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tv   The Daily Show With Trevor Noah  Comedy Central  June 22, 2022 1:14am-2:00am PDT

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>> coming to you from new york city, the only city in america, it's "the daily show"! tonight, tiktok is working for china. fred sells out and katy tur! this is "the daily show" with trevor noah! what's going on, everybody? welcome to "the daily show"! thank you for coming in! thank you so much!
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we have got a jam packed show for you tonight, so much news. president biden declared a war on gravtd, corporations are gay for pried pride and someone spes following you on tiktok. let's jump straight into today's headlines. ( cheers and applause ) all right. let's kick things off with tiktok, the world's biggest social media site and the app that proves americans can read subtitles fine when they want to. hundreds of millions of people around the world use tiktok every day. what else are you going to do while pooping? what many tiktok users might not realize is tiktok is owned by a chinese company, and now we're finding out that while you're watching videos of people dancing china might be watching you linked audio suggests bay i didn't think has repeated by
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access daytona from users in the u.s. >> the report suggests tiktok is falling down on promise to wall off with h, colleagues are told i get my instruction from the main office in beijing. >> trevor: china is watching us on tiktok? they're going to know money doesn't jiggle jiggle, it folds! wailed on these audio leaks, looks like tiktok's parent company in company actually has access to our private data which means the chinese government probably has access to our private data which is scary because tiktok knows everything about you. tracks what you watch and like and only shows you that stuff. if you asked me to show you my "for you" page, i would say that's too personal. just look at my nudes instead. actually that's a minicoke. donald trump was trying to ban
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tiktok a couple of years ago because the u.s. government realized china could use this as a tool to influence americans and also because eric kept trying to send him friend requests. it's so funny how we're so hooked on social media governments don't have to steal our data, we give it to them. back they had to hack into a database or break into the social security building but now we give it to them free. i blame myself. i'm part of the problem. i took part in the personal information challenge. ( laughter ) that was a big mistake. i hope i go viral. all right, let's move on from
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the data you're putting into tiktok to the data coming out testify the january 6th hearings. the investigation that will somehow result in less punishment than the oscars slap. last week we learned how mike pence almost got hanged. today we learned how president trump tried to pressure state officials to sign on to various schemes to overturn the election, everything from throwing out biden votes to creating slates of fake electors to eating the constitution fast before anyone could look up the election laws. one of the people trump depended on most in the pressure campaign was rudy giuliani his personal lawyer and final boss in a resident evil game. unfortunately, it seemed like no one wanted to take rudy's calls. >> pennsylvania's house speaker brian cutler received daily voice mails from trump's lawyers in the last week of november.
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>> mr. speaker, this is rudy giuliani and janet ellis. we're calling you together because we'd like to discuss obviously the election. hey, brian, it's rudy. i really have something to call your attention that i think really changes things. >> cutler felt the outreach was inappropriate and asked his lawyers to tell rudy giuliani to stop calling, but giuliani continued to reach out. >> i understand that you don't want to talk to me now. i just want to bring some facts to your attention and talk to you as a fellow republican. >> trevor: oh, wow, that's desperate. yeah, rudy made so many unanswered calls. the iphone started labeling him as spam. not just his calls. his body is 90% spam. can we acknowledge what a fall this has been? this man went from being an american hero to now sounding like a telemarketer selling a coup. if you order now i'll throw in that chair abraham lincoln is sitting don. yeah! hello, hello, hello!
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this is another example of how historic president trump really was. any other time in u.s. history, if the president's lawyer called someone, they would take that call. but when trump's vampire lawyer called people, everyone was, like, tell him i'm not not here! tell him i went camping and died! ( laughter ) not that 'em encouraging it, because i'm not. but if you are, going to try to overturn an election, maybe don't leave voice mails? it's a paper trail. it is it's 2022, text, who are leaves voice mails. you realize how thirsty you're coming off -- hey, it's me again... ( laughter ) hit him with a quick late night you up? subverting democracy and emojis. come on, keep up with the times!
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let's move on. it has now been almost a month since the tragic school shooting in uvalde. while shoot sings are traumatic, this one has been made worse about how the police responded in did you feelia. they didn't go in, they waited for an hour and even stopped parent from trying to save their own kids. if that wasn't bad enough, they have been trying to block information about that day from coming out. >> and each time, more information comes out, we learn why. >> this morning, the first surveillance image from inside robb elementary emerges. the photo showing multiple police officers standing inside the building with rifles and at least one ballistic shield, 19 minutes after the gunman entered at 11:52 a.m. this despite school police chief pete arredondo's original claim that the officers weren't properly armed to take down the gunman at that point. officers didn't enter the classroom and kill the shooter until 58 minutes later.
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state's director of public safety steve mccraw testifying before lawmakers blast law enforcement's response as his department's investigation uncovers new evidence about the massacre. he says officers were waiting for keys to enter but the door couldn't be locked from the inside and said officers never tried opening it. >> trevor: this story keeps getting worse and worse. every time we learn something, it gets worse. we know they waited far too long to confront the shooter. now we find out they lied about not having enough weapons to go in. turns out they had assault rifles, body armor and ballistic shields. what were they waiting for? get in the room! how did they not go in? which is by the way another thing we learned, they didn't even try to get in the classroom, they didn't even try. they told everyone that they had to wait for a key because the door was locked, but the door wasn't locked.
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they just never tried to open it? which is ridiculous. even people waiting outside a locked bathroom at starbucks will jiggle the handle after two minutes to be sure. they'll try. turns out these cops couldn't do what the dinosaurs in "jurassic park" took five minutes to learn, they couldn't do just that? you know what's insane about this whole story is the one time it would have been appropriate to go in guns blazing, the cops decided to stay outside. but if you're black or have a broken taillight that is correct go rambo on your ass, oh, we're coming in! it's another reminder you can't trust what the police say. this is the clear estreminders, yes, they're police and you respect them, but it doesn't mean you trust every single thing they say after an incident. journalists shouldn't be reporting what the police said, they should be investigating what actually happened because time and time again, you learn
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that cops in america, they basically use the same principle as toddlerrers. they're tell the truth but only if it doesn't get them in trouble. no, mommy, the kooky tried to eat me, i was just responding. and my body camera wasn't working, i turned it off. ( laughter ) finally, lighter news, a lot of stuff happened, drake dropped a surprising new album. >> beyonce dropped a new single, and not to be outdone, president biden had a drop of his own. >> anchor: a scare for president biden today when he fell off his bicycle in rehoboth beach, delaware. the 79-year-old was stopping to talk to reporters when you see there his foot got caught in the pedal guard as he was dismounting his bike. he quickly got to his feet. later on his way out of church, the president repeated that he was doing just fine and hopped in place several times to prove it. >> trevor: oh,
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president biden... that's just embarrassing. ( laughter ) he was just standing, and the bike fell over. it's actually too bad because before he fell over, he was looking kind of good. all of us were, like, wow look at him riding that bike and he's 80 years old? and he stops and falls and we're, like, oh, yeah, he's 80 years old. he's 80 years old. ( applause ) and you know, it's not just the falling off of the bike that isn't moving, but it's the fact that he thought that hopping was going to reassure americans that he's still got it. you know -- because you can see when he was hopping, in his mind, he looked like creed -- yeah, look at me go! when, in fact, his hopping looked like -- you know when somebody's tried to escape a kidnapper who tied their legs together? ( laughter ) apparently, the reason he fell is because his foot got caught in the pedal cage.
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knowing america, that means that bicycle is already at guantanamo bay. who do you work for? the taliban? china? russia? kamala? ah... the silent treatment, huh? okay, that's how you want to play it? well you better start talking soon or by the time i'm done with you, you will be a one speed ( bell rings ) don't get smart with me, you asshole! ( laughter ) still, though, falling down is always an embarrassing thing to happen to anyone, never mind the president, which is why former president trump donald johnny trump, he made sure to weigh in. >> one of the greatest travesties of all is to see a person in the white house who even after years of political experience has absolutely no clue how to be the president of the united states. and i hope he has recovered
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because, as you know, he fell of his bicycle today. no, i'm serious. i hope he's okay. fell off a bicycle. i make this pledge to you today: i will never, ever ride a bicycle." ( laughter ) >> trevor: every bicycle in the world breathed a collective sigh of relief. he's not going to ride us, guys! thank god. that's it for the headlines, put let's check in on the stock market with our financial expert michael kosta, everybody! ( cheers and applause ) good to see you again. >> nice to see you. >> trevor: what's happening in the market today, mike? >> well, i am crushing. >> trevor: so you say, mike. >> i mean, today i am crushing. i got a hot tip for you and you and you so pay attention.
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so this chart, actually before that, president biden, falling off a stopped bicycle, i mean, he did the hard stuff! you know, he did the hard stuff. that would be like if you were getting ready to go sky driving and you do the training, you pack your bag, get in the airplane, take off, jump out at 30,000 feet, pull the rip cord, the parachute opens, you land safely, disconnect the parachute from your bag, you take a deep breath and pull out a knife and stab yourself in the head. i mean, what -- ( laughter ) >> trevor: all right, what's going on in the market? >> so -- >> trevor: thank you. >> -- to the untrained eye such as you remember and yourself, this looks like a stock chart, but actually what this is is our confidence in president biden. okay, now, this is when he fell off a stopped bicycle, okay, and it went low. this scared the hell out of all of us. these three little dips right here, that's when he did those, you know, three little jumps.
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( laughter ) is he going to break his leg, is he going to pull a hamstring, is he going to tear his acl? now, once he got in a home, sat in a chair, surrounded by secret service, the confidence began to rise. speaking of rising, tech -- whew! okay, up big time. s&p 500, okay, this is s.e.c. tech, if you don't know, s&p stands for surge and protectors, and if you want to be successful in tech, you need at least 500 surge protectors to be a successful company, that's why the small businesses that don't use lots of electricity don't seem to make it it. don't forget i'm an expert, trevor. >> trevor: so you say. >> i have a hot tip coming. it's going to come. >> trevor: all right. >> so the tiktok story, right. >> trevor: the china one. >> yeah, what does china think we are as americans, just so lazy that all we care about are follow, and not our own privacy?
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it's subjects like that i talk about my tiktok@michael kosta underscore, make sure you give it a follow, don't forget, that was leaked audio. we know about this because of tiktok's leaked audio, audio that i did a lip sync video to on my tiktok, which is@michael kosta underscore, make sure you follow and like. if you're as outranked about this as i am, i think we all need to send a message to the beijing authorities. here's how we're going to do that, grab your phone and computer and go to http colon ^ ^ tiktok.com,, okay, and find michael kosta, underscore follow me, and we will go to tiktok, not be silenced and let beijing know that. >> trevor: let's get your followers on tiktok. >> i'm sick of giving the hot tips away from free.
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i left mine today on my tiktok page@michael kosta underscore. you won't regret it. thanks for the follow, trevor. okay, sounds good. >> trevor: i feel like that was a waste of your time. don't go away, when we come back, dulce sloan will tell you how corporate america learns to love people. ads are getting shorter and shor- do the dew. hey, hey! stop it! woah, woah! i didn't even drink yet. do the dew. ahh, cmon! ahhhh! do the dew. ♪♪ the next sale is a digital treasure trove - charming ellie's private data! what? lot number 1: her emails. the ones she's opened and read. drug store purchases. her recent transactions. do i hear 600? 620? 640? 660? 680? oh!
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♪ and party every day. ♪ ♪ i want to rock and roll all night ♪ applebee's late night. because half off is just more fun. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. what did she do when you told her? [plate shatters] [whisper: bubly] [can cracks] remember, that behind every broken plate, is one less chore you totally hate. bublé's right. [dishes shattering] bubly sparkling water ( cheers and applause ) >> trevor: welcome back to
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"the daily show." june is pride month, or as it's called in the state of florida, sssshhhh! but while you're out there celebrating pride don't forget some of its biggest supporters aren't auld on its slide. for more another sloan of installment of dulsayn'. >> hello, friends. it's june, which means it's the first month of the year where it's just hot enough outside to not be sexy, but in america we know juneles means guy pride month! so i want to wish everyone happy pride. i'm not the only one. this year feels like every damn company with a logo is going full rainbow. you've probably seen the ads like burger king offering whoppers with two top and bottom buns, listen, it's still bread
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and every gay man i know is not eating bread in summer. they're doing keto and crunches till october. don't forget, companies weren't always jumping on the pride float. when the gay rights movement began in 1969, most companies were too afraid to advertise to gay people. they didn't want to offend the rest of america, especially religious conservatives. they were so uptight they taught pretzels were too sexy. all those twists -- oh, so sinful! so companies kept their distance, except for -- absolute vodka. absolute was one of the first big companies to market to the queer community because they don't give a shit about the religious right. they were, like, who cares if the right doesn't like us? all they drink is milk. so thanks to abs absolut for bea true ally.
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a good year. i didn't drink the whole thing because i've got a work meeting after this and they say i've got to be sober this time. ( blows breath ) as gays became more in society, advertisers began to reach out into the community till the aids epidemic blew up. companies fled to the hills again. oh, no, what if the gays look at our ads. is that how you get aids? you know what company dumbed down on advertising in the aids crisis? absolut vodka! mmm! second half got a kick. damn. all right, where was any by the 1990s, the year community once again fought its way into greater acceptance. so brands once again tried to dip their toes into the pool party but were still too nervous
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to jump all the way in. so american advertising entered a phase called gay-vague which sounds like being in a fraternity. it was companies hinting at possibly homosexuality. this volkswagen ad where two gay dudes are in a car looking at a so fa on the sidewalk which leaves open to the question are they roommates, lovers, mouthmate-lovers? a brand tried to make an outright gay a.d., and the ad completely went over to the religious right and they apologized for everything! ( laughter ) psych! ikea long island got a bomb threat! what is wrong with these religious fanatics, they know furniture isn't gay. plus if one place that can reassemble after a bombing it's an ikea. unfortunately for the religious right but luckily for everyone
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else their time was ending, over the next two decades americans started to realize gay people were just the same as everyone else except with better ads and as proper opinions conclude, companies felt it was safe enough to take gay money and this time major brands. amazon started advertising to gay people. coca-cola aired a commercial with two dads during a super bowl and just salad even had a big gay salad, which, come on, that was just a regular salad. at least toss some glitter in it. that brings us to today where practically every company was pride month marketing. but it doesn't mean their values line up with their tweets. take at&t, they love to show everyone how much they support pride, while also giving $1 million to anti-lgbtq politicians and tex: or how
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retailers like h&m are launching pride collections, which is why wearing this ugly top sure a crime. they aren't the only hypocrites donating to anti-queer causes but why go through the trouble of listing them here? i'm no hater. ♪♪ ♪♪ oh, that one, too. okay. are we done? the point is, enjoy all those gay whoppers and pink toyotas but don't forget what this month is about -- pride is a time to celebrate the right to love who you want, and to honor the people who fought to give us that right. back when no brand was on their side. except for -- absolut! you know, one of those gay whoppers sounds real good about
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now. i'm desi. ( cheers and applause ) >> trevor: thank you so much for that. katy tur will be going us on the show. don't miss it. [pop top can opening] ♪ ahh! you fired up the grill for one hot dog?! seriously?! hot dogs: better with pepsi. ahh!
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you're getting thirsty. go.) bold. refreshing. so good. (clears throat) i mean dew. dew. ( cheers and applause ) >> trevor: welcome back to "the daily show." my guest tonight is an award-winning journalist and msnbc anchor who writes about chasing news at an early age and her pioneering helicopter journalist parents in her new memoir called, "rough draft." please welcome katy tur! ( cheers and applause ) ♪♪ >> trevor: welcome back. >> hello. thanks for having me. >> trevor: katy tur, welcome back to the show. >> thank you so much for having
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me. it's exciting to be here. >> trevor: it's exciting to have you because, you know, your last book went on to become a "new york times" best seller. congratulations. >> thank you, thank you. >> trevor: i feel like this book has the same in store and i think for a slightly different reason. many people have seen you on msnbc, on the campaign trail covering donald trump and changing what you do on your show these days, be uh this book takes us through one of the most harrowing childhoods filled with moments of joy, moments of pain, moments of terror, really. >> yeah. >> trevor: and i think let's start at the beginning to situate people. everyone talks about hell hospitaller parents but you mean actual helicopter parents. just explain that for the people to understand. >> my dad was a helicopter pilot, and my parents had a helicopter news gathering company, and i grew up in the helicopter. i spent more time in the
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helicopter than in my own bed. i would fly the helicopter alongside my dad. i developed an unhealthy obsession with backyard pools because, in los angeles, everybody had a backyard pool, it seemed, except me. >> trevor: and you were just the person in the helicopter. what's interesting about your story is, in many ways, i feel like it tracks news in america. where your opinion as a child, you were at what many would argue was the beginning of the 24-hour news cycle. the o.j. chase, that was your dad. >> and my mom. >> trevor: everyone's working, the cameras -- >> my mom is hanging out of the helicopter with the camera on her shoulder quite literally, stropped in with the belt, looking out at the ground, 1,50. the o.j. chase, they were the first one to get that. the denny beating, the l.a. riots, guy who got beaten within an inch of his life.
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any pursuit you saw in los angeles in the late '90s and the '80s. >> trevor: i don't want to say like your parents invented that but that was sort of their style. >> so they did sort of invent it, actually. so if they didn't cover the very first police pursuit, it was the second, and they were the ones that popularized it. they were the ones that changed the way news was covered in los angeles and then the country and you could argue the world. it was breaking in the moment and now, here it is... your moment of zen. now. no context needed, blowout everything, and cover this for as long as we can. you know, it was an easy decision going forward, whatever was happening, didn't matter, if there was a chase going on, go to the chase, people will watch. >> trevor: one part of us is eternally grateful to your parents for starting the trend that we get to see what's
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happening, on the other hand, it became the drug news became addicted to. >> it was a double edged sword. they captured police brutally beating immigrants on the highway, stuff the police would have gotten away with had my parents not gotten there. they did incredible things and won all the awards there were to win. you could say arguably, they were responsible for the downfall of local, maybe national news, the addiction to reality tv as news, and i do think you could draw a straight line from the way we covered pursuits back then to the way we covered donald trump in 2016, and the way we cover politics now. >> trevor: seems like it's all about the now, it's all about what's unfolding. nobody takes time -- >> don't digest it, just put it on the air. >> trevor: do you feel like a journalist to be in that space? everything is happening live. how do you find the balance between waiting for information whilst also telling the people
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what's happening? >> i think we're learning from people now and learning from our mistakes. i wrote about in the book the bar summary, when h.e. barr came out and gave a summary of the mueller report weeks before the mueller report came out. he gives us the summary on a sunday and it was misleading as we know now. it didn't have any of the underlying evidence. but because we were covering it live live live, we quint to air with it and essentially became a pawn in a political document that then had a head start for the truth, in front of the truth for weeks. the problem that we face right now is that there's a part of the country that has demonized journalists and has said we only report one thing, we only want the outcome to be a certain way. say we didn't go up with the barr report and other outlets did, and we didn't and said we'll wait till we get the full context of it, they would have used that as fodder to say, hey,
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listen, we're not going to report on something good for donald trump. >> trevor: damned if you do, damned if you don't. another part of the book is particularly pertinent not just because to have the month and time we're in but because of life and relationships as a whole, and it's about you talking about your relationship with your father who transitioned and came out as transgender. i don't think i've read an account from a person that is as personal as yours is because you talk about being raised by a father who was, you know, struggled with rage, real anger towards you, it was an abusive household to be in, you were terrified as a child, and you have this moment where your dad says, hey, i'm now she and call me hannah and it becomes this journey and asks you to throw away the old memories of another person and live with someone new. it's a very layered question, but what do you think we can all
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learn or how did you navigate what has to be one to have the most confusing issues happening in society? >> it was very confusing in the moment. what made it confusing is that, life is complicated and childhoods are complicated, and mine was especially complicated for distinct reasons. i loved my childhood. it was so much fun, and there was so much love within my family, but it was also incredibly scaryt a times. my dad as you said would fly into rages. there would be holes in the walls of our house that we as little kids would plaster over to cover up. you know, i hid in the bathroom one time for hours because i was afraid of what my dad might do. he threw things at my plort. then when he called me, and i used he specifically, when he called to say i'm not a he, i'm a she, my name is not bob tur,
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bob tur is dead, i'm hannah, and we can throw away everything that happened in the past, all of that is gone, that's where the rage came from, the rage will now be gone, i had a hard time with that. because to have the content of what my dad was telling me, and the fact that my dad had been living this lie for so long, it made it even harder to navigate because, on the one hand, how awful for my dad. >> trevor: right. >> how horrible to have to live a lie for that long and not be your true self and, of course, that's going to make you a wound-up person and it's going to break you in some ways. but you are also my father, and you were also somebody who has done a lot of bad things to us and me, my mother, and i can't just throw that away. >> trevor: right. >> i don't have the about to just forget those memories.
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and i tried to bring that up, and it just didn't go well. it didn't go well. my dad didn't want to confront it and i didn't want to let it go, and, so, now, now we're estranged, and it sucks. >> trevor: i think what i appreciated most about it was it took an issue that many people are trying to turn into this homogenous blob and it showed us how many individuals are involved in all the stories. people talk about transpeople as if it is one human being doing certain things, gay people as ie are many stories, people, complications -- >> people are people. >> trevor: people are people. it's a really fascinating book. you shared so much. everybody is going to love reading it nor journalism, life, families. thank you so much for being on the show. >> thank you. >> trevor: katy's memory memoir
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"rough draft" is available now and be sure to watch "katy tur reports" on msnbc. okay, we're gonna take a quick break, but we'll be right back after this. ( cheers and applause ) >> trevor: well, that's our
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show for tonight, but before we go, please consider donating to the national black justice coalition. since 2003, they have been america's leading national civil rights organization advocating for federal policies that fight against racism and homophobia. if you can, please donate at the link below to hem

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