Word: abc
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Then he was gone - away from Atlantic, off to ABC Paramount, for the life of an interpretive rather than creative artist. Ray Charles sings country? Well, why not? He had a smash with ?I Can?t Stop Loving You? - the kind of success that can propel an artist (or at least allow him to cruise) toward a career as a non-hit-producing musical treasure. For the next four decades, he toured, guested on TV shows, earned honors galore, including a Presidential Medal and a charter membership in the Rock ?n Roll Hall of Fame. It was coasting, sure...
...June 15. Charity Folks’ website, www.charityfolks.com, features the high-profile roster of celebrity participants—which includes a behind-the-scenes evening spent on the set of The NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, a day at the home of the Kennedys and a tour of ABC News with Diane Sawyer—and allows registered users to cast online bids...
...producers at ABC quickly agreed to be our partners at the summit and set to work on a series of reports, including the stories listed here, that will air all this week on Good Morning America, World News Tonight with Peter Jennings and Nightline. Reports from the series, "Critical Condition: America's Obesity Crisis," will also be featured on World News Tonight Sunday, World News Now, World News This Morning, ABC News Radio and ABCNews.com...
...much of a mood to listen to speechifying about the international mess last week--certainly not to grand expositions of doctrine and principle tethered only vaguely to the horrors on the ground. My guess is, you're losing patience with being orated at as well. Some evidence: An ABC News/Washington Post poll tracked "emotional responses" to the situation in Iraq. The "emotions" measured sounded like a Postmodern parade of Snow White's dwarfs: Angry, Hopeful, Proud, Worried and Frightened. Angry had almost doubled, from 30% to 57%, since March. Hopeful and Proud had taken a hit (although Hopeful...
...turning. Preliminary data suggest that 2003 was the first year since 1998 that the percentage of Americans who are obese did not increase. But that doesn't include kids, and it still leaves us at epidemic levels. What can be done? That's the question TIME and ABC News set out to explore in a joint reporting project this spring. The answers in the pages that follow, and in the broadcasts airing this week, will surprise and, we hope, inspire...