CNN's Carlos Watson has interviewed scores of world-famous people, from presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and Rudy Giuliani to athletes and entertainers such as Shaquille O'Neal and Diddy. His new one-hour show, Conversations with Carlos Watson, is taking America by storm. The show pulled in more than 2 million viewers for its first prime-time special last March and more than 3 million for the second. The December special was expected to reach equally impressive numbers. The 38-year-old television host splits his free time between jet-setting to places such as India, South Africa, and Iceland, and working with impoverished children here in the United States. Watson speaks with Black Enterprise about the upcoming presidential election, media moguls, and the importance of education. What are your thoughts on the upcoming presidential elections? I think it could be the most interesting election in 40 years, maybe 50. It is so wide open that we no longer even blink that we may be on the verge of having the first Italian-American elected. That would've been a big deal at any other time. But now you've got a woman, a Mormon, and an African American, so no one even blinks anymore. What is a key issue that you hope the new administration will address? Our education system. Because of legitimate criticism, a lot of changes have been made over the last 15 to 20 years. In many cases, we see kids going to school longer in terms of the individual day, with after-school programs, and even during summers. But, for all of those changes, I don't think that we can be happy when we step back and look at situations where, from Baltimore to Los Angeles, the majority of black boys who start off high school are not likely to graduate. I think it is a tragedy that the greatest nation in the history of the world can't do better. I think that there's a real opportunity for the next president, should she or he decide to focus on this, to really make substantial headway. I want to see, among other things, not just a focus on the basics, but really an encouragement of all of our kids to try to go on for higher education in this information century. And not just incrementally more ... I'd like to see it double, triple, even quadruple. I would love to see the next president establish a national goal much like John F. Kennedy did by putting a man on the moon at the end of the decade. I love kids! (Continued on next page) What do you think about Oprah supporting Barack Obama in his presidential bid? I think she just continues to be exceptionally relevant to everyday lives, both big and small. I'm ok with it any time we're able to get more of our citizens to do good things, and the fact that one of them is high profile in the media is even better. I might feel differently if she were a day-to-day reporter or if she was a classic journalist. I think she's carved out a different niche for herself, as a talk show host. She's an adviser to people for many things, to the books they should read, to how they should relate to their spouses, to how they should raise their kids, to what kind of health things they need. I think it's a good thing saying that politics matters. Is it possible for her to go too far in her support for him? She would be crossing the line if she used her show to give him an unusual advantage. As journalists, we're supposed to separate personal feelings from work. But it's hard not to form opinions about the newsmakers you cover. Who do you think are the most interesting people in the news? Dick Parsons. I think his departure as Time Warner's CEO is significant. I think it's significant that he came in and left on his own terms. I just think his run is fascinating-not as an African American, but as a media mogul period-having a prolonged run at the top of the company and not imploding, not falling in the heap, not getting whacked. That's not easy to do.