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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  December 2, 2022 12:00pm-1:00pm PST

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collapsed in their arms. >> he's getting back on the horse of a cruise ship? >> he missed the lobster. saturday was lobster. i never got to enjoy it. >> just like alisyn, i've got a lot of questions. right? there's a lot of questions about what happened that night that we still have blank spots. >> fill us in. >> i will. absolutely. >> thank you, nick valencia. top of the hour on "cnn newsroom." good to have you along. i'm victor blackwell. i'm alisyn camerota. huge early vote turnout in the georgia senate runoff. almost 1.5 million ballots have been cast ahead of next week's decision day. >> today is the last day for georgians to vote early for either incumbent democratic senator raphael warnock or republican challenger herschel walker. dianne gallagher is in georgia tracking both campaigns. what are these final messages as
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we get close to the day we count the votes? . >> reporter: so i will tell you that both campaigns are happy to see these long lines at polling places across the state on this final day. obviously we wish people didn't have to wait soeni long, but they're excited about the turnout that is key to the closing early message for both herschel walker and raphael war warnock. trying to get people out to vote and making sure they understand that technically the control of the senate is no longer hanging in the balance over this race. there was still so much at stake. now look, we can see the line that is behind me here. you talked about nearly the 1.5 million voters through thursday that have already voted, and look. just a few moments ago, gabriel sterling who was the chief operating officer of the secretary of state's office here said that today they are already above pace of both monday and tuesday which were those record-breaking, single daily
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totals. so we could be in for yet another single daily total record-breaking day which is really what voting rights experts and also election officials expected. typically the last day of early voting is one of, if not, the busiest day, but remember. we're in a compressed schedule here. just a four-week runoff election because of that new republican-sponsored voting law that came into effect last year. just five days of early in-person mandatory statewide voting. so while we're seeing higher daily totals, right now they're running quite behind the pace of, say, the 2021 total overall voting and that's something democrats have paid attention to though i'm told they're very encouraged by the turnout and where they're seeing it thus far. speaking of republicans, they anticipate to have a much healthier election day turnout which is what they typically look for, but said that right
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now they also are finding bright spots in the early voting right now. i have been talking to voters all day, and i will tell you, victor and alisyn, they have complained about the long lines. i was just at a polling place on the other side of town on the south side. they were waiting about two hours to get to the polls there, but every single person told me this was not just their duty, but this was important to them because not only is this choosing the person who will represent georgia in the senate, but they also do feel the nation watching them and watching their choices here. >> for sure. it's really encouraging to watch, you know, them exercise their civic duty. dianne gallagher, thank you for that. be sure to join in for our special coverage of the georgia runoff. election night in america starts tuesday at 4:00 p.m. right here on cnn. house gop leader kevin mccarthy and his critics are gearing up for a potential floor fight over the speakership in january. >> mccarthy maintains he will have the 218 votes needed to secure the leadership role, but some conservative hardliners say otherwise.
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cnn's melanie zona is on capitol hill. why is he so confident, melanie? >> reporter: he's confident because there isn't a serious challenger that has emerged. i'm told that some of kevin mcer ka thi's critics have been having informal conversations with other republicans to see who might be interested in jumping in the speaker's race, but everybody they've talked to which includes mark meadows, say they're backing mccarthy for speaker and say they wouldn't rival him outright. if he can't get to 218 votes or drops out, if that were to happen, there is a wide expectation that any number of republicans would want to throw their hat into the ring. take a look at what a mccarthy critic said about a potential challenger. >> there's quality candidates who represent the conservative center of the republican conference who are privately acknowledging that once it becomes clear it's not going to
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be kevin mccarthy, they would be interested in becoming speaker. they excite the republican base and unite republicans across the country as candidates, but they're not going to raise their hand publicly until it's clear to them that it's not going to be kevin mccarthy. >> reporter: he has a number of tools at his disposal he has yet to use to get those critics to his camp, but it'll be a messy process between now and january 3rd, guys. let's go to boston now where president biden is meeting with prince william. >> tell us what they're talking about there. >> reporter: well, the white house tells us they're expected to talk about climate change and mental health, and it is climate change that actually brings the prince of wales to boston. prince william and princess kate
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have been here on a multi-day visit ahead of their earthshot prize awards, aer ceremony that supposed to happen tonight, and was founded by william to tackle environmental challenges. the two individuals coincided, and president biden is here to meet with union workers notably on a day where he signed the rail legislation that received some pushback for not having paid sick leave, and he's also going to participate in a key fund-raiser ahead of that georgia senate runoff where he's going to shore up support for democratic incumbent raphael warnock. he's been here before shoring up support from a distance, doing that now for, again, warnock as democrats try to get another seat in the senate next week. victor and alisyn? >> all right, priscilla. thank you. let's get back now to the goings on on capitol hill. alyssa farah griffin is a former trump white house communications director and cnn political commentator and alice stewart is
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a cnn political commentator as well. good to have you both. alyssa, let's start with you, and you can't beat somebody with nobody, right? who's on the short list of potential not mccarthys that could get 218 votes? anybody? >> well, so that's the magic question. conservatives may be overplaying their hand here because they don't have a consensus candidate to put up. jim banks would have been obvious, but now he's looking at a senate run. jim jordan is not interested in it. so the most likely scenario if kevin mccarthy can't get to 218, and it'll go to multiple ballots. that's what happens, would be someone like a steve scalise coming into the void who i think could get the 218. i was working on capitol hill in 2015 when house conservatives blocked mccarthy from the speakership then. i think it's going to be a lot of behind the scenes to get extractions from him, and commitments leading up to that floor vote. i think it is probably 50/50 he ends up pulling off the
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speakership at this point. >> alice, what do you think? >> without putting someone forward, this is just noise, and that's what we're hearing from these people that are showing their opposition to mccarthy. without putting a name and a face up there, and i happen to agree with conservative commentator mark levin who says these people are boneheaded and they're saboteurs of what republicans need to do moving forward. the most important thing republicans can do is recognize the heavy lift that republicans across the country did to get majority in the house, and they need to work together, and that includes getting behind mccarthy and helping him to start off leading in a good fashion. look, right now what we're seeing is a lot of people that are very vocal and a lot of these conversations need to be held behind closed doors. mccarthy is very good at these behind closed doors meetings and working to listen to the concerns of these people that are opposed to him, and he's working out deals. a lot of them want to see rules
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changes, and he's working out deals one-on-one. the republicans i'm speaking with are confident he's going to have the votes necessary to do so because right now we're just playing into the democrats' hands with all this infighting with republicans. >> alyssa, it's fascinating you think it could go either way. we have other things to talk about, but is there a bridge too far for mccarthy if they want some concessions? is there a list of things he'll say, if that's what you need, you can pick someone else. >> i think one of the big challenges he's facing is some of the house conservatives want a rules change that will make it easier to use the motion to vacate which is the vote of no confidence to take the speaker out of power. he's very concerned about having that because it means even if they give him the speakership, it could be a very short-lived speakership. i agree with alice. i think it's largely a sideshow in the sense that, you know, put up or shut up. you have to have an alternative, but the problem is if you pay attention to the four vocal hard noes on mccarthy, they're not
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budging. the only lane is, is there something you could give to democrats or do you give them something significant enough to switch those votes over? >> let's talk about what's going on in georgia, the senate runoff there. so former president obama was down in georgia campaigning for senator warnock, and he appears to be having some fun with that. so here he is after herschel walker made some kind of lighthearted comments. so did president obama. >> y'all watch a stupid movie hoping it gets better, but you keep watching anyway the other night i was watching this movie called "fright night" or some type of night, but it was about vampires. i don't know if you know, but they're cool people. a werewolf can kill a vampire. did you know that? i never knew that, so i don't want to be a vampire anymore. i want to be a werewolf. >> mr. walker has been talking about issues that are of great importance to the people of
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georgia. like whether it's better to be a vampire or a werewolf. [ applause ] this is a debate that i must confess i once had myself. [ laughter ] when i was 7. [ laughter ] then i grew up. as far as i'm concerned, he can be anything he wants to be except for a united states senator. >> alice, what do you think is going to happen on tuesday? >> a lot of material to work with there. i'm from georgia. i speak with a lot of my family and friends that are there, and they are cautiously optimistic. this is tight. this is extremely tight, and the name of the game right now is turnout. turning out the votes, and the rnc as well as the walker campaign have hundreds of people on the ground knocking on doors, making phone calls and getting voters out, but what herschel walker has in his camp is
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governor brian kemp. extremely popular, just re-elected. he's been out there on the campaign trail with herschel and focusing on things that are important to the people of georgia, reminding them that this is a very important race. this is about maintaining a 50/50 split in the senate which is critical for committee assignments. he's also making sure that he focuses on the policies that herschel walker will focus on if he's elected, policies that are important to the people of georgia that he has worked on, which is covid issues, the economy being strong on crime and supporting our military, and he says that herschel walker is out there for the people of georgia. raphael warnock is nothing more than a rubber stamp for joe biden, and those policies aren't popular in georgia, and brian kemp, i think is a great surrogate for herschel walker. >> alyssa, the spending on ads since the general, republicans are spending and republican allied groups are spending less than half of what democratic groups are, and of course, the
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warnock campaign. what does that signal to voters? is there less enthusiasm about getting herschel walker in now that he won't be the deciding vet? >> it's still become one of the most expensive runoffs despite the balance of power not being on the line. >> sure. >> i would hope the resources, the rnc are putting toward get out the vote effort. that's what matters most more than the ads do at this point. this race is neck and neck. most polling as them within four points of each other. . the heavy hitters are showing up for walker. ted cruz, lindsey graham, nickk ha haley, and brian kemp. i think some of the concern though is that the center of gravity is just shifting toward warnock because of the fact this is not about the balance of power for the senate. >> alyssa, and alice, thank you both. >> thank you. this just into cnn, closing arguments have wrapped up in the tax fraud case against the trump organization. >> cnn's karisganell is with us.
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has the jury started deliberating? >> reporter: the closing statements finished up today. we had the prosecution go first. on monday, the judge will instruct the jury on the law, and this is a real critical piece of this about how the company can be held liable for the actions of some of the employees. that's the government's theory, and then the jury will get the instructions, but today was about the prosecution giving their closing arguments. they followed the defense which is how it works in new york state. the defense went first and they were pinning this tax fraud on allen weisselberg, the former chief financial officer of the trump organization. they said he was a rogue employee. that opened the door for the prosecution to say that the former president, donald trump was not blissfully ignorant of these crimes. they went -- he is not on trial, just a reminder, but they went through different elements of this case where he has popped up. the former president signed some of these bonus checks given to employees that were subject to the alglegations they got some untaxed, fringe benefits.
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he signed off on corporate apartments and even the lease for the apartment that was given to allen weisselberg. those are all elements of the allegation where the trump organization they say had benefitted because they gave these employees these off the book compensation through those different sorts of benefits like the car leases and the apartment. now the government, you know, donald trump is not on trial, but they entered him into this case this afternoon by saying he signed off on this, and one of the things they pulled up an exhibit where it showed that trump had initialed what was a salary reduction for one of the executives. they don't tie trump to the specific fraud, but they entered it in a reason in which a prosecutor said mr. trump explicitly sanctioned tax fraud. after the closing statements wrapped, lawyers for the trump companies asked the judge for a mistrial. they said the prosecutor had went too far by calling him an unindicted coconspirator. the judge denied the mistrial and said he would give the jury
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instruction on monday and that's when deliberation will begin. >> kara scan, thank you. a strong jobs report is bringing more interest rate hikes. what that means for you ahead. and twitter expels the twitter account of kanye west after more erratic and anti-semitic posts. more ahead. do i just focus on when things don't work, and not appreciate when they do? i love it whenen work actually works! i just booked this parkrking spot... this desk... and this conference room! i am filing status reports on an app that i made! i'm not even a coder! and it works!... i like your bag! when your digital solutions work, the world works. that's why the world works with servicenow. before we begin, i'd like to thank our sponsor, liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay fowhat you need. and by switching, you could even save $652
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gas prices continue to fall. a gallon today costs on average 30 cents less than it did just a month ago. >> americans are paying less for gas now than before russia invaded ukraine in february, and prices may slide even more by christmas. now lower gas prices, this is one of the major factors
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president biden highlighted when he touted the state of the u.s. economy today. >> our economy continues to grow. we're in a position now where things are moving. they're moving in the right direction. >> new numbers out today show u.s. employers added 263,000 jobs in november. more than anticipated. the unemployment rate held steady at 3.7%. now wages are also up more than 5% for the year. it's feeling fears that the federal reserve is going to do another big rate hike. diane swank is a chief economist. let's start. before we get to the fed, just on the characterization by the president that things are moving in the right direction, the economy's on the right path, do you agree with that? >> well, there's no question the economy's growing. we've added over 4.3 million jobs this year. that's stunning. that's almost double the pace of
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the 2010s. let's hope it stays afloat even as inflation has eroded individuals with power, and that's the dichotomy that we've got, that inflation has eroded the individual power. it's great that prices at the pump are lower. that doesn't deal with, though, the underlying inflation that the fed is so concerned about. one of the things that the fed is very worried about is the acceleration we saw in service sector wages feeding into a more metastasized location. it can become a chronic or fatal disease. the cure though is not easy, and this has just upped the ante that the fed has to hit the brakes much harder now to control inflation at the underlying level so we don't have it persist even though, you know, we're taking some of the steam off in some important areas like prices at the pump, the bottom line is inflation,
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underlying inflation is still there and outside of foreign inflation, how low we can go, and getting back to where we need where wages outpace inflation gains persistently instead of where individuals feel like they're losing ground. >> as we look to the fed, jerome powell said moderating the pace of these interest rate increases could come as soon as their meeting in a couple of weeks, but from what i'm hearing from you, is these numbers and let's add to this october's job numbers, they were revised up to 284,000 new jobs, could force him to keep his foot on the brake at least for this meeting. no reductions or slowing pace until next year. >> that could be the case. it certainly puts 75 basis points back on the table. we've only had five 75% rate hikes, and the first was in 1984 and i remember it, and that was
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a surprise rate hike of three-quarters of a percent, and the last four have been at the fed meetings. we have had four meetings in a row raising by 74 basis points, and the fed would like to moderate that going forward, but this puts that back on the table. it's also important, the fed chairman noted and it's something that was really important in today's data that ongoing effects the pandemic is having on labor shortages. 1.6 million people were out ill and unable to work in november. that's the second highest level since the omicron wave in january, 2022, and it's 70% higher than we saw in the 2010s. that's a lot of staffing shortages that employers have to deal with and adds cost and inflation to the economy. >> mark zandy says that the u.s. will narrowly avoid a recession. do you think we're done with these, you know, category 1 or
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category 4 storm analogies for the economy that the u.s. will kind of slip by a recession? >> well, mark i have enormous respect for and he's a good friend. i hope he's right. my own view is that the fed now is in the position of hitting the brake harder and at their last meeting in november they thought the chance of the economy having a prolonged slowdown with the rise in unemployment, that's their baseline scenario, not much different than a recession, and having a recession were about equal, and i think unfortunately they now may feel forced to push the economy through thin ice. so unfortunately i think we do have a recession in store for us. the good news is, and this is the only way to put it, a fed-induced recession where consumer and firm balance sheets are where they're at, we should be able to come out of it much more rapidly than we have in previous recessions. certainly than the situation in 2008, 2009. >> short and shallow.
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diane swonk, thank you. okay, in hawaii, the lava from that volcano that has been erupting all week is getting close tore a critical roadway. we're going to go there live next. hi, my name is tony cooper. and if you have both medicare and medicaid, i have some really encouraging news at you'll definitely want to hear. depending on the plan you choose, you may be eligible to get extrbenefits with a humana medicare advantage dual-eligible special needs plan. all of these plans include a healthy options allowance. depending on the plans available in your
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lava from hawaii's mauna loa volcano is threatening a crucial road that connects hawaii's big island. >> officials say the molten rock is just around three miles away from that highway. look at these images. it's prompting scores of drivers to pull over to witness this natural wonder, and as a result, safety concerns are rising over the growing number of traffic jams. cnn's david colbert is on the ground in hawaii. it's not necessarily the lava that's causing the danger. it's the traffic jams? >> reporter: essentially exactly, alisyn and victor. we're not far from that main highway you mentioned. it's just behind the camera here. it's tough to see during the day, but i will show you you can see the plume that looks like smoke. that's not smoke. that's been warned by officials to be toxic gases. that's part of the concern here, and just a little farther down,
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you might be able to see what looks like another planet's terrain. that is where the lava end. that's about 2 1/2 miles away from us, and the concern is it is inching closer, but slowly. at a snail's pace is how it's been described. it's headed this direction. they're saying at least another week is what their anticipation is, if it actually ends up getting to that main area, but right now they're saying they can give a couple of days' heads-up to folks to say this will be closed off. as far as that vog or volcanic smog is concerned, they're saying winds are pushing through and if it gets to a certain level, it could become dangerous enough for them to issue warns and have folks remain indoors and if they need to go beyond that, it would be rather extreme. that's the extent of what it would be. if you are looking at these images, it is night and day and very distinct when you are looking at the glow of the lava and the dark of night versus
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what we see now, and that's really just the plume in the sky. those images are so striking. that's what had folks pulling over, wanting to get a feel for what exactly this was like, and it's interesting because you have locals who some of whom hadn't seen this in 34 years, some -- or 38 years, and some who are younger than that, hadn't seen it at all, and they wanted to get a sense of this too. for them, it's a spiritual moment and it's something that as far as not causing immediate danger to anybody, it's something that they want to take in from a safe daistance. >> you have been in a split screen your entire shot, and the entire time you have been explaining this, i have been just fixated on these pictures. they are remarkable what we're s s seeing. >> reporter: it's really impressive. >> at this moment, not a danger. that could change. david culver, thank you so much. >> totally mesmerizing. >> yeah. meanwhile, hate speech on twitter has surged dramatically since elon musk took over. we have more just ahead.
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later chest congestion. hello 12 hours of relief. 12 hours!! not coughing? hashtag still not coughing?! mucinex dm gives you 12 hours of relief from chest congestion and any type of cough, day or night. mucinex dm. it's comeback season. - [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. new research shows that hate speech is surging on twitter ever since elon musk took over. the center for countering digital hate finds the daily use of the "n" word is up 300% from the 2022 average. the rate of slurs against gay and transgender people has also climbed. >> the report comes just hours after twitter suspended kanye
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west for inciting violence. now musk did not specify which post was the problem, but just yesterday west posted an altered image of the star of david with a swastika inside. he also praised hitler during a conversation with conspiracy theorist alex jones. joining us now, the executive editor of rocklet 101, and nischelle turner is with us. and jeff guardier, a clinical psychologist. i want to start with you, jeff, because ye says he's bipolar, has manic episodes. not every person with mental health challenges says or does these things, and there are plenty of people who are hateful and bigoted who do not have mental health challenges. how much of our conversation should be informed by his mental health challenges? >> well, i think certainly a lot of it. there's been a history according
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to his family of bipolar disorder. it's quite obvious to me that this is someone who's been in a manic phase for quite some time. certainly we don't know how much of his speech is related to that bipolar disorder, whether it was there beforehand and the bipolar disorder, being in the manic phase is taking away any kind of filter or whether it's purely from this mental illness, but either way this is someone who's in deep, deep, deep emotional trouble, and needs an intervention. >> nischelle, i totally agree. i think it is so uncomfortable to watch him mentally melting down. >> yep. >> in addition obviously to all of the hateful stuff he's spewing, but it seems that this is a classic manic episode that he's having which as we know, people do self-destructive things and he seems to be in the throes of it. nischelle, here's my question. where are the people around him, the friends, the family, the advisers, the associates?
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why can't somebody box him in and get him some help right now? >> well, i think that we're seeing some of that play out in front of us, you know, you guys talk about what he's going through mentally, and i will let dr. jeff talk about those things because i am not one to diagnose. i'm just like the rest of us, watching this really sad, sad scenario play out in front of us, and sick scenario in a lot of ways play out in front of us. we know his mother passed away. some people would attribute his start of his real issues once that happened. we've seen him now become divorced so he doesn't have the support of a wife or that family anymore. we've also, you know, seen a lot of his friends say, we have been trying to stick by you. we just can't do it anymore. i think people were coming to his aid trying to help him. we've seen different times when he's, you know, lashed out of spoken out. we've seen some of his friends, whether it be a celebrity friend rushing to his aid, but know it seems like people are saying,
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enough because you -- there are things sometimes you can't come back from, and, you know, people i think they think of themselves and say, i don't want to be associated with someone who is spouting the fact that hitler is their -- their good things to say about hitler, so i think at this time people are just, whether they're doing it behind the scenes, that's another story, but the public face of it is just, i don't want to have anything to do with him. >> i was on our morning call today. i was talking about how not every community, every group is having the same conversation about ye. his music is still a rotation. people still wear yeezys. >> yeah. >> listen. i went back and checked. he got a standing ovation at the bet awards after he said slavery was a choice. is this a moment that kanye gets a pass again, or is this something that's going to stick for his reputation? his music is still playing. >> right. you know, i think that that conversation -- that question might not be nuanced enough, you
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know? i don't know it's a matter of simply giving him a pass again. i think there are a couple of things at play. for one, media at large doesn't give a damn about hip-hop culture generally speaking. half the people in conversation about kanye couldn't name an album, and yet there are people who are -- who have spent their entire lives devoted to his artistry. so i think in one respect, there's a conversation about his artistic contribution that people wrestle with when it comes to michael jackson and r. kelly, and there's a question of whether or not one should indulge. in my criticism of the media of which i am apart, i think there's an overvaluing. i have been really thinking about this. i'm, like, listen. there are rappers who have clothing lines even, and popular famous wives. there are some that have existed
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before kanye, exist in the world alongside of him, and for some reason there's a particular amount of attention that we're giving to this story. i'm starting to wonder, is kanye in and of himself even the story? are we somehow contributing to this manic episode and making everyone have to partake in something that's very hurtful for many, many people, and, you know, is he really the headline? i really just had to parse that a little bit this morning thinking about him. obviously he's way out of pocket. this is a very sick person. mark lamont hill tweeted the other day that, you know, he was trash. this isn't just about someone misunderstood. this is someone who was actually trash and i don't think that any of us can debate that at this point, whatever community you're seated in, but with respect to how you age him, i think it is different for different groups,
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and i just wonder if the media itself is being a bit disingenuous about kind of chasing and inflating this story and the importance of someone who's -- how important is kanye? you know, when you really think about it. >> such a good question. >> is he really there -- is it smart our journalistic for us to do. when we remove kanye west from the conversation of 2022, how much is actually lost? we're engaging in a bit of the salacious nature of the sickness. >> yeah. nischelle -- >> that's great question, yeah. >> give us your last word. >> go ahead, alisyn. i was just taken out. >> we had the exact same conversation in our morning call. how much oxygen do we want to give this, but with somebody of his amount of following does something, say, so hateful and vile, are we supposed to call it out? nischelle, go ahead. i'll give you the last word. >> no, we have the same
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conversation at "entertainment tonight." we had the same conversation this morning and over the past few months. we have decided as a unit here that we do not cover him, that we do not give him oxygen and that we do not inflame this at all, that we just decided just no. we're not going to do it. we're not going to participate in it. we're not going to give it oxygen, and i do feel really good about that decision. i was wrestling with it today when i got the call to come on. do i even want to discuss him? do i even want to talk about it? i do understand the value in it because he does have a following and he does reach people, and we've seen it. we've seen it play out after he says the most ridiculous things. we see people hang banners over the freeway in los angeles. there are people who can't parse the difference between what he says and what is reality. so in a way, i think it is important to talk about. in another way, it's just exhausting. he's just exhausting. >> yeah. >> yeah. certainly is. >> we really appreciate you all coming on and being willing to have the conversation with us. thank you very much for all of
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your perspectives. nischelle, keirna and jeff. this just in. houston police have made an arrest in the fatal shooting of the rapper takeoff on november 1st. they charged 33-year-old patrick xavier clark with murder. now homicide investigators say takeoff was tragically at the wrong place at the wrong time. >> the event was a private party. there was a lucrative dice game that went on at the event. there was an argument that happened afterwards outside the bowling alley which led to the shooting. i can tell you that takeoff was not involved in playing in the dice game or the argument that happened outside. he was not armed. he was an innocent bystander. >> takeoff was just 28 years old. he was a member of the multiplatinum-selling rap group, migos. police made another arrest charging a man for unlawfully carrying a weapon. u.s. men's soccer team star christian pulisic will play in tomorrow's big match against the
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american soccer star christian pulicic is cleared to play. >> he was on the field today.
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don redell joans us. what is the latest? >> he is cleared to play. i was at the united states training session and he was out there running drills. i wouldn't say 100% but definitely looking pretty good in the distinctive orange soccer boots and so important to the u.s. he is back in the team. he is known as captain america though he isn't captain of this side. it is a side that came into the world cup with basically no world cup experience. they are getting better with every game. they need him against the netherlands. they have only scored two goals so far and pulisic was involved in both of them. this is win or go home but in this these kind of games anything can happen. so i would imagine that an awful
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lot of u.s. soccer fans glued to the edge of seats. >> that's right. thank you. january 6 house select committee is closer to a deadline to finish the report. we have the latest on the meetings n next. research shows pple remember commercials with nostalgia. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's one that'll really take you back. it's customized home insurance from liberty mutual!!! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ we all have a purpose in life - a “why.”
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about a week away from crowning the 2022 cnn hero of the year. >> a con tenner is tyreke who's helping to make the community safer after his release from prison. >> when you run a block, the community people know. it is a dangerous but normal life why going to jail woke me up. if the community would follow me let me see if they follow me for something positive. in 2019 we opened up the community engagement center which used to be the community drug house and now a safe place for the community. we provide clothing, food, vegetables, hot meals on tuesdays and thursdays. shrimp and chicken. helps them consistently stay safer. >> shootings is down and hope is
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up. my relationship with the philadelphia police department is cool. seeing the officers in a different light. builds trust and confidence. they need to see that all cops aren't bad. it is about your heart. we try to create a safe haven for the neighborhood. >> what a great story. go to cnn.com/hero to vote. have a great weekend. we appreciate you joining us. "the lead with jake tapper" starts right now. ♪ the january 6 committee today considering some of its most consequential matters yet. 519 days in existence, more than 1,000 interviews and the january 6 commit tee weighs the final act. coming up, speaking with a member of the committee to mak