tv The Daily Show With Trevor Noah Comedy Central October 18, 2022 1:15am-2:00am PDT
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>> announcer: coming to you from new york city, the only city in america, it's "the daily show." tonight... herschel walker does show and tell. the history of reggaeton. and chelsea manning. this is "the daily show with trevor noah." ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] >> trevor: hey, what's going on, everybody? welcome to "the daily show." i'm trevor noah. thank you so much for tuning in and thank you for coming out in person. thank you so much for being here! appreciate you for being here! we've got a great show for you tonight. take, everyone. elon musk is putting ukraine on his family plan, dulce sloan is
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going full on reggaeton and herschel walker joins the paw patrol. plus, whistle-blower chelsea manning is today's guest. so let's do this, people. let's jump straight into today's headlines. ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] all right, before we get into the big stories, let's catch up on a few other things going on in the world. starting with some health news. the fda has announced that there is a nationwide shortage of adderall. so if you don't have a genuine need for it, please, save it for anyone who has a legitimate prescription. and if you do have a prescription, now is the time to sell it at school. cash in! make that money. in international news, the superstar cape pop band bts has announced bts has announced that its members will soon begin reporting for mandatory service in the south korean military. yet, which is great news for
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south korea. because their army is basically unstoppable now. there is no army in the world that is going to take a shot at these guys. are you kidding me? who will be stupid enough to take a shot? everyone is a fan. enemy soldiers are going to be like "i just got stabbed by jin, this is the last and best day of my life." oh, and in tech news, kanye west announced today that he is going to buy the right wing social media platform parler, because he wants to make sure that quote "to make sure we have the right to freely express ourselves." and thank god, because i have been waiting to hear kanye's unfiltered thoughts on things. you never get to hear that! so shy, so shy. all right, let's move on to some of the bigger stories of the day. starting, as we so often do, with donald trump. and i know when trump is in the news, it's usually because he was caught doing more crimes, but this time... it's also because of that. the man loves to crime, what can
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i say? so let's find out about his latest one in our ongoing segment: "america's most tremendously wanted." ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] you may remember that after he left the white house, trump created his own social media app called truth social, which is basically just twitter but for white supremacists. if you say, wait, are the white supremacists already on twitter? but on true social, they are verified. believe it or not, there might also be a dark side to treat social. >> a whistleblower is now accusing former president trump's social media company of violating federal securities laws. will wilkerson is a former executive at trump media and technology group, which launched the truth social platform. he tells "the washington post" that trump's company tried to raise capital by making
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fraudulent misrepresentations about its finances. the sec is now investigating. >> the co-founder told "the washington post" that former president asked one executive to relinquish his shares in the company to former first lady melania trump and had him removed from the board of directors when he refused. >> trevor: watch? donald trump's social media platform was reportedly engaged in shady financial gimmicks? it is called truth social! i don't know what to believe anymore! one of the most interesting allegations is that he tried to bully one of his board members into giving his shares to melania, which is just so romantic. yeah, ladies, find you a man who will commit securities fraud for you. you have to admit, shares in truth social are a weird gift. it sounds like trump didn't remember until the last minute. "of course i remembered your
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birthday, melania. i got you -- uh... truth social shares! surprise! surprise! [cheers and applause] and also... the tie i'm wearing! the funny thing is, truth social is such a failure of a company that she probably didn't even want the shares. it's almost like your kids give you a gift but it's a piece of macaroni art for your birthday. "oh, so cute. you think this is worth something. thank you, donald." just to be clear, though, i am totally on trump's side here. yeah. it's the year 2022. if you go into business with donald trump, and you are surprised that you got scammed, that's on you. what were you thinking? "i know the last car that trump
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worked with almost got hanged by a mob but i will turn out fine. what can go wrong? what can go wrong? let's move on. from donald trump to this year's hot new mini-trump: herschel walker, georgia senate candidate and closed captioning's worst nightmare. there are a lot of controversies swirling around walker: his attack on absentee parents despite being one. his opposition to abortion despite allegedly paying for one. his attempt to become a senator despite not knowing how many states america has. and in his first debate over the weekend, walker tried to clear up one controversy with a little prop comedy. >> at a debate friday night, herschel walker responded to accusations that he has pretended to be a police officer by flashing what appeared to be a fake badge. >> i have to respond to that. and you know what's so funny. i am work with many police officers. >> in a new interview, the former football star says the badge is real. he says he got it from the sheriff of johnson county, georgia. walker clarified, "it's an
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honorary badge." >> the national sheriff's association says an honorary badge "is for the trophy case." why make the decision to flash it at the debate? >> that is totally not true. >> trevor: you know, i don't know what's crazy or in a story. the fact this man lied being in law enforcement or the fact that he pulled out a fake badge during a debate. during a debate. the fact that after the sheriff's association said that his badgers as an honorary one, he said, they are wrong, they are totally wrong. it makes me wonder, how many people has herschel walker arrested? is there someone locked up in his basement right now that is like, is this a real prison? that is a foosball table. he is like, it's an honorary prison. does he treat every symbolic object like this? people say i'm an absentee father but if that were true, why would i have this world's best dad mugs? not a good dad, not an okay dad -- world's best. that's official.
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in fact, i have seven of those mugs and some i haven't even received yet." the saddest part of the story is that they are people who are going to believe that herschel walker was in law enforcement because he pulled out this badge. this is something i learned in america. people see it and believe it. the same way that people believed that trump actually did step away from his company just because he posed next to a stack of empty folders. he's lying. people are like, why is he standing next to empty folders? what he said next to them if they weren't true? are you next empty folders? no, you are not. but it's honorary. taylor swift got an honorary doctorate from nyu this year, but you don't see her in the operating room like, "welp, killed another one. let's get lunch and try again later. maybe i'll try brains next time instead of hearts?" i will say, the one upside to this whole story, there is some good news. because this means that georgia voters don't even need
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to elect herschel walker senator. they can just give him a certificate that says "honorary senator," and he won't know the difference. [cheers and applause] he will not know. let's move on to some criminal justice news. right now, a right wing militia member named paul bellar is on trial for hatching a plot back in 2020 to kidnap the governor of michigan. which means every day, the jurors have to look at a man accused of an evil, heinous crime. just imagine that, every day, staring into those eyes... are you turned on? because apparently, someone was. >> a juror has been dismissed from the trial of three men in connection with the 2020 plot to kidnap michigan governor gretchen whitmer. >> she was dismissed by the judge on friday after attorneys accused her of flirting with one of the defendants. now the flirtatious behavior was described as nonverbal communication in the form of eye contact and smiles between the juror and the defendant,
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paul bellar. while the prosecutor originally pointed out the conduct, several others -- including bellar's attorney -- stated that they had seen interactions between the two. the judge dismissed the juror in an abundance of caution. >> trevor: goddamn. first of all, congrats to this woman for finding a new way to get out of jury duty. truly an inspiration for us all. [cheers and applause] but i have to say, i'm kind of sad they kicked her off the case. think of how great it would have been when they read the verdict. "we, the jury, sentence the defendant to life -- with me!" the real lesson here is bad boys stay winning. this guy is literally on trial for trying to kidnap the governor! and he is still getting love. it's always like this. every famous criminal has all these groupies who are like,
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"is there a mrs. serial killer? oh, there was, but you chopped her into little pieces? so you're single now..." i would like to know how this happens. how did this happen? because when you report for jury duty in america, they make you watch a video that expressly tells you what you should and shouldn't do. ♪ ♪ "please remember, while performing this sacred civic duty, it's important to avoid doing the following things: reading about the case in the news. going like this to the defendant. going like this to the defendant. going like this to the defendant. thank you for your service, and please don't try to smash." everyone watches that video. how did that happen? [applause]
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finally, let's talk about the latest news in russia's war with ukraine. if you've been following the war, you know that almost everybody has been helping ukraine fight off the world's worst botox customer. america is sending weapons, the e.u. is sending financial assistance, england is sending prince andrew. not to help, they just want to get rid of him. but it may surprise you to know who has been giving ukraine their internet service, and how close it recently came to going away. >> elon musk reversing course. the billionaire now says his spacex company will continue to fund ukraine's critical satellite service. spacex's starlink internet service has been a vital source of communication for the ukrainian military during its war with russia. the reversal coming after exclusive reporting from cnn that spacex sent a letter to the pentagon warning it may stop funding the service unless the u.s. military kicks in tens of millions of dollars each month. musk tweeting this weekend, "the hell with it. even though starlink is losing money and other companies are getting billions of taxpayer money, we'll just keep funding the ukraine government for
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free." >> trevor: you know, elon musk is the only person who could do a good thing in the bitchiest way possible. "guess i will keep helping ukraine for free." i will not try to tell elon musk how to use his money but this is not how you get remembered as an inspiring figure in history. you are doing a good thing but then you say it like that. can you imagine if martin luther king jr. had this attitude when he was trying to do his good? "i have a dream, i guess. i don't see anyone else having a dream so i guess it's on me." i got to sleep 20 hours a day because these bitch asses' will not come up with dreams of their own. people be like, martin, do you want to go to the club, but i can't, because i have to go to sleep because i need to have a dream. it's in both be 29 but i need to
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do it anyway." it wouldn't be the same. [applause] can i tell you what i think happened here? what i think happened is, elon musk saw an opportunity to be the good guy and make a lot of money. give the ukrainians internet but then over time have the american government step in and pick up the tab. yeah. but because they said no, now he is stuck. he is, keep losing money or be the asshole who cut off ukraine's internet. i know people think he is evil but he is not cable company evil. weapons manufacturers are not donating them, the u.s. government is paying them, so elon is going, why aren't i being paid? he didn't expect the war to go on this long. it sort of like when you open the door for someone but other people keep walking through the door and you hold it open for 2s
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some old lady in the nose and then your boss runs up and said, you are fired, and you said, i am not even working here, and then you are unemployed. before we go to the break, let's check in with our stock market expert, michael kosta, everybody! [cheers and applause] good to see you, michael. what is happening in the market today? >> i am crushing it. i mean, i am crushing it like a 19-year-old me used to crush adderall pills getting ready for the big party i was not invited to. am i right? also got a hot tip for you. the big financial news today is that albertsons has been acquired by kroger, and if this deal goes through, they will become the second biggest grocery chain in america right after walmart. okay? before we get to that, want to talk to you about that flirting juror in michigan. >> trevor: yeah, yeah. >> that is not flirting. she was just being nice. people in new york think someone is flirting just because they haven't pushed you down the
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stairs, okay? she's just being midwest nice. i am from michigan! okay? i know about eye bleeping? was she doing this? >> what are you doing? >> see how good i am at i [bleep]? kosta gets the girl's eyes wet, which technically is crying, but it's a very -- it is a moist e eye. let's get to kroger. kroger brought albertsons for $24.6 billion, that is before you faction in the coupons. this big jump, this is not how kroger actually acquired albertsons. and my expert opinion, this is when albertsons implanted self checkout. this saved them a lot of labor costs and that is where the value shut up. when all grocery stores don't realize is that self check
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out it is really just inviting us to steal, isn't it? it takes people some time to figure that out but when they do, it hurts profits. and that is what you start to see right here. i mean, self checkout. i got to know what type of mushroom this is now? i don't know. how about i just steal it? trevor, i had a bushel of carrots, okay, and it's not coming up. it's not coming up. about the produce number? i don't know the produce number. i'm spelling it out on the keypad, and it still not coming up. it is just easier if i steal it. i used to work at a grocery store. i did. i was in charge of stocking the i couldn't concentrate. thank you. >> trevor: really? >> actually, a threw a cantaloupe at an old lady, i thought she was stealing. look, everybody. this supermarket merger, it is great news. everyone is worried about the price of groceries but now there's going to be less competition at a giant corporation will have more power
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than ever to decide the price of food. and i am sure they will do the right thing. speaking of doing the right thing, elon musk with the internet and ukraine. i love that he's helping ukraine. this is so cool, everyone is helping out. the u.s. is sending weapons, europe is sending money, trevor, i assume africa is sending some of your child soldiers? [boos] >> trevor: [laughs] >> stop, i can make that joke. i have an honorary african doctorate. all right? yeah. >> trevor: that's not even with the african badge looks like. >> i got a hot tip. here is my hot to. if you work at a grocery store and you throw a cantaloupe at an old lady, you have to be 100% sure that she was stealing. back to you, trevor, my fellow african! >> trevor: michael kosta, everybody. that is one official badge. when we come back, dulce sloan is going to take us to the club,
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[cheers and applause] >> trevor: welcome back to "the daily show." every now and then, we ask dulce sloan to report on the latest news. but dulce just talks about what she wants to talk about, in another episode of "dulsayin'." ♪ ♪ >> hello, friends. hispanic heritage month to month just wrapped up before we go, i want to talk about reggaeton. if you don't know what it is, you probably have heard the unmistakable beat of reggaeton before, especially if you have upstairs neighbors. >> keep it down up there? >> i will not! the roots of this music goes back as far as the '70s and as
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far south as panama. it started further south with the beads are so big they don't fit in the canal. it was in the 1980s when the music artist sort of thing spanish lyrics over jamaican dance hall funk creating a new sound of reggae and s manual and honestly, i'm glad it wasn't there. the spanish words and dance all music coming together for the first time? that is too sexy to handle. there is no way you didn't leave the dance floor pregnant. it's like being the jelly in a diego luna and bad bunny sandwich. two of the earliest pioneers would later be known as the fresh prince got into millinery military school. these two artists brought this down by bringing takes to bus drivers. it is basically the way rappers in atlanta get there singles to strip cub, club djs except now people at jim out to your music when they are late to work. in 1985, el general moved to new york city when he began spreading early reggaeton in the
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club. it all mustn't happen because while he was in new york, el general also pursued a degres administration in an effort to get a real job. you have to wonder, what if that pat had worked out? would he be in an office going, this is el general speaking, how may i direct your call? thankfully, he was sucked back into music, hosting parties and performing. in 1990, he put out the song, a tribute to the power of the -- ♪ ♪ >> and el general's cover blew up. it was a hit in mainland america, puerto rico, and spread to central and south america. the music was spreading so fast. not too far from brooklyn, and long island, reggaeton was popularized by panamanian rapper. the sound was originally created by jamaican dance hall musicians, who looks like if blade became a d.j. instead of fighting vampires. from there, the sound move to a different long island,
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puerto rico. here is where all of the panamanian new york ingredients finally mixed together to make something special. like sofrito for your ears. it took over the club, he had been selling hot dogs on the street to get by and then had an idea to start a club. it was there that the genre became known as l underground and created a whole new generation of artists. they also popularized reggaeton's most famous dance. i know this dance! this is just me in 2005! this is the dance you do when you don't want to pay for drinks. at one point, puerto rico's government cracked down on it and try to regulate the lyrics and dance moves but all it did was make it more popular. this was like when your parents told you not to date somebody but then that person, i'm sorry, you make some good points. but later, the genre exploded all over the mainstream with the release of the hit song
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"gasolina" by daddy yankee in 2004. he was everywhere. mtv. "time" magazine. even the campaign trail. >> i just want to say thank you, daddy yankee. >> that's right. you know a genre is big when old white republican start calling. for a while, reggaeton was huge and then record companies moved on and it disappeared and much of america, which basically means both to most americans out of the did exist anymore, like a baby during pickup be about with latin music. even as america forgot about it, it became a rebirth. the city recognize from "arcos." colombian artists gave reggaeton a new, more mainstream sound with lyrics that focus left on violence and more on sex and romance, like a neyo became n neyo. it caught her in again with... ♪ ♪ >> that's right. they took over the globe with
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"despacito." it was number 1 for 15 minutes. it became so popular that republicans learn spanish. since "despacito," reggaeton has covered told america which is great because this is a genre that is still evolving and becoming exclusive, grew out of a rich hispanic heritage of... oh, seriously. that neighbor again? >> hey, sorry about the floor but can you actually turn it up? everyone downstairs start to, just want to keep the party going. >> i don't know -- okay sure. >> can we turn it up, please? thank you. no thank you. you can get out now. phew. ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] >> trevor: thank you for that, dulce sloan. all right, stay tuned because when we come back, chelsea manning will be joining me on the show. you don't want to miss it. [cheers and applause]
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(julian) ugh. geez. (cecily) ironic, edelman struggling with reception. (julian) two things i hate dropping, balls and calls. (cecily) well you need a better network. time to switch to verizon, the most reliable 5g network in america. (julian) i'm listening. (cecily) you even get a free 5g phone on them. (julian) sweet. (cecily) so now, whether you're in the city or on the road... (julian) reception. (cecily) and getting the network you want and a brand new phone... (julian) touchdown! (cecily) whoa! touchdown! (vo) switch now and get the new google pixel 7 pro, on us. only on the network america relies on. verizon. 's [cheers and applause] >> trevor: welcome back to "the daily show." my guest tonight is an american transparency activist and former u.s. army intelligence analyst. who disclosed unauthorized government documents during her service. she was convicted of 20 charges and sentenced to 35 years in prison, which president obama commuted in 2017. she's here to tell her side of
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the story and talk about her new memoir, "readme.txt," which comes out tomorrow. please welcome chelsea manning! [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] chelsea manning, welcome to "the daily show." >> hi. how is it going? >> trevor: it is going well and your book is one of those books that strangely enough, i felt like i had read because of how much you had been in the news, because of how big your story has been, in not just american media, but in the telling of america's military operation. let's start with, i guess, the inception of the idea to write a book. after pulling off one of the largest intelligence leaks in american history, you were vilified, you served time, you were labeled as a traitor, and it felt like the story tapered
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off over time. now you have come back and you have reignited many of the conversations with this book. my question to you is why. >> why? i think the fact that my own version of the story, my first draft of history, if you will, hasn't been talked about as much. i feel like there has been all the discussion of things that have happened around me, involving the military, involving other personalities, like president obama who commuted my sentence. but i feel like my story, my coming-of-age story really, for trying to tell the story of how i became who i am today, has been kind of left out of the picture, and i wanted to tell that story. >> trevor: in many ways, you became a lightning rod and an idea because what you did shook the world. you came out as a whistle-blower, and you just -- i mean, to name a few of the leaks, and you'll add to them, leaks about murders that the
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american military had committed and not told anybody about. >> right. >> trevor: you told the world about collateral damage and how this wasn't what we thought it was and there were way more deaths than had been previously reported to reported. >> as i put it, the true face, the true reality of a symmetric 21st century warfare which is basically like how an occupation -- how holding territory with a large occupying army during an insurgency actually plays out. it's not surgical. it is very, very messy. >> trevor: what did you hope to achieve by leaking the information? >> i wanted another person like me to feel as informed as i did finally about the true reality. that is why i called it "readme.txt" because that is a document. >> trevor: did you hope it would change what the u.s. military was doing in the middle east or did you think it would shift public perception? >> the public discourse i feel like is what i really wanted to
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impact. i feel like, at least if the public is informed, then at least, like being -- having a conversation with your doctor, you have informed consent. >> trevor: i always assumed that you went straight to wikileaks. i didn't know how hard you try to get american media outlets to look at the information and get first dibs at. why do you think they said no and why do you think nobody got back to you? >> it is very difficult. technical difficulties, we didn't have the tools like signal, encryption wasn't widely adopted by traditional media outlets. i didn't trust the telephone system. >> trevor: i don't blame you. >> i didn't trust email and i have my reasons for that. trying to avoid that but also trying to do a physical thing while i only have a limited amount of time. there was a blizzard. it was very logistically difficult, and if any one thing, somebody asked me earlier today, if any one thing had changed, yeah, this would have never happened. >> trevor: interesting.
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you are trying to maintain -- >> there was a point in the book where i talk about how i -- i was sitting at starbucks and uploading this stuff and it wasn't working and because of starbucks' internet, it almost didn't happen. >> trevor: [laughs] i will say, there were parts of the book that are almost comical unintentionally because you talk about copying 750,000 government files onto cds and then you labeled them -- he wrote to banta names. >> right, taylor swift, lady gaga. >> trevor: i wanted to know when i was reading this, did you write those artists because he was soon to let military personnel will be like, there is no harm? >> pretty much. >> trevor: so did you think there were some archers they would be like, i want to listen to what's on that cd? >> yes. >> trevor: it's really interesting. you had the cds, we go to the starbucks, you start uploading all of this. was there ever a part of you that you would compromise the u.s. more than you would help it? >> i don't think so.
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i say that because i knew this information. i worked with it every day and i think about senior public officials, whatever they have access to the information, they don't understand it. >> trevor: that is scary. >> it's our job to tell them but it's a question as to whether they listen are not. >> trevor: you're basically explaining it to them and they are working off what you told them. >> may be. >> trevor: wow. >> depends on how they interpret it. >> trevor: couldn't help reading through the book and wondering how much of your life as informed the latter part of your journey. you were not just famous for being one of the biggest whistle-blowers in american history. you also then became famous as a buddy who transitioned at a time when the conversation was really -- you even speak about it in the book. was there not a part of you that thought, i am dealing with my gender, i am dealing with a world that doesn't accept me the way i am. by get involved with leaking
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military secrets? why deal with one thing at a time? >> i didn't think of it like that. despite my background, despite everything else, it was just so clear to me. it was crystal clear that something had to be done, and i just -- you know, i was very young. and i think it is also important to remember that the consequences for this were not clear. right? i thought i was going to lose my job which was a big deal. >> trevor: you didn't think you would be sentenced to three decades. >> wright. no one had ever gone to prison before me. >> trevor: do you think the american military is more honest now and its operations? do you think you have shifted the paradigm even slightly? >> i think that obviously, the context has changed. i look at the war in ukraine and i always found it fascinating that as the russians invaded ukraine, i knew more about what was happening from my laptop at home then i would have known about what was going on and a
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rack while i was actually deployed there. >> trevor: that is interesting. >> this is just the sheer firehose of information that we received from every single different angle, and i actually think it has shifted from not having access to information to having access to so much information that you can't filter out accurate from inaccurate, miss information from disinformation, and this is going to be the main struggle that we have moving forward. >> trevor: now -- i was really -- joy poured out of me when i found out that you are djing as well. >> yes. >> trevor: that is a cool journey to be on. [cheers and applause] >> yeah two i am tj my own release party. >> trevor: what are you playing? >> what do i play? electronic dance music from a hyper pop. >> trevor: i love that. it's not taylor swift, lady gaga. >> that's my old -- i had a blink-182 era. >> trevor: i like that. congratulations on your journey, thank you so much for joining me on the show.
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[cheers and applause] >> trevor: well, that's our show for tonight but before we go: consider supporting the violence intervention program in new york city. they work within latino communities to end domestic and sexual violence, by providing emergency shelter, advocacy for long-term economic stability, and healing for survivors and their children. if you want to support their work, please donate at the link below. until next time, stay safe out there and remember: you can't just draw a badge and become a police officer. you have to write to police on it and then you are in. now, here it is, your "moment of zen." ♪ ♪ >> she was so great. she was ridiculous! captioning made possible by comedy central
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