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tv   The Amanpour Hour  CNNW  March 23, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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gambling on your mind as well. i do. it's march madness and i am positively convinced that this week we will see another college betting scandal in men's or women's basketball so far we've only seen a scandal that hit alabama baseball last year and a couple of college football players who got caught betting on other college teams. but this is the, this is the betting olympics. >> and >> if you haven't seen a betting add in the last two weeks, it's because your eyes were not opened. i will i would be stunned if that does not take place over the next week >> all right >> chris is gonna be back next week and you can catch me on cnn's the assignment podcasts that drops twice a week wherever you get your podcasts until then, thanks for spending part of your day with us. we'll see you back here next week
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>> cnn's breaking news >> hello, everyone. thank you so much for joining me this saturday. i'm fredricka whitfield in atlanta, the amanpour, our begins in just a moment, but first these top stories were staying on top of several breaking stories at this hour t, starting in russia, were short time ago, president vladimir putin released a statement on the deadly attack on a concert venue near moscow, calling it a barbaric terrorist act isis is claiming responsibility for the rampage, which killed at least 133 people and injured more than 100. the world is also reacting to the stunning announcement from the princess of wales revealing her cancer diagnosis princess catherine says, she is now in the early stages of treatment all right. let's get started in russia, cnn senior international correspondent fred pleitgen is monitoring developments from berlin. so fred, what more is the kremlin saying at this point? >> well, vladimir putin came out a couple of really an hour
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and a half ago and he essentially addressed to the russian nation, you offered his condolences. he called the attack on the crocus center a barbaric attack as he put it. and he also then tried to create a link fredricka to the attackers and two ukraine, it was quite interesting to listen to vladimir putin because this is also a narrative that we are now hearing more generally from russian state controlled kremlin controlled media as well, where they are saying that right now that they're not exactly sure where these attackers came from, what organization they're from, but they are trying to create some sort of link to ukraine blaming that the attackers were trying to get back to ukraine after perpetrating the attack last night, i want to listen into some of what vladimir putin had to say nicole for direct perpetrators of the terrorist attacks that are those who shot and killed >> people were found and attained they tried to hide and move towards ukraine, where according to preliminary data, a window was prepared for them on ukrainian side to cross the
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state border total of 11 people were detained >> there's two things i think a really interesting about that frederick on the one hand, he said that the perpetrators, as he called them, we're trying to get to ukraine. of course that in itself is a pretty difficult thing to do because of course, that is exactly hey, with the frontline of the war in ukraine currently is. and there really is no open border to get through there. he then claimed as he put it, that a window appeared to have been opened for them seemingly meaning some sort of way to get across the border which would strongly indicate that vladimir putin, like some others, and russian state media are accusing ukrainian in the ukrainian state or any state organizations of having been at the very least a part of this operation ukrainian military intelligence has already come out and said that ukraine had absolutely nothing to do with this. in fact, the military intelligence service is accusing russia of doing this in a false flag operations. you can see the things going back
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and forth there between the russians and the ukrainians that narrative sort of starting to take hold their in russia. now, the latest that i have for you in this actually came just a couple of minutes. so before we went on air, fredricka as the russians are now saying that of the 11 people who have been so far, none of them are russian citizens. fredricka. >> all right. >> again, isis claiming responsibility. thank you so much for pleitgen. >> all right. support is pouring& from around the world. meantime, after catherine princess of wales, revealed yesterday that she has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy >> as you can imagine, this has taken time it has taken me time to recover from major surgery in order to start my treatment but most importantly, it has taken us time to explain everything to george, charlotte, and louis in a way that's appropriate for them. and to reassure them that i'm going to be okay. >> seeing an anchor and royal correspondent, max foster joining me from outside buckingham palace. max, how is
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the uk reacting >> well i think after the shock of yesterday, you've got to think that amongst all of the theories out there or the rumors out there cancer certainly was not one of them. so a lot of people lot of people let's consume. there has obviously been so much worry over the last few weeks and months. also, a lot of trawling. and i think mao, that everyone's got their answer, they can sort of make sense of why we hadn't seen the princess for all this time. she had to decompress. you had to recover from surgery shut to start a new set of treatment and she's made it very clear that after all of that, the priority was the kid and so making sure that they are in as safe environment as possible, which is why they waited until they broke up from school and went into the school holidays to announce this news to the world. so i think now it's the case of what level of privacy he should the family be
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afforded. and i think a lot of people i'm speaking to are saying they should certainly be afforded the privacy that they're asking for >> max. what what is next for kate? and when we know she said she is undergoing in the early stages of her chemotherapy treatment, but do we know anything more about her day-to-day or in the near future for her >> so they've they've made it very clear that what we got yesterday and they asked us to put out effectively is all we're going to get on this. there aren't going to be updates and less she improves suddenly, all gets worse. suddenly, and the public has a right to know that we're not being told where they are even at the moment, for example, although lots of flowers, i have to say being laid out a windsors they for the princess, but we don't even know that she's there right now. she may appear at some point if she feels ready to, but she's not gonna be returning back to work until the doctors have given her that approval. i suspect
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that will be after she's successfully completed this period of chemotherapy and she's ready to go back to work. so we're not going to see much if we are going to see william. he said he is going to carry on with this public engagements, but he's got a balance that against looking after his wife and his children who are at home as well. a lot of pressure on him when you consider his father and his wife are both got cancer now, but he also has to be the front facing the monarchy alongside the queen. a lot of pressure on her right now as well to represent that continuity that the monarchy is there to present to the world. >> that's certainly a lot on everyone's shoulders. all right. max foster outside buckingham palace. thank you so much. >> all right. back in the us crisis averted on capitol hill as us senators worked past the midnight deadline and into early morning hours to pass a spending bill fell to avoid a government shutdown. the 1.2 trillion dollar package funds nearly three quarters of the government for the next six months and is now headed to
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president biden's desk for signature today, cnn's annie grayer is covering all of this for so any, what can you tell us about what's in this bill and how this vote? eventually came together >> well, it came together after a long stalemate in the senate. what finally broke through with senators came to an agreement on the amendments to vote on for this bill. so they started voting and finally pass legislation around 02:00 a.m. now we're expecting you to go to the president's desk where he's expected to sign it so we're not expecting to see any lapse in funding. let's take a look at what's in this bill, including funding for the department of defense, the department of homeland security. you can see the breakdown on your screens. they're and now that the government is officially funded for the rest of this fiscal year, we can take a step back and just realize and acknowledge how chaotic and tumultuous this was. we always knew was going to be challenging for congress to
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fund the government when it's divided. but this was really next level. republicans have such a small majority in the house. democrats control the senate, and there there was a lot of stalemates between the two. part of the issue was republicans tried to include a lot of partisan measures in these government funding bills. that was a nonstarter in the senate. so that's set off a stalemate between the two sides. and we saw lawmakers again and again passing these short-term extensions us to get to this point and usually up until the 11th hour and beyond that, i mean, kevin mccarthy lost his job over this republicans ousted him back in october for his handling of government funding speaker mike johnson now faces a threat from congresswoman marjorie taylor greene over his handling of appropriations. we'll see what happens there, but i think right now there's just a sigh of relief on capitol hill that they have finally funded the government for this fiscal year. >> all right. annie grayer. thank you so much. we'll see you again at the top of the
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hour. i think so much for joining us and fredricka whitfield. more news coming up, the amanpour, our begins in the moment >> united states of scandal with jake tapper. tomorrow at nine on cnn, we had to take our old gas heating that wasn't huge project. i was so overwhelmed, so i started contacting people off of to work with people that knew what they were doing. it was a game changer >> get started today at angie.com >> don't worry about may constable horizon above it be >> obscene little hampton letter. >> what you're five had one. now, there's causing widespread across the nation i might happen at off for that govern
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ends of the earth to find adventure you just have to travel to the end of the road because here in kyiv who asked were the launching point for a world of breathtaking action and excitement from deep sea quest's shallow-water pursuits moving history lessons and journeys on the bounding main key west, close to perfect far from normal >> now board must what do you find? >> priscilla now streaming exclusively on macs >> welcome to the program, everyone. i'm christiane amanpour in london. we begin this out with something we can all relate to the pursuit of health and happiness in an emotional conversation with america's highest ranking dr.
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vivek murthy. the us surgeon general, wears his hard on his sleeve, talking about his own struggles with loneliness. he came to london for the world happiness summit this week, and his timing couldn't be better. >> the global in project claims the uk is the second most unhappy country in the world. meanwhile, in america, a new report says that for the first time, young people there, between 15.24 aren't as happy as their older peers dr. murthy says, social media silos and addictive smartphones are making us more anxious and depressed than ever. and he wants lawmakers to step up now surgeon general, welcome to the program. >> thank you so much. >> you are in england. i mean, perhaps people would >> be surprised to know that you're here for a happiness summit. in fact, we're talking on international happiness day why, why is it needed? what is the problem with the deficit of happiness? >> well, the problem is that if people happiness is
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intrinsically linked to help, you know, when we are not feeling happy, when we're not feeling fulfilled in our lives that affects how we show up at work, at school and our communities. but it also ultimately has an impact on our physical health. we've now learned over the years that there's a strong connection between our mind and our body, how we feel, and how we are. and the more we've learned about that we've learned, for example, that issues like loneliness and isolation have tremendous effects and increasing the risk for both depression and anxiety, but also for heart disease, for dementia, and for premature death. >> are you surprised and i know that you are york shovel. >> in other words, you are a yeah, yorkshire labmates >> are you surprised that this country, amino pretty close to top of the tables in the oecd nations is the second most unhappy, depressed country in the world only uzbekistan has it worse we're just going to play a couple of soundbites. >> i think a lot of people can be taken down by the weather,
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but coming from the us, from california to here, i love it i made a choice to move here and people are just getting more and more downbeat by the fact that there'll be helped by the government market forces, et cetera. and i think it just yeah, it can be we are difficult. we're not that i'm happy. i think the older generation is senior to be happier than the younger generation. are you surprised? >> well, i'm deeply concerned, but i think one of the key lessons from this is that economic prosperity alone is not the key to happiness. and in fact, what we are seeing is that in many, many countries, which are increasingly modernizing in terms of their economy, their culture, et cetera we're actually seeing that unhappiness is growing. and i think that's coming for a few different reasons. one of them is because we're actually pulling further and further apart from one another with the benefits and efficiencies of modern technology and ways of life we actually have fewer friends that we trust. with your relationships. we can rely on and that is a direct impact on our happiness and well-being. the other challenge though, is i think technology
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has been a mixed blessing for us. and i think particularly when it comes to young people, the impact of social media on their mental health has often been quite negative, which is why last here, i issued a surgeon general's advisory on social media and youth mental health to point out the fact that when young people are using social media as they often are for more than three hours a day, they double their risk of anxiety and depression symptoms you have, in fact gone even further comparing social media and the tech companies to 20th century card giants, which have produced vehicles without seat belts and airbags until legislation mandated it. what's happening in social media is the equivalent of having children in cars that have no safety features and driving on roads with no speed limits, no traffic lights, no rules whatsoever. and we're telling them, you know what do your best figure it out. it's insane yeah that is what we've done to where children it's we've put them in unsafe, untenable environments and we're hoping for the best and you know, who else
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>> we've placed the burden on our parents parents, all across the world are trying to figure out how to manage social media for their kids. these platforms are rapidly evolving many parents never grew up with them. and what they're finding is that their kids are often exposed to extraordinary harms or that that's violence and sexual content, whether it's content generated by the algorithm that in some cases tells them to harm themselves house. and the experience itself, many young people tell me, has led them to often feel worse about themselves and about their friendships. yet, they feel they can't get off of it because the features that are built in are meant to maximize how much time we all spend on them. and that is a profound source of concern for me as a dr. as i watched the profound and disturbing health effects on our kids can ask you a personal question. did >> you have personal experience as a child with any kind of loneliness that informs your your, your zeal for this? >> i did christiana, i struggled a lot with loneliness
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as a child. i was shy. i was introverted. i didn't have a lot of people who were from similar cultural backgrounds are or, you know immigrant backgrounds. and i ended up feeling quite different and left out a lot. and that was really hard. but what was pretty hard for any christiana? and was a shame that came with that. i came to believe as a kid that's something was wrong with me. that's why i was lonely and something was broken. maybe i wasn't likable. maybe i wasn't lovable. and even though my parents love me unconditionally, christiana never told him about these struggles because i felt ashamed i have felt this is an adult at times to these struggles with loneliness after my first stint as surgeon general, in fact, i was left without a work community. i hadn't largely neglected my friends and family as i allowed myself to get inundated with my work and i bore the consequence of that later when i felt profoundly alone and lost. and i think a lot of people go through these struggles. we don't talk about them often, but there are deep, they're profound, and they're part of the human experience. if you
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experienced the linens from time to time, that's one thing if you reconnect with people that loneliness goes away, it's when it's prolonged, when it's deep. that's when it starts to have impacts on our health and well-being. and if we can just talk more openly about this, if we can recognize the power of showing up in each other's lives are checking on friends of putting ten minutes aside each shader reach out to people we care about we can make a big difference in how connected we are >> that's one aspect to the loneliness. the other aspect is you said is the social media and you, i was staggered to read that you'd gone to several universities in the united states and where they should be chattering and connection. there was total silence yes, this one of the most striking things on the university tour that didn't the united states was just the volume on the campuses. and in the dining halls was much lower. i remember when i was in university that the loudest place on campus was actually the dining hall. we would all finish our classes, come there and aaron wanted to talk talk, talk and catch up. but not only is it quieter there because people aren't talking, they're on their devices. >> they asked you, how are we
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supposed to even meet people and have conversation? >> that's right because it feels intrusive. they would say to approach somebody when they've got their ear buds in, when they're looking at their phone. and the harder the less you do it. the harder it gets. because are social muscle has to be built over time. if we don't exercise it, meaning if we don't interact with other people, start conversations, engage in person, that muscle becomes weaker and in-person interaction becomes harder and harder. and that's what we're seeing with our kids. and so it >> goes not everybody thinks ai is going to be the replacement for romance not just dating apps, but actual robots and things what's your view on that? >> i think it can be tempting and easy to look at ai as a panacea for all l's and it might be easier and more convenient to turn to a chat bot than to go out and build a relationship but these are fundamentally different. there is no replacement for in-person human connection. it's how we were evolved over thousands of years. we were wired, hardwired to connect with one another. and we've got to intentionally build that back into our life
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now because it is slipping away. >> vivek murthy. thank you very much for being with us. thanks so much. christiane, good to be with you. >> and coming up later in the hour, superstar olivia coleman on her new movie. and what trolls did before, there was twitter but first, the israeli haley prime minister benjamin netanyahu vows to press on with a military offensive on rafah. irc president david miliband joins us with the humanity the tyrian consequences after the break. >> this is about human survival. and that's why it's a failure of humanity >> this year the one thing republicans and democrats have in common, they're both waiting for their nominees to die this such white trash in congress who are young american, same lod is getting it, right. why don't you take a gap year in a bada bada show. were right and left. talk to jump sanity needs to save
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>> if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to one for it would be impossible to complete the victory without the idf and trade rafah. and this, in order to eliminate the rest of the hamas battalions soon we will also approve the plan to evacuate the civilian population from the battle zones israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, they're following his latest call with president joe biden seeming to where his dismissal of the >> president's concerns as a badge of honor he's often no plan yet for the safety of more than 1 million palestinians sheltering in rafah or for expanding relief or forgetting the israeli hostages back amid stalled negotiations, the international rescue committee calls the imminent famine in gaza a profound failure of humanity. and entirely
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preventable. david miliband is president and ceo of the irc. he's also former british foreign secretary, and he is a child of holiday of course, refugees. this week he joined me here in the studio to sound the alarm. >> david >> miliband, welcome back >> to our plank, christian. >> so >> the who you all everybody is really trying to sound the alarm of what is we can see by the picture. is this impending famine who do you blame for this? >> so 2.2 million people don't know where their next meal is coming from. and the million who are at risk of famine, imminent risk of famine in level five represent the fastest degradation, the fastest acceleration of a hunger crisis that's ever been seen. now, how do you explain that to get you to your question? so you've got a series of impediments, blockages, restrictions, being put in place on lorries carrying vamos, basic
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humanitarian aid. and it's not getting through to the people who need it that's why you're ending up in the situation. well, what a frankly, fourth and fifth best alternatives dropping aid from the sky, building a peer that's going to be online and another six weeks that won't help the people at imminent risk of famine. now, what possible >> reason could a democracy at war have? for denying the basic elements of survival, >> no good reason has been given. there's one part of the arguments. i think it's important to get clear, which is that some of the trucks are being turned back because of allegations that some of the items on a truck might be quote, unquote, dual use. in other words, they might have civilian use as well as military abuse let's be clear what kind of items we're talking about. a pair of scissors for use in a health center. and when a pair of scissors gets found on a truck, the whole truck gets turned back >> i want to play is just so that our viewers and you also really hear from at least one
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person there of the desperate hunger that they face >> what has this child done to suffer from hunger? i cannot find him milk for five shekels or a packet of milk from the agency. there, the normal milk is for 150 there is no work. there's no food no drinks. we are eating plants. we started eating pigeon food, donkey food. we are like the animals. >> i saw you shaking your head. i mean, this reference to them eating animal food is shocking still, every time we hear it. >> yeah. and remember the international phase classification report that came out? the day before yesterday 25 children have died of starvation already. this is abt human survival. >> and >> that's why it's a failure of humanity >> i just keep thinking somalia, ethiopia, all these famines that we've covered, all these food deliveries are these urgent interventions by
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the us lesson, others to save civilians >> why is this one different? why is this one allowed to happen? >> this is different because of the speed of the onset of this famine, because of the virulence of the attacks. and i say that plural, because remember there are 100 hostages, more than 100 as well as more than 2 million palestinian civilians in gaza at the moment this is the even urge the depth of this urgency, but also we know the depth of this political crisis because every humanitarian emergency is also a political emergency. this is a political emergency of really global significance, and it's one where our role as humanitarians is to be the expert witness of what's actually happening on the ground because the testimony that you've managed to play of the palestinian woman from gaza mirrors what our staff being on
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the ground in gaza, both our own medical staff are working with medical aid for palestinians who are our partner for our orthopedic surgeons group are emergency medical teams, but also local ngos were absolutely clear. the international rescue committee as a humanitarian organization that the dual humanitarian imperative, a legal and moral humanitarian burden of protecting civilians from fighting and of delivering aid to civilians. they can only be met by an immediate and enduring ceasefire. remember this is a legal as well as a moral imperative and legal right that these people have not just to life and limb, to survival but to aid delivery >> legal and moral incredibly important reminder. you can watch the rest of that conversation online and amanpour.com coming up on the program oscar winner olivia coleman on her new movie. and what trolling look like before social media. but first from
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protection starts here here >> when you need to prepare for unpredictable adventures you need whether tec leeser measured for liners front and rear seat protector to save the seeds >> they're all yours >> so i whether take the car we >> can now kick your gear with american made products at whether tech.com, it's michael's lowest prices of the season shop now for up to 70%, i'll store why it's gore huge deals on spring stems, art and craft supplies, and custom brains plus they won't offspring in plural and decor and all ethan or decor and here's another way to save the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow at eight on cnn welcome back >> president vladimir putin sailed unopposed into a fifth
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term. the only surprise being the brave protest vote that have been cold by alexey navalny before his death in prison last month. putin's iron grip on power is years in the making. part of his imperial worldview to return russia to what he considers its glory days. and he spent more than two decades systematically and often brutally reversing any of freedoms, advances, rolling back the legacy of his predecessors, boris yeltsin, and especially mikhail gorbachev, who famously brought perestroika glasnost a new openness to the soviet union, even before its collapse, 12 years ago, just after a teary-eyed putin had won his third term i sat down with this last leader of the soviet union to talk about that election and how it would speed the decay of russian democracy mr. president, many people call you the father of democracy.
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certainly many in the west and many in russia but many also saying that russian democracy, if it's not dead already, is dying why is that? what went wrong >> plus flow or three year well during the election campaign and a lot of critical phase, we're said about democracy in russia. and you're right, there is a problem. but democracy is not dying because when 100 people, hundreds of thousands people protest in the public's eye knew when the demand free and fair elections so many they are ready to take risks six, and what democracy means that it is a senior, because above all, democracy is this participation of citizens. soi should we however you bleed the institutions of democracy or not? working efficiently, not working effectively in russia because molly ultimately, they are not free. they are
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dependent on the executive. they're dependent on what we call telephone more, the rule of things you can. that is what you are protesting against the real freedom they want real democracy. they want a democracy in which the people's voice is decisive. >> in fact, you've called putins democracy or the current russian democracy and imitation democracy. >> do you >> think that? president putin is committed to any kind of reform? and will the people's voice be heard under his presidency >> yogurt idea to colonial report. >> i said, on the eve of the elections the president and his entourage in the future, we'll just continue to try to fool the people with this exitation russia that will not succeed people are protesting and people might protest in much stronger ways i should just
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continuous, which is old ways i think it'll be hard for him given his nature to do this, but there is no other way for him but to move toward greater democracy. russia towards real democracy in russia because there is no other way to work with russia to find a way out of its dead end in which it is now >> in the meantime about seven years ago president putin said, quote the collapse of the soviet union was the biggest geopolitical disaster of the century for the russian people. it was a genuine tragedy. he's talking about what you did >> routers. >> they are stating that i engineered it, >> fincher hello. >> dot worship. >> you will not find in any of my speeches until the very end, anything that supported the breakup of the breakup of the union was the result of betrayal by the soviets.
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nominate putter by the bureaucracy, and also yields he spoke about cooperating with working with me on a new union treaty. he signed the union judy initial that. but at the same time, he was working behind my back and that of course, is not an frankly policy. that is, i think deception middle version let me tell you that our friends, including our friends in the united states especially spoke very sympathetically to preserve some form a union. they said that it should be preserved but at the same time, when the breakout started, they were rubbing their hands. they will rubbing their hands. i would say below the table and by the way, yeltsin and his team felt deal subordinate your from certain members of the us
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administrations such there's some trini and gaetz who establish a channel of communication with yeltsin to many people around the world. you are a hero, a once in a generation actor who ended the cold war. how would you like your people to remember you >> historia demo, capillary history as a fickle lady and you can expect surprises from history further i do know that i did what i did and that i can be around long him. >> and you can and yet sadly, even today, there are reports that the kremlin is engineering further crackdowns on dissent and free expression. >> taking a >> page even out of china's online firewall still to come on the program. actress olivia coleman's new movie, a 100-year-old scandal that resonates more than ever today. >> oh, would you return my patio? pans before the trial next week just in case i don't see you for a long while afterwards tau
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1800851177. call now what is on the arizona mexico cnn welcome back to the program. long before there were twitter trolls, there was pen and paper. at when writing offensive letters landed people in prison, and a mystery that grip the whole of britain
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kevin. >> do you folks? yes. old hall in the gothic is just jealousy >> you feel >> certain rows glutenins, guilty. >> i can see why they think it's me you're twice the new movie, wicked little letters is inspired by a real life scandal >> and a string of anonymous poison pen letters that rocked the sleepy town of little hampton on the english coast in the 1920s the movie stars olivia coleman and is directed by theos sharrah and they drove me now from new york. welcome to you both and thanks for being on with us. so olivia, calmer. you play a kind of a buttoned up lady of the era. in this seaside town, this very gregarious or irish on girl comes to the town played by jesse buckley. you become friends and then you're dealing with a string of poisonous, horrible letters that are being directed to you.
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and it's about who did it, eat it, swan, who i play on the face of it is pious christian sort of the perfect woman of that time and very well behaved lives still with her parents and still weirdly sleeps in the same room as their parents. >> oh, that's weird >> weird and >> then jesse plays rose goodly, who in that period than everybody looked at as a shocking example of womanhood and an unmarried mother. and but these two women become friends. they see each other because we find out that behind closed doors, edith is not having a nice time and it's not a particularly loving household and this friendship sort of starts up. but then something happens which because i'm not sure what have we live. we don't do spoilers
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>> okay. so i'm going to take it from there then delta running, i'm going to take it from them because this investigation then starts when you start getting these poison letters, those are the wicked little letters. the title, and rose jesse buckley gets arrested because she is thought to have done this. i want to play one of the clips you charge in her under liable, not a small events >> no, >> isn't what's the evidence >> motive timeline >> similarities in the language >> so i can see you both laughing as you're listening and remembering. and i mean, so much of it was believed that we can't figure out what the heck is going on. was there a lot of that onset or you'll pretty potty mouth and you allow it to
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deliver >> yeah, we tell them. >> yeah. go on thea >> olivia is incredibly potty, mouth, >> she wouldn't melts in your mouth and actually, thank you >> know, we all are we all we all like proudly. yeah. yeah. >> i think it's a nice seasoning of language and it it a bit restrictive when you go to try to promote this thing and you can't really show any scenes are talking that vernacular. >> but we, that's why we don't do live telly i get quite know i get a bit more swearing when i'm nervous, i'm really trying not to say anything bad now, you're doing really well. i really doing lasing. >> what are your favorite swear words >> oh, now you see, can we say it american audiences really aren't keen on my favorite word. >> no. >> can you imagine what my favorite word is? >> i'm not going to say it. i will the lambasted and pilloried
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>> well, i do maintain that it's actually quite a cultured word because chaucer did use it, is my favorite. >> oh, okay. >> well, we'll be >> believing that >> theater. do you have one or you might >> well, i like to counterbalance >> so i go with bollocks. okay. i think we can keep that one. that's not yeah. yeah. sorry. thea wins. olivia, you clean out of luck. >> there. you began your career with amazing theatre here in the uk and i wonder whether you see in what you've done, not just from where you started, where you are now whether roles for women is beginning to be taken as seriously as they should, because women are they considered now big box office draws. >> i would say yes. and actually research suggests that they've always been big box office draws, but they've chosen to say don't get me started on the pay disparity. but may lack has get paid more because they used to say they've day drawing the audiences and actually that
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hasn't been true for decades but they still like to use that as a reason to not pay women as much as their male counterparts. now, industry should i ask you, who's jumped? yeah, yeah, let let's much higher because i want to know what yeah. tell me. do you have a pay disparity? i mean, urine oscar-winning actress olivia, i'm very aware that if i was oliver coleman, i'd be earning i've got a lot more than i am. i'm not saying i'm absolutely yes, i'm i'm aware of hey, which is a 12,000% difference that later, oh, gosh. yes. >> do the mass i know we'll look on that node via sharrah, olivia coleman. thank you both so much for joining us wicked little letters. thank you very much. >> for having us and the movie is out in the uk right now. and in the us on march 29, i'm christiana man four in london. thank you for watching and i'll see you all again next week.
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>> sanity needs to save space >> you have a show were right and left talk to him cnn's presents an encore presentation of hbo's real time with bill maher tonight at eight on cnn >> to get the full story, be unafraid, the will to fight our important. see the truth is israel full control of its territory and go with a search for answers takes you anderson cooper, 360 weeknight today. >> i consumer cellular, you get the same exact coverage as the largest carriers for up to half the price. >> that's amazing and great customer service based here in america >> that's amazing and no hidden fees no contracts and free activation >> that's something hello >> barbara sorry, i was muted >> may >> i know rights barbara rife
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