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The economy remains the number one issue in the election and the housing crisis remains a drag on the recovery. On Tuesday, the Case-Shiller index said year-over-year home prices fell 3.4 percent. In Atlanta, home prices dropped 11.7 percent; 8.4 percent in Minneapolis; and 4.9 percent in Los Angeles. CBS News correspondent Lee Cowan looks at the situation in L.A.In the City of Angels, the housing market this holiday season was anything but charitable. For a second straight month, home prices dipped by more than a percent just in October.Terre Steinbeck finally sold this five-bedroom, four-and-a-half bath home this month, but had to take a third off the asking price to do it. Given the way the market is, did the owners have a sense they were going to take a bit of a bath on this Cowan asked Steinbeck. They knew they were going to have to take a bath, she said, but not nearly as much as they ended up taking. Even the appraiser was surprised how low it sold for. Scam artists can prey on homeowners troublesLos Angeles is just one of 19 cities that showed a decline in home prices -- and not even some of the lowest mortgage rates in history h
stanley termohrnek elped. They could be giving zer
stanley becher o percent mortgages, said Steinbeck. If you can t get a loan, the mortgage rate being low
stanley mugs doesn t really matter. Many potential buys have been fleeing to the rental market instead, leaving the demand for existing housing weak at best. Since the housing bubble burst five years ago, hom Rlen Ravaged Midwest in bull s eye for more storms
https://youtube/watch v=hJFtCfHDFfw Last year NBC unleashed a hate-watching miracle upon the mas
stanley cup ses in the form of a terribly acted and horribly performed Live Sound of Music production starring Carrie Underwood and Vampire Bill from True Blood. Next up Peter Pan, and we ;ve already lined up the perfect famous/non-famous cast. Robert Greenblatt of NBC recently announced [via Collider] that NBC next live musical victim would be Peter Pan. Next December 4th, we will broadcast a new live production of the Broadway musical Peter Pan. NBC has a history with the show, which even I didn ;t know. In 1955, the Broadway pro
stanley taza duction, which was doing great business, closed in order for the whole cast to do a live broadcast of it on NBC from a studio in Manhattan, and it was in color, which was a novelty back then. 65 million people tuned in. It was so successful that, a year later, NBC did another live production with the same cast. And then in 1960, they did
stanley en mexico it again, this time starring Mia Farrow. Craig Zadan and Neil Meron will be back producing again for us, and we ;ll be announcing a cast as soon as we get it. Get ready for flying children and some kind of state-of-the-art light technology for little Tinker Bell. The 1955 production starring Mary Martin as the boy who never grew up is perhaps one of our favorite, cheese ball translations of this fairy tale. And with that production in mind because why not resurrect a totally dated nightmare product