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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  January 19, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

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the lies continue. this time george santos caught making up a story about his mother being in the south tower on 9/11, this as republicans reward him in congress. emergency measures are in place today as the nation is hitting its debt limit. why congress may be playing with fire. a warning to vladimir putin. ukraine's president said his country will take by crimea. will alec baldwin be charged the killing of a shooting onset? we'll discuss. "cnn this morning" starts now. we begin with yet another
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apparent lie from george santos, a republican congressman from new york who fabricated just about everything on his resume. he's been caught lying about his late mother. santos long claimed his mother was in the south tower of the world trade center on 9/11 and later died from cancer. new immigration records confirm santos' mother was in brazil and never in the u.s. and now a navy veteran from new jersey is accusing santos of stealing $3,000 from a gofundme account. santos denies the claims and moments ago the veteran shared his 2016 encounter with santos. he says the ordeal nearly cost him his life. >> george santos, this is what he told me, he says i have no clue what he is talking about. the crazy part is anyone that knows me knows i would go to
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hell and back for a dog. >> then go to hell. he said he would go to hell and back, then go to hell, george. >> that's your sentiment? >> yeah. >> he says this is just more of a pile on effect. i have dozens of people reaching out to me in support sharing their stories about their dogs and cats that i helped save and rescue. what's your response to that? >> i don't believe any of it. i don't believe anything that he says about that. any other animal he had up on his website probably suffered the same fate as my dog did. >> what would you say to him if you -- if he was here now, what would you say? >> do you have a heart? do you have a soul? he probably would lie about that. i mean, i don't want you to ever
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hurt anybody like you hurt me again, george. nobody else should have to go through that. i almost killed myself when that dog died. that's why i'm here. i don't want him to be able to do this again. >> powerful words coming from that veteran. we're going to talk to former congressman adam kinzinger. also, on the international front a battle is brewing over the fate of ukraine. the u.s. is urging germany to sent tanks to ukraine. this, as president zelenskyy, has been making a declaration this morning bluntly saying that ukraine will retake crimea which was illegally annexed by russia nearly a decade ago. both russia and ukraine claim ownership over the land.
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we're live in kyiv this morning. the big question is whether or not this could happen. does it seem like that's a realistic goal for zelenskyy to have? >> reporter: well, it certainly is the ukrainian's goal. they've been saying they want to take back crimea. if we look at some of the gains that the ukrainians have been making in the south, in the kherson area, you can see it on that map, if they gain a lot more territory, they could be knocking on crimea's door and could be cutting off russia's land bridge to crimea. that's one of the things that president zelenskyy was alluding to. he said if ukraine gets the weapons, they'll take back crimea. the kremlin has reacted to this. they've said they believe zelenskyy simply wants to see
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russia eradicated off the map. the russians are playing on this. the ukrainians are saying this is russia's war of aggression. the ukrainian's say crimea is theirs and they want to take it back. >> obviously russia doesn't want that to happen. fred, when we talk about the weaponry ukraine is getting, there's this battle over tanks. the germans saying they'll send tanks if the u.s. does. what is going to happen? are they going to get these german tanks? >> reporter: it is so interesting. tomorrow is that big meeting where the contact group is going to meet. a lot of people are expecting tanks will be part of the equation. the germans hold the key to that. they manufacture the leopard 2
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which a lot of european countries have. those are the ones zelenskyy want. he says the germans need to do that quickly. let's listen to what volodymyr zelenskyy said. >> i would like to thank for the assistance from our partners. at the same time there are times where we shouldn't hesitate or we shouldn't compare when someone says i will give tanks if someone else will also share his tanks. i'm strong in europe and i can share if someone outside europe will contribute as well. i don't think this is the right strategy to go with. >> reporter: guys, a lot of european countries want to give these leopard 2 tanks. the germans say they'll do it if
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the americans give tanks. secretary of defense lloyd austin was in europe to give the go ahead. >> all eyes will be on that. thank you so much. we turn to new insight into a deposition former president trump that was unsealed by a u.s. district court. according to the transcript at one point trump mistakes a woman who accused him of sexual assault for his wife. what did we learn in this unsealed deposition? >> this is the second transcript that's been unsealed from this deposition that took place in october. this was the former magazine columnist who sued president trump for defamation saying when he denied her allegation that he
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raped her in the mid 1990s. in this transcript trump is showed a black and white photo of him with his wife ivana trump and trump was showed a picture and he said that was marla maples. some people say it undermines the fact that he said she wasn't his type. now it's a blunder where he points to her and his lawyer corrects him and says that's carole and not marla. there have been numb erous allegations of sexual assault and trump said he never kissed anyone that didn't want it and he never assaulted anyone.
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this is his truth. this ultimately will go to a jury. >> even if it is a defense, someone is not your type -- i get what you're saying. if you didn't think she was attracted, you just identified her as your exwife and there was something that attracted you to her. thank you. also, something to watch, prosecutors are set to announce whether or not criminal charges are going to be filed incor connection to the "rust" 2021 shooting. alec baldwin claims he didn't pull the trigger. josh campbell is live in new mexico. is baldwin going to face charges potentially? >> reporter: it's a possibility. in a report issues by state officials in new mexico, they determined there was no
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compelling evidence this weapon was intentionally loaded with a live round and fired. the question is, is it criminal? that's what the special counsel will announce this morning. there are three targets of prosecution. they include hannah gutierrez r reed, the armorer on the set, dave halls, the director and alec baldwin who had the weapon in his hand. i talked to the district attorney and she talked about some of the potential charges. she talked about the pressure she feels running an investigation in a case that's literally been watched around the world. have a listen. >> if we're talking about felonies that would cover an unintentional killing, in new mexico it's involuntary manslaughter. when we're talking about
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charging someone or not charging someone, that's where we start our legal analysis. can we get to that bar of proving that reckless standard. i know there's pressure out there. i don't feel that pressure. i won't make my decision based on that pressure. the decision will be based on the law and the evidence, period. >> reporter: so we'll be watching for three potential out c outcomes, a felony charge, negligence or they could close the case altogether. >> it's captured national attention. josh, thank you. live to france, you're looking at protests in paris where angry workers are taking to the streets over the government's plans to raise the retirement age by two years to 64. eight of france's largest unions have called for strikes and protests against the proposed
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pension system reform. let's go to melissa bell live in paris in the middle of the protests. melissa, hello. what are you seeing? >> reporter: this is how it looks, the beginning of that protest is coming up. you can see the turnout. all the balloons represent the major unions in france. what's impressive about this strike is the public sector, private sector, teachers, all walking off the job. it's the first time the eight major unions have got together in a major way. the impressive thing is the amount of people on the streets. this is about to take off. they say, the unions, they hope to get more an 1 million people on the streets of france today.
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the french authorities have 10,000 police officers trying to keep the peace. they expect it could turn violent. >> melissa, thank you. this morning president biden is still under fire for those classified documents found in his private home and office. just how common is the, quote, spillage of classified documents? we have new cnn reporting you'll want to hear next. my most important kitchen tool? my brain. (chime)
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could be for classified documents to be outside the protected places they're supposed to be in. experts say it's known as classified spillage and in most cases they're simple mistakes. we've been looking into this. katey, this has been a big question in light of what happened with trump's documents and now biden. is it accepted? how common is this? >> reporter: this kind of classified spillage happens almost every day. most of the time it's completely accidental. an employee takes home a document in a briefcase. one in instance they found a classified document with his travel itinerary and returned it the next day. most of these cases are handled internally. in more severe cases there can
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be penalties such as losing security clearance or being fired. part of the reason it's so common is the numbers. there's over 4 million security clearance holders and some national security officials acknowledge that the u.s. government has a big problem with overclassification. there are millions and millions of pieces of classified information, not all are exquisite. >> i've heard that from so many officials, democrats and republicans, the idea that everything is classified. you talk about this one person who accidentally took something home. when it comes to the president and two presidents being looked into this, intent plays a massive role. >> reporter: the question is when does it go to something that the agency refers to the justice department for investigation and possible prosecution. there's no hard and fast rule.
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it depends on the case itself, the facts and circumstances. we've seen in more high profile cases that intent to mishandle the information is the key factor. did you intend to hoard it, sell it, leak it? one former cia lawyer we spoke to said the decision for agencies to make that referral to doj is more art than science. >> i can think of a few lawyers and prosecutors who have intent on their mind when it comes to classified documents. >> one of them may be this guy, former republican congressman adam kinzinger who is a cnn senior commentator. i don't know that you're a senior yet. >> i'm getting gray. >> you heard katey there. did you witness spillage? what is your take on all this? >> to me it's unique. >> spillage is like accidentally getting out there.
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>> like here's a cia document i lost. for me the two areas i had classified information was congress and the military. both were very controlled. congress, you're either in a scif where nobody can listen in where classified info can go, or a big room where we had massive briefings. there's no way you could take anything out of there. in my mind the only way i got anything was to memorize it. on the military side you went to the vault, whether it was the nuclear mission i did when i was a tanker pilot, you can't get stuff out of there. >> you never by accident took something home? >> no. i don't know how i could have. if you have access to anything, you're usually being s people.
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i guess if you're the handler of the information i could see how it would be possible. it's still hard to see how that would work out, especially for it to be common. >> the question is scif, this sensitive compartment information facility, one of those is where the president is. former president trump is making this claim, he's zeroing in on the 48 empty folders that were marked as classified that were found when the fbi found mar-a-lago. he's saying is they would have briefings in the oval office. people would come in and bring a folder. when they were done, they would take the classified documents back, but he would keep the folder as a cool keepsake. is there ever a situation where there's classified documents in
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a folder and leaves would the folder and just the documents? >> i've never seen it. i was never president. maybe there was a moment where he said i want to keep the folder. i guess the folder isn't classified. from the behavior of any briefer i've seen, they walk in, give you the information and have everything when they walk out. you're in earnest to make sure they have that stuff. you're very careful to say -- i took notes. are those classified? take them if they are. >> can they just grab what they want? >> i mean, look, to end up with classified information near your corvette or at mar-a-lago, something has to be done differently than anything i've experienced. when you're president, it's like the white house is secure. your residence is secure. still, though, we definitely need to get better at this.
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>> can i move on to another subject? >> yeah. >> george santos. i don't know if you saw the interview i did with the veteran. >> i got to meet him. >> let's play a little bit of it. here it is. don't have it. basically he's saying he was scammed out of $3,000 from a gofundme, that george santos didn't live up to his promises. he didn't get it. his dog died. he said george santos should face the consequences. >> i saw this story and i thought of course he took a dog for money. do politicians stretch the truth? probably sometimes. >> probably. >> resumes, maybe. i've never seen an instance where somebody made up their entire life history to the point where folks are questioning if
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his name is really george santos. you lie, it's bad. you start stealing money from a dog with cancer? my goodness, that shows the desperation and the con going on here. >> it shows the human impact of lies. this guy was talking about how he was so sad after the dog left that he contemplated suicide. it was hard to hear. the bigger question is not how this reflects on george santos, it's republican leaders. this is what republicans on capitol hill have been saying about george santos in recent days. >> he hasn't committed a crime. he hasn't been indicted on anything. in this country you're innocent until proven guilty. >> i don't condone what he's said. that's not my role. he was elected. >> i know you apply the constitution equal to all americans. the voters of his district
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elected him. >> he's accused of defrauding a veteran and lying about his mom's presence on 9/11. >> i never get sick of watching people react one way because somebody is in one party and another way when they're in a different party. i guarantee you my former colleagues on the gop side if this was a democrat, they would be in front of every camera saying he needs to resign. here because it's such a tight margin and the only thing that matters is passing your agenda, you defend it. the gop has a truth problem. we all know that. this is not helping their case with saying they're a party of truth. they're going -- this is only going to grow and snow ball. >> i think it's important to get the other person's response in here. this is what he told me. he said i have no clue what he's talking about, meaning the veteran.
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the crazy part is that anybody that knows me knows i would go to hell and back for a dog and especially a veteran. this is more of a pile on effect. i have dozens of people reaching out to me in support sharing their stories. again, he thinks this is a pile-on effect and this is people after him. do you see it that way? >> no. i tend to think the veteran has way more credibility. the bottom line is he's going to be questioned on everything because he lies. >> adam kinzinger, thank you. this morning florida governor ron desantis has banned an advanced placement class on african american studies claiming it breaks a law.. what law? we'll talk about that. they can help you creaeate a retirement-income plan designed t to balance growth and guaranteed income. and prprovide access to specialists
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just look around. this digital age we're living in, it's pretty unbelievable. problem is, not everyone's fully living in it. nobody should have to take a class or fill out a medical form on public wifi with a screen the size of your hand. home internet shouldn't be a luxury. everyone should have it and now a lot more people can. so let's go. the digital age is waiting. ♪ this morning governor ron desantis refusing to approve an advanced placement african american studies course to be taught in florida high schools. in a letter to the college board the florida department of
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education writes, as presented the content of this course is inexplicable contrary to florida law and significantly lacks educational value. desantis believes it promotes critical race theory from schools under the stop woke act. it stands to wrong for our kids and employees. it prohibits anything that says a person's status is oppressed by his or her race, color, national origin or sex. sara sidner joins us now. lacks educational value, wrong to our kids and employees. what is that? >> here's the thing. this is an advanced placement course. this group that approves the
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a.p. courses is the same one that approves the s.a.t.s. it's a group that's been around for a long time. their job is to approve the curriculum for a.p. classes and also administering the s.a.t. you have a pilot program that 60 schools have tried. it hasn't been made publicly available. i would love to get a copy of it. i think a lot of people would like to see what it is that the florida board of education has a problem with. here's the big issue. let's call a spade a spade. it's about crt. it's about critical race theory and this whole thing has been brought up between those who believe -- there's a fear it's teaching white kids to feel bad about being white and teaching black kids they're oppressed.
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that's the fear. that's not that's that's not what critical race theory is.
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if you look at advanced placement cases, you get college credit if you pass the test. it's -- this person was on fox over and over hammering the idea of critical race theory. let me let you hear what he says. >> you tweeted it's -- you were going to create something toxic when it comes to the rway peopl think about critical race theory. >> that's inaccurate. critical race theory is toxic. i'm merely exposing it and kr creating a framework for people to expand on it. >> in his tweet he says we're going to create this -- make this toxic and use it as a catchall for all things we don't
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like. that's a real problem when you look back at all this because people were oppressed in this country. should that not be taught? we can teach that and people can learn from that. you're supposed to be thinking critically. there's this whole argument being made. this is an advanced placement course. what if critical race theory is in it? who cares? teach people to think, not what to think. >> the people in the crosshairs are educators. >> absolutely. they're suffering with this. they're afraid they're going to break the law if they say the wrong thing. >> they don't make enough of that. my mom's a teacher. she'll tell you. >> it's hard. >> so different when i was in school back in the dark ages. we were writing things on scrolls. thank you, sara sidner. egg prices across the country appear to be cooling down after doubling last month
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for what they cost a year ago. next, we'll talk to -- there he is, chef bobby flay on how much it's impacting what you're paying at restaurants. i'm a vegas hotel. i know what you're thinking - it's cool, i don't want anything too serious either. just a fun, spontaneous thing. i'looking for someone who will let loose. dress up aittle. see a show. orr the steak and the lobster. some people say i'm excessive, but who cares.
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♪ as many of you know, all of you are going to the grocery store. egg prices have been up across the united states, but now potentially cooling down after they peaked in december. more than double what you were paying a year ago. a lot of us are feeling the pain about this. higher prices might also mean you pay to more when you go to restaurants. owners are trying to battle the rising costs on top of inflation. joining us now is someone who knows all about this, chef bobby flay. bobby, we've been talking about egg prices all week and the fact they're so high. they're affecting restaurants because they make other food go up as well. what are you seeing?
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>> well, i mean, you know eggs just happen to be the next food commodity in line to have its moment of giant price increase and also scarcity. one causes the other. so these things are cyclical. we've seen avocados and bacon and beef have their moment the month prior. they have now gotten in line. it's like anything else. you know, at the moment that's what's happening with eggs. i thought we were going to see a dollar per egg price at some point. seems like it's coming back in which is a good sign. >> it's leveling out. in the moment it has an impact when you talk about food and there was -- you had production issues and what have you with food. that impacts restaurants and impacts prices and impacts
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people's ability to go out and eat. >> yeah. i mean, don't forget, don, before we get off the egg issues, when we think of eggs, of course we think about eggs in the morning for breakfast and omelettes and breakfast burritos. eggs are in a lot of things. baking things, there's flour, sugar, butter and eggs in everything. there are eggs -- substitutes you can use for eggs. people on vegan diets, people with egg allergies have been doing that for a long time. they substitute things like flax seed and water or applesauce, they'll bake with applesauce and ripe bananas. it's never quite the same, but it is a good substitute. listen, you know, it's like you can also instead of having a three-egg omelette, have a two-egg omelette. you save 33% of the cost and 33% of the calories.
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maybe it's not a bad thing. >> bobby, you talked about people are still going to restaurants, but fewer people are ordering an appetizer or splitting an entree or not getting a dessert. is that something you're still seeing? what is the landscape? >> that obviously is a result of inflation and, of course, how people are feeling about the economy on that particular night they go out to dinner. maybe they're spending a tiny bit less. honestly i don't see it being that big of a deal right now. there's been some reports out that dining has weakened. when you compare it to the mini boom of the post covid moment where people needed to get out of the house and start living their lives again, i mean, they went to restaurants in droves. getting a reservation at a restaurant you wanted to became
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incredibly difficult. honestly, i still feel like it is. i had some friends in town in los angeles last week. we went to three restaurants. you couldn't get near the door. of course, there's going to be a weakening compared to that mini boom we had, but i have to say, i think it's hard to get into restaurants you really want to go to. >> bobby flay, i have a hard time believing that bobby flay has an issue to get into a restaurant. if i need a reservation, i'm calling bobby flay saying can you get me in to such and such. >> listen, don, you're calling me out. i'm lucky. i'm in the restaurant community. i can always make that phone call if i have to. what i'm saying is, the energy in the restaurants at this moment -- what i've witnessed is crazy. people are going out. it's a good sign. yes, a tiny bit of weakening. i saw a number that was 15 to
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17% off. when you think about it, you know, it's still very, very busy no matter what. >> restaurants are packed. i have a hard time sometimes getting a reservation, especially early. people are eating earlier now as we have witnessed. it's tough. >> that's for sure. what time do you go to dinner, don? >> a lot earlier since i'm on this show. probably -- seriously around 6:30 or 7:00. in the old days that was really early. dinner was like 9:00, 10:00 in new york. that is changed. everything has changed. going out to eat, our wardrobe. this morning people are probably freaking out because i have a sweater that has a hood on it. people aren't wearing ties, aren't wearing suits. people are casual. they're going to dinner early. the pandemic shifted a lot of things for people. i've got to go. quick response. >> i think when you go from city to city people dress more in new
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york and l.a. in l.a. people go to dinner in nice restaurants in their work-out gear. it's part of the fashion. i like your look, don. >> it's not a cotton hoodie. it's a cashmere sweater that has a hood. >> oh, yes, it is. that's apparent. >> good to see you, bobby. be well. up next, this morning's number, 35. my age. we'll tell you why. t fast relie. its time to love food back. ♪tum, tum tum tum, tums♪ if your moderate to severe crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis symptoms are stopping you in your tracks... choose stelara® from the start... anmove toward relief after the first dose... with injections every two nths.
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i moved here for a job. i am the new night court judge. >> "night court" is back in session, reboot of the sitcom debuted this week. the revival makes us wonder how many canceled series have been brought back. senior data reporter harry enten
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is here. that plays into the numbers. what is it? >> this morning's number is 35. we essentially looked at, tried to figure out how many revivals or spinoffs that are long after the original series ran are on the air or streaming right now. it's at least 35 including "night court." i believe that 90s show is debuting. i looked at the scores, i think we have four of those revivals compared to the original. on all of them, the imdb scores are worse for the revivals than the originals. csi, fantasy island, quantum leap, night court. they're all worse for the rev revivals. i haven't watched night court yet, but the early reviews seem like of eh.
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>> people are never going to feel like it was with the original. >> maybe so. i think nostalgia is this funny thing, where the mind kind of plays on you a little bit and you're thinking, hey, i liked it back then. maybe i'll like it now. it turns out that the memories are fonder than the realities are. >> god, that was bleak. >> i don't know if that was bleak, but i'll point out one little last thing for you. revivals aired back in the 1990s as well. in the 1990-1991 season we saw a bunch of revivaltion, wkrp in cincinnati, the bradys, the carol burnett show. they're more frequent now. >> don't anybody say nothing bad about carol burnett. >> i love carol burnett. i love the bradys. surprise announcement from cnn that involves adam sandler. >> that's a tease if i've ever heard onone.
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as i stare at this magnificent bust of mark twain, i'm reminder of how humbled i am to receive such an honor and how i vow to take very special care of it. >> this is a wonderful award. to see all my friends here and all the people i've worked with through the years, it reminds me of just how many people i carried. [ laughter ]. >> and yet i hope that, like mark twain, 100 years from now people will see my work and think, wow, that is actually pretty racist. >> there was also some confusion about whether or not it was
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aaward or a prize. actually it's an award, even though they call it a prize, it's an award. usually when there's a prize there's money involved. >> i feel like i'm in a wedding with like a hurricane around me. everything is happening and it's a blur. i tried to wear something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue. >> if you want to see more of that -- this is the speech that's going to come up, mark your calendars. sunday, march 26th is when cnn is going to exclusively broadcast the 24th version of that, the mark twain prize for american humor, this time honoring adam sandler. it recognizes people who have had an impact on american society, similar to the 19th century novelist sam clemons, best known by his pen name of mark twain. some of the past winners, "saturday night live" is where a
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lot of them got their start. this is sunday night, march 26th, 8:00 p.m., right here on cnn. follow that long list of people. you know his speech is going to be good. >> i think we need this. there was a conversation we had earlier this week, yesterday where we talked about comedians feeling like they can't get their stuff out there because they're worried about being judged. i think we're in a moment where we need to let comedians be comedians. tina fey made the point where someone would look back on my work and say it was racist. i watch 30 rock, not that it was racist, but it pushed the env envelope. in this environment, i don't think they can do that. >> when something is made, it's so different than seeing it in the present time. adam sandler has dealt with that, critics have looked at films he made.

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