From hair to watching Homeland: What Hillary Clinton latest e-mails reveal

The latest release of 7,800 pages of e-mails give a glimpse into the private side of one of the world's most public people.

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(AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
Democratic presidential candidate, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton listens on Oct. 22, 2015 while testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, before the House Benghazi Committee. Nearly five weeks after Clinton’s marathon testimony on the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, several investigations into the deadly assault and Clinton’s use of a private email account and server are going full bore, and likely will continue into the presidential election year.

The latest release of Hillary Clinton's private emails show her, as secretary of state, dealing with the complicated politics of the Arab Spring, fending off questions about her role in the deadly 2012 Benghazi attacks and attempting to navigate an intensifying conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

But they also give a glimpse into the private side of one of the world's most public people. Clinton's notes show her searching for videos on how to do a "fishtail bun" hairstyle and struggling to locate Showtime on her television. (She wanted to watch the CIA-centered drama "Homeland.") She schedules — and reschedules — flights, meals and hairstyling appointments. And as she flies around the globe — logging 956,733 miles over her tenure — she tries to keep track of the time zone.

The roughly 7,800 pages of emails released Monday were part of a court-ordered disclosure of correspondence sent from the private server Clinton used while she was secretary of state.

Clinton, now the front-runner for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination, has faced questions about whether her unusual email setup was sufficient to ensure the security of government information and retention of records. Included in the most recent batch was an email that Intelligence Community Inspector General I. Charles McCullough III and State Department Inspector General Steve Linick deemed classified in July.

At least two Senate committees are still investigating Clinton's email arrangement and seeking the release of correspondence from her top aides. The FBI is also investigating the security of Clinton's private email setup.

Two-thirds of Clinton's 30,000 work-related emails are now at least partially in the public eye — minus numerous redactions by the State Department.

Here's a closer look at some of the messages that churned through Clinton's very busy in-box in the batch released Monday:

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HEALTH POLITICS

Get-well-soon notes poured in from across the globe after a stomach virus that Clinton picked up in 2012 became a serious condition that kept her out of the office — and off the congressional witness stand. After a dehydrated Clinton fainted and sustained a concussion — a condition she frequently called her "cracked head" in messages — she was forced to postpone her testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee about the deadly Benghazi attacks.

Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein emailed her aide, Capricia Marshall, offering to send Clinton copies of any movies she wanted to watch while recuperating. Dorothea Hurley, the wife of rock star Jon Bon Jovi, checked in with Clinton's daughter, Chelsea, to say that they were "sending you all a big hug." Chelsea forwarded the message to her mother.

Her health quickly became a political issue, with Republicans questioning her fitness should she ever run for president. Her staff moved quickly to tamp down the speculation. Top aide Philippe Reines told Clinton he'd reached out to former Tennessee Sen. Bill Frist, a heart transplant surgeon, and the NFL commissioner to enlist their support pushing back on right-wing commentators. "Just not letting these comments stand, no matter who says them," Reines said.

Frist was happy to help, according to the documents. "I love her and respect her and I can help. Not sure how exactly but I know I can help. I will Keep all Confidential," he wrote.

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2012 ELECTIONS

Although Clinton wasn't on the ticket in 2012, she and her supporters followed the race closely — and had plenty to say. In a January 2012 note, during the heat of the Florida GOP primary, Clinton refers to Mitt Romney as "Mittens" and Newt Gingrich as "Grinch."

"If Mittens can't beat Grinch in Florida, there will be pressure on state Republican parties to reopen or liberalize ballot access," she writes to confidant Sid Blumenthal.

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BENGHAZI

At least a few of the messages have come back to haunt Clinton during her presidential bid. Shortly before 9 p.m. on Sept. 11, 2012, Clinton sent an email asking her daughter to call her at her office about the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya. The email was addressed to an account under the name "Diane Reynolds," an alias Chelsea Clinton used for personal messages.

"Two of our officers were killed in Benghazi by an al-Qaida-like group: The Ambassador, whom I handpicked, and a young communications officer on temporary duty w(ith) a wife and two young children," Hillary Clinton later wrote to her daughter. "Very hard day and I fear more of the same tomorrow."

In October, that email was trumpeted by Republicans on the House Benghazi committee as evidence that Clinton knew very quickly the attack on the consulate was the work of Islamic terrorists, not a spontaneous street protest triggered by the release of a video considered an insult to the Prophet Mohammed. In a later television interview, then-United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice suggested the video, which did spark anti-American protests that day in several Muslim countries, was the primary motivation for the attack. Republicans have suggested the Obama administration downplayed the terror threat to avoid stoking public safety concerns in the weeks leading up to the 2012 presidential election.

Some of the messages show that Clinton worried about how her own remarks after the attacks would later be perceived. In a September 2012 message, aide Jake Sullivan compiled all her statements and assured Clinton that she was "careful" and "never said 'spontaneous' or characterized the motives."

"The way you treated the video in the Libya context was to say that some sought to (asterisk)justify(asterisk) the attack on that basis," he wrote.

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KEEPING THE TEAM TOGETHER

Clinton maintained her ties with the Democratic Party donors who supported her past campaigns and could help her in the future. In November 2012, Samuel Kaplan, a Minneapolis lawyer and major Democratic donor who was appointed U.S. ambassador to Morocco, secured a private meeting with Clinton to discuss how he and his wife "might hope to be allied" with her in the future.

Former Clinton aide Lauren Jiloty wrote to Clinton in 2012 to say she had met investor Warren Buffett, who asked her whom she had previously worked for. "When I told him it was YOU, he said, 'She's my heroine!'"

"We all feel that way," Jiloty wrote. The billionaire investor will join Clinton on the campaign trail later this month.

She also kept up with some of the political strategists who worked in her husband's administration and would go on to run her 2016 campaign, replying to birthday wishes from her future campaign chairman, John Podesta, and requests for career advice from campaign chief financial officer Gary Gensler.

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KISSING UP

Clinton's aides and supporters showered her with gushing praise, complimenting everything from her appearance to her policies, and the volume and emotion of those messages only grew as her tenure in the Cabinet came to an end.

Aides forwarded Clinton congratulatory messages even as she was still on the stand testifying before Congress in January 2013. "I'm being flooded with emails about how you rocked," deputy chief of staff Huma Abedin wrote. "And you looked fabulous." One supporter wrote a message with the subject line: "twitterverse abuzz with Hillary-kvelling," using the Yiddish word for gushing praise.

Later, after several congratulatory emails were exchanged among Clinton's staff, political consultant Mark Penn sent an email to Clinton gently suggesting that perhaps it wasn't wise to lose her temper in the hearing. Penn suggested Republicans could use that moment as evidence that they had rattled her.

Aide Philippe Reines leaped to Clinton's defense, writing:

"Give

Me

A

Break

You did not look rattled. You looked real. There's a difference. A big one."

Top aide Jake Sullivan weighed in, saying Penn delivered the same advice during her losing presidential campaign in 2008 — that it's bad for a candidate to be herself. Clinton replies, "BINGO!"

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Follow Lisa Lerer on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/llerer

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Associated Press writers Matthew Lee, Catherine Lucey, Jack Gillum, Ted Bridis, Deb Riechmann, Matthew Lee, Stephen Braun, Wendy Benjaminson, Tami Abdollah, Michael Biesecker, Eileen Sullivan, Eric Tucker, Jim Drinkard, Ken Dilanian, Scott Bauer, Jeff Horwitz, Matthew Daly and Alicia A. Caldwell contributed to this report.

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