TDY CLEAN 08:00 Hour NY-TDY-20100310-0001 CLEAN TODAY SHOW

TDY CLEAN 08:00 Hour NY-TDY-20100310-0001 CLEAN TODAY SHOW

NBC ID: AR3V7TS888 | Production Unit: Today Show | Media Type: Aired Show

Transcript

Event Location(s): United States | Description: 08:01:57 A Pennsylvania Woman Is Accused Of Being A Home Grown Terrorist And If Convicted Could Face Life In Prison STILL: Insert mug shot of woman charged with plotting to recruit and raise money for terrorists and also for travelling to Europe to commit murder, Colleen LaRose. INT MS: Panning shot of indictment documents against LaRose stating her name, her aliases Fatima LaRose and Jihad Jane, and the charges against her. STILL: Insert of LaRose wearing a scarf covering her face except for her eyes. Ann Curry VO 08:02:13 Suspected Militants In Pakistan Attacked The Offices Of World Vision, A Christian Humanitarian Organization, This Morning Killing 6 And Wounding 7 EXT DAY OGI, PAKISTAN 2010-03-10 MS: Panning shot of people outdoors including soldiers and men carrying covered victim on stretcher. INT OGI IN A TENT-LIKE STRUCTURE MS: Medics tend to unseen patient. EXT DAY OGI MS: Bomb-damaged exterior of World Vision's office building. MS: Downed metal fencing near bomb-damaged entrance. INT OGI MS: Downed wires and debris in an office. MS: Various shots of debris and broken chairs. Ann Curry VO 08:02:31 Iraqi President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Arrived In Kabul Today For Talks With Afghan's President Hamid Karzai INT KABUL, AFGHANISTAN 2010-03-10 (RTA) 2 MS: Iraq's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai stand at press conference podiums during a joint press conference in the Presidential Palace. MS: Karzai speaks. MS: Ahmadinejad speaks. MS: Photographers behind roped off area take pictures. MS: Karzai listens as Ahmadinejad speaks as photographers (rear shot) take pictures). Ann Curry VO 08:02:52 President Obama Meets With Haiti's President Today And Then Will Travel To Saint Louis To Push For Health Care Reform INT MS: President Obama speaks at a town hall meeting as audience members are seen behind him on stage. INT WASHINGTON DC MS: Obama walks on the White House South Lawn towards Marine One. Ann Curry VO 08:03:09 CNBC's Melissa Francis Gives A Stock Market Outlook In live report from the New York Stock Exchange, CNBC's Melissa Francis says economist Nouriel Roubini who called the latest recession says there's a 20% chance of a double dip recession because of Greece's economic situation, and says Bank of America is ending overdraft fees on debit cards this summer and instead will decline the cards. 08:03:41 A Harvard-Trained Architect Builds The World's Largest Free Standing House Of Cards INT MACAU MS: Panning shot of the world's largest free standing house of cards (a replica of the Venetian Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas, Nevada strip) to Harvard-trained architect Bryan Berg working on the house of cards. MS: Berg's hands (faces unseen) place cards on the house of cards. MS: Panning shot up of the house of cards. MS: Berg works on the house of cards. MS: Berg and the house of cards. Ann Curry VO 08:09:47 A 17-Year Old Girl In England Is Murdered By A Sexual Predator She Met Online On Facebook When He Posed As A 17-Year Old Boy A 35-year sentence was given in the case of a teenage girl who was murdered by a man she met on Facebook, a man who became her friend by pretending to be a 17-year-old boy. STILL: 17-year old Ashleigh Hall, who was kidnapped, raped, and murdered by a man she met on Facebook. INT MS: Blurry footage of a person (faces unseen) typing on a computer. MS: Computer screen showing the Facebook website's rule page and "friends" button. STILL: Shirtless torso image sent to Hall supposing to be 17-year old Peter Cartwright (face blurred out). STILL: CU mug shot of the man who pretended to be Peter Cartwright, 33-year convicted sex offender old Peter Chapman. EXT DAY DURHAM, ENGLAND MS: Police cordon around tent in field where Hall's body was found. INT MS: Chapman's impounded car. STILL: Messy interior of Chapman's car. INT ENGLAND 3 MS: Police station video of Chapman walking to desk officer near another officer and saying (supered) "I killed somebody last night…I need to tell somebody from CID where the body is." EXT DAY ENGLAND MS: Hall's mother Andrea says "Oh God" and rests her head on the shoulder of Hall's grandfather Mike Hall as Mike pats Andrea's shoulder. 2 MS: Andrea stands with Mike who has his arm around her shoulder and says "Please attention to kids that are on Facebook. Please ask them to tell you who they're talking to. You just don't know who's behind that...(unintelligible). INT MS: Hands (faces unseen) type on a computer. MS: NBC's Dawna Friesen reports on-camera. EXT DAY DURHAM MS: Police vans and vehicles in the field. INT MS: Computer screen showing the Facebook website. MS: In interview Child Exploitation and Online Protection's CEO Jim Gamble says "We arrest people all the time on the basis of credible information that's delivered to us through this means." GFX HEADER: "Facebook Statement" GFX: Facebook logo. GFX SUPERS: "We hope parents and teachers will encourage education on safe online decisions and the use of Facebook's settings that can protect from unwanted online contact. - Barry Schnitt, Facebook Spokesman March 9, 2010" INT MS: Shot pans from hand (faces unseen) typing on computer to the computer screen. MS: In interview Internet Privacy Attorney Parry Aftab says "What we need to do is teach our children how to use the filter between their ears. You never know who you're meeting offline and you never know how safe you are." VO: Friesen signs off from London, England. 08:11:48 Internet Safety Expert Lori Getz And Psychologist Jeff Gardere Discuss Ways To Protect Your Children From Internet Dangers Internet safety expert and momlogic.com contributor Lori Getz and psychologist and "Today" contributor Jeff Gardere seen live in-studio. Getz says it's important to focus on education and not restriction when dealing with the Internet, says you can't stop others from reaching out to your child but you can stop your child from responding, says "fringe friends" are friends of Internet friends that you don't know, says the more friends children collect on the Internet the more popular they feel but it puts a bigger target on their back, says children must be taught if they don't know the person on the Internet then that person is a stranger, and says Facebook has an area to report abuse. Gardere says children should be taught about dealing with fringe friends, notes the types of children who are more vulnerable and at risk to fringe friends, and says it's important that children be given more information. 08:19:19 Actor Matt Damon Discusses His New Movie "Green Zone" One of Matt Damon's more popular roles is that of Jason Bourne, a government assassin trying to figure out his real identity, but in his latest movie, "Green Zone," it's the truth he's after. Damon plays Army Chief Roy Miller, who's hunting for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, but when he begins to question the very intelligence that started the war, he ends up in a hunt for answers. CLIPS: Letterbox clips from a Bourne Identity movie with actors including Matt Damon, and from the movie "Green Zone" with actors including Damon. INT TODAY NEW YORK STUDIO MS: In taped in-studio interview Lauer asks "So the director of this movie says, quote, 'This is not a movie about the war in Iraq. It's a thriller set in Iraq, and that's a very different proposition.' But when people go to see this, are they going to have a difficult time separating the two?" MS: Damon replies "No, I don't think so. I mean, well, the idea was, Paul Greengrass, who directed this movie, directed the last two 'Bourne' movies, and so he also directed 'United 93' and a movie called 'Bloody Sunday,' and those movies felt like, you know, you were a fly on the wall watching...reality. And so, the kind of proposition for us was could we fuse those two things and make a big action conspiracy thriller, but set it in the real world and make a popcorn movie." MS: Lauer asks "I mean, people are going to note the thriller aspects. I think The New York Times called this 'Bourne in Baghdad.' There's a lot of action in this movie. But the movie also does not shy away from some hot political and social subjects, does it?" MS: Damon replies "No. Well, I mean, it starts with--it starts with a character who's based on a real guy who is one of the first guys in, and we actually had these things called mobile exploitation teams, MET teams. And these guys were--these teams were comprised of people from artillery, some scientists and explosives guys, to go in and exploit these weapons sites. And so they went in there with these intel packets and basically were told there was, you know, weapons in these places, and they -and they went, you know, careening in there and were confronted with a totally different reality. So it's kind of--they were the first people to go on the journey that we all went on, basically, which is we were--went in with one set of expectations and then we're confronted with a different reality. And then the logical question from there is, `OK, well, what happened?' And that's what kind of kicks off the..." CLIP: Letterbox clip from "Green Zone" with actors including Damon. INT TODAY NEW YORK STUDIO MS: Lauer asks "And you want the viewer to ask those questions. You want people to ask questions about interrogation vs. torture and weapons of mass destruction. Even the reporting of the war. There's a character in this movie, played by Amy Ryan, who's based on a--it's Wall Street Journal reporter in the movie...but it's--it can't be loosely, very far based on a reporter for The New York Times, right?" MS: Damon replies "A reporter. Sure, yeah." MS: Lauer says "And she was criticized for her reporting. So you want people to say, `OK, I dig the action here, but it makes me ask some questions about what we've just lived through.'" MS: Damon replies "Yeah, exactly. That's right. That's exactly right." MS: Lauer says "You were surrounded by some guys in the field here, and some of them are not actors. Some of them..." MS: Damon says "Most of them are not actors." MS: Lauer continues "...most of them actually served in Iraq and Afghanistan. How does that change the dynamic on the set?" MS: Damon replies "Well, it changed everything. That's something that Paul's done in some of his other films. He'll use non-actors, and in this case he was convinced, and I think rightly so, that the best way to make this movie would be with vets, guys who'd just come back from Iraq or Afghanistan. And so there's one other actor, Nicoye Banks, and me, and everyone else in a military uniform in this movie is just back from a tour in either Iraq or Afghanistan." EXT DAY ON THE SET OF "GREEN ZONE" MS: Various shots of Greengrass directing Damon and other actors. MS: Crew films scene. INT TODAY NEW YORK STUDIO MS: Lauer asks "Does it take extra time to shoot that way, because you got to make sure they hit their marks and they're in the right place at the right time? Or do you not care about that, you just want to capture what happens?" MS: Damon replies "No. Well, actually I think it saves a lot of time. Because if you took 30 actors and tried to explain to them how to hit a house or how to do, you know, it would take so long to teach us. Whereas, if you take a couple of us and we get absorbed into a group of real guys, they really quickly can show us exactly what we need to do." MS: Lauer says "And it raises the believability factor immensely." MS: Damon says "Yeah. Well, and that's a big thing, the authenticity and feeling like you're really seeing the real world." MS: Lauer asks "I'm not going to let you escape without a couple of questions. 'Bourne' movies, will there be a fourth?" MS: Damon replies "Well, my doing it was always contingent on Paul directing it, and he's not--he--so we're not going to do it now. I think maybe in five or 10 years we could do it, but I think the studio will probably do some kind of a prequel or something, and you know, and keep that franchise alive because it's an important franchise for them." MS: Lauer asks "And finally, a lot was written over the past couple of weeks about you taking on the role of RFK in a biopic that may be made in the near future. If you take on a role like that, you have to be comfortable with the fact that you can convince a viewer that you are that historic character. What makes you--you know, what is it about RFK that makes you think you can nail him?" MS: Damon replies "Well, I don't know that I can. That's part of the challenge. But I'm pretty confident that I could do it. You know, it would be a lot of research and a lot of time put in. And look, where I come from, I mean, he's a pretty big, you know, important person and it's a lot of responsibility. And, you know, even my father said, when I told him I was--I was thinking of doing it, you know, about six months ago, he said--he--everything stopped--and he said that's a lot of responsibility. And, you know, so I get it." STILL: Insert of Robert F. Kennedy. INT TODAY NEW YORK STUDIO MS: Lauer asks "And when do you know if you get to do that?" MS: Damon replies "Well, the script's going to come in in a few weeks. And it's Gary Ross, great director and a friend of mine. And so we'll, you know, we'll--we're thinking of it as we're going forward with it, so we'll see. Hopefully, a great script comes in." MS: Lauer says "Meanwhile, good luck with 'Green Zone.' It's good to have you here." MS: Damon replies "Thank you. Yeah. Thanks, Matt." 08:30:15 Viewers Can Enter Today's Wizarding World Of Harry Potter Contest EJ: (FROM A SUBMITTED CONTEST ENTRY) 08:30:15 (:30) INT BLAINE, MINNESOTA IN MR. ZACKMAN'S (PH) 4TH GRADE CLASS IN JOHNSVILLE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL MS: Elementary students sing a song. STILLS: Girls holds signs "I donate my allowance to a woman's shelter," "I collect supplies for the Humane Society," students hold signs about their core values, girls holds signs "I walk to fight cancer," "I placed 1st in the all-around competition," and "We know our teacher cares for us." Lauer, Vieira, Roker and Curry report live on-camera in the plaza outside Studio 1A. GFX "Today's Wizarding World Of Harry Potter Contest" logo and rules. 08:31:54 The Today Show Has Gotten Really Cool About Ways Viewers Can Keep In Touch With The Show Curry, Roker, Lauer, and Vieira seen live in the plaza outside Studio 1A. GFX SUPERS: "Join Today on…Todayshow.com" and GFX logos for twitter, cellphones, podcasts, and facebook. 08:33:39 Willard Scotts Segs Live in the plaza Roker and Scott hug. Women in the crowd hug Scott. Birthday stills of 100-year old Syliva Levine, 103-year old Thelma Shives, 100-year old David Bentman, 103-year old Lillian Titlebaum, and 100-year old Roma Wicykowski seen. 80th wedding anniversary photo of Ralph and Dottie Richards. 08:38:32 Today's Consumer: Are "Smart Homes" Necessary? A look at the trend toward smart homes. Is it time to get tech-savvy when it comes to your house? Smart homes are already a $10 billion industry. It's technology that allows you to basically control cameras, heaters, even window blinds from the touch of your phone. But do you really need it? "Today" Consumer reporter Janice Lieberman reports live on-camera in-studio. EJ: 08:38:48 (3:04) CLIP: Animated clip from TV show "The Jetsons." EXT DAY 2 MS: An adult (faces unseen) and young boy enter a smart home. INT 2 MS: Children watch TV. MS: Hand (faces unseen) holds a cell phone showing footage of a boy walking in a living room. CLIPS: Smart home commercial clips about a mother getting a text message sent from her home when her son entered the house, Schlage (a company that installs smart homes) logo, and the smart home lock on the home's front door (the lock sent the mother the text message that her son entered the house). INT MS: Light dimmer instructions on a cell phone for a smart home. MS: Hand (faces unseen) pushes light instruction buttons on the cell phone to control the lights in a smart home. EXT DAY MS: Man walks to a home's front door. INT IN A SMART HOME MS: Syndicated tech writer Marc Saltzman and smart home homeowner Jonna Dersome (ph) walk in Dersome's smart home towards a computer on a table. MS: In interview Saltzman says (part VO) "A smart home helps you better monitor or your control your home even when you're not there. This can include the alarm system, locking and unlocking the door, lighting, thermostat, appliances. It's really endless, but it's the ability of giving you the control at your fingertips." MS: Hand (faces unseen) holds a cell phone. EXT DAY MS: Hand (faces unseen) holds a cell phone near a smart home's door lock. INT IN A SMART HOME MS: Light goes on automatically. MS: Thermostat. MS: Cell phone showing smart home instructions for security, cameras, lighting and automation, and climate. MS: Hand (faces unseen) holds a cell phone and pushes instruction information on the screen. MS: Cell phone. MS: Thermostat temperature electronically being lowered by a cell phone instruction. MS: Hand (faces unseen) holds a cell phone showing a security camera image of a dog lying on a chair in the living room. INT MS: Saltzman says "There are some nice conveniences with smart homes, but it's not for everyone. It definitely has to suit your needs and budget." BRIEF CUTS: Hands (faces unseen) hold cell phones and push smart home control buttons. INT IN THE DERSOME FAMILY'S SMART HOME MS: Parents Jonna and Shawn Dersome (both ph) watch their children do homework in the kitchen. 2 MS: Jonna and her daughter. 2 MS: Shawn and his son. MS: In interview Jonna says "I can make phone calls on my iPhone and I can shop on the Internet and that's probably the extent of it." MS: In interview Shawn says "I'm not half-bad at some things, but there's a lot of things I struggle with," and when Lieberman asks what does he struggle with Shawn replies "The security system here, I have no idea how to turn it on. Haven't turned it on in nine years. So hopefully this new system I'll be able to figure out." GFX: Logos of the two companies that sell smart home devices which offered the Dersome family a trial smart home makeover, Schlage and Platinum Alarm Systems. INT AND EXT DAY MS: Smart home company employee installs a smart home lock on the Dersome's door (shown in regular image and in blurry split screen image). MS: Inserts of the employee working on the home's light socket, drilling into a wall, drilling into the exterior of the home with split screen of a ceiling light automatically turning on, inserts of hand (faces unseen) touching a cell phone's smart home instruction panel and of a thermostat, worker (faces unseen) pulling wire (installing cameras and an alarm system), and hand (faces unseen) holding a cell phone showing smart home real time footage of a room and a hallway in the home. INT IN THE DERSOME'S HOME MS: Employee installing smart home technology in the home seen with GFX superimposed cell phone and GFX super "$1,000." 2 MS: Employee instructs Jonna on how to operate an electronic panel on the wall. MS: Shawn in interview as GFX cell phone with GFX super "$70/month" seen as Shawn says "That's a fairly sizable money. We'll have to see if it's worth it in the end." EXT DAY MS: Jonna uses her cell phone to unlock her smart home's front door and opens the door. GFX: Emergency vehicle flashing lights. GFX: "The Eagle-Tribune" newspaper log and article headline "Traffic violation turns into manhunt" INT IN THE DERSOME'S SMART HOME MS: In interview Jonna says (part VO about a fugitive accused of breaking and entering and assault who was on the loose in the neighborhood the week after the smart home technology was installed) "My husband had called me, we were out at the mall and he asked me if the house was secure, and I was able to go on my phone and make sure the house was alarmed and do it remotely." MS: Jonna (faces unseen) pushes smart home information on her cell phone which shows her home is alarmed. MS: Jonna says (when asked if they're using the smart home technology as much as they thought they would) "No, we're not. We're not using it as much as we expected." MS: Jonna (faces unseen) holds her cell phone displaying a smart home text message that her children are home from school. MS: Jonna says (part VO about the feature she likes the most) "I do get a text message on my phone when the children come home from school and it's really nice to flip on my phone and click on the camera and see them walking in the door." MS: Jonna's cell phone showing smart home security video footage of her daughter walking down a hallway in the house. MS: Shawn (faces unseen) pushes smart home information on his cell phone as shot pans to show his face. MS: Shawn pushes smart home information on his cell phone while sitting in his bedroom. VO: Jonna says (about Shawn) "He probably uses it a little bit less, but he does like to control the lights with his phone while sitting on the couch." INT IN THE DERSOME'S HOME MS: Jonna, Shawn, and their children in the kitchen. MS: The daughter pushes buttons on the home's alarm system wall panel. CU: The alarm system panel and message screen (message on the panel's screen is too dark to read) as the panel beeps. Lieberman reports live on-camera and does live x-talk with Vieira. 08:45:06 How To Cook Everything Today: New York Times Columnist Mark Bittman Re-Invents Cooking Hash Book "How To Cook Everything" by New York Times Columnist Mark Bittman seen. A large potato pancake (covers the whole plate) seen as in live in-studio interview in the kitchen area, Bittman says that potato pancake is his grandmother's recipe and she cooked the whole potato pancake batter all at once, and says it has a good crunch and creamy interior. Bittman prepares a root vegetable hash and uses a food processor to shred the vegetables, and notes how cooking root vegetable hash differs from cooking a potato pancake. Bittman makes zucchini pancakes. GFX supered list of ingredients seen. Freshly cooked zucchini pancakes seen as Lauer tastes one. Bittman makes a stir-fried beef and sweet potatoes dish. Bowls of shredded vegetables and ingredients seen. GFX supered list of ingredients seen. 08:51:24 Happy Anniversary Willard: Willard Scott Is Honored For His 30th Anniversary With The Today Show And For His 60 Years At NBC Willard Scott joined the Today show 30 years ago today, and began his career with NBC 60 years ago this month. A look back at memorable moments with Willard Scott as some of his old friends share their thoughts. Lauer, Vieira, Roker, Curry, and Scott are all seen live in-studio. EJ: 08:51:41 (2:52) CLIPS: 1980-03-10 "Today" clips with GFX opening logo and then-hosts Tom Brokaw and Jane Pauley at the anchor desk with Scott as Brokaw says "Good morning, all. I'm Tom Brokaw here with Jane Pauley and the newest member, old Uncle Willard, the newest member of the TODAY family. You'll be hearing from him later. You're going to be doing the weather for us. Willard Scott," Scott gathering pieces of paper and saying "I got so much weather here I could do the whole show. You all could go home right now if you want to." INT MS: In interview Brokaw says "When I first met Willard Scott, he was doing the weather on the local station in Washington, but he had a very profitable sideline, he was selling eggs from his farm." CLIP: Scott doing the weather for the local NBC station in Washington DC and holding up a carton of eggs and saying they're available at Bloomies. CLIP: "Today" clip with Brokaw at the host desk watching Scott walk to the weather map to do his weather report and Scott patting his stomach. VO: In interview Scott says "Basically, weather can be pretty bland on a day to day basis, and so what you do is to add a little shtick to it." MONTAGE: "Today" clips with Scott on a racing field counting down from three and firing a gun and saying "Let the race begin," on 1987-08-22 Scott in-studio doing the weather dressed as Carmen Miranda and singing as men play guitars, on 1985-11-19 Scott in-studio doing the weather dressed as Boy George and singing "Do You Really Want To Hurt Me," Scott outdoors kissing a woman on the cheek, GFX lips seen on screen, in the plaza outside Studio 1A Lauer kissing Scott on the cheek, GFX lips seen on screen, outdoors on-location Vieira hugging Scott, GFX lips seen on screen, on 1989-01-20 then-first Lady Barbara Bush walking from the street during the inaugural parade to kiss Scott on the sidewalk and then running back to the street with Secret Service agents as in VO Scott says "The best. Thank you. How about that? I've been kissed by the best" and in VO then-host Bryant Gumbel saying " She definitely got the worst of the deal." STILL: Black and white of then-Today host Dave Garroway and chimp Fred J. Muggs. MONTAGE: Scott standing with woman on-location and holding his microphone to the mouth of a seal making noises, Scott on-location with Ringling Brothers and Barnum Bailey elephants and talking into one elephant's trunk, Scott on-location standing with others at a rodeo near a bull with horns as he kisses the bull's head, Scott on-location bends to kiss a pig held by a child and the pig makes a noise as Scott pulls his head away, fried food being cooked, CU of a small monkey held by a man on-location as Scott says "Is this--would you please try to control yourself? This guy hasn't had a meal in two days," Scott saying into a chocolate phone "Eat your heart out!" and then eating the phone, and in early morning darkness on-location Scott eating something crunchy as chefs behind him laugh all seen. INT MS: In interview movie critic Gene Shalit says (part VO) "Hi, Willard. I congratulate you on your wonderful 30 years here on TODAY. When you get to 100, call me. We'll celebrate over a jar of Smucker's." GFX: Smucker's jar used in Willard Scotts Segs when he announces birthdays. MONTAGE: Clips of Scott on-location wearing a large sombrero as a man plays guitar, Scott standing with a person in a kangaroo costume with boxing gloves as they punch each other, Scott wearing a chef's hat standing with men playing the tuba, accordion, and guitar, Scott standing near a tent which is blowing smoke, Scott riding on a gondola and singing in Italian, and Scott messing up the hair of a soldier near other soldiers as the soldier laughs. CLIP: "Today" clip with then-hosts Jane Pauley and Deborah Norville with Scott at the anchor desk as Scott removes his hairpiece and puts it on a bust of a man resembling Scott on the desk as Pauley laughs. INT MS: In interview Pauley says (part VO) "Willard, people always ask me if you're the same as you are on TV and I say, no, he only looks like he's having too much fun to keep the money." MONTAGE: Clips with Scott and Roker on the WNBC-TV set as Scott puts a hairpiece on Roker, and Scott and Roker on-location in a field as Roker sings "Everybody loves my Willie!" and Scott raps "Go. Be chilly and love your Willie." GFX: NBC peacock and superimposed black and white insert stills of Scott throughout his career including Scott as a young man, and of Scott on the Today set with Lauer, Vieira, Roker, and Curry. CLIP: Today clip with Scott wearing a flower shirt and straw hat sitting in a bamboo chair on the beach putting a cigar in his mouth and looking at the ocean behind him. Scott seen live in-studio as applause is heard. In live x-talk Scott says it's gone by unbelievably quickly, and says when he started he made $6 a day. Cake with inscription "Willard Happy 30th Happy 60th Happy Birthday!" seen. Scott says he's 76-years old, and says the greatest thing he did was meeting the Pope in Rome. Scott toasts with the Today cast. Outside Segs 08:00:03 (:38) Panning shot of the crowd, some with signs, waving and cheering. Lauer, Vieira, and Roker report live on-camera near the crowd. 08:31:13 (:12) Willard Scott seen in the plaza near crewmembers as he kisses the camera. 08:31:38 (:16) Scott stands near monitor looking at himself on-camera near crew. Al Roker Segs 08:04:20 (:15) Woman holds sign "My Sis Is 50" as she and her 50-year old sister say their names. Another woman says her father in Florida is 84. 08:05:06 (:10) A boy holding "I Am 12 Years Old Today" sign says his name is Vincent. Shot pans to a young girl waving. Commercials 08:06:02 American Express Members Project 08:07:02 Truvia 08:07:17 visitlasvegas.com 08:07:47 Sunny D 08:08:02 Revlon Colorburst Lipstick 08:08:17 healthyimagination.com 08:09:02 Chicos 08:15:59 movie "Green Zone" 08:16:29 Neutrogena Clinical Skin Care 08:16:59 Chevrolet Equinox 08:17:29 Hershey's 08:17:44 Chicos 08:17:59 Red Lobster 08:18:14 Nicoderm CQ patch 08:18:29 Bank Of America payment reminders 08:25:59 American Beverage Association 08:36:14 International House Of Pancakes 08:37:24 Mercedes-Benz 2400 Hybrid 08:37:54 Almond Breeze 08:42:54 Celsius diet drink 08:43:24 Paper Mate 08:43:54 Cohen's Fashion Optical 08:50:40 Polaner Sugar Free Preserves with fiber

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