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tv   The Amanpour Hour  CNN  June 1, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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reasons to have done this years ago. but it is what it is lulu, take us out on a happy note. >> yes, it's been a tough week. and so i will take you out on the note of the pandas are back. i'm so excited as a dc resident, the pandas were taken away from us cruelly when panda diplomacy seemed like it was going to be shuttered. and yet we have now gotten worse from the first lady, jill biden, that the pandas will be restored to us to beautiful pandas dc will be paying a $1 a year for these pandas for the privilege the ambassador from china to the united states talked about how important it was to have this connect section with the united states through the panda that is a bargain, $1 million a year for ten years for the delight of the pandas in our town? >> yes. >> thank you all for being here and thank you for spending part of your day with us. we'll see you right back here next week.
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>> hello, everyone, and welcome to the salmon per hour. here's where we're headed this week the life and murder of nicole brown simpson. >> this documentary is bringing nicole to life. >> persisters set the record straight on her legacy. >> it was ugly, it was horrible, and it was very hard to watch almost entail and relive the moment oj was acquitted of her murder floor was just ripped open. also, this howard john legend on afghanistan's answer to american idol. and cultural revolution through music, it really shows you the power of music and the power of the human spirit. then this is the north korean saying, well two can play this game except we're just going to send over actual garbage. >> i'll roundtable conversation with journalist mark landlocked and jonathan freedom on the big stories of
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the week, google's tried to step in and prove that but the indispensable, but has had pretty rotten results. >> maybe the search engine becomes redundant if you have an ai chatbot or something similar to do the job for you. >> from my archive, the atomic bombs that ended the second world war, but changed our shared existence forever as we remember, historic presidential visit, my conversation with one of the few remaining survivors of the hiroshima blast, then suddenly i saw the bluish white flash and i still have an incision floating up in the air. >> and finally, happy birthday to the cable news channel that changed the game forever. welcome to the program, everyone, i'm christiana amanpour in london, 30 years ago this month, the world was shocked by the brutal murders of nicole brown simpson and her friend ron goldman. nicole's abusive ex-husband and nfl
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star, oj simpson was true fight and controversially acquitted. although later found liable for their deaths in a civil suit. the case became a grotesque media circus and nicole's life and memory, we'll lost in the noise. a new four part docuseries starting tonight aims to right that wrong. here's a clip who is on call, who ishi because she lost in this whole thing. >> she wasn't a headline of a tragedy. she was so much more children and family missed out on the woman that she was becoming a little bit of the trailer of the life and murder of nicole brown simpson, featuring new footage and personal stories from the people who knew her best at the center of the series. >> and he calls three sisters, denise, dominic, and tanya brown, who spoke to me from new york just before today's
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series launch. tanya and dominic, welcome to our program. >> thank you very much. >> it is 30 years since the tragic or murder of your sister and her friend. and i was struck denise by how this documentary started with you absolutely. point-blank, refusing to say the name of of the man she was married to what is it that you decided had to be the focus of this documentary series? >> i'm wondering if i wanted to humanize nicole. i wanted to focus on nicole and not because there's been so many documentaries that have been done about him, about the trial, about everything else. people would ask us to do to do documentaries or to do things regarding the coal about nicole. and it would always turn into a negative. so when i was asked, gosh, it was about ten years ago when we started thinking about doing something
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like this. but then the 30th, we just sat down and we said, you know what should we do it? let's do it. let's human when is nicole? let's get her voice out there let's let people know. let's let the world know who nicole really was. obviously because of what you're saying, you want to put nicole, your sister front and center of this narrative. >> it does also happen to come just after the death of oj. >> and i wonder how you internalize that, whether you whether it was another triggering moment absolutely. >> i got a call from a network and they said it's oj died. and i went i called my sister, dominique and she turned on the tv. i had just moved, didn't have a tv. she goes, oh my god, it's true. and then together we started to cry and it was sad. it was it was like a chapter, a journey of our lives over 50 years was like over and
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sadly, it's also an end of a chapter of nicole's life and memories and some goods many bad from what we've heard from this documentary but this documentary is bringing nicole to life. we just spoke to somebody. she said it absolutely perfectly he says, this is a love letter to the world. this is letting people know. hello, my name is nicole, and this is my story. >> so as you say, is really timely that you're doing this. so dominic, i want to turn to you because we're going to play the first clip of this interview and it is about us, you talking about the early day phase you want to, you know, everybody to see the new coal that u3 knew personally. let's just play this clip i feel like i've kept my knuckle really private for so long on chips. >> very, very stubborn. she was very, very determined to a
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point where she was going to do what she wanted to do, no matter what my mom called her hard-headed you know. maybe, it's time. to rekindle the flame of nicole dominic tell us what you'd like to rekindle about nicole well nicole was a veach girl. >> originally, she was a wic girl. her but her life at 18, she had to be an adult who was shubi got married, she lost a lot of her 20s and 30s who didn't have a freedom to experience. she didn't have that kind of a life to experience. and i'd like to rekindle the nicole that we knew a freedom about her at ease, about her her ability as a mother or her loving nature of she was just so hospitable and warm and caring and i think it shows in this documentary, i
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think you've chosen the video clips that we've had that she took that our father took that other people took and all of these that are compiled together and show what a beautiful mother and a beautiful soul record oh, really was. >> were you all in the court when the verdict came down in 1995, were you there, tanya? >> i'll never forget that day. it's the way i describe it. it's like you're going up a hill of a roller coaster. you're clenching onto. i remember i was just clenching onto the bench and i felt like i was going up the biggest hill of a roller coaster and i just wanted it to come down. and when it's like that anticipation in your gut, you know that the drop is going to be scary no matter which way it's going to be and when that when that verdict was read and that roller coaster cart came crashing down i just remember i look to the bailiff to my left and i said, i need to go. she goes i can't let you go. and i just remember i wanted to get outside. i'd meet him the
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debris that i wanted my brother our brother rob, turned to me. he goes, can we go and i said we can't go. >> i think we were all in shock. i think i was definitely in shock and i couldn't cry. i couldn't i had like zero feeling. it was it was like wow the floor was just ripped open. our we just fell into a whole but yeah, no, it was it was tough de after the acquittal, your family lost custody of the children, and i want to play this clip of a view discussing that painful moment, denise christmas eve with them. and on christmas day, he came to pick them up and it was my mom and i were standing out on the driveway craig it does so just somewhat up to my mom meandered or piece of chocolate data, it's gonna be okay we started
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walking into the house together and i just thought that's the nastiest thing anybody could ever do. she was to wait until after christmas. why couldn't you wait another day it was just awful. >> it was just to hurt my mom. >> gosh, denise, i can see you getting emotional just all of you yeah yeah. >> no, that was the hardest de i was really so so hard and heartbreaking. and you see this little boy just looking up at her and data, everything is gonna be ok. and henniker, a piece of chocolate because he knew how much she loved chocolate oh my god, my mom. >> and i we tried to keep a straight face at that point and then all of a sudden we turned around after they turned the corner, we were waving after they turn from the corner, we turned around and just broke down in tears. i mean, that was the hardest day. i mean, just
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the hardest de ever so sad and, breaks my heart to even think about it what would you like to say, i guess on behalf of you, the sisters, to other families who are experiencing this kind of violence, this kind of, living in the shadows of not wanting to talk about people who may be endangered right now. >> now, until we got educated on domestic violence, i did not know how to speak to a victim of domestic violence. we didn't have it in our family. our parents never thought they didn't scream and yell at each other there were so many signs looking back, you fat pig when she was pregnant there's just so much verbal views and then locking are up in a wine closet, beating her and going back and watching tv, going back, i mean, for hours, 68 hours, she was locked in one closet so they abuse that. she endured was significant. nicole lived in hell for a lot of
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times, but then there was also good times and fun times and so whenever nicole was happy, i was happy for nicole but finding out that all of the things that happened even after her murder and the controlling behavior of this guy, it just people need to do not ask the why question, but they need to be supportive and learn everything they can because victims of domestic violence are usually ashamed of coming forward and talking about it. and a friend of ours, we're on hardy put it the best he says, nicole didn't let us know because she wanted to protect her family and her friends and that made all the sense in the world to me. >> well you all, denise domini, can tonya brown in memory of your sister, this this documentary series is sure. to give a huge amount of focus on her on the issue and hopefully to help others as well,
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educational as well. so thank you very much yeah. >> that's the goal thank you. it. took the very public murder of nicole brown simpson to finally pass the violence against women act in the united states back in 1995. and the following year, the national domestic violence hotline received its first call. if you've been affected by any of these issues that number is now on screen and you can watch are longer conversation online at amanpour.com coming up next on the show, risking their lives just to listen to music the artist john legend on the shocking images which inspired his new project about afghanistan's underground creative culture deep down, i knew something was wrong since my fatigue and lightheadedness would come and go. >> i figured it wasn't a big deal. then i saw my doctor and found out i had a few and that
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at the all new car facts.com this is a secret secrets and spies premiers tomorrow at ten on cnn welcome back. >> imagine for a moment a talent show where aspiring singers perform and compete. one that empowers young artists through music and becomes a national obsession. but the talent show, i'm thinking of is not american idol. this show is now forbidden. it was called afghans star. it was a national hit in afghanistan first airing four years after the fall of the taliban in 2005, i reported on it back in 2009 covering both the competition and how it risks the toddler bonds rafah in a new, a part audio series, award-winning musician and producer, john legend takes us on a remarkable journey to keep that music alive. in the afghanistan that was, and could have been, and he joined me from los angeles john legend,
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welcome to our program great to see your christiane. listen, we are really pleased to be doing this with you because it's amazing that you've decided to take on in a new audio series, something that happened in afghanistan and i really want to know why, what was it about afghans star that moved you to? we explain it and rekindling in your, in your podcast well, i think it's just a beautiful story of the power of music. >> the power of the people's resilience and, and really remarkable show that was pretty revolutionary. for its time people in afghanistan at that time, as you very well know, we're coming out of years of the taliban being in charge and and during the taliban, rain prior to the us and the allies invasion music was banned so there were instruments being burned on the streets records
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were contraband, cds were contraband cassette tapes were contraband. >> any musical instruments were contraband. so all of that stuff, if you got caught with them, would get destroyed, burned, and you may get in trouble. and so there was a lot of pent-up demand and desire for people to engage with music again. and when they were able to, and afghanistan, afghan star eventually was developed as a show very similar to american idol or the voice which i'm a coach push on and people were able to vote on their favorite singer. they were so engaged, it really captured the attention of the nation and it was quite a remarkable show you podcast does talk a lot about your show, delves into to the creator of afghans star. >> his name dawoud sidiki, and he had, he has a remarkable story. tell us a bit about him.
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>> well, he was the creator and the host of the show and then saddness s0 was the founder of toluse tv and wasn't important broadcaster and founder of real really groundbreaking entertainment for afghanistan during this time of increased freedom, he was there to provide the entertainment and the connection to the rest of the world. and all of that had to be gotten rid of. once the taliban came back into power. but what i find this interesting and i've gotten to speak with sod since we made the podcast is that even though the taliban's back in charge it's hard to put the genie back in the bottle. >> yeah, it's great. you just bring that up because we're going to play a little clip from one of the episodes when sowed sidiki dealt, sorry, you would cdk is talking exactly about that. listening to music, even under the first tyler ban rain, we have the savior in
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kabul call mecole real. their apartment buildings six floor, seventh floor, eighth floor. >> a lot of these apartments are empty since residents fled the country to escape the mujahideen so it's a good spot for a clubhouse plus the apartments are so high up that you can blast music without fear of getting caught i listen to live music a lot. >> i partied a lot we went to this building and we were have live music. we have preparing food for us. that was 40 half i tell you that i listened to more live music during the taller than my entire life, you will laugh i mean it is funny and i can see you laughing. the idea that they listened to more music in sort of underground cell, so to speak, is quite indicative of the resistance that afghans have. >> or i really think it shows the power of the human spirit and the power of music and
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people will find a way to connect to music. no matter what the rugae regime might say. >> if afghanistan is now emblematic of anything, it is of the absolute abuse and restrictions they put on women there seems to be a lot now, in your industry, trying to look inwards to how women are treated. and i'm talking specifically about the latest about sean diddy combs, his you are on his last album you also feeling that the idea of the abuse of women, domestic, partner abuse it needs to be really handled once and for all and not swept under the carpet as it it has been for so long. >> absolutely is something that needs to be brought to light when it happens and my default stances to believe women when they make these accusations and to make sure that we do whatever we can to support women who are making these
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allegations and make sure that they heard and that any kind of accountability and reparations can be made to make these women whole again, it's shameful what mr. combs has been accused of, and i only want the best for casie, but also for all the other victims that have alleged that he's abused them. >> john legend. thank you so much. and your new podcast series about afghan star. thanks a lot for joining us. >> thank you. christiane, great to speak with you. >> coming up this off. we'll president biden, let ukraine hit targets inside russia with american weapons. and why is north korea floating trash across the dmz? my roundtable discussion on the biggest stories of the week is next i'm not here telling people how they can save money with a experience, which subscription cancellation you can be saved, but 200 $270 on average a year,
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to the program. there's increasing pressure on the biden administration to let ukraine strike targets inside russian territory using weapons america has provided earlier this week, neto secretary general jens stoltenberg told me self-defense should include we've being able to hit legitimate military targets in russia, ukraine, the haas right to self-defense and self-defense includes also the right to strike targets outside ukraine, including legitimate major targets in russia. >> some european leaders agreed. >> and now the biden administration signals its position could be shifting for more on that and to talk about some of the other biggest stories of the week, i'm joined by mark landlocked. >> he's the london bureau chief for the new york times and jonathan friedland, columnist for the guardian and the co-host of the podcast, unholy to jews on the news. welcome back to the program i always get a giggle that's what it's there for. and it's good to have these discussions, but
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we're not going to talk about that right now. in fact, we are going to talk first about the economy, and i want to ask you, mark first, because we do have an election coming up here in the uk. and obviously in the us and there seems to be this persistent state of dissatisfaction about the us economy, despite the actual fats. >> so what do you and more and more is being written about that and biden is trying to put his record out there for people. >> what what do you make of this disconnect i think that what it reflects a christiane above all, is the fact that it's been a long time since western countries add a persistent period of nir double-digit or isn't the case of the uk double-digit inflation? >> it's still feels super expensive when you go to the grocery store or in the us. crucially, when you fill up your car. and so i think that we are dealing with classic hangover effects from inflation, which is punishing both the conservative party here and joe biden in the us. >> but i'm just going to say the economy in the united states is much better than the
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economy here. to be fair, this government has a lot to answer for yeah, i mean, the inflation rate you by british times as you'd look with envy, the american right? >> but it strikes me that the parallel here is 1992, the last time there were elections in both countries, us and uk you saw there the american president going into that election saying that the numbers are so much better. but there was this lag between the act of the stats and the lived experience lima was saying that people hadn't ii was turfed out. that is exactly the fear biden and his team have now. >> and actually i remember everybody remembers that the clinton who did win we said it's the economy stupid, so it is the number one issue for voters. if you were, i'm going to give you trump if you would, trump's campaign manager, what would your nightmare scenario b right now well, i it's not so much a nightmare scenario, but it could be that we have six months to go before the us election, roughly and in that six months if you continue to have a strong financial market, which you do and a continued
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moderation of prices. >> people might actually start feeling well and that's again the calculation that many people thought that conservatives would make here in this country, wait as long as you can hope that things turn and the people sentiment actually improves. and i think that is enough for the trump people and they should worry about that. >> biden should worry you owe bruce, sorry. yeah. so conversely, if you were biden's campaign manager, what would your nightmare be now? your nightmare is that the consumer confidence those figures about feeling that they don't change. >> but i think they need to talk to their candidate. they need to get him to start saying, not my record. so great. have you seen these statistics? he needs to start say, i know that it's taking a long time. i know that even if the inflation rates falling, prices are higher now than they were a year or two years earlier. i feel your pain and other clinton line from 92 i feel your pain, but we're getting there. we're turning the corner. let's not go backwards that's the message.
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they have to drill into their candidates mind. >> another message that biden is now being, i think pressured to deliver is from jens stoltenberg from some other european leaders. >> and even antony blinken is beginning to shift his, his, his wording on this do you think that the administration will begin to say yes to ukraine's plea, to be able to actually stop the russian advanced by actually targeting legitimate russian targets are huge rubicon for them to cross, if you remember right, the style of this war. joe biden's message always was will help build out the window not going to get into anything that looks like we're in a shooting war with the russians. anything that untangles nato. so this is such a huge ship to start going. of course, it will still be the ukrainians doing it won't be american people boots on the ground, but it would be american allowing an attack on the russians of homeland. it's a huge leinz cross, but i think they're thinking about it and of course, the us delay has given him putin a great deal of
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confidence and ability to move forward. can i ask you about hong kong, though? >> everybody is always concerned about china. one way to describe it is to see how china is behaving in hong kong is was convicted a number of democracy activists is the biggest trial, the biggest such conviction and sentencing since it past this foreign intelligence is new security law what does that tell people about? >> well, i mean, it tells people above all that the chinese authorities through their proxies and hong kong are not willing to tolerate even fairly mild democratic moves. i mean, for some of the people here that have been swept up in this and sent to prison are democratic lawmakers who wanted to hold a primary among themselves. in terms of selecting candidates to run for the legislative assembly and for that crime, they have been sent to prison. so this isn't just liters of the umbrella revolution, which there are, there's a number of these young activists who led the street
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protests. but there are these various politicians who have also been swept up in an academics who've been swept up in it. so i think that overall the message it sends is that we're in a new era in hong kong. and even the mildest form of dissent it's just simply not going to be tolerated and you can go way to prison for a very long time for what, five years ago would have seemed rather trivial activity. >> yet another nail in the coffin of democracy standby because we're going to come back next. i just wanted to actually just say, of course the government of hong kong says it's ended the chaos and restored stability. they would say that wouldn't they? we will continue with more in a moment when we come back, we'll be asking about the ai arms race and google spectacular search fails the stanley cup plans are good. let's live vicariously through hangs this
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and some comic results where it recommended that a good idea would be to eat one rock a day instead of your five fruit and veg a day, suggesting pregnant women should smoke. and then if you're asked it, how can i make the qizan to stick to the pizza when i'm making a pizza, it recommended a nontoxic glue. these things always happen with new tech products. there are always these glitchy things people laugh about it and then in the end, they're iron it out but google is in a real racy with are real battle with microsoft, who invested heavily in openai because they were worried that google we're coming after them and open ai. ai. with chatgpt and so has been pretty successful. so this is egg on google space and the fear that they do have exactly as you say, is that in a way maybe the search engine becomes redundant if you have an ai chatbot or something similar to do the job for you we're still grappling with all this ai stuff. >> let me ask you, mark though, there had been some kind of weird but maybe dangerous things that have been demonstrated this past week these sort of chinese robo dogs
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with guns attached to them. then of course, the hilarity of north korea the ascending trash balloons across the border. >> well, i mean, i think in the case of the trash balloons, talk about that for a moment. there's, as you know, a long tradition of sending leaflets across from south korea and north korea by balloon sort of encouraging people to rise up against their own leaders. and so for years that was a very, very fraught issue. the south korean government actually outlawed it in 2020. some people continue to do it. clandestinely and so i think this is the north korean saying, well two can play this game, except we're just going to send over actual garbage and have it explode and land on your streets and fields and other places. so i mean, if anything, it's it's a bit silly, but symbolic of what's an ongoing source of strain between the two koreas, perhaps not a great harbinger of where we are in that cross-strait in that relationship as for the robo dogs again, it can be viewed amusingly, but it's
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something rather serious here, which is that we've seen in some recent in many reason wars, including in israel, gaza, and in ukraine, the increased use of drones of remote controlled weaponry and this is another example. it's the latest generation of remote controlled rep andrey. it's acute looking robot dog that has rather lethal machine gun placed on it. and so it's one more example of, if you will coming off the aid ai discussion, how technology will transform warfare in the look of warfare and some of these things that don't seem immediately as fiercer some as old-fashion fighter jets are tanks really can be quite lethal as well. >> really interesting mock landlord, new york times, jonathan friedland of the guardian. thank you so much. >> indeed, when we come back remembering a historic presidential triptych, hiroshima, and an incredible conversation with one of the few remaining survivors of the nuclear bomb are archive is
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coming up next i saw that bluish white flash and i still have dozens asian flooding up in the air violent earth with liev schreiber premiers tomorrow with nine on cnn. my husband and i, o and growing hemorrhage company. we rely on e-commerce and digital tools to build our business and launch new products. thanks to american investments in ai, we're using this technology to run our business more efficiently. artificial intelligence is a game changer. and i'm excited that the us is leading the world in its development. our leaders should continue to protect america's competitive edge to strengthen small businesses like ours i brought in a juror max protein with 30 grams of protein. >> those who tried me felt more energy it just two weeks here,
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perfect fit. >> now, comfort looks good this is a secret, war. >> secrets and spies premiers tomorrow at ten on cnn eight years ago this week, barak obama became the first sitting us president since world war ii to visit the japanese city of hiroshima, where on august 6, 1945, america dropped the first
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of two atomic bombs they ended the war, but changed the world forever. >> 70,000 people died instantly. the death toll doubled before the year was out, three days later, a second atomic bomb detonated over nagasaki, killing another 40,000 president obama is 2016 visit was a gesture of reconciliation and a call for a world without nuclear weapons we have a shared responsibility to look directly into the eye of history and ask what we must do differently the curb such suffering. >> again from my archive this week back in 2020, i spoke with one of the few remaining hiroshima survivors, setsuko furlough on the 75th anniversary of the bombings. she told me about the agonizing memories that's still haunted her you would just a 13-year-old girl when that bomb
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was dropped on hiroshima what. were you doing at the time? and what do you remember i remember everything vividly was doing. >> i was 30 great eight students in junior high school and japan was losing ali they had to recruit us that young children to do the work for the army. we were in the huge wouldn't building on the second floor one mile away from the a ground zero and then they the clock. we started the morning assembly and when they measure you and i would speak into us giving us the cheer pet dog then suddenly i saw the bluish white flash and i still have sensation floating up in
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the air and when nine, again, the consciousness i found myself in total darkness and total silence and i tied to move my buggy, but i couldn't so i knew i was facing death then i started hearing voices on my friends around and they were asking him for help from their mothers, from the god and then the somebody strong male voice said that, don't give up, don't give up, keep pushing, kicking. >> i'm trying to free you. so with this man in the dark. i was rescued. come i was able to come out of the building but, uh, most of the 30 girls were burned to death, alive. >> you have used your memory and that experience to spend a whole lifetime of activism
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against nuclear proliferation. and warning about the dangers that only really you and your fellow survivors can talk about the danger of nuclear war what do you think now about the state of security in that regard around the world, who had been kept as hostage for all these years. we each one of us human being did better than this. >> i feel dirty disturbed and as mr. obama said before he left workouts, i think united states is the only nation which has actually used it. so therefore, united states, you have special moral responsibility to lead the work toward the world without nuclear weapon. that was his
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favorite expression, that was good. so i am begging american people we just cannot continue to live in this condition. i have the image of massive, grotesque death this stays with me. and as increase christian said, yes, those images have been guiding me and not to give up my struggle because i believe in this decent life and human rights of each and every individual on this planet. so zuko is now 90 but despite her hopes, the world still faces a nuclear threat as of today, nine countries have more than 13,000 warheads. the majority held by russia and the united states. now, more than two years into russia's war with
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ukraine, and vladimir putin friday, nucleus, saber rattling the need for arms control, disarmament is more urgent than ever. >> when we come back 44 years since the broadcast news game changed forever remembering my conversation with cnn's visionary founder ted turner this before in the study well, fairclough life is on the line right down to now up to distractions goodness still sky high i brought in a chore max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy and just two weeks here, i'll take that ensure not to protein. 30 grams, protein one prim sugar, 25 these minerals can a new fiber blend with a prebiotic
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finally it was 44 years ago today, on june 1, 1980, that cnn was born i dedicate the news channel for america a cable news network ted turner's vision of a 24 hour news channel proved all his doubters wrong and change news broadcasting forever. i spoke to ted back in 20 feet 15, it is bison ranch in montana where he told me the story behind the launch were you trying to create a revolution with 24/7 news or were you just trying to find another brilliant business opportunity? what was your motivating impulse? >> both both i thought it through very carefully is what
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i did. >> i studied this situation i'd been in the television business for several, several years without a newscast. we weren't independent uhf f station in atlanta but i watched the news on the other channels. i knew what i was doing at least i felt like i knew what i was doing and it turned out that i did and ted turner's advice to the next generation of young entrepreneurs focus on clean, renewable energy. >> he told me it wasn't just the biggest opportunity and crucial for our futures. but there's a fortune to be made in the process. and it has to be said that it's been a great privilege working to realize the vision of such a legendary leader. and that's all we have time for. don't forget, you can find all our shows online as podcasts, as cnn.com slash podcast, and on all other major platforms. i'm christiana amanpour in london. thank you for watching and i'll see you again next week

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