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tv   The Daily Show With Trevor Noah  Comedy Central  September 17, 2020 1:15am-2:00am PDT

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of police reforms including a housing credit for officers to live in low-income housing, to live in the communities they police; creating a program to include social workers for assistance on police runs; a commanding officer to review search warrants before the officer seeks a judicial warrant. those are some pretty serious reforms for the police department. >> trevor: okay, there's a lot going on right here, so let's try to break it down. in what might be a first, the city of louisville has agreed not just to pay a settlement to breonna taylor's family, but also to enact a number of police reforms to try and prevent something like this from happening ever again. for instance, from now on, a commanding officer has to attach their name for a search warrant before it goes to a judge, which hopefully means they'll be more careful about which raids they approve, because now they can be held accountable. also, every raid will now include paramedics, so that if someone does get shot, somebody is on hand to try and save their
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life, unlike what happened with breonna taylor, who was left on the ground after being shot for 20 minutes. another reform is that officers will now be incentivized to live in the communities they police. which is a step in the right direction. i'll be hont with you. i can't even believe police are allowed to live outside the areas they patrol. you would think they would have an invested interest in the communities they live. living in the country he's in charge of-- which i know, technically, putin does with america, but you know what i'm saying. and, obviously, a large part of this settlement is the $12 million paid to breonna taylor's family, which is a record for the most money louisville has ever paid for police misconduct. but, honestly, that's not really the type of records we want black people to be setting. and the thing that's messed up about these settlements is it's never paid by the police who did something wrong. it's paid by the city.
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which which means taxpayers are being punished for the crimes committed against them, which is as for the police department. this was a big step forward. i don't think you should take the killing of an innocent person for police departments to make commonsense reforms. they should be doing this on their own. the time to install a smoke detector is not while your house is on fire. yes, the city of louisville has made moves to atone for what happened to breonna taylor, and in some ways, this is a victory. but really the true victory will be when no more families have to get settlements for the loved ones they lost. all right, let's move on from police brutality to another scourge of 2020, facebook-- the place your uncle goes to investigate the kennedy
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assassination. there's no denying that although facebook publicly denounces hate speech and misinformation, it's also become a big part of their business, which is why today, hundreds of celebrities have teamed up to send a message to the zuck. >> kim kardashian west and other celebrities say that they are freezing their instagram accounts today to protest how its parent company, facebook, has handled misinformation and hate speech. kardashian west has 188 million instagram followers. other celebrities freezing their accounts for the day include katy perry, leonardo dicaprio, and jennifer lawrence. it's part of the "stop hate for profit" campaign that has pressured facebook to remove hate speech. some have criticized the celebrity instagram freeze as a stunt saying it's not much of a sacrifice. >> trevor: okay, this is an interesting one. on the one hand, i agree with people who say it might not be a huge sacrifice to not post on social media for one day. i mean, for people who have spectrum, a day with no internet
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is just part of their lives. but on the other hand, you have to admit all these giant accounts freezing their posts on the same day creates a huge amount of attention to hate speech online. and anything, anything that brings awareness to this issue-- which is radicalizing young men, misinforming the public, and undermining democracy-- is a really good thing. because, guys, next to climate change and income inequality, online toxicity could become one of the things that rips society apart. right now, there are fake accounts that exist just to piss you off. fake accounts that try to get black people and white people to hate each other. people spreading conspiracies about vaccines, sex trafficking, and the holocaust. as we've seen in india, myanmar, and even kenosha wisconsin, hate that started online can easily cross over into the real world. so look, maybe this one-day boycott isn't the silver bullet, but at least it's a step in the right direction. and it's also good because maybe for a day, we can finally stop
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obsessing over stupid things like celebrities' butt pics and start focusing on important things, like our friends' butt pics. so kudos to kim kardashian for taking part in this massive event. but if you ask me, taking some time off the internet could also be good for kanye. he could finally get back to his roots, forget the likes and retweets, and just urinate on stuff for the love of the game. but let's move on to our big story, because while the world is falling apart, there's still a presidential election in just 48 days. so let's catch up in our ongoing coverage of votegasm 2020. today's campaign coverage kicks off with joe biden, former vice president and your favorite politician ever for the next 48 days. recent polls have shown that, compared to previous democratic nominees, biden isn't doing as well with hispanic voters, which is why yesterday, biden went to florida and unveiled his plan to win them over: a new
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ringtone. >> i just have one thing to say. hang on here. ( "despacito" playing on smartphone ) >> there you go. >> dance a little bit, joe. come on. ( laughter ) >> i tell you what. if i had the talent of any one of these people, i'd be elected president by acclamation." ( laughter ) >> trevor: aww, yeahhh, everybody get on the dance floor... and now keep movin', toward the exit... no one should have to see this. but, yes, at a hispanic-outreach event in florida yesterday, biden pulled out his phone and played a few seconds of the song "despacito," which you probably saw online. people are like, "this is how biden thinks he's going to
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connect with hispanic voters? what a pandering racist!" what you probably didn't see online is the context: biden had just been introduced by luis fonsi, the singer of "despacito," who talked about how the song "proved to him that in this country we won't be defined by our differences." and then people took the clip out of context and were like, "oh, no, we are definitely defined by our differences." and, look, i expect the internet to share clips out of context, but then president trump went ahead and shared a manipulated version of that clip, which made it seem like biden actually played "(bleep) tha police" on his phone. which will probably bump up biden's popularity on the left, but i don't think that's what trump was going for. and once again, this is a reminder: before you get angry about anything you see online, take it des-pa-ci-to. now, trump hasn't just been spending his time spreading misinformation on twitter, because while biden is looking to shore up hispanic voters, trump has been making a play for
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a demographic that he's been struggling with: people who don't want to die from coronavirus. which is why last night, the president of the united states and hooters diamond-club member took the rare step of sitting down for a town hall event that was not on fox news. and it seems like he might be just a little rusty taking questions from a less-than-adoring audience. >> the wearing of masks has proven to lessen the spread of covid. why don't you support a mandate for national mask wearing? and why don't you wear a mask more often? >> well, i do wear them when i have to and when i'm in hospitals and other locations. by the way, a lot of people don't want to wear masks. there are a lot of people think that masks are not good. and there are a lot of people that-- as an example, you have... >> who are those people? >> i'll tell you who those people are-- waiters. they come over and they serve you, and they have a mask. and i saw it the other day, where they were serving me, and they're playing with the mask. i'm not blaming them, i'm just saying what happens. they're playing with the mask, so the mask is over, and they're touching it, and then they're touching the plate.
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that can't be good. the concept of a mask is good, but it also does-- you're constantly touching it. you're touching your face, you're touching plates. there are people that don't think masks are good. >> trevor: okay, no, i'm sorry guys. i'm calling bullshit on this. first of all, the people in the window at mcdonald's are not called waiters. and, secondly, why is the president of a country with one of the highest corona death rates in the world still giving people room to doubt masks? it's so weird, because trump's followers will do anything he says, so why doesn't he just tell them to wear masks? ( as trump ) "masks are great for protecting your health, and you save precious time by not bronzing the lower part of your face." also, i'm really struggling to understand trump's logic here. because he's worried about a waiter breathing into their mask, then touching the mask, then touching the plate, then giving trump the plate, and then trump touching the plate and
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then touching his mouth, but trump isn't worried about the waiter just breathing directly into trump's mouth! ( waiter breathing hard ) "here's your order, sir." ( breathing ) basically, trump is ignoring the immediate threat to focus on a far-less-likely threat. if an asteroid was coming toward earth, trump would be like, ( as trump ) "don't blow it up. one of the pieces might fall into my mouth, and i'll choke on it!" oh, and just when you thought trump's answer on masks couldn't get any worse, wait till you hear who he blamed for the fact that more people aren't wearing them. >> but i will say this. they said at the democrat convention they're going to do a national mandate they never did it, because they've checked out, and they didn't do it. and a good question is you ask like, joe biden-- they, "said we're going to do a national mandate on masks." >> he's called on all governors to have them. there's a state responsibility-- >> well, no, but he didn't do it. i mean, he never did it. >> trevor: yeah, trump has a
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good point here. why hasn't joe biden instituted a national mask mandate? and don't say it's because he's not the president and doesn't have any power. that's not an excuse! guess what, donald: there's only man responsible for fixing all of america's problems, and it's not joe biden. it's jared kushner! look, guys, between this and blaming riots on joe biden, either trump is delusional, or he's just slowly trying to jedi mind trick america into thinking that biden has been president this whole time. ( as trump ) "guys, if you want four more years of this disaster, by all means, re-elect president biden. you saw how crazy it was! maybe this time you should pick an outsider!" hey, maybe i should start pulling this move, just blaming shit on people who have no
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nothing to do with anything. just walking into a 7-11 like, "you guys didn't set my dvr last night! i missed game 7 because of you!" now, i know a lot of you haters out there say that trump doesn't know what he's doing, and because of that, a lot of people are going to die. but that's not true. a lot of people are going to die because trump does know what he's doing. >> and we are going to be okay. we're going to be okau, and it is going away. and it's probably going to go away now a lot faster because of the vaccines. it would go away without the vaccine, george, but it's going to go away a lot faster with it. >> it would go away without the vaccine? >> sure, over a period of time. sure, with time, it goes away. >> and many deaths. >> and you'll develop-- you'll develop herd-- like a herd mentality. it's going to be-- it's going to be herd-developed, and that's going to happen. that will all happen. >> trevor: okay, there's a lot of things going on here that are funny. firstly, you can tell that he knows herd mentality is wrong, but he can't remember the right word, so then he tries herd-developed, which is also wrong. you can see in his head he's
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going through all the herds: "uhh, herd mentality? herd developed? heard it through the grapevine?" obviously, the phrase trump was trying to find was herd immunity. and what's funny about that is that for america to reach herd immunity, a couple million people would have to die, which i guess is one way to defeat the virus. so those are the latest updates from the campaign trail: one candidate, through willful ignorance, is going to be the reason hundreds of thousands of americans die. and the other candidate... played a song... on his phone.... so i don't know, guys, i can see why this is a tough call. all right, we need to take a quick break, but when we come back, lewis black will help you move to the suburbs, so stick around. t-mobile and sprint have merged. and t-mobile doesn't just have a bigger network, but a better one than ever before, with scam protection built into its core.
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covid-19! which is why i've temporarily relocated to suburban pennsylvania 7. it's weird out here. even their jews are christians! i don't get it! but i'm not the only one decamping to greener pastures. a lot of my fellow cowards have the same idea. >> a trend we're seeing in the
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age of covid-19, people packing up their things and moving to the country. >> the suburbs of new york are booming. home sales are up 44% compared to last year, while the number of properties society in manhattan dropped by more than half. >> that's right. new york loses a lot of its appeal when you can no longer do all of the things you used to do for fun, like paying $40 for a sandwich, or going to the garden to watch the knicks lose. and what's the point of exposing myself in public if i have to wear a mask! but the suburbs have their own rules and own customs that might be strange to newcomers. so to help my fellow city folk, i want to give some tips for adjusting to life as a suburban refugee. ♪ ♪ >> i know in the city most of your interaction with people is calling them assholes.
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but here in the suburbs, you have to be nice to everyone. so you're the asshole! for example, when you see your neighbor say, "hey, bob! how's the golf game going?" instead of, "hey, bob, what the ( bleep ) are you looking at!" also, if you see someone laying in the middle of the street passed out, you have to help them. apparently, just stepping over them like a human bottle is not a normal thing around here. so now that you got that, let's move on tip number two: the only people out walking in the suburbs are hikers and drug dealers. and you don't want to be mistaken for a hiker! so instead, go buy the biggest s.u.v. you can find. you want a vehicle with the same spekrrks the army uses in
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afghanistan. you never know when a trip to williams sonoma can go sideways. then once you have your personal tank, drive it everywhere. drive it to the grocery store, the park! the end of the driveway to get your mail! and then buy four more-- one for every one in the family. and if you dont have a family, buy one of those, too. you'll need them for all the s.u.v.s. ♪ ♪ don't forget to invite helen to your tupperware party. i know she talks too much about her sciatica, but she's the de facto leader of the homeowners association, and if you piss her off, good luck getting approval for your new mailbox. you gotta get in good with the right people. which brings me to tip number four: oh, yeah. you better believe they have gangs out here, but instead of the bloods or crips, they're called things like the p.t.a.,
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or book club. they're 1,000 times more vicious. last month, susan didn't finish her book in time, and now she's dead! forget sports cars. a clean, well-manicured lawn is how people in the suburbs measure their dicks. did you know you're supposed to mow your yard every week? i'd have never moved out here if i knew i had to give mother nature a brazilian. but you have to do it because the height of your grass is how the neighbors know the kind of person you are. three inches long, you're a pillar of the community. four inches, you're dealing with some stuff and you need to get your act together! five inches, that missing fifth grader is in your basement! so follow these tips and the
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only problem you'll have with suburban life will be the crushing loneliness! and, hey, if you ever miss the city, just do what i do: spritz the air with bottle of urine. oooh! mmmm! smells like home. back to you, trevor. >> trevor: thank you so much for that, lewis. it's time for a short break, but when we come back, i'll be talking to senator jon tester, about how de
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♪ vented where you want it. cool when you need it. coolzone™fly. from fruit of the loom®. ♪come on, come on (come on, come on)♪ ♪come on, come on (come on, come on)♪ ♪don't procrastinate, don't articulate♪ ♪girl, it's getting late, gettin' upset waitin' around♪ ♪a little less conversation, a little more action, please♪ ♪a little more bite and a little less bark♪ today's the day to get to your toyota dealer. but hurry, these powerful hybrids are going fast. toyota. let's go places >> trevor: welcome back to "the daily social distancing show."
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earlier today, i spoke with jon tester, he's a third-term democratic senator from montana. we talked about his new memoir, and his ideas for how democrats can win back white rural voters. check it out. senator tester, welcome to the "daily social distancing show." it's great to be with you virtually. >> trevor: you're one of the most interesting politicians in america because you're an organic farmer, a seasoned butcher, and you are the senator of a deeply red state, you know. you voted against neil gorsuch. you have stood up to many of donald trump's decisions, and, yet, people still vote for you. so are you a sign that america isn't as polarized as people think? or is your winning an exception to the rule? >> look, i think the country's more polarized than it's ever been, certainly in my 64 years on this earth, but i still think we have far more in common than we have differences. and i think the key is to bring people together, and that's not something that donald trump has done. he tends to divide us a lot more
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than bring us together. but the truth si think if we come together and we have good, honest conversations, and we have a good debate, and we compromise, we can come up with solutions. and, by the way, that's the way it's worked from the beginning of time in this nation. it's what made us the greatest country on earth. and we can do it again. >> trevor: okay, let's put that to the test. one of the biggest problems america is facing right now is the coronavirus, and specifically, what to do with schools. are you in a unique position where you're not just a lawmaker, but are a former teacher who was a member of the school board. so you've been in the trerchs. what do you think america needs to do with regards to opening the schools, the when and the how? >> look, in my small town, what i would have recommended if i was on the school board is that we use every facility that we could to social distance those kids and keep those teachers safe and keep those kids safe. i'm talking about using everything from community halls to church basements to every
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meeting place there is. now, i know it's going to cost a few more bucks to get it clean and make sure it's safe, but the truth is that i think, you know, things like wearing masks and being socially distanced are things that really can help stop the spread of this virus, and they think if i was a parent school board member teacher, even a student, i'd be saying let's look how we can best socially distance. and i think that's really-- that's really the key. i don't agree in stopping school. i think people need tow get back to a normal way of life. but we need to let science be our guide. and i think that's what is critically important. >> trevor: your book is entitled "grounded: a senator's lessons on winning back rural america." and it's really interesting that you say "winning back rural america." do you feel that democrats have lost white rural voters? and how do you think they can begin winning them back? >> when i was growing up, the area i lived in, north central manhattan, had a whole heck of a
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lot democrats in it. that started changing in the 70s. there are not many democrats left in it. we need to listen. there are big issues you know that. issues around climate change and health care. and the fact is we can bring everybody along if in fact we talk to them and listen to them and find that common ground. look, i think the reason climate change, for example, is so very, very difficult in my area, my town, people are afraid any changes we might make might put them out of businesses. so let's do changes we can make that will make their business better and not put them out of business. >> trevor: as an experienced farmer you yourself have conceded the fact that donald trump has done a good job of making farmers believe that he is on their side. recently, you filibustered the covid bill that would have allocated $20 billion to help farmers. and as a farmer, it feels like, you know, you would have a really soft spot in your heart for all farmers who are struggling through this period. >> farmers are very, very
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important. trust me. i'm one of them. we work at feeding the world. that is a fact. the truth is it has to be much more comprehensive than that if we're going to get a bill to pass that actually helps turn this economy around, not only for farmers but for everybody, for working folks, for small businesses, the whole thing. every bill you work on has positive and negative things to it. the problem with the one that we voted down or filibustered last week was there just wasn't much there, there. there was a little bit of there, there for farmers. but the truth is there needs to be more. this is a big deal, this covid-19. and our economy is suffering greatly for it. and it's not just agriculture, by the way. hospitality sector and other sectors are getting pounded. and the other thing i would point out to farmers is that we need somebody that knows how to get trade policies that work. without exports, farmers are dead in the water. and long before covid came, the
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president of the united states was in trade wars that really hurt product agriculture, both grains and livestock, beef and pork. so we've got a lot more work to do to help out the family farms in this nation. >> trevor: one last question. when you look at the upcoming collaboration, it is no secret that joe biden's biggest challenge is going to be wrestling those voters who maybe voted for obama and then moved to trump, and are now in some ways up in the air. as a politician who many see as a d.c. outsider, the man who they say pays $11 for his flat top and no more than that, what advice would you give to the biden campaign on how to communicate with bringing some of these voters back into the fold? >> it's pretty straightforward. be honest. be authentic. and show up. i know joe biden. joe biden is straight up. he's a working class guy. he wasn't born with a silver spoon in his mouth. he's worked for everything he's
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got. he needs to tell that story to rural america. and if he tells them and looks them in the eye when he says it, i think he'll get a lot more votes than our previous candidate did. >> trevor: senator tester, thank you so much for joining me on the show. >> thank you. >> trevor: thank you so much again, senator. all right, when we come back, i'll be talking with the man himself, big sean, about his brand-new album, so stick
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>> trevor: welcome back to "the daily social distancing show." earlier today, i spoke with grammy-nominated, multi-platinum artist big sean. we talked about his new album, "detroit 2" which has gone to the top of the charts. welcome to the "daily social distancing showment. good to have you back on the show in a very different way. >> yeah, i appreciate it. >> trevor: the last time you came on the show you had your album out and you were back on the billboard charts. "detroit 2" just hopped and you have debuted at number one. congratulations. >> thank you so much, man. thank you so much. it means a lot to debut like that, but for me it was already number one because of what i wanted to put in the music, and the impact i wanted to make for the people who are ready for
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that. so that-- that actual number one was the cherry on top for sure. >> trevor: listening to it, i was intrigued by the journey you take us on. you talk about america's health care system. you talk about religion. you talk about your own anxiety and depression as a human being. i mean, this is not something you normally hear rappers rapping about. it's a very vulnerable album. but at the same time, it's not weak. it's a really delicate balance. why did you feel the need to make an album that is so vulnerable? >> honestly, it wasn't even by choice. it's just what was in my heart at the time. you know, i feel like i had gotten to a point in my career, you know, i feel like whenever you do something for 10 years-plus, your passion starts to change for it, you know. it's not the same hunger that you had when you first got into it. and i was experiencing that. and i was experiencing all this anxiety and depression, and i didn't know why. i was like, let me focus on me. and, you know, i did therapy.
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i spiritually really got my spiritual connection stronger, and that foundation stronger. and in doing that, like, through all the meditations i was doing, one of the things that i did was visualize and go back to when i was 15 and when i was 19 and 21, and when i was sleeping in the studio, like, why was i so passionate? like, why did i do that? and it helped me return back to the essence of that. but as a new-- asa a new me, though, at the same time. >> trevor: right. >> you know? and it's something that has helped me rediscover myself. and when i really asked myself what's my passion? what's my purpose? it was like my real purpose is to inspire, right? so the best way i can do that is through the music. and when i did that, when i said that, that's when all the honesty really starteing through because it was like, okay, i may have to sacrifice my privacy,
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but it's going to help somebody, and it's going to inspire somebody and lift them up. and that's what i needed. i needed inspiration and motivation. that was my whole goal. >> trevor: i feel like you've done that, you know, time and time again throughout this album. i think there's a reason it's number one right now on the charts is because, you know, it's not just great music but it connects to what many people are going through, especially during these times. one of my favorite lyrics is when you say, "in high school they taught me about chemistry and biology but they didn't teach me how to deal with anxietiment. >> right. >> trevor: that really hit me. in the world, when you think about tthey don't teach you how to deal with these things. they don't teach you in school. we don't focus on this in society. is that something you think you will speak more about anxiety and depression and what people might be dealing with. >> i don't apply everything i learned in physics or the trig trigonometry i had to learn, all these things. i think they really need to
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incorporate that into the health class. mental health is your health, you know. it's called mental health to specifically point that part of the health out. but i don't say, like, hey my hand health is good today. or my eye health is really strong today. to me, it's all health. that needs to be incorporated how to deal with anxiety and depression. also things like tacks. all the things i learned in school, especially the math classes, i needed to learn more about taxes, setting up l.l.c.s, you know, all those things, man. >> trevor: when you look at what makes this album good, kanye west is one of the executive producers. you have like eminem, you have post malone, you have diddy on, you got stevie wonder. you even got dave shapelle, and that has an interesting backstory to it. what is your connection with dave shapelle?
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how did he get on the albem? >> so dave shapelle, i ran into him on a plane. he was like, "io, i love your dad, man. i love your music, but i love your dad." i thought i was in the twilight zone for real. and i remember i immediately went back to a conversation i had with my dad a few months ago and he was like, "yoi was backstage at a dave shapelle program, and he loves you. i was really kicking with him." my dad can exaggerate things sometimes. so i was sitting there like, "uh-huh, uh-huh." i had to call my dad and say, yo, bro-- not bro-- but i said i didn't know you made an impact on dave shapelle. and i told him i was working on the album. and he said i would open up for you say show, man, and donate my whole proceeds. for him to be that real and that human, you know, i just
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appreciate him for that. all the stories and the features, man, they all were very, very like organic. it wasn't anything forced or any favors done. it was all out of love. >> trevor: it's been three years since your previous album. it's been three years of big sean living his life. it's been three years of you growing as an artist. what do you think has been the biggest change? >> i feel like i'm still learning and still going through it. i feel like it's a journey. but to me the biggest-- i guess the biggest transformation that has happened since my last album is that i've been able to listen to my gut, listen to my heart, and walk in my purpose. and i think that when you walk in purpose, you know, happiness is something that you see every day, you know. and something that you can help,
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especially in a time where we need it the most, especially in a time where the world is on fire, especially in a time where we're losing heroes in real life, and losing role models and people who had so much more life to give us, i think it's important that we all rise up and be the best version that we can be of ourselves. >> trevor: i think you've done that, man. i think you've done that in the music. i think you do that in your life. i appreciate you. big sean, thank you for joining us on the show. >> yes, sir, peace, bro. >> trevor: we're going to take a quick break but >> trevor: that's our show for tonight. but before we go: the west coast is currently battling some horrific wildfires that are destroying millions of acres of land and displacing thousands of people, and climate change has been a key factor in increasing the risk and extent of these conditions. one organization that has been working to find practical solutions for climate change and
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is the environmental defense fund. if you can help them please visit the link below and donate what you can. until tomorrow, stay safe out there, wear a mask, and remember, wash your hands after you pee on your grammy. now, here it is, your moment of zen. ♪ ♪ here now with more reaction, senator john kennedy. i think the senate should sign on to this, senator. >> sean, with respect, there are times, particularly recently, when i think speaker pelosi is one of those people who tried tide pods.
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