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tv   The Chris Wallace Show  CNN  May 18, 2024 7:00am-8:01am PDT

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price. then go to harrys dr. hello again and welcome. >> it's part people. >> today we're asking after a dramatic week of michael cohen on the stand, did trump's former fixer blow the prosecution's case, then debating the debate, our panel weighs in on what's at stake. after this week's bombshell agreement between trump and biden and the final jeopardy category is new format we've got the twist coming to the 60 year-old was shot. the gang is here and ready to go. so sit back, relax, and let's talk about up
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first after an explosive week of testimony, donald trump's hush money trial is wrapping up with closing arguments expected as soon as tuesday. it could all hinge on the prosecution's star witness, trump's former fixer, michael cohen. he made damaging allegations but trump's team pumped serious holes in his credibility i think there's a very interesting day, fascinating donald trump feeling strong after as lawyer grilled cohen about lying under roe including about this, we to work in the white house? >> no, sir. i can get brought to the day the defense use cohen's own texts and words to show he did want to go to washington and was a disgruntled former employee out for blood. i truly hope that this man ends up in prison then getting cohen to admit he didn't fully remember a key phone call where he claims he told from the payoff to stormy hey, daniels was moving
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forward. >> i think it's devastating. i mean, for michael cohen's credibility on this rich part, the prosecution got colon to testify about check sun by trump to cohen. they claimed was a $420,000 reimbursement including for the porn stars hush money, checks personally written at the donald trump's personal bank account outside the courthouse, a parade, a prompt cheerleaders, including some vp hopefuls, went after cola saying what trump can't say because of the gag order, the star witness is a serial perjure here with me today. podcaster and author kara swisher right-hand, salam, president of the manhattan institute, a national review, contributing editor new york times journalist and host of the interview podcast, lulu garcia-navarro. >> and do author and conservative pollster kristen sold as anderson. welcome back everyone. >> so qarrah, did cohen below
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the prosecution's case this week during cross-examination? no, i expect it that this is the part where he was going to have that back-and-forth with trump's lawyer. mostly he they had supporting stuff around and what he had been saying, but this guy is kind of a sketchy character and you seen that happen a lot of trials like this, like a lot of the mob trials actually they have a sketchy character convicting another sketchy characters. so i think overall, they proved what they were setting out to prove and whether people like michael cohen will be what the hinges on. i just like they might have throw of liking him there in real trouble. >> yeah. i disagree. i think up until this point, i was actually optimistic that the prosecution was making its case, but i think what happened on thursday actually really makes it very, very difficult for the prosecution to push forward. everything rests on cohen the debate around whether or not not on that phone call he actually spoke to trump and the fact that there was this big surprise that all of a sudden there was this
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14-year-old and some crank calls that apparently had not been disclosed before, i think was very problematic. >> ryan, let me pick up on this with you because cohen offered a lot of other evidence of trump's involvement. and there's been other evidence and documentary evidence from other witnesses. so how much damage would the prosecution poking holes or rather the defense poking holes in cohen's case, how much damage to that due to the prosecution? >> well, the truth is, i don't think the problem prosecution had a very strong case, regardless. so it's possible, even if you stipulate that trump was doing something that may have been false, does that mean that it was fraudulent? does that mean that he hadn't intent to commit a crime? that's not clear to me what was the crime that he was looking to commit more broadly, a campaign finance violation? >> the fec which is charged with actually protecting the public against campaign finance violations, said that they didn't really have a case, they didn't pursue a case. >> and that is a preponderance of evidence standard rather than a beyond the shadow of a
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reasonable doubt standard. there's no case here do you think there's no k oh, that's not true. they they can make as a case wherever they want to have a case and a lot of ways that's a scary thought. >> i believe that there has to be an actual client. yes, but they made a case that he paid off this porn star and how we did it, and that he possibly did it for campaign, for the campaign issues. >> there's no name, there's no crime, there is there is wait a second. god. yeah, there is there is a crime. i mean, this isn't this isn't a fabulae that they've come up with. >> if you haven't proven intent to defraud, forgive me, lulu, please. no, no, no. >> i mean, this is the debate. right? this is for the jury to decide ultimately. and so we can sit here and talk about this all day. but the fact of the matter is there was something that clearly happened here and clearly donald trump, i mean, no one i don't think anyone thinks of donald schon really has to be wasn't involved in. >> that's where i think this is really going to get in trouble for the prosecution because again just being sketchy is not necessarily illegal, but there has to be a
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clear violation of a clear law. and so for instance, say this was done to influence an election. there are lots of reasons why you would not want your adultery to be aired out in public, for instance, mean that's that's why this cohen situation is so potentially damaging because you need him to be the one to say yes, this was donald trump doing it. and here's why he was doing it. and here is exactly why. >> let me let me play this out though, but let's assume, and this is just an if, if trump is walks. if in fact that the either he is acquitted or there's a hung jury. what's the political impact of that? trump has been prosecuted are four cases this may be the only one before the election and what happens if he walks. so i think if he walks very little changes, i think right now that's almost the opposite. >> the world we're operating in right now, that voters right now who liked donald trump assume that he's innocent. figure, he probably won't get convicted if you don't like donald trump, you're not voting
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for anyways. so i think if walks its status quo, if he is convicted, i can envision a small but not insignificant portion of the electorate going even if you don't like joe biden thinking, i don't know if i can vote for someone who might be looking at jail time, but if he walks, i think it's status quo. >> i want to get into one last subject here, and that's the trump policy. 21 republicans, including members of on gross and state officials, who showed up at the trials week. many of them wearing the same outfit the former president usually wears front call them his surrogates i am disgusted by what is happening here. >> this is a sham this is not the united states of america. the only conclusion of course is that election interference. >> mr. president, we've got your back lulu who were the trump uniform best. >> i mean, vivek ramaswamy said a true thing here, which is this is not the united states of america, since when is it in the united states of america that people have to wear the
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trump uniform in order to show fealty and loyalty. this reminds me of saddam hussein and the good old days when you had the big mustache, when they were sitting around the table. >> oh, come on. come on. you know, let me be know, but knew. it was a joke. it was a joke. but to be clear, the idea that you are having to dress up as this man in order to show how close you are to him, you didn't let you how much you care for him? there's a, lot of rooms with a lot of republican politicians that have looked just like that. i don't want to are you suggesting that it was just a coincidence that they all showed up white shirt and red tie, wouldn't necessarily telling chris i was just going to wear a suit today like this and wander around behind him i fully support chris wallace so that's not show are going on in the republican congressional comment on the gasket it to take lulu's point, is it a
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little demeaning that you have all these people rushing not only to go out and attack the witness says and support trump, but to feel they need to dress up like him. >> i think that donald trump is a very unique idiosyncratic figure he really, really likes folks. we're going out on a limb travel doug burgum has a real job. he's the governor of north dakota, but here he is in new york city, cracking up the cost playing donald, right. and that's because that's something that donald trump appreciates and respects. and these are folks who would want to play a role in the trump administration's tariffs, you know, i've spent said they find things lulu. i've seen more terrifying things, including how the biden administration is running the country under the ground. so i mean, i think that it's imagined well on that i know what he wasn't in donald trump was busy agreeing to debate president biden right here on cnn. can a june debate help biden turn the tide? then changing the change, the growing trend or rollback diversity initiatives, just
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four years after george floyd's murder and lighter, the name game, the wild ways on parents are picking their baby's name with the help of social media. so sophie is that is that i go online, figure the trump hush money trial gavel to gavel coverage. the way only cnn can bring it to you, legal insight, expert analysis, and real-time updates live from the courtroom follow the facts, follow the test stem one follows cnn. >> all new subway wraps are packed with delicious ingredients in a pillar, we'll advice around family or refreshing lunch to taste them murphy for pro athletes like me, right? you're my finish all new rafah subway today. >> what the biggest companies the liver is an exceptional customer experience. what makes it possible is unmatched connectivity and biji solution from t-mobile for business t-mobile connects 100,000 delta
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presidential debates. >> we had two debates locked down and about two hours. this week. >> and while some details are still unclear what is clear these debates may be what president biden struggling campaign badly needs or make my day pal president biden, shaking the political world with his surprising announcement, i'll even do it twice. >> first, pick the dates down, offering two debates with donald trump in june and september, which trump quickly agreed to have accepted that to 100%. but i think they should be more than two. the first debate, just over a month away, the earliest presidential debate ever with vibes of the first televised debate. the candidates need introduction, like the nixon kennedy face off in 1960 candidates will be in a tv studio with no audience. >> they've got a debate that's not going to be a roman colosseum, which disadvantages trump biden's move getting mixed reviews even from top
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democrats itself would never recommend going on stage with donald trump. >> but the early debate could help biden, as his campaign hey, in battles challenging headwinds with the economy's still the number one issue for voters. and new polls showing biden trailing trump in almost every swing state. this is a close race. he knows that he has to cross this hurdle kara, who won the debate power play when they're going to have the debate. and what we know so far about the format. if you think about the format, biden, it's been placed to his advantage. >> i think it's without a crowd. it is. they're having it, they're doing it. and it'll be probably the most watched thing now, because people are very interested. i think they kept out rfk jr. that was another thing that seems to have happened. it looks like you don't necessarily, but it looks like that so i think you probably pay place to biden's advantage, although trump does very well on these things, sometimes, although not always, christian, who would do you
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think that biden sees the vantage by sunlight coming out this week? i'm saying yep, june and september. and here are the ground rules and kind of forcing from to say, okay, in a way, i don't think that biden necessarily one this i mean, i don't think that it's going to affect the race in a great who won this battle will affect the race a great deal. but in some sense trump. you expect him to be the one that's kinda blowing up norms and forcing everything to be big and dramatic and difficult. and instead, he was the one kind of sitting back going. okay. sure. then there i'll do it. >> now. i don't know if behind the scenes there was less dramatic, but it certainly to me seems like biden is normally the one to say, i'm going to do things that are the normal way. and donald trump is the one that's being odd. and yet biden's the one that said no, this commission on presidential debates. i'm rejecting them that to me seems a little bit i do think it can be. it's going be very important. i mean, if we remember the state of the union speech and everyone was saying, oh, it doesn't matter,
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it doesn't matter. it really did raise some selves will matter a great night grades will matter a great deal. i think the timing of the debate, having an early is important for biden and i do think and i've and i've said this on the show. it is important for biden to be seen to take on trump some folks noted in biden's video announcement there are five jump cuts, debates. >> you can watch them here in 14 seconds, which is either edgy we're assigned he needed help from editing to get through the 14 seconds right? khan, is this is this debate really all about biden and the particularly this first one and whether or not he can convince americans he's up to four more years as president. >> yes, absolutely. lulu made the point that the timing of this debate is very good and important for joe biden. that's right. also for democrats why? because june is incredibly early, the commission on presidential debates would have had these debates way deep into the fall. why does that matter that democratic national convention is an august. my friends and what that means is if biden really blows it then the
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democratic party can blow it and press reset and get a new nominee. that's why this has to be extremely early so that the democrats can recover from a terrible performance. lulu, you think that's the real issue here? it's sides of mental and physical capabilities. i mean, i think it's definitely a test of his message to the country. i think think he is struggling in the polls and it is an opportunity for him to prove himself yet again and try and impart his message to the biggest audience he is going to have. and so, but the fantasy that some other is going to be a contested convention is again, a fantasy. >> i'm rob really just saying that people have doubts about his capabilities and in a sense, the first thing people are going to be judging is as he got all his marble, yeah. >> i think we will distantly have this and i will just say about the jump cuts this is a thing i'm trying to talk to take that one. yeah. you do it. this is the thing from tiktok. they do it all the time. that's the style and then at the end, i'll meet you on a wednesday. hear you're free.
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well done. that was a well done announcement. >> some folks suggest it's no coincidence. vitamin called for debates the day after the new york times ran pl that must have alarmed his team. it showed trump leading biden in five of the six key swing states. what's more, 69 on percent said they think the country's political and economic systems need major changes or to be torn down. kristen, you're are pollster on this panel how much trouble as biden in right now, items in a lot of trouble. the best thing for him is that the election is not being held today because if it was being held today, i think donald trump would win it and i don't i think that it would be terribly close, but we have a lot of time to go. and if americans actually get very exhausted with the selection, the fact that we're having this debate so early that we're gonna be talking about this nonstop between now and november. a low turnout election benefits biden because right now, democrats, they've got the most high propensity voters. donald trump will need to bring out a lot of people who hate politics in general
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are very loosely connected to the system. if everybody's frustrated and hates everything by november, then you can see it's swinging back from my theory is that biden couldn't afford to let the current arca does campaign continue until september he needs to try to change it because he's behind in an having a june debate gives them a chance. maybe if he does well, to change the narrative going back to eisenhower every elected incumbent with an approval rating at or above 50% won reelection. every incumbent below 50% lost except obama in 2012, was but 49% biden is 38 qarrah is preston, right? is biden and real trouble right now. >> he's got to jumpstart everything. he's got his show what she's read that is this a long time between then and now. and so we'll have to wait. the ways you how he does in this what other things had happened. we are in a massively quick news event thing that. people come in and so they could change their minds easily. but she's right if if, if people
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get tired of it and donald trump does things you disagree with you because they did the times did a poll in november and trump was leading and five of six swing-state, there has been a tremendous number of things that have happened since then on the economy hey, on the trials and all of that. and guess what trump is still hadn't five or six states. there really has been no change in the race. and the last six months, we'll see what the vice presidential can. i think it will matter for trump this time? i think people are paying a lot of attention to it up next, the renaming of a renaming, the local decision that's assigned to the backlash against all the changes made after george floyd's murder. >> plus one of the world's most popular ai platforms just got a whole lot more human let's try
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santa.com i'm elizabeth wagmeister in los angeles. and this is cnn close captioning brought to you by meso book.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial mac will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to one 4,000 not a what appears to be a growing trend, the rollback of social changes instituted after the murder of george floyd. this week, the university of north carolina voted to divert $2.3 million in dei funds from diversity programs to public safety on campus. and the state's board of governors is set to vote whether to reverse dei initiatives at all 17 public universities. north carolina is not alone. 85 anti-dei bills have been introduced in 28 states as well as congress since last year 13
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have become law. it's a stark reversal from a slew of diversity initiatives. after george floyd's murder four years ago as well as the taking down of confederate symbols across the south. question is the country reversing course from 2020? >> well, there's definitely been a shift in the political wins and setting aside the politics of it in terms of governors, legislature's public universities, look at corporate america for a long time before say 2016, companies were very eager to stay out of politics, stay out of social and cultural battles. but come 2017, they got not much more engaged in 2020 in huge ways, corporate america began getting more and more progressive, doing more to say diversity, et cetera that has all begun to reverse. now, you've even had companies like google coming out and saying, hey, we're just mission first kind of walking away from some of this. i think they're sensing that in a divided country, you don't want to be touching any of these third
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rail how big a rollback are we saying and how do you explain it? i think we are seeing a low back. it's interesting. i was just speaking with ted serrano's ahead of netflix from my podcast interview. and i asked him about this because netflix had actually been very forward in some of these issues. if you think about the fact that ted surrenders, took netflix out of russia after the invasion of ukraine and other things like that. and what he said to me was actually, we are rethinking this now. and i think you're seeing that more broadly. and in universities in particular killer what i find interesting, it's not that they're stopping dei programs. they're renaming them to be other things. they're talking about diversity in different ways. and i think the reason that's happening is because of the wright has been very successful in demonizing diversity, equity and inclusion. >> then there are the case of those two schools in virginia back in 2020s, stonewall jackson high school was renamed mountain view high school. and
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ashley ashley lee elementary was changed to honey run elementary. qarrah. this week they decided to switch the names back, right? what do you think of the fact that in this one count, a conservative county in virginia they are switching the school's names back to the original confederate net. yeah, i always think these things go back and forth and back and forth and back and forth. >> and now they're going too far. they're going to start doing this and they'll put up there confederate statues and then they'll come down mean one of the things i think most people, if you re if rebranded as fairness and things like that, i think the problem is the dei movement over did it and then it got pushed back and then the right is overdoing it with book banning and everything else. and they'll get pushed back. and i think it's a constant struggle in our country, but in the word dei, think about the word diversity, equity, inclusion, the opposite of those things are homogeneity unfairness, and exclusion so you have to start to convince people that everyone deserves a fair shake. and if you do that, i think
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most people tend to agree on that. >> ryan, what do you think of the decision in that school district to rename mountain valley high school? stonewall, jackson high school. >> i honestly don't think that it has much to do with a larger dei, debate. my guess is that what happened is that in 2020, there was a sense of panic and there wasn't an effort to really reach out to folks in the community, find a name that would really unite people. and then they just snap back with a larger conversation of a dei, what i think is happening is this. if you look at folks under the age of 18, under the age of five, this is already a majority, minority america who are the folks were pushing back hardest against racial preferences and elite higher education. it was asian-americans. look at how opinion has changed him on black americans among hispanics, there are big, big shifts against a rigid dei perspective in favor of something that's a little bit more pluralistic and less bound up with this kind of very highly ideological conception
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of what de, representation i think that's goodman what happened in 2020, is to ryan's word, a panic. no. >> i think it was a course correction for a country that had not dealt with its history of racism and inequality. and i think what we saw was a good faith effort to try and correct some of that perhaps some of the ways that they did it weren't the most effective, i think more than anything else they want the most effective corporate de i'm particular. i don't i don't think worked in the way that it there are two examples that come to mind for me of how higher education tried to do dei and did it wrong? the first was a lot of universities tried to eliminate standardized testing as an admissions criteria. they said, it's discriminatory. we don't want to do it a number of universities have now brought it back because they've seen that it actually is a reasonable predictor of success in higher education. the second thing you're seeing pushback against is requiring people applying for faculty jobs to
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essentially submit a statement declaring their loyalty to dei tenants. >> that's not fair that's not what they were doing. >> roll back. that's not what that's not fair. what they do is they asked people, how are you going to contribute to the being inclusive? i'm sorry, other perspectives. >> they are expecting particular answers that they see as the correct answers. if you do not give the ideologically correct answers, people were often punished with regard to testing. i thought there was a great point that kristen raised when you look at the survey data, the biggest best surveys we have over 90% of every ethnic and racial group says the testing should be included, that it is fair and reasonable as a way of assessing academic merit that is what's really striking here. but this conversation, you have a small group of frankly ideologues who have used that are very much at odds that the large majority d i three color. >> but i mean, are the people against the di, not ideological there has been a concerted,
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concerted movement on the right to take down dei, okay. >> under the category of james, the question is, what's the format for a new version of jeopardy? the answer next, plus the first portrait of king charles has people saying read a lot of bread more than $500 million in art stolen. me, saw what turned out to be the big stark heist in history. >> you can't help but wonder if this was some sort her to the inside job, how would really happen with jesse l. martin to morrow would nine on cnn, we talking about cashback 11 hard not again talking about cashback. >> we talking about cash back and iverson not talking about bragg know. >> we talked cash back and we talk about cash. are we talking about cash we've been talking about practice, but too long word, no practice. we talk about cashback, talking about cashback. we're not talking about a guy cash that's like a
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our groups yay or nay, on some big talkers up first a new spin on an old favorite, jeopardy. >> this week, amazon announced a new version of the quiz show called pop culture jeopardy, which is coming to prime, but with a twist instead of three people competing, the new show while only include a trio of three-person teams going against each other on topics like movies sports, and music. christian, are you yay or nay, on the new jeopardy, i lean against this in part because i think the thing that's so great about original jeopardy is you as one person have to have this incredibly expansive knowledge base. if you have a team, you can be somebody who's doesn't know anything about sports or music, as long as you have somebody else on your team who does so, i prefer the original formula qarrah, i asked this. >> let me say modestly as an undefeated jeopardy champion where are you? >> yeah. i love this. it's like
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trivia night at the bar. if they have liquor in it, i'm four and i love the trivia nights. i like all the names they have for their trivia teams. i like the whole thing. >> okay. next, a very untraditional portrait of a very traditional person take a look at the first matt said first official portrait of king charles, large, bold and surprisingly covered and a crimson shade of red. reaction online has been fired ray, with comments ranging from it looks like he is an health the monarch is going up in flames. lulu ru yay or nay, on the ruse. royal for hard shred. >> i'm a hard knee. this is as they would say in the uk, a bloody awful portrait it's bad, it looks like the picture of dorian gray. he's got this very emaciated face with the sea of rhetoric brown tim, it's, you know, it isn't very royal to me. >> kristen, queen camilla reportedly said to the painter after she thought, yes, i think you've got him, which is
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either a queen camilla or julia child's. anyway, wherever you on the court's read. >> so i was in favor of it in part because i think we're going to get a very traditional portrait of him at some point. so why not do something interesting? i, it reminded me a little bit of when barack obama's presidential portrait came out and he had all the greenery behind him and it got a real backlash. >> i like people doing something different with art. well, that's different. it is finally a baby named game. >> this weight, the social you already administration released its annual list of the most popular names for newborns. at number one, liam, for boys, and olivia for girls. and matteo and kailey were two of the fastest rising names. one possible reason social media with some parents turning, i unbelievable to naming consultants on platforms like tiktok to help them find the perfect fit. here is a consultant and her assignment somebody dmd me and wanted
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masculine baby names for girls that were too masculine christian as the one person on this panel who recently had to go through this and name a beautiful newborn baby, sophie, wherever you are the idea of going to a naming consultant to get some help. >> i am i'm extremely nay on this. you should be doing it based on something that is special to you personal, to you that you think is beautiful, you should not be taking into consideration a bunch of other people's opinions. so i am very much out on this right-hand. >> you have young children, not new-borns, but young children what do you think about those all idea of naming consultants? >> i'm all for outsourcing to the right person. i outsourced the nickname for my kids to my mother, who is really quite, quite good at giving nicknames. and i think it was what was the girl's name and what's the knickknacks well, a gosh, i don't want to share too much chris, but the nickname is tune to10, which is the bengali word for a little bird and my
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younger daughter's nickname is bulli, which is really chosen because it rhymes the two in to10 or roughly rhymes. >> and in our family we all have rhyming nicknames what's your nickname? >> pred2. >> okay up next artificial intelligence, acting less and less artificial this is a secret. a secrets and spies, premier sunday, june 2, attempt bomb cnn. >> when you have chronic kidney disease there are places you'd like to be mike here and here not so much here far seeker reduces the risk of kidney failure, which can lead to dialysis are sega can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal,
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monday, sign up for free is it otter.ai? ai or download the app? >> let's try this again. what do you see? >> my first step is ship in easton second championship, sall's not winning a championship. getty. this tries stay positive or positive. he didn't win a ring oh, my god
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over or under this week, whether new artificial intelligence tools just unveiled are over-hyped or not first, there is the latest model of openai's popular platform. >> chatgpt, which has now easier for users to interact with those. a personal assistant. and as you will hear, has a much more human voice once, upon a time, in a world not too different from ours. there was a robot named my chatgpt. i really want maximal emotion like maximal expressiveness, much more than you were doing before understood let's amplify the drama once upon a time in a world, two different from ours, there was a robot named byte. >> byte do this in a robotic voice. >> now initiating dramatic robotic voice once upon a time
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pretty good. >> day later, google showed off its own ai platform called gemini, which looks through your pictures and gmail to help answer personal questions like how old was my daughter when she learned to swim? how are we over-hyping? just how human ai is going to get right now? >> yes, but it is headed that way. and i think that's what's important to think about is where it's going. we started off with siri and alexa and those assistance which aren't very good. and now they're getting better and better with time. i think we over humanize them. these aren't humans doing this. they're just taking data and crunching get and spitting it back at us and so i think what's really important here is where it's actually going, which is everyone will have an assistant, my ai assistant will talk to your ai assistant and figure things out between us, et cetera. and that's where it's all going. >> i think i think it is over-hyped that it's it's sort of were like in 2001, a space odyssey that one's a little much what i think people should pay attention to right now is google's synopsis, ai synopsis of search answers, which is going to put the final knife in
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the heart of media, which is, in other words, instead of it, yeah, referring you to an article in the new york times, write about such and such, it'll just give you the answer that is correct and they're pretty good. >> they're very good and they're rolling that out worldwide now, crushed ai developers like google say that they want these devices to be more a part of your life to set your schedule to du, you're shopping even to interact not with my ai device, but with other people. >> what's your sense, how human? these things are gonna get, if not, right now down the row, i think they're useful to be thought of as tools that humans can use to do great things. so right now, you can use these tools to help write beautiful music, to help create beautiful art. but ultimately they're still a human component. so i don't mean to get too philosophical about it but i think there is something about being human that will be impossible for computer no matter i find it terrifying,
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terrifying, terrifying, good ai voice yes oh my goodness well, first of all, i think it's going to be apocalypse for the industry that i work in, which is me what google's just done. >> i think we're unleashing this into the world and we are human guinea pigs, and we don't know what we are unleashing. >> and there are no guardrails and we don't know where it's going to end. and i've seen a lot of terminator movies, you know, yeah, i just think a lot about the fact that you now have an ai assistant that can help blind people by offering visual descriptions that can give them context. these are incredible potentially life changing tools already and they're still in a really early stage. so that's exciting. >> the gang is back with their takes on hot stories or what will be on the news before it's knows that's right after the break. you know, back the name. alexa went way down as a name and that meet the pioneers, changing the world are you clear, concise? >> mission-driven been is not sure you it's him raising way
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direct redefining insurance. >> violin earth with liev schreiber, premieres june 2, had nine on cnn. >> close captioning is brought to you by you, cora, help maintain a healthy urinary tract with you, cora, i can having utis for ten years you, cora. >> we make uti relief products. we also make proactive urinary tract i tell product you korea is a life stage write today at your core.com it's time for our panel special takes on what's happening are predictions of what we should be looking out for. >> so rahaf, get me with your best shot recently, chaim saban, a major democratic donor. >> there's also a huge which media entrepreneur and investor sent a very stern letter to the white house specifically to president biden's chief of staff to say, look there are a lot more voters were pro-israel than anti israel. and if you don't knock it off, you're going to upset a lot of voters
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in you're going to risk losing this election. i think he represents a larger term among many voters and many donors who thought of themselves as being firmly never trump more and more folks are now finding themselves in what you might call a never biden category. saban might not be in that category, but someone like bill ackman, who was a big supporter of barak obama, might be lulu. you're focused on still another controversy at the supreme court. >> yeah, this is an actually substantial controversy. my colleague jodi kantor, the new york times, had a story this past week. the talked about samuel alito, justice, samuel alito, and how he had after the last election, an upside flag in his yard. it was there for several days and what apparently transpired was that his wife had a personal beef with someone in the neighborhood who had an anti-trump sign and put this flag in the yard. now the problem here is that that flag and that symbol just after the
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last election was a sign of the fealty towards trump and something that is supposed to signify their belief and stop the steal. justice alito is someone who is actually so involved in the supreme court on all these issues. and the fact at that this was their is deeply, deeply problematic. >> christian got shot. >> so mine is also about the supreme court a little bit different. so most people think elections are decided by voters, but actually courts and maps have quite a bit to do with it when it comes to the us house of representatives, at least. and this week, the supreme court took action that will put in place a map in louisiana the ensures a second majority, minority congressional district. now on its face, this looks like it benefits democrats at least for the current cycle. but interestingly, all three democratic appointees on the court opposed the action they think it sets a bad precedent long term qarrah, brynn. >> well, the pregnant and barefoot crowd got a new hero this week and harrison butker and emphasis on but as in budget explain, he is the
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champion. craig r for the kansas city chiefs. he gave a speech at benedictine college. let's listen to what he said some of you may go on to lead successful careers in the world. but i would venture to guess that the majority of you are most excited about your marriage and the children you will bring into this world as men, we set the tone of the culture. and when that is absent disorder dysfunction, and chaos set in wow, i don't know what else to say except that there's a big backlash. obviously online and all over the place, more than half the women, half the class is women. are there was a lot of unhappiness by the women, although it's a very conservative college, a lot of people did like it, but it was truly disturbing. and but my favorite part is that he quoted taylor swift, but his, one of his teammates is it's girlfriend and the swifties are on it. and so hopefully there'll be a backlash. >> we should say, the nfl rush to say that he had no way represents the views of the nfl. >> yeah. >> all right. gang. thank you
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