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     are drawn they need to be cut. time to fire up the chainsaw. this is the most intimidating part. to the layman, it's the chainsaw. >> sure. yeah. >> reporter: kodiak burke, named after the bear, started using a chainsaw when he was ten years old. the safety i'm guessing is pretty important. >> very. >> reporter: he suited me up for action. >> they're made of a very, very tough fiber. >> reporter: ah, my very first pair of chainsaw chaps. really. should i be wearing a top with this. >> no, it's not necessary. >> reporter: well, we'll see. after a few practice cuts, i was having fun. >> nice. >> reporter: and then it was time to give a real log a bold cut. remember those lines we drew? it's like a loose tooth. >> there you go. >> reporter: okay. the moment of truth was upon us. would my log fit? i'm lined up. >> watch your fingers. >> reporter: so the fact that i can get my finger up here is not a good thing. >> that is not a good thing. >> reporter: as the saying goes, if it doesn't fit, you must use a giant mallette to slam it into place. fortunately as max friedman
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     poverty we have more province. the app could help to control a disease bliging the lives of millions. >>> do remember, you can go to website for the latest news and more. aljazeera.com. >> this week on talk to al jazeera katrina adams, she sits atop u.s. tennis as chairman of the board, ceo, and president of the united states tennis association. >> it's been 133 years since we were founded, so it is an honor to be the first... i don't think i have to fight for it uh...i was just being me. >> adams' climb to the top took a decade, and now the first african american and former professional player to lead the national governing body is busy setting the agenda for her two-year term. >> accountability, behavior, and communication. >> as the youngest person to hold the post, adams wants to use tennis to transform lives. >> it's about providing kids an opportunity to be better individuals not just better tennis players but better citizens. >> she is also hard at work trying to expand the game. >> part of my goals, are making sure that we grow our hispanic base here in the u.s. the fastest-growing population. >> katrina who grew up on the west side of chicago reflects on her introduction to tennis, and first playing in the nationals. >> i was such a cocky little kid not saying that much is changed, but it was fun. >> and of course we played the name game. >> johnny mac... >> wild, a...talented witty.... >> i spoke to katrina adams
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     ?? ?? ?? ?? >>> "star wars" secret affair revealed. >> whenever i start to talk harrison gets nervous. >> what carrie fisher says about a secret romance with harrison ford kept hidden for 40 years. >> i love you. >> i know. >> plus, brad pitt on the move. is he buying a new york bachelor pad? kate gosselin custody war?n and- the bombshell claims against his ex. >> there's something being hidden. >> why the father of eights he does not know where his son is. >> if you texted kate where is my son? >> yeah. i would love you to. >> i'll text her right now. >> a kale owe cuoco exclusive hard abs. >> now for november 16, 2016, this is "entertainment tonight". >> wait until you hear the reason prince harry wants private security to protect his american girlfriend. the details are on the way. but first, princess leah spilled the beans on an affair and apparently wasn't so solo after all. >> i saw him and he looked l will you date me? >> i think you can't bear to let a goshlgous guy like me out of your sight. >> your highness, that's another secret i can't tell you. ?? >> carrie finally admits it. she claims she and harrison had a three-month affair. she was 19, and he was a 33-year-old married father of two, calling the "star wars" set
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     illuminated manuscripts, these students are learning how they were made. >> basically, it's my first initial, and we got to design around our first initial. >> what you do is you blow your hot air onto the glue dots, and then you take the gold and you press it on. >> and then you get to use real gold and stick it on, and then you just have gold on your paper. it's really cool. >> what else is cool is the glue the monks used in the old days. it was made from fish guts. >> and everyone's gonna get an opportunity to do something, okay? >> the students learned that most colors came from nature. >> they used the flower to make the yellow, just like things like that to make paint... >> and purple, it came from this -- it's cochineal it's a type of bug. >> cochineal is a bug that comes from mexico, and it gave us a sort of a red color, as well. and what we do here is we actually grind it in order to create the pigments that the children are using. >> and the last color -- blue --
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     >> hinojosa: the wars in central >> hinojosa: the wars in central america have framed his life and shaped his work as a writer. in his latest book the art of political murder, he uncovers the truth behind one of guatemala's most notorious assassinations. award winning author francisco goldman. i'm maria hinojosa. this is one on one. francisco goldman, you're an award-winning author and a contributor to the new yorker. welcome to the show. >> it's very nice to be here. >> hinojosa: so, we're talking about some pretty serious stuff here. but it all kind of starts in an interesting way for you. you are this guatemalan jewish kid growing up in the northeast. and in the late 1970s, you make a decision, like a lot of kids, which is to take a road trip. and you take that road trip right into guatemala in a moment of civil war, essentially. >> well, my father's family... my father's from a russian jewish immigrant background family from here in boston. but my mother's family in guatemala is an old fashioned guatemalan mestizo catholic very traditional guatemalan family. and i had spent a lot of time in guatemala as a child, the first couple years of my life, almost every summer, summer after summer. but then, as i become more and more your typical american teenage kind of kid, i become sort of self-conscious about that. i want to fit in the way americans do. and i sort of begin to stay away from guatemala, i guess. i hadn't been down there probably since sixth grade or so. and sure, then in college one day with my friends, we didn't really have anything to do that summer.
CIA
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     and a special jibjab surprise, that will have you dancing. a jam-packed hour this tuesday. as we say -- >> good morning, america. >>> a lot of british spirit there this morning. all for a good reason. it is tea time here on "good morning america." all in honor of "downton abbey."
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     and a special jibjab surprise, that will have you dancing. a jam-packed hour this tuesday. as we say -- >> good morning, america. >>> a lot of british spirit there this morning. all for a good reason. it is tea time here on "good morning america." all in honor of "downton abbey."
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     something else be pulled, al gore's nobel peace prize. >> first off on the companies pulling out of this, maybe they're catching on to something you warned about. what do you make of this? >> i don't blame them. he probably see the email sent a couple of months ago by one of the leader of global warming and almost saying it's a con. and they see things like that, they see the fact in washington, we're building a big development and nobody with move because we have 48 inches of snow and it's not melting because it's cold. in new york we have had the coldest winter on record and all over -- you have friend in europe who are freezing. it's so cold. >> but donald, i talked to a lot of the environmentalists and they're saying this is goble warming. >> the problem we have is that the world is also got to play the game. we're scrubbing coal and doing things to make products more expensive and noncompetitive.
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     or call 1-800-752-6631. >>> good morning, america. 8:00 a.m. and the bell ringing in times square studios. the red-hot stars behind our favorite characters, here, live, direct from "downton abbey," taking your questions. >> what? >>> and "gma" rocking your holidays today. some sizzling dresses under 100 bucks. they'll have you jingling. >>> and andrea bocelli live. and a special jibjab surprise, that will have you dancing. a jam-packed hour this tuesday. as we say -- >> good morning, america. >>> a lot of british spirit there this morning. all for a good reason. it is tea time here on "good morning america."
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     >> and two a cappella groups alive. >>> staff and students say they hit the jackpot with one of their teachers that didn't start teaching until she was 80. >> they call her granny and she's been named the oldest living teacher in america. >> that is going to be a good one. >> reporter: at 102 years old, agnes is the oldest living and working teach never america. >> 102 i feel like maybe 95. >> reporter: she certainly doesn't act her age. better known as granny spent most of her adult life as a stay at home mom. and then at the ripe age of 80 starting her career as a cooking and sewing teacher. granny's daughter recruited >> i saw how she took care of
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     >> mr. trump, your reaction, particularly on this issue of late-term per shall birth -- >> i think it's terrible if you go with what hillary is saying in the 9th month you can take the baby and rip the baby out of the womb of the mother just prior to the birth of the baby. now, you can say that that's okay and hillary can say that that's okay. but it's not okay with me. because based on what she is saying based on where she's going and where she's been, you can take the baby and rip the baby out of the womb. in the 9th month. on the final day. that's not acceptable. >> that is not what happens in these cases. using that kind of scare
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     if my office becomes a plane if my office becomes a plane or an airport the... ...surface pro's perfect. fast and portable but also light. you don't do this 14 hours a day, 7 days a week... ...if you don't feel it in your heart. it's a weird night. we're officially having a weird night in the news. we just through the last hour just covered this. and it was interesting. the chyron at the bottom of the screen, that's like the -- see, there it is, the lower third thing, the red banner. the chyron on the screen for most of our coverage for that live event tonight said "trump holds first rally since election." and that's just weird. i mean, i'm not criticizing the producers who wrote that headline. it's true. it's just weird, right? it's weird. you have to sort of caption things that way as if it is a normal thing that there would be rallies since the election. right? as if this is the first one that we've been waiting for, as if it's a normal thing that a president-elect would keep holding campaign rallies after the campaign was over, after the election. i mean, presidents definitely hold big public events, right? presidents all the way back to the beginning of their being presidents, they have done big public events for their own re-election efforts or to try to elect other candidates who they support in other american elections or frequently presidents have done big public events after they're elected to try to sell the country on a specific idea like supporting the privatization of social security, we'll do rallies for that or supporting the auto bailout or something. presidents do public events. but this tonight, this trump thing that we just saw, this really isn't something that we've had before in american politics. this tonight, which we just covered, this was a campaign rally. this was trump holds first rally since election. this was a campaign rally. this was just a rally in support
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     >> the police officer said, >> the police officer said, "this is now a crime scene. nobody touch anything." it was just like, 'oh wow.' he did it and he took off. and we didn't know where he was. >> reporter: call it a mother's intuition. >> she had a sign, i don't know how, that something was wrong. her daughter, away at college, wasn't answering her phone. >> she was scared. she didn't know where alex was. >> reporter: then, terrible news. a student had been murdered. a young woman. but apparently it wasn't alex. >> the girl lyin' on the floor had very dark, almost black colored hair. she had much lighter hair. so who was it? and where was alex? >> at that point, it was one dead and perhaps another missing. the killer could be roaming a campus full of students. >> we were really scared. a mysterious tweet. >> what do you think it meant? >> i don't exactly know. >> reporter: a terrifying phone call: >> my son just called me and told me he killed somebody. >> reporter: and a terrible truth. >> i didn't know how. i didn't know who. i didn't know anything. i just know she was gone. >> reporter: i'm lester holt and this is dateline. here's andrea canning with "after midnight." 3 f2 medianoche. days at the beach come to an end, students flood back to college. it's the same scene year after year, at campus after campus. and every year, there's that new bunch, the freshmen. >> i was nervous for classes the first day because, you know, i'm that scared little freshman. >> reporter: all those worries, all those questions. >> do i really have to go to
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     how does that help us, right? where is that gjgood? it's not. so i would say, congratulations, that's the good news. let me give you the bad news. every car and every truck and every part manufactured in this plant that comes across thexérñ border we're going to charge you a 35% tax. okay? and that tax is going to be paid simultaneously with the transaction, and that's it. now, here is what is going to happen. if it's not me in the position, it's one of these politicians that we are running against the 400 people that we are dealing with and they are not so stupid and they know it's not a good thing, and they may be upset about it, and then they are going to get a call from the donors or probably the lobbyist for ford and say you can't do that to ford because ford takes care of me and i take care of you, and you can't do that to
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     ÷÷xxppppúú@@ ÷÷xxppppúú@@ >> en horas comienza del tributo pÓstumo mÁs grande de la historia. los angeles se prepara para el adiÓs pÚblico a no expulsar. autoridades de honduras mantienen cerrado el aeropuerto internacional de la capital, evitando que regrese el presidente depuesto. del pri, se vuelve a convertir en el partido polÍtico mÁs poderoso de mÉxico. en china, fuerzas gubernamentales habrÍan matado a mÁs de 150 personas durante disturbios. 80,000 fanÁticos se presentan en el estadio del real madrid para ver llegar a cristiano ronaldo. >> muy buenas noches y gracias por comenzar la semana con nosotros. sean bienvenidos a una nueva ediciÓn. marcos jackson, sigue siendo el evento mÁs mencionado en los h@h@h@h@h@h@h@h@h@h@h@h@txóodvpp desde los angeles, jaime garcÍa@ ha eado siguiendo todos los preparativos. >> buenas noches. han pasado coedidas desde la h@h@h@h@h@h@h
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     >> la ambiciÓn nuclear de irÁn >> la ambiciÓn nuclear de irÁn y la economÍa estuvieran en los ntos fuertes del debate de anoche entre los candidatos republicanos a la presidencia. el presidente de mÉxico rinde homenaje al fallecido secretario de gobernaciÓn y otros siete funcionarios del gobierno muertos al estrellarse el helicÓptero donde viajaban. momentos de pÁnico vive la opositora marÍa corina tejeda. y el grupo de hackers anonymous vuelve a poner en jaque al gobierno salvadoreÑo. >> bienvenidos a nuestraediciÓn nocturna. comenzamos con los balazos que irrumpen violentamente con el ambiente polÍtico en venezuela. la precandidata opositora a la pridencia marÍa corina machado pidieron este -vivieron este momento de pÁnico. participaban de una reuniÓn pÚblica en caracas la actividad fue interrumpido por disparos. segÚn la prensa local do personas montadas en motocicleta hicieron los disparoscontra el autobÚs de la polÍtica. machado informa que una de las mujeres que la acompaÑaba resultÓ herida de bala pero estÁ fuera de peligro. dijo que no estÁ azotada y que volverÁ al mismo barrio, el 23 de enero.
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     >> emiten aviso de tormenta h@Í >> emiten aviso de tormenta h@Í edna. los meteorÓgos advirtieron que no hay seÑales que la ola h@ desde texas hasta michigan. >> la humedad y el calor se han combinado el resultado han sido temperaturas que chacÍa rato no se veÍan en esta ciudad por ejemplo se teÍuna teh@etura uni-fd13 os >> aquÍ las tempeaturas alcanzaron los 114 grados los niÑos combatÍan el calor manteniÉndose hidratados en parques de agua grafpiscinas a pesar de las altas tempraeturas, en chicago se celebrÓ el evento anual de degustaciÓn donde se sirvieron los platos mÁs calientes de la ciudad >> este vendedor dice que not f@ sperante estar al aire libre.
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     we need to debate or at least get out on the record is what i view as a recent push by some policymakers in washington certainly within some constituent members of the fsoc if not the fsoc itself is to attempt to vilify in this context electronic trading specifically as the cause of the lack of liquidity, which to me is turning the world on its head. i listened to dr. harris and i'm intryinged by his notions when i've been following for while, maybe a thousand chutes will grow from the chaos of all these rules that have decreased liquidity. maybe it will be a hedge fund or maybe it will be a broker dealer that trades fixed income. but employing new technology, new business models, electronic trading is happening in the aftermath of all of these other changes yet being pointed at, blamed for this lack of liquidity. and we can't let this narrative go unchallenged. you've seen it in the fsoc annual report. there was a drive by of it in the multi agency report that came out last october. and i've been around this town long enough there always has to be a boogeyman somewhere when you're trying to misdirect. i think this is an area that we need to encourage and not run away from and not vilify, not accept the standard pushback that we're getting. and the second point, too which is this notion of the aggregate impact of regulation. and your question, which i think is a good one, how much of it is standard post crisis and how much of it is regulation. i was listening closely to sandy. i think we've reached a point where we've seen historically 2008 to maybe into '11 where
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     captioning sponsored by captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions
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     captioning sponsored by wpbt captioning sponsored by wpbt >> no one was tougher than i was in trying to protect the american taxpayer. >> paul: former treasury secretary henry paulson gets grilled on capitol hill for his role in the sale of merrill lynch to bank of america. the tough questioning and his answers ahead. >> susie: the bankruptcy countdown is on for c.i.t. tonight. the nation's leading small business lender is poised to fail. now that uncle sam has put away his checkbook. coming up, what c.i.t.'s failure could mean to small businesses that depend on it. >> paul: j.p. morgan chase checks in with record second quarter revenues. analysis of the results and a preview of what's ahead for the financial sector in the second half. >> susie: google continues to search out profits. the company posted a near 20% rise in second quarter earnings. but the giant web search engine isn't firing on all cylinders. we'll explain. >> paul: i'm paul kangas. >> susie: and i'm susie gharib. this is "nightly business report" for thursday, july 17. "nightly business report" is made possible by: this program was made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. 7//&
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     captioning sponsored by wpbt captioning sponsored by wpbt >> susie: the jobs picture brightens as unemployment dips slightly and fewer jobs are lost in july. the white house says today's employment report confirms the economy has pulled back from the brink. >> jeff: lawmakers head home to hear from the people who sent them to washington, and they're getting an earful as town hall meetings on health care reform get heated. >> susie: our market monitor guest says there's too much euphoria in the markets, and it's time for investors to bank some profits. he's richard steinberg, president of steinberg global asset management. >> jeff: then, a.i.g. shares soar as the tax payer investment finally turns a profit. but the bailed-out insurer isn't out of the woods yet. we'll tell you why. >> susie: i'm susie gharib. >> jeff: and i'm jeff yastine. paul kangas is off tonight. this is "nightly business report" for friday, august 7. "nightly business report" is made possible by: this program was made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. >> susie: good evening, everyone. the nation's unemployment rate fell for the first time in a year, and president obama said today that the worst of the recession may be over.
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     captioning sponsored by wpbt captioning sponsored by wpbt >> paul: while consumers will see the first signs of the biggest overhaul of the credit card industry in two decades, tomorrow, many are already getting hit with rate changes and account closures. tonight, a look at the new provisions. >> susie: the head of whole foods lands in the middle of the health care debate, saying health care is not an intrinsic right. but his views aren't jiving with some of the organic grocer's die hard customers. >> paul: tonight's "street critique" guest sees performance anxiety gripping the markets this fall. he's doug roberts of channel capital research and he'll explain. >> the idea was to create a centralized transparent place for buyers and sellers to come together to sell assets that they can't sell on the public exchanges or other types of platforms. >> susie: he's talking about second market. we profile the market maker for hard to trade securities including california iou's. >> paul: i'm paul kangas. >> susie: and i'm susie gharib. this is "nightly business report" for wednesday, august 19. "nightly business report" is made possible by: this program was made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. 7//& >> susie: good evening everyone. the internal revenue service today lifted the veil of secrecy on a major swiss bank. the names of 4,500 americans with accounts at u.b.s. were handed over to the taxman. those clients are suspected of hiding their assets and evading u.s. taxes.
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     >> frontli is made possible >> frontli is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like yo with mor funding from the john d. and caerine t. macarthur foundation committed to buildg a more just, veant and peaceful world. and adtional funding for frontline d for "poisoned waters" from the park foundation. committed to rsing public awareness. major funding r "poisoned ters" was provided by the seattle foundation. yo gift, your community. thrussell family foundation. the wallace getic foundation. the morris and gwendol cafertz foundation. the key campbell foundatn for the environmen the merrill fami foundation. with additional nding from: the ell foundation the bullitt fodation the rauch foundati. and by theollowing: a completeist is available from pbs. >> narrator: puget sod. chesapeake bay. they are arica's great coastal estuarieand they are in pil. >> i would put pugetound in the intensive care unit. the situation is crical. the chesapeake bay is like
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     with t.j.maxx, marshalls and homegoods. with t.j.maxx, marshalls and homegoods. >>> i'm chris wallace. president-elect trump takes a victory lap and previews what's in store when he takes the oath of office next month. >> i'm going to discuss our action planning to make america great again. >> and trump is already acting, intervening to u.s. and naming a retired marine general to lead the pentagon. >> we are going to appoint "mad dog" mattis as our secretary of defense. >> then, insults fly when top officials from the clinton and trump campaigns meet at a harvard forum. >> i would rather lose than win the way you guys did. >> no, you wouldn't. >> yes. >> we'll get the latest on that from top adviser kellyanne conway. >>> then, green party presidential nominee jill stein, who's pushing for recounts in three states donald trump won narrowly. it's a "fox news sunday" exclusive. >>> plus, we'll ask our sunday panel what democrats should do now after their members in the house re-elect nancy pelosi as their leader. >>> and our power play of the week. veterans training service dogs and healing themselves. >> a worked better than any other intervention that i'm aware of. >> all right now on "fox news sunday." >>> and hello again from fox news in washington. this week donald trump demonstrated for any doubters still out there just how unconventional a president he will be. intervening directly to keep a thousand jobs from going to mexico, holding a campaign-style rally, where he continued to bash the media, and holding
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     >> this program is supported by >> this program is supported by disney. >> wherever there is life, there are stories of unbelievable adventure. this earth day, three families take an extraordinary journey across our planet. "earth"-- rated g. only in theaters. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. with major funding from the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation. committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. and additional funding for frontline and for "poisoned waters" from the park foundation. committed to raising public awareness. major funding for "poisoned waters" was provided by the seattle foundation. your gift, your community. the russell family foundation. the wallace genetic foundation. the morris and gwendolyn caferts foundation. the key campbell foundjror the environment. the merrill family foundation. with additional funding from: the abell foundation the bullitt foundation the rauch foundation. and by the following: >> narrator: puget sound. chesapeake bay. they are america's great coastal estuaries and they are in peril. >> i would put puget sound in the intensive care unit.
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     >> frontline is made possible >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. with major funding from the the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation. committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. with additional funding from the park foundation. committed to raising public awareness. >> in 2001, frontline reported on the dramatic rise in the number of children being given behavior-modifying medications. >> we cannot, as a nation, continue to play a game ofd russian roulette with our children's lives. >> leave our kids alone! don't label! don't drug! >> the medications were the subject of fierce debate. today, the concerns over medicating kids continue. >> 9-1-1... >> yeah, i need an ambulance. my daughter passed away in the night. >> what's going on? how old is she? >> my daughter passed away. >> and now, one million children have been diagnosed with a new and controversial diagnosis.
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     >> frontline is made possible >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. with major funding from the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation. committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. with additional funding from the park foundation. committed to raising public awareness. >> it was too good to be true. >> would you believe it, how the money rolled in? >> but nobody wanted to ask questions... >> you see a willful ignorance. nobody wants to get in the way of all this money. >> from small-time investors to sophisticated hedge fund managers. >> all these guys did was just dump money in, do no due diligence and count their money. it's amazing. >> smith: did madoff say to you, "don't put me in your prospectus?" >> yes, he did. >> smith: do you think that's right? >> and where were the regulators? >> "why didn't you find him?" is the question. >> i blame the government. i really, truly do. >> tonight on frontline, correspondent martin smith unravels "the madoff affair."
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     >> frontline is made possible >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. with major funding from the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation. committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. with additional funding from the park foundation. committed to raising public awareness. >> it was too good to be true. >> would you believe it, how the money rolled in? >> but nobody wanted to ask questions... >> you see a willful ignorance. nobody wants to get in the way of all this money. >> from small-time investors to sophisticated hedge fund managers. >> all these guys did was just dump money in, do no due diligence and count their money. it's amazing. >> smith: did madoff say to you, "don't put me in your prospectus?" >> yes, he did. >> smith: do you think that's right? >> and where were the regulators? >> "why didn't you find him?" is the question. >> i blame the government. i really, truly do. >> tonight on frontline, correspondent martin smith unravels "the madoff affair."