years ago when i was young i probably wouldn t be sitting here. i would still be stuck with the image thing. i was really into the gang-banger scene. i was really caught up. lee s childhood neighborhood was riddled with gangs. and lee joined up when he was barely in his teens. not listening to my family. not listened to ma. do everything. running with the wrong crowd. i put my homies before my family. and that s all i knew was my homies. homey this. homey that. lee told us, despite being shot five times and serving a prior prison sentence, he couldn t give up gang life. then, his story took a turn. it had to do with recruiting his younger brother into the gang. when i was growing up, i never thought i would get past 21. i want my brother to get the same respect i was getting from the neighborhood. so, when i m gone, my brother gets the same respect.
over a half million lives every year. they haven t come up with the answer to curing cancer. we all know that. so if they don t have the cure, why would you close off and not look at other options? there are no respectable oncologists out there who buy into these theories. for an author like suzanne somers to say these men are curing cancer, and that they re being suppressed by the establishment is very irresponsible. there s a big voice like doctor andrew weill coming out on the side of more mainstream medicine, well, that s part of the controversy we re going to address sunday night. it s a very interesting hour. look, any of us, there are millions, have cancer in the family. you know, all touched by it. you can feel very desperate. a lot of people look for alternatives, but what are some of the unorthodox treatments highlighted in this book? one of the doctors we look at in texas uses proteins that he
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the ed show live from madison, wisconsin. that s tonight, 10:00 p.m. eastern time. soy won t want to miss that. meantime, hundreds of thousands have packed cairos tahrir square to mark one week since hosni mubarak stepped down. they want to keep the pressure up on egypt s military leaders and are calling this the friday of victory and continuation. nbc s ron allen is live in cairo for us, and so what exactly is going on there right now? ron what is it that these demonstrators hope to accomplish? reporter: well, there s a huge victory celebration going on. it s been going on for the better part of seven hours or more, and it s night, you can see here, and known as leaving. it s been there way for all day long. it s a victory celebration. but it s also a protest. you were saying, people want to keep the pressure on this country s new leaders to make the changes that they re promising and talking about. there s a lot of concern as well about the military being in
more than 20 years ago when the youngest of the quintet was only 6. the group s spokesman says the sisters now in their 20s and 30s came forward to prevent the possibility that others might become victims. prosecutors wouldn t comment about why now? i think that s a personal thing. that s you know the victims have their reasons for not coming forward sooner. reporter: the browns are devout mormon family and their spokesman credited that and their music for getting them through. spiritual and religious people and derive a lot of support from that. reporter: brown s attorney says the plea deal, which could carry a life sentence, was meant to spare the family anymore harm. and there has been a lot of it this week. their father s porsche careened off an embankment monday landing unrecognizably in an icy stream 300 feet below. their mother was injured in the crash as well. it came just after the charges