Below are the links to all of the "Very Last Word" videos from this week. . Enjoy exclusive web interviews from all of our New York guests and of course our host, Lawrence O'Donnell. I have put my favorite video on top — Lawrence discussing the emotionally exhausting week of covering the death of Whitney Houston.
- MSNBC Contributor and music critic, Toure, on the downside to fame and elaborated on his mention of R&B singer Melba Moore.
- Lawrence told us why he wanted to forget politics on Monday and focus the whole show on the legacy of Whitney Houston.
- Salon.com political writer Steve Kornacki wondered how the Republican reaction to the Mitt Romney attacks on Rick Santorum would compare to when he went after Newt Gingrich.
- Lawrence on a very special Valentine's Day segment with Washington Republican State. Rep. Maureen Walsh and her daughter Shauna.
- Executive Producer of The Rachel Maddow Show and former Harvard athlete, Bill Wolff, talked about the positive impact of Jeremy Lin.
- Lawrence on the honor of speaking to Elie Wiesel (check out the exclusive interview right here), the excitement over Jeremy Lin and the most important story of the night that we didn't have enough time for.
- Mark Thompson, host of Sirius XM's Make it Plain, elaborates on not just Whitney Houston's phenomenal career but her contributions to various charities.















Lawrence, Please ask those guys what preventive method they used to not have the 6th or the 8th child, those women did not ask the guys on the panel how many children did they have and what preventive method they used not to have the next child that was waiting to be born.
Enjoy the Very Last Word segments. Thanks for educating viewers on the behind the scenes mechanics & time limitations of a TV program. Loved the Rush Limbaugh Rewrite!!!!
I'm a relapsed Catholic myself, but when I was a Catholic, it was church teaching that only marriages between two Catholics performed by a priest were valid marriages. This being the case, it follows that the Catholic Church could claim that it could not, in good conscience, pay for medical benefits for spouses and children of Catholics who were married to non-Catholics, since the marriages were, in their eyes, invalid. What's the dif?
I am absolutely sickened by all the religion being introduced in the Presidential campaign. Religion has no place in politics at all. If all this religion stuff doesn't stop I will be shutting my tv off for good--just despicable.