tv CNN Tonight CNN April 17, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
7:00 pm
sore muscles. absolutely free text f e t +2321321. cnn news central tomorrow at nine eastern closed captioning brought to you by invent help. call 1 807 100020 invention idea but don't know what to do. next call invent help today they can help you get started with your idea. call now. 807 100020. before we
7:01 pm
go. police releasing the mug shot of the suspect charged in the shooting of a black teenager in kansas city. 16 year old ralph yara will bring the wrong doorbell while he was trying to pick up his siblings. last week , he was shot two times. 84 year old andrew lester is charged with assault in the first degree and armed criminal action. thank you so much for joining us. i'll be back here tomorrow night, cnn tonight with alison camerata starts now. hey, alison. great to see you and we'll be talking about that case, of course, as well. good evening, everyone. i'm alyson camerota. welcome to cnn tonight that 84 year old man in kansas city was charged this evening with shooting 16 year old ralph ural in the head. this was last week after you're all apparently rang the wrong doorbell. is this a valid case of stand your ground law, or is this the law of the instrument? which says when all you have is a hammer? you treat every problem like a nail. here. the instrument is a gun. our panel shares their thoughts on why it took several days to charge this suspect plus congressman jorge
7:02 pm
santos says he's running for reelection, though he has not raped in much cash. in fact, he's had to give back thousands of dollars in campaign donations will tell you what his colleagues and constituents are saying and grammy winning country star brad paisley is back tonight. he's just returned from ukraine and he'll tell us about his meeting with president zelensky. and performing his new song. same here in the streets of kiev. this your. rebound. your babies and. back crazy. shame who. sing. we will talk to him shortly, but i want to bring in my panel. we have l z granderson from the los angeles times republican strategist evan siegfried, cnn's own law enforcement expert, john miller and molly jong, fast from vanity
7:03 pm
fair. also joining us right now we have congressman emanuel cleaver, a democrat from missouri, who represents the area where the shooting took place. congressman i want to start with you because you have spoken to local law enforcement . we're all looking for information on what happened here. do you understand what happened? uh well, i think i have a pretty good idea of what happened based on what was presented by the prosecutor and clay kennedy. uh and what i've heard from the cancer. missouri police chief who, by the way has been on the job very short period of time. my first female police chief who? i think the a magnificent job. negotiating what could have been a very ugly situation and, uh, have all all praise for the entire cancer majority police department particularly those who investigate this issue, but i also think that we have a problem here in the in the, um i think there are a lot of people who are saying, uh, that they are happy that the man was hot
7:04 pm
charge. 84 year old man was charged, but they are a little frustrated over the fact that it wasn't it wasn't charged with a hate crime. i think you know, we need to cool down just a bit. uh look at 84 year old man. if convicted, uh, whatever he gets is a death symptom is a sorry it's a life sentence. uh and you know, uh, we were right now. create we would right now. i think people of goodwill on on the side of right i don't. i don't think they're, uh, anywhere close to the majority of people who are upset about the charging. they're obviously going to be some people, but we're right now in a good spot, and i don't think we don't change it by starting to get people to start feeling like they've got to resist being called racist. hmm well, i guess one of my first questions is why did it take so long? this happened? i think he was questioned and brought in on thursday night. why did it take until monday for the charges? uh i'm not sure of all of it what i believe based on my conversation
7:05 pm
is a police were doing a very thorough investigation. they wanted to make sure that they gave the case file to the prosecutor where there's much information and there is a as possible so that the prosecutor could make the right decision. and look for all of the people who you know that's a overwhelmingly white county. uh and people who all the weekend we're saying, well, you know, they all hell not they'll never charge them in clay county. uh i think what we need to understand what both sides need to understand the people who think everybody's always guilty if they're black and everybody's simpson, uh, if they're black, it's something very critically important. i think from my perspective, and that is um, there are a lot of people who have been program. to always expect the worst and they were programmed out of experience to expect the worst. and then there are others who say that nothing is racist, and we got to get to the point where we try to base
7:06 pm
it on facts and what happened in this kitchen situation. i think the people of our community or feeling a little bit better now they're gonna there's gonna be some some lawsuits and that's that's another whole situation that i'm not sure that those of us in the political arena involved with but for sure most of us in our community all pleased that there were charges. well i mean, obviously, i don't know what is in the defendant's head or what he was motivated by, but we do know from the reporting of what's come out that he told police he was quote scared to death. when they're 16 year old rang his doorbell. and that he they didn't exchange any words during the incident. so how? what? what could be behind that? well he also said that he was afraid because the guy was big, uh, which which wasn't true in the first place, but sometimes black people start growing, uh, in front of people who are already paranoid when they are around people who are
7:07 pm
different. don't you understand that mean that you think that it was racially motivated? well, here's here's what i think. the man who shot that young kid did not have a lot of information, uh, to make the decision with the kid was not in his in his house. he shot the kid through the glass door. um and so all he could see black. man young man on my porch means danger. i can shoot. and i think you know, and i think that evidence is clear. i don't think that you know, there's any evidence that the young man threatened him and or said anything. i think you know, the young man was shot and then ran to three or four houses asking for help. he finally did get help. thank god. or you probably would not have survived, so they're they're good and decent people out there . uh, this is not the gentleman who made who shot this young man may not be one of them. we will
7:08 pm
see as we get more facts. congressman emanuel cleaver. thank you for your time. we appreciate it good to be with you want to bring in the panel now? john miller. so is this a case of something in missouri, where they could use stand your ground if he was on the porch? i mean, they have the status. they have the standard ground law. but the stand your ground law in missouri requires that you feel that there's an imminent threat of serious injury so because you're scared to death doesn't mean that you should be scared to death. part of it is, you know the mindset of the person what did they believe? but it's a tough case because you open the front door. and then there's a second door, the glass door, which is locked and the other person is we don't have the full breath of the statement of the suspect. in this case, we do know that the district attorney said race was a factor. so it's suggestive that there's some statement to the effect of i saw
7:09 pm
this big black guy at my door. i didn't know him. i was afraid i shot him. otherwise how could race play a factor in his statements? but it's still hard to say if he's on the other side of a barrier and he doesn't present a weapon. and that's not in the statement. um what was the threat? so it's going to be the kind of thing that you know if it were in new york state, it would go to a grand jury and they would hear the victim's testimony. they'd hear the suspects testimony they'd be advised on the law. um it's a. it's not. it's not a clear cut case, except for the fact that here's a guy at the door. you don't even know what he wants. there's been no conversation. you shoot him. you better have some story about what? you consider that imminent threat before you let a 32 round go at a teenager's head insane that we live in a country where you can shoot someone because you might be scared. i mean, and that that's legal. in some states. it
7:10 pm
is insane. i mean, i think this is the guns. this is the law. this is i'm sure i mean, we don't know the facts. the case? yes, yet, but clearly ah, they think racism is involved. but it's in the scene that we have lost that you can shoot someone if you are, you know, worried. i mean, but not necessarily on. this is not just if you were it's usually if they go into your home ground, is that right ? but what we're seeing is a culture that test with guns that says violence is okay that you know, in many cases, it can be legal. i mean, i think we have a fundamental, larger problem in the culture. rosie. there are a lot of things that play, um the first thing i think about is the fact that kansas city over the last three years has had horrific violence, crime. and that people in the in the state, particularly in the city, are afraid. i'm trying to find some space have empathy for the suspect because, as the congressman said, i don't just want to paint everyone with an
7:11 pm
ugly stick. but with that being said, it's hard for me to see. someone who was born and what the forties as a white person growing up in american society. your city the last three years has had a lot of violence and it's 10 o'clock at night, and there's this black man as far as you can tell, standing at your door and you're afraid as a white man who's in your eighties. i can see that perspective of it. and also part of that is all the fn racism that informed that white man to make him think that he was okay to pull the trigger to show up to the door with the gun to begin with when someone rings your doorbell. who does that? heaven racism absolutely was involved. let's just call a spade a spade here. what i want to know is why did he feel the need to have what appears to be readily accessible hand gun and shoot him through a glass door? he didn't call the cops. he didn't even after shooting him.
7:12 pm
it was a neighbor who treated this poor kid. and i think that well, it was good that the police thoroughly investigated. i want to see what else was going on here because there's certainly something going on with this guy where he felt that i'm going to have a gun near me as we've covered. responsible gun owners keep their guns locked and stored safe spot. i mean, as we've also covered. there are now more guns in america than there are people. there are so it just feels like when somebody when you're scared in your house, like we said, if every problems and you know if you're a hammer, every problem is a nail. if you have a gun at the ready then you're maybe you're just scared when somebody knocks on your door at that hour of night and be quite honest with you. i don't need a gun to scare white people. i have my skin. right and i don't mean to offend, you know, all of america who's white and not racist, but we have a history that's well documented that shows the color
7:13 pm
of my skin has been used as defense to justify killing people like me just simply by presenting myself as a black man. no weapon, no gun, so to me, there is a gun conversation . but this is also about the implicit bias that we continue to skirt, which then gets the reverse polarization of this question, which is let's put the gun thing on hold for a second, which is i'm 84 years old. the doorbells ringing it's what time is it? is it 10 o'clock 10 o'clock? none of my none of my 84 year old friends are coming over 10 o'clock, my 32. i go downstairs. what's going on? here is it's a home invasion robbery and i see a white guy on the other side of the glass door. do i shoot him in the head? i can't help but think about ahmad aubrey, who was killed for jogging while black and trayvon martin. i mean there's history, but you have ralph brl here who's a 16 year old kid who is happening to be a good older brother picking up
7:14 pm
his kids while black and that terrifies me rang the doorbell knocked on the door. i mean, this is not like he was halfway in the living room and the guy comes down. i mean, i think that we have to, you know. we have to, like, take a real look at a the way these laws are crafted, but also, you know, just too many guns and also i just want to say that in the charging documents the shooter did call 911 after he shot him, but as we know, the 16 year old was having a hard time getting anybody to help him because what the dispatcher was saying was we don't have the shooters on the loose, so don't open your door to him. let him stay out there. we're sending somebody right now . don't open your door and then a neighbor. of compassionate neighbor went outside with towels and like helped staunch the bleeding and saved his life. the reason why that whole good guy with the argument conversation when it comes to mass shootings or events like this is such bs because in the heat of the moment, how the hell are you supposed to know who's the good guy? and who's the bad
7:15 pm
guy, right? oh yeah, i mean, think of in the charging documents, he says. you know, the statement of the shooter is, you know, as as the person who just shot in the head going in the other direction is don't you come around here again, right? lot to talk about. thank you all for your perspectives on this. stay with me, everybody because next police arrested 15 people after unruly crowds of teenagers and young adults spilled into the streets of downtown chicago saturday night. what they're calling reckless and disruptive behavior is also described as mayhem in some reports, what's going on in chicago? i w would like to move it. move it. you're like the we're reinventing our network. like to move it, move it. this moment. come on. fast
7:16 pm
reliable, perfectly orchestrated. the united states postal service. are you fling sluggish or weighed down? metamucil is new fiber plus collagen canelp when taken daily. it supports your health, starting with your digestive system. metamucil is plant based fiber forms a gel to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down, helps lower cholesterol and promotes healthy blood sugar levels while it's collagen peptides help support your joint structures start feeling lighter and more energetic by taking metamucil everyday. metamucil psyllium fiber also comes and easy to take capsules the first time you connected your go daddy website and your store was also the first time you realized well, we can do anything. cheesecake cookies, cookie sales from one place with a partner that always puts you first started today at go. daddy .com . i got a call from some scammer who had the nerve to ask for my medicare number. that was not
7:17 pm
born yesterday, when someone asked for my medicare number text. i know it was a scam. nice catch, and your mother knew it wasn't a real email. mom share my medical number with strangers call text or email asking for your medicare or personal information down. learn more at medicare dot gov slash fraud. this is our premium platinum coverage map and this is consumer cellular zmapp. i don't see the difference to you. well that one's purple, the exact same coverage as the nation's leading carriers, starting at $20 consumer cellular. nicorette knows quitting. smoking is freaking hard. you get advice, like, just stop. go for a run. go for 10 runs run a marathon instead start small with nicorette, which can lead to something big. start stopping with nicorette. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual because demise your car insurance. so you only
7:18 pm
pay for what you need. who we gotta go again for what you need . liberty liberty, liberty, liberty. this is how i lost £33 on noon. wait. i'm tasting psychological approach to weight loss name is taught me how you think about food has such a huge impact on your relationship with that and make it last with noon. wait. how to grow more vibrant flowers. step one. feed them with miracle gro, shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro, you need to know to grow. before clear choice. my dental health was so bad i would be in a lot of pain was unable to eat. it was very hard. kimberly came to clear choice with a bunch of missing teeth struggling with pain with dental disease. clear choice dental implants solved her dental issues. i feel so much better feel energized to go
7:19 pm
outside and play with my daughter. i can eat anything like i don't have to worry, claire choice changed my life. ah! police in chicago arrested 15 people over the weekend amid what they call reckless and disruptive behavior from large groups of teenagers. young people in the video as you can see in chicago's downtown district were jumping and dancing on cars they were getting into fights they were weaving in and out of oncoming traffic. chicago mayor elect brandon johnson putting out a statement, saying he does not condone the destructive activity , but that it is not constructive to demonize youth who have otherwise been starved of opportunities in their own communities. and in separate incidents, chicago saw another weekend of gun violence. 38 people were shot across the city . eight of them were killed. my panel is back with me, evan, your thoughts on what was happening. what is happening in chicago? i think it's very bad.
7:20 pm
and i think that the mayor elected was absolutely wrong for what he said in his statement. part was wrong, absolutely wrong to go out and say that we should not be demonizing these kids. the kids went out and this was an organized group. that started on social media, and it was reports of hundreds, possibly even a few 1000 kids going and jumping on cars pulling people out of college assaulting them. causing mayhem and hat. now. i understand that mayor elect johnson wants to try to tackle crime by providing more opportunities for people and i think good. i hope that actually works because we have to try something that will actually reduce the primary in chicago. but the way, he said this it had two things. it sent two messages . first it might have signaled to some of the kids who have not been arrested because 15 out of a few 100 is quite a small drop in the bucket. it might signal maybe it's okay if i do this, but the other thing i was talking to a couple of friends who live in chicago. they have said that there have been some
7:21 pm
they've changed their lifestyles and their behavior because of their perception of crime and how it's rising. what are they doing differently? they some of them don't go out at night or spend more time with friends. they take alternate routes. they don't take mass transit anymore , and that's part of the what i like to call the urban decay loop. we're seeing where but how increases in crime and theft are causing businesses mom and pops two major retailers to have to spend more on security and have money more problems. and then you're seeing quality of life issues, and when residents see that they begin to say the crime is getting even worse when maybe statistically, it's not. and it's just is this loop where two keeps cycle of bad perception. where is the loop? start the loop starts with fox news, right or the new york post or one of those right wing media channels that is super interested in that video. i saw that video again and again from right wing media , but you never see anyone say like we should work on after school programs. we should work on education. we should give
7:22 pm
these kids really great free skating. i mean, there are you know there are a lot of things to give teenagers to do that are not like, you know, teenagers want to get together. they want to hang i mean, i'm just saying, i hear you. and that's what mayor elect brandon johnson is saying. i'll read it to everybody. this is his plan for safety at public safety and reform act of one day plan to get smart and serious about crime, invest in youth and communities expand support for victims and survivors. mental health addiction care housing for the un house strengthened police accountability here's for investing in youth in particular youth and communities, um, double the summer youth jobs to more than 60,000 target, the most at risk youth. great build a comprehensive trauma response network. fantastic. put youth on the path to prosperity with career and technical education. who can argue with that address the crisis of nearly 20,000 on housed cps students and, um, support the peace book ordinance , whatever that means, so he's talking about it. but i guess the point now is that it's not
7:23 pm
that i hear what you say fox loves to put that on a loop and play it over and over and over, but it did happen. no it's not great, but i also think like, you know, this is not you know, there were 38 people who were murdered right? was shot shot eight who were killed not you know, two people were shot there, but no one was killed. it was just that the visual was very, you know, right wing media visual and again, i say, like, focus on giving these kids places to go, you know, parks to hang out, and they're teenagers. i mean, there is a way to sort of, you know, shepherd this energy into my want to believe that i want to believe that kids who are doing destructive things would go to a nice park. and hang out. if one were available . they do. i was a kid in detroit, you know, like we had devil's night, you know, and anyone can. detroit knows devil's night was like, you know, the night before halloween , and you went out. you did basically what you just saw.
7:24 pm
every year we find ourselves on national television. detroit can't be handled blah, blah, blah. there is an aspect of this conversation is about teen rebellion, and it's been celebrated in our culture and it's been villainized in our culture, and i don't want to pretend as if what's happening in chicago is in and of itself unique to just chicago, isn't it against the backdrop of violence in chicago right now, homicides and against the backdrop of violence in america, not just chicago. we just talked about kansas city, right, and some 84 year old who freaked out, so it's about violence in this country. i think there are different aspects of the conversation. the mayor is absolutely correct. the teams in chicago need more things to do. but if there's a conservative aspect is convincing, that's also correct. and liberals don't like to talk about it, but it's true. where the hell are your parents? right i have raised the kid, so i feel like i have some teeth. in this day. you have to stay on top of your kid and i get it. life is hard. you gotta work. i balanced three different jobs at one point didn't care of
7:25 pm
my kids. but it. i needed to make sure i knew where he was. and so i think that's a part of the conversation, too, that some of those parents who have a come to jesus meeting in terms of yeah. kids need more activities to do. yeah this is just about teen rebellion, but also your parent parent. here are some of the stats john about what's happened since 2019 in terms of chicago and the citywide crime burglaries down aggravated batteries down criminal assault , sexual assault. i should say, basically the same, but murder, robbery theft car theft is up. so we're having the opposite in new york, which is murders and shootings down. other crimes are flat. um chicago has struggled with this for a long time. i mean, i can go back through five mayors, two of whom i know personally and talked to crime about multiple police superintendents there, all of whom i knew you've got the last mayor who probably lost the election on crime and the new mayor who's coming in saying i'm not going to hire more cops, and
7:26 pm
we don't need to make more arrests. we need more homicide detectives to solve the murders because somehow if those murders go away, the murders will stop. um these are rookie mistakes, and i think the mayor elect is going to learn the hard way the same way and i'm with evan on this. you cannot say you cannot come downtown bent on disorder and breaking laws and committing damage and violence and then back in that sentence with an excuse, which is but it's really our fault because we didn't build an excuse, though, right? i mean, it's coming. it's a mixed message that goes beyond context to me, and i mean in new york, chauncey parker, the deputy commissioner of the nypd , spent the entire summer after we had a spate of terrible youth on youth violence, teenagers with guns shooting and killing each other 14 15 16. the bronx was the leader in this we rebuilt all the basketball courts. we could we found the money dug up the money stole the money. i mean, we did amazing things with funds. we did the biggest summer jobs program
7:27 pm
we've ever done before, and the biggest higher was in the police department. then the parks department everywhere else. i mean, we really did the all out approach to answer this question about provide other avenues work. um you know, did it work? we think it works, but you can't count what didn't happen, so did all kinds of policing initiatives by flooding certain areas with cops doing violence interrupter programs coordinating the two and we were able to put a dent in it, but we never made excuses for people shooting each other by saying it was somehow society's fault. question which is if chicago you know all these people in chicago white, couldn't they get it together? chicago? the politics overrides everything in chicago. the police. the police superintendent, chicago can't fire bad cops. it goes to some politically appointed commission . that's you know, in league with the f o p things don't get done without all of these
7:28 pm
machinations. so you know when 38% of your gun collars are being tossed at arraignment, and the biggest gun supplier is a gun store just outside the city limits because the state law is different from the city. you've got a system that's been broken for a long time that politics will not allow the fixing of really interesting context. thank you all very much for those thoughts. so as you know, there have been a mountain of lies from republican congressman jorge santos. but one thing he does not seem to be lying about the announcement of his 2024 reelection campaign. we'll discuss how it's going next. next time on the whole story. electric flight climatete warris racing to save the e planet. yoyou're part of the movement to basically build the oil industry and reverse carbon removal. godzilla get mad and go kill that thing. every molecule of fuel to that doesn't end in the atmosphere victory, searching for new ways to fix mistakes.
7:29 pm
the whole story with anderson cooper sunday at eight every sunday one whole story one whole hour on c. new breed of hornets sweeping the nation. are you picking this up? taking the country by swarm the all new dodge hornet. this feels systems now feature google products like the nest cam with floodlight with intelligent alerts when a person or familiar faces detected is not here tonight, so you have a home with no worries brought to you by a d t. the majority of my patients with sensitivity. i see irritated gums and weak enamel sensodyne, sensitivity gum and enamel relief sensitivity helps restore gum health and re hardens enamel . i'm a big advocate of recommending things that i know work. the future. you see, it is said that depend on where you sit texture. we think it also
7:30 pm
gets down to how you sit. which is why our technology is light years ahead. chair has done it again with our groundbreaking technology, providing hours of infinite comfort, no matter where in the world you're sitting by synthesizing the universe's elements, bringing hot cold and touch into one extraordinary seating experience . our mission is to help you discover that every workday can happen with body and mind in and out of this world place of comfort and productivity, charting a new course, helping workers everywhere find comfort as their work world zoom back and forth. even though your work reality may continue to shift. we've got our eye on the future of work so you can focus on the present and ex chair. gazing ahead from where we sit. the future still feels good x chair dot com to find out how you can own an ex chair for only $20 a month. x chair .com when you're the leader in disaster, cleanup and restoration, how do you make like it never even happened happened. ah! being prepared for
7:31 pm
anything pro like you've never even happen. hmm hmm. hmm. hmm. i screwed up. mhm. i got us t-mobile home internet. now cell phone users have priority over us. and your marriage survived that? you can almost feel the drag when people walk by with their phones. oh i can't hear you... you're froze-- ladies, please! you put it on airplane mode when you pass our house. i was trying to work. we're workin' it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck.
7:32 pm
enthusiast check in at puma dot co. good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morning. truth challenged congressman jorge santos announcing his bid for re election in 2020 for his campaign called santos quote, diligent legislator but santos is better known for his lies about everything from being jewish to being a star volleyball player. santos also has a lot of investigations to answer for calls to resign from his constituents and members of his own party also happening within a campaign in deep fundraising. trouble my panel is back with me. somali um first
7:33 pm
santos has apparently raised in the first quarter. um $5300 in contributions, but he's refunded $8000 in contributions, so i'm no mathematician, even cats, not i don't think of winning strategy. i'm not gonna be wrong, john, but that's how i feel about that. we've seen a lot of crazy financial disclosure numbers this cycle with the nicky haley and, um but, yeah, no. santos is an amazing candidate for democrats , right? that's a d plus to distract. i mean, he you know, it's nassau county like you, you know, between the lies about being jewish and the lies about this, and i mean, it's hard to imagine a world where this guy gets reelected, but part of his i don't want to say charm. part of his stick is that he does outrageous staff. you know, he tries to sort of be long island's marjorie taylor green. so he has this nicki minaj anti vax. bill. he just authored. i
7:34 pm
mean, i don't know how this works for him, but maybe he's auditioning for conservative television. maybe but you also make a great point. like having never underestimate the you know constituents. um power at some point to kind of like the flamethrower. unpredictable, strange. court jester, right? i mean, it's sometimes don't they vote for those people? she cited the marjorie taylor greens popularity in her home state. yeah, but they don't really have any alternatives in the primary , whereas jorge santos does have a serious primary challenger who is african american, and we've confirmed that he was an afghanistan veteran confirm that and did something that jorge santos also claims to have done which he is. he was a vp at jpmorgan. and his name. in fact, checked, yes fact checked kellen curries. biography in no way. is he making anything up? but jorge santos, he really doesn't have a place to live in the republican party because he doesn't really have any committee assignments. he doesn't i don't know what his
7:35 pm
diligent legislating is really about what he's doing, but what he does have is he hired as one of his first hires in january, a man who is known as a fixer for mega he's abandoned acolyte who was pushing the january six stuff and there were rumors about him being involved in the actual riots, and that was one of his top hires. he's been out there, pushing himself into maga crowds because that's the only place that will take him saying, look, i'm a target of the media . woe is me. i'm such a victim. he's not a victim. he's a con man. we have a long way to go before 2024 the political world , but here's how some of his constituents felt about him. uh, last month when we asked. i don't understand why he's so bear is completely humiliated himself and it's i just seems like he's detached from reality . we don't know who he is, and we don't like what we see. and its drive for him to go. home
7:36 pm
just goes away. i mean, there's just so much turmoil with response to his his environment the environment has created john, you know, new yorkers. is this going to work for him? so i think for a long islanders, who are pretty savvy, it's a fool me once you know i don't see this happening again. but also i mean , we know a lot more about jorge santos than we did before. so a he says he's going to run again . first of all, how can we believe him? thanking them all? what's the campaign slogan like reelect george santos? no shame , so i don't i don't see this as a likely possibility. lz quickly. in the midst of trying to decide speaker of the house. he was hanging out with other republicans. yeah everything. after all, the lies have been exposed. serious people. we have a i we have gun violence. we have diseases. we got china with secret police forces and jorge santos has ass's in congress on that note. um be sure to tune in
7:37 pm
to the top of the hour. favorite reporters will be here to discuss their scoops and the stories that they're covering, including what's going on with the fox defamation trial. that is set to begin tomorrow. but first, if your two year old skills popcorn everywhere on an airplane who should clean it up. you were the airline. one major league pitcher has some strong thoughts about this after what happened, his family and our panel has strong thoughts, too. that's nice. from friends coming over to mom's coming over. so many ways to save life ready, happy 3 65 by ole foods market the first time yourales reached 100 with go. daddy was also the first time your profits left you speechless. at the counter or on the go save 20% with the lowest transaction fees and keep more of what you make. start saving today at go, daddy .com i see how pro starts
7:38 pm
working instantly. two extra pain relievers. you can rise from pain like a pro. i see hot pro. hey hey, hey, get away 10. years ago, i invented the ring video doorbell for moments like that and ring security cameras for moments like this video. protect your home away. i do learn more at ring .com. here's how tommy lost £30 on new wait. i'm tom use psychology to lose weight, mindful aspect made me feel more conscious about what i was eating and why i was eating it. it's actually working and make it last week.
7:39 pm
1500 purchase allowance on a 2023 cadillac xt five and six. visit your local cadillac dealer today. identical twins. bethany and stephanie both struggled with cpap for their sleep apnea , but stephanie got inspired and implanted device that works inside the body. there's no reason to keep struggling, learn more and more important safety information and inspire sleep .com how to grow more vibrant flowers. step one. feed them with miracle gro. shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro, you need to know to grow this friday security position standby director guy ritchie. taliban are everywhere. you're good. i'm good. oh, that man. my life. covenant friday. just always thought dog food is dog food
7:40 pm
didn't really piece together that dogs eat food. as soon as we brought the farmer's dog in her skin was better. she was more active. if i can invest in her health and be proactive. i think it's worth it. is it better for them .com. every weekday questions still need to be answered here bringing you the news. it is heating up. today way we'll stay on
7:41 pm
ariane de vogue at the supreme court, and this is cnn. should parents have to clean up the messes their children make on airplanes. toronto blue jays pitcher anthony bass says no, he tweeted quote. the flight attendant at united just made my 22 weeks pregnant wife traveling with a five year old and a two year old get on her hands and knees to pick up the popcorn mess by my youngest daughter. are you kidding me? i'm back with my panel. l z, your parent. would you clean up? popcorn that
7:42 pm
your child through around the airplane? yes you would. i would . isn't that time consuming. yes but it's also my child. it's my responsibility. airline gave them the popcorn. understand that and i and i don't expect people to all have my view. it's just constantly conscious of my example is what my son is going to follow. he needs to see me clean up the mess if he sees me past the mess on what is that saying to him as a child? molly i have three kids so i would try but i can understand. being 22 weeks pregnant, having two kids being on an airplane and trying to clean it up. so i think it's more of a question of like, yes , obviously, we want to be respectful and nice to our environment, especially traveling with children is anyone who's done it. it's a nightmare, so i do see it. but it also yeah, i'm just pregnant and she has two babies. i mean,
7:43 pm
it's a hard it's not the easiest thing. you guys are so much nicer than i am, because i would think that i didn't have to clean up the little teeny kernels of popcorn because i would think they have an industrial vacuum cleaner like that. i would think of me getting down on my hands and my knees. i haven't either. nothing. i just wanted to play it. i didn't see anything like that. i mean to get about this the like little shreds of popcorn out of the on your hands and knees. could have said no also. he was right. it's basic human decency and setting a good example for your kids. and at the same time there seems to be something a little off with flight attendant. she also seems to be in the wrong because why are you forcing someone forget if they're 22 weeks pregnant or not to do this, and you know what are you gonna threaten them with? we're going to turn the plane around or have an air marshal yank you off. traveling with babies is hard and traveling. pregnant it's hard traveled pregnant myself, but i have traveled with the three year old and a five year old. i have traveled with spilling and,
7:44 pm
you know. what you do is what you can, which is you're considerate of the people around you. and what else she is. i pick up everything i can. and emily does the same thing. but you know, kids at this age, you know, people say, control your kids like would you like to try called my favorite flight attendant before the segment. i said, what's the rule here? and she said this is wrong. that's why we have a clean up crew between flights. i'm right. thank you. that's what i got out of that very much. all right. thank you. all it was only weeks ago when country star brad paisley released the song same here to honor the people of ukraine and he was on this show to talk about it. now he's back . he just went to ukraine. he just met with president zelensky . and he just performed that song in kiev. he's going to join us to talk about it next. sing. with every generation subaru forester has been a leader in crash safety. working to undo
7:45 pm
the impact crash can have on your life. which has led the forester to even be able to detect it. and stop itself. subaru forester has earned the i h s top safety pick plus nine times more than honda crv and toyota rav four. love is what makes subaru subaru health inside your eyes is being challengedy daily stressors like sunlight and screens, just one occupied by vitamin a day replenishes key nutrients that help protect the health of your eyes take occupied now enhanced with vitamin d. this is the planning effect. if rina is thinking about retirement she'll get some help from fidelity to envision what's possible. fidelity can help her prioritize her goals by looking at her full financial picture, help her pick an investment strategy when she's comfortable with and with
7:46 pm
a clear plan to get to retirement can enjoy wherever she's headed. next that's the planning effect from fidelity noodles, part short hair. and part ninja. meet the new bissell cross wave hydro steam. it's part vacuum mop steamer and ninja nemesis. this is a new breed of clean to speak to customers to speak to a customer service representative. i'm sorry i didn't get that tentative. try again. i'm sorry . funny come here. you need a hug. there you go. you also need consumer self talk to a real person every time as you nicer. well. almost the exact same coverage as the nation's leading carriers and 100% us based customer support starting at $20 . consumer cellular. are you feeling sluggish or weighed down metamucil new fiber plus collagen can help when taken daily. it supports your health.
7:47 pm
starting with your digestive system. metamucil is plant based fiber forms a gel to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down, helps lower cholesterol and promotes healthy blood sugar levels while it's collagen peptides help support your joint structures. so start feeling lighter and more energetic by taking metamucil everyday. metamucil psyllium fiber also comes and easy to take capsules. i like to move it. move it. you're like the we're reinventing our network. come on, move it move! move this moment like that. moment. fast reliable, perfectly orchestrated. the united states postal service. the future is here. we've been creating it for more than 100 years. putting the
7:48 pm
most advanced technology into people's hands. generation after generation. tool after tool. again and again, bringing you the broadest and most reliable network of service dealers always moving forward. others follow liberty mutual customizes your car insurance. so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved. we tried electric unicycles. got it, okay. doggy paddle. only pay for what you need already. liberty liberty. hi hello there. would you like some lemonade would love some lemonade. $5 please. what supply chain issues. there's a lemon troy age. harry seen the person of cups. these days. inflation undo inflation with dish. the same tv bill
7:49 pm
every month. price hikes no matter what for three years, three year tv price guarantee only from dish to you. however, you talk whatever you think from the song that you see. the drink that drink, miss your. word about your babies and . other like crazy. so that's country music star brad paisley playing his song. same here in kiev, ukraine. paisley wrote the song to mark the first anniversary of the war and to raise money for the charity united 24 to help build housing for the people of ukraine, whose homes have been destroyed by putin's war. brad paisley has just returned from ukraine,
7:50 pm
along with a bipartisan group of us senators, and while there, he met with president zelensky and brad is back with us now, brad great to see you. i'm glad to be back talking to you. what a week . i bet. so what was it like to play that song to play? same here in kiev? it's really surreal about a year ago. i remember hearing about the invasion from mark kelly, senator kelly, who i've known a long time and i had texted me about something and said later on that evening that they were being invaded and to fast forward a year to be on a train with him rolling into a station in kiev, about two see it for the first time with my own eyes. it's really something that i never would have imagined in a million years getting to do and then to stand there with this song. and to sing it in front of this, you know the remnants of things that have been bombed and as well as surrounded by people
7:51 pm
that are living their lives in spite of the air raid sirens um i don't know how i was able to even do that without breaking down emotionally. i didn't break down until i got back. and then i did. so what were your impressions being in kiev of how it is a year more than a year later since the war began i think the main thing that i was left with is that i don't know what i was expecting whether i thought i'd get off the train and see just buildings that were rubble, and it's not necessarily like that. they have fixed things immediately like they were a couple of young women that work for united 24 that as soon as i got there, the senators went to a top secret secret briefing and i went for a couple of hours and tried to sightsee. sing the song in some places, do some filming and meet some people that i had been working with and these girls that were showing me around. we're so excited to show me their city in the same way that
7:52 pm
somebody would who lives in paris. um and meanwhile, but they had sources of pride that are beyond anything. anything any of us have ever gone through . they were showing me an intersection that during rush hour traffic had been hit with a missile and left the 20 ft crater and on her phone. she was showing me what it looked like that day, and then they had it fixed four days later, and they stoplights worked again and cars were driving and they just went back to living. and i've never seen defiant life. just absolutely they were going to restaurants were in armored cars going around the city prior to go into the presidential area to say hello and do some more meetings there, and i'm looking out the window at school kids and raincoats with backpacks. going home, walking up the street after school. and i guess i don't know what i thought i'd see. but i guess that's what you do right you go. you live your
7:53 pm
life in between the sirens, i guess, but i would say that just hearing you describe it and everything that we've heard about the ukrainian people over the past year, their resiliency does seem to be in a different league. they just seem to be stronger than anybody any of us can imagine. and so, brad, what was it like to meet with president zelensky? well, it's ah. pretty surreal because there's an honesty and a humility to him. that is sort of . it's disarming in the sense that the amount of weight on his shoulders at this point is probably just inconceivable to all of us. but it's the man was an actor and a comedian, and i haven't sat down and talked to somebody that seemed anymore genuine, so it's an interesting thing to see him rise to this. i feel like he this is a strange situation where it's almost like
7:54 pm
it's he was the one guy that that could do this or something, and i think the thing though, that that i saw and all of it really was every single person from him on down. i was thanking me. as a as an american citizen. thank you tell the people of america thank you, and also another aspect of it that i was left with more than anything. they just want to be us so bad. they want this. they want everything that we take for granted. meaning freedom. oh, yeah, as well as the fact that they really you know they they had it for a minute. they were getting their they had. you know , when i was right around the city, there's a nike store. there's you know, there's restaurants open. people are doing these things. and they don't want to go back. to whatever it was before they want to be. they want to be a free nation in a democracy at all
7:55 pm
costs time you were here. our friend frank lawrence, one of our panelists offered you $10,000 for the charity. if you would have coffee with him has that happened. it has not happened yet. so i'm he did. he did reach out and he said, tell me where to write the check, and i'm going to do that. as soon as i can be in the same city as him. he's also fascinating. i want to pick his brain and see that the stories he must have, right. i mean, you know a few of them for sure. the conversation between you two. i wasn't kidding that i'm going to be at the next table with like a menu listening in because i think it'll be a great meeting between the two of you, and i'm glad that that's still happening so um, brad, you should be there for sure. well i'm gonna tell frank that that's a must fred. it's great to see you. it's great to hear all about this and great inspirational travel that you've done there and sharing it with us, and we really appreciate it and we look forward to what's next. thank you. and thanks to the senators , senator manchin, senator
7:56 pm
murkowski, senator kelly for taking me with them. they didn't have to, but i think they just wanted free entertainment. it was very nice to them. that's very cool. and any time we can say a bipartisan group of senators did something that's also very cool. they introduced me as the largest constituency among them, which was really nice. i'm not elected to anything. that's awesome. brad. great to see you. thanks so much. thank you. next some of our favorite reporters join me to give us the low down on the biggest stories that they are covering. for tomorrow. we've got the latest on the fox defamation trial and what's going on with justice clarence thomas why he's now changing his financial disclosure forms all of that and more when i join our panel, great to see you guys that's next. how to grow more vibrant flflowers. step one. fed them with miracle gro, shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro,
7:57 pm
you need to know to grow. is about to learn her fear of missing out leads to overeating . totally eat stuff to not miss out. and that's just a bit of psychology. evil learned from noon wait, sign up now at noon .com. the mosquitoes are just all over the backyard. quiet please. okay wow. they're good. okay got that one. what's going on? what a pro. i did get a pro or con pro. i got you. mosquitoes don't call any pro call the organ pro with over 120 years of experience, nobody's better. orkin, the best in pests . thanks for wasting my time. the first time you connected your go daddy website and 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
7:58 pm
first. starting today at go, daddy dot com future way you see it is said that depends on where you sit at x chair. we think it also gets down to how you use it, which is why our technology is light years ahead chair has done it again with our groundbreaking l. a max technology, providing hours of infinite comfort, no matter where in the world to your city. by synthesizing the universe's elements, bringing hot cold and touch into one extraordinary seating experience. our mission is to help you discover that every workday can happen with body and mind in and out of this world place of comfort and productivity is charting a new course, helping workers everywhere find comfort as their work world zoom back and forth. even though your work reality may continue to shift. we've got our eye on the future of work so you can focus on the present. gazing ahead from where we sit. the future still feels good. visit x chair dot com to find out how you can own an ex chair
7:59 pm
for only $20 a month x chair .com there's a new breed of hornet sweeping the nation. are you picking this up? country by swarm the all new dodge hornet. good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morning. i want to give you a sense of what it looks like to you and your team on the ground pressing for answers. it's really important. joining us now are two lawmakers from different sides of the aisle live in ukraine. this is my 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 palestiniank aches and
8:00 pm
88 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1235414771)