tv CNN Tonight CNN March 27, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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time and on budget take the drama out of ordering promotional products at four imprint dot com imprint for certain. i'm jeremy diamond at the white house. and this is cnn. close captioning is brought to you by audiobook network. others tell your story, produce an audio book with us earn more profits and find a new audience for your published book produced an audiobook. we handle narration, production and digital distribution 38559. good evening, everyone. i'm alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight . we're waiting for the release of the video from the latest deadly school shooting in the us three families sent their children to covenant school in nashville today, not knowing their children would never return. the head of the school, a substitute teacher and a
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custodian were killed, too. can you imagine? of course you can. because at this point in this country you've either lived through in that shooting or you've imagined it. we cannot keep having the same conversations over and over again. tonight. we try to find a different way to talk about it. plus listen to this 2017 duet from dolly parton and miley cyrus. living in rainbow land, fluid and things are brand. i where we're free to be exactly. did you hear those inflammatory words there about rainbows? tonight? we're going to talk about why that song was deemed too controversial by one wisconsin elementary school. and gwyneth paltrow is accuser took the stand in that ski collision trial today at his story was very different from hers. we're going to play for you what
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happened in court, but let's begin with the latest school shooting in nashville today. i want to bring in my panel, los angeles times columnist lz granderson starve cnn john berman, former senate candidate joe pinyon and commentator ana navarro. guys thanks so much for being here before we start. let me just bring everybody up to speed about what we know about this school shooting at this hour, so police say the suspect had attended that elementary school may have resented going there. there is some belief that there was some resentment for having to go to that school. don't have all the details of that just yet, and that's why this incident occurred. police say they're still investigating whether the suspect identified as transgender and whether that played any role whatsoever. they say the suspect was a 28 year old nashville residents armed with two a r style weapons and a handgun and killed by police at the scene. police say they found the shooter's writings and detailed maps of that school.
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okay so let me bring in our panel now. so, john, um as i said, we can't keep having the same circular conversation. we have it all the time. you and i have reported on these all the time. i'm not sure what to do differently. i'm not sure what we can do differently at this point. you said you're going to start with what we know what we know is six people are dead, including three children. the name's evelyn dick. how's hayley scruggs, william kenny, katherine cohen, cynthia peak, mike hill. we know they're dead holds. three of them nine year olds. everything else to an extent. is background noise at this point, right? it's just different sets of facts. six people dead next week it will be 12 the week after that, it will be 24 what i continue not to understand. is why everyone has to be against this right. everyone has to be against it. i know that sounds trite, but i'm assuming everyone's against it. so why can't people agree to get in a room? and talk about it.
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just get in the room and talk about it. if some people think it's about guns, that's fine. if some people think it's about mental health, that's fine. if some people think it's about a third thing that's fine. get in the room. talk about it argue about it until you come up with a few things you agree with that can get the country together. to work in the end this or at least slow it down. don't we do that? elsie where we have right? i think the problem is that the it to talk about it the it continues to be a moving target because every mass shooting is different, so every incident of gun violence is different. and so when we get into that room, we need to be specific in terms of what exactly are we talking about? you mentioned mental health conversation? yes that is one aspect of it. we don't know it was an aspect of this particular shooting. but we know that based upon history that mental health is a part of the conversation, but we need to be specific in terms of how we're going to address it and not just say gun control because that doesn't tell us anything whatsoever. it's too blanketed.
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i just feel again that if we're talking about what we can't do, because we don't have enough information yet. yes they're all different, but in some ways they're all the same. they're often perpetrated by a ar style rifles. that's just the truth. at this point in time, that's the truth. and they are people with some sort of beef or mental health issue. that just seems to be a commonality. joe, what's your suggestion? look i think first and foremost, we have to have compassion for those victims for those families for that community that was impacted . so we have to start there. i think again to your point. there are multiple factors. i think the overwhelming issue is that we do not have national best practices for preventing school shootings that we have these conversations. be it about the guns, be it about the mental health for me. the issue we don't talk about enough is the infrastructure because to me a lot of their way through outdoor well, i think the reality he is that we don't have 21st century infrastructure. and i think that can be attributed like i think you have to look at hardening.
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those classrooms have to look at hardening that infrastructure about when it's the supermarket . but what about when it's the walmart? but what about? i think i think i think so. i think to your point, but when we start talking about it's a moving target. what are we talking about? i think specifically when we talk about school shootings, i think that it is an underappreciated reality that whether you're trying to secure a police station when you're trying to cure an air force base, they really talk about bringing more guns they often talk about. what is the infrastructure changes that can be made to ensure that the guns never actually make it through the doors to a place where they can actually harm people. so i think that is an underappreciated reality that hopefully we can now talk about even if you look at what happened, and you've all day, one of the best practice that we can put in place for pennies on the dollar to make sure that those classrooms are more secure and making sure that those campuses don't actually have the gunmen on them in the first place. i agree with you that we have to have compassion, but i also think we have to have incredible anger and outrage in this country. it is time that we as americans say we're mad as
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hell and we're not going to take it anymore. i just saw a picture coming over here of the congressman that represents that district in nashville, glorifying guns glorifying the type of guns that perpetrated this grilling today is christmas card with his little children is absolutely disgusting. and you know what? i think it takes. i think it takes every american imagining that that is someone you love. or a child, you know, or you love or from your family that could be at that level of risk. i can tell you that every time i hear one of these stories today, when i heard that i have my husband has grandchildren who go to private schools that are parochial. i thought of them immediately, and i'm sure that's the case for you. and for you and for you, and for you. we all know i have. i thought guns were not my issue. and i would, you know, talk around it as so many people in the political sphere do and then my cousin. get killed at pulse and so if we don't all realize that this is
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now our issue and uniquely american issue. why does this only happen in the united states ? what is wrong with us? is that the water? is it the air? or is it the cowardly politicians who are beholden to the nra? yes i mean, or is it the proliferation of guns? i mean, sometimes we have this conversation without saying guns, which i find so peculiar all of it. and again. it's about identifying what aspect the gun violence. we want to address at a time because yes, there are schoolmaster shootings. there are church mass units, but there are gun violence happening in urban america every day, which is also part of the tally in terms of americans being killed by guns. and so it's about not just getting together and being emotional for saying okay. this is super large product problem. let's identify one aspect of it if it's going to be mental health and demi republicans present some legislation that addresses mental health and stop using you can't do mental health or guns else. you can do a mental health and benefit weapons could do more than one.
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but my point being is that the important part is find something . do you know that's not even a unified definition of mass shootings? we don't have more than four. it's not unified. there's some some system says, you know, it's one of four. i think mother jones is a different status. gun violence archives use a different step. the u. s government doesn't actually have a definition of mass shooting, so it's hold on for a lot of reasons for this conversation. i do want to bring in one of the elements and that is the incredible proliferation of these are 15 style or a ar style rifles. and we have with us our special guest, todd frankel, who has who has done a deep dive on this in terms of reporting for the washington post. so todd, bring us up to speed. when did these are style rifles become so popular? it's been a fairly recent phenomenon just within the last 20 years. have they really jumped onto the scene, you know, going back, and there's the assault weapons ban that ended in 2004 and back then , you know, maybe wanted guns
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made in the u. s were a r 15 style weapons. and today it's one in four. so if you just look back since 2012 since the new the year of the newtown shooting about two thirds of the air fifteens that are on the market. now we have been made since then. so it's only been within the last decade. so these were unusual weapons, you know, not too long ago, and now they're commonplace, and in fact, it's the best selling rifle in america. and what i thought was so interesting from your reporting one of the things it was designed for the military as we know, in fact, the gunmakers saw it as quote. overkill for home use. they didn't think that it would be as popular as it is now, because who would need it for home use if you're a civilian, right? that's exactly right. um you know they were suspicious of it, um, at their trade shows, they kept it at the back. they were was behind barricades and only law enforcement were allowed back there. you know some of the air makers in the early days and
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talk about you know, being being flipped off by an nra members. i mean, they were not welcome at these events, and that's changed right. so after the band the o'sullivan span ended in 2004. you know, once the large gun makers of the you know the industry got behind it. that's when things changed before that. you're right. you know, it was they didn't see a market for it. they're like, well, why would a hunter want this? why would someone need this for humber protection, but that changed very quickly. hey, joe. um during the assault weapons ban, as we just put up their mass shootings went down after it expired mesh rings went up that is that not demonstrable proof that it would help to have an assault weapons ban. not think it's remarkable proof. i think that the experts have said, what do you call that? look, i think that the reality is that most people who are more expert than i am have said that the data on the band is a mixed bag that you cannot say concretely that the band is the reason why the shootings went down or up. i think you look at that graph. doesn't it seem pretty compelling that the mass shootings went up as soon as it ended pretty substantially there
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again. i don't want to. diminish the reality of the fact that we have children that are being used for target practice by crazy people, and we have to do something. and so i think that the reality that has to start with bringing people in that pushing people away. there are the effect that this nation is founded by people who have a love for their constitutional rights. specifically the second amendment calling them crazy. you're saying that they're glorifying it after expressing a constitutional right that we might not actually think about, i think does a disservice if the goal is to bring more people to the table. have that conversation, the number one killer. of kids in 2021 is guns . the number one killer just saying i'm not. look i'm just saying, if that's the problem you have to diagnose the problem. have to be honest with problem number one killer in all over the place. we're going to talk about school shootings. let's talk about it tells this point, i think again if we're talking about the number one killer for children, it was the number one killer for black children a long time ago, and no one is talking about the people that are getting killed every
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single day in urban nobody's talking about. i don't think we are, by the way just because we haven't solved. one problem doesn't think it is. underappreciated reality of everyday life in urban america. fair enough that the harder truth is that if we're going to have that conversation, that is a illegal gun problem, which is the largest portion of the gun violence and most people experience on a daily mr frankel's point, something that also has changed dramatically drastically in the last 20 years since the assault weapons ban expired. is the nature of the n r a where you know he was talking about how members didn't like to have them around now the funding of the nra, which is in a heap of legal, legal and funding problems, but the funding of the nra is largely from manufacturers much more so than it was before before it was a member based organization. now it's the manufacturers who make these guns. that are funding the nrf quickly. l z. i have to go soon. a. we also need to note that 9 11 happened. and that fear in this country shot through the roof. and if you think about it whenever fear
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hits this country gun sales spikes whether it is mass shooting or terrorist attack. good point and thank you very much for all of your reporting and sharing that with us next. i'm going to speak to the local council member who raced to that school today. i can't believe this is how you kids talk to your friends. this is talking. did you have a nice day? look at the size of these butterfly shrimp, enormous shrimp. what no, she's talking. what welcome to srmy heights. where the windows are always paella. because the weather is always changing. glass is the strongest material for windows and patio doors. tested from minus 40 f up to 160. fiberglass frame is even scratch and dent resistance. hello, windows even replacement windows by pellet, nell. from
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we've got our eye on the future of work so you can focus on the present were gazing ahead from where we sit. the future still feels good. visit x chair .com to find out how you can own an extra for only $20 a month x chair dot com . good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news. joining us now are two lawmakers from different sides of the aisle also live in ukraine, dr sanjay gupta award. we're learning more details tonight about the shooting at a nashville elementary school. joining me now is nashville metropolitan council member russ bully, who was at the scene today and helped keep children. calm councilman thank you very
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much for being here. tell us what the scene was like today. ah, well, the scene was not very good as you can imagine. i first arrived at the scene where the shooting occurred. they were pretty locked down by the time i got there and then i just transition to an area where i could be of most help. so i moved on to the church where the families were being reunited with their children. that was quite a process and the children were kept separate from them for a while, so that they could do this in a very deliberate and responsible way. so i was able to interact with the children and interact with the families who are waiting for that reuniting to occur. emotional scene just want to ask you about that because i can't imagine what the parents were like waiting to see their children and making sure that their children were safe. and so what were the kids saying to you? what were you saying to them during that time? well, i was being basically a guy in a
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classroom. because the kids were huddled into their in their classrooms down and fell asleep all in the church, and they were acting like it was just another day at school, so i was just basically trying to interact as if i was visiting a school for a day, trying to keep their mind off of what was going on. and so they were very much interacting like they would normally seen upstairs above that in the sanctuary, which is where the parents were was much different and so interacting with the parents was a bit different, as you can well, imagine waiting for to be reunited with your child after such a tragic event. what were they? what were the parents like? well of course they were emotional and, uh, you know all the parents didn't receive good news. so that was that was tough. very tough moment. yeah. um. kathy kids
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that you were talking to had they seen anything. we're all of these nine year olds who were killed. do you know if they were all in one classroom? i don't know any of the details because, as i said, i was with the families, so i have really no detailed information about what we're doing there, and my conversations with the children were not as witness interviewer . they were basically just trying to interact with them and make sure they were happy during the time when you know this could be stressful for him. yeah i don't know if you've seen the christmas card. we were talking about it in our previous segment. it's from a republican u s congressman whom you perhaps know andy ogles and the christmas card that he sent out is with. um he and i assume his wife holding what looked like a ar style rifles. i can't see it clearly enough to see if the kids are also holding guns. i can't tell. okay at least one is
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maybe too what are your thoughts on that christmas card like that? i don't like it. i don't think very many people do. i did see it. uh but again, my thoughts are with the families right now, and it's really a raw emotional time for us here. of course, i don't like anything like that. public figure. yeah. i mean, it's hard to know how that helps the situation. and in terms of the families there right now, were you there when they the parents actually were able to hug and kiss their children. yes and it was done very systematically, you know, we want to make sure and do it the right way and reunite the people with the right pant, right parent with the right child, and i commend the school for how they handled this. uh they were. they were incredible. today i come in the police
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department. those two did this jointly. and uh, i thought it was well done well handled, given the circumstances, so, yeah, it was great to see. um parents reunited with their child, their children under such circumstances. but again, you know, my thoughts are with those who didn't have such good news as well. this is tough for everybody who was a part of the covenant community and this in this city. our thoughts are with them to end you. thank you very much, councilman. thank you. now to this major protests in israel over plans to make sweeping changes to the legal system. critics call that a power grab now prime minister benjamin netanyahu is backing down. all of that next. good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morningng. i want to give y you a sense of wt it looks like to you and your team on the ground pressing for
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answers. it's really important. joining us now are two lawmakers from different sides of the aisle live in ukraine. this is what climate scientists have been warning us about these volunteers. they say we couldn't have just sat at home. i'm doctor sanjay gupta award palestinian. i hear you're me than just a ndowner. you're a gardener landscape er hunter. because you didn't settle for ordinary same goes for your equipment. versatile powerful. durable taboada equipment more goes into it, so you get more out of it. ladies and gentlemen , you know him? well, master of the sword maestro over the boat. prove son of france. relish
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four imprint dot com. come on out. i'm on it. four imprint for certain presents a max original heaven's gate sunday at 10 on cnn. okay hold that thought for a second israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu delaying a judicial overhaul plan today amid historic protests and in general strike. this is a controversial proposal they would give the government much more control over the nation's
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judiciary. opponents say the plan threatens the foundations of israeli democracy. netanyahu's firing of his defense minister for criticizing this plan, spark these massive protests and strikes on back now , with my panel, john huge protests, the biggest in israel's history over this never been anything like this on the streets of israel. not since its founding. have you seen millions of people on the streets like this. and yes, it's a fight over judges. but in that significant the policy pros of significant but it's more to me approx ified over the future of israel. a pivot point here doesn't want to be the secular democracy, which it has been since its founding, or is it going to turn into a religious nationalist state, which it is trending in? much of the population does want that, and you're seeing these two population centers at loggerheads over this and you saw it come to it on the streets and yes, it's paused right now, and they're gonna come. maybe
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reach a deal. ultimately the judges or they won't. but that won't solve these two huge trends that are colliding. it may not be able to coexist together. this rings a bell to you. l z on some level. i mean, it's hard not to think about january 6th right. it's hard not to think about a dictator or dictator like presence trying to manipulate. don't make that face broth. he's been indicted twice . let's not do this seriously seriously counting and counting . doing what about authority? authoritative would that does that sound better to you? i want to let l z finish. but i mean for me, i ah alright, so hold on, hold on. go ahead. so you feel that that there is about some of the same power group? cab type. i think there's a reoccurring theme. that is when you have a 13 type of person who's insecure. they don't hesitate to try to use our power that's in their levels to try to make sure they maintained that power. i believe it was. was it
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chilly? they just got rid of their president for trying to do like the exact same thing. so it's not as if what's happening israelis and just unique or not even unique to democracy is just the latest example of when you have an authoritarian figure whose goals on checked, they're going to try to go as far as you let them so i think it's a little different, and i think that it's different because israel is different, right. you're talking about a nation founded effectively as a jewish state, even though there is a long secular history. i think for me, i compare it not to january 6th. but you september 11th right that we have. reached the point now where there are people who are born who are living who are adults who weren't alive when those towers came tumbling down. and if you look at the history of israel, right, even the people who were more secular trending they all understood that israel was born out of this crucible. this desire to actually codify jewish existence. and so as you get further and further away from this founding of this jewish state of israel, a nation does not have a constitution the way that we have the question becomes. who are those people?
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people those elders with the white hair that remember why israel exists and are trying to create safeguards to make sure that it doesn't actually go out of existence. now you can have a conversation about is he going about it the right way? certainly there are people in the streets who are arguing, perhaps certainly not going the way he thought it was going to go. but the conversation is critical not just for the people of israel, not just for the arabs who live in israel, but certainly for the safety and security of the world moving forward, including our interests here at home in the united states, where i where i say it is very different from january 6th january, 6th was based on a lie. this is based on very factual events that are happening in israel right now. i have tremendous respect for the people that are protesting for the people that are out in the streets. i have tremendous respect for the israeli government officials that have resigned as a result of this something that we saw for four years. so we have to be here
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because there needs to be governance. we saw the israeli consul general here in new york , very important position, frankly, in the foreign service , resigning immediately issue a very strong statement and letter of resignation and i, you know, we saw it in puerto rico to your point about chile. we saw it in puerto rico, where people took to the streets and they got rid of a corrupt, ineffective, horrible governor. people like ricky martin was showing up, protesting and here in america. i feel like we have lost our initiative in that sense of outrage and that idea that we can change we can righteously change something. protest here. what i think is interesting is obviously millions of people here turn out as well and protest. but in this case in israel, the prime minister gave him pause because you had members of the military who were threatening not to show up if called up. i mean, this was at a whole different. this was at a whole different level, and you're also dealing with like a larger percentage of the population that was on the
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street. all at once. there now, this was serious. this was the you know a significant chunk of the population rising up and saying hollows. which is enough enough. we're not gonna take this anymore. now, netanyahu, like don't count them out in this. this guy is one of the savviest politicians that has ever been put on the face of this earth. he is a survivor. and he but how does he thread this needle if millions of people don't want to take the air out of the balloon over the next two weeks and then passes something almost as much as he wanted to get through this time, but maybe not quite as much or bet that they won't take to the streets again in three weeks. i won't profess to be some sort of like, you know, foreign policy expert. but how is it possible that he believes, given the fact that he's under investigation that he can go ahead and do some sort of major changes and reforms to the judicial system that appears to benefit him? because he's got the votes? that's the problem right now in the in the in the government, but it doesn't look like based upon the streets that he has to vote. he does well, but their
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government runs. he has the majority inside the knesset to pass what he wants to pass if he keeps them together, in theory, if he wants to have these people on the streets, he can push this through. just think most of the people in the streets aren't worried about the indictments against benjamin netanyahu. they're worried about their everyday liberties living in the jewish state of israel. so i think that is the focus of why they're in the streets, and i think the schism becomes the people who come from yesteryear that people all who are looking forward. what will the jewish state of visual stand for moving forward? i think that's a conversation that's happening every day. and don't think that the rockets being fired by the iranians don't give benjamin netanyahu the leverage. he needs to remind people about those founding ethos of that nation on an entirely different note. now to this the song rainbow land by dolly parton and miley cyrus sounds warm and fuzzy. i was like, wow. but you know you
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debut. well sorry duet, rainbow land first graders in waukesha, wisconsin, were planning to sing it at their spring concert, but it was banned. why well, a statement from the school district says quote they determined the song could be deemed controversial in accordance with the policy. quote my panel is back with me. can we all just agree that when you're banning dolly parton, you've truly lost your way. we can't have nice things. honestly anna, what are we to make of the fact that they couldn't sing about rainbow land? because here , let me tell you the really racy controversial lyrics. wouldn't it be nice to live in paradise where we're free to be exactly who we are, uh, let's all dig down deep inside, brushed the judgment and fear aside, make wrong things right and end the fight. listen, what can i tell you? i mean, this is not rocket science. ah rainbows are a symbol of lgbt. q. and this is an insane extension of the homophobia and all of the
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banning of everything. lgbt q going on in my state of florida , where people have lost their mind and taking fire everywhere else. if they're gonna ban from the rainbows, they're going to have to take it up with god and mother nature. i don't know what they're going to do. i mean, if you're coming after dolly parton, dolly parton is the patron saint of puppies and butterflies. what is wrong with these people? the homophobia has completely affected their brain activity. dolly parton is a national treasure. i think we all agree. we all agree on that. joe would finally we have agreement at this table. people can come together about department. here's what not only important developed gun policy. we should not only is she the patron saint of puppies as you said, but she also has died. parton's imagination library is a book gifting program that males free, high quality books to children from the age of birth to five. no matter their family's income. they have mailed two million books each month. globally poison spreading
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poison. sorry belief. still that sexual orientation and gender identity are learned behaviors. that you can be nurtured or talked or exposed to catch it, and it's like there's no science to back this up. and yet we have all this policy that's actually being rooted in this nonsense. the amazing moral authority that is the former state legislator in florida who was the sponsor of what was dubbed that don't say gay bill just pled guilty for fraud for stealing covid funds. that was the moral compass that the florida legislature was counting on in banning all of this stuff. pardon actually donated to help find a vaccine for covid angel, because she's an angel. you're not gonna escape this conversation. go ahead, and feel like i'm will ferrell in the campaign. i do not want to live in rainbow land. with the cotton candy, unicorns and parts of gold in the socialism. no i look
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, this is the insanity the idiocy that is the result of people not listening to each other anymore. we have parents that showed up that we're concerned about things. whether you agree with those concerns are not they should not be called crazy. we should have civil dialogue. they shouldn't end up on the terrorist watch list, right? which has happened, so i just think at some point, maybe we all take a step back now and realize that if dolly parton can't even sing along with the children something has gone terribly rotten in denmark , and perhaps we should listen to each other. we should come together in the love and whether you believe in socialism or not . rainbow land is a wonderful place to be able to get together by the way in waukesha. very very afraid right now for barney the dinosaur because he's purple and you know, that was terrifying. yes that dinosaur should have never been unleashed on children in the first place, god and the poor green eminem. who had to give up her comfortable shoes. i mean, it's just it's manufactured culture wars for political purposes, and
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i absolutely will call anybody banning dolly parton. crazy local. well you guys were very happy to hear that they have substituted different rainbow songs, so it's not like they're completely opposed to rainbows. it's going to be the rainbow connection by kermit the frog. come on love that song, socialist socialist by the way, and journalists which is even worse than a socialist, kermit the frog, you know, i mean, how can they have a song with kermit? edit? don't start trouble, john. they hear this. they will ban it in a minute key slope from safe places to no more dolly parton. it's a dolly or is it marty cyrus? that really got wisconsin upset? it is a duet. i don't know molly's godmother. don't blame me for them just saying and as we've agreed she should be all of our lives to yeah. all right. well i think we've resolved that minute . meanwhile gwyneth paltrow is back in court today in this trial that we've been covering over this 2016 ski collision
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today we heard her accuser on the stand. so we've got the details of that next. power e trade's award winning trading app makes tradingng easier with its customizable options chain, easy to use tools and paper trading. to help sharpen your skills. you can stay on top of the market from wherever you are trade from morgan stanley power e trade's easy to use tools make complex trading less complicated . custom scans help you find new trading opportunities. tool helps you plan your trades and stay on top of the market. e trade from morgan stanl have cares about other people and who gives of themselves to help others who can't always help themselves. those are true heroes and for a kid like me, who said 13 operations can now walk. you might think i'd say my hero is my doctor. foreigners
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prepare you for everything. kia movement that inspires from friends coming over. two moms coming over. so many ways to save life ready, happy that's 3 65 by whole foods market. without. paltrow back in court today, she's defending herself in a lawsuit over an alleged ski collision back in 2016 today, we got to hear from terry sanderson, the 76 year old man alleging that paltrow hit him on that beginner ski slope in utah. i just remember everything was great and then heard something. i've never heard of the ski resort and that was a blood curdling scream. just i can't do
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it. it was and then and it was like. somebody was out of control and gunny hit a tree and was going to die. and that's what i had until i was hit. okay paltrow did not seem to agree with that. based on her facial expression, i'm back now with my panel. also joining us is our cnn tonight's gwyneth paltrow. correspondent scott jennings, senior correspondent scott jennings scott. what? i like about your expertise in this is that you don't know very much about cultural, but what you do know makes you very uncomfortable. yeah and i was reminiscing with my wife today. gwyneth paltrow almost broke up our marriage. how did that happen in 2000? when we just started dating? i allowed my wife then. girlfriend to pick the movie, and we went to see this stinker was called bounce. and i came out of the theater thinking i should maybe in the relationship, but i prayed to
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god and he told me to be patient. and so we ultimately got married and had a family but good ending since then, because she chose that movie. she's not been able to pick any of the other movies in the last 20 years, so she's sort of still paying her gwyneth attacks on our relationship. why you're an expert. thank you. that also helps witness's call you to the state. funny, funny. you should mention that john because a key trial viewers somebody has been watching it sent in then. some evidence into the trial, which they have been uncovered some messages on a chat board. yes what is it? it's really can't help anyway. they uncovered some messages from the supposed victims for and ramon. hmm at the time this happened, nick. i don't know. i'm just reading this tale, ramon. but anyway, he was saying, oh, gwyneth knocked out terry today or whatever, and that was before there was any terry. that's what the guy said now at the same time, what you heard him about the screaming was refuted by gwyneth ski instructor who said she's a good skier, and she would never screamed, going down the side of
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that. let's hear that let's hear from the ski instructor because i feel that he would know what really happened on the mountain. did you ask him? are you okay? i had to. that's the whole time. i'm removing skis and getting ready to help them up. i'm asking. are you okay? are you okay? so the answer? did you ask him if he was okay? and he was affirmative. he said yes to patrollers or just making a ski by and one of them came up to us and said you got do you need any help? and mr ramon. mr sanderson spoke to each other. i was still kneeling on the snow getting their skis ready. and, um whatever they said they turned to the patrol and said no we don't need help posters. can i tell you something? so last week we were talking about when it paltrow on the view because she was on a podcast, and basically all she eats is bone broth and vegetables. she was doing a
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cleanse. okay. no no, no, no, no. this is her daily. you gotta read. what if we all know a lot about i'm having a very hard time believing that somebody who only eats bone broth and vegetables can knock out. i got. i mean, if i have skied into the guy that would be more believable, but it's like, oh, she doesn't. i mean, it's like mo mentum. those like if you drop a penny off the empire state building, it would still realized they were on the money hill right. they were not on the moguls level of physics been on a bunny hill said this last week. i don't understand any of these rich people. they're out there on these skiing around the poor people ski to these people not only this is the beauty of scott and why he's our correspondent? not only does he not know much what you are going to accept that he does know she creates products for lady parts, as he says he also has never skied perfectly. sunny hill is where little kids go and learn how to ski. they ski without poles. they get on this thing called the magic carpet. i've been on it a lot, too, because
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i've been skiing for about 25 years, and i've never gotten past the bunny hill having a very hard time believing that gwyneth paltrow code and the gravity is all wrong on me. i agree all just residue from when shakespeare in love won best picture over saving private ryan. that's what really is up. what's happening really happening here? he's trying to get revenge about exactly and i am to still be quite honest with you. this is a great country. by the way we have spent. seven years litigating this people that are enormously smart and talented, have spent and wasted all their time on this. we have people sitting in the courtroom. exactly true, just came forward with the lawsuit more recently, just this 2016 years ago, 26 even less back then, and i'm just saying these cases that are seven years old. that does make this a great country. clearly you have some important actually , i've enjoyed this so much more just listening to scott and anna. anna was looking at scott. like where am i? it's never like this on the view, like who is this guy? and why is he saying
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that if i went on the view, it would be like an alien in this case is actually this case, which is televised, actually, really? relate herbal in the sense that it's just two people arguing over what happened and it's you don't watch and it's not like all the highfalutin legal language and most of the trials you see on tv. this is like, did the guy run into her? or did she run into the guy if you had to put to put 20 bucks on it right now? who's gonna win? i don't put 20 bucks on anything back with me. but i know you're not ongwen aside, because you're angry about shakespeare in love, terry sanderson side to tell. i'm i'm transfixed by the guy's lawyer who who is like the female version of my cousin vinny. okay we need to play that for a second. so here is terry sanderson's lawyer who seems to be, i would say excited about getting to cross examine benefit. ultra. you were wearing goggles and helmet? yes looked like everybody else on the slope. that's always my
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intention, okay? probably had a better ski outfit, though. i bet you still have the same one. may i ask how tall you are? i'm just under five. 10 okay. i am so jealous. i think i'm shrinking. though you and me both. i have to wear four inch heels just to make it to 55. very nice. thank you. and you're not trained in accident reconstruction. me. no. what's happening here, however, the oscar performance that's what's happening. turns out the remake of my cousin vinny, this is this is it it is starring one of paltrow and this woman she this lady is going to get like a special code for discounted goop products. this is thank you candles bringing home stuff you always know you have the piercing insight into these segments. thank you very much for being here. all right, we'll be right back. when you're the
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today's the day as long as we stick to the plan, we're gonna be long gone before they even realize they've been robbed. what's my part? nothing. i don't want anyone getting hurt. what get over it. grandpa was talking to you. when we get to the vault, distract the escorts. open the doors easy twist the cases up. walk out the front door slick. it's like we found our thermal exhaust port star. some note thing i'm supposed to understand. the first time you connected your go daddy website in your store was also the first time you realized what we can do anything. cheesecake cookies, cookie sales from one place with a partner that always puts you first start today at go. daddy
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.com only $40 per month with sling tv to watch cnn, hd tv, msnbc and your other favorite channels. you can stream it all on sling over just $40 per month . try sling today at sling .com/ watch now. what's it like to hear from the people actually living the headlines? cornish my new cnn podcast talks to the people behind the trending stories. i've got a lot of questions the cornish listen wherever you get your podcasts. sunday nights. we're trying something a little different whole story is the sheer number of migrants on this track. one whole hour. the world's best journalists dig deeper. how did you end up living out in the street? the stories they can't ignore godzilla, get mad and go kill that thing go in depth every sunday night. there aren't people willing to take risks. iu
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primetime inside the trump investigations live tonight at nine. close captioning brought to you by meso book .com. we proudly help veterans with mesothelioma. call for a free book 1 808 220400 or go to missouri book .com. another school shooting this time in nashville, tennessee. police say a shooter opened fire. they're killing 39 year olds and three adults at this private christian elementary school. police identified the shooter as a 28 year old former student at the school. i want to bring in my panel, catherine schweiz is the former head of the fbi active shooter program. lz. granderson is an op ed columnist at the los angeles times. nicholas carson is a global editor in chief of insider. scott jennings is our cnn political commentator and lauren leader is a political list. thanks to all of you for being here, catherine. i want to start with you because you
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