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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  December 15, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PST

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good evening, i'm allison >> i'm laura, this is cnn can i
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just say that was a powerful documentary, it really was and the way that there was just so much affirmation of what they had done, they did not retreat to a corner, they really, which they would have been entitled to. they were proactive and helpful still. >> those parents are extraordinary and i've thought about them every single day since those conversations which you was for you probably two months ago, because of exactly what you're talking about, they were grief stricken, they are grief stricken, they're grief hasn't gone away, maybe some days for the as raw as the first year year but still have taken action, obviously a lesson for all of us even with grief, they've -- changes which we'll talk about you know, where we'll -- there is forward motion,
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something that you think about risk on ten years there's a tendency almost want to avoid and for the talk about it because you want to put your head in the sand this isn't happening here but they refuse and kids are safer and still work to be done. >> we'll talk about all of that and later we'll speak to scarlet lewis who you met in the documentary her son was killed in sandy hook and she managed to turn her pain into purpose, she'll share wisdom and advice how to get through this with gloria and javier whose 9-year-old daughter was killed in uvalde. >> the latest on the deadly to an ripping through southern states tonight, at least three have been killed in louisiana. two million people are in the path of twisters and hail and winds up to 65 miles an hour. these powerful storm continue throughout the overnight hours. >> we have a lot to talk about along with cnn senior legal
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analyst, always lauren leader co founder and ceo and political commenter se cup, at time we're in right now, i'd love to hear from all of you in the sense of we are that in space where there is so much progress and still a lot of work to be done it's a conflicting feeling how do you feel. >> i've been in this space a long time i'm a gun owner and i was a gun rights activist at a time and an nr a member before i quit and a lot change since sandy hook and sandy hook is one of the reasons i left. the progress has been for law abiding responsible gun owner whose decided in many cases to part with the nra and say they're too extreme and we want to come out and be part of a solution instead of just defending the second amendment as we did. i saw progress earlier this year, when good democrats, good republicans got together, and brought legislation to the table
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and didn't do what they usual do, democrats usually gum up stuff so it doesn't pass, republicans usually say no to everything. that's progress, but let me tell you. things are about to get real scary, the day before roe was overturned another case came town from the supreme court, new york city pistol and rifle versus before you know, clarence thomas said that if you can't find a law if 1791 when the first amendment was ratified you can't introduce if you gun regulation, so in west virginia, for example, a court there decided that it was unconstitutional to have serial numbers on guns if you watched forensic files that's how most cops sell gun crimes, in texas, a judge decided that it was unconstitutional to prohibit someone who was a domestic abuser from owning a gun because
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from 1971 in texas, spouse al abuse was for the a crime. this is wild, we don't talk about that enough, that has me very, very concerned. >> it's more extreme than, that the supreme court will only go one direction on the second amendment, that's clear if you look back to thehe history of t case, as talking about the patron saint originalism was justice anthony scalia, however, he conveniently this is a guy whose whole judicial philosophy is every word matters when you look at the second amendment, it says in order to be part of a malitia paraphrasing and he's faced with that exact question in that case and you know what he says part of a malitia? that part doesn't matter, ignore, mr. urgelist said that doesn't matter, the new court is run with this, i will say this and allison your documentary features this, they have been a vehicle for some measure of justice, there can never be --
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nothing cacan undo what happene to these people but to be put to the extra torture that alex jones put them through courts have rightly found him liable, he'll never pay it all but have given and you can see this? your documentary a measure of justice available. >> billion dollars basically they've gotten expenses we'll they will never get cent and lawyer said we'll follow him to the end of the earth, the supreme court on gun rights is out of touch for the vast majority of americans on that issue as they are with roe and other you know, very important point about the sort of dog mask approach to the law the vast majority of owners across the board, gun oirngs et cetera want sense be gun laws, look at issues like domestic violence, you know, domestic abusers have been access to guns when there's overwhelming evidence that that is often has existential risk of homicide in that case, americans want the courts to protect them.
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they want the congress to protect them, and families have had little children sitting through shooter drills, you know, that was a huge motivator for voters in the mid-terms s after trump was elected all the moms whose preschoolers had to go through this a political issue people care about and it's remarkably bipartisan actually in many ways. >> you and i talked about this before lauren as mothers what it's like for your kindergartners and first graders, a generation and it's almost normalized for them. >> completely >> also taking a step back and broadening it out which i know is so important with sandy hook promise and what they're working on and what they continue to do, is unfortunately because of gun violence, there cannot be a singular focus on one particular space where it occurs. and >> for sure. >> multi-pronged and there was a club q survivors blame rhetoric on the idea of violence the idea of use of gun violence and
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targeting people in particular that listen to think that happened on u.s. capitol. >> to the politicians and activists who accuse lgbtq people of grooming children and being abusers, shame on you. we're being slaughter erreded and dehumanized across the country. >> the hateful rhetoric you've heard is the direct cause of the shooting at club q >> is the rhetoric causing it.t. >> the rhetoric is a huge part. you know, all have to look how we're talking in terms of our politics, politics is part of it mental health is a huge part of it. which doesn't mean you get to ignore the gun legislation part, it's all of it. there's so many confors to this conversation and debate it's easy to focus on one and miss others there's a cultural thing i've noticed the past decade or two is the black gun and culture
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there's pockets of gun right people the self-defense crowd a lot of women increasing the african-americans, asian americans sports men people leak me and my husband who mostly use guns to hundred and shoot at targets. then you got this malitia crowd not that they're in a malitia but attach guns to maybe wanting to protect themselves against the government and you have a black gun crowd by black gun. >> what does that meany ar-15s and similar weapons. >> weapons of war. >> the people who use to cause play at war and pretend to be soldiers and pose in pictures and on instagram, that pocket sub culture has really consumed all of the argument over gun rights and how far to take gun right extremism when those are the folks leading the arguments on that side don't be surprised when it's more extreme i want to talk about more progress, it's a
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schizophrenic conversation we always have to have because there are steps forward and back and it gets complicated but there have been as we talked about in the documentary, 525 state laws significant state laws considered by the gifford center passed in the past ten years and by the way in those states that really did something significant connecticut has not had a mass shooting since 2013. that's a lot. >> it's a lot on the moms responsible for that. you have to look at the extraordinary political organization of group like moms demand and sandy hook promise and all of these groups many of whom are average citizens, no professional politicalos for people whom it's personal and put they have successfully lobby their state governments and paid an impact and to your point on progress it's an extraordinary example of what's policy and bring the stories to bear >> experiences they never
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wanted. >> and tried to avoid. >> there's absolutely been a lot of progress, it's important would he keep which in mind particularly the state level the thing with gun they traveling i was a prosecutor if new york and new jersey, guns were coming from pennsylvania, ohio, north carolina, we had pipelines of gun coming in. that's why i think there's some efforts we'll never get there but federal legislation would really make a big difference the thing is the gun lobby taken this 0 negotiations stance for decades now and worked for them as at a tactic, of course, there was bipartisan legislation for 30 year, so, i like the speed talking. >> yes. >> that was good. that was an optimistic sort of >> it's a hard topic to be optimistic about if the current environment >> 2 million people in the path of tornados hail and wind as huge storms tears through the south, at least three people have been killed, a confirmed
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tornado touched down in new orleans this afternoon and nick is in regret in a, louisiana, what is the situation? . >> reporter: good evening, allison, damage here is extensive his hard hit neighborhood where emergency crews we've seen them going through the neighborhood block after block making sure everyone is accounted for and as much damage as you see behind me as it stand now, we believe that everyone is accounted for in this neighborhood, there was no loss of life, you did mention three people did die as a result of these storms and just look behind me, the path of this tornado took ripping down this street, downed power lines are active, we don't want get close it's a dangerous situation according to the first responders we spoke to, but that tornado came through here, ripped through the back yards of these neighbors and it was earlier i spoke to the neighbors and they said they were aware that there was a risk of severe weather -- it was just not comprehensivible to them they thought they were going to take a direct hit. one of the neighbors said that the storm lasted about ten, 15 seconds but still you could see the type of damage that it left
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behind. you know, many homes are still without power, you can hear the him of a generator here behind me as crews are continuing to you know, make sure that everything is ok in this neighborhood, we talked to a lot of eyewitnesses here that are just shell shocked by what they went through, it's not lost on them this happened, just before christmas, and i spoke to a little boy earlier who said you know, it's heartbreaking he said he hopes santa can still find his home even though it's heavily damaged we've seen parts of roofs ripped off, backs of houses torn, and nature of tornado as they come through, they sort of pick and choose where they want to go, walk down these blocks and some homes are relatively untouched and others are devastated by the storm that went through, the still not quite certainly what this neighborhood but the extent of the damage that this neighborhood has suffered they continue to canvas this area tomorrow morning, and get more of an indication of exactly what they're dealing with here but this neighborhood, it's a neighborhood that got hit boy hurricane ida not too long ago,
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another tornado ripped through here more than a year ago, these neighbors are going through the worst now and hoping you know, that it gets better here in the coming days. allison, laura? >> so scary. nick, thank you very much. we have a lot more to come on our breaking news the massive deadly storm u.s. opening the south unfortunately the danger is not over yet, we'll solicit from the weather center next. ♪. ♪. ♪. terine to ne. new science shows it gets in between teeth to destroy 5x more plaque above the gumline than floss. for a cleaner, healthier mouth. listerine. feel the whoa! vicks vapostick. strong soothing... vapors. help comfort your loved ones. for chest, neck, and back. it goes on clear. no mess. just soothing comfort. try vicks vapostick. two loads of snot covered laundry. only one will be sanitized. wait, what? adding lysol laundry sanitizer
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. . back to breaking news news coverage of the deadly storms killed at least three people in louisiana, twisters causing destruction for miles more than 40 tornados have been reported across texas, oklahoma, louisiana and mississippi in the last two days. >> and tonight there are more weather threats as the massive storm heads east now. we're live now in the cnn weather center, britly what is
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the latest. >> we're still dealing with the tornado threat of this evening and through the overnight hours although it is starting to decrease as well as the threat for hail and damaging winds, look at this. pay attention to that dark cloud that's the tornado we've had several reports as mentioned, 40 reports all across the lower mississippi valley. most of that line has significantly weakened, the flooding threat however still exists as it moves across the florida panhandle, still dealing with thunderstorms, one severe thunderstorm warning until 11:00 central time for alabama, strong winds, you see the bow, with the line there, quarter size hail possible as it continues the track offer to the north and east the whole system takes its track north and east and bringing in that severe weather threat from florida up into the carolinas over the next 24 hours, but again, still holding that threat for stronger storms throughout the rest of this evening and into early morning
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hours tomorrow, mobile on up into parts of southern parts of alabama still hold the threat for a few tornado this evening, like i said it is starting to weaken, numerous reports of tornados 44 reports, 23 severe wind gusts reports, and six hail reports. again mentioned the severe weather threat holds across florida but more a of a slight risk for damaging winds and large hail moving into wednesday and a flooding threat becomes more likely in these areas we already picked up two oh four inches of rain, additional rainfall up to another two to four inches possible in the next 24 hours moving up into parts of the tennessee river valley, the snow threat not over still dealing with blister warnings on the north shore of lake superior and back to the central plains >> people need to be careful out there. thank you all of that tlet's bring in guy mcguinness, the president of st. bernard parish
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where a tornado touched down earlier, guy thanks so much for being here, we understand that ten people have had to be rescued in st. bernard parish, tell us what those have been like. >> allison thank you for looking into on us here in st. bernard parish, we had ten rescues, you know, it was a multiple type of issues, sheriff pullman and our fire chief was making sure we can get residents out of an apartment complex, we had a home directly across the street from our chief administrative office actually was trapped in their home, we got them out, a child and some, we had about 50 or 60 structures that were heavy's damaged by the storm, none totally damaged as we know of yet, so a little different than the ef3 that came through here
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in march in the same path in arby, so we're blessed that we have no serious injuries and we're going to get to work tomorrow morning, cleaning this up, we have the resources from our governor i spoke with john bella tonight and all of our representative, so we're ready to hit the ground running tomorrow and get our community cleaned up and we're thinking about all the communities throughout the country really that have are going through the same thing tonight. >> so important, and guy, what do you feed in terms of resources given that this is happening your parish is no stranger even this year to tornado, what are the resources that will be most beneficial to the community >> only thing we needed tonight was the governor to say you know, guy start to clean up tomorrow we have the money to pay for it. that's what we're going to do, our power company is out there between the trying to get power back to the citizens of araby,
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that's ongoing, most of them will probably be up tonight tomorrow we'll work on the most damaged areas, but you know, the one of those things where real time reporting from the media, national and local saved lots, i believe, i know it saved lives in march, it saved lives tonight, and to see the amazing awesome actions of our deputies, i was with the sheriff when that tornado was coming across the river into our community, and listening to all of the deputies and the coordination as that storm was coming, it was unbelievable, and we -- we were in the areas we needed to be, and our citizens were taken care of, and they are up beat, helping each other, and we're going to get through this during the holiday season. >> looking at the images watching the screen and seeing
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how that really just scary a tornado images there, i'm trying to get a sense how much time you had how, you're watching this coming, what is the amount of time you had to prepare making sure the people had the signals going. >> we were out and about driving around try to position ourselves to make sure we were ready to respond, we had an alert at around -- at around 3:45 or so that this storm would be hit araby around 4:06 and from what i remember, it pretty much came across the river at 4:06. so i would say around 15-20 minutes our citizens had you know, advice to hunker down, and it looks like most of them did, we're blessed because of that.
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>> guy, thank goodness for the coordination of the emergency first responders and deputy, thanks so much for taking time to talk with us we'll check back with you tomorrow. >> god bless >> you too. it's been ten years as you know since the sandy hook shooting and tonight one of those parent who has harnessed her pain and anger will be here to help uval de parents get through the unbearable days. ♪. ♪. ♪. it's an 8 in 1 immune support formula. airborne. do more.
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well, we fell in love through gaming. but now the internet lags and it throws the whole thing off. when did you first discover this lag? i signed us up for t-mobile home internet. ugh! but, we found other interests. i guess we have. [both] finch! let's go! oh yeah! it's not the same. what could you do to solve the problem? we could get xfinity? that's actually super adult of you to suggest. i can't wait to squad up. i love it when you talk nerdy to me. guy, guys, guys, we're still in session. and i don't know what the heck you're talking about.
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. that's the white house there, lit up in green tonight to mark ten years since the school shooting shooting that killed 20 children and six adults. we've seen progress in the ten years but we've seen many more schools to a sickening degree. so where are we tonight? joining us is scarlet lewis, she's the mother of 6-year-old jesse lewis killed at sandy hook and also gloria and javier their 9-year-old jackie was killed in the uvalde school shooting in may. jackie and gloria and scarlet, thank you all for being here and
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being here together i know scarlet that talking to you will be a comfort to all of us particularly to them. can you first tell us what today has been like for you? how do you mark an anniversary like these ten years today? >> today i did actually what i do every day, and that is continue to work towards keeping our kids safe by speaking with educators and working on a proactive and preventive solution, today was to different than any other day, workday for me. but ten years is marks a significant time and i really wish that we had made more progress and my heart really goes out to the uvalde families because as with sandy hook, that should never have happened
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>> absolutely and so scarlet, evening, just so everybody knows, you have turned your pan to purpose, devoted these years to traveling around the world, talk to school kids, educators, you talk to everyone about trauma and spotting it and helping to process it, and i mean, you say you found your purpose you know, after all of the pain, and so in terms of the casaresis, what can you say to them, where do they begin to start processing the horrible pain. >> i mean, it's so difficult and they are really right in it right now. they're still in the investigation phase and they're still sorting through so many mistakes that were made, and my heart really goes out to them. you know, it is a long process but i can tell you for myself at some point, i just made a choice
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and i thought about you know, how -- there's no playbook for parents who have lost children like we have. and i had to decide how i wanted the rest of my life to look and if i wanted to be another victim of the shooter, fighting against something for the rest of my life or i wanted to be for something, and my son jesse left a message on our kitchen chalk board, three words, nurturing, healing love and it shaped the direction my life took after that, i decided to be for love, and it was the right choice for me. >> so gloria and javier, where are you guys tonight? has anything gotten easier since may or harder? >> hello and thanks for having us, yes, it's hard every day, you know, >> it's much harder i think just
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like scarlet said, there's, we're in the middle of it. there's investigations we just got a report yesterday that was difficult to hear, that it just feels like it can't get worse and it does. >> i can only imagine the way uvalde handled this from the what looks like cover ups to the stone walking to the incompetence that that obviously hasn't helped all of the pain. so gloria and javier what questions to have you for scarlet >> first of all i want to give my respects for your loss as well. and thank you for being on here and you know, sharing our story as well. >> i think it brings some kind of comfort, i don't know if that's the right word, just because i can't picture myself tomorrow or next week let alone ten years. i don't know and it just brings
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some kind of comfort to know that, know that you are able to move forward, not move on but move forward at least get through each day. >> you know, i absolutely remember wondering if i was going to survive. that was the level of pain. i never wanted to kill myself, but i literally thought that i was going to dissolve and die, that's the amount of pain i felt. i understand where you are, and i am ten years further along in my journey, at least nine and a half and you do survive, and you do. >> we're having an issue with the static again. >> you're having technical -- can you hear us gloria? >> ok, we'll get them back i wanted you to talk about that because i think we all feel that way. how do you survive, at what point did that turn around for you and realized i will survive
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this? >> you know, honestly, it was another parent that had lost a child to violence and i had never met anybody that had done that, and she started laying out the path of what my life was going to look like, and that was not what i wanted my life to look like and i realized right then and there and i was going to have to determine my path. it was going to be a choice and so i, i made a choice really to quit my job and devote my life to being part of the solution, you know, it's very, very hardware that couple is right now when you have people that are not taking personal responsibility for mistakes they made and it's very hard to hold people accountable. i think that until we are able
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to hold people accountable, it's -- and also, what i've been trying to do the last ten years is address the root cause of the pain that leads to the violence, i mean, we have a billion dollars industry that's gone up around hardening schools, and hardening does need to happen, unfortunately because that's where we are in our society, we have allowed it to get to that. but until we address the root cause, we're never going to get ahead of the problem. >> scarlet, because christmas and we're in the middle of the holiday season, christmas is coming up, obviously, we have them back, this is their first christmas without jackie. what advice do you have for them? what can you share about that? >> christmas is difficult. i remember my first christmas
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without jesse it was two weeks after the tragedy, and it was really difficult. i don't know if you all have faith, but i do, and that is really what got me through my faith that jesse and i would be reunited and i don't know how anyone else could get through that, it is really difficult. >> gloria, javier? >> you know, the first thing you know was her birthday, on the 24th and her birthday was june 10th, that was the first hardest thing, that was very hard, thanksgiving, you know, christmas and it's -- it's difficult you know, but she loved to celebrate and we'll try to make it as -- it's hard.
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we'll do best we can. you know, hard as it is try to make it we have to get through it. it will be hard. we'll get through it. >> yes. >> and you will, i remember the first, the first holidays were really difficult, i thought about jesse's message to his older brother he left his this note that he had found when he was 12 years old on his desk and it said have a lot of fun that's what we tried to do before jesse died and that's how we try to honor him even right after he died, we were celebrating his life rather than mourning his death, we tried to focus on celebrating the life that he had and who he was to honor his
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legacy, but you will be spending rest of your life every single day honoring your child's legacy. >> gloria and javier, i hope it gives you some small comfort to see scarlet and see that she has been able to move forward and obviously, you know, she carries jesse with her every day, but she has as she said turned her pain to purpose, we're thinking of you and obviously we've been looking at your beautiful children throughout the segment, none of you deserve this, these kids didn't deserve this, our country has to figure this out. take care, we will be in touch with you through the christmas holiday and we really thank all of you for being here with us tonight. >> thank you. >> thank you for having us. >> thank you. >> thanks, scarlet. >> thank you. >> what a devastating yet important conversation to be witness to. i mean, just the idea of, i'm always believing that people are
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sometimes are on a collision course and fate so intertwined and to have them interact in this way was so meaningful to so many people. >> i know i hope that it is comforting to see somebody else who survived something so unthinkable and that she can go on and hope that gives them a small measure of comfort. really it's time they're going to have to live with this pain for a long time. >> my mother always says life must go on i forget sometimes just why. we'll be right back. ♪. ♪. ♪. to gretta. to gabby. to grandma. then, gertrude found something for it. delsym. and now what's going around is 12-hour cough relief. and the giggles. and the great dane pup. and grandma's gluten-free gooseberry pie. which is actually pretty great. the family that takes delsym together, feels better together. and try new delsym no mess vapor roll-on for cough. hi. i'm shannon storms bador. when we started selling my health products online
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have you noticed something about your newest coworker maybe
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you're having trouble communicating >> not with me. >> allison, what have you heard? about the coworker. >> i'm asking for a friend, there's a generational issue. that was good. that was a little bit boomeresk we're not alone thinking about this, "washington post" has a quiz out called cringe quiz, are you fluent in gen z? i'm not, i feel like we're living this >> let's check this out. we have emma goldberg our resident gen zer her to interpret this. >> not a boomer. >> i'm jen x but it turns out. >> you're not a boomer >> didn't margaret talk to us about sarcasm >> here's the point, i didn't
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know that i was offending my gen z colleagues by some of my e-mails this quiz tells us >> here's the first question you assign your gen z colleague a task, and you end the sentence with a period. ok, why don't you like that? >> sound passive aggressive. >> it's passive aggressive. >> if there's no exclamation point i'm taking it personally. >> they need a exclamation point or nothing. >> i do three >> at the end one sentence and the beginning of another. >> you could do, you know, you could just, you could do one exclamation point keep it neutral. >> how about if i say period? we need a dictionary for that >> that takes longer, laura, that's crazy, here it is, the
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answer is that the period is just like you said a sign of anger or coldness too aggressive basically a period. because it says like duh, is what it says to you. >> what did i do wrong. >> i'm learning. >> exclamation point, you send an e-mail to a gen z colleague asking a person to complete a task and add a smiley face emoji. >> but no teeth showing it's that one and your gen z colleagues become worried. >> that is an ambiguous smile, i have bad news to smile >> it's unsettling smile >> there's a lot of smile options on the emoji and that signals to me this is a very cautious smile. >> a regular smile you interpret as too ambiguous. >> you want teeth or not teeth dimples or winking. >> the colon and the paren sees.
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>> they don't like that >> that's not ok. >> in fact, the answer is number two, the emoji makes you think like you said that something is actually wrong for that reason, so show teeth. >> but also you can't do a thumb up. >> why. >> that's passive aggressive >> what >> when your mom starts to talk like really slowly to you and you're like, ok, she's telling you something is good because she's about to sandwich it with something bad, the thumb, up is very. >> i haven't worked in an office forever not because of covid, i don't have a real job. so i don't know any of this stuff from office life i know it from tiktok. >> i know what the kids on tiktok are saying and doing. >> you can't do a thumb, up. >> 100% cannot >> i didn't know at first i responded to somebody and just said, ok, like i was, i was just >> i know.
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but she called me and said are you ok? i'm fine but you said k to >> judgmental >> look at the meaning of ok first of all. let me tell you something if you add a third k to a text to me, we do have a problem. emma tell me this, first of all, we're joking about this, but i think a lot of the generation is about having communication online so being lost in translation happens all time you have to be very clear about what that looks like. is that y? i think the average gen person got a smart phone at 12. so they grew up with casual and playful form of communication and i think when you grow up with every emoji in the world available you're like why is someone just sending me a k? >> k is too short. >> it's rude >> it's rude. >> k is rude, and ok is -- classic. >> classic. it's a classic but capitol ok is aggressive.
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so you can't make. it's loud, you're loudly saying ok. ok. ok, but i like the words k means so meaning so judgmental. >> that's why you have a phone call. >> i have the solution, by the way on behalf of our generation, my, generation x, here's what you do, use our slang. we grew up in the 80's, 90's, my daughter will text me, practice ends 5:30 and i will respond word. she is not like that. and i did it at work i'll find this at one of our favorite producer, randy texted me, need you onset can you get there asap and i wrote back, word, it's not people said in the 90s >> unfortunately it's for the
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the 90's. >> can we just say shade? i don't know. >> that's probably offensive >> we can say side eye >> we can say not friend? that the amazing. thank you for helping us avoid all sorts of -- at the office. that was great. thank you. >> we'll be right back. ♪. ♪. >> word. >> word. 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.
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moderate to severe eczema still disrupts my skin. despite treatment it disrupts my skin with itch. it disrupts my skin with rash. but now, i can disrupt eczema with rinvoq. rinvoq is not a steroid, topical, or injection. it's one pill, once a day, that's effective without topical steroids. many taking rinvoq saw clear or almost-clear skin while some saw up to 100% clear skin. plus, they felt fast itch relief some as early as 2 days. that's rinvoq relief. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal, cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer, death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq, as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. disrupt the itch and rash of eczema. talk to your doctor about rinvoq.
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learn how abbvie can help you save.
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. upsetting news in the entertainment world, steven twitch boss the long time dj dancer for allen degeneres died at the age of 40, allen tweeted i'm mart broken he was pure love
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and light he was my family, i will miss him please send your love and supporter to him and his beautiful children. >> steven boss died boy suicide, anyone struggling with suicide al thoughts can dial 988 and connect to a counselor at the suicide and crisis life line or chat at 988 life line.org. it's devastating news. thank you for watching. >> coverage continues now.
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hello and welcome to our viewers joining us here in the

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