Just woke up to an e-mail from susanhu asking if I can diary this, so here goes:
Tonite on Nightline: 
Witness To Hate – A Reporter’s Journal
Long before 9/11 and the series of stories about “Why do they hate  us?” there was Frank Gardner. He is a 43-year-old reporter for the  BBC, specializing in security and international affairs. He is the  kind of reporter we reporters and producers listen to when he speaks  of the latest terrorist threats, or intelligence information, or the  motivations of al Qaeda. A year ago, on a reporting trip in Saudi  Arabia, Gardner found himself face-to-face with militant Islam. What  happened that day changed his life forever. Tonight, you’ll hear his  story.
Frank Gardner’s love affair with the Arab world began when he was a  teenager when he was introduced to the famous explorer of the Arab  world, Wilfred Thesiger. After seeing the pictures and hearing stories  about the Arab world of the 1940s and ’50s, he decided to explore a  world that has fascinated him ever since. Gardner is one of few  Western journalists fluent in Arabic, a language he studied first at  university, then on the streets of Cairo, the Arabian Gulf, and even  with Beduin tribes in the desert near Aqaba, Jordan. Armed with a  degree in Arabic and Islamic studies, he took his skills to the world  of journalism. And when 9/11 came along, he was able to travel  extensively to explain the grievances that people in the Arab world  have against the West. His ability to put things in context helped BBC  audiences worldwide.
Gardner used to think his command of Arabic in the Arab world was his  flak jacket, a bulletproof vest, which would protect him from any  danger.
After a trip to Saudi Arabia just over a year ago, he no longer thinks  that way. Tonight in a three-part program, we learn why. His is an  instructive story — not just for journalists who travel to places of  danger every day, but for those who think they understand a place well  — only to find out that there are certain unknowns that, despite  understanding, cannot be reckoned with. It’s a remarkable tale of  intrepid reporting, a love of learning and courage.
Over the weekend, Gardner was given a rare honor, the Order of the  British Empire, bestowed by Queen Elizabeth II, for his service to  journalism. Tonight you can see what that service is — and what price  he has paid.
You can learn more about Frank on BBC’s site  here. He is truly a journalist’s journalist.
“In one year he travelled to 28 countries. He’s the sort of guy who will get through a passport because he runs out of room,” he [his friend] said.
(posted without much comment to get it up ASAP)
 
I hope this isn’t too late for some of you to catch! Nightline hasn’t been on yet here. Looks fascinating!
11:30 PDT would be 8:30 EDT
Thanks for the heads up. It’s usually too late for me,
but I’ll make the effort tonight for sure.
Thanks! I’m still wiping the sleepies from my eyes. 🙂
Thanks for all your work today, Catnip. I haven’t gotten to look at the posts yet — but you sure led a talkative bunch with Diane! Cool!
I’m taping this Nightline if I fall asleep before. (And it ticks me off that Nightline doesn’t put up its videos and transcripts.)
Thanks..I tivo Nightline every night. Don’t know what I will do when it is gone….
because he was crying too much.
Little boy in the arms of his grieving father.
B.C. toddler killed in Cambodian standoff
Four gunmen stormed the Siem Reap International School, and seized up to 70 children aged between two and four and their teachers – in an effort to extract money from foreigners.
One of the hostage-takers reportedly told police the little boy was shot in in the head because he was crying too much. […]
Police said the men were known criminals, aged 22 to 25, from the southeastern province of Kandal.
The school is located in the popular tourist spot of Siem Reap, near the Angkor temples. Many of the parents using its services are foreigners working in local hotels.
Many of the hostages, aged between two and six, were the sons and daughters of expatriate hotel workers from Canada, the U.S., Britain, Australia, Singapore, Korea, Japan and Taiwan.
What is there to say? words fail me.
Yes, I heard. How incredibly horrible. 🙁
Still waiting to see if the Detroit digital cable channel I get is going to show this program. They’re doing after game coverage of the Pistons’ game. If they don’t show it, I have to wait until 12:30 am my time and don’t know if I’ll still be up by then…
Okay. The show’s on now.
Wow. Quite the survival tale about living through an ambush in Riyadh after suffering multiple gunshots.
Friday on Nightline: a Focus on Fatherhood
They ran a bit of a clip with Barack Obama. Cool.