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tv   Don Lemon Tonight  CNN  April 8, 2022 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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this is don lemon tonight. we're getting new details on the brutal massacre of innocent civilians at a train station in eastern ukraine today. the video you're about to see is graphic and disturbing but it shows the horrors of putin's war.
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these people were simply trying to flee russia's nonstep shelling. at least 50 people had been killed including five children. almost 100 others were injured. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy is calling the attack a war crime vowing everyone responsible will be held accountable. straight now to cnn's phil black who has the latest at the strain station in kramatorsk today. >> reporter: for many who fear what is coming in eastern ukraine kramatorsk station has been a gateway to safety. crowds of people have packed its platforms in recent days desperate to increase their distance from a region russia says it will soon conquer with overwhelming force. witnesses say thousands came again on friday morning. they sought safety. they couldn't escape the war. these are the moments after a
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ballistic missile exploded at the station, after debris and shrapnel tore through the crowd. so many dead bodies, a person cries. only children, just children. when the creaming eventually stopped the broken bodies of the innocent remained. we have to hide much of this scene. most of those lying bleeding and still are women and children. survivors fled. we managed to contact some by phone while they sheltered together in a public building still scared and shaken. this woman says she looked up when she thought she heard a plane, then it exploded and everyone went down. this man says he heard the blast and threw his body over his daughter. it remains a missile that
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terrified and hurt so many crashed down near the station. hand painted russian words mark its side declaring the weapon's avenging purpose. it says "for the children." the author and their intent are unknown. the result is yet another moment of horror in a war with endless capacity for taking and destroying innocent lives. so once again world leaders are accusing russia of committing an atrocity in ukraine, and once again russia is denying all responsibility. the u.s. assessment is this was a short range ballistic missile fired from a russian position inside ukraine. ukrainian military says that missile was packed with cluster munitions, small bomblets which spread and explode over a wide area and which are banned in more than a hundred countries. don? >> phil black, thank you. i appreciate that. now i want to turn to the head of ukrainian railways which
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controls railroads across the country. thank you, alexander. appreciate you joining us. we have these images from earlier this week showing this railway station being used by civilians to evacuate, and now we see the disturbing images of blood and scattered luggage and bodies and all of it. why do you think the station was targeted? >> hi, don. indeed, the first time they target the station on purpose, apparently targeting civilians and targeting passenger railway infrastructure. before that -- a day before they shelled a bridge that was connecting the line of donbas to ukraine. and the reason is that they tried to stop the munition program. >> the remnant on the side it says "for the children." now, we don't know what the
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message means, but what do you think? >> i don't know either because ukraine lost five kids, and 16 more are injured. and that's why there's no reason in that message. >> the mayor there says that 8,000 people a day were going to the station to evacuate over the last two weeks. how will they be able to escape now? because the humanitarian corridors or looks like, you know, no one is safe in them. how are they going to escape now? >> we increase the security interests even more, but we keep the evacuation program running. >> you keep the evacuation program running. you said you increase the security forces. you think that's enough? >> we increase it even more because, again, it was already quite secure. all people knew that stations and trains are the safest place in this country. and we keep running until the
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last moment here now, and we increase the security measures, but we keep the evacuation program on. >> as you said the trains have been bringing thousands to safety. if russia destroys the rail lines do you think it's going to cut off any hope of people trying to escape or people trying to flee this war? >> don, they keep shelling and for the last three days they shelled at least ten stations in the east. what we do will keep prevailing and getting back to war and keep running. and this case was the railway station. >> alexander, russia says that they are focusing their attacks on the eastern part of ukraine and with eastern ukraine.
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do you fear kramatorsk could become the next mariupol or the next bucha? >> i definitely see there's a change around kramatorsk. i've been there and the first time two weeks ago was much easier, less people around the station. and two days ago we had really much people on the station, so i see russians keep pressing on donbas and keep making kramatorsk kind of mariupol again. that's why people try to flee. >> when you hear russia's defense ministry deny any responsibility, really, like they so often do despite all the evidence, what do you say to that? >> well, what you say when you see people lying, explicitly lying?
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i don't know. you shouldn't say anything to them. >> what about the spirit of the folks and the resolve? what do these attacks like today do to the ukrainian spirit and your own resolve, really? >> you know for me that case was really hard because i didn't expect such an apparent attack on the passenger infrastructure. but, again, as i told you, they keep shelling railway infrastructure on purpose. they tried to stop the program. that's why what we have to do, we have to keep the relocation program running, and we will do it. >> alexander, thank you and be safe. thank you so much. >> i'll try. thank you. bye, don. >> thank you, bye. that's actually the perfect answer. i will try, right? perfect answer. and we hope that he succeeds at
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that. now i want to turn to the situation at the chernobyl nuclear power plant. cnn was given exclusive access to the plant for the first time since it came back into ukrainian control. and what we found is really concerning. here's cnn's frederick pleitgen with more. hi there, don. you know, the ukrainians from the beginning when the russians took over the chernobyl nuclear power plant, they said they were absolutely concerned about what those forces were doing there. when we got there there were two things that really crystallized. on the one hand the russians treated badly but it also seemed they may have inadvertently allowed their own forces to get exposed to massive radiation. here's what we found. simply getting to the chernobyl exclusion zone is a treacherous journey. many streets and bridges destroyed, we had to go off-road crossing rivers on pontoon bridges. finally we reached the confinement dome of the power plant that blew up in 1986, the
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worst nuclear accident ever. russian troops invaded this area on the very first day of their war against ukraine and took chernobyl without much of a fight. now that the russians have left ukraine's interior minister took us to chernobyl, and what we found was troubling. the russians imprisoned the security staff inside the plant's own bomb shelter the interior minister told us. no natural light, no fresh air, no communications. so the russians kept 169 ukrainian prisoner here the entire time they held this place. and when the russians left they looted and ransacked the place. among the prisoners, police officers, national guard members and soldiers. ukraine's interior minister tells me the russians have now taken them to russia, and they don't know how they're doing. when i arrived here i was shocked, he says, but only once
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again realized that there are no good russians and nothing good comes of russians. it is always a story associated with victims, with blood and violence. what we see here is a vivid example of outrageous behavior at a nuclear facility. while the plant's technical staff was allowed to keep working, the ukrainians say russian troops were lax with nuclear safety. and as we entered the area russian troops stayed and worked in, suddenly the alarm goes off. increased radiation levels. they went to the red forest and brought the radiation here on their shoes this national guardsman says. everywhere else is normal. only this floor is radioactive. i ask everywhere is okay but here is not normal, yes, he says. the radiation is increased here because they lived here and went everywhere. on their shoes and clothes, i ask. yes. and now they took the radiation with them. let's get out of here, i say.
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it's one of the most connaminated areas in the world especially the soil. this drone footage apparently showing the russians dug combat positions there. the operators says those russian soldiers could have been exposed to significant amounts of radiation. we went to the edge of the red forest zone and found a russian military food ration on the ground. when we hold the meter close it sky rockets to above 50 times levels. the conduct is a threat to nuclear safety in europe. the chernobyl nuclear power plant hasn't been in operation for years but of course this confinement needs to be monitored 24/7, and also there's spent nuclear fuel in this compound as well. and it's not only in chernobyl. russian troops also fired rockets at europe's largest nuclear power plant near southern ukraine and are now occupying it.
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ukraine pfls energy minister tells me the international community must step in. >> i think it's dramatically impact, and that is really the act of nuclear territories and what they are doing. >> reporter: chernobyl is close to the border. the russian army used this route to attack the capital. his company needs more weapons to defend this border the interior minister says. today the border between totalitarianism and democracy passes behind our backs, he says. the border between freedom and oppression. we are ready to fight for it. and the ukrainians fear they may have to fight again soon as russian president vladimir putin replenishes his forces continuing to put this nation and nuclear safety in europe at risk. you know, don, i spoke to the ukrainian energy minister for an extended period of time and he said he thinks it's absolutely crazy for the russians to dig their forces in one of the most
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contaminated areas in the entire world and doesn't bode well for the fact they also still control another nuclear power plant here in this country which is the largest in all of europe. he says he believes the russians simply have absolutely no concept of nuclear safety, don. >> frederick pleitgen, thank you so much. the united states believes russia is trying to recruit more than 60,000 new troops. military is now below 85% of their total combat power when they first invaded. can ukraine take advantage of that? pure... ...demands a lotion this pure. new gold bond pure moisture lotioion. 24-hour hydration. no parabens, dyes, oror fragrances. gold bond.d. champion your skin.
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as russian forces gather for an offensive on the eastern ukraine, the race is onto get defenders the supplies that they need. a defense official says 8 to 10
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planes are landing every single day at air fields near ukraine with weapons and other security assistance. but what exactly do they need to keep russia at bay? let's discuss now. cnn military analyst and retired major general james spider marks. general, good to see you. thank you for joining. president biden says he's sparing nee effort in getting ukraine the weapons they need. slovakia gave critical soviet era s300 systems to ukraine. will these help clear the skies of the missile and bomb attacks that keep coming from russia? >> don, they'll certainly help. they won't close the skies. you don't close the skies. you try to deny certain areas within the sky. but absolutely the s300s will be a tremendous added capability.
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one of the key things ukrainians need and they know this is an integrated air defense capability that either eliminates or really degrades the russian's capability to use that third dimension where they can put an attack helicopter and put fighters. with an integrated air defense system which gives them long-range capabilities, very pronounced radar capabilities, detection capabilities and then the stingers, the shoulder fire weapons systems that are more tactical, it gives ukrainians a more integrated system. >> where are they needed most in the country, in the east no doubt, but where specifically are they needed the most. >> specifically in the east. you need to look at what the ukrainians did about a week ago or so is where they did that long-range attack helicopter raid into russia and went after that oil depot.
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these long-range strikes need to become standard for the ukrainians. they need to put pressure on the russians in what the russians think is a sanctuary. in russia they do what they want, they can assemble their forces, refit, refuel with a certain degree of impunity, but if they can be struck as a matter of routine and unpredictably by the ukrainians. simultaneously the ukrainians can go out into the black sea with good planning, the right capabilities, they can go after the russian naval capability, which provides long-range fires from the sea to the shore. so if the ukrainians will continue the pressure and they're getting the weapon systems that can give them that, and they also have the planning, they also have the intelligence and certainly the united states and nato, they're really coming together to help with the
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intelligence that's beenoge gon, let's be frank, that will give the ukrainians great advantage to take the fight to the russians and to really completely wrest the initiative away from the russians and set the tone of the engagement. >> the donbas is much different geographically than the area north and west of kyiv with more open landscapes. who has the edge in that kind of territory, general? >> well, the russians have the tanks and they have the numbers. this is classic tank battle. kharkiv was one of the most fought over cities in world war ii when the nazis were coming in and the russians were coming through in world war ii. however, the ukrainians this is their home turf, so it's a home game for them. they've got familiarity with what this terrain provides in terms of advantages to them. so if the ukrainians can bring forward tanks that they have, the t72 tanks, many they've
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taken from the russians who abandoned them, so the ukrainians are using russian capabilities to their great advantage, and also what they have the ukrainians have cluster bombs, and they're not to be used against civilian targets which is what the russians are doing. that's criminal behavior. cluster bombs are an anti-tank capability because tanks cannot maneuver through them and can't maneuver around them, so you deny terrain to the offensive operators to your great advantage. that forces them into where he is, where you now can take advantage of it and ambush them and bring to bear all the capabilities they have such as the individual fighting capability in the initiative and certainly the javelins they've been using to their great advantage, and then you can setup the ambush positions with the tanks. that's what the ukrainians are going to work on, i can guarantee it. >> russia has lost a significant number of their invasion forces. the u.s. says they're looking to
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recruit i think upwards of some 60,000 troops. how does -- how does ukraine capitalize on those losses and poor morale among russian troops? you talk about strategically how you push them back, what have you, but how do they make up for these troops? >> these will have much effect initially. it's not going to happen. also we've seen that the troops they're having in the fight right now have absolutely inept leadership. that inept leadership has not gone anywhere. so you're going to put these brand new recruits who probably have not had sufficient training and stick them under lousy leaders, which means you've got another opportunity through the ukrainians to just rip them apart. this works to the ukrainian great advantage. these are going to be raw recruits. they're not going to have great skills, and they certainly as we've seen do not benefit from great inspired leadership. they are going to be vulnerable. >> thank you, general. i appreciate it.
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be well. >> thank you, don, very much. a ukrainian poet escaped her war torn country and just days later was performing at the grammies. she's here with me in her first interview. that's next. um, she's eating the rocket. ♪ lunchables! built to be eaten. what happens when performance... meets power?
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awards to send a message to the world about the atrocities being committed in their country. among them a poet who escaped from ukraine just days before. she recited her poem "prayer" inelish so everybody in the grammy audience could hear her and understand her message. >> our father who art in heaven of the full moon and hollow s sun -- >> she joins us now. hi, thank you so much for joining. we really appreciate it. >> hi. thank you for having me. >> the poem is really beautiful and powerful. can you tell us how you ended up presenting at the grammy awards? >> how did you get the
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invitation to present your poem? >> firstly it was about an american boy and ukrainian boy -- she was like a contact person and she offer producers of grammy to think about just ukrainian poet, they consider. >> so how did it feel being on a global stage, the world watching, using your work to draw attention to the crisis in your country?
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>> i -- i didn't even worry, you know. it was strange because it was like i should do what i do. and like my work just like this. i was anxious before my flight to las vegas, but on stage i was just fine. and, like, it was great moment. and i couldn't speak for the audience. it was like this. >> and you got to tell the world about what your country is dealing with. in the poem you talk about your parents being home standing in the fire. you told my team your parents already lost their home in the donbas back in 2014. what are they doing now to help the war effort?
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>> my parents they already lost home, and our home and our family home is under occupation in donbas, and russian militant has been living there for years. and after massive invasion my mom baked bread for the territorial defense unit, and my father made molotov cocktails for them for street fighting. and now it's more or less calm there, and they're okay. >> i also understand that your husband stayed in kyiv to deliver humanitarian aid while you your son safely fled ukraine to austria. you're in austria. your husband is still there. you and your son are in austria. your husband is still in ukraine doing humanitarian work.
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you say it was easier to stay in kyiv than leave. why did you ultimately decide to leave then? >> it's easier to stay in kyiv than vienna because you could be more helpful. and my husband is a volunteer delivering humanitarian aid from kyiv to kharkiv. and i used to do almost the same with him. i helped in this, and my sister as well she's a volunteer. when you do something helpful, you feel better -- just better because you give, i guess this
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and you don't afraid for your family, for your country when you are all distant. >> the endorphins kick in. luba, thank you. you did an incredible job, too, and we appreciate you appearing. be safe and we hope your family is safe especially your husband there as well. thank you. >> thank you. so we've also got news tonight from the january 6th committee, a cnn exclusive. texts between a trump family member and trump's chief of staff. we're going to tell you what they said. that's next.
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we have got some cnn exclusive reporting. texts from donald trump jr. to his father's chief of staff, they show just how involved he was in strategizing plans to keep his father in power. here's cnn's ryan nobles with the story. >> reporter: november 5, 2020, two days after the 2020 election. votes were still being counted, the final outcome still in doubt. president trump's son -- it's very simple he texted before outlining several options. we have operational control, total leverage. trump jr. was texting white
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house chief of staff mark meadows. this next revealed by cnn hasn't been revealed publicly before. it's in the possession of the january 6th select committee. in a statement to cnn trump jr.'s lawyers says, kwoetd, after the election don received numerous reports from others. meadows' attorney declined to comment. on election night president trump was already laying the ground work to claim the election was stolen. >> to me it's a very sad moment, and we will win this. and as far as i'm concerned we already have won it. >> reporter: behind the scenes his son and advisor don jr. was sharing ideas with meadows how to subvert inelectoral college process. leveraging the republican majorities in the senate and swing status lachers. state assemblies can step in, the text message from days after the election ticks on questionable legal theories many of which would be employed from
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the trump campaign. we control them all. the paths trump jr. refers to in the texts include creating alternate slates of fake electors, pushing the vote back to state lerch s lachers and forcing scenarios where neither candidate had enough votes to win and leaving it to the house to elect the president. democrats controls 20 states, the republicans 22 states. he told trump supporters if trump lost it would be because the radical left cheated. >> make sure everyone gets out and vote because if you don't they are going to steal it from you. >> reporter: while he publicly warned against fraud on the left, his private text message to meadows foreshadows a legal strategy his father's allies will eventually launch. even teasing the showdown in congress on january 6th two months before it happened. we either have a vote we control
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and we win or it gets kicked to congress 6th january 2021. this text part of a traunch of thousands of texts from meadows the committee has in its possession. and, don, in addition to these plans don jr. shared to mark meadows about the election certification he was also already talking about his father's second term as president of the united states and the plans he wanted him to implement almost immediately. he said, quote, fire fauci, make grenell the interim head of the fbi, have barr selective special prosecutor, biden crime family. and what you can tell from this text message on november 5th before the votes were even done being counted is that donald trump's closest family members including his son really truly believed that he was going to stay in office. don? >> ryan nobles, thank you so much. the academy handing down
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their punishment to will smith after he slapped chris rock on the stage at the oscars. i'm going to tell you what they said next. erything was all goodt then things hit a slight snag. ok so they were trying to verify my employment status while i was at work, in a giant hole, in a mine. but then something amazing happened. hello? carvana worked with my shift manager and got everything sorted out so i didn't miss out on the car. super helpful. i was over the moon, even though i was underground. we'll drive you happy at carvana.
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the board of governors for the motion picture academy convening today to decide on a punishment for will smith after the actor slapped comedian chris rock live on stage at the oscars cursing rock out and telling him to keep his wife's name out of his mouth. i hate watching that video. >> i know. hey, it's forever going to overshadow this moment, the most -- you know, i've been talking with people recently and it's unbelievable that in less than an hour he had the highest moment of his professional career and the lowest. >> and so against the image that he has crafted over all these years and so unlike him. what did the academy decide today? >> so the academy, the board of governors convening today, moving up their april 18th date after will smith resigned banning will from ever attending the academy awards for the next decade. so for ten years he cannot attend any academy events in person, virtually.
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and why is this important? well, because when you win an the next year for the big category, you get to present next year's winner. so the fact he won't be there, it just sort of drags and carries this out. i am not saying it's wrong they decided this. quite frankly, i actually thought they were just going to expel him forever. that he was not going to be able to ever come back but there was a lot of public pressure, a lot of celebrities came out, you know, telling the academy that you did the wrong thing, you should have pulled him out of the oscars, out of the dolby theater and he shouldn't have been able to accept the oscar that night. so they had to do something strong. >> i wonder if they would have handled it differently in the moment if they would -- maybe people would have thought his punishment would have been not being there. >> well, you know, let me -- let me tell you something. so in this lengthy statement today, i am going to read you just a little bit of what they said. they say, the academy says, during our telecast, we did not adequately address the situation in the room. for this, we are sorry.
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so, they are apologizing again. this was an opportunity for us to set an example for our guests, viewers, and our academy family around the world and we fell short. unprepared for the unprecedented. so, you know, look. i think that, you know, hindsight is 20/20. they had about 40 minutes from the moment the slap happened to the moment that he won best actor. you heard will packer, the producer for the oscars, go on gma and say chris rock also said to him i don't want them to remove will -- will smith. i don't want them to -- i don't want to charge will smith is anything. you know, the lapd was ready to arrest will smith for battery. will packer's saying that chris didn't want this to turn into something bigger than it already was. >> every person, even tonight, just speaking to people, they're -- of course, they're asking me -- you know, they talk about the war and the next thing is will smith, right? academy awards. and they said, man, chris rock, he is certainly handled himself well.
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he is handling this the perfect way. i wonder what he is going to say. my question is -- and who knows when he is going to speak out -- did the academy address chris rock? >> they did. they praised chris for his composure and the way that he handled himself. and you heard will packer recently say, don, that he thinks chris saved the oscars. i went to a couple of chris's shows in boston last week, and he said i'm still processing this. i'm going to address this at some point fully. it will be funny. it'll be serious. but, you know, you have had a couple of chris's brothers come out and speak and say they don't accept, you know, will's apology. and chris even said during his shows last week, don, that will had not personally apologized to him. so i really wonder, has will, despite these public proclamations of apology, has he gone to chris and said i'm sorry? don't forget, they starred in a movie together once. something interesting i found out, that i didn't realize until recently. madagascar, the animated film franchise, jada and chris both
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voiced characters in that film. so this is a circle of people that knows each other well. so, it'll be interesting also to find out if there was more bad blood than just the quip at the oscars. >> i think that moment will happen. i think -- this is just me speaking -- i think it will happen and, um, maybe he is embarrassed right now. who knows? and maybe he is just trying to figure out how to do it right. >> but he has a big movie that we don't have a release date yet. emancipation on apple. supposedly, the best role of his career and it will be interesting to see because this -- his -- his resigning and the academy ban for ten years does not stop him from being nominated. >> and he could win. >> he could be nominated. imagine. >> he could be nominated and he could win. >> and not there to accept it. >> the question is will they nominate him? we'll see. thank you, chloe. appreciate it. so, chef, writer, traveler, friend, anthony bourdain played a special role in millions of peoples' lives all around the world from loved ones to strangers. now, as cnn prepares to bring you the new film "road runner," a film about anthony bourdain,
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some of tony's closest friends and family share some of their favorite memories of the cultural icon. here's w. kamau bell host of "united shades of america" who traveled to kenya with tony for one of the final episodes of "parts unknown." >> reporter: going to kenya with tony, i would have paid for it if that had been an option. it is like fantasy camp. i was living with a dream and i was very aware as i did it, i am still the guy on the couch watching show who is lucky enough to be working with him. so i knew in some sense, i want representing for all the people on all the couches watching his show. so i am not going to be too cool for school here. my favorite meal with tony in kenya is not a favorite meal because of how it tasted. i am not typically an adventurous eater but i was like whatever they put in front of me, i am going to eat. this is tony's show, how it works. we get there. turns out, goat's head stew is just a goat's head they put on a table that's been stewed, and
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they rip all the meat off of the head, everything. everything that is eatable. when you see it in the episode, you can see me looking like i think i am handling it. my eyes are this big and i chew for what must have been 20 minutes to get the goat's head stew chewed up enough to swallow. and that was like -- there were better meals in kenya. many better meals but that was my welcome to parts unknown moment that i will never forget. >> love tony. i love w. but no goat's head. it is interesting to watch so make sure you tune in. the new cnn film "road runner," a film about anthony bourdain premieres sunday night, 9:00 p.m., right here on cnn. and thank you for watching, everyone. our coverage continues now with john vause. stuff. we love stuff. and there's some really great stuff out there.
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but i doubt that any of us will look back on our lives and think, "i wisi'd bought an even thinner tv, found a lighter light beer, or had an even smarter smartphone." do you think any of us will look back on our lives and regret the things we didn't buy? or the places we didn't go? ♪ i'd go the whole wide world ♪ ♪ i'd go the whole wide world ♪ [♪] did you know many anti-fungal products are not intended for the nails? try kerasal. unlike others, it's formulated with clinically-proven ingredients that penetrate fungus-damaged nails to start improving nail appearance in just two days. try kerasal.
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if you have type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure you're a target for chronic kidney disease. you can already have it and not know it. if you have chronic kidney disease your kidney health could depend on what you do today. ♪far-xi-ga♪ farxiga is a pill that works in the kidneys to help slow the progression of chronic kidney disease. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections in women and men, and low blood sugar. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may lead to death. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this bacterial infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. and don't take it if you are on dialysis.
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take aim at chronic kidney disease by talking to your doctor and asking about farxiga. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪far-xi-ga♪ when it comes to tech, everyone wants the next best thing. now with xfi complete from xfinity,
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you can get updated wifi technology with the new tech upgrade program. plus, protection from cyber threats at home and now on the go. so staying up to date is easier than ever. you look great by the way. right? unbeatable internet. made to do anything so you can do anything. only xfinity will upgrade your tech after 3 years for a more reliable connection. get that and more with xfi complete. upgrade today. (vo) wildfires have reached historic levels. as fires keep raging, the need to replant trees keeps growing. so subaru is growing our commitment to protect the environment. in partnership with the national forest foundation, subaru and our retailers are proud to help replant 1 million trees to help restore our forests. subaru. more than a car company.
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this is cnn breaking news. >> hello. i am john vause live in lviv, ukraine. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. russia's list of atrocities against ukrainie ukrainian civi a new low friday. a major rail hub in the east with thousands of men, women, and children were wait for a train to escape the conflict. that's when authorities say it was hit by two russian missiles. ukraine's president has vowed to pursue the attack as a war crime. here he is. >> translator: we expect a firm global response to this war crime. like the massacre in bucha, like many other russian war

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