tv CNN Tonight CNN April 12, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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slipping. it's easy. just step in and go try new max cushioning handsfree sketches slipping. tonight the washington post is reporting that the special counsel that's looking into former president trump's efforts to overturn the election is following the money. doj prosecutors are investigating whether trump raised money off of his election lies, which could be wire fraud tomorrow night. we're going to speak live with trump's former attorney general bill barr. about that story and so much more thanks so much for joining us tonight. alison camerata is standing by up next with cnn tonight. hi alison katelyn polantz so much. good evening, everyone. i'm alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight. police have released the desperate 911 calls from the louisville bank shooting. i just saw a shotgun. he was coming around the corner. okay? people have been shot. okay, we have it. we have. we're going to get them up there. okay man shooting
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probably 15 rounds in a minute. we'll also play you the anguished call from the shooter's own mother. his family says he had mental health challenges that they were actively addressing as a family . so what a red flag law have worked. we'll show you what's happening in the states that have them. plus micro is here with us tonight to describe the future of work. is it remote? is it a i based will also get his take on one of the dirtiest jobs out there. the newly appointed new york city rats are also, baseball games are shorter this season, which means you've got less time to buy beer. harry engine will be here to tell us all of the unintended consequences of that rule. he's also crunching the numbers on the optimum beer drinking inning . so stay tuned for that. but let's start with what we've learned about the louisville shooting we have here tonight. vanity fair's molly jong fast the one and only micro is here. pollster frank luntz is here and our favorite player on and off the court. patrick mcenroe. alright that's our last moment
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of levity guys for this segment , because, as i said, we have heard more of the 911 calls. and caitlin collins just sat down with the governor of kentucky tonight. andy bashir, who lost a friend. i mean, he was choked up throughout this entire interview , basically because someone close to him was murdered in this bag. so let me just play another portion of that interview for you all. i believe we can respect and honor people's second amendment rights to protect themselves and their family. but at the same time at least take a step so that we can intervene when we know somebody's about to go out and murder a whole bunch of people. red flag law involves the court system. it ensures that everybody's rights are protected . that evidence is heard. it has every check on it that we could ask for. but at least it lets us stop. that next individual, at
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least when we know before they murder people and listen. i know people will say that wouldn't have stopped. this situation probably wouldn't have maybe it will the next one. i don't want another family go through this. michael start with you. i mean, it's impossible to know what would have stopped this one. but they did say that he had mental health challenges. he did leave a note for his family and for his roommate in one of them. he said he was suicidal. what are your thoughts to start with me? well, because i haven't talked to you about this, and i have talked to many of the other people on our panel about this. and honestly, i'm we're always looking for solutions, and it's so mystifying in a case like this because he doesn't fit. what are images of the deranged loner yet it sounds like he had a bad week. he bought the gun six days earlier. he was having mental he had a bad week and because of access to guns, a bad week turns into a mass shooting. well. if it's just because of access to guns, then yeah,
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there's a real simple solution to this, but speaking only for myself, i don't think it's just access to guns. i think it is mental health, and i think there's some other things that is. it's desperate as we would love to be able to quantify it and spell it out. it's not there . we can't we can't look into the future. we can look back at the past and we can probably conclude something's but at this moment in time, i'm just i just feel nothing but but pity for the for the survivors for the victims for their families, and all the usual stuff that just sounds so platitudinous and ridiculous and empty. but you're are you a gun owner? i grew up with guns. you grew up with guns. and so what's your feeling about guns? you need one. you're comfortable around them. you're less comfortable now. i've always been comfortable around them. i enjoy shooting. um and it makes me very, very angry. a
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to see people abuse this right? and b to see people make excuses for people who abuse this, right . whatever the magic formula is , to somehow figure all of this out i'm sorry to sound, you know, retrograde on it, but there's punishment. there has to be a consequence. this guy from forgive me. there's so many. i conflate them. but did he? he livestreamed it right. okay? so that's another weapon. by the way, the phones that we all have within two inches of us right now, this thing is a very, very, very powerful weapon. we turn it on. we pointed. we say what we want. we're influencing, right? we're chronicling our own life and some kind of horrible version of some terrible movie in our mind. look i think there's a parallel that not enough. not enough people talk about between the impact. of
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your phone with that camera on it. i can. i can live stream right now to six million people on my facebook page six million people. yes but your point is that he that we have the ability to traumatize with it, saying that we have the ability with that device to turn the first amendment upside down in the same way that that guy has the ability with that device to turn the second amendment inside out and those two amendments last i looked at the math or in the top three they matter and when people abuse them like this to answer your question. it just makes me angry and sad, except for those times when it makes me sad and angry. my no other country lives like this. i mean, besides syria, we have the highest number of mass shootings . we are shooting among shooting among shooting. i mean, every there were two shootings in the last, you know, five days. i mean, these are mass shootings. we have so many children killed
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by guns. guns are like the second, you know, the first or second highest. thing that kills children. i mean, we are out of control. this is not a well regarded militia. this is craziness and like nobody has ever been killed by a phone like i understand that there might that the media has power. but like the we're literally seeing children who are scared to go to school board traumatized by the drills, i mean, this is not we don't have to live like this. frank constitution. and yet i read the second amendment. not every individual. should have the right to buy any gun at any time for any reason. anywhere in america. that there is a sensible, reasonable, responsible approach that involves both some sort of restrictions. and. addressing the human dynamic of this because if we limit every gun it
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says that we don't believe in this constitution. don't believe in that document. but it doesn't mean that every gun should be available all the time. and the problem is the democrats come across as one that take your guns republicans come across is not caring. and they're both wrong. and i'm not sure that those are the accurate perceptions. but there's so much emotion that's tied to this and so much division and so much polarization. that we cannot solve it because we don't want to act reasonably. we take an extreme point of view. and so this show is going to do this segment again and again because it's going to happen again and again. we do it all the time. i mean, we keep having this circular conversation, but occasionally there are suggestions. patrick that bring logical. for instance, in florida okay, red state florida desantis, florida after parkland they passed, um red flag laws, and since that time, it's remarkable in just the past six months, okay? so in a six month charge six or seven months
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between july 2022 february 2023 2000 um, protection orders. in other words, red flags. a judge agreed 2000 times a gun had to be taken away somebody for their own self harm or a danger to others. that's just in recent, you know, six months before that , it's something like 8700 times , so it's working there. in other words, judges are seeing a reason that people shouldn't have guns. one more thing. i want to show you before i let you chime in. and that's in connecticut, which also has a red flag law. duke law school determined through their study that for every 10 to 20 guns removed by a red flag law, they stopped one suicide. there's no doubt alison that red flag law would help. okay, there's also no doubt that citizens having a k 15 a ar fifteens and these weapons of war that they can just go out and buy like they're buying candy at walmart is absurd. it's just completely absurd. but let's go to the to
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the heart of the melon, and i'm trying to take the emotion out of it because this is emotional for all of us. i mean, and everybody says now on television, we, you know we can't become numb to it. well guess what? i'm becoming a little bit numb to it, because how else are we going to survive? this is becoming such a regularity. bill, let me go to my larger point. these we are a country that has been built upon capitalism and built upon people taking chances and taking risks all the great things that go along with that, but we're also a country that's got to be about laws and about reason and rational laws. and we've lost it. why have we lost that? when it comes to guns? we all know why we could talk about the second amendment. that's obviously extremely important. it's money. this is about money and the gun ownership and the n r a and the and this is a massive business. every time one of these things happens. what happens, people go buy more guns and more guns is going to solve
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this problem. i mean, that's the most ridiculous argument i've ever heard. and mike who's obviously someone that is a gun owner and respects that and you can see just by the way, he's talking how much it hurts him to have to talk about this. but the reality is that the average american in this country wants their guns more than they want anything else. anything else? what strategy? actually i mean, common sense already left. frank is here because i always hear you know, he talks about all his polling. i don't believe that people don't believe what people say. when it comes to guns. it's like it's like it's. it's a little bit like talking about racism. are you racist? who's going to say yes, they're racist. there's a lot of people that are racist. there's a lot of people a lot more people than i think we're acknowledging that want to have got more than they want to have the security and safety give you numbers, isn't it that the politicians are just
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not reflecting what the regular americans want? the that's because of money? go ahead. we actually pulled nra members about this and they support some limitation of some sales and some guns. nra by 70% or 80% and there's some ways which is just by delaying the purchase that you can't walk into a store right now and get that gun and go out and use it. they're fine with us. so there are doesn't it happen because the politicians are afraid because because they're afraid of losing their jobs because many people in addition to the corp companies, many people if the people rose up right to the kapler walking just as they were doing in in kentucky, right and tennessee that people got motivated and they actually went up. that's to me. the only way this is ever gonna change in these actually, laws are going to be an actor is if the actual people say you have to do it to the politician . they're not saying that now
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it's happening in tennessee. i mean, there's still having protests. i mean, i don't know that it works, but i do think ultimately. the republican the a lot of republicans and i don't see it as much on the democratic side are sort of hostage to the base, and the base does not want any kind of gun did every time izing advertising and they made gun owners look like they were hicks, southern hicks. good law abiding people, they're decent people. they're micro right, not be demonized, and that's the problem is that they're trying to score political points rather than trying to get the job done . all right. thank you all very much for that conversation. next we're going to talk about the future of work and how much our jobs have all changed, including one particular job. we're going to talk about. new york city's new rats are how much would they have to pay you to do that job? there's a price. we'll talk about it next. there's a new breed of hornet sweeping the nation. are you picking this up?
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, spent almost every minute with her since. when i first brought her home, she was eating little brown pieces in the bag. and it was just what kind of came recommended. just always thought dog food is dog food didn't really piece together. the dogs eat food. as soon as we brought the farmer's dog in her skin was better. she was more active, high quality poops. if i can invest in her health and be proactive, i think it's worth it. the benefits of fresh food better for them .com. allowed to china ask anybody anything. uh oh. gently regret saying thing that we want to talk about what the future of work looks like. will we all be back in the office together? someday will we all be working alongside robots? but first, we want to tell you about a very unique job that was filled today. new york city hired a rat czar. you heard me right? the job description called for someone who is quote highly motivated and somewhat bloodthirsty, where they
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swashbuckling attitude, crafty humor and general aura of badass. three lucky woman who landed this gig kathleen karate. a former elementary school teacher who the new york times reports will make $155,000 a year. my panel is a raise, would it take how much you take patrick for you to do it remote? like how many days that you have to actually get the rats right? you don't have to have a net where you're like in the subway system, grabbing the rats, but you have to, i think be pretty hands on gofer 1 60. okay you would have held out for that. okay frank, did you where did you charge about to describe congressman santos? so no, that does not require bad accessory that requires something entirely different. a different skill set your, um, exactly the other. i thought just the skill set. it's so funny how they did this, how they fill this in how humorous they were, and so the skill set requires if we determined to look at all solutions from various angles, including improving operational efficiency data collection technology.
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ology innovation, trash management and wholesale slaughter. wholesale slaughter. that's the best kind of solder. how much would it take for you? how much money i live in new york city? there are so many rats here. i'm telling you. i mean, i was a restaurant yesterday where i heard a squeak, squeak and outdoor. yeah, those outdoors. there's a lot of that. no i'm not naming it. i only have, like four places. i got a lawsuit going right here. right now. the city is big rat city. i mean, this is our thing, big job, and i feel like it all of your dirty jobs somewhere along your laundry list. this must was rodent, my mitigation ever huge rat abatement program, uh, in new orleans. not long after katrina place was i mean, overrun, like unlike anything i'd ever seen, but i'm surprised rise. your producer didn't find footage. you know, i had a show on cnn a couple of years ago called somebody's gotta do it back in
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2014 and one of the first segments we did. mhm profiled this group of people who have rat terriers, and they just call him rattlers, right? these are dogs with incredible drive bred specifically for the purpose of hunting rats. and these guys met downtown like about 10 o'clock at night, and they'd stay out until two am with this pack of rat terriers, and when they we watch those rats kill. maybe 50 dogs killed the rat dog terriers. torment half i mean, it is a bloodbath. so here's the qualification that tape right now the qualification this person needs. they need to be prepared for the blowback that they're not expecting because when the public sees piles of rats piled up, believe it or not , as unsympathetic as we all feel right now. i got more hate mail that segment for celebrating the death of about 50 rats. you clean up the mound of rat carcasses before people wake up and go to work. no i
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think that it's important part of the job. you leave the carcass. is there a send a message to the other? the other, right? absolutely let him know you're not messing around. that's appalling. mike i knew you were going to have a story. i didn't know it was going to be that graphic. that is fantastic footage. if you want, we'll we'll be digging that up momentarily. they're finding it . they're telling me they're finding it right away. okay meanwhile, let's talk about the rest of our jobs. so what is the future? what is the future of work look like mike. so you know what? not to go back to the last segment. god help us. but so much of what goes on in these conversations is painting with a really broad brush. and in my view, i run a foundation. we try and stay in our lane. i don't know about the future of work in general, but i do know that if you have mastered a skill that's in demand plumbing, steam fitting, pipe fitting, welding, electric heating air conditioning. there's never been a better time to be alive and working in this country. you can set your own hours. you can
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write your own ticket. you can work as much or as little as you want. you can join a union if you want or not, if you don't it is a terrific time to master a skill that's in demand. very interesting is that there used to be, um, prediction. patrick that a i was going to replace those jobs. but now the wall street journal says it's actually the opposite. we had it wrong, and the wall street journal says as long as artificial intelligence has existed, so have the predictions that it would disrupt and someday replace blue collar work now, according to a new study by researchers at the university of pennsylvania and open a i. most jobs will be changed in the form by generative. pretrained transformers or gpt s, which use machine learning based on internet data to generate any kind of text from creative writing code, meaning white collar jobs. those kinds of jobs are the ones that will be replaced. i think, mike said. i'm glad he said that because i think that i don't think we do enough in this country for blue collar type jobs. you know, there should be more training. there should be more. it should
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be a better route to take. i do think, though, that the working from home the office you see that a lot in the financial world right, the big companies and to mike's point. the people that are in the most. the highest demand have the most flexibility right? because you know those companies those big companies, they need the best people so the better off you are in your even go back to sports. you know my thing in sports like you're the best one of the best basketball players get you see them all you know, they changing teams out there making their own rules. even the college players now the best college players, you see what this nhl they're playing for one year for one school, there's one kids in north carolina now he's going to michigan next year. so you know if you can pull it off, why not? be the best of whatever whatever you do, whether you're a plumber or your basketball player to change the language, but it's not a job. it's a career. and the public by 2 to 1 wants a career over a job number one number two. she get to own your career. plumbers, who have three or four people working for them are making more than lawyers and
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number three is you don't have to go into debt like you have to do. and so much so many universities, there has never been a better time for this. the problem is that there are too many teachers who are telling their students have to go to a traditional college and get a traditional have a traditional career. when in fact, this is more financially rewarding. you get to control your hours. control to control who you work for. you are absolutely right. and there are a few politicians now and i hope you're working with them. who have changed the focus of the education system in their states to promote career education. stop calling a vocational, and they're not blue collar jobs, actually self employed careers, frank that i've seen and probably have research on this is that so much of this comes down to something we always dismiss, which is pr. right stigmas, the stereotypes and the myths and misperceptions to keep millions of people from exploring these careers. they're
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real right every time i talk about the welders that we've helped train who are making mid six figures, people just go. what do you that that's not possible and then i show them that it's possible and all of a sudden we're having a different conversation, but until the trades get better, pr broadly keep lending money. we don't have to kids who can't pay it back training for jobs that don't exist on hold that thought, because your wish is our command. we have found the micro come on saying rats. wow, really video. here we go. oh, no . are we about to see one attack ? oh my goodness. my gosh, there's no way they're going to show the things seared in my retina, a rat the size of a loaf of bread torn in half by two dogs. tug of war with the thing is revolting, not three blocks from here that is so revolting, strong production work. that was great. it was very like cinema
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verite bar, but it was it was days i was all black and white. i could see that. that was excellent. all right. that was great. everyone stay with us. should college come with a trigger warning students at one school. say yes. my panel has thoughts on this next. so many migrants complaining about how ththis was nothing like the easy route they were promised one of the world's most dangerous journeys, people clumping together, perhaps fearing for their own safety. men women children, risking their lives for a better life reminder of the violence faces migrants here every day. the whole story with anderson cooper premieres sunday at eight every sunday one whole story one whole hour. on cnn. you need to deliver new apps fast using the services you want in the clouds of your choice with flexible multi cloud services that enable digital
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muscles. absolutely free. text f a i r 2321321. solomon in new york, and this is cnn. you got that? mhm students at cornell university want trigger warnings on upsetting material that could be discussed in class in a resolution, the university's student assembly wrote that including these warnings, quote gives respect and acknowledgement to the effect of triggering content on students with ptsd, both diagnosed and undiagnosed, whereas doing so makes the discussion of sensitive academic topics more predictable. therefore balancing the academic freedom of instructors to teach with the needs of the student body. well, the university president turned that resolution down, writing quote. we cannot accept this resolution as the actions that recommends would infringe on our core commitment to academic freedom and freedom of inquiry and are at odds with the goals of a cornell education. leaning
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learning to engage with difficult and challenging ideas is a core part of a university education essential to our students, intellectual growth and their future ability to lead and thrive in a diverse society . my panel is back with me, and if they could they give it a standing ovation. frank life is triggering life is triggering life is stressful, and i think what cornell is saying is get used to it. but it's more than that. we talked about the importance of diversity in society at a university campus isn't intellectual diversity, the most important i teach at usc, and the fact is, most of my students have never had a conservative professor or maybe one. i asked him how many conservatives come onto campus. almost none of them do. i don't want to make a case for conservatism. i know that where i teach and i teach all over the globe. the only school that i've found that is truly deeply in every possible way committed to the truth. is west point, and
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they have to be because their lives are at stake. we're all just playing a game. they're the ones to protect our rights, our privileges. our constitution and those students are the best. i love my usc students. i love my n y u students, but the ones that west point would look at that and say that's pathetic. to be clear. they're not talking about conservative. this isn't about partisan stuff and about political stuff. they want a heads up on material that's like about sex. actual violence or suicide used to life. that's what this show you talked about death as the first segment on the show. these things happen and we can't have that conversation anymore. or we have to warn people about this. come on, that justifies the whole claim about the snowflake culture. it justifies. it really does enjoying this. is that kid ? how is that kid going to deal with the live streaming mass murder? i don't want them to
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have to deal with the live streaming mass murder. i don't either. but they're going to have to because it just went live just happened, right? it's just it's we are surrounded, frank said it perfectly. the world should come with the trigger. warning yes, and then we should get on with it again to play devil's advocate. we even give our viewers we say we have disturbing video coming up. which makes them go. yeah yeah. i mean, the rat in half. what am i gonna see? next sometimes some people do but but i feel like we do give them based. that's basically a trigger warning. in another one of your own viewers know, because we want to let people know something really upsetting is about to come up. if you want to turn away. go ahead right now. sorry go ahead, mama. don't know that we need to extrapolate so much from this. i mean, i think they're welcome to ask for it. if the university doesn't want to do it. there are people who have been raped. there are terrible. you know, there are people who have had mass shootings in their schools . you know, you give that kid american psycho. they may feel
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very uncomfortable. i don't think it's you know, we're not saying don't give them the book. they're saying that we just like a heads up. i mean, i don't think that's the craziest want. i mean, and i think the college is well within its rights to say no common sense. it's common sense. i mean, i actually agree with the guys, but i think molly hit it because in this this was a situation. where was it was a couple of young women that were readings like you, said alison something to do with rape or sexual abuse, and there's one particular student had some history involved with this. so in that case, why wouldn't it be nice if it was the teacher sort of took the prerogative not not a legislated by the university or some directive, but the teacher who knows their students who knows? you know this could be a sensitive to give him a little bit of heads up. that wasn't wasn't part of the curriculum, but it was just the right thing to do. is it crazy to think that common sense that a big time university starts the way to go. but it starts there and then you have to do it every
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time you mentioned donald trump, and then you're gonna have to do it every time you mentioned something about israelis versus the palestinians, and it's a never ending challenge. and we have to get on with life and we have to learn how to deal with with trouble. we have to learn how to deal with crises and we can't warn people that things are gonna happen that they won't want to hear. and my fear is that this will be used by other schools to actually shut down political conversation. okay we're banning books, right? i'm not right. but that's not the left. that's banning books. that's the right but it's not left or right, right. we have to stop seeing everything is left to right. but i'm not saying that they should ban these books. i'm just saying that a heads up, you know, and more just that these students are welcome to ask for a heads up. you know, i have teenagers, and i would be proud if they had sort of, you know, especially if they had a friend who was a victim of sexual violence. and
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who was you know, trying, you know, upset by something and asked, i mean, and i think the school has every right to say no to. i mean, i do think that a discourse that's not too hot and it's just talking about this is the right thing and again and you and i have talked about this book banning thing is bananas, right? and i don't want to be afraid of my students as a professor of and i feel comfortable challenging them. i want them to hear from people they never heard of. i want them to see things that they hadn't seen. i want to truly and i mean this. educate them. i want to be a teacher, not a professor. about one step further. how about make? do you want them to be uncomfortable? do you want them? to have doubts. do you want them to really be uneasy? i do want them to embrace it, right. look for it on this. show any any moment any of the four of us could say something that gets his band from the show? because we used the wrong language. we embarrass ourselves. i embrace that
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because it requires me to think and requires me to ponder and i don't think we teach that if our kids i hear you, i mean, i think that part of growing up is learning to be comfortable being uncomfortable. but finding a comfort with discomfort, and they have to get used to that. but i also see what you're saying, like would it wouldn't kill somebody to say, guys, by the way, there's going to be a rape scene in this book, just like it would not. i mean, the question is what happens next, then to the students don't want to read that. that's why i said common sense you're seeing in florida, right? i mean, they're taking away books that make people uncomfortable in the classroom into the last 40 seconds of every pharmaceutical commercial where the entire thing is. okay, now, you might be offended if this and that and you might be offended if this and this and this except it's not gonna be the end of the commercial. it's going to be the beginning of the commercial cause diarrhea. by the way, lord of the flies piggy gets in the end. have a nice day. everybody go home now. you're smart. thanks for ruining it for really, by the way, why doesn't
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this ever happened in trade schools just saying okay back to the work that back in the plane trade schools, their career schools, and we've already changed the language colleges you to your colleges. thank you all very much for that conversation. all right, make sure you stick around at the top of the hour because we're going to dive into several stories with our panel of phenomenal reporters. including cnn's or let science who has the details of yet another 2024, gop presidential contender, but first more beer. that's what some mlb teams are saying selling beer later in the game. what are the risks? what are the benefits will discuss. i w would like to move it. move it. you're like the we're reinventing our network. like to move it, move it. moment. come on. fast
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were the chicago cub fans in 2015, raising their beers in tribute to the legendary harry carey nailed it with his rousing rendition of take me out to the ball game in the seventh inning stretch. that's the inning when baseball teams have traditionally stopped beer sales . but now games are getting shorter, and teams like the arizona diamondbacks in minnesota twins and the milwaukee brewers. the brewers are selling beer through the eighth inning that could have some unintended consequences and nobody better. to help us understand this and crunch the data data on beer, then senior data reporter harry antin, my panel is also back. harry how much time have you spent or how many beers? i guess. did you have you drank to research this only diet and w cream? so that was why i was asking you before about your cream soda preferences. what do we need to
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know? here? to know. here's what you need to know. average this year about 31 minutes shorter. than they were last year because of the pitch clock that they've instituted that. essentially they wanted the games to be shorter because they thought the long games for keeping fans from watching games especially young people, like myself, but here is the unanticipated consequence. right essentially, what has occurred is that means that now you have less time to sell beer about. i think it was about 24 minutes, on average, or so less time to sell beer. and that, of course, is something that mlp mlb teams don't necessarily like because it turns out using let's say minute maid park, which is where the houston astros play. for example, last year. i believe they sold about $28 million worth of alcohol, and now some of that was from concerts, but the vast majority that was from baseball games so my estimate is that they might have lost, you know, somewhere in the area of a few million dollars based upon these new the new timing rules,
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so they're trying to gain some of that back by going to sell alcohol for eight innings instead of seven, and they have a solution to this national problem. this is going to be a national crisis, but they have a solution. they apparently they have a solution to this national national crisis. but of course, there are unintended consequences to this right, such as the fact that now you're going to be selling alcohol closer to the end of game time, right? and that might lead to more people on the roads who, perhaps perhaps i've had too much to drink and more than that there was a very interesting study that came out of the university of pennsylvania that showed that when you had extra inning games that is games in which you would have more time in between the end of beer sales at the end of alcohol sales. when people actually hit the road, it turns out that there was less violent crime in and around the stadium. so there's a lot to this beer sales thing. you think it's a small thing, but it's a very large. um mike, why are you rolling? the hairy eyeball? what do you do with doubleheaders? right i mean
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extra endings, obviously is a thing. it's just this just makes me thirsty right now. right now , in real time, we'd be fools not be closing out this whole thing, right? we need beer right now. just for research purposes course. yes can i can i bring my i'm athletic background here, please. thank goodness because i love baseball, and i'm bored. you know what? watching a lot of these games, particularly during the regular season, the playoffs is a little bit different. i love what they've done with the pitch clock. we did it in tennis a couple years ago to serve clock. it makes the games move much quicker, and you know what they're getting in their cars. they get a little more time. you see, it's harry. they just don't want them walking to the cars with the beer and the hand. okay whether it was a six or the summers of the eighth inning. hopefully, they didn't have too many. they could take an uber it . okay we only have about 30 seconds left, so i'll give you the last word. glad to do this show because i'm glad to meet
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you. i really appreciate all that you've done for the ignored and forgotten. you have given people the respect that they deserve for doing the jobs that they had to do, and they want to do. you celebrated them. you are a treasure in this country and to be on this show with you. i like you all. but you're special . and this is such an honor. you're making me blush. thank you. our next round of work ethics scholarships is happening right now. anybody is welcome to apply shameless. can we go micro works dot org. these are not for four year schools. these are for trades. we've got $2 million were giving it away next month. apply today. fantastic thank you very much. thanks for those sentiments. frank stay with us. our schwarzenegger is getting his hands dirty with a dirty job. there was a huge pothole okay in his street, and he went and filled it, which is great, right? arnold schwarzenegger. big celebrity, but turns out maybe it wasn't a pothole, after all, explain the baddest frank.
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wasn't a pothole. it's a city approved service trench for southern california guests. micro is back. how many times have you mistaken a pothole or trench to trench pothole? so i just feel like you have filled your share of potholes. am i right? it's embarrassing. we're hearing the break and i'm just i told you like if i google micro manhole or pothole like they're eight pages of it. we just literally did a segment on dirty jobs with manhole rehabilitator . yes we went to tennessee and we went into these manholes and we spray this magic stuff on the walls, and it extends the life of the sewer system by 50 years, and it's sweaty and disgusting. yeah so it's a whole but you don't fill it up for crying out loud. arnold you put them you put a cover on the manhole, but he thought this was a pothole because that's a trench arnold is like his resume is brilliant . he's done a lot of great works , governor, for god's sakes, but
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a whole is round and goes down the trenches. this horizontal man. this is a rookie mistake. you don't fill in a trench folks . you see an empty trench and your street just walk on by only he had called you for the definition. you know the definition between a pothole and a service branch out there in california. i'm up there. you can call me down at the arnold. you just we'll fill in some trenches, holes, whatever you want, because i mean, it seemed great because you know, you don't often see like famous celebrities and former governors out there, you know, dealing with asphalt. let me say something kind of lousy though. and like suspicious. i mean, it's filmed. somebody filmed it, and then somebody posted it. so what's really going on? i mean, this is an altruistic thing, or was this i mean, i'm not i'm just saying, if i saw somebody as famous as arnold schwarzenegger in front of my house, filling in a hole yeah, i guess i would expect to see somebody filming it. yes, you would think something was up? next thing you know you're chasing rats with terriers. you
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got your own tv show. then you're sitting here talking to you. now we see what was going on there, mike. such a pleasure . so great to have you here for having me seeing you tomorrow. i'm going to be in the city if you got if you got an empty chair, i'll come by. this was fun. great great to have you all right, coming up. some of our best reporters are here to share the scoops that they have been working on this week. including a judge, scolding boxes. lawyers sanctioning the company and the dominion lawsuit, and there's another 2024 presidential contender. all of that and more with our fabulous reporters. i'll join them in a moment next. at a d p. we understand business today looks nothing likike it dd yesterday. . while it's more unpredictable. its possibilities are endless from paying your people from anywhere supporting your talent. everywhere we use data driven insights to design hr solutions and services to help businesses of all sides
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yeah. welcome back to cnn tonight. this hour. we're talking with some of our favorite reporters about their scoops on the stories that they are covering for us this week here with me tonight we have shimon preoccupies our let signs harry antin and rachel solomon. so let's jump right in republican senator tim scott, announcing the launch of his presidential exploratory committee today, after months of testing the waters and he's starting with a listening. tour and visits to iowa. so what is the path for tim scott r that size has been talking to her sources. so our let's let's start with who is tim scott? how is he introducing himself and selling himself to voters? listen, this is the introductory period for yet another republican who might be entering the race. he is just doing in that exploratory committee a period now, but sims cut the senator from south carolina has long been seen
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