 |  | DREAMLINER TRYING TO GET OFF THE GROUND: Facing problems reminiscent of Airbus' much-maligned A380, Boeing's 787 will be shown to reporters for the first time since it was unveiled last year. Phil LeBeau will be live in Everett, Washington, getting an update on the status of the plane from the head of the 787 program and taking a look at the state of Boeing.
| INTERACTIVE ADVERTISING: This year at NCTA, everyone's talking about interactive and targeted advertising technology that will allow cable nets to deliver targeted ads to specific zip codes, and eventually to individual homes… as tailored as Google search ads. News Corp's Peter Chernin, Intel's Paul Otellini and Comcast's Brian Roberts are all speaking to this subject in their keynote addresses. Cable networks want this because it would increase the value of their ad inventories, and would present a new revenue stream for cable operators. How soon will we see truly interactive advertising -- and what obstacles remain? Julia Boorstin reports.
| SINKING BOAT PAYMENTS: The housing slump is claiming another victim: Boats. People having trouble making their mortgage payments are finding that they can't make their boat payments either, and that's causing a wave of boat repossessions across the country. Melissa Lee has the story.
| EXERCISING THE WII: Darren Rovell is live in Central Park, where Wii Fit, the highly anticipated program/device for the Wii will be demo'd for the masses. Hundreds of consumers of all ages will be able to try out the healthy twist on video games. Does Nintendo have another hit on its hands? Darren Rovell takes the pulse.
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