MSNBC Weekend Dayside anchored by Stone Phillips 12:00 hour.

MSNBC Weekend Dayside anchored by Stone Phillips 12:00 hour.

NBC ID: ARDOEG2W0R | Production Unit: MSNBC Live (Dayside) | Media Type: Aired Show | Media ID: MNBC-DAY-20010121-0004 | Air Date(s): 01/21/2001 | Event Date(s): 01/21/2001

Transcripción

Event Date(s): 01/21/2001 | Description: 12:00:00 Weekend Magazine anchored by Stone Phillips. 12:05:40 NBC News Correspondent Keith Morrison reports NBC"Dateline" package titled"Risky Business." Black and white clip from a 1950's era television show seen. Teenagers ride down the road on bicycles and sit around a campfire roasting hot dogs as in voice over an unidentified man says"Would Kay like to go for a bike ride or a weenie roast". Actors Tara Reid and Thomas Ian Nichols are seen in a clip from the movie"American Pie." During interview a student identified only as Luandra (ph) says"It all leads to something about sex". Reid and Nichols are seen in a clip from the movie. During interview a student identified only as Laurie (ph) says that sex is very in the culture. Reid and Nichols are seen in a clip from the movie. A student identified only as Jason says that parents would lose their minds if they really knew what was going on. Reid and Nichols are seen in a clip from the movie. Quick low level shot of a male and female teenagers walking holding hands. A teenage boy (faces unseen) plays with his girlfriend's hair. Document graphic with supers: teen pregnancy rate fell; U.S. rate remains very high; sex is not acceptable for high school age teens. Average Age At Intercourse graphic with supers: United States 16.3; Germany 17.4; Netherlands 17.7 seen. During interview with NBC's Keith Morrison. During interview Morrison discusses what parents would do if they knew how sexually active their middle school and early high school aged children were with Laurie, Jason, Luandra and a student identified only as Tommy. During the interview Tommy says that sex is more like a recreational activity and the other students agree. Shot pans across an unmade bed to sports trophies on a dress. Collage of fashion magazine is seen as"Oops I did it again" sung by singer Britney Spears is heard. Reid and Nichols are seen in a clip from the movie"American Pie". Close up of a soft drink pouring on a woman's lips seen. Close up shot of a girl taking her shirt off over her head. Teenage boy and girl sit at desk laughing. Spears is seen in a clip from the video for her song"I'm Not That Innocent". Silhouette of people hugging. People seen dancing. Actor Jason Biggs is seen in a clip from the movie"Boys and Girls Sex Changes Everything". A man removes his shirt in a music video. A woman dances around in a music video. During interview Jason says that he doesn't think parents get the fact that they're up against an army trying to promote sex. Quick shot of people kissing during the opening credits to the show"Loveline" with TV-14 rating graphic in the corner. During interview sex expert Dr. Drew Pinsky says that he tries to use the media to get the culture to move in healthier direction towards sex. Low level shot of Pinsky looking over the shoulder of an unidentified woman at a computer. Pinsky's web site seen. Pinsky is seen in a clip from"Loveline". Regular shot of Pinsky look over a woman's shoulder as she works at a computer. Pinsky's web site seen. Pinsky sits in a radio booth talking on a microphone. Close up of an audiometer inside the studio seen. Pinsky and an unidentified man are seen through the window of the radio booth. Pinsky speaks with a caller in a clip from"Loveline" as co-hosts Adam Carolla and Diane Farr and rapper Coolio look on. Pinsky, Carolla and Farr are seen in a clip from the show. During interview Pinsky says that he tries to get into young people's culture regarding sex and that he doesn't promote liberal sexual acts but he does promote the discussion of them. Carolla and Pinsky are seen in a clip from the show. During interview Pinsky says that the programs that he does do have the potential to do harm so he makes sure that something good comes out of every call. Close up of a person pushing a button on a radio station control panel. Pinsky wearing a headset and speaking into a microphone takes a listener's call on his radio show. Pinsky is seen speaking with a caller through the window of the radio booth. During interview Pinsky says the teenage sex culture in America is disturbed. Pinsky and Carolla are seen during the radio show. During interview Pinsky says that he was shocked when he spoke with teenager girls who told him that the decision to make out with their boyfriend was the decision to have oral sex. During interview Laurie discusses oral sex as the others students look on. Graphic with article on oral sex seen. During interview Laurie says the women people have oral sex they believe they're still a virgin so they think it's ok. On 1998-01-17 President Bill Clinton says"I did not have sexual relations with that woman" during his deposition. Clinton is seen hugging his former mistress and White House intern Monica Lewinsky. During interview the students discuss if Clinton's remarks about oral sex had any influence on their sexual activity. During interview Tommy says that part of the problem is that kids give oral sex a lesser value they don't realize that it's just as emotionally and psychically damaging. During interview sex expert Debra Haffner says that most 8th graders are concerned about learning how to French kiss. Haffner's book"From Diapers to Dating" is seen. Haffner reads a document at her desk. During interview Haffner says that there have always been sexually adventurous 8th grade and that she bets Morrison can remember the names of the girls in his school who were giving oral sex to the football time. Overhead shot of a person spinning a glass Coca-Cola bottle. During interview Haffner says that people her age would play spin the bottle at parties as kids and now kids hook up. During interview Jason says that hooking up is when you make out, have oral sex or sex with a person but you're not a couple. Graphic of a people kissing with supers: hooking up; player seen. During interview the students discuss what a player is. Clip from"Loveline" credit seen. Low level shot of a teenage couple walking hand in hand. Close up of a teenage couple kissing. During interview Haffner says that she wants parents to tell their children that their sexual feelings are wonderful but that they're not ready for intercourse and that parents should tell their children that if they're are going to have sex to use protection. Haffner also says that in America it's ok for parents to tell their children not to drink but that if they do drink to not drive but it's not ok for parents to tell their children to use contraceptives if they're going to have sex. Close up of birthday cakes with candles in the shape of 13 and 14 seen. During interview Haffner says parents usually sit their children down at around 13 or 14 and tell them everything about sex and that didn't work for people in her generation and it's not going to work for teenagers today. Panning shot of backpacks on hooks in a classroom. Close up of a lock on a locker as people walk down a school hallway. Rear shot of a student opening up a door to a school. During interview the students discuss why going to their parents with questions about sex is hard. Stills of Laurie and her mother are seen. During interview Laurie discusses the time when she told her mother she was going to have sex with her boyfriend. Document graphic with supers: Friends; TV, media, and other entertainment seen. Students get off a school bus. Students walk across a school campus. Students sit in a school cafeteria eating. Rear shot of students walking down a hallway. Students walk up a flight of stairs in to a school. Rear shot of students walking down a hallway holding hands. During interview Haffner says that she is amazed by how many parents stop asking their teenagers where they're going and what they're doing because they're supposed to be their child's parent no matter what their children say. Couples dance during the prom. In part voice over as a rear shot of a teenage couple holding hands is seen Pinsky says that we're either talking about sex to much and glorifying it or talking about it too little and all that's unhealthy. 12:21:39 NBC News correspondent Margaret Larson reports on a Dateline NBC package titled"Up In Smoke." In voice over graphic title and credit supers, unidentified teenage smoker girl says it is like something different, fun, a little accessory. In voice over and interview unidentified teenage smoker boy says he loves them, they taste way better than a cigarette. In interview girl says there's a bizillion and they taste good. Close up on lit bidi cigarette and smoke seen. Sign"market" seen. Internet web site for Smokers Choice Inc. with advertisement for pack of Irie bidis seen. Picture of Hindu goddess on pack of cherry flavored bidis seen. Bundle of bidis and wrapped bundle seen. In interview unidentified girl says her mother smokes and I don't think I would ever see her lighting up a bidi. Close up on lit bidi being smoked by unseen person seen. Tobacco from opened bidi and bidis on table seen. Hand holds lit bidi. Two boys share match to light bidis on street in India. Man smokes a bidi. Panning shot down stack of Darshan Classic Bidis seen. NBC's Margaret Larson reports on camera outside market in India, Larson holds up bidis. Pack of Darshan bidis with chocolate flavor seen. Pack of Darshan grape flavored bidis seen. In interview girl says smoking a regular cigarette when you first start is gross, tastes horrible, feels horrible, but if you are smoking a strawberry flavored cigarette it tastes better. In interview girl says they are definitely geared towards kids. Level shot of bidis on table, bleeds to wrapped bundle and bundle of bidis seen. Teenage boy smokes normal cigarette. Girl sitting with boys smokes cigarette. Boy smokes a cigarette in holder. Girl smokes cigarette. In voice over and interview unidentified smoker boy says cigarettes have something like 3000 chemicals that are not needed, but I believe that there is none of that in the bidis. Pile of bidis seen. Zoom to sign over door on exterior of the Booker T. Washington community service center in San Francisco, California seen. Three teenage boys including Frederick Johnson from the center who investigated bidis walk on sidewalk. Various packages of bidis from India seen. Package of Shivsagar cherry flavored bidis seen. Pile of bidis seen. In interview Frederick Johnson says nobody asked for his I.D. or how old he was. Panning shot on pile of bidis seen. Signs for neighborhood stores"deli","liquors","groceries-liquors" seen. Hand holds lit cigarette. Hand unrolls bidi and tobacco comes out. Open package of Ganesh Beedies with no warning label seen. Surgeon General's warning label on package of bidis seen. In interview Johnson says if cigarettes have to have them why shouldn't they have to (bidis). Three investigator boys walk on sidewalk. Close up on bidi being smoked by unseen person seen. Child workers roll and tie bidis in crowded room in India. Close up on young boy working seen. Panning shot of children rolling bidis in crowded room seen. Close up on hands rolling bidis seen. In interview Johnson says they are being exploited through almost slavery and have to live their lives rolling bidis (child labor). Children roll bidis in India. Boy with holes in shirt rolls bidis. Bundle packages of Mangalore Ganesh Beedies seen. Pile of bidis seen. Hand spins bundle package of bidis to show no tax stamp seen. Boxes on pallets in warehouse seen. Zoom out on box label"made in India" to other boxes on palates seen. Various packages of bidis seen. Bundle, bundle package, open box of bidis and loose bidis on table seen. Darshan black licorice flavored bidis package seen. In interview girl says shedoesn't believe there's any nicotine or anything in them at all. Frederick Johnson and two other teenage bidi investigators in interview seen. Graphic investigation report documents seen. In interview Massachusetts Public Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Koh says in the sea of conventional cigarette products which are deadly in and of itself we now have a more addictive and potentially more deadly product. Koh works at desk in office. In interview Koh says we found that the bidis had some five times the amount of tar, 3 times the amount of nicotine and carbon monoxide than what is seen in conventional filtered cigarettes. Koh says that is in a certain volume of smoke. Internet web page for Quintin USA with pictures of bidis seen. Close up panning shot on web site title"Smokers Choice Inc." seen. Web site with scrolling picture and description of bidis seen. Split screen of lit cigarette and lit bidi being smoked by unseen persons seen. Hand opens bidi to show tobacco. Pile of bidis seen. Close up on man smoking bidi seen. Boy in India puffs on bidi touching lit bidi in another boy's mouth. Close up on man smoking bidi seen. Smoke from bidi is blown out mouth and nose of smoker (faces unseen). In interview Koh says the user has to smoke harder, inhale harder, and that involves a person drawing in deeply, inhaling deeply, ultimately getting more toxins and having a higher risk of addiction. Close up on lit bidi seen. In interview bidi smoking boy says if you sit there and hold it in your hand it is going to go out, I don't have a problem with that, just keep smoking and keep smoking and you don't have a problem. Close up on bidi being lit seen. Smoking bidi seen. In interview Koh says we don't know (if kids smoke more bidis than cigarettes) the concern is that the appeal is high and getting higher. Open box of bidis and loose bidis seen. Person sitting on ground holds cigarette. Open canister of Skoal chewing tobacco seen. Bundle and bundle package of bidis seen. In interview Koh says whether they are advertising for a target audience or not, the target is being hit, we are very concerned that they are marketed like candy and that is not the way an addictive product should be sold. Package of bidis seen. Packages of bidis with Hindu motifs seen. Darshan bundle package seen. Pile of bidis seen. Landscape signs and exterior of the Centers For Disease Control in Atlanta, Georgia seen. Licorice bidis package seen. Cherry bidis package seen. Strawberry Kailas bidis package seen. Chocolate Darshan package seen. Grape Darsan package seen. Lemon flavored bundle package seen. Rear shot of teenage couples walking on street seen. Rear shot of girl walking with man seen. Rear shot of man walking with New York Yankees cap on bookbag seen. Close up on lit bidi seen. In interview smoker girl says she was a little 13 year old punk and was like yeah, whatever, give me a cigarette, that's how I started, because it is really hard to stop. (why she still smokes) 12:32:20 NBC News correspondent John Larson reports a Dateline NBC story entitled"All The Rave?". Black and white hidden camera video showing teenagers and partygoers at a rave party (throughout segment) with flashlights, wearing masks, people on drugs talking (with supered text), inhaling nitrous oxide from balloons, teenager discussing getting oxygen cut off from her brain and feeling good, and people dancing at rave party seen. Exterior of a warehouse building seen. Black and white and color hidden camera video of rave party, teenager inhaling drug substance, man asking if girl wants ecstasy drug, and people dancing seen. In interview uncle of teenaged girl who died from a drug she'd taken unknowingly, Raul Farias (ph) says Hillory (his niece) went out with some friends to a club. Still of 17-year-old Hillory Farias seen. Panning shot of figurines and framed photo of Hillory seen. Raul walks along a pier. Hillory's bed inside her bedroom seen. In voice over Raul says Hillory came home from the party not feeling well and went to bed, and states the next morning she never woke up and died in her sleep. Flowers on Hillory's headstone, and close up of headstone seen. Still of Hillory seen. Raul says they found out a month later that Hillory died from GHB (gamma hydroxybutyrate). Chemical breakdown chart of GHB seen. Close up of a vial seen. Powder is mixed in liquid. Panning stills and Hillory seen. Flowers on Hillory's headstone seen. Raul says"Taking GHB is like playing Russian roulette. You might survive the first go-round, but you don't know how strong that next batch is going to be. And that batch could end up killing you, like it has killed others." People dance at rave parties. Stills of rave party victim Jimmy Lyons (ph), (who died from taking drugs ecstasy and Ketamine) seen. Aerial of car accident in a ravine in the Angeles National Forest in California with still inserts of 5 teenaged victims seen. Cordoned off road with emergency vehicles parked. Debris on ground. Emergency vehicles at accident location. Aerials of sheriff's helicopter in flight, and car in ravine seen. In interview Jim Molesa (ph) of the US Drug Enforcement Administration says parents don't know what their kids are getting into. Unidentified parents of 16-year-old daughter say they've never been to a rave party. Daughter Amy (only name given) curls hair in bathroom. Black and white hidden camera of Amy (undercover for Dateline) at a rave party seen. Amy and parents sit together. Amy's father says he wants his daughter to see the lifestyle before she gets involved. Black and white hidden camera video of Amy being scanned with a metal detector before entering a rave party in Mesa, Arizona seen. At night, headlights of cars seen. Rear shot of people walking along alleyway at night seen. Rave party advertisements including one by"Drop& Roll Productions" seen. Amy stands near sport utility vehicle in parking lot. Hidden video of people outside rave party, man scanning with medal detector, black and white of Amy inside party, crowd inside with music heard, Amy is solicited for drugs including ecstasy seen. Clips of ecstasy pills seen. Person flicks vile of heroin. Extreme close up of person smoking marijuana seen. Inside a warehouse, boxes of illegal drugs move on conveyor. Packages of ecstasy are taken from box. Bags of ecstasy seen. Close up of ecstasy pills seen. In interview Amy says she was solicited for drugs 8 times, adds it was scary and exciting, and wonders how they could try to sell the drugs to teenagers. Molesa and Larson look at video of a rave party on a monitor. Molesa says he can't comment on ongoing investigations, and adds at the appropriate time, they are going to make arrests. At the Nile Club, hidden video of a rave party seen. Amy says there was only one girl at the party that wasn't on any drugs. Black and white hidden video of Amy talking with people on drugs including ecstasy with supered text, people dancing, people sucking on pacifiers, close up of a pacifier, people shaking glow sticks while dancing, close up of a glow stick, close up of a jar of Vicks Vapo-Rub, teenager talking with Amy about using Vicks Vapo-Rub, and one holding jar seen. Jar of Vicks Vapo-Rub and a face mask seen. Person wears face mask at rave party. DJ (disc jockey) works turntable while playing music. People dancing seen. Molesa says people who think these are safe drugs haven't done their homework. Hidden video at party showing Amy being solicited for drugs including Ketamine with supered text seen. Bottle of Ketamine taken from a box seen. Close up of box and bottle with name Ketaset seen. Overhead shot of people dancing seen. Amy talks with drug pusher about how to take the drugs including ecstasy and Ketamine with supered text seen. Molesa says"Part of the problem is not just the ecstasy, but when they're cocktailing, if they're mixing ecstasy with Ketamine or GHB or some other drugs to either increase or decrease the effects of the ecstasy." Black and white video of teenagers at a rave party, and teenagers walking near a person lying on ground motionless seen. 12:49:45 Mother Onya Lieberman (ph) knocks on the door to her son's bedroom in the morning and tells him it's time to get up. Onya's son Jason Lieberman (ph) seen lying in bed and telling his mother"five minutes". Camera pans Onya standing at the doorway to Jason's room telling him to get up seen. Jason in bathroom, Jason walking down stairs, and Jason talking to his mother in their kitchen seen. In vo, Onya says that when Jason was younger he used to go to sleep at eight o'clock and wake up in the morning cheery. In interview, Onya says that Jason's gruffness is new for him. Camera pans Onya talking to Jason in the kitchen. In interview, Jason says he doesn't like to wake up, and says that he would sleep until two-p.m. everyday if he could. Jason uses the remote control to a TV, and eats his breakfast. Peltz reports on camera. In interview, Brown University Professor of Psychiatry Mary Karscadin (ph) says that teenagers need to understand the importance of sleep. Camera pans Mary sitting at a desk in her office. Panning shot of the exterior of the Bradley Sleep Lab seen. Laboratory researchers operate laboratory equipment. Close up of a machine printing vital sign patterns on paper. Half moon in night sky, exterior of a home, full screen shot of sun, and a bird sitting on a pole seen. Jason gets out of bed and walks out of his room. Panning shot of teenagers sitting at desks in a classroom, Jason resting his head on his desk in class, a teenager holding his head up, and Jason rubbing his face seen. Jason says that he remembers when going to sleep wasn't a problem, says that now he can't go to sleep when he wants to, and says he has to sleep when his body tells him to. Mary confers with colleagues. Panning close up of images of teens lying on beds in a sleep lab, panning shot of a computer monitor displaying vital sign patterns, panning close up of printed vital sign being printed, panning shot of a teenager lying on a bed in a sleep lab, camera zooming in on a school bell ringing, students walking in a school corridor, students walking down steps, and a silhouetted student sitting near a window seen. Mary says that teenagers are being asked to be awake in school at a time when their minds are still asleep. In Minnesota, a school bus moves through a parking lot. Students enter Edina (ph) High School in Minnesota. Wide shot of lockers and students walking down a corridor inside Edina, and camera panning from wall clock to students in class seen. In interview, a student says that the extra hour of sleep (provided by a school start time of 8:30 am) is really wonderful. Panning shot of students in class, close up of a teacher writing on a board, and panning shot of a student writing at a desk seen. In interview, Edina Principal Ron Tesch (ph) says that the later school opening has made a significant difference. Students exit a classroom, Jason exits a school with other students, Jason gets into a minivan, Jason picks up plates in his kitchen, and Jason sets the dinner table in his home. Mary says that kids are only sleeping seven hours a night, says that every night kids are losing an hour and an hour and a half of sleep a night, and adds that it builds into a tremendous sleep debt. Jason talks on a cordless phone in his room. Onya tells Jason"good night" and Jason waves. Jason says that if going to bed early became a routine it would be easier, but adds he's not sure he'd be able to start the routine that easily. Jason eats a slice of pizza, and sits down with another teen on a couch. Onya eats pizza in her kitchen. Jason and a friend watch TV. Mary says that the afternoon nap may be a good strategy for some teens. Camera pans darkened hallway at night. Jason says that he goes to bed on a Friday night between the hours of 12 am and 2 am, and says on Saturday he gets up between the hours of 2 p.m. and 3 p.m., and says he's just missing the morning. Jason walks outside his home, and walks to a minivan. Mary says that parents should give a little slack on weekends but not let kids sleep in too long. Students eat in cafeteria. Jason walks down steps in his home and turns off a light, Jason walks through his home, and walks into his room and shuts the light. Onya says that Jason is a good kid, and adds that she doesn't want to be a tyrant. Jason gets into bed and turns off his reading lamp. 12:56:00 Phillips closes the show. 12:58:26 MSNBC Weather. Graphic plug www.msnbc.com. 21:59:00 MSNBC Live report with Gina Gaston.

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Crédito:
NBC News Archives
Editorial n.º:
1273068822
Colección:
NBC News Archives Offline
Fecha de transmisión:
21 de enero de 2001
Fecha de subida:
Tipo de licencia:
Derechos exprés
Inf. de autorización:
No se cuenta con autorizaciones. Más información
Ubicación:
United States
Fuente:
NBC News Archives Offline
Nombre del objeto:
ARDOEG2W0R