welcome back to who s talking. it not every week we can use the word legend but tonight, both of our guests meet that bar started with required duke basketball coach k opens up about the ncaa s problem. why he never went to the pros. and he answers the question every march madness fan wants to know. who do you see in the final four and you cannot say duke? and later, the man behind the music for some of the biggest movies in history. why jaws and star wars and ind indiana jones . the very simple unstoppable arhythmic structure, da, da, da, da. we have two things in common. do i get a hint? i find cooking really hard and stressful. do you feel your life is in danger? the love of my mother is what brought me here. what was the worst investment? there is a long list of really bad ones. with march madness around the corner, we go one on one with coach k. m mike with an impressive record with five national championships, three olympic golds, and the
in the history of the do you believe p duke program, maybe you ll disagree, the 19992 regional final against kentucky, over time 2.1 seconds left. duke is down by one. grant hill gets the ball. he throws it three-quarters of the way down the court to christian, dribbles one, turns, pivots, hits the shot. duke wins by one. what do you remember about that moment? well, to be quite frank with you, the elation, the joy that our group experienced and chris, right in front, i couldn t see the shot go in but i knew it went in because everybody was jumping. right in front of me richy farmer, one of the great kids who played for kentucky collapsed right on the court. and, you know, i still get chills thinking of it because it
opportunities if it wasn t for the people that fought for us and gave their lives for us. chris: it is that plainspoken wisdom drifting moral woosetr for years, on a mission that touches america s heart. each december he places wreaths at arlington national cemetery. a thousands of people are there to help him. a lot of people think like i do. they appreciate the veterans. they want to show it. chris: this story begins back in 1962 when worcester, a 12-year-old paper boy from maine won a trip to washington. what impressed him most was arlington, its beauty, dignity and rows and rows of graves. everyone represents a life and a family and a story. they re not just tombstones. i mean those are all people. chris: 30 years later in 19992 he was running his own wreath
he wouldn t have the opportunities if it wasn t for the people that fought for us and gave their lives for us. chris: it is that plainspoken wisdom drifting moral woosetr for years, on a mission that touches america s heart. each december he places wreaths at arlington national cemetery. a thousands of people are there to help him. a lot of people think like i do. they appreciate the veterans. they want to show it. chris: this story begins back in 1962 when worcester, a 12-year-old paper boy from maine won a trip to washington. what impressed him most was arlington, its beauty, dignity and rows and rows of graves. everyone represents a life and a family and a story. they re not just tombstones. i mean those are all people. chris: 30 years later in 19992
opportunities if it wasn t for the people that fought for us and gave their lives for us. chris: it is that plainspoken wisdom drifting moral woosetr for years, on a mission that touches america s heart. each december he places wreaths at arlington national cemetery. a thousands of people are there to help him. a lot of people think like i do. they appreciate the veterans. they want to show it. chris: this story begins back in 1962 when worcester, a 12-year-old paper boy from maine won a trip to washington. what impressed him most was arlington, its beauty, dignity and rows and rows of graves. everyone represents a life and a family and a story. they re not just tombstones. i mean those are all people. chris: 30 years later in 19992 he was running his own wreath