tv CNN This Morning CNN April 19, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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war in this country to give black americans the equal protection under the law that we failed to secure them in 17 76. but then you want to know what happened. southern states passed anti gun laws that stopped black people from owning guns, the democrat party then as and now wanted to put them back in chains. then as in now, that's quite an accusation about the current democratic party. who and what were you referring to? i was referring to joe biden and his expression of wanting to put them back in chains dating back to lyndon johnson. i think lyndon johnson's so called great society was one of the greatest misnomers in american political history even back then, in the 19 sixties, 70% plus of black kids were born into the two parent homes. today. that number is less than 30% in the opposite direction, the very policies that we implemented in this country in the name of helping black americans have actually been disastrous for black americans and all americans, and i think that that's something
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that we need to wake up to 18 65 year talking about the black codes, right? that's right, enacted to make it a crime for a black person to carry a gun in the south. but you're equating that to the current president, you're referring to economic change? what are you saying? i was referring to joe biden's. i think ill chosen expression to say they're the party that wants to put you back into chains. what i'm actually saying is that if you look at the policies of the modern democratic party democrats, absolutely. so what i'm saying is that actually, it's policies like that of lyndon johnson and joe biden that are actually holding black americans back the war on poverty yes, and in particular, his great society where he actually created incentives in the family. where if you're a family. you could actually get more money by not having the father in the home. what you get you get what you pay for. i think it's been really bad for the black community. i think it's really bad for all americans. what do you have anything on this before i move on to china. don't see what one has to do with the other. but go on. i took up a lot of time with fox's fine. we have time don't
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really see what one has to do with the other, especially consider and using the civil war to talk about black americans. that war was not fought for black people to have guns. that's that's that's not for black people to have freedoms in this country. actually that's why the civil war was fought. okay part about it for black people to have guns, i think actually, you don't know, funny fact is black people did not get to enjoy the other freedoms until their second amendment rights were secured. and i think that that's one of the lessons that we learned allowed to enjoy the freedoms disagree with you on that. don i disagree with that? i think you're doing a disservice to our country, failing to recognize the fact that we have any black a lot and you live in this country than you can disagree with me. but we're not you mentioned in there that we agree different shapes and we have to be able to talk about these issues in the open, regardless of the color of our skin. black americans today to say that compare that to 18, 65 and 1964 to compare it to 65 1960 in this country. i think it's insulting to black people. it's insulting to me as an african american. i don't want to sit there and argue with you because it's infuriating for you to put that to put those things
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together. it's not right. you're telling of history is wrong. your what? your history was wrong. part of the civil war was fought. you're making people think that the civil wars fought for black people only for black people to get guns and for black people to have civil war was fought for black people in this country to get freedoms a noble mission. and i think that even after even after we succeeded, we had to actually secure those freedoms to reduce it. in a speech at the nra to say you're making people think. are you trying to say that black people to get guns? that would that? that was the reason that you're there at the nra? that was the reason for the civil war ducted . it's not productive done. there are a whole plan reasons that for the respect i find, i find your explanation, reductive and actually insulting, including the black americans to say that black people today compared to 1964 18 65 haven't made progress in part because of the freedoms we secured and the second amendment was hang on, please. i cannot keep a thought. if you guys are talking in my ear so hang on one second, so to
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say that that black people would say what you said again. black people secured their freedoms after the civil war is a historical fact. don just study it only after their second amendment rights were secured, secured their freedoms after the civil war, that it's not your you are discounting reconstruction of discounting a whole host of things that happened after the civil war when it comes to african americans, including the whole reason that the civil rights movement happens because black people did not secure their freedoms after the civil war, and that things turned around. people tried to change the freedoms that were supposed to know how they got it. they got their second amendment rights, and they actually got the nra played a big role in that, but today down the road, not play a big role in black americans. firearms that's a lie that's not raided, not play a big role in historical fact, historical fact the part that i find it's historical fact that i find insulting is when you say today, black americans don't have those rights after we have gone through civil rights revolution in this country are sitting here telling an african american about the rights and what you find insulting about the way i lived the skin. i live in every day. here's where you and i have
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a different point of black and white that black people don't have in this country and that black people do have. well, here's where you and i have a different point of view. i think we should be able to express our views. regardless of the color of our skin. we should have this debate regarding you as a black man that you're regarding you as a fellow citizen here, whatever ethnicity your splaining to me like to be black, whatever ethnicity. i'll tell you what i am. i'm an indian american. i'm proud of it. but i think we should have this debate. black white doesn't matter. content of the ideas. what you should do it in an honest way, and in a fair way, and what you're doing is not an honest and fair way. we appreciate you coming on to respect dot i look forward to continuing that conversation. thank you. conversation. thank you. thank you, poppy. talk about china. about time you come back. thank you, much to say on declaring independence from china. you can thank you. thank you. thank you in just hours the man accused of leaking highly classified pentagon documents will appear in a detention hearing to determine whether he should remain in custody. we're talking about 21 year old jack
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to share he has been held since his arrest last week after documents with top secret information on the war in ukraine and other u. s intelligence has surfaced online he faces 15 years in prison. our jason carroll joins us live this morning just ahead of this hearing. he's outside of the federal courthouse. in boston. jason good morning. what will we see? good morning to popular likely to hear from prosecutors during the detention hearing as to why jack to share a should not be let out on bail. namely that argument being that what he's accused of doing if he's let out he's likely to do it again. the legal experts that we've spoken to say it's really a high bar here that the chances of him getting out on bail are slim at best. the judge here has a lot to consider, including in terms of is this defendant a flight risk? is he in some way a danger to himself or to others in the community, the defense for its part when it argues
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about bail could say, look, bail is appropriate here, and perhaps it's appropriate. with certain conditions such as the defendant will not have access to the internet or social media or to a phone, no access to guns. so these are some of the things that might be considered. once this attention hearing gets underway all of this happening, as the air force has now announced that the air national guard unit where to share was based in cape cod, has been stripped of its intelligence duties temporarily. well an investigation takes place. so the security fallout happening on that. at end as we await this detention hearing to get underway on our end that's expected at 11 a.m. poppy one will be watching this so closely because he hasn't even put in a please. yet, right, jason? thank you very much. another story that everyone is watching new concerns this morning for the aviation industry ahead of the summer travel spike. just yesterday, southwest delayed hundreds of flights nationwide,
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the airline said technical issues forced a ground stop and meantime, boeing ceo has announced the company will have to delay delivering some of its new planes. the least stems from a problem with new 7 37 max jetliners and this morning on capitol hill. we're expecting a warning from an industry leader. there's about to be a tsunami of pilot retirements. they're saying soon as aviation correspondent pete mountain live for us in washington this morning. good morning, pete. what are we looking at here? good morning. don. you know this is particularly bad at the regional airlines the pilot shortage crisis. it's an industrywide problem, but it's hitting small cities the hardest and the head of the regional airline association will tell house committee today that this issue is getting worse all the time, especially with retirements coming on the horizon as tsunami of retirements, she says, she says in the next 15 years, 50% of all commercial airline pilots will retire, making the problem even worse for malarkey. black is says, is that the under 30 corps
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. the airlines is only at 8% right now. this means more delays and cancelations for you and also cities losing service. 42 states, she says, have less service now than before the pandemic. 11 airports have lost lost service completely and making matters worse. 500 planes are now sitting idle malarkey, black says, because there's just simply no pilots to fly them. the solution that is going to be laid out today in front of this house committee is raising the retirement age, a very controversial topic in the airline community from 65. that's the mandatory federal retirement age right now to 67 years old, so we will see as this unfolds done. this is a very tricky topic and something that the airline industry needs to get a handle on, especially with more pilots leaving the industry. alright, we'll be watching. thank you. pete appreciate that. fox news has agreed to pay any enormous a historic price for broadcasting conspiracy theories about the
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2020 election. the network reaching a last minute settlement with dominion voting systems for more than $787 million. they struck the right agreement. destructive agreement . i should say right before right before the defamation trial was about to begin. dominions lawyers say it's a victory for truth and democracy . dominion tell cnn that the deal does not require fox news anchors to go on air and tell viewers that they lied. here's what fox said in the statement when the news broke i do have a statement from fox. neil we're pleased to have reached a settlement of our dispute with dominion voting systems. we acknowledge the court's rulings finding certain claims about dominion to be false. the sun won't reflects foxes continued commitment to the highest journalistic standards want to give you now? a small sample of the broadcasts. i've got fox news broadcasts that got fox news in trouble. here it is. sydney we talked about the dominion software. i know that there were voting irregularities
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tell me about that. electronic voting machines didn't allow people to vote apparently, and that whatever you think of it, the cause of it, it shakes people's faith in the system that is an actual threat to democracy. and this morning we're hearing from the ceo of dominion voting systems. watch this there was an acknowledgement and certainly it's not the way i wrote it, um and i had some conversations with our team. my co founder and i and at the end of the day, the court system really is about accountability. we feel we got it. and all of the facts that we had discovered during the case had already come to light. joining us now lead counsel for dominion. justin nelson. justin thank you so much for your time this morning. thank you. good morning. hi. good morning. i think one of the big questions this morning is sort of. how do
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you put a price tag on trust in us democracy, right? you can't put a price on that is one of our colleagues writes on cnn this morning. was this about money for dominion. or is this about truth? well, i think it was really our two goals were accountability and to get compensation for this massive amount of harm that occurred to the company and i think we achieved both on the truth on the accountability over the past few months, you've seen this mountain of evidence that has been revealed and texts and emails. that really show that in fact, fox new fox knew that it was lies and the statement that fox released yesterday acknowledged the court's order that called these falls. this was the first time that a court has held that the election lies were in fact lies. and this was the first time that someone has been held accountable in the
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form of a nearly $800 million payment for that. it is also, of course, a civil litigation, and it's about making my client hole and although this does not make my client hole is a step in that direction, and instead of going for years to appeal and the verdict, we got an $800 million settlement nearly $100 million settlement. and we're proud of what we did, and we do think it's a victory both for truth and for accountability. let's talk a little bit more about that, justin because in the statement, fox says, this is just part of it. we acknowledge the court's rulings finding certain claims about dominion to be false. they didn't exactly say that they lied and there is a among the public. there is a feeling that it may have been better. justin for the fox news anchors and their, um their leaders their management to take the stand to acknowledge the lies publicly that that would have sent a stronger message. what do you say to that? well i
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would say that there was that acknowledgement and i would also say that in the civil litigation system, we could have gotten a 10 20 billion. you name the billion dollar award, and they still wouldn't have had apologized or to go on air to say that they were wrong. what we can do in a civil litigation system is to bring accountability by exposing the truth. and by having compensation for the harm that occurred on that we accomplished both by a wide margin. would you have preferred if you could have gotten your druthers to have the fox news anchors and, um folks on air say you know what we lied or at least bit. having had them to have them have to make a statement. would you have preferred that? it's always bittersweet when you settle a case because you think you have a great case. the issue is, of course, there's always risk in going to a jury trial and my
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client. really these employees have dominion have been so incredibly harmed. and they still get threats, death threats they it's really difficult for the company to be operating, and so for them to have the settlement really does mean a lot and remember, this is just the first step. we have six other cases against other defendants, who are some of them are still lying about the election. and so what we think and what really proud of is that this really is the first time that someone has been held accountable for the results and the lies that were told after the 2020 election. other defendants who might that be? well we have a case against newsmax. we have a case against one american news. and then, of course, we have cases against sidney powell and mike lindell and my pillow and rudy giuliani and patrick byrne. and so we think that we will continue to hold people accountable for the lies that they told. i mean,
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look, ultimately, misinformation is not going away. the truth does not no red or blue. and what we have to do is really if we're going to have this shared experiment in democracy, we have to have a common commitment to facts. and we can disagree. we can have different opinions, even on our most profound issues . but if we are not able to agree on facts, then that is when we're going to have these just bubbles of where we don't talk to each other. and what happened to dominion is it just got swept in this torrent of lies where it was in this alternative universe? and i do hope that this really does send a message that it is so important to tell the truth and that if you don't tell the truth lies have consequences. and i think this is what it is tablet and that is why there is accountability. today there's accountability to dominion and there's accountability to democracy. um. justin former fox
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news anchor gretchen carlson tweeted a few days ago, please do not settle your about to prove something very big. she of course, was successful not only against in her litigation against fox news but in arbitration, but in changing the law when it comes to secret mandatory arbitration. i just wonder if there are things about fox's lies and how they conducted themselves behind closed doors. that now the public will not know because there has been there will be no trial. well i think that what you saw in the past couple of months that has come out in our summary judgment briefing, and that already is public has really revealed behind the scenes that fox did know that these were lies. that was a really big question going into this box really know it. did the anchors who are saying it really believe it. and i think that we've seen the evidence. we've seen the evidence from these crazy emails that started it all
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to people saying that sidney powell was lying to the motive that occurred and this was all in black and white and documents that have been revealed. so would the trial have put on that same evidence, of course, but at the end of the day i think the accountability came from what already has happened over the last months, and, of course, the payment itself having a nearly $800 million payment, really, i think sends a strong message about what it means to lie. justin nelson. thank you for your time. we'll be following those. i think six other cases that you are lead counseling as well as this progresses. thanks very, very much. thanks, justin. thank you very much. appreciate it. so we're gonna move on now and talk about the white homeowner accused of shooting a black teenager who rang his doorbell is already out on bail. the mayor of kansas city says that the teen was shot for simply existing while black. he's going to join us live that's next. the biggest sale of
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like me? i'm a hard worker with a five year plan. i like whatever sports team you do don't business. all i want to do is make your daughter happy. thank you wonder whether people with all the answers get all the answers. ask markham accountants and advisors. you're getting word that lester had bonded out. $200,000 bomb was set. it's not the kind of bond that necessarily will keep someone for a very long time. it's frustrating. we don't want him out, but we understand that's part of the process. so that was ralph norris and the attorney reaction to the news that the homeowner who shot the team is out on bail, and you saw his aunt shake her head there. 84 year old andrew lester faces two felony charges, assault in the first degree and armed criminal action for last thursday shooting. investigators say he shot the 16 year old twice once in the head once in the arm, and the teenager mistakenly rang the doorbell to his house. thinking his siblings were there. ralph underwent surgery to remove the
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bullet from his brain. i want you to listen to how the family attorney described as injuries. the truth is, he was shot at point blank range from less than five ft. away, head on and was struck in this temple. the bullet entered his skull and fragmented near the frontal, upper left lobe of his brain. thursday night, doctors were scraping off bullet fragments off his brain. saturday he was released from the hospital. the fact that i spoke with him today and sat down and had a conversation with him, vice president kamala harris had a conversation with him today, where he was fluid where he was amicable, where he was funny, consistent with his character is truly a miracle. joining us now the mayor of kansas city, missouri, and that is quintin lucas mayer. thank you so much for joining us really appreciate it. i have to say to our viewers . i noticed that both times when i talked about his injuries, and when lee merritt spoke about the injuries, i saw you wince and shake your head. what's up? it's
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unbelievable when you think about why this happened. this is a boy, a child who rang the doorbell and ended up shot in the head. it is one of the most astonishing shameful stories that i think i've heard about, and sometimes anywhere in the country, frankly, and just for the grace of god, this this young man is alive today. but i cannot imagine the recklessness irresponsibility that's within the heart and the mind of the defendant. in this case, have you been able to speak to the family or ralph at this? um since it happened, and what are they saying? what's this condition? i talked to ralph's mother, and she is a strong woman. if you think about all that has transpired in her life in the last week, something that a normal mother anywhere in america almost anywhere in the world might do and saying, hey, go pick up your little brother's , you know, make sure they get home. ralph's off doing the
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right thing. and then you have this woman who is worried about her son getting back to school, getting back to some sense of normalcy and understanding the pain that he is going through and the pain that an entire community he is going through last night, also visited with members of the local liberian community. hard working people who moved to kansas city who many of whom have moved to neighborhoods like this one for the best opportunities for their children, knowing that they are majority white, but thinking that it is worthwhile in a way because there could be this great education. you wouldn't deal with these sorts of challenges. and seeing this today is something that i think concerns all of them and all of us. what do you think about him being released? the lester being released on bail. it's uh, it's a sign in some ways of justice and american attorney myself. i understand that i understand the way these things work, but but it's awful. it is unfortunate. that somebody who convinced an offense like this someone who i see as a threat to the public
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because i don't know what house he's in. right now. i don't know if that's a house at the next amazon driver or postal worker or campaign worker may knock on the door floor. and then what? and then what does somebody have to worry about? it is it is shameful in some ways that he gets to live this very normal life. but i understand it's part of this system that we have. which needs real tweaks. listen, i want to get some reporting on this because we understand. and can you confirm that lester's arraignment is today? is he going to be in court? will he appear? what we understand from the clay county public information officer for the prosecutor's office is that there will be an arraignment at 1 30 central time today. typically with that would be is requiring the defendant to come in. usually that's that statement of guilty or not guilty. other conditions set by the court, so that's at least what we're hearing now. no nothing further about whether mr lester will be there or his lawyer and others, but that's typically how these things would work. although i will note there
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have been elements of this that have been a typical yesterday, mr lester had the ability to surrender himself to the courthouse, something that a lot of other defendants charged with felony assault, of course, don't often have the opportunity to do. but he is scheduled to appear in court today for an arraignment. correct. that that's the indication. yes alright. so, listen. the real question is what took so long because he was released after just two hours the night of the shooting, despite missouri's law that allows police to detain a suspect for up to 24 hours, you along with the family are calling for an investigation. so what do you know what took so long? and what do you know about about that? so far. what we've heard is that there was a desire for more discussion, including with the victim. i think there have been many questions that have been presented in terms of whether that's something that needed to be done. i think there was ongoing question about that . and what i've said a few different times when i've talked to the police department about
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this that we need to welcome all questions. you know, open this transparency is the sort of thing that is important in these types of things. and i think there are people that are asking real questions and valid ones. i think there are people that recognize perhaps that there've been different victims at the victim's been me put myself on blast as a mayor, maybe it wouldn't take this long. and so we need to make sure everybody gets the same justice in this country in the state and in this city, and i understand that there are questions and how about that we need to make sure those are answered here in kansas city prosecutor did say that there was a race element involved. do you think there should be a hate crime charge? mayor yesterday. there were calls from a number of people in this community that went out to the united states attorney's office here in kansas city and the fbi to ask those questions. i don't think that more investigation has ever a bad thing. i don't know if the legal elements can be fulfilled on a hate crimes charge here, but i know very simply is that this defendant and the probable cause statement is indicated to have said it was afraid of ralph
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because he is a tall black man was the fear thought he was six ft. tall, he's 58. i thought he was in some way. menacing or scary. i don't think that was true. and i think that this has everything to do with race. the defendant's fear of black people , black men, black boys, and i think that's why we are all discussing this now, for some reason, right, because it it is something that is tragic. and i think that if the young man wasn't black, we wouldn't be here today. quentin lucas mayer . thank you. i wish that we were seeing each other under better circumstances we appreciate you appear. yeah. yes, sir. thank you. thank you. happy thank you. for that, of course, will keep very close track of that, as it develops. meantime this it may sound like your favorite singer , but it is not a head the new viral trend of songs being made with artificial intelligence. what are the legal and ethical issues at play? that's next?
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today and go daddy .com. let it rain, randi. that's how you make like it never even happened. happens pro today history in the making beginning today, bringing you the news, disturbing new details. new way of questions. still the stories at the center of your day coming in right here central today at nine eastern she loves first, isn't it time troubled. would you like to come and save the world with us?
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yeah. drake in the weekend, right? no no, not in fact, they had nothing to do with what you just heard. the viral song was made with artificial intelligence replicating the artist voice, so to reiterate what you just heard. it was fake. for real? yeah, i fake real, you know, it's not that it's not memorex, and it's not them. the song has been taken down from various streaming sites due to a copyright claim by universal music group that represents, of course, drake and the weekend, umg wrote this we have a moral and commercial responsibility to our artists to work to prevent the unauthorized use of their music and the stop platforms from ingesting content that violates the rights of artists and other creators. we expect our platform partners will want to prevent their services from being used. in ways that harm artists. the artist who generated that song ghostwriter, 977 commented on
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tiktok writing. i was a ghostwriter for years and got paid close to nothing just for major labels to profit. the future is here. our guests are nodding, so we're going to get into that neither drink nor the weekend of commented on this recent ai generated song. but just last week, drake spoke out about another ai generated song that mimicked his voice, saying , this is the final straw. a with perspective on all of it. we're joined by two experts in this space. julie slavin and also dj has stepped friend and entertainment and managing executive producer ian schwartzman. guys thanks very, very much for being here. why were you? why were you nodding? um what do you guys think? well first of all, i think that that we don't know. if drake is involved in this or not, he's had a lot to say about a. i his record. labor was somewhat vague . and this is this. the release of a new project with a i with drake in the weekend. we don't yet know your show last night. yesterday was all about this.
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that's right. so you're deep in on it. big timing on this show music is therapy. it's about music and about motions and emotions. and i will tell you is my listeners do not like this. they do not like a i they are afraid they feel connected to their favorite artists and a deep personal way. you can't put a picture of an ai on your wall . you can't dream about your ai picking you out of the crowd and marrying you. you know, a i never went through a heartbreak. i never was alone. a i can't say things better than you can. i mean, it does sound fake? right remember the whole thing when digital music started to come in, and people say, well, it doesn't sound like the album. the album is that which texture and the ai sounds fake. that's sort of the same thing right? you can't really connect to it. you can't always say perfection is boring. and then a. i is boring. i don't mean to interrupt, but go no. go on, disagree with you. alright good can relate to it, and i think that it's just as good as music that's made in a studio when you're sitting there. uh with your favorite artist watching them create. the difference is
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very slim to none at at this point when you hear a song you like you're either attracted to it or you're not. and when i heard the weekend and drake, the ghost written record that's created through artificial intelligence. i thought to myself. wow this is a record that they actually collaborated on. this is their marketing rollout. and this records actually coming to the market. julie, is it just copying what drake and the weekend did? can can it be creative? have a soul create music from that soul are all the important questions right? if you're feeding the songs into the algorithm, if you're feeding the songs that are already created into the algorithm, and it's spinning something else out, and then you're feeding it back in and it's spitting something else out. it's not innovating. right it might sound the same. here's an argument. it might sound the same. but does it feel the same to your point about it being hollow about it? not being human. how does it make you feel? but it is artificial intelligence. so it learns from the actual people, and it actually doesn't supposedly
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makes it better. right good could make it better artists because you represent artists and actors. do you have artists who are clients were involved in this represent music producers, some of which you think this is absolutely outrageous and don't not yet, but i think that there are people who are forward looking, and then there's people who are operating under archaic methods that are scared of having their jobs and potential incomes affected by what artificial intelligence could mean for the future of music, production and creation. i personally look at this as an opportunity for artists to create new revenue streams and a new rights. category that doesn't exist yet. i'm sorry. how do you create a new revenue stream? if it's something else doing? you understand what i'm saying? because right now with a i generated music, there's somebody else that's in putting the words in lyrics into a machine and then an actual song comes out. if that song is not under the rights that a label has rights, too, then this is a
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new rights category that the artist can then clean and that could generate money. i mean this weekend and drake's song probably accumulated 50 million plus records in the 48 hour time spend before the record labels were able to take it down off all the dsps if that was left to earn money, and the artists had rights to the to that recording than they would have effectively made a lot of money that they didn't has also talked about this opportunity. maybe for blockchain. you've talked about watermark sort of digital signatures on a i think that's really important. what are we not asking you that we should be talking about? i think when you talk about your revenue streams, i think it can be. i think the interesting place to look is. how can fans harness this technology i think about kim kardashians game. remember? she did kim kardashian hollywood 20 years ago and you can spend money and you can act as if you're kim kardashian, khloe or kourtney or whomever i wonder. can you subscribe? can you use eminem? like david guetta, the
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eminem verse generator. can i pay a certain amount of money and play in the game of being a record producer at home? if i have no musical ability and say, i want eminem to write a verse about my best friend, and can i , you know, send in some money to eminem or to his label or to the company. where does the money go? that's creative to me , that's cool, and it's not stealing and it's not putting someone out of work. and i think there is a different kind of to use your word soul. in doing something that i could talk about this for this is fascinating. hester prynne. print print print just looking at the prompter. you know, it looks like an e in schwartzman. thank thank you made up your friend of the show. i no, i think you made us cooler. just being in your presence and thank you guys. thank you. thank you. appreciate it. you both of you this story a great story this morning for you. buffalo bill safety tomorrow. hamlin has been cleared to return to football with doctors and mar are saying this morning. some people might
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say that coming back to play might not be the best option. um but that's their opinion. and like i said, i've been being statistics my whole life, so i like my chances here. sunday nights. we're trying somethingna little differentnt one whole sty . what's startling is the sheer number of migrants on this track . one whole hour. world's best journalists dig deeper is san francisco have failed city stories. they can't ignore the godzilla get mad and go kill that thing. go in depth every sunday night. there are people willing to take risks. then they're gonna be people that left behind. the whole story with anderson cooper sunday at eight on cnn. the only thing i regret about my life is that i did what everyone else did at the time. i hired localalent. if i knew about up work, i would have hired actually talented
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eastern ukraine. cnn. died on national tv in front of the whole world. i lost a bunch of people in my life. i know a bunch of people who lost people. in their lives, and i know that feeling, you know, so that right? there is just the biggest blessing of it all is for me to still have my people and my people still have me. really so happy for him. buffalo bill's safety tomorrow, hamlin says he is happy to be alive and happy to be cleared to return to the nfl. he said he died on live tv right when that happened three months ago, hamlin went into cardiac arrest mid game after a routine tackle. he sustained a blow to the chest stood up and then immediately collapsed to the ground. hamlin confirms that amedeo or camo show, courtis caused his cardiac arrest. it is a rare phenomenon when severe trauma to the chest disrupts the heart's rhythm and can even cause sudden death. so joining
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us now sending medical correspondent dr sanjay gupta, he's back with us. thank you for joining us a different topic this morning, doctor. we appreciate it. so walk us through what happened with him. is it amedeo commercial? in the beginning? we were people were saying both yeah, it's come, oshawa, but you're right. people do often say both commercials. the correct pronunciation. it was. it was an emotional thing to watch that right when i was watching that game, i love sports. i'm a doctor and then to watch what happened and that remarkable resuscitation. it was like being inside a hospital, even though it was on a football field in terms of what they were able to do. but what happens here now? as you mentioned, the diagnosis was confirmed commercial courtis. think of it like this. here's here's a heart prop. hearts constantly beating and relaxing, beating, relaxing . it's happening all the time. what happens with commercial curtis is that right at the time, the heart is about to relax from beat to relax. it takes a blow to the chest and that chest causes these issues where the heart really can't
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relax as a result of that, and instead starts to fib, relate and go into an irregular heartbeat, which can lead to the cardiac arrest that can happen what i just described just like that, and in a split second second, which is what we saw. and what we now know happened to them are on that football field again. you saw that resuscitation with the with the aedes being applied cpr all of that. it made a difference. i think in terms of where we are today, 3.5 months later, we'll never forget your piece going up to buffalo with those doctors and sort of showing us exactly how sort of perfect right execution wise to save his life. sanjay what do you what do you say to folks? tamar said in this press conference. i know some people think this is too soon. i shouldn't go back and play medically. what do you what do you say to that? i realize it can seem surprising to people considering what you know. everyone witnessed again on live tv. but the last 3.5 months have been filled with all sorts of evaluations to try and make this
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conclusion different types of tests different, you know, looking at his structural abnormalities. are there any of his heart looking at his electrical rhythms? what they can say now is that his heart function is normal and that he did not have an underlying cause, either anatomically or electrically, so, in essence, what they're saying by saying he can return to play is that his risk is really no greater than someone else. like him a 25 year old professional athletes the general population risk, that's why they're clearing him. you remember everything. i've had forgotten that. what? sanjay that's her memories crazy. that sounds reporting. yeah thanks. hope it stays that way, doctor. thank you very much because she graduated so many years after you, don oh, he's joking. um thank you, sanjay. we're so happy for tomorrow. his whole family cannot wait to see him back on the field as you get ready to head to your 9 to 5. we are diving into data on how
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satisfied are we all with our jobs? harry antin. this morning's number of music in this show today, partner. from tried and true to try something new. so many ways to save life by whole foods market is a3 65 better way to remodel your tub, custom made water, tight fit and high quality materials mean a beautiful tub and a great value that fitter it just fits better .com to book your free consultation. 92% still active seems high. seriously it's just a bike weight. they make a treadmill with an intuitive speed knob. yeah i want to try 2% stick with it. so can you start a 30 day home trial today? terms apply. one prilosec otc each morning heartburn all day
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customized the cut with three interchangeable blades cuts for over an hour on a single charge ego exclusively at lowe's ego authorized dealers. the leader of a high end office furniture company has earned herself the nickname pity the pity city ceo . her name is andy owen from the company miller knoll during a video town hall. an employee asked her quote. how can we stay motivated if we're not going to get a bonus? this is what the ceo said this is her answer. don't ask about what are we going to do? if you don't get a bonus? get the down $26 million . spend your time and your effort thinking about the $26 million we need and not thinking about what you're gonna do. if we don't get a bonus. i had an old boss who said to me one time you can visit pity city, but you can't live there. so people leave pity city. let's get it done. that is a clip the one
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viral, according to securities and exchange commission filings . the ceo there indio and took home $5 million in compensation stock and a bonus, a spokesperson for the company told us here at cnn that her comments owns comments were taken out of context. of course we welcome her to join us on the show. this brings us to the question. just how satisfied are americans when it comes to their jobs? senior data reporter harry antin is here at the mornings. magic number. i know you love your job because you literally hop across the studio. that's exactly right for you. sir, i prefer kitty city. remember that story? i used to go there as a kid. it was a toy store. any event? alright so this morning's number is 45 45% of americans say their job gives them a sense of identity. but 54% said, it's just a job. this is, according to the latest poll numbers back in 2021. why this is so interesting. this 45% is because i want you to take a look at this trend line of your job is more than just a job. it gives you a sense of identity back in 1989. it was 57% in the nineties
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55% 2053% 10 2050% and it is now dropped all the way down to 45% so there's clearly more fewer americans saying that their job is more than just a job. it gives you a sense of identity. more americans think it's just a job and take a look here who thinks their job gives them a sense of identity. 2021 this is another interesting little nugget high school graduates. just 33% versus post grads 54% i think these folks may have it more right on the whole even though i love my job, but if i had any other job then i think it would probably be just a job. is it good, though? i mean for your job to give you a sense of identity, and i don't know. i mean, i guess for it's a different question. is it fulfilling than giving you a sense of you know how much do you really love your job? is it really a part of you? i think that's ultimately the question for me. it's a part of me. it's what i always wanted to do. glad you're doing it every morning here with us. thank you very, very, very much. thank you.
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moment brought to you by viking exploring the world in comfort. today a toddler crawled through the fencing outside the white house. at first secret services, those people together. i mean, we're laughing, but when it happened, one guy was like operation baby was a success. operation baby was indeed a successfully do it like a russian accent. i don't know what it was called through a white house fence yesterday, setting off security alerts, and you can see two secret service police officers carrying the tiny trespasser who was quickly reunited with his parents. thank goodness for that. can you imagine if you were the parents, though? ah we're glad you were with us today. we'll be right back here tomorrow morning. cnn news. central starts now.
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