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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  October 20, 2022 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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up here >> kevin spacey, today. after an hour of deliberations, a new york city jury found him not liable in a battery claim brought by anthony rapp. he is best known for his role in star trek, discovery. they concluded that he did not prove that spacey touched a sexually intimate part of himself. the judge formally dismissed the case. despite this win, spacey still faces another inquisition in the uk. in may, spacey was charged with four counts of sexual assault against women, and another count to engage in sexual activity without consent. he has pleaded not guilty to the charges. the news continues. time to head over to jake tapper and cnn tonight. jake? >> thank you anderson, really good show. >> good stuff, good stuff. all right, welcome to cnn tonight, i am jake tapper in washington. ask not for whom big ben polls, it tolls for trust. british
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prime minister liz truss today setting the women's and men's indoor speed record for duration of a prime minister, only 44 days in office, that is not even -- her abrupt resignation earlier today throws our closest ally even further into chaos. now that our friends across the pond weren't able to find any humor in this instability, the economist magazine pointedly wondered which would last longer, liz truss's prime ministership or a perishable ahead of iceberg lettuce, a youtube live stream puts this theory to the test six days ago. well, lettuce, liz, is still standing. when folks start invoking solid items when discussing how long it will last at her job, at some point it becomes a feta complaint.
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but let us move on. how could six weeks ago so horribly wrong? liz truss's is fall from power exhilarated after she introduced trussonomics, a plan for massive tax cuts aimed at the wealthiest britons so that they could create jobs, she said. essentially, trickle down economics. this proposal immediately caused the british economy to implode. just the mere suggestion of this plan. it'sent financial markets into a tailspin, drove the currency to a record low value against the american dollar and push mortgage rates even higher. this is on top of an even pre-existing deepening cost of living crisis in the uk, leaving average citizens struggling to afford basic day-to-day expenses. liz truss tried to staunch the bleeding, sacrificial emmys were offered, ultimately she apologized and try to reverse course but by then it was too late, the economy did not keep calm and carry on. it is quite a lot of damage in a pretty short amount of time. ultimately this turmoil was too much, even for her own
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conservative party, and liz truss was shown the door at number 10 downing. now the conservative party, they got a real problem. public supporters at an all-time low. if they held an election tomorrow, they would assuredly get thumped. meaning, the next prime minister should probably think twice before unpacking those boxes. the staircase, up to the second floor at ten downing street has a picture of every prime minister i suppose trust now gets one, it is weird to think of her hanging up there with churchill, and thatcher, but it will always be remembered as a residence of ten downing because i was a first time i was ever let inside that building. my team and i went there just a few weeks ago to interview prime minister trust. it was her first u. s. interview. and i am
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not sure, but it might have also been her last. i asked her about the fact that our president, joe biden, just that trickle down economics was a loser. president biden is, in essence saying that he thinks your approach does not work. >> i don't really accept the premise of the question at all. my view is that we absolutely need to be incentivizing growth, it is a very difficult time for the economy. >> how do you say i told you so in british? anyway, i do wonder how this news is being received today by larry. the chief at ten downey who is preparing to meet his fifth prime minister? his killer instincts, we should note, have made him a store star. i mean, i was rooting for larry, anyway, despite his reputation, trust seemed quite fond of larry. >> at number ten, you will be keeping larry the cat as a chief announcer, is that correct? >> that is true. larry's position is a short, and he is doing a great job. he does spend rather a lot of his time
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asleep. >> not to be catty, but larry seemed to know better than to hitch his wagon to that short timer. look, british politics can be brutal, prime minister winston churchill had just saved the world in 1945 when he and his party were ousted from power. i mean, he saved the world, that was not enough for voters. a couple years later, churchill said quote, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except for all of those other forms that have been tried from time to time. the other prominent form currently, autocracy, you bet, president xi of china and putin of russia are celebrating the latest example of how messy democracy is. the push pole nature, the physical public, the conflict and tension is built in. and what about that other form of government, the one that is supposed to be the definition of stability,
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especially in the uk? monarchy! i got some bad news on that front, as well. queen elizabeth ii his final royal engagements was meeting senior prime minister, liz truss, she is gone. for the first time in seven decades, there is a new monarch in town, king charles. his popularity lags behind his mom's, and there is major uncertainty about whether he can unite his own family, much less his kingdom. prince harry's new memoir is already dividing the country, and it hasn't even been published. an upcoming netflix show will highlight the lives of harry and his wife meghan markle in a self imposed exile in california. season 20 of the crown is going to be lit. what happened today at ten downing is about something much bigger than the drama of buckingham
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palace or the korean demise of liz truss. the uk remains america's closest friend in the world. it is not just our history that is shared, our futures could be as well. consider this, a divisive policy based on nationalism who could by athletes succeeds at the ballot box, surprisingly. heralded by a brash politician with a unique hairstyle. i am talking about brexit, of course. the 2016 vote of the uk to leave the european union, which created and predicted our own vote for disruption later that year. so, is there anything we can learn from our loss of trust? a wise friend of mine in the uk, longtime government official, allegiance to neither labor nor tory since both of these parties are too focused on only attempting to appeal to their base. hence, far left, former leader jeremy corbyn said, boris johnson and liz truss, selected by members
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of parliament with apparently little thought about popular support. the lessons for the u. s. are about what happens, whether the limit takes on the far left or far-right take over their parties here. the right of the tory party, they have been calling the shots since brexit. frankly, it has been a slow motion car crash. the lesson? find compromise. appeal to the middle. because this chasm between the extremes, it leads to the paralysis that we see in the uk today. or, as they say when you take the tube, mind the gap. now we are going to go far far away after the break and leave the politics bit behind, and take you to the pillars of creation. a stunning and surreal new look at where the stars are born, literally. the new web space telescope, it
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one of the most stunning and in a way explicable stories involves the incredible images captured by the james webb space telescope, we're told it shows newly formed stars in a region called the village of creation. but if you're anything like me you have no idea what we're looking at here. so let's bring in mike, the nasa emissions system engineer for the james webb telescope. to tell us what this is like. thanks so much for being here. first of all, let me, say we know that the creation existed because the hubble telescope, about 30 years ago, picked up these images. obviously a much sharper, clearer picture. today, what is this?
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what am i looking at here? >> this is a vast cloud of gas and space and 600 light years away from us. the cloud itself is made about ten light years in size and what you're seeing is an area where vast amount of stars are imported. outside of the field of this, there are stars that have already been born. very hot stars that are actually now evaporating from the call that they were born in. and so that evaporation is peeling away the layers of gas and leaving the most dense layers there. the most dense layers are what you say is the pillars of creation. and inside these pillars, stars are still being born. and this latest image from the james webb telescope has some very fascinating things in it. these red areas that astronomers described as looking like lava. are actually new stars that have just been born. and they're actually spewing out gas. and what we call, jets. and that's what you're seeing here. you did not see those on the
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hubble image. because the infrared wavelengths that james webb is looking at, we're not detective by the hubble space telescope. >> i know your particularly interested, and this is called the deep field. this is inside the pillars of creation? or this is separate? >> this is an entirely different area. >> what is this? >> now we're looking outside of our galaxy. the pillars of creation inside our milky way, the vast city of stars in our universe. this looks at other galaxies in our universe and it is a cluster of galaxies right here in the center, about four billion light years away from us. >> which one are galaxies? >> every dot you see here is a galaxy. >> every? dot >> the milky way galaxy is one galaxy and every galaxy, it's a different one. >> that's right, it's about 100 million to a billion stars in it so you're looking at cities and hundreds of billions of stars. this particular area here is a big cluster galaxy and behind
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it, while this cluster of galaxies is very very massive and light from galaxies much farther away from that is passing through its galaxy field, and actually bending to form these arcs. those arcs are distorted views of galaxies much farther away. >> you mean like this are kind of like that? like this one here? >> that's correct. that's called gravitational lens-ing and it's actually a dramatic proof of what albert einstein said. gravity is space that is bent, lights travels through space. as it travels through space, it bends to. the gravity of these galaxies are distorting the images of galaxies much farther away. but the thing that i really love about this image, i can tell you, when my wife first saw it, she look at me and said it looks like home. >> and the truth is that it does and it does look like helping. the hubble picture that looks like this took 14 days and james webb did that in 12 hours.
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>> 12 hours? incredible. >> tell us about stephen's quintet, this is also outside of the milky way galaxy? >> it is, this is a group of five galaxy, four of them which are interacting. >> 1234? >> it's 12345. there's actually five galaxies. that's why it's called -- . this guy over here just happens to be in the line of sight, he is not involved with the other four. the other four galaxies are actually merging together, and their gravities are interacting with each other. and as the gravity's interact, you get places where they kind of compact or make shockwaves that compact the gas and when you compact the gas, you start forming new stars in places that we call star burn. it's believed that a lot of galaxies like the milky way and the galaxies that we know today that are close to us, we came to be as small galaxies in the early universe interacted merge
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together and formed the big galaxy that we see. now these are called the cosmic cliffs, this is also outside the milky way galaxy. >> no this is inside. >> this is an area much like the creation. >> the physics of this is very similar to the pillars of creation and stars have been born and are being born in this cloud while the stars outside the field are evaporating the clouds and you can almost see a pillar of clinicians started here and that's a dense park that is a rap rating slower than the rest. stars are being born in this cosmic cliffs as we speak. >> and all these dots are stars? >> they are stars. and this one is about 7000 light years away and it's in our own milky way galaxy. >> if i go back to the pillars of creation do we know where this is in the pillars of creation? or is it not of his pillars of creation? >> it's a separate cloud. >> okay, this is interesting, this is the rings of neptune and we always knew, even when i was a little boy, we always knew that neptune had ring so what is the significance of that?
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>> i'm not sure you know as a little boy but astronomers in the early 18 hundreds. >> sorry i'm thinking of saturn! my apologies. >> yes that's what this picture is saying. astrologer is in the 1800 suspected neptune might have had a ring. astronomers suspected it but it wasn't confirmed until voyager to image that. but the rings were very pathetic, very dark, very thin and they're not much to talk about but in the visible light. but and then i saw this image that struck me, i had a very visceral reaction to this because it looks like saturn and it shows. >> that's why i was confused! >> it is. and the infrared wavelengths. we know there since voyager to it now stands out beautifully. and i was standing next to a planetary astrologer when we saw it and we both had just visceral reactions to this, look at that, oh my god, look at that! what are? ranked their dusk that is orbiting the planet. there are two theories of them. people used to think that maybe
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in the case of saturn which we still think, the rings were a wound that might have gotten too close and gotten destroyed. another theory is that these are places where a moon might try to form. and the message just never finish the job. these are rings of billions and billions of dust particles. >> all right, so i'm gonna freelance a little and say that i don't know if you're a religious man. and it's not in my business. but when you look at this? does it make you think that there has to be some force out there that we cannot comprehend other than just science happening? >> well it certainly brings out that. it brings out, or it should bring that out in people. whether or not they believe it or not. to watch the forces of the universe actually act to create stars has to be some adverse action. >> and it also makes me think that it is the height to think of we are the only life anywhere on this vast complex
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of so many galaxies. >> i wouldn't disagree with. you >> so much fun, mike menzel, thank you very much. if aliens are looking back at us through that comic dust you are probably wondering what on earth is wrong with those carbon-based light forms and why are they so-bent on lying cheating winning at all costs. well, aliens, that is a good point. that is something we earthlings, we here in the united states need to address and we will do so next.
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>> maybe i am remembering wrong but i feel like playing by the rules and winning honorably used to matter in this country. it seems quaint. but i feel like it did. this was on my mind right now because district
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court judge david carter examined a bunch of emails from trump attorney, john eastman, you might remember eastman offer these bizarre sear ferries and plots to help trump hold on to the presidency after joe biden won. anyway, judge carter said that these eastman documents show that trump knew his claims about alleged voter fraud, specifically in georgia were false. and charter carter said that they demonstrated an effort by president trump and his attorneys to press false claims in federal court for the purpose of delaying the january 6th vote. he goes on to say the email shows president trump knew that these specific numbers of voter fraud were wrong, but continue to tout those numbers both in court, and to the public, unquote. trump was not diluted, where misinformed about the 2020 election loss, he was lying. that goes to state of mind. which means judge carter says, quote, the court finds that these emails are sufficiently related to, and in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud the united states, unquote. but this is not about trump. i mean,
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it is, but not just about him. i am struck at how pervasive the idea of winning at all costs has become in america. there are so many cheating scandals it is hard to keep track of them all. you have guys cheating and fishing contests, hiding weights in walleye. >> we have waits in fish! get out of here! >> there are allegations of cheating in the world of chess, norwegian world champion against 19 year old american grandmaster hums kniman. the fellow grandmaster jokingly suggesting that newman may be used vibrating beats on his person to get secret information and suggestions for his moves. he denies that. just today he filed a 1 million dollar defamation suit against carlson. but then again, i mean, it is chess. they literally shake hands before every match. there was even a cheating scandal in this years fat bear
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week contest. that is when alaska national park holds an online contest for wildlife enthusiasts to go online and vote for their favorite bear as the bears pack on the pounds for the winter. this year there was an online attempt to spam the vote total, though it was caught in the semifinal round. i mean, the fat bear contest! is nothing sacred? i mean, there was a time in this country when the message we taught our kids were that things such as sportsmanship mattered. although i do not know how convincing that argument might be to the average kid who this week is watching the major league baseball playoffs where the astros are up one game against the yankees for the american league division championship. does anyone else remember, it was only two years ago, when major league baseball determined that the astros cheated, they broke the rules, they used a camera system to determine the signs that a catcher was making to the picture? they did that in 2017, the astros. by the way, just coincidentally, a year that the astros won the world series. or maybe these kids are watching quarterback tom brady, who has steadily avoided a accountability even better than
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he has avoided tackles. after deflategate, where brady was accused of playing with balls purposely deflated to make them easier to grip and throw and catch, the response from even some of the all-time greats was this. or maybe these kids are watching quarterback tom brady, who has steadily avoided a accountability even better than he has avoided tackles. after deflategate, where brady was accused of playing with balls purposely deflated to make them easier to grip and throw and catch, the response from even some of the all-time greats was this. >> they always say, if you aren't cheating, you aren't trying. >> say it ain't so, joe. maybe it is time you step back and get a bit less of vince lombardi's winning is not
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anything, it is everything mentality, and a bit more of john wouldn't speak to test of a man's character is what he does when no one is watching. but then again, he named the super bowl trophy after lombardi. let's turn now to someone who accepted the math and the reality of his feet back in 2016, former presidential candidate jeb bush, he is on the new kind of campaign. does the man once known as the education governor have any winning ideas for turning our school systems around in this post covid distress period, and what does jeb bush think about today's republican party? that is on cnn tonight, when we return. all across the country, people are working hard to build a better future. so we're hard at work helping them achieve financial freedom. we're proud to serve people everywhere, in investing for the retirement they envision. from the plains to the coasts, we help americans invest for their future.
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vote for him? [applause] well it might be >> vice president pence talking obliquely, perhaps moderately about himself and i find the restraint to the thing given the whole hang mike pence thing which we now learned trump was saying privately that maybe the mob had a point. in any case, 2024 is on. let's talk about this and much much more including some of the issues that we seem to be important in 2024. former governor of florida, and former vice presidential candidates jeb bush, thank you so much for being here. i know you want to talk about education, or get there in one second. vice president pence, he seems to think there is room for a traditional dare i say sane republican in the 2024 race for president, that's who you tried to be in 2016 presidential election. do you think there is room with the republican base for someone other than donald trump?
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>> i think so. i think vice president pence will make his case to primary voters and my guess is he's running. i don't know that for a fact, but i think he certainly is well qualified to do it, he's earned that can position as have others. my guess is this, i'm not a great pundit on these matters, but my guess is a, they will be yearning for a new generation of leadership in our country in 2024 and b, candidates that are focused on the future not necessarily on the grievances of the past. whether or not the former president runs again, i have no clue, but it will be formidable, but there will be other candidates who will be able to make their other cases for sure. >> the current florida governor, ron desantis is not new generation. he'd be the first gen x president, is a rising star in the republican party in florida and nationwide. he's also saying that he might be running for president.
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would you support him if he ran? >> i'm not gonna get involved in the primary before we even get to the end of this election cycle, but i can tell you, he has done a great job as governor. he's governed very effectively. his response to the pandemic i think was extraordinarily good. his education policies are solid. he's made a real commitment to protecting the water resources and the natural environment of our state. he's taken the legislature in line. when he's done things that i admire as governor and he also has strong appeal outside the state because he's tackleing these cultural issues which have pretty broad appeal in the republican mindset right now. >> let's talk about some of the issues you just raised regarding governor desantis. education and covid. because the latest national assessment on educational progress called the naep report card, showed students report cards plummeted in math after the pandemic. that dramatic drop was attributed largely to pandemic worse schools were shut down.
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learning went virtual because of various policies, fear of kids getting sick, fear of teachers getting sick. what are your thoughts on this? how long will it take to get our kids back on track? >> well, if we put the proper resources behind new policies and we actually faithfully implement the policies that we know work, we can overcome these big learning gaps, particularly with low income kids. we have always had this challenge in our country of lower income kids struggling with education outcomes compared to more affluent students. it's gotten worse and the results that will come in on monday really will probably show an awful situation. what should we do? empower parents to make choices for their kids. give them the power to choose private and public options as exist in florida, arizona and other places.
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give them transparency to know where their kids stand. most kids think their kids are all doing fantastic, but the reality is the, naep scores will show that the number of kids who are proficient is way too low. >> i must say, i am surprised that there hasn't been the national conversation about the damage done to kids because of these school closures and the school learning. i'm not saying that there should be a national do-over, but we can't just pretend fifth graders who are now seventh graders that that didn't happen. i feel like there should be -- and not with the blame game -- it happened, people did, it was criticized, the school closures, the virtual learning et cetera. but here we are, there needs to be like a bipartisan movement. >> i agree. i think what happens in washington and it seems like our policy and our politics is all d. c. focused.
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what happens is that everything gets hyper politicized and so, schools opening or not becomes a political issue rather than recognizing mistakes that may have been made. it was a really difficult time. but let's try to solve problems now. there is a bipartisan consensus outside of washington of what needs to be done. democratic governors and republican governors alike, many of them are abandoning the whole language notion for reading and focusing on the science of reading. and there are a lot of efforts to use the money, not all the covid money has been spent to be able to develop strategies to empower parents to make more choices about how you overcome these big gaps in the learning loss that took place. but to ignore it we do it at our own peril, because imagine
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if you are in fourth grade right now and you've had two years where there hasn't been an assessment, there hasn't been any diagnostic work being done, and you're starting to have to do science and social studies in math, and you can't read? how the heck is that child going to progress? those learning losses will grow and grow and grow. who's marching in the streets for these kids? who is expressing outrage? that's what i hope the nape results because i'm pretty sure they're going to be ugly, i hope that they end up being a catalyst to do a lot more than what we are doing today. >> i've said it 1 million times, the, adults of this country have been failing the children of this country. want to ask you because you talk about governor desantis taking on cultural issues that has an appeal in the republican party not just in florida. four has new law in effect that impacts kids education, so the individual freedom measure. it's commonly referred to as the stop woke act. it prohibits teaching if one ethnic group is inherently
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racist and should feel guilty for past actions committed to others. your mission as governor in florida was to improve the education system. i don't know exactly how these rules are being enforced but do you have any concern that these restrictions could have a chilling effect on teachers having honest discussions about civil rights, slavery or anything else? >> i think there's certainly a middle ground on this, i don't think it's been implemented, i don't know what the enforceability has been or is. i know the governor desantis has expanded, they've put a lot of money in the budget for literally literacy based efforts, i support. of these cultural issues generate enormous amount of interest because there are problems for sure. but some of this is making a political point push back against wokeness in general. how it's implemented, we will see. >> former governor jeb bush, always good to have you on. please don't be a stranger. come back, we want to talk more about education and you're a good person to do it. thanks so much for being with us.
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>> thank you jake. >> from jab we will turn to fill. somebody feed phil. sitcom creator phil rosenthal joins me to talk about his new book and the new season of his hit show. stay with us. to get a beautiful "after." with our unique tub over tub process, there's no mess or stress. bath fitter. it just fits. visit bathfitter.com to book your free consultation. ♪ ♪
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if you're one of the millions of fans of the mtv show everybody loves raymond, you obviously know ray romano. but the name i really want to know his phil rosenthal. phil is the person who created that hit show and rosenthal has a new book out this week. it's called somebody feed phil, the same name as his hit travel show now on netflix in its sixth season. phil rosenthal joins me now. phil, so good to see you. >> i'm happy to be here. >> you seem great. in the first episode, you go to my hometown philly.
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when i think of philly, i think of cheese steaks, soft pretzels with mustard, i think of water ice, which we called italy nice. but you found a much more impressive culinary fair. >> i'm here to tell people that philly is now one of the best city food cities in the world. >> in the world? >> i'm not kidding. there's a tie place called kalaya. magazine picked it is the best new restaurant in america last year. there are great shifts. amazing, he's got laser wolf two and a few other places. he's like a king pin in philly. there's marc vetteries empire, he is there. vetteries and--l. these are amazing chefs. it's not just cheesesteaks and hoagies. >> hoagies. >> thank you for correcting it the best way. >> i married to a
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philadelphian. >> the summer he went diving for sea urchins in croatia. >> yes. >> and you rode in a race car for the first time. let's start with the sea urchins. >> my brother is the producer of the show and he thinks it's a great show when i hurt myself. so he sent me underwater in croatia diving for sea urchins to eat them. to gather them to be eaten. >> did you eat them? >> well sure, that's the point. >> i had one once at an embassy. >> they're not for everybody. >> i did not enjoy it. >> not as delightful as you would think? >> it was like brine, like silt, a mouthful of ocean, that's what it tasted like. >> when it's great, it's a beautiful silky -- there was a japanese master sushi man in los angeles who said it's like ice cream. >> what? >> yes. >> is that how you found it? >> no. but it is very, very good. you might have had the one that turned. but anyway, he put on protective gloves -- >> with the turning of the
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urchins go ahead with the gloves. >> i put on protective gloves the only way to pick them up. i go to pick them up to, the spines go right through my glove into my hands. and it's not the one spine the you see. the spines have tiny almost microscopic barbs. and so the next part of our show is a nurse taking out the barbs and my brother's laughing. >> he thinks it's great. >> the worst thing was the formula 1 track in austin. i went in the car, a ferrari with a race car driver 187 miles an hour. have you ever done anything like that? >> no i haven't. >> don't do it. >> and would never occur to me. but you see it on the tv. it looks like it's fast but it's smooth. it is anything but smooth.
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i can parent it to being in multiple car accidents. it's horrible. >> it sounds like a horrible thing. it seems like it would be a horrible thing. your brother, but just let me guess, he's your younger brother? >> that's right. >> see i knew it. because i have a younger brother and he enjoys your suffering. >> that's right. >> he enjoys calling you out? >> i think that's it. and i must say he's on to something because the people seem to enjoy it as well. >> i'm not saying he's not wise. i'm not saying he's not right, but i just wanted to get to the heart of it. i've talked to him he's a very nice guy. you have said you feel like -- you think of yourself is anthony bourdain if he was afraid of everything. >> if he was afraid of everything. >> if anthony was bourdain was afraid of evidence. but it's not just that, it's you want to make yourself face and do it. >> or least have a brother that who makes facing due. it i do have to say that in the 6 seasons, i have gotten a little braver.
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i've eaten bugs. have you? >> not intentionally. obviously the race car driving was one of your least favorite things. what was being the craziest thing you've done? >> well, i guess i had 1000 year old egg in hong kong. it wasn't really 1000 years old, it just taste that way. they bury it in ash and then they boil it boils in the ground for about a month or two. i didn't know this. i was in a hot pot restaurant, you're supposed to take a little sliver of it and added to the hot pot. i had this hard boiled is the white, is a brownish yellow, and the yoke is a bluish green and the person was with me was a little skittish she didn't want to do it. so i took the whole thing and i said come on. i popped it in my mouth. it was hilarious. i took every shade of that egg and if you look and you hear someone laughing, it's my brother.
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i thought i was going to die. >> to cause you any serious -- did you throw up was there anything? >> how much do you want to? now >> let's move on to the next question. what is the biggest surprise you've had, something the eighth and thought you're actually gonna hate but i actually enjoyed it and would have it again? >> i had an ant in japan. it came in the salad. and when an ant comes in the salad, you think all the restaurant has a problem. yes, but no, the person with me said these ants taste like lemon. oh in that case, i said can i have some. lemon and i said no you should really try. and it took all the must courage i can muster to put it in my mouth. and damn if it didn't taste like something the lemon drop on my tongue. it was really good. it was a great lemon drop. not just a lemon. sesay based these lemon, snow. not every aunt but this particular at from this part of the woods in this part of japan tastes like a lemon. i don't know who found it. a hungry guy, but it's good. >> all right, lemon ants.
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we should also note that the season features a touching tribute to your late parents max and helen who as everybody watched the show, know that were frequent guest on the show and this tribute is very sweet. let's watch a bit of it. >> i love to see you dancing the tango. that was my favorite. >> that was the most frightening thing i've done on the show so far. >> you look terrific. you dance good. no you didn't. -- stick to what you do best -- the gift of gab. not the gift of dancing. >> don't forget it did well i don't agree with him. >> okay he's not a good dancer. >> so, the show is very funny. this is different. it's moving.
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why was it important to include it? >> i was the best part of the show. i wasn't alone. it's just obvious, i say in the tribute that people sat through my crap just to get to them. they were the best part. i come from a sitcom world so you're looking for funny characters that can recur. i happen to have them in their house. so there they were. i would skype with them and they would always deliver. my brother and i would marvel that they are like a miracle. >> they inspired everyone. they were the source material for that. >> absolutely right. how lucky am i to have that family? i had a friend who would write sitcoms who would go yell it is parents, why can't you be crazy like phil's family? yes, i owe everything to them. so this tribute, netflix very generously let me do this but i'll everything to them. i'm so happy to have been their son, and they were so happy
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that my brother and i, we fought like idiots when we were children now work together, and that we are happy. gave them gnoccus as they say. they have great lives. my mom unfortunately passed from als, so proceeds from my book-- >> the book let me just hold it up. which by the way as some of the most requested recipes. >> yes 60. >> 60 recipes, so people who want and the proceeds go to? >> my share of the proceeds go to imalice.org. >> may their memories be a blessing. >> thank you. >> and it's so good to see you again. just so people know, the season six on netflix. >> it's on right now. >> to get to season one is a big deal. >> netflix likes to and shows that season two. you have to be a big deal to make it to six on netflix. so mazeltov. it's so good to see you phil. >> love you jake. >> thank you. >> phil's book is available right now, go check it out.
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