tv Piers Morgan Tonight CNN September 25, 2011 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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the woman who played the president. >> somebody would look at me and said, i'd vote for you in real life. i was just playing this character on tv. >> and what it was like to be in bed with brad pitt. >> it was worth the money. >> i've been unfaithful to my wife. >> i exchanged messages and photos of explicit nature with sick women in the last three years. >> i act in a way that violates the obligations to my family and my or any sen of right or wrong. >> that's what they say in public. what goes on behind closed doors. the cast of one of the hottest shows on trk v, "the good wife." this is "piers morgan tonight." >>geena davis, i want to call
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you madam president. >> thank you. >> i loved commander in chief. the great series you took part in. i thought -- it was like my new "west wing" fix with a twist and i woke up and it was gone. >> i know. that's what happened to me. i woke up and my show wasn't on anymore. >> were you disappointed as i have? >> devastated. i have an idea. if the show is brought back, i have the whole publicity angle worked out that it would have a profile shot of me at the desk and it would say, look who just got re-elected. >> for years, i reckon, you were more presidential in that role than many of the presidents, i would say, like martin sheen. you both are very electable in those roles, right? >> right.
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>> in your case, you've become a great standard bearer for all things women. >> people say, i'd vote for you in real life. i'd say, well, i'm just playing this character on tv. >> this is what i like about you. you were a victoria's model. i had no idea. and you starred in a role called "earth girls are easy". >> and my first scene was in my underwear. >> this little trip is weird that you've been on. >> yeah, yeah. now that you sort of lay it out like that, maybe it's even more remarkable that i have the humble beginnings. >> exactly.
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>> so it's all sort of an evolution. part of what happened in the early days is that i wanted to play interesting and unusual characters. i wanted to have some sort of challenge and not saying the girlfriend or the person who's doing all of the interesting things. that's why i ended up in the '80s in the movies like "beetlejuice" or "the fly," or "earth girls are easy." it was interesting instead of me being set dressing. then i did "thelma and louise." that changed everything. >> let's look at "thelma and louise." this is you and brad pitt, of course. >> what'd you rob? >> hmm, well let's see. let's add it up here. i robbed a gas station. a couple of convenience stores. liquor stores.
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>> wow. >> of all of the movies you'd want to do a sequel, i thought love scenes with a naked brad pitt. >> yeah, if we weren't pancakes at the end of the -- >> hollywood, people come back to life. >> well, yeah, i -- yeah, i really tried to convince them. some people wanted to say, it's sort of metaphorical. we are so dead. >> air of mystery. >> we're dead. >> was it all that it's cracked up to be, being in bed with a naked brad pitt. >> first of all, who cracked it up to be -- >> every woman is wondering, what was it like doing a love scene with brad pitt. it's inescapable. >> i will sometimes answer by saying, it was worth ever the $6,000. >> let's get serious. you've had the sort of frivolous
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buildup. you spoke at the global initiative. these are serious places to be serious about. the main kind of thesis i think of where you're copping from is that women are still portrayed in a fairly ludicrous way by the media, particularly hollywood women, female politicians i guess as well. tell me about that. why do you feel so exorcised about this? >> from the reaction that women had to "thelma & louise." it was an incredible lesson in the power of media images. we don't realize we don't give women the opportunity to feel like that about female characters that often. we don't come out of a movie feeling pumped and inspired. so after that, i made all of my choices based on thinking about the women we were going to be watching in the movie. would they like my character? would they get something out of
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it. that's why playing the president was like -- >> fantastic. >> the perfect thing. so iconic. but then -- but i had all of this spidy sense about women's roles already. when my daughter was 2 and she's 9 and i started to watch little kids' things with her, i was horrified to see this tremendous gender imbalance in what we're showing to the littlest kids. i thought it was very disturbing. >> what kind of thing? >> well, so, i have an institute now that -- a research-based institute. we sponsored the most research ever done on gender repgs in the media. what we found is that in all family film ratings, g, p grks, pg-13, for every one female character, there are three male characters. in crowd scenes, it goes to five to one.
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>> that's extraordinary. >> isn't that? >> so it's a bombardment that men are more important. >> exactly. and you think about the crowd scene or the village or whatever, if there's so few women, it's saying women take up less space in the world than men. so if that's all kids see from the beginning is this huge imbalance, it becomes internalized. >> what do you think of the way that modern female politicians are portrayed? i'm talking particularly about michelle bachmann, sarah palin. they're more controversial ones. but it seems to me whatever side of the political divide you come at them, they're treated in a different way to me. >> they are. they are. it is because it's so rare. we have to get to the point where it's completely normal. when i was doing the show, interviewers would invariably ask, did i think we would see a female president in our lifetime?
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and first of all, i would say, what century are you from? yes, we will. but we have to get to where it's as likely for a woman to be a president as a man. we're not anywhere close to that yet. so every woman gets so focused on and ends up representing the whole gender rather than just -- >> are you concerned politically that the most likely people to become the next president of the united states are as we stand, i guess, sarah palin, michelle bachmann, because there are no democrats circling around -- hillary clinton. >> you don't mean the next president, you mean the first female president. is that what you mean? >> first female president. it's more likely to be one of these tea party candidates. they're the only ones showing this race? >> does it worry you it's that end of the market?
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it does, doesn't it. >> you know -- >> i know your cup of tea. >> we will probably not have a female president in this election. >> it isn't close to your heart? >> you think hillary would have made a good female president? >> absolutely. >> is it a regret that she didn't win that standoff with barack obama. >> i supported and adore barack obama and i think he's doing a great job. you can say, well, would someone else have done it differently? it's hard to know -- if she had gotten elected, who knows? we might be saying, oh, well, barack would have done something different. but i think she would make an extraordinary president. >> are you tempted to get to political life yourself? you tasted it in a dramatic way. you're making important speeches at these big conferences.
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is it giving you a bit of a taste? >> i liked it very much. it went to my head a little. there's one scene where we arrive. we were at the white house. and the secret service are opening the car doors and going to the white house. and there was a tape keeping the people who were watching it. they were watching off of the set. i looked at the extras playing secret service guys and thought, what are they doing? i was like, oh, my god. >> for a fleeting second, you thought you were the president. >> i did -- i did -- what do they know. so i went, hey, pretend that you're actually -- oh, okay. please -- >> is it just your magnificently intimidating figure.
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you came in, you're wearing the long heels, you're six feet tall. you tower over men. so therefore with one swoop, you are basically making us all feel, you know, a little bit intimidated. >> i'm not sure that's everyone's reaction. >> i think so. when you march into the conferences, you must get these guys going, whoa, okay. she not only played the president but -- >> well, you know? >> she's intimidating. >> i have a certain amount of gravitas which helps, yeah. >> what is the state of play for hollywood and the way they treat women. lots of barriers have been smashed down over the years. nowhere like it feels 40 years ago, right? where could hollywood improve, do you think? >> exactly in what i was talking about in reference to kids' movies is having more female characters and have them do more interesting things.
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we found that a great majority of the female characters in kids' movies are -- are hypersexualized, they're narrowly stereotyped. the more hours of television a girl watches, the fewer options she thinks she has in life. that's a strong message coming through that's negative. what we say -- we go to studios and present our research and i say, change some of the characters to female where it doesn't matter. just think about it consciously when you're putting together the crowd scene. say, why are there so many guys in this scene. just populate the movie with women. and if you have that many women, naturally, they're going to be of many diverse occupations and types. >> i think the simpler way is to bring back "commander in chief". >> yeah, get back to that. >> and present you the screen fictional female president and make people think it's time for one in real life.
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could be a good thing. >> yes, get on that. >> we're in this together, right? >> yes. yes. >> not going to say no. i win my campaign to bring it back. you're available? oh. >> i am. >> start monday. >> if elected, i will serve. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. >> coming up next, one of the strongest women on tv, emmy winner juliana margulies in "the good wife." nationwide insurance, what's up ? what's vanishing deductible all about ? guys, it's demonstration time. let's blow carl's mind. okay, let's say i'm your insurance deductible. every year you don't have an accident, $100 vanishes. the next year, another $100. where am i going, carl ? the next year... that was weird. but awesome !
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to my spectacular husband. i love being your good wife and i'm so grateful you have no political aspirations. and i just want to say thank you to you and to our sweet girl, karen. you handle my long hours with such grace and understanding. >> triumphant, she's the star of what may be the hottest show on tv today. my vote for the hottest show on tv. that's "the good wife." welcome julianna margulies. i saw you the night before in a party. you were giddy-yap with
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excitement. you had next to you this handsome adonis of a husband. you pay tribute to. he's not a politician, but he is a lawyer ironically. >> yes, yes. he is. but now he's running a company. he's a lawyer by trade. >> the only cast member -- >> that is true. >> here you are scooping it again. does it get boring? you won eight sag awards, an all-time world record. even jack nicholson hasn't won eight sag awards. >> i don't think that's fair. because i've done a lot of television. if jack nicholson, they only do one movie every three years. if meryl streep did a movie every year, she would have -- >> is it the ultimate affirmation of the acting prowess of all of the work, you win the big awards, you win an emmy, do you feel like, okay, it's worth it.
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>> i always feel like it's worth it. i've gotten very lucky with great writing and playing great characteres and having people respond to these characters. so i always feel like it's worth it. it's gratifying. it's one thing in this business to work. 5% of the screen actors' guild works. it's another thing to do satisfying that people are loving. and to get accolades on top of it, it's surreal. to be honest, it feels very -- i keep saying to my husband, this isn't normal, you know? we sort of came right out of the dpaet and he didn't know the business. the first time out to l.a., we came back with a golden globe. and i thought, truly, this doesn't happen. i thought, well, it's happening. i thought, i should hear it and enjoy it in a minute. >> one thing about your part is she's getting ever more evil. i like evil characters. you came in to the last season
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and you thought i'm not taking this nonsense. >> evil might be a strong word. i think what's happening now is she's seeing that being a good girl got her nowhere. she's seeing that people's evil ways come in to her existence and shep has nothing to lose now. she's taking a pit of a darker road, i like to say. >> are you a good girl in real life. >> i'm a real mix. i'm the kind of person who always has to be on time. i'm professional. i don't have a stomach for people showing up without knowing their lines because you're keeping people waiting. >> rather late night. juliana? >> the late night. the good girl said we had the hollywood foreign press
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conference tomorrow morning. we had to be up by 8:00. and he said you just won an emmy. we're partying. >> we're thursday and your voice is quirky. >> that's one hell of an evening. >> the music was loud and i was talking a lot. >> you said you try to be a good wife to your husband. >> i said i love being your good wife. >> people ask you ad nauseam, what does it mean to be a good wife? what does it mean to be a good wife? >> that's a good question. they ask that often. it's different for every person. communicating completely, honestly with your spouse. always on the same page, never miscommunication. that's a good marriage. >> let's have a break. i want to ask you to think about this when you come back. if you discover your adonis-like husband was behaving like your on-screen husband, what would you do to him? don't answer yet. just hold your thought. however murderous it may be.
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>> hey, you all right? >> wow. that was some slap. even now you're cackling as you watch yourself do that. >> it sounded very loud over here. it wasn't that loud. >> did you actually strike the poor man? >> he was great. three times i struck him. he said, i was on "sex in the city" for six years, i've been hit many times. he didn't seem to mind. but i heard robert and michelle king, our executive producers and creators say to them that was her wakeup call, slapping him. >> i know you said before, a lot of the parallels with the good wife and the story line are drawn on the real life scandals, particularly the eliot spitzer one. you remember watching the press conferences at the top of the show. and his wife next to him and how sorry you felt for her. and sort of vowed this could never be a scenario you found
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yourself in? >> last five years. >> every woman did were watching her. yeah. >> lots of women stand by their man in political circles. what do you think of that? could you mamgen that? would you stand by your man? >> i think it would depend on the situation. honestly, if it feels the thing that alicia went through, me personally, i wouldn't put myself through that humiliation. i couldn't stand at a podium knowing that he had slept with hookers and explain to your children you're with a man like that. i personally cannot do that. >> you came from a divorced background yourself. your parents split up when you were young. >> yeah. >> you said you didn't marry until your 40s because you didn't want to get it wrong like your parents. >> right. >> what are the memories that you have of them splitting up. how much do you see of your father? >> my parents split when i was
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1. it feels amicable for the most part. my father moved to paris, to keep the kids together, we all moved there. he moved to london, i moved to sussex. >> that's where i'm from. >> where did you go? oh. >> i'm from a place called newerk. >> i went to school in forest grove. >> a mile from my village. >> did you go to the nightclub? >> no, i left when i was 13. that could have been really awkward. i was suddenly having these flashbacks. how extraordinary. you were raised literally around the corner from me. >> i said if you go to the a-22 you miss fit fyou blink. >> i know exactly where you are. i when to school in dane hill half a mile from forest road. >> how bizarre. >> we need a break after that. >> when we come back, going to bring in your tv trays.
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because when you're 14 years old, all you ever want to be when you grow up is your 16-year-old brother. and my case, that meant smoking a lot of dope. >> well, that was "sports night" now joining juliana and i at this desk. honestly, the first question i suppose for you is how do things end up when the hotel door shut in the end of last season. your good friend here went on the tv show and said things got steamy. what does that mean exactly? >> people will find out on cbs. >> there are allegations that we see your butt, is this correct? >> allegations. david letterman was obsessed with what we're going see. we're going to see your butt, butt. you might see some thigh. he was obsessed with the butt. >> no butt at all?
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>> i don't think so. >> really? >> but maybe -- >> maybe suggesting. >> there might be -- >> i don't think if there's any butt. >> it's steamy. >> how much do you enjoy the show. you got the most brilliant cast that you could have. every time i think you can't improve on it, you join like edlestein. it's a brilliantly written show isn't it? with great characters. >> brilliantly written. we have the most amazing talent pool in new york city of great theater actors and mark sax does a brilliant job of bringing the people together. they're here, they want to work. the king writes so beautifully for them. we see which actors they're going to work with. >> my issue is you tweeted two days ago, i'm so glad arsenal won today because piers morgan will be in a good mood on thursday.
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i didn't know you knew what arsenal was for my many followers on twitter. >> i would not know -- >> following you on twitter. >> having the worst season ever. >> that doesn't scare me away. i want to gather all of the information as you accuse me of earlier. i'm not flirting. i want to get all of the information. >> you're a baltimore ravens. i understand the pain they're going through. >> ravens are good. it's the orioles by the way. >> july 20. you're not on twitter. >> i'm sorry. >> an e-mail and tech person. >> get an e-mail and text person. >> not that i don't like it. i'm a mother with a fulltime job, i don't have the time. >> you have half an hour a day. >> i have no time. >> i don't know how people have time. >> you met one of your heroes backstage. it was a brilliant guy to follow.
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he tweets in realtime from wherever he is. as he said to me before, it's become the new form of information from the public from reporters like him. >> i said last night we were at work and i was following all of the troy davis story while we were filming. i realized for the first time what twitter was all about. feeling all of that beautiful humanity coming from the iphone that is hard to believe. >> did you see what the woman was like last night? i loved the visceral rage that he -- it feels on the other side of the argument you're on. i love the fact that twitter allows someone like him to get the spleen. he took everything down with it, didn't he? >> i enjoyed it as well. >> is there a danger like drunk dialing drunk tweeting danger? >> there should be certain rules. never get on after more than two drinks, never get on after midnight, never follow an
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exgirlfriend. >> are you -- >> tell me about your real life. are you as pathetically in love on inn real life as you are on screen. >> i am very lucky. the endless misery you have to go through on the show. >> seriously. >> it's a good looking guy. why can't he keep a girl? what's wrong with him. >> things are much better for me than will gardner as far as the emotional life. >> is he comfortable with the steamy love scenes. >> my girlfriend sophie is not only comfortable with it. she wants to see it. >> your husband you banned from watching. is that true? >> i said, i think the first episode, honey, might be steamier than i thought. i said, good, i'll send sophie flowers.
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>> that's part of the enjoyment, though, that jewels and i go back. we're so comfortable together. it makes it really easy. we have great partners that understands what we do. >> we're all friends. we go out to dinner together. >> taking the friends and partners, two more of them. as these are your co-stars, christine baransky and alan coupling. see them after the break.
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>> what do you think? >> i think, you're holding something against her. >> i'm what? >> alicia? maybe it's unconscious. maybe it's not. but you're being hard on her. >> christine baransky in "the good life" with alan cumming. this is what i love this about this show. you've been married contentedly to one man for 30 years. >> 27 but -- >> a perfect long lasting monogamous marriage. you, alan. >> knew i was going. >> you were quoted as saying i don't believe monogamy is feasible. >> yes. >> being married to a woman and a man. >> not at the same time. >> that's the complication that could make it more interesting. he's discuss monogamy. it's littered with the opposite of monogamy. everybody is at it.
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let's have the debate. you go first. >> me? well -- >> why is it not feasible? there's an example sitting next to you. >> as a man, i doan feel that my gender is particularly attuned to being monogamous. i think as an animal, a male animal, i don't think we are meant to be monogamous. >> really? you can get away with that? >> yeah. >> a surprise. >> how would your girlfriend treat you coming back and saying, i'm an animal, i can't be monogamous. >> wow, piers. arsenal is playing on saturday you said, right? >> i don't think it's -- look it's based on a lack of monogamy. the whole notion of our show, the whole much of art, so much that you talk to people across this table about is the fact that monogamy isn't working. and i know -- the biggest thing that -- not that it's not feasible, we don't think that sexual infidelity, we think
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that's the worst betrayal and there are much more worst ways to betray your partner than that. >> betraying this them friendship or trust. we're so -- >> betraying their trust is cheating. >> but if you were to think about it this way, a, it's a physical thing, a desire we have. we can't -- if you're kind with it, then maybe it's going to be okay. i think we as a culture we're conditioned to think, maybe in france, maybe it happens, maybe we deal with it in a way that we're all able to let us be oi o'kay with it. maybe we'll have happier lives. >> i think a big factor is when you have children and you're raising a family, staying together, the greatest gift matthew and i gave our kids is staying together. working things out. it can be hard and you end hessly shifting your weight. but we have two grown daughters
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and they seem to be both in wonderful relationships. and so it isn't a question of monogamy or not monogamy. this just makes sense, make this work. it feels good because it makes your children happy. >> do you understand why her character, then, would stand by her man? >> yes. in fact if you ask juliana about the women who stand by their men instead of desserting them -- and i think a big factor, for instance, silda. two daughters, two daughters of an age to really know what was going on. i think she probably just closed ranks and said we're going to get through this as a family with as much dignity as we can rather than talk to the press, make a dramatic exit, whatever. that woman got quiet and dignified. i saw her in an event. she was so beautifully dignified. and she did that for her kids. >> also the way that if that happens, your hair will change.
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because i don't know if you've realized it in the new season of "the good wife," it's changed in juliana's character, a certain change. her hair has changed as well. >> but am i hearing you saying it with your hair currently slightly alarming condition itself. so i'm quite sure you don't want to be dishing out hair advice. >> it's not advice, it's observance. on television, if you get some action, you get a different hair do. >> that's what i'm thinking. >> your character based on rahm emmanuel, former white house chief of staff for barack obama. eli gould is the good wife. and the link is ari gold. it's based on ari emmanuel. it's an evil little axis. >> do you hate for the other brothers. >> he hasn't gotten any tv show. >> that must be awful. >> your character is wonderful. >> amazing.
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>> do you think he's inherently an evil person? >> no. he's got humor. >> would he in the end do anything for political gain? >> he's got a tink in his armor. >> yes. >> moral officer? >> yes. >> yes. >> i think you're going to see parker posey play his ex-wife? >> yes. >> you get to see a whole different side of him. that's really exciting. >> you have an ex-wife? >> uh-huh. >> you've gone through a civil partnership. >> i have a husband. >> i have a husband. >> that's unusual. talk to me about that. >> what would you like to know, piers? >> what do you think i should know? >> it's interesting in the emmys. they were -- >> oh, m frk g. >> yeah. >> it gave me a conciliatory snuff. >> you came out as a bisexual
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and you said, i like women and men. do you think you're on the right side of the fence? >> i am. >> are there any -- are there attractive ladies? >> i -- do you mean, jules and christy, i'm not going to break up my marriage for either of them. george, maybe. >> to my husband. >> yeah. >> what do you think of all of the politicians talking politicians who the tea party side of the republicans saying same-sex marriage is disgusting. it can't happen. >> i think, you know, americans in this country full of such hatred in terms of politicians and the politics of hate
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and now the only kind of minority that can really be dealt with in that way is the gay population. so it came to make sense. of course, i think it's awful. i think that the tea party have some very, very, some quite sensible notions actually on paper. but also, that kind of seems to be an umbrella that just covers up a lot of real homophobia and racism. >> i think most of america has moved past it. >> i get the sense they're moving past it. >> i think the tea party is out of touch with america. that's the sad thing for them to come 0 terms with. >> let's have a break and talk about the new season "the good wife." i want to know all the gory details, including the ongoing debate whether there is any butt action because if there is, i'm watching it.
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back to the cast of good wife in a moment. first cnn heroes, real people changing the world. the top ten heroes were revealed. each will receive $50,000 and be honored at cnn heroes an all-star tribute. >> gerald, last year you were a presenter on cnn heroes all-star tribute and introduced magnus barrett. >> i found myself reading about this incredible man and what he
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achieved and i was just very, very moved. >> please join me in honoring cnn hero and i'm proud that he's a fellow scotsman, magnus mcfarland battle. >> i just completely choked up. >> you did. >> one, it was a total pride that we were scottish and just the complete humanity with which you could feel everything about his story and the work they did. they feed more than half a million children all over the world. >> you went and saw him at his home, didn't you? >> i chased him down. we had swapped a couple phone calls. i said i'm coming to visit you. i spent the day with him and his family and saw his charity. >> but he's a remarkable man. >> a remarkable man and a beautiful soul. >> get more information and vote for your favorite at cnnheroes.com. the winner receives $250,000. cnn's hero of the year. back to the cast of the good wife in a moment.
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>> so, ah, your seat good? got the mirrors all adjusted? you can see everything ok? just stay off the freeways, all right? i don't want you going out on those yet. and leave your phone in your purse, i don't want you texting. >> daddy... ok! ok, here you go. be careful. >> thanks dad. >> and call me--but not while you're driving. we knew this day was coming. that's why we bought a subaru. if by blessed you mean freaked out about money. well, we suddenly noticed that everything was getting more expensive,
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so we switched to the bargain detergent, but i found myself using three times more than you're supposed to and the clothes still weren't as clean as with tide. so we're back to tide. they're cuter in clean clothes. [ laughs ] thanks, honey. yeah. you suck at folding. [ laughs ] that's my tide. what's yours? [ female announcer ] find the tide that's right for you at tide.com.
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>> you didn't read about it unless you subscribed to the national news. two days later, an israeli woman gave birth in a palestinian hospital. where did you read it? every major paper. google it. this is a pr war and they are winning. >> michael, i do not go to your house and tell you what novels to write. i do not go to your committee and tell you what lobbyists to hire. >> that was alan couple ming in the good wife". the season premiere is this sunday night at p.m.
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ule anna margolies, christine baranski and alan couple ming. >> christine is too clumsy. i kanl can't handle it half the time. i'm loving her on this segment. >> too classy for your own good. i'm from buffalo from the polish neighborhood in buffalo. josh and i talk about football. how about those bills? >> i don't know what you're talking about. i'm a soccer fan. >> this is american football. >> let's get back to "the good wife." there's only one type of football and it doesn't involve helmets. talk about the good wife. we want them all tuning in on sunday. >> they've got to come out of the hotel room. >> do you guys realize what's happened? when do you realize they're at it? >> that's an interesting. >> there's a lot of suspicion. it's still -- i would say still -- i mean, you know, duh, for ot story and tense, we don't know
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for a while. the whole season last season is about are they going to get together. >> it's unbearable. i was willing them into the hotel room. >> question from people on the street, what happened when you closed the door? we held hands and drank wine. what do you think happened? >> are you confirming unequivocally that sex took place? >> she's got a new hairdo. >> yeah, i mean i think any adult who goes to a hotel, $7800 for the night, you're not going to sit there for $7800 and just hold hands. >> he's not going to waste the money is my sense. >> he's too smart for that. >> married lady, she could have chickened out. >> will is what you call a closer. >> you have to put alcohol into the picture, too. >> yeah. >> and then she really hasn't had any in two years. >> she hasn't. she's been waiting a long time. >> that's the hair adequate cut. >> like a smoldering volcano. >> her hair curled at the moment of orgasm because of waiting so long.
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>> have you all seen the first episode? >> no. >> do you all get together for a good wife party? >> we're going to. >> alan and juliana and i are going to live tweet. >> fantastic. >> i don't actually see it. i just watch on the internet afterwards. >> but let's just say in terms of the show, the fact that peter floric got re-elected, this is happening, i mean, we don't have to give anything away in terms of the plot but this affects the internal office. >> also terra firma. >> also he's now -- eli's in the office and his office -- >> leave it as a cliffhanger. thank you all so much. >> i love the show. i love you all. i can't wait. sunday p.m.
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