Word: tells
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...TIME: Tell me about the title of your book. Gifford: Well, it's funny, because a young kid named Daniel interviewed me a couple of days ago. "Explain the title of this to me," he said. I said, "Daniel, forgive me, but I'm assuming you're a man. Is that correct?" He said yes. I said, "Tell me how old you are." He goes, "Twenty-three." I said, "You're not exactly my target audience." It's all about a woman's reproductive cycle and how we become fertile in terms of bearing children at a young...
...truth about my age, and it stuck with me. I think honesty is always better. People can look you up in your yearbook. They can Google you. What's the point of lying about it anyway? That just makes people look foolish. It's one thing to not tell certain things about yourself. I think that's totally fine. Don't lie about stuff. You're too easily found out these days...
...Tell me about the Today show. How is that going? That is going surprisingly well. I was kicking and screaming going back to TV. It was not something I was interested in at all. They talked me into it, and I'm glad they did, now looking back on it. By the time [co-host Kotb] and I sit in those stools, people have had three hours of pretty tough news to have to digest, and we're the alternative programming. TIME magazine called it the happy hour. And that's really what...
...work their way through piles of bad assets and tight credit. The process is not over. Major US banks may need tens of billions of dollars more in government assistance when the results of the "stress tests" of bank viability are finalized later this month. The Treasury may tell Bank of America (BAC) that it needs $15 billion in additional capital and the bank may be able to raise that money on the government's deadline. If it can't, it could be merged into another bank the way that Wachovia and Washington Mutual were. The government has avoided getting...
...early to tell whether those threats will be acted upon or are merely the words of brigands feeling stung after getting their way for so long. The pirates have had uninterrupted rule of Somalia's seas for several months, and a spate of recent attacks suggests they are broadening their range to well beyond the Gulf of Aden to several hundred miles off the Somali coast. They once portrayed themselves as a coast guard for a country that has no government, and said they were striking back against fishing boats that illegally fished and dumped toxic waste in their waters...