tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle December 5, 2018 7:00pm-8:01pm CET
7:04 pm
but i love. you all me or immortal the creator and maker of men and we are mortal formed of the earth and to earth shall we return. for so did you were doing when you created me saying you are dust and to dust you shall return. all of us go down into the dust yet even at the grave we make our song all a living you know all a little you know all a lujah. there's a. verse or. and your hands of merciful savior we commend your servant george. acknowledge we humbly besiege you a sheep of your own soul a lamb of your own flock
7:05 pm
a center of your own redeeming. receive george into the arms of your mercy into the blessid rest of everlasting peace and into the glorious company of the saints in light. of men. now may the god of peace who brought again from the dead are lloyd jesus christ the great shepherd of the sea the blood of the everlasting. make you perfect to do his will working in you that which is well pleasing in his sight and the blessing of god almighty the father the son and the holy spirit beyond you and remain with you in this world in which we live this day and for evermore. amen. let us go forth in the name of progress thanks be to god.
7:08 pm
steve. george herbert walker bush washington national cathedral is now coming to an end it was emotional at times a powerful chip you would see funny anecdotes all deeply sincere and we all got to know the president a little more personally with the speakers sharing some personal experiences because most of the military pallbearers are there to carry the casket outside or to the hearse that is that waiting outside to carry george h.w. bush. to his final destination.
7:10 pm
7:11 pm
wonderful tributes not only to his abilities in foreign policy the prime minister of canada recounting all of the truly enormous achievements in navigating that very turbulent end of the cold war but also the trade agreement between canada mexico and the u.s. and. improving relations with latin america after the very rocky reagan presidency that we heard as well of such amazing testimonials to his leadership and to his friendship that was deeply moving and poignant i found beth's incidentally also the word that keeps ringing in my ears is friendship loyalty and decency absolutely that ethic of service that we talked about at the very beginning of of the funeral . also ringing through all of those speeches the notion that he was he was acting
7:12 pm
for a larger cause and that he absolutely believed in that that as a mission right now the casket. will is being carried out to the motorcade that is waiting for george h.w. bush that will then be driving and making its way to joint base andrews where the casket will be flown back to texas. the women would you say that this is a service that he would have liked i think we know that he picked most of what we heard and saw here and certainly those two. readings are actually the ones in the very beginning as well from isaiah all of them were in a way about peacemaking making and about serving builds your city on
7:13 pm
a hill so that others can see your beacon don't hide your light let it shine for us these are the kind of words that were part of the fans the sort of family that he came from the idea that you have a purpose on earth to essentially use the privilege that you've been granted to the benefit of others and certainly that was what i think all of those eulogies tried to say about him and at the same time they were tempered with a lot of humor apparently he was a man who loved a good joke and that was wonderful how that came through and i think what makes it so poignant we were talking about this a bit as we were watching. all of these seem like character traits in very virtues that are somewhat scarce in american politics today and of course seeing president trump sitting there. taking it in we wondered what impact would this be having on him who is not perceived as someone who has an ideal of service. or for that matter
7:14 pm
unfortunately the idea of transcending ideology to work together with another party for a common goal all of that had enormous poignance absolutely i want to toss to my if i may now with my you are still a standing outside can you i mean i don't know if you have the opportunity to capture some of the stories that people told you about maybe how president bush made an impact on their lives. well there are people who have been speaking within the past couple of days who talked about the way the president was perceived by the nation that he just seemed like a really decent guy a family man someone who really genuinely cared about people and this is all very much echoed in the eulogies that we heard today people talking about as melinda said his friendship his loyalty his idea of service to the country this is
7:15 pm
something that's been acro to over and over again not just by the dignitaries as i've by people on the street people who are waiting in line for hours to see his casket in the capitol over the past two days and a really hard back to a different time in u.s. politics when you could have a president who reached across the aisle in a way that we really haven't seen in the modern era i mean this comes keeps coming back melinda he was a very kind of old fashioned politician by today's standards can you elaborate a little bit on about you know what's so fascinating i actually have a number this he was the last american president to have served in the military all of his successors after that including clinton did not serve in the military he also had extensive foreign policy experience before he even took on the presidency he was probably the best prepared president we have had in many many decades he had been as you know u.n. ambassador he had been ambassador to china he had headed the cia he had been
7:16 pm
a congressman that's one of the reason he had all of these links to other politicians to other leaders and of course it made an enormous difference when it came to the foreign policy challenges that he faced building that coalition no matter what one may think about the or walk iraq war it was a coalition twenty nine countries mentioned here in the service he called every single leader personally whose country was sitting on the security council at that time whether as a rotating member or as a permanent member. now we can see. that picture of the casket they're currently being carried out by the pall of bearers to the hearse that is waiting to carry away the forty first president of the casket draped in the american flag that will be making its way to a joint base andrews to where it will then be flown back to texas
7:21 pm
7:22 pm
7:23 pm
where a funeral service will be held. or . are i to my i want to go to you white to the people that you've been talking to in these past couple of days and today what does president bush me for americans are to america. something that i was touched upon a bit earlier was his value of personal relationships and this is something that
7:24 pm
even the people who we speak to on the street will talk about the fact that he just seemed like a really good guy who really valued his family i spoke with one woman who worked on one of the republican committee is on the hill while he was president and she talked about how he would come by the committee say hi to everyone asked about their families another man who i spoke with who said that george w. bush has in his mind the last great president for international affairs someone who really projected image that he approved of to the rest of the world. people who are alive and remember his presidency remember really just a different time in american politics as we've said one where president could get bipartisan support for things like the american with disabilities act which requires access to buildings for people with disabilities in this country and it's sort of a solemn harkening back to that era all right melinda this is of course
7:25 pm
a president who was very much outward looking multi-lateralism was basically his invention almost so to speak here in germany where we are based of the flags flew half mast what's the significance of president bush today here in berlin for germans but i think if we had what was president bush's greatest achievement it was surely navigating the end of the cold war and to that achievement absolutely belongs to the unification of germany he wrote in the book that he coauthored with brant scowcroft who was security advisor national security advisor that this was a deeply personal matter for him seeing germany re-united he has quite of a warm hearted account of his relationship with chancellor kohl who of course presided over the unification and i think we really can say that without president bush's diplomatic abilities one of the eulogies referred to to his days referred to
7:26 pm
his deft skills he had cultivated those as a diplomat he truly was a diplomat prior to being president without that mixture and his sense for how did wield power because he had to do a lot of persuasion several other european leaders were not at all enthusiastic as we know president mitterrand margaret thatcher did not relish the idea of a real united germany a powerful germany and president bush was very much part of the team who convince them along with his very very able advisers advisers we saw james. speaker there in the church we think james baker brant scowcroft and george h.w. bush together was an amazing leadership team and i think we can't be sure how the outcome would have been if they hadn't been at the helm so yes germans deeply appreciative of that when pressed and when chancellor merkel heard the news she was at the g twenty summit together with donald trump and she recounted what that had
7:27 pm
meant to her as a very young politician at the time to see that achievement and essentially said that was the time when the transatlantic relationship was something you absolutely could count on you could rely on that of course a very indirect a very gentle reminder to president trump who was seated next to her that that is not the case anymore at least as it's perceived by germans many germans i know have spoken to me in the last few days about the death of trump and it seems to affect them personally and emotionally right a very stark contrast between these two presidents when the crane here with me thank you for spending time with me and on this momentous day and my a schrader out for us outside the national a cathedral thank you so much as well for your work porting i and in the meantime i think that concludes now our special coverage of the state funeral of
7:28 pm
george herbert walker bush all right we're going to shift our attention now to yemen because the guns fall silent there in this war torn country at least briefly that's the possibility raised by talks between a delegation of the rebels and representatives from yemen's government the u.n. brokered negotiations are now set to start on thursday in sweden there before state and ending the conflict since two thousand and sixteen. passports and tickets in hand for a journey many hope will bring pace a delegation of who see rebels waiting to board their flight to sweden. the un special envoy martin griffiths has been instrumental in setting up the talks with the yemeni government such is the distrust between the two sites the rebels wouldn't get on the plane without him. basic guarantee is the presence of the un envoy with us on the same flight this is
7:29 pm
the only guarantee we have for going there. the evacuation of fifty wounded who see fighters from the war zone has also helps build confidence in the talks with the conflict locked in stalemate. the youth these backed by iran control the north west of the country including the capital sanaa which they took in two thousand and fifteen the government backed by saudi arabia and the u.a.e. has set up a base in aden in the south. for years of conflict have left thousands dead and created what's been described as the worst humanitarian crisis in recent history with yemen's economy cripples more than fourteen million people many of them children of facing starvation. is a country at war as of her may say that this is the country of the break of catastrophe
7:30 pm
but if this is not a country on the brink of catastrophe. this is a country that is in a catastrophe. the catastrophe that son follows is in full view of the whole world but one many say has been ignored the hope is the talks will result in a truce allowing food and aid to reach those who need it most. all right let's get you more on these highly anticipated talks from adam barron from the think tank the european council on foreign relations he has covered yemen as a reporter and is speaking to us from beirut very good evening mr baer now the talks are expected to kick off tomorrow. can the meeting really only to a truce. i think it would be far overly optimistic at best to think that this meeting a long truce that being said we're looking at potentially if all goes well the beginning of a process that could end up leading to some sort of truce. through the forms of
7:31 pm
confidence building measures trust building measures the core the sort of things that you need to effectively bring things back on track all right so if this is all part of a confidence building measure and if if these talks do not lead to any kind of a green meant what would be the next step on the diplomatic front knows i mean there's to do is basically two options on the one hundred things go according to plan i guess the ideal situation would be these talks go forward which it appears that there will there's some sort of agreements on trust building measures it appears that we're looking at things like the transfer of prisoners some sort of situation on with regard to some higher port issues regarding the payment of government salaries and the central bank. if these are indeed if lamented and then i guess the key after that would be setting a date to hold more talks it sounds almost cliche to talk about talks about talks but at the same time when you're dealing with a situation like yemen where you haven't had any sportsman u.n.
7:32 pm
brokered talks for two years you know you're not just starting from zero you're starting from a negative points of trust between the two mores has been so low so basically this is kind of an opportunity for both sides to sort of. sniff around see what the other one is doing and then potentially move on from there right well we've already seen this quite extraordinary prisoner swap that took place as a part of that confidence building that you were referenced when we now see also most importantly food aid moving in to help a well a million yemenis on the brink of starvation. i guess the situation with yemen is deeper than food aid if you look at a lot of the areas that are really hard hit by the by the underground says there's food in the grocery stores there's food on the shelves it's not a matter of there being food or not being food although access to food is certainly an issue it's a matter of whether or not people are able to afford it so that kind of underlines the new not of finding some sort of stopgap solution but to really bring some sort of end to the conflict as a whole and so you get
7:33 pm
a real recovery for yemen's more abundant colony until people start getting jobs until the young the private sector is back and functioning you're going to continue to see a situation where even if there is food. people aren't able to afford it let's face it when you're dealing with a country where eighty percent of people are in need of aid some twenty million people through it it won't be enough all right thank you so much adam baron from the european council on foreign relations thank you. and police have arrested more than eighty people in raids across europe and south america to crack down on one of at least main organized crime syndicates the police say they've detained some senior bosses on suspicion of cocaine trafficking money laundering bribery and violence the target is the senate known as and that i get that which dominates europe's illegal drugs trade and is based in colombia in southern italy. it's being called
7:34 pm
a decisive hits against one of the most powerful italian criminal networks in the world a vast investigation starting in twenty sixteen culminated today in dozens of arrests in a silly scene here as well as in germany the netherlands belgium and south america the european judicial agency year i just called the operation unprecedented and extraordinary result that we have reached today with the joint judicial action that has been carried out in different member states in order to fly to the no one no the most powerful organization. in the war to be europe wide operation comes a day off to italian police arrested the suspected new head of the society and mafia and dozens of other alleged gangsters in poland and germany there are estimated to be at least three hundred fifty members one alleged member the owner
7:35 pm
of this pizzeria and pull jaime a cologne was arrested on wednesday and his home searched all right let's cross now to sanders who is in poor hi i'm close to the western german city of cologne where one of today's arrests took place in the us what happened there this morning and why has this particular the get out that member been arrested well earlier this morning authorities across four different countries launched operations targeting the calabrian mafia. in this sleepy town on the outskirts of cologne called poor home police targeted the man who owns this pizzeria now he's a forty five year old man who lives about three hundred meters down the street where police arrested him and they say he was a pivotal member of. who which is known for its wide scale cocaine trade in criminal activities in europe tell us live it more about the mafia
7:36 pm
a group just how powerful are they. well they're considered one of the most powerful if not the most powerful italian mafia according to u.n. estimates their criminal activities including money laundering and the cocaine trade comprise up to three percent of italian g.d.p. now that's a massive number and in italy they're also considered one of the most violent mafia groups all right now as you pointed out is a small town close to cologne it seems like a very unlikely place for such a huge police operation indeed it is and that's what this took years of investigating and it was the culmination of of a years long investigation targeting the group across like i said four different countries including italy the netherlands and belgium now in germany it's
7:37 pm
considered the largest group operation police operation targeting the mafia and they were able to confiscate up to four thousand kilos of cocaine but prosecutors said. don't don't take this as a major blow to the mafia organization in fact this might not even have put it dent into it. sanders are reporting thank you. and i'm going to have your on our talent because german car makers hope to head off a trade war yes with their checkbooks no less office works at the white house fox fog and c.r. have a decent president trumpet responded positively to plans from fox falcon dime and b.m.w. to invest billions in aid the united states and crucially create jobs now there's also talk of a co-operative deal such as one between v.w. and for which now the u.s. is especially important for german call make it eight percent of the seventeen
7:38 pm
million cars sold every year on theys by german brands now china is actually more important is a much larger market with twenty four million cars sold there annually in which the german manufacturers hold an enormous twenty two percent share of that figure europe actually is only the third largest market for the b.m.w. don of folks are going to hear they hold a fifty percent share but of course it sounds like a lot remember sixteen million cars are sold there and he says a low a fake and that's why they can afford to ignore an invitation to speak with us straight officials. they were summoned and they came three german car industry titans called to the white house to make the case against higher tariffs on european made cars they weren't initially expecting to meet the president but in the end he too came here's how dime new c.e.o. dieter at such a described the encounter. the meeting with the president is very interesting and
7:39 pm
he clearly said that we have come in this country and. of course his objective is to see more jobs there and more investor activity here which is in accordance with. a sentiment echoed by the other automotive leaders in washington. is even weighing a plan that would seed build cars and fords u.s. factories and produce electric vehicles in the united states but the specter of trump's promise terrace is still a cause for concern for germany's association of automotive manufacturers. additional terrorists would. bring us additional cost and therefore be a threat on the competitiveness of our office in the us market and that's why we say leave the competition open and let the ones who have the best product win within the competition. whether president trump will be persuaded to drop the
7:40 pm
twenty five percent levy he's threatened may depend on the kind of impression the german c.e.o. has left on him. germany is likely to lose more than one hundred thousand jobs as the traditional car industry shift to electric cars that's the sobering conclusion of a massive study looking at how the adoption of electric cars could affect germany's job market and lots of positions would likely range from factory jobs to highly paid design and engineering decisions that the experts from the institute for employment research say that the german car industry could avoid the losses if it redoubles its efforts to brace the electric car industry. she uganda now where tensions have been growing between small ugandan traders and chinese businesses operating in the country the growing competition has stoked local resentment including protests now ugandan soldiers have been deployed to security guards at chinese businesses in the wake of a spate of robberies. chinese hotel yeah you being has lived in
7:41 pm
uganda for fifteen years been says he got his government has assured him safety for his business all the time not every he acts and i must i wouldn't promise. you when you americans affect the good of for your kind of people. a lot of people come to get a job. i'm not disowning your hair people can develop saw in free to don't worry. by the fact that in itself. but not all the chinese nationals in uganda i like being. the police see that cases of fifty at chinese owned businesses of little increased. this is forced uganda's president you were in was saving to order for military intervention there have been some threats by criminals on and on just as this is an acceptable and
7:42 pm
steps being taken to assure that. investors below core international are protected. our chinese friends have raised the concerns and. we've responded to them. with seventy says the chinese of created many jobs for ugandans and he cannot risk frustrating them i'm going to do the jailer training. if you need to be. a little prayers. for ugandan who really wanted to pull them. over fifty thousand chinese live in uganda many are engaged in construction mostly funded by their government others are in trade and manufacturing but have often clashed with low cause especially in running small scale businesses. the military
7:43 pm
deployment is primarily to crack down on robotics but might as well safeguard the chinese against hostile locals. and is back officially now. now it's got everything from music videos fashion and makeup to torrijos d.i.y. repair tips you tube is the go to place for videos on just about anything with billions of monthly users it's also a money making machine for people known as influencers are now force has published a list of the highest earning you cheer whereas on top is can't face an eight year old boy who reviews toys then with me is do you social media editor jared ever read i need to get my toddler on your chair. so what's behind that something or ok so we're clearly in the wrong profession because this kid ryan is on the top of the forbes list he earned twenty two million dollars. for what sounds like the best job
7:44 pm
ever basically he gets to play with toys these parents film him playing with and they stick it on you tube he's channel is cold ryan's toys review and they put up very short very colorful videos and i've made him one of the most popular influences online they launched the channel four years ago when ryan was three and since then his videos of right up twenty six billion views on that makes him today the highest paid you tube star these videos are published almost daily and like i said he's filmed playing with his mom and toys opening number playing with so to sum it up it's christmas every single guy he's a multimillionaire and i'm pretty jealous. that he's got nothing to live for n.c.l.b. goes downhill from here are right. what i don't understand is how can you make that
7:45 pm
much money by being on you to ok so we take ryan's case as an example millions of people watch is videos and so these is the audience of millions of people waiting to be advertised to and before you before his viewers what she's videos they get played ads and so money those odds generate money so you win if you what. the you tube video generally there's an ad before you watch it and money's so if they're basically paying for the eyeball stuff there is no way you could get that amount of eyeballs on your product all right also let's talk about influencers because i see this asking by as well would like the makeup to torrijos you have these influencers they are also making a kelly that's right i mean not all of them are as rich is ryan they probably want to be you know you can write that influences make money because they already and says trust them to to promote a product and that's how they get them on board and increasingly companies are spending more of their money on social media influences on you tube you can make
7:46 pm
money but instagram is really roadside and if you're the right kind of low and so on instagram you can make a killing people like kylie jenner who is a kardashian sister and a make up her she makes a million dollars. according to the instagram rich least he she is she's followed by the singer and actress selena gomez she makes seven hundred thousand dollars and cristiano ronaldo makes seven hundred fifty thousand dollars layla as if they needed it because it's basically they endorse certain products and therefore they are very valuable in terms their endorsement is very that's right you don't need to be like a massive celebrity you know to make money you've got to follow if you've got a following but it's a really competitive industry and you've got to find your niece in a very crowded place what are we going to do you know what we have got to say. and we're going to shift our attention now to brazil where doctors have announced
7:47 pm
that they helped a woman to successfully deliver a baby using a transplanted room from a dead donor the baby girl was wore last december but the study has only just been published in the lancet medical journal. a baby is born every four seconds but few births are as remarkable as this a healthy girl delivered after growing and a woman from a dead donor and the relieved doctors who oversaw this feat of modern medical science it's a very important step really are milestone for your money for the reparative nancy because that's the first time it was dr dani illusion berg and his team at the university of new medical center that carried out the risky trial helping a woman born without a womb to become a mother. she becomes much more ahead here
7:48 pm
when the process jean use after this surgery mimi after she get pregnant it was she felt very full feel happy we've thought oprah said it's. now days we've her baby almost one year now and she's is very well. transplant births have worked in the past like for this newborn in sweden in twenty fourteen but previous procedures had only succeeded with winds from living donors often a relative of the patients. for leading gynecologists around the world the development is a game changing breakthrough in this way we can tell them well we have a. live birth from the c. store program and for this reason we feel that we can you know proceed and offer this option to women it is airily days yet but doctors running the trial say more
7:49 pm
babies are on the way good news for women who cannot or do not want to rely on a living donor. aren't and we want to return now to our special live coverage of the state funeral for george h.w. bush the forty first president of the united states a departure ceremony at joint base andrews in maryland is due to start before the bush bush's remains are taken back to houston in texas for a private family service and burial on a thursday and. a crane our chief political correspondent is back with me here in the studio in that so they're getting ready to go to texas where the president will be buried next to his wife of seventy three years and his infant child robin who died at the age of three from the kenya talked to us all of it because originally the family is of course for maine but then texas places
7:50 pm
outsized role in their in their legacy almost yes it's quite fascinating it's a very patrician wasp family white anglo-saxon protestant that was quite evident in the church service and yet as we also heard in one of the eulogies the young george h.w. bush up rooted to his family with a small george jr already there and they went off to tech in texas and that was not an easy transition at that time i actually have lived in texas i've spent summers in maine where the bushes also go and these are two completely different worlds and were even more so at that time i had to do it one nine hundred fifty s. he did it in order to get his start in business in life and in fact texas was an economy that was on the rise at the time he did work we heard very very simple beginnings there apparently they shared a duplex with the ladies of the night as his son put it in in his own speech there
7:51 pm
in the church and then after a not very long george h.w. bush did in fact run for congress and that. it was the beginning of his political career so he got his start as a politician in texas and they really did have a foot or do have a foot in both of those worlds and in fact texas is where george h.w. bush died and i think that sort of down to earth ness that you could sometimes see in both of the presidents both george bush is is part of that texas heritage because that east coast patrician side can sometimes be a bit haughty and certainly george w. bush is anything but hardeep we could also see that in the church and george h.w. as well in fact he could be very down to earth and as we heard he had a great taste for off color humor that's a very texan trait very texan trade well as we are waiting for the casket to are
7:52 pm
arriving for the bush family to arrive to take of president bush's final destination bring an end to what has been a week of honoring the former president you referenced. president bush jr his. of course his father and towards the end broke down which understandably i think anybody who has buried a parent can can relate to that very emotional yeah we were sort of wiping our own eyes there a bit at that moment apparently president george h.w. bush wrote a letter to his children when he was around seventy five or eighty probably just entering that period that was mentioned in the eulogy of his friend former senator simpson who said he encountered president bush george h.w. bush at that time who seemed so content with his life who had the sense that he was
7:53 pm
where he wanted to be and around that time the president wrote to all of his children including george w. bush and said to them. i find myself crying. bit more than i used to as i as i age but you know bush is cry when they're happy and they cry when they're sad and that was that came to my mind when i saw george w. break down and he held it together manfully for most of that that eulogy but at the end he was overcome when he talked about what a great father his father was and there was a lot of competition in that family this is a father who was a sportsman an athlete of great achievement who had gone on to achieve other amazing things george w. often felt i think that he was somewhat in the shadow of this man and yet apparently in their later years they developed a very close and loving bond. in terms of of course that with events like these
7:54 pm
there's been a lot of praise showered on the late president bush as is appropriate of course in these circumstances and there's also been a reassessment kind of of his legacy but this was also a man and a politician who was flawed absolutely there were absolutely mistakes made and we really can debate about the merits of the iraq war what i think we can say on the plus side is that he did not prosecute it to baghdad he did call off. and say we are not going all the way through to baghdad but he was often perceived in domestic politics as being out of touch with common america's foreign policy of course it doesn't when he was less has been you know that was his passion but as there was an economic downturn in the u.s. it was perceived that george h.w. bush simply didn't have the energy in the motivation to deal with and if you remember bill clinton won on the slogan it's the economist exactly he was
7:55 pm
a one term president of course and we know americans most of the time this is a generalization give a sitting president another term but they didn't do that with. the late president bush well in the meantime. the motorcade has arrived and i think are pretty soon they will be carrying out their casket to its final destination and going back home to texas. here in germany and just in general his handling of the cold war has received a lot of praise absolutely and you know despite the flaws that you mention and i think that to some degree we've perhaps lauded his virtues more than we might have if we didn't have a president at the helm at the moment so you think it's just such a special contrast absolutely the modesty of president george h.w. bush the sense of service the decency the bipartisan approach all of that but
7:56 pm
the fact is i think historians will say he was a better president than many of us perhaps realized at the time as you say and one term president but many historians are already saying the history books were treated well. melinda thank you so very much and we're going to leave our viewers now with these final images of the motorcade that has arrived and we're waiting for the casket to be taken home.
7:57 pm
the guardians of the along. to brazil's indigenous one appeal to tribes the rain forest the sacred the respect to media the environment so protecting the forests has become an unrelenting struggle. they fight to preserve both their natural surroundings. and their own culture. on behalf of the entire planet
7:58 pm
in fifteen minutes on t.w. . europe. what unites. them and what divides. the most. tragic colors. what binds the continent together. the answers and stories of plunging the. spotlight on people. focus on girls on t w. i don't often talk of the death well i guess sometimes i am but i found nothing when picked up and read the german thinks deep into the german culture of looking at the
7:59 pm
8:00 pm
37 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=491092186)