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tv   King Charles  CNN  February 14, 2024 7:00pm-8:00pm PST

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>> closed captioning, bronte by meso book.com. >> we have offered a free book about missile filial mahfud, over ten years called >> 1808724901 are going to meso book.com >> walk in >> from the cnn studios in new york city. it's king charles. >> we're not going to waste your time. no, with gayle king's jante, but you can call me gail and charles barkley. >> i probably should tonight. >> top >> obama adviser david axelrod plus from the new movie, bob marley, one love actor kingsley ben-adir, grammy-winning musician ziggy marley, king, charles starts now going welcome, welcome to king charles. we were so excited for the show tonight for yes,
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because we were off last week because of the super bowl, we were both in vegas and there were so much to talk about but right before the show started, you heard the news that we've heard and we're going to pivot to that because, we cannot start the way we wanted to. it's also valentine's day, by the way, happy valentine's day to all of you. because of something that has become increasingly a common occurrence here in this country. no other country has a problem that we have when it comes to gun violence in this country. it's happened again. this time. >> a joyful gathering. and it was shots fired and people we'll fleeing for their lives frantically calling loved ones. this was in kansas city guys today as they were celebrating the super bowl parade and i'm curious, what was your initial reaction because this happened is we were planning for the shoulder >> sadness. you wake up. we're going to celebrate the chiefs winning the super bowl and that person is not going to get home. then you factor in all the injuries. an apparently most of them were kids. >> and >> i just feel sad because you've got the greatest country in the world. any fool can go
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out about gun anytime. they don't do great background checks and you would think and liked everything else in our countries become divided between democrats and republicans. and that makes it even worse. they're like, wait, that republicans don't want gun control. >> but this is such a human issue. and as we sit here today, we have to say it's, the story is still in flux at last count there were at least 20 people they were saying many of them children, but again, we have to say that this story is still changing and we don't have the exact numbers but still terror >> what the storage just as always, you go back and the leydig shouted, joel osteen church over the weekend? >> yes. yes. >> it should be hot hard to get guns. >> like a gun own. i'm a gun owner. i'm a gun guy, but it should be hard to get a gun with the technology we have today as far as learned, everything you did in your life, you should not be able to
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go in a store and get a gun in 15, 20 minutes. you should not be ordered those ghost guns on the internet. >> but you believe though charles in the right for people to own guns. >> but it should be hard to get him again. it yeah, let me ask you a question. yeah. well, this not a fair question to you, but if a normal person went into, let's say, hypothetically, or mercedes benz dealership? yeah. they wouldn't let him say, hey, i'll just take whatever you tell me. i can afford it. they would do a comprehensive background check. >> yeah. own a car. right. and i don't think we should do that with guns. we should do i'm not trying to simplify i'm not trying to be flippant, but i can't walk in a mercedes benz dealership and say, i'll take the best one you got there like, well, we need to see some bank records and what kind of job you gotten, everything it should at least be that on guns said, you know what scares me about this? is that you're at a parade. i really do feel in this country you really don't feel safe anywhere. i feel that we are walking roulette, that
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it could happen at any time to anybody anywhere. here we are at the chiefs celebration. this is the sixth anniversary of the school shooting at parkland high school. nothing has changed in this country and i've find it so frustrating that, you know, i don't want us to become desensitized to this. that's what concerns me. i don't want us to think that this is this is just no big deal because this is still a very big deal in this country. well, i don't want us to just think this is how we have to live. but charles, this is how we're living in this country. >> yeah, but that's because we don't put enough pressure on our pop partitions. we don't hold them accountable for anything. we don't hold him accountable for the immigration mess we have going on. the dishes. immigration is obviously really important. this gun thing, like i say, is you can never get desensitized, right? right. right. but we're used to it now i mean, we're used to it. i don't want you they ruin such a joyous occasion. those guys man football. i'd really admire football players, what they put
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their bodies through. and this is supposed to be a joyous occasion. but somebody is not going home? >> yes. and some people live probably gonna be changed forever because they got shot or something. >> when you bring in somebody who spent a huge part of his career trying to figure out trying to figure this out, how to solve the gun violence issue here in this country. that's former top adviser to president barack obama, david axelrod rod joins as david. thank you for joining us. >> it's good to see you yeah. i'm sorry. i'm such a sad occasion. i know. but, you know, we anticipated. i know. but i think about you in the obama administration, he has often said that one of the worst days of his life was a school shooting at sandy hook. one of the worst days of that administration and many people thought, okay, finally, finally, things will change in this country and we sit here today in 2024, and we're still talking about this what is the problem? it's what is it going to take >> yeah. >> go ahead. >> well, i look, you know, charles says we got to hold the politicians accountable. the
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politicians are afraid of voters. that's why, i mean, even though the majority of americans agree with almost everything that you said, charles there are politicians who are responding to two small cohorts of people within there parties within their communities who, who participate in primary elections and they're afraid they're afraid to take a listen donald trump on saturday night, i guess, friday night, spoke to a an nra group and i think in pennsylvania pena and he said, i didn't do one thing about guns in the last four years and i won't do anything about it in the next four years and he got a big hand. and that has become sort of orthodoxy within the republican party and look, i think that there are politicians who are willing to risk their careers for principles but there are a lot
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of politicians whose first priority is to get reelected >> david, david. david, i don't think it's a >> democratic issue or republican issue. i really do think it's a human issue when when you say the politicians are afraid, why are they are afraid when the majority of the people it's country say that they want changes in gun laws. they want to make it safer for all of us who are walking around. they want some restrictions on gun owners. yeah yeah. more than 60% say that when you look at issues like universal background checks, charles was talking about having rigorous background checks you know, that is something that is the '70s and '80s and higher in many polls. >> but >> there is this fear in, within, within element. you say it's now democratic, republican issue, but largely within the republican party largely within the republican party, there is a fear that at, in primary elections you will, you will be beaten by a
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candidate who says they are not strongly supporting the second amendment. and therefore they should be defeated. so, and they treat every, every gun safety law as the camel's nose under the tent and they don't want to act because they fear it's going to cost them. their jobs, but their inaction is costing people their children's. there lives. their husbands, their and this thing today, i not to touch it a sensitive point with charles, but i went to six parades in chicago when the bulls, when the championships, i went to the cubs championship and it was always such a wonderful day because the entire community would come together. people have different races and backgrounds. rich people, poor people, all. because this was a community celebration and you bring your kids and and to have that disrupted obviously the worst are these gun these
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school shootings, because you send your precious children to school and you expect them to come home. and those are the worst, but there's something about just that's coming together as community and we can't even come together as a community. people have different political points of view and so on. i'm sure there were republicans and democrats in that crowd so it does underscore, it does underscore, it does underscore the intractability of it. i hope we keep at it, you know, there was a modest gun law passed after uvalde in, i guess, 2022, that that was the first time we've done anything in years it took some modest step forward, but they were they were real step forward and senator cornyn from texas and senator murphy from connecticut negotiated this on a bipartisan basis. i do think you're absolutely right that a majority of fields that there should be stronger laws. but i think that's needs to become a voting issue for people. yeah,
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they need to say it's a voting issue for people who don't want any changes in the laws and vote the people yeah vote the people out that don't support what you believe in the meantime, we're playing the game of more and pray, repeat more and pray repeat, and nothing changes. >> so it's and numbness. numbness, which i think you point out rightly is the greatest threat of all as if we come to accept this as the, as the norm we, we have exponentially 46% of the privately owned guns in the world are here in the us. we only have 4% of the world's population. so it's no wonder that we have more gun violence and more deaths than anywhere in the world. >> all right, david, we don't want you to go. we want to change subjects after the break. we hope you'll stay around because we wanted to talk about john. absolutely. jon stewart came back came back to us. he returned to the daily show after going right after any wasted no time going after president joe biden and former
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>> we are back with david axelrod, top adviser to president barack obama. we want to talk to you about the return of john stuart david to the daily show because the numbers were ginormous, nearly 2 million people watched the beloved comedian on monday night. and the big question was, how did he do? here's a look >> the super bowl was on sunday and the president was offered a chance as per tradition, to do an interview where millions and millions of people could see him competently and clearly lay out his 22 24 agenda, or he could just turn that down and do what this is. >> the biden-harris campaign joined tiktok over the weekend. the first video was released during the super bowl and it shows president biden answering questions since related to the big game game or halftime show jason kelce, your >> travis kelce mo'men. moment sooner since great chocolate chip cookies
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>> fire everyone everyone >> you go on >> tiktok and end >> up looking older god, it's so nice to have jon stewart back while neither the leading presidential candidates was spared, the spotlight was certainly on 81 year-old joe biden. so we have somebody with us who knows what it's like to work in a white house and beyond the receiving end of a jon stewart joke, david axelrod is back. david, here's a question for you and your colleagues. because you had to whether criticism from john stuart, i'm wondering what happens, what happens in the white house after taking a hit like that on national tv >> yeah, it's not good. you know, i still have tired i still have tire tracks on my rear end from a couple of interviews i did with jon stewart during that period, i saw after his after his his
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show on monday, people saying, oh geez, you know, he used to go after conservatives and now he's going after president by no, he used to go after everybody. and he was unsparing and play she's the truths in humor, but they staying and they go viral. and that's why he's had impact and it was kind of incredible that nine years later he comes back. yeah, gray hair and bearded but he still has it and i'm sure in the white house, it landed very badly because, you know, this is a problem for them right now and it's a complicated problem to solve because it's not about any particular issue. it's about something that's that you really can't change. >> so my question is i actually love jon stewart i thought he was i thought his points were great. glad to have him back
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and one of the problems we have, we have two-minute networks and played left or right. he criticized both guys but he's getting a lot of heat from quote, unquote to left for criticizing biden number one, do you think that's fair? or you thought he did just a good job of criticizing both candidates? >> know, i had no problem with what he did, but listen, charles, here's the situation. i think that there are a lot of people on the left and a lot of democrats who, who whatever their feelings about whether biden should have run or not, are now their belief now is he's the candidate and donald trump's on the other side. and donald trump cannot win. and therefore, you should not criticize biden in any way because you might harm him in that mission of defeating of defeating in trump. the problem is that these things that john stuart was bringing up are things that voters are thinking it's not like if you don't
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talk about it, they're not thinking in their thinking it. so what do you do about it is the real question. and i think more than anything else, if i could climate john stewart's head what he's saying is do something about it >> you can't can't change how you are, but change up your strategy. so at least you are on the offense and people can see you in a more engaged way >> let me ask one more question. >> are you hopeful? pessimistic optimistic? are scared for the next year >> you sound like a pollster, charles >> i i i am wary of the next year because i think the consequences of this election are probably grid it are than any we've ever experienced. no people last time. yeah, we said that at the direction to david. yeah >> and had it. and how did it end? >> yeah.
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>> you know, i mean, i think that that a trump 2.0 will be more he'll be like the delta variant, of democracy he'll be 1,000, 1,000 times 1,000 times more virulent and harder to control >> before you go, david, because we have to wrap up and bring out our next guest. do you think jon stewart can move the needle in this election the times stuart will be a factor because the things that jon stuart says, the way he says them, the honesty with which he speaks that creates viral moments. and as you know, the way people get information today isn't just by watching, it's mostly by the fits they get on their phones in viral on tiktok and instagram and so on. he creates those moments. and therefore, i think he can have a big impact, particularly on younger voters. >> all right, thank you very much. david axelrod for sticking you guys.
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>> thank you very much. >> thanks. >> thanks, >> bob marley, one loves star kingsley ben-adir and bob marley's real life son, that would be ziggy discuss the movie, the man and his music. so let's go out with exodus from the new movie >> jaffee >> i've done a lot wrong. criminal, none. i don't want to thank that i was taking cash. okay. >> once i'm back there, governor ron but it's went down in a blaze of infamy charged with plotting to sell barack obama's former senate seat. >> wait, what corruption lies, prison they acknowledge the uyghur, the fbi know, really, yeah, one, they were determined to get me no matter what, let me offer you an alternate theory. >> united states have standoff with jake tapper, back-to-back premieres sunday at nine on cnn. >> the right mattress makes
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off your first-order. that's only $39 a bottle. if you order within the next 24 hours hi, melanie zanona on capitol hill. and this is cnn >> would job the thing, that thing. i've got bad. >> you can't help but smile when you hear the music is called jauan. that's the one and only bob marley, why are we talking about it today? because bob marley, one love. there's a new movie celebrating the jamaican reggae artist turned global icon. it is out today. so we're very excited. trolls because talking about it all day, talking about it all day because we've got the man who's playing the legend year that is award-winning actor kingsley been adheres in the house. welcome, kingsley. thank you. also with us is music >> royalty, if we can call you that, the movie's producer and the eldest son of bob and rita marley, that would be eight
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grammy winning artist to apple. doesn't fall far from the tree. that's ziggy marley congrats on the movie, welcome, welcome back as well to be here i want to start with you, ziggy, because of course we all know the music, but i think most people don't know a lot about the man myself included. we're learning things in this movie that most people i've heard, even people close to him didn't know what was his story you wanted people to know about your dad? >> yeah. i think the thing that we wanted people to know was him as a human being, the emotional side of bub, psychological side above, not not the exterior, but the interior of barb. there's a lot of books, a lot of videos, there's 500 books about yes. so >> yes 500 about him, yes. yes. yes. so we were trying to tell >> people is something that they didn't know about bob. and we have to go on to the inside of bob to do that >> yeah. >> and you didn't shy away to in the movie because it's fair
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to say your dad was complicated. >> there were >> all sorts of stories about him and the way he lived his life and anger and fidelity, many things. but you said the family was okay. showing bob marley warts and all. we were enough for you to the truth. he wasn't afraid to shoot. he lived his life. is he wasn't like i tried to hide anything of who is and how he was. so he was he had an edge to him, an edge? yes. his name, his nickname >> is tough gun chef g9, gang. gang. gang, gang. okay. >> so that's his son to get yeah. i mean, it means don't mess with okay. let's go ahead. mean yeah, the edge do you grew up in the streets? so that's aside and people might not know what be within go is piece of he had an edge to immuno okay. >> so i got a question for you. >> plan. how was the planned? a real person. but how to fall? how's it plan a real person. but also plan a legend um.
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>> i feel like i feel like we're barb it was always the conversation from the beginning about his spirit. the essence of him, and that bob is really, he's so big, is some magical in a way that you can't really play him. you can only try to attempt to capture, capture a little bit of his spirit. and when i say spirit, really what i mean is vulnerability. and as an actor, whatever the pie is whoever is if his kennel graphical king off for whatever it's my training was always vulnerability first so what, what what is it about any character that makes them human is the only thing that audience are going to connect with in the end. so as you feel pressure, of course, of course there's pressure, but, but really i chose i chose to do no one made me do it. i want i
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wanted to do it. and i remember watching bob before i auditioned and being amena was all in black. he he's there's something some magnetic about him when he's on stage. and then ziggy and we start talking about him as a father and as a man. and i'm going to get to learn about bob with the people who knew him and loved him. >> but it makes it more extraordinary though what kinsey did because you said you didn't saying you didn't play the guitar you didn't dance. >> all of >> which bob marley did do, just smoke weed. >> know, i eat it >> all, all of which 12 of which bob marley did you did none of those things who said, but yet you said a little very good at football football, but yet so how did you learn to speak the way you spoke the patois to play the guitar. what did it take for you to learn to do that? >> just a lot of phone calls
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and, we just had to get to what i got a guitar as soon as i've wrapped on secret garden. yeah, i know i just started learning chords and listening to bob and i started a conversation very quickly with the family and bobs friends. so as i was just absorbing information from them, as i say, like normally, when you have a character, you just show character new create it. you're on your own. >> and then you come in and you but with this, it wasn't like that it was really and needed the support and love of everyone around, you know everyone in the family and you felt you had that from the family? yeah, >> 100% question for you, like we talked about like an nba last week we were celebrating dr. king, who's more famous passed away and he's alive. and your dad is probably in the same boats. have you ever been surprised because when we do this, nothing outside where we interview people that was people who couldn't have been
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born. when your dad passed away? we asked him what's their favorite bob marley song. they still aren't seeing it. it had one like so living with having a father who was living legacies your dad? >> yeah. >> how? >> i've used surprise >> or just feel gratitude that he's more famous in-depth then life. >> gratitude. and i think one of the reasons why it's like that with him is because a voice as a human being, people connect with him. probably like martin luther king junior to like them connectivity him on a different level that is not just like this superstar up days like he's one of us. so them have that strong feeling towards him because of other the footage they've seen, how we speaks and how they perceive him as to be as a person. so the connection is very strong with anybody who explores my father's music is that empathy is something about him, especially now what's your,
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what's your best memory about him? because we see a lot in the movies, there's a wonderful scene of you in the car with your dad. you're a little boy >> what's your favorite memory about he ever it is a favorite memory you know, he was so young when he passed away is only 30. yes. so it's like cancer everything when i look back, either my memories our special moments. would that be playing football, soccer, chars yeah. >> it's good >> are you know, one of the most member the things we did with him, we took trips with him. we went to zimbabwe i believe hey, mom, my brother steven, we went to zimbabwe to celebrate the independence from british rule and during that trip was first time in africa he, what we were in the hotel room and the guys that were fighting for freedom came to visit him and they brought they brought like the grenades and
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they brought the guns and they were showing him and they were telling him how the music, his music had them motivate them to fight against the colonial powers he was and as i kid that kinda meta impression on me. how music can be so powerful >> you know, how music can be healing and music can transform. and that's what he did. don't go anywhere, guys, because we have a lot more on bob marley, the movie. it's called one love and the enduring impact even today on hands everywhere we talked to a few of them right before the show today >> do you have a favorite bob marley song, sunshiny, waiting? and during this here a little bit my name is shahed dave, i know finger like let's here, pam >> we're here to get your side
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wait, scan the code now and ask about the bosley guarantee >> i'm paula reid in washington and this is cnn >> that is a real bob marley with this classic is his love. we're here now with jamaican reggae star that ziggy marley, who is a producer on the new film, bob marley, one love. he also is bob and read his eldest son and actor kingsley ben-adir, who plays bob marley and the movie that is out right now how did you know listening to kingsley who said he didn't play the guitar, he didn't saying he didn't dance. how did you think that he could play
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your dad and he's taller than your dad, t2. >> it will. bob was a giant. >> i was okay with kings would be entirely >> got to ask bob is like a big but what it was with king do when we saw that addition team and we did look everywhere. we i mean, obviously the over first inkling was this fine. a jamaican, someone who knows that. let's find somebody who know exactly the kohn-sham, everything. >> and there was some backlash, wasn't there because he was british and people thought a jamaican person should have paid. >> yeah, we thought so too. yeah. >> charles, what was your answer? >> what was your answer to >> charles? you were >> talking about an early acids if the happened way to tell everybody up to shut the hell up >> we were happy with it, but they did was he brought us in to the more than which that's i mean, we know that if you could look like bob take that, but i've seen that if you don't bring us into the motion, then it don't. >> what do you have? yeah, it doesn't make any sense. >> and the fact that we
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accepted kingsley and we premiered it in jamaica and the jamaican people accepted kingsley. and i'm good. >> yeah. >> you know, you came here just glossed over like, yeah, i just learned to play the guitar like, i don't think it's that simple like how much time and effort i mean, i don't think anybody no disrespect anybody you can just like, hey, you know what i think i'm allowed to play the guitar is just the owl is just it was just the hours enough for stop. and so i just a lot. bob's songs, you know, there's similar cord, so the basics i just was teaching myself and i just felt them as we'll keep going with it. and then by the time we got to the scene in the room, i'm still not i'm not perfect. done it but if there's a way well at xi's in ziggy was in the room when we were doing that scene. now remember him, the sort of musically directed me because i wanted to know what it means to create music. and to wake up in the morning and what you do is
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you pick up a guitar and you create songs like that's what bob did. that's what he, that's how he lived his life. create a music is kind of, let, vause plan a footballer and not kicking a ball. and it was the same with the singing i was i'm not going to sound i don't need to put the pressure on myself to sound good, but bob singing from such an emotional place when you watch bob's face, when he's singing it the magnitude that i experience is coming from a deep, deep well of emotion and trauma. and when it comes together, something really powerful and i feel like that's the vibration of his music and his spirit and his person as well. because who he was as a person with so much to do, his commitment, bob he committed his left to music and he became a master in right. a young age. and there's not many people who can do that. so i really wanted to just feel what that was when and i remember in that acoustic seen ziggy just send less less more telling me what to do with my hands, less more. and i was just following the instructions
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because you can't really learn to play lack bob or sing like bobbin ten years. >> i know. >> you're on the set of barbie because you were one of the cans you're on a set of barbie, so break you'd go and try to strum the guitar and then go back. >> i >> kept me different things the stumbling guitar on what pull and do can yes. >> at >> the same time little bit, but i figured out can pretty quickly. yeah >> the same clout on the biden box with a minute together made it a bit more space. you know, when he was talking about your dad's commitment country music, he also had such a commitment to peace and just desire for peace almost took his life because they were rival gangs in jamaica. he said, let's have a concert, bring everybody together. there was an assassination attempt on his life. so we all almost lost him. do you remember that night? >> when i remember that night, i wasn't there at the rehearsals. i did. i wanted to go, but my mind that was very strict about school and education. so she was like you have school tomorrow, you can
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go to rosales so but in a minute that night, the police came for us at home and kind of harry does talk it took us away? i know it's kinda like we didn't know what was going on and why did they take you away? because they weren't sure what i guess so. i mean, somebody sent them for us. maybe it was from the government. somebody sent them for getting kids and take them to see if the just in case can we don't know what's going to happen? and i remember seeing my father the next month and then the mother came up and we were like something that, you know, something bad happened, you know, we realized that something that right. >> yeah. >> go ahead. i >> just you know, i was telling kingsley like first of all, i hate fanboy over him. i mean, i saw watching you in this movie a few years ago. king arthur led to the store because i was a big childhood and fan and i said, it's brother here, man, i like him. so i just wanted to tell you, man, i'm proud of us access to keep doing your thing. i'd tell you mandate
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for the family to have so much competence and you because number one, i know acting is hard. i've never done in a real acting but to be able to pull off alleging man is pretty special. so contiguous success saying the yes, i want to know from you before we say goodbye, did you learn anything about your dad that you didn't know in the course of producing the movie, looking at all the footage, talking to kingsley about what you wanted to portray, did about him. >> it made me think about some i'm not sure about learning, but it made me think about probably it is a part of learning his mei really think about what more fido intial emotionally during this time period psychological. i never thought about it before. kings depleted in calculus, the playdom with deep emotion and deep like thoughtfulness doesn't like the happy about
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the stereotypical bob marley was like a more solemn father who went through something heavy. >> yeah. >> i mean, he he many sides yeah, he he got almost chirg he got diagnosed with cancer, yet to leave his country and it was crazy, you know, i got one last question. so yes, it has been 500 books written about your dad. have you ever read any of them >> do you remember? >> i was like no even the best said, i don't know i live with my experience alone. let's leave >> with the great line in the movie about what your desk would you tell share class. >> and this is, this is why the movie was made in this time period because in this time period, he came to that realization that and he says that if my life is so me, i don't want it my life is so people you go and that's something that bob marley, yes. yes. thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you. thank
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you. congratulations. did you know that his valentine's day? did you remember it's valentine's day >> chansley i could tell by your outfits >> charles and i have a surprise when we come back, king charles continues right after the break good evening, everyone. i'm abby philip. what on earth is going on with the republican party is just a huge problem for the biden campaign. how do you know that those numbers? birds are false news night with abby phillip tomorrow at ten eastern on cnn, united states of scandal with jake tapper sunday at nine on cnn my name is brian how fire up. >> and because of tiktok, i have the power to educate people. and hopefully save lives >> when my son, >> brian died and drunk driving accident, i put out a video about it and try to stop that young people from drinking and driving. >> no other family has to go go through what we did. >> tick tock has the power to
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>> glenn close was melians are possibilities. >> you can book whoever you want to be. >> that's my line. >> booking.com looking died. yeah >> start your day with nature. me. >> the number one pharmacist recommended vitamin supplement brand >> have you heard sling tv offers the news you love for less weight, you look and sound just like me. actually i am, you because on the same news programs on sling for less, you mean you're me but for less money, a lot less. i'm all your favorite news programs and more on sling starting at just $40 a month. everything great about me, but for less money, which makes me greater than you think it's the same news for less, starting at $40 a month >> america have valentine's
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day, you think downtime stage overrated >> it's what if you're not in a relationship? >> richard, it's just so female holiday, correct? >> it seems to be that way >> you think it's for men and women, like it's for everybody. >> well, i would adjust be for a woman. >> what percentage of women you think? good a man, something, maybe like 50%. >> oh, about 40, yeah >> 20. >> it feels more like a holiday for women. do you get valentine's day gift yourself? >> i mean, a whole so i'm vice chair the man and you're like, yeah oh you do my job, dunkin donuts >> yeah >> yeah. >> we were talking earlier about is valentine's day for men or women. and you said, how many women give gifts? german for valentine's day percent, 20% the most. >> so we were taking hello people said 50% people think so. do you agree with me? i do. i do. i actually, i don't think that most women give men gifts
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on balanced and they shouldn't, they shouldn't know. there's a holiday. >> do you really think that i really do and that's done with that? yeah. yeah. yeah. >> we just got to come up with a bag for the man well, i do i want america to know that charles barkley came in and brought gifts for every woman on the staff. he came in. you want to tell people what you got us? >> i got you a facial and body scrub, whatever the hell that is. >> what we all thought that for all the women on the staff, we walked in, charles is handing out cards to everybody. i thought that was really nice. >> charles, i got something i want to try to get you all youngest specif i got some three, you >> please. can we get a tight shot of the wrapping paper you've got your face okay i'm afraid. i'm a free a bad, i have face know i have to explain this because charles told his guys in a meeting that he travels with opening opening here, ripping up your travels with his travels with his own bar of soap. i do >> in a plastic bag charles
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barkley in a ziploc bag so this is why i got you. this is this is a soap carrier. >> oh, my goodness, yellow and my favorite color >> isn't it nice? >> pull it out so people could see. >> and it says >> then i got you got i got them something else. it says you are fabulous, you are glorious, you are fears. notice it's a little hard it's with my face. >> got there all dam was i do. i do >> you bought three root scale and i thought you would get a kick out him do get a kick out of it. and i would like you to put it in a prominent place in your home it's got brianna prominent place >> it's a shot of me and check at the super bowl >> isn't that nice? >> it's just sought to put this on a prominent place our promise i'll put this on a prominent place has got to have a shower in the room counter a
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toilet. i knew you're going to say that's a place. i knew you're going to say that, but charles, the kick i want to see this every morris i do not know. no, i think you want to see both of us know. i don't they, charles, i have to say we were the planning a different show for today, but because of the shooting, kansas city, where did pivot and talk about something else? because i really wanted to talk about the super bowl, really wanted to talk about ushers halftime show. you really, he was fantastic. talk about travis and coach reid was lots to discuss. but one thing i did want to talk about, you said when we're in the super bowl, we were going to get together for dinner on saturday night. you said, i'm going to call you were going to be asked me know call me if you if charles barkley called you, he called me. >> you said >> i'm going to call you. were going to go out to dinner saturday. i'm still waiting. that'll do it for us on king charles. this man doesn't keep his word. >> it doesn't even call me but what no, you didn't drop a phone? no, you didn't. you said i'm going to call you were going to go out to dinner. i'm still waiting. well, we back every wednesday at 10:00
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>> and gayle gayle be up first thing in the morning. let me tell you. i'm i get up every morning. the water >> we will see you next week. take it easy. >> no, charles, you said we're going to go said you didn't call me. >> why didn't want to call you and say, are we >> going out to dinner? i didn't want to know i didn't do it a thing saturday, gayle king and charles barkley are shaking things up on cnn. >> thank you. >> us tonight >> i'll give opinion. i don't be opinionated. >> do you make comment about the warriors last night? i don't believe everything you read on the internet, king charles, next wednesday, a ted on cnn >> this is cnn the world's news network. >> dynamic has suspension. we'll stay >> configurable terrain
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