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As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:38:39 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction. If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email. Please include the exact date of the dream or the DD number. And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.
See if this dream has come true yet
"irwin 5:20 pm 9/3/65, he is right, NY, Lola in danger, help him, ec"
RELATED DREAMS: DD2873 DD3316IMPORTANT INFORMATION: All these dreams may be actually from man named Edger Cayce that died in 1945, and I have only research the past 2 months, there could be many more during the past 16 months of dreams, if you can find anymore, please let me know.
EDGAR CAYCE INFO/UPDATE 3006 3014 3028 3060 3080 3089 3104 3111 3112 3115 3116 3118 3121 3123 3147 3158 3159 3160 3170 3171 3173 3178 3292 3293 3303 3309 3312 RV008 3316 3319 3320 3331 3338 3352 3356 3357 3372 3385 3392 3405 3423 3427 3431 3436 3458 3461 3470 3475 3476 3483 3485
3.29.2006
Brian, I think this dream is intended for Actor Charlie Sheen, please read this!! And I do not know how to contact him!
Dave
reply
Thanks, will post this ASAP
Brian
Charlie Sheen, (born Carlos Irwin Estévez September 3, 1965) is an American actor.
Contents [hide]
1 Early life
2 Career
3 September 11th
4 Private life
5 Filmography
6 External links
Early life
He was born in New York City, a "blue baby" who needed immediate medical attention. His mother is Janet Templeton and his father is Martin Sheen. He is brother to three other actors, Emilio Estevez, Ramón Estevez Jr. and Renée Estevez.
Career
Sheen's film career began in 1984, and his first major role was in Platoon (1986). In 1987, he starred with his father, Martin, in Wall Street. He has recently played the lead role in the political television sitcom, Spin City (as Michael J. Fox's replacement on that show). He now plays the role of Charlie on the sitcom Two and a Half Men, which debuted in 2003.
September 11th
Main article: Charlie Sheen and Alex Jones interviews
On March 20 of 2006, Sheen revealed he was part of the 9/11 Truth Movement on the broadcast of the Alex Jones radio show. The broadcast was subsequently covered by Showbiz Tonight (CNN) and Hannity and Colmes (Fox News).
Private life
Sheen has been dogged by trouble, including drugs and a shooting, and he has frequently had problems with the police. Though he was involved with a number of Hollywood personalities, his long-term relationship with adult actress Ginger Lynn in the late 1990s garnered the most media attention. In 1993, his name was found among Hollywood Madam Heidi Fleiss' list of her most frequent customers, and it was revealed that Sheen hired top-class prostitutes and spent huge amounts on escort agencies. During this time, he also had a serious cocaine addiction.
Sheen was married to Donna Peele from September 3, 1995 to November 19, 1996. He then married another actress, Denise Richards, on June 15, 2002. They had two daughters, Sam J. Estevez (born March 9, 2004), and Lola Rose Estevez (born June 1, 2005). In March 2005, Richards filed for divorce, but the couple were able to reconcile briefly afterwards. In January 2006, Richards continued with the divorce.
Sheen also has a daughter by former girlfriend Paula Profit, Cassandra Estevez (born 1985).
4.10.2006
You dreamed DD3316 on 3/22 -- actor Charlie Sheen made a TV appearance the
following day 3/23. Many people watched and listened.
reply
Hi, will post this.
Brian
+ + +
SHOWBIZ TONIGHT
Sheen 9/11 Comments Spark Controversy; Investigators Unraveling Mystery of
Princess Diana`s Death; Students Spend Spring Break Helping Out ; ABC`s
"Extreme Makeover" Remakes Town Devastated by Katrina; "Rolling Stone" Goes
Behind The Scenes with "American Idol"; Growing Phenomenon of the Office
Spouse
Aired March 23, 2006 - 19:00:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE
UPDATED.
A.J. HAMMER, CO-HOST: New information about the death of Princess Diana. I`m
A.J. Hammer in New York.
BROOKE ANDERSON, CO-HOST: I`m Brooke Anderson in Hollywood. And a look at a
workplace phenomenon, the office spouse. TV`s only live entertainment news
show starts right now.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
HAMMER (voice-over): On SHOWBIZ TONIGHT, Charlie Sheen speaks out on a
controversial theory that the government covered up what really happened on
9/11.
CHARLIE SHEEN, ACTOR: Taking over four commercial airliners and hitting 75
percent of their targets. That feels like a conspiracy theory.
HAMMER: Tonight, we dig even deeper. The host of the radio show on which
Sheen leveled his startling allegations joins us live right here on SHOWBIZ
TONIGHT. Plus, the overwhelming response from you, the viewers.
Rebuilding communities devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Tonight, how a TV
reality show is going in to fix what some say the government could not.
HARRY CONNICK JR., SINGER/ACTOR: I`m Harry Connick Jr. If it happened today,
it`s on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
HAMMER: Hello, I`m A.J. Hammer, live in New York City.
ANDERSON: And I`m Brooke Anderson, live in Hollywood.
A.J., it`s been incredible. Pretty hard to believe, actually, the response
we got today to the incredible story SHOWBIZ TONIGHT broke last night. Actor
Charlie Sheen`s startling claims that the government may be covering up what
really happened on September 11.
HAMMER: So many e-mails coming in. We`ve been really overwhelmed today.
Between the e-mails, the blogs, the web sites, everybody is writing and
talking about it.
Charlie Sheen made the comments during a hard-to-believe interview on a
radio show. And don`t move because in just a moment the host of the radio
show, the guy who actually spoke with Sheen, is going to join me live here
on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT. But first let`s get you up to speed on the latest
developments.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
SHEEN: The more you look at stuff, especially specific incidents, specific
events, in or around the fateful day, it just-- it just raises a lot of
questions.
HAMMER: The questions Charlie Sheen is raising about the 9/11 attacks are
raising a lot of eyebrows. Our e-mail inbox immediately started to overflow.
And the coverage on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT is getting a lot of attention.
The web site 9/11 Blogger calls SHOWBIZ TONIGHT`s coverage, quote, "The
first time a major news station has covered 9/11 questions in any reasonable
format."
It all started with a radio interview Sheen gave to GCN Radio Network host
Alex Jones, a cult hero of sorts to 9/11 conspiracy theorists. During the
interview, Sheen made clear that he backs Jones` views.
SHEEN: We`re not the conspiracy theorists on this particular issue. It seems
to me like, you know, 19 amateurs with box cutters taking over four
commercial airliners and hitting 75 percent of their targets, that feels
like a conspiracy theory.
HAMMER: Sheen also made another shocking suggestion: that we may not know
the full story about the collapse of the World Trade Center.
SHEEN: I have a hard time believing that a fireball traveled down the
elevator over 110 feet and still had the explosive energy to destroy the
lobby like it was described.
I said, "Hey, call me insane. But did it sort of look like those buildings
came down in a controlled demolition?"
If I was your age, I could only dream about my parents splitting up.
HAMMER: As the star of the sitcom "Two and a Half Men," Sheen is seen weekly
by about 10 million people. And many of them may end up paying attention to
his controversial comments about 9/11.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
HAMMER: As I mentioned the radio host who interviewed Sheen is Alex Jones of
the Genesis Communications Network. Alex joins me live from Austin, Texas,
to talk about Sheen`s riveting comments.
Alex, as I mentioned, the response that we got from doing this story last
night absolutely shocking. So I want to know how it actually all came about.
How did the interview with Charlie Sheen actually happen? Did you guys reach
out to him? Did he call you? What was the deal?
ALEX JONES, RADIO TALK SHOW HOST: Well, just to make something clear, Mr.
Sheen has amazing courage to do what he`s done. And he contacted me. He`s
been watching my documentaries for years. He`s one of the most informed
people that I`ve talked to in Hollywood on this subjetc.
Listen, for years Hollywood`s been on fire with people knowing the truth
about 9/11. And I was the first to expose 9/11 on the day. In fact two
months before I had intel that elements of the military industrial complex
were going to carry out the attack. I said they`ll use bin Laden, the known
CIS. That is their patsy to take the blame for attacking the towers.
So Mr. Sheen is only exceptional in that he has courage in going public.
Courage that no one else in Hollywood had.
I mean, here`s a CNN poll from Anderson Cooper a year and a half ago where
they said is the government covering up 9/11? Could they be involved? Ninety
percent when the poll closed on CNN said this.
So listen I have my own syndicated show. I`ve done 4,000 radio interviews in
the last 4 1/2 years. Almost no one calls in and disagrees now. We have the
majority view and we have the evidence.
And bottom line, there are declassified U.S. government documents like
Operation Northwoods that ABC News reported on back in 2000. Operation
Northwoods. Google it.
And in there the U.S. government -- an element of it -- said we want to
hi-jack jets by remote control, crash them and blame it on the Soviet Union
in Cuba. Now that was decades ago. This is why we believe this.
Then you look at the official story. The firefighters, the police, hundreds
of them saying there were bomb in the buildings. They were told to shut up.
You look at building seven, detonators going off. You can see the explosion.
HAMMER: And Alex, a lot of this is what Charlie Sheen was covering. I`m
actually just curious. Did he reach out to you guys? Is he the one who put
the call into you and how he wound up on your show?
JONES: Sure. Sure. He called me a few weeks ago and said that -- said that
he loves this country. He has nothing to gain from this. In fact it`s
dangerous for him to do.
HAMMER: Sure, sure.
JONES: He said, "I love this country and my kids so much that I`m going to
do this, Alex."
And I said, "God bless you" because now it makes for other Hollywood people
who`ve got major pull who know the truth to start going public.
HAMMER: And dangerous indeed to do. Because a lot of what he said makes a
lot of people sort of sit back and say, "Whoa, I don`t know about that."
And what`s really important here. You may not agree with everything that
Charlie Sheen had to say. I personally think it`s a good thing that he did
go on your show, so he could go public with his point of view. Because it
does get people talking.
You know, there are a lot of people who may look at this, however, and say
there just goes another Hollywood nut job shooting off his mouth.
JONES: Listen -- listen...
HAMMER: I imagine that you think, though, having a Hollywood actor on your
side is a good thing and, as you mention, may bring some more people to the
table talking about this.
JONES: Sure, sure. If you knew some of the Hollywood names that are aware of
9/11. We`re talking some of the biggest people.
HAMMER: Any you can tell us about that you`ve been in contact with?
JONES: No, I can`t. Because -- because people in Hollywood contact me
because I have integrity, and I`ve been in a few films and they know me. And
they know I keep my mouth shut.
You know, it was kind of like back in high school. I learned to keep my
mouth shut about girls I was dating and all the girls started liking you.
Look, it`s really simple. Let`s understand this, OK? Nine-eleven was an
inside job. It was a self-inflicted wound. And -- and what Charlie Sheen is
doing is just amazing, and he can only be commended for it. And all he`s
calling for is a real investigation.
I go further at InfoWars.com and PrisonPlanet.com. We lay out how it
happened and what took place.
And it`s not just Charlie Sheen I`ve interviewed. CNN has interviewed some
of these people, the only network that I`ve seen doing it. You guys have
interviewed. There have been physics professors that have gone public. There
have been the heads of mining colleges that have gone public.
George Bush Sr.`s top CIA adviser who briefed him and Ronald Reagan, one of
the highest little guys at the CIA, says our government is clearly involved
in carrying out terror to blame it on foreign enemies.
Did you know that on CIA.gov they admit that they carried out terror attacks
in 1953 to blame it on Mohammed Mozadek (ph) in Iran as a pretext to
overthrow Iran?
HAMMER: Alex -- I`m going to rein -- all good stuff and all stuff that needs
to be talked about. But I`m going to rein you back in here to the topic at
hand.
JONES: Sure.
HAMMER: One thing that I think is interesting. You know, as I mentioned
we`ve gotten this overwhelming response. The e-mail has not stopped coming
in. Most of the e-mail I`ve been getting has been supporting the fact that
we are bringing attention to something that is rarely talked about in
mainstream media.
JONES: Yes, sir. You have courage. No one else has done what you`re doing.
HAMMER: And I appreciate you saying that. So the question is why? Why have
so many of the major media outlets not talked about these alternative
theories that exist behind 9/11? Why is that?
JONES: Mark Twain said that, "In the beginning a patriot is a scarce man,
hated and feared and scorned. But in time when his cause succeeds, the timid
join him, because then it costs nothing to be patriot."
A lot of people don`t have the courage that you have, A.J. A lot of people
don`t have the courage of Charlie Sheen. They don`t have the courage of the
German defense minister, Andre Van Bulow (ph), who two years ago went
public...
HAMMER: What do you think is afraid of that`s going to happen to them?
JONES: They`re afraid of being beaten up by the hordes of neocon
intimidators who try to go out there with their Gestapo Nazi tactics to try
to bludgeon everybody with their blogs and radio shows to shut up.
But they`ve lost, pal, because people have learned that they`re a bunch of
liars. They lied about WMDs. They lied about everything. And now their
credibility is totally blown.
The new White House memo just came out where Bush is talking about staging
the shoot down of American planes to get -- to blame it on Saddam. That`s
public. That`s admitted.
HAMMER: Let`s talk about some public documents. Because obviously experts,
government commissions, countless officials have all come out and supported
what is the official line.
JONES: Yes, they call it Henry Kissinger independent.
HAMMER: Right. Well, we know that those documents are out there and that
people are supporting them. So I guess what some people watching us tonight
may be thinking is, well, why the heck should I be listening to Charlie
Sheen or to Alex Jones and his web site on this matter?
JONES: They shouldn`t. They shouldn`t. They shouldn`t believe me. They
shouldn`t believe you. They shouldn`t believe George Bush. They shouldn`t
believe the Keane Commission where almost the entire commission has
conflicts of interest and was appointed by Bush. You`ve got to love this. He
appoints his own commission, and then the media calls it independent.
Did you know that the "9/11 Whitewash Commission" claims there were no
columns in tower one and two when they had 47 of the biggest columns in the
world up until that time? They won`t say why building seven had blast points
going off down the side.
HAMMER: Well, Alex -- Alex, I`m afraid I`ve got to cut you off because we`re
out of time. But as I said, it`s sparking debate. It`s getting people
talking. And I appreciate you help bringing it up.
JONES: Thank you. Go to InfoWars.com, sir. Find out the truth at
PrisonPlanet.com.
HAMMER: Alex Jones, live from Austin.
And as I mentioned we`ve gotten so many e-mails on the subjetc. We`ll read
what some of you have to say coming up a bit later in the show.
Nine eleven also happens to be the subject of a new movie that`s coming out
in theaters soon. And SHOWBIZ TONIGHT has your first look at "United 93."
That`s coming up in a bit in the "SHOWBIZ Showcase."
ANDERSON: Plus, rebuilding communities devastated by Hurricane Katrina.
Tonight how a TV reality show is going in to fix what some say the
government could not.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I`m going to get the door for you, like I always do.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Thank you.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
HAMMER: Office spouses. Until desks do us part. In sickness and in health
plans. SHOWBIZ TONIGHT investigates the phenomenon that`s all the buzz in
the media. Is it OK to have a real wife and a work wife?
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
HAMMER: Welcome back to SHOWBIZ TONIGHT. I am A.J. Hammer. You are watching
TV`s only live entertainment news show.
We have gotten a tremendous response to the story that we brought you on
Charlie Sheen`s comments about 9/11. We do want to keep hearing from you. It
is our SHOWBIZ TONIGHT question of the day. Charlie Sheen speaks out. Do you
agree there is a government cover-up of 9/11?
Let`s see the votes so far: 65 percent of you say yes; 35 percent of you say
no, you don`t.
A couple of the e-mails we`ve received include one from Dylan in Texas, who
writes, "There are so many unanswered questions, and all attempts at an
investigation have been stonewalled by the government."
We also heard from Mike in Hawaii, who writes, "How could any sane person
believe that our government attacked our own people?"
Do keep voting at CNN.com/SHOWBIZTONIGHT. You want to e-mail us more of your
thoughts, we want to hear from you at ShowbizTonight@CNN.com. Those e-mails
coming up later in the show.
ANDERSON: In tonight`s "SHOWBIZ Showcase" we`ve got your first look at the
movie "United 93." The film is a real-time account of what happened on the
fourth plane to be hijacked on September 11.
Heroic passengers fought back against the terrorists and spared what might
have been the intended target, the White House. Take a look.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Welcome aboard United Flight 93. We`re flying to San
Francisco.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Runway is clear.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Runway clear for take-off.
United 93. United 93. United 93.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hello?
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Honey, it`s me. My flight has been hi-jacked.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Two planes into the World Trade Center. We have to shoot
that thing down.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Oh my God. I think we`re heading to Washington.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We have to do something.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We`re running out of time.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He`s going to do something stupid.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: There are a bunch of us here.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Take him down.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We are going to take back the cockpit.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I have to go. They`re about to storm the cockpit. I
love you.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ANDERSON: "United 93" will be in theaters next month.
HAMMER: So just when you thought the case might have been closed on Princess
Diana`s fatal car crash, there are some surprising new revelations and
shocking questions surrounding her death. SHOWBIZ TONIGHT now goes around
the world to get you the very latest.
CNN`s Fionnuala Sweeney is in London -- Fionnuala.
FIONNUALA SWEENEY, CNN CORRESPONDENT: A.J., it has been almost nine years
since Princess Diana was killed. But that doesn`t stop the public
fascination with the circumstances surrounding her death.
In recent months, long standing questions are emerging: did Buckingham
Palace want Diana dead? Was she pregnant at the time of her death? And just
what is the deal with the man driving the car that killed Diana and
boyfriend Dodi al-Fayed?
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
SWEENEY (voice-over): Conflicting reports, stray plot lines, new questions.
What really happened the night of Princess Diana`s death?
BETSY GLEICK, "PEOPLE" MAGAZINE: There have been some leaks from the
investigation.
SWEENEY: "People" magazine has shocking new evidence about why, almost nine
years after the fatal crash, British authorities still can`t close their
case.
GLEICK: A lot of people thought that Diana`s death had been settled long
ago. But in fact there are some genuine questions about the circumstances
surrounding it.
SWEENEY: Many conspiracies revolve around Henri Paul, the chauffeur on that
fateful night. He, too, died in the car crash that killed Diana and her
boyfriend, Dodi al-Fayed. French officials say he was drunk.
But now...
GLEICK: It is now unclear. The French had come back and said, well, actually
there may have been some confusion and some sort of mistake with the blood
tests.
SWEENEY: What we do know, Paul was an informant for French intelligence.
GLEICK: He seems to have been a French secret agent of some kind, and he had
extra money in his account. He had received a payment of approximately
$120,000 in the week or so before Diana`s death. And it`s unclear at this
point where that money came from.
SWEENEY: Conspiracy theorists say it came from a plot to kill the princess,
a directive from Buckingham Palace.
GLEICK: Well, the one person who`s saying that the palace orchestrated it is
Dodi al-Fayed`s father, Mohammed al-Fayed, the sort of outspoken owner of
Harrod`s, a businessman. And he has been claiming all along that this was
murder, not an accident.
He`s the one who is fanning the flame. But now, people from the side of the
investigation have come out and said it turns out that this is a far more
complex matter than we had originally thought.
SWEENEY: And the reason behind this so-called plot, an impending engagement.
GLEICK: One of the reasons that this controversy continued is because
Mohammed al-Fayed believed that the palace did not want Diana to have
anything to do with a Muslim.
SWEENEY: "People" magazine says Dodi had bought a $200,000 ring just before
the pair died.
Another lingering mystery, Diana`s body was partially embalmed just hours
after she died and before a French autopsy could be done. Some people think
that was done to throw off signs Diana was pregnant with Dodi`s child.
GLEICK: The investigators are trying to determine who gave the order for
that embalming? However, other medical experts that say embalmed, not
embalmed, she was not pregnant.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
SWEENEY: Well, here in London we`re expecting the final British report on
the crash to come out next month. It`s said to dismiss these conspiracy
theories, and simply put, the report will reportedly say there was no foul
play.
SHOWBIZ TONIGHT will be on top of the controversy which will no doubt arise
from it. A.J., back to you in New York.
HAMMER: And conspiracy theories will no doubt live on. Thanks very much,
Fionnuala. CNN`s Fionnuala Sweeney, joining us from London for SHOWBIZ
TONIGHT.
Well, when you think of MTV and spring break, charity work is probably not
what springs to mind. But MTV`s Gideon Yago is going to be joining me live
in a few moments to tell us how it`s not all about beer and bikinis this
year for some spring breakers.
ANDERSON: Plus, rebuilding communities devastated by Hurricane Katrina.
Tonight, how a TV reality show is going in to fix what some say the
government could not.
HAMMER: And do you have an office spouse in your office space? Lots of
people do these days. We`re going to take a look at relationships forged
around the conference table rather than the dinner table. That`s coming up.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And dissolve. Let`s get Gideon Yago from MTV stated.
Master. Roll the tape and then black.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
ANDERSON: Tomorrow on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT, Jared Leto, actor, front man of his
own band. Now a role that`s been 25 years in the making. He`s playing Mark
David Chapman, the man who killed John Lennon. We`ll ask him about the
amazing transformation he underwent for that role. That is tomorrow on
SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
HAMMER: Well, it`s here: spring break season, and for legions of college
students across the country, that means beaches, beer, tequila shots and of
course, lots of unsupervised partying.
Well, now a new MTV series called "The Amazing Break". It`s showcasing how
some students decided to spend their time off working to help rebuild
communities and improve the lives of those in need.
Joining us live, MTV News reporter Gideon Yago.
Welcome back to SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
GIDEON YAGO, MTV NEWS CORRESPONDENT: Thanks very much.
HAMMER: I think of the -- you know, the beer guzzling and the partying going
on.
YAGO: Right. Funnels and foam parties, students in decadence.
HAMMER: But not in this particular documentary. In fact you have some
students who went to South Africa. Why?
YAGO: Well, these were students from San Diego State who had done a drive to
raise money and supplies for an orphanage right outside of Johannesburg. And
they got a chance, because the amount of stuff that they raised, to actually
fly and deliver this stuff themselves and take a look at some of the living
conditions and some of the effects of AIDS, AIDS and poverty that have
really ravaged that country.
So you know, that`s just one of five very interesting alternative spring
breaks that we showcase in our program.
HAMMER: The Gulf Coast another place. That was a destination. You know, we
saw, finally, with Fat Tuesday and with the Mardi Gras, we saw the partying
going on. But we have students there also doing good.
YAGO: Absolutely. You know, and I think that`s one of the things, that you
look at Katrina. And especially in the last year with all of the natural
disasters, with the tsunami and, obviously, with what hit the Gulf Coast.
And it had a galvanizing effect on campuses across the country. And we felt
that that deserved recognition. And that deserved support.
So we paired up with the United Way and Home Depot and FedEx. We sent 100
kids down there to actually do work in Biloxi. And you know, as you can
probably see with some of the footage that`s being rolled right now, you
know, they had an incredible week.
HAMMER: What types of things were they -- I mean they were getting in down
and dirty, getting their hands dirty.
YAGO: You know, demolition; cleaning houses for, you know, to get sprayed
for mold; doing roof repair; just lifting debris. I mean, we forget that,
you know, there`s still so much damage. All the way on that belt from
Pensacola all the way, you know, past the lower Ninth Ward. That, you know,
with three months away towards the next hurricane season, just needs to get
out, get out somehow.
HAMMER: You mention the fact that, you know, people seeing all of this going
on in the Gulf Coast on television galvanized the community to help out. Is
that really what motivated a lot of these kids to get involved to get down
there instead of hitting the beach?
YAGO: You know, I think so. I mean you -- look, you`re going to have body
shots and banana hammocks galore going on all throughout the U.S. during
spring breaks. But you know, more and more there`s an increasing number of
kids that volunteer. And, you know, we wanted to give that a platform.
HAMMER: I know the very first time I had the opportunity to volunteer, I did
it not so much because, oh, I thought it is going to effect my life in some
drastic way. It just seemed like a cool thing to do. It radically changed my
life. Do you see a lot of that happening with these kids?
YAGO: I think you do. And it`s really funny that, you know, we were watching
these things go through the edit. We were like wow, how many times do you
have somebody say that this was a life-changing experience? Or this was, you
know, amazing and it changed my outlook on things.
But you actually see what these -- you know, these young volunteers go
through. And seeing the stuff firsthand, whether it`s the damage in, you
know, in the Gulf Coast or helping out in a homeless shelter or going to
South Africa or doing equality rides and how it affects them.
HAMMER: You watch this transformation.
YAGO: Yes. And we hope that in the future more people might make that
decision that we can facilitate.
HAMMER: Thanks very much for sharing this with us.
YAGO: Thank you for having me on.
HAMMER: Gideon Yago from MTV.
And you can catch "The Amazing Break" this Saturday on MTV.
ANDERSON: Spring breakers aren`t the only ones lending their time for a good
cause. Coming up, how a TV reality show is helping Katrina- devastated
communities rebuild.
ANDERSON: Plus a reality check for the reality show that Americans love.
Coming up, a revealing new look at the "American Idol" judges.
HAMMER: And when you see your co-workers more than your family, it`s bound
to happen. And SHOWBIZ TONIGHT takes a look at the phenomenon of office
spouses. That`s coming up. Stay with us.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
HAMMER: Welcome back to SHOWBIZ TONIGHT. It is 31 minutes past the hour. I`m
A.J. Hammer in New York.
ANDERSON: And I`m Brooke Anderson in Hollywood. And you`re watching TV`s
only live entertainment news show.
HAMMER: Well, Brooke, one of America`s favorite reality shows that is
well-known for doing good things for people one house at a time is now
getting set to showcase how they`re doing good things down in the Gulf
Coast, in the devastated region, one community at a time. I will speak with
one of the stars of that show, find out exactly what they`re up to, coming
up in just a couple of minutes.
ANDERSON: It`s heart-warming to watch that.
Another reality show garnering still unbelievable ratings, "American Idol,"
A.J. But sometimes the judges put on a bigger show than the contestants. And
coming up in just a few minute, we will have an inside look at Paula, Simon,
Randy and also host Ryan Seacrest.
But first, home may be where the heart is, but for lots of people, it`s
their co-workers, not their families, who get the majority of their time.
And that has led one magazine to look into the growing phenomenon of the
office spouse. Here`s CNN`s Rusty Dornin for SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
LORRAINE WILDERMAN, "OFFICE SPOUSE": I`m hungry. I want to eat.
RUSTY DORNIN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): They like the same things...
MIKE O`REAR, "OFFICE SPOUSE": Let`s go to the Chinese restaurant.
WILDERMAN: OK!
DORNIN: ... like where to eat...
M. O`REAR: Let me get the door for you, like I always do.
WILDERMAN: Thank you.
DORNIN: Mike and Lorraine have built a close relationship on banter.
WILDERMAN: Mikey, Mikey, Mikey, you know the routine. You`ve got to let the
teabags set in there for a while.
DORNIN: A longtime married couple out for lunch? Hardly. How about
co-workers? Mike O`Rear and Lorraine Wilderman met when she joined the
faculty at Chattahoochee Technical College in Lucida Grande. Over eight years,
they`ve become part of a new phenomenon: office spouses.
WILDERMAN: Mike has a lot of the same traits as my husband does. And when
I`m at work, it`s like, "Where`s Mike? Help, I need something."
DORNIN: In a national survey by the research company Vault, Inc., 32 percent
of workers say they have an office spouse. Advertising executive Tina
Chadwick recently wrote a magazine article defining this new kind of
relationship.
TINA CHADWICK, CREATIVE DIRECTOR, MATCH, INC.: When you get particularly
close to someone and in terms click with them, that starts to develop a
spouse relationship, where you rely on them, you ask for their advice.
WILDERMAN: Mike, do you have a pocket knife or a pair of scissors?
M. O`REAR: No, I got some scissors.
WILDERMAN: Can you open that for me?
CHADWICK: There`s a synergy that develops that can be quite energetic, you
know, and quite enlivening, rather than just the drudgery of work.
WILDERMAN: You can hand these two at a time, if you want.
M. O`REAR: My other hand`s busy.
WILDERMAN: Put your water down, and hand me some, or we`re going to be here
until the cows come in.
M. O`REAR: Yes, ma`am.
DORNIN: As they grew closer over the years, Mike and Lorraine started
relying on each other for much more than business.
WILDERMAN: If he`s even had a bad weekend or something`s happened to one of
his grandchildren, I can almost tell by the expression on his face.
M. O`REAR: There`s always problems you`re going to have. That`s just part of
life. But if you have someone you can share it with, it makes it a little
bit better.
DORNIN: Tina Chadwick says she`s had several office spouses over the years.
Her colleagues, Jason Turner (ph) and Jeff Stewart (ph), say that long hours
and business trips with co-workers make it part of modern life.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I mean, they become your best friends, basically, because
you`re spending, you know, every day with them. And you`re with them longer
than you`re with, like, your wife, our your spouse, or whoever. So, yes, it
kind of -- a line could possibly get crossed, mentally, but not really
physically.
DORNIN: But whether it`s 9:00 to 5:00 or 9:00 to midnight, if things begin
to border on the inappropriate, business experts say, "Step back."
CHADWICK: You have to decide, "OK, I`m at my boundary with this person, and
I need to kind of start drawing that line in what I say and what I divulge."
DORNIN (on camera): How important is it to take your relationship home and
tell your spouse about this other person?
M. O`REAR: I tell Dianne everything. If you don`t lie, you don`t have to
remember what you told, so you don`t get caught.
DORNIN (voice-over): Mike is open, not only with his wife. He likes to shock
people by introducing his "wives."
M. O`REAR: This is my first wife, Dianne...
(LAUGHTER)
... and this Lorraine Wilderman, my office spouse.
JESSICA NETTLES, "OFFICE SPOUSE": We don`t know which one I am, two or
three.
M. O`REAR: And this is Jessica Nettles, my second office wife.
DORNIN: Oh, yes, there can be multiple office spouses. Jessica Nettles is
Mike`s other "other woman." He befriended her four years ago when she was
new to the college.
NETTLES: I can`t finish his sentences yet; I haven`t know him that long. But
I can walk by on the phone and know what he`s thinking.
DORNIN: Business management expert Chris Riordan says close relationships in
the workplace can make people happier on the job, but she doesn`t like the
word "spouse."
CHRIS RIORDAN, NEELEY SCHOOL OF BUSINESS, TEXAS: It`s a sexy term, you know,
even in the idea of having a spouse in a work environment, but...
DORNIN (on camera): But that`s a negative?
RIORDAN: It is. It`s absolutely a negative. Friendships are very powerful,
and you don`t want to the diminish the power of those friendships by coining
it or calling it an office spouse.
DORNIN (voice-over): And there is always the very real danger of an office
relationship going too far.
RIORDAN: If you engage in flirting-type behavior, that`s going to make other
people uncomfortable. If you become so interdependent that you`re not
necessarily thinking on your own, if you`re making decisions because of the
other person rather than for yourself, those might be danger signs.
DORNIN (on camera): Could you ever see a relationship like this, though,
maybe negatively affecting people in an office?
M. O`REAR: I guess, if it crossed the line, it probably could.
DORNIN: But what is crossing the line?
M. O`REAR: I don`t know; I`ve never been there.
(LAUGHTER)
DORNIN (voice-over): In fact, these three don`t even socialize outside the
office. And Mike`s real wife, Dianne O`Rear, doesn`t worry about her
husband`s professional polygamy.
DIANNE O`REAR, WIFE OF AN "OFFICE SPOUSE": A spouse is someone you share
things with, you discuss things with, and you share a bond with. And there`s
a bond they have that does not infringe on what Michael and I have.
DORNIN: This daytime husband and his office wives appear to have found the
right balance.
WILDERMAN: You asked him if you could talk about your haircut.
NETTLES: And you said no.
M. O`REAR: And I assumed yes.
WILDERMAN: But we both said no.
M. O`REAR: That means yes.
(LAUGHTER)
DORNIN: Comfortable, familiar, but within very well-defined limits.
NETTLES: OK. I`ll see you there. Bye.
M. O`REAR: I`ll see you then. Bye.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ANDERSON: Professional polygamy, interesting way to phrase it. That was
CNN`s Rusty Dornin for SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
HAMMER: Well, tonight a rare and revealing look at TV`s most watched show,
"American Idol." Now, aside from the thrill of seeing which contestants is
going to be made into an instant star, the show has become super-popular
because of its judges.
Randy, of course, the energetic guy that always says, "Yo, dawg." Paula, of
course, the former pop star who brings that sugary sweet balance to the
program. And then, of course, crusty, old Simon, the blunt Brit.
Well, the new issue of "Rolling Stone" magazine that you`re seeing right
here has an inside look at the trio and host Ryan Seacrest. Joining us live
here in New York to spill the beans, senior editor from "Rolling Stone,"
Nathan Brackett.
So, Nathan, I appreciate you coming in here...
NATHAN BRACKETT, SENIOR EDITOR, "ROLLING STONE": Good to be here.
HAMMER: ... to talk about this with us. We see the very public personas of
Randy, Simon and Paula every week. Thirty million of us were tuning in to
see them, and that`s the bit that we get on TV. But you guys got to dig into
their personal side. What private part of their lives would really shock us?
BRACKETT: Well, I think we went into this thinking, well, these guys must be
-- they`re professionals, right? This must be kind of an act. They must kind
of like each other.
The fact is, it looks they really don`t. That was a big revelation. They
have a long history of tension on the set. Simon Cowell just, in real life,
doesn`t seem like that nice a person. He doesn`t tell his girlfriend that he
loves him. He started calling his mom names when he was, like, three years
old. I think in one part of the story he says that he told his mom that she
looked like a poodle when he was three.
HAMMER: He was just a kid.
BRACKETT: Yes, he was just a kid. He almost burned down his parent`s house
once. So stuff like that.
HAMMER: Nice guy. So based on that, the drama that we`re seeing isn`t drama
for drama`s sake. In fact, I remember at the beginning of this season, Simon
actually stormed off from the San Francisco auditions and apparently hired a
jet to fly back to L.A. because he was so unhappy and angry at the rest of
the judges.
BRACKETT: I mean, we can`t be sure that they don`t amplify it a little
bit...
HAMMER: Yes, play it up a little.
BRACKETT: ... but there seems to be some underlying tension, which is the
root of it.
HAMMER: OK, so let`s talk about Simon. Let`s talk about more the fact that
this is not really an act for him, there are a lot of other aspects in his
life. I mean, one of the shocking revelations I thought was the fact that he
may not always wear underwear, but you guys...
BRACKETT: I try not to think about that, yes.
HAMMER: But it was in the article, but you guys really show that this goes
on in all aspects of his life, the sort of rude and crude.
BRACKETT: Yes, he seems like just kind of a difficult person. You know, he`s
had an interesting life. He used to be the owner of this label called
Fanfare. It was worth a couple of million dollars in the early `80s, kind of
made some bad steps, lost all of his money. And now he`s a very wealthy man.
HAMMER: And speaking about the money, in the article, "Rolling Stone" asks
of Simon: What do you want more than anything else in the world? And Cowell
responds by saying, "Money, as much money as I can get my hands on. It`s as
simple as that." So what is this guy worth and what`s he making?
BRACKETT: Well, the writer, Eric Hedegaard, suspected that he was probably
worth in excess of $90 million. Simon wouldn`t give us a real answer. And he
probably makes over $25 million a year.
HAMMER: Well, a lot of people -- it uncovered in the article, and I thought
this was interesting. A lot of other networks tried to hire him away to sort
of put an end to the juggernaut that is "American Idol."
BRACKETT: Yes, well, I mean, it just can`t be overstated what a juggernaut
"American Idol" is now. I mean, it`s kind of like a throwback to the days
where there were only three networks and things would get these amazing 40
shares. I mean it`s one of the few things that, like, zillions and zillions
of people really tune into every night.
HAMMER: Well, it`s a real interesting read with some great insight, and I
appreciate you stopping by, Nathan.
BRACKETT: Thanks.
HAMMER: Nathan Brackett, senior editor from "Rolling Stone." You can grab
your copy of "Rolling Stone" magazine on newsstands now.
ANDERSON: The Heather Locklear-Richie Sambora divorce could be getting ugly.
We will explain why, next.
HAMMER: Plus, our inbox absolutely flooded with your e-mails about Charlie
Sheen, saying there`s been a government cover-up of what actually happened
on 9/11. SHOWBIZ TONIGHT reads your fired-up responses, coming up next.
Plus, we`ve also got this...
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: It feels like a ghost town. I mean, there`s nothing
here.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It looks like a war zone.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
ANDERSON: Tonight, bringing hope after the storm. SHOWBIZ TONIGHT shows you
how one TV reality show is fixing Hurricane Katrina-devastated areas in ways
some say the government has not.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
HAMMER: Welcome back to SHOWBIZ TONIGHT. I`m A.J. Hammer in New York. This
is TV`s only live entertainment news show.
We have been getting an overwhelming response to our SHOWBIZ TONIGHT
"Question of the Day." We`ve been asking: Charlie Sheen speaks out: Do you
agree there is a government cover-up of 9/11?
Here`s the vote so far: 67 percent of you say yes; 33 percent of you say no.
Some of the e-mails we`ve received includes one from Jennifer in North
Dakota. She writes, "Charlie Sheen has no evidence, and it is a shame that
celebs get their voice and opinions heard because of their status."
We also heard from Dan. He lives in Kentucky. Danny says, "God bless Charlie
Sheen for standing up and speaking his mind on what is the most devastating
event to hit our nation, 9/11."
We also heard from Chris in Ohio. Chris writes, "This is a very important
issue that must be brought into the mainstream. It is our patriotic duty to
make sure we find out why and how 9/11 happened."
There is the address to keep voting, CNN.com/SHOWBIZTONIGHT.
ANDERSON: It is time now for tonight`s "Hot Headlines." And for that, we go
to SHOWBIZ TONIGHT`s Sibila Vargas, who is joining us live here in
Hollywood.
Hi, Sibila.
SIBILA VARGAS, CNN ENTERTAINMENT CORRESPONDENT: Hi, Brooke.
Well, tonight Richie Sambora borrowing a line from Kanye West`s "Gold
Digger" song. He says he wants pre-nup. SHOWBIZ TONIGHT has learned that the
Bon Jovi guitarist wants a prenuptial agreement he signed with his wife,
Heather Locklear, quote, "enforced."
He`s also seeking joint custody of the couple`s 8-year-old daughter.
Locklear filed for divorce after 11 years last month.
Well, your friendly neighborhood Spiderman is about to say, "Hello,
Cleveland." (INAUDIBLE) The greater Cleveland film council says "Spiderman
3" will shoot exterior scenes in the Ohio city next month. Cleveland beat
out the Big Apple, New York, where production costs are higher. It`s
doubtful, though, that the movie stars, Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst,
will be involved. Just a crew will be shooting.
And "60 Minutes" is heading online. CBS said today the long-running TV news
magazine will put segments up on the Web portal, Yahoo. Starting this fall,
"60 Minutes" will stream content and offer exclusive video. Now, we wonder
what Andy Rooney, who still likes his typewriter, will think about all that.
And those are tonight`s "Hot Headlines."
ANDERSON: Sibila, Andy Rooney might not be too keen on using that service.
Thank you so much.
VARGAS: No, you know, he`s always considered himself a writer who has been
on television. Now he`ll be on the Internet.
ANDERSON: That`s right. Sibila Vargas, live here with me in Hollywood.
Thanks.
HAMMER: Well, tonight a popular TV reality show rebuilds towns devastated by
Hurricane Katrina. Normally, ABC`s "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" remakes
one deserving family`s home per episode. But after Katrina leveled the Gulf
Coast last summer, the designers and builders decided it was more helpful to
rebuild town infrastructure, like medical clinics, firehouses, and movie
theaters.
Well, I had the chance to sit down with Paul DiMeo. He`s the show`s
carpenter and one of the designers, and we chatted about their show`s
amazing efforts.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
HAMMER: You guys have been so helpful to so many for so long. Now you have
the chance to spend some time down on the Gulf Coast. It`s been seven months
since the hurricanes.
PAUL DIMEO, DESIGNER, "EXTREME MAKEOVER": Yes.
HAMMER: Were you just shocked by what you saw?
DIMEO: Unbelievable, A.J. I mean, you get down there. And, you know, I
watched it on TV. You know, I watched the news and saw it on the TV. But
when...
HAMMER: Doesn`t represent, though.
DIMEO: Not at all. I mean, we got off the bus, and it`s just mile after
mile, just gone, just like somebody wiped their hand right across and it`s
no longer there.
HAMMER: And any particular things that struck you, that said, "You know, I
couldn`t have imagined it was this bad"?
DIMEO: Yes, one, no life at all, no bird life. You don`t see any animals at
all. I mean, we saw some wild dogs running around, but, for the most part,
silence.
You know, it`s like you`re looking at a black-and-white photograph, you
know, and it was meant to be in color. So it`s just been -- it really opened
my eyes to what was happening down there.
And, you know, we came down. We would look at it. Right after Katrina hit
and Rita hit, we said, "Well, we got to get down there. What are we going to
do?"
So, you know, right away, you say, well, we`re just a bunch of guys who know
how to build a home. You know, what are we going to do down there? But we
thought about it and said, "You know what? Let`s hit, you know, churches,
firehouses, schools, parks, that kind of thing, that a community then could
build itself around those."
HAMMER: So for this whole series, you`re not building homes and you`re not
helping specifically families that need your help and communities at large
with these other buildings?
DIMEO: Exactly, health clinic. Preston did a great memorial there in Biloxi.
I was in Sabine Pass doing a firehouse, a great bunch of firemen who waited
until the last hour to get out, and they were the first ones back when they
came back.
The little town of Sabine Pass was pretty much gone. So, you know, it`s hard
for families to come back and kind of rebuild, knowing that there`s no
paramedics or no one to help them if they were in trouble, so...
HAMMER: You have to have some basic infrastructure.
DIMEO: Exactly.
HAMMER: And people probably would be shocked to learn a lot of that still
doesn`t exist.
DIMEO: Still does not exist. I mean, the needs down there are -- you know,
you say to yourself, you know, "When will it be back to normal?" And I don`t
know when; I just don`t know when.
I mean, the people have left. Some will never come back. Some will come
back. So it`s a tough -- you know, here it is right here in our own
backyard. You know, the size of Great Britain, that`s what`s gone, so it`s
big.
HAMMER: So you`re down there working on, let`s say, a clinic. Of course,
it`s work that needs to get done. But at any point during the project, are
you saying to yourself or maybe amongst each other saying, "OK, it`s great
that we`re doing this. But, you know, the government really should be doing
this"?
DIMEO: You know, a government of the people, so we are the people. And
that`s who`s doing the work. I mean, I met so many volunteers down there,
people from all over the country, people from New York, New York
firefighters that have come down and helped out.
So, you know, I mean, we can do that. We can wash our hands and say, "Hey,
this is a government thing; let`s let them do it." But, you know, that`s a
real easy answer, you know? We got to take the bull by its horns and go down
and do what we need to do to bring these people back home, and that`s what
we`re doing.
HAMMER: But was it still clear to you, though, through what you saw, whether
it was work you were personally engaged with it or not, that this is
something -- you know, the government messed up here, and it`s not getting
done because they didn`t do the right thing?
DIMEO: Yes, I mean, there`s certainly -- we can put blame in a lot of
places. Yes, I mean, I know that we can deploy people very quickly. Why we
can`t get people out of the Superdome, I can`t figure that out.
But that`s the way it happened. And we`ll learn -- hopefully, we will learn
from that. And in the future, you know, we`ll try to be ahead of the
ballgame on that. I`m sure no one knew the devastation that Katrina and Rita
were going to bring when they came through. So you know, now we do. So if
this were to ever happen again, well, then, yes, then I`m pointing my
finger.
HAMMER: You guys have had such great success over the few years you`ve been
on the air. This is another great success story. What does it come down to
for you, as why this show strikes such a chord with people?
DIMEO: Boy, you know, it`s funny, because being in it for -- now we`re going
into our fourth season. And I just think it`s a need of -- how can helping
others be entertaining?
And how can it be -- I think we all have that need. We want to do that. We
want to lend a hand out to our neighbor. We want to help out the person
who`s down and bring them up.
And, you know, all we`re doing is sharing the events of a week with the
viewers at home, and it shows. I think it shows how genuine we are, and what
we want, and how the community rises with us to do this. It`s one of the
greatest experiences of my life.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
HAMMER: They should be very proud of themselves. The "Extreme Makeover: Home
Edition," after the storm four-part series begins tonight on ABC. Paul also
wants to let you know about a health campaign that he`s working on. You can
learn more about that at GoalStandard.com.
SHOWBIZ TONIGHT will be right back.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
ANDERSON: It is time now for a SHOWBIZ TONIGHT birthday shoutout, and this
is where we give fans a chance to wish their favorite stars a happy
birthday. Tonight, we`re sending one out to singer Chaka Khan. You remember
the `80s song, "I Feel For You"? Well, Chaka is celebrating her 53rd
birthday today.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hi, this is Michael Zurich (ph) in New York. And I just
want to wish Chaka Khan a happy, rockin`, happy birthday. You`re a terrific
singer. I enjoy your work, and I wish you all the best, and many, many happy
returns.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
HAMMER: Let out a long sigh, if you want to. Tomorrow is Friday. And to find
out what`s coming up on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT, here comes your "Showbiz Marquee."
Tomorrow, we will take an inside look at "Inside Man" star Jodie Foster. The
Oscar-winner dishes with SHOWBIZ TONIGHT about her new movie, motherhood and
the secrets behind her four decades of success. It`s Jodie Foster in the
interview you`ll see only on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
Also tomorrow, Jared Leto, versatile actor, frontman of his very own rock
band, and now he`s in a role that`s 25 years in the making. Jared Leto is
going to be playing Mark David Chapman, the guy that shot and killed John
Lennon. We`ll ask him about the amazing transformation he underwent for that
role, tomorrow on SHOWBIZ TONIGHT.
And that is it for SHOWBIZ TONIGHT. Thanks for watching. I`m A.J. Hammer in
New York.
ANDERSON: I`m Brooke Anderson in Hollywood. Stay tuned for the latest from
CNN Headline News. Good night, everybody.
END
9.13.2006
Hi Brian,
Gerry here from keywordcandy.com. I'm a long time reader of your dream drawings. I think your site easily falls in the top five most entertaining sites on the planet! I'm just enthralled by your dreams. The 1st night I found your site my brother and I both spent 6 or 7 hours going through a few months worth of your dreams and checking them against various Internet resources for accuracy. We were both wide-eyed and amazed over and over again as we found incredible similarities between your dreams and actual world events. Since that day, I'm 100% convinced that there is something to your dreams that is undeniable and unexplainable.
Nowadays, anytime something of any significance happens in the world, one of the first things I think is to check Brian's site. 99% of the time, you've already informed us of the coming event through your dreams. I never cease to be amazed. Yes, in my house, if I speak of Brian, everyone knows who I'm talking about. I imagine your name is becoming somewhat of a household name more and more with others like me.
reply
Hi, thank you very much for your complements, have been to you site yet, but I defiantly will...and thanks for this information, did not even know about this DD and I think there is a connection.
Brian
Here is your
DD3316:
"irwin 5:20 pm 9/3/65, he is right, NY, Lola in danger, help him, ec"
As you well know, Steve Irwin, the crocodile hunter died on 9/4 off Low Island.
I saw your full post on the subject where you mention
DD2873 and Jeff Corwin, the other Animal Planet TV personality, but you didn't mention
DD3316, so I thought I'd point this one out to you. Do you think there might be a connection?
I'm noting specifically:
"Irwin, 9/3, Lola" vs. "Irwin, 9/4, Low Island"
The time difference is 15 hrs between you, in West Virginia (is that right?) and Low Island so it seems that you could say 9/3 your time and the time of the accident could have actually been 9/4 at 8:20 AM there in Australia. Either way, it seems possible but I could be wrong.
Best of wishes to you and your family!
Gerry
<
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