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tv   Direct Impact  RT  July 22, 2023 4:30am-4:57am EDT

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to buy tickets to watch the circus and the, and that's essentially what, what truck represents. and if that's why ratings were up, that's why ratings were, were rob, i, i, i don't think it's necessarily that the business is changing. based on the guy who's in office. i don't think there's any difference between trump and obama, and biden, or any other president of the united states because the policies are essentially the same. and the business interests which i have clenched fists with those policies. and the government are the ones that are really mandating what we watch or what we get on these cable channels. i think i, i leave it to you. you say what? i think more people are starting to seek out independent media. i think they're tired of hearing the same narrative that you get from the state department. and i think that they are starting to question things more and we can point to the pan demik. that's something that more americans to started to question. since the information has changed from a cdc, so this information like that, and then also this war with russian ukraine. war americans are starting to question
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. should we really send billions of dollars to ukraine over the past like year and a half. but why should they but why should they? they didn't questionnaire rock. they didn't question of get us then. they didn't question. yeah. man, they didn't question. lydia. they didn't question syria. why wouldn't make americans all of a sudden wake up and oh, wait a minute. my government is spending between 50 and a $100000000000.00 a year and some place i, i can't even find on a map. why would they change or the economy? a lot of people are still struggling right now. the gas prices, depending on what state you live in, the gas prices are still high for some of us. then there's the price is that the grocery store food is still expensive. this inflation that we're dealing with. so people are saying that more so people who are not left this upset this to me as well. they're saying now that like wait a minute, i'm paying what $8.00 for a carton of eggs. and the bind administration has continued to send billions of dollars to another country. so i think more people are starting to make that
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connection. i think that's the difference when you compare it to iraq. you know, it's interesting what you just said about left. i don't even know what the hell is the less than what the hell is the right anymore, because it seems like they've just somehow merged and found this place in the middle. in fact, you could make the argument that if the democratic party represents the left, which it certainly represents a lot more than the republican party represents the left that it's the left today in america that is promoting and supporting these raise the expensive endless wars. like what we're now seeing, developing a new credit. uh, well, i wanna, i wanna clear something here because a lot of people say that the democratic party is left. the democratic party is not left, or those are liberals. they still lead center, right? so i just want to make the distinction there, left, this are people who consider themselves to be progressive. people who are left of the democratic party, people like myself, we're the ones. yeah. now listen i,
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i get that is a way to i a hold on. i get that and god love you for saying that, and i think you're making an important point that there's a true distinction between, you know, the institutional formalized that the establishment, which is maybe the best word democratic party and left us. but my point is, you certainly couldn't say republicans are left to scan, you know, you to not. yeah. so if you have to go down to specter between who's closer to the left that across are closer to the left. so i agree with what you say by the way, that they're not necessarily representing a left point of view, which i think is what you're saying. right? right. i mean, they're calling for censorship now. like this is ridiculous. you have people who are politicians, who i thought were suppose to be progressive, like amc calling for censorship. calling for the silence of voices that she disagrees with their people who tend to criticize her. this is a problem. any time that you have,
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people like margery taylor green is calling for anti censorship and just calling to stops and in the money to ukraine. that's supposed to be the perspective that comes from the left. yes, i think it happened when we come back. i want to ask you a little bit about the, the specific things that that tucker has said and done in recent weeks prior to his being well, he supposedly resigned. but as we all know, he was fired. he was let go and that's the truth of it. you stay right there. sabrina, i look forward to talking to you on the other side of the break. by the way, i should tell you, i have a pod cast where i as a journalist as a latino and as an entrepreneur or tell my story and share it with you. i also talk about what we learned about the stories that we talked about on the show. it's called rick sanchez podcast. i invite you to check it out when we come back more on the firing of tucker crossing and what uh, what really meets stay with the
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of the sort of course into solving for now or, you know, no problem ma'am. ma'am. the
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millennium, the
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your more just the say, welcome back. how much sanchez. you know, there's something else that's been happening of late regarding what we know in the firing of talk across and remember question was, fox is most, when you know most highly rated most companies breaking host, for example, we have the compunction, if not the temerity, the questionnaire countries foreign policy, something these days seems for been an american establishment. media outlets. it is perhaps for that very reason that fox is getting a lot of heat now for firing cross and went back once again talking to uh, sabrina sell body. she hosts savvy sobs, that's her podcast, and it's
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a darned good one. and she has a very unique way of looking at the, the politics of our time, which obviously today is very much in a mix with the news and the editorial decisions of our time non bigger, more recently than what happened to tucker carlson where he was just off a sudden the old one morning hey, don't come to work. you're fired. it was a complete shock to him. he was totally surprised. i know tucker, as you know, tuckers had me on a show many times and he, and i've talked a lot over the years, i would consider him most a friend because you know, in this business, i don't know how close you have you. we are having those, but he did, he did get by, you're in this have dominion lawsuit and he did something which was quite interesting. he was actually uh heard, or i guess written on tags where he said about donald trump. i hate him. i hate him passionately. and ask for the argument that donald trump had lost
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the election. he called, he said it was essentially a joke. and that you know, and he was embarrassed having to put that story on the air because he didn't think there was an a trip to it yet. he was going on the air and that saying those things essentially promoting donald trump and promoting the, the story about the election being a fraudulent. so that been cut to his credibility. did it not? i would say so. i think a big part of the problem is, you know, in network network news, you have to do what the producers want you to do or you lose your seat and they'll replace you with someone else, you know, but i couldn't imagine going on air almost every other night promoting a donald trump promoting something that i really despise. so i would say that a tucker was a good actor in, in reference to that. but i think that this is something what, what does that say? but what does that say? what, what does that say? and you know, okay, tucker was doing that because for some reason he figured the right calculation was
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not to go on the or, and criticized drop. so he defended trump on the air. the privately, he would tell his friends donald trump's that area and on the air he defended the election square foot whole. but privately he said this is bullcrap and he did that. do you think they all do that is i wouldn't. i wouldn't be surprised. i really wouldn't, i wouldn't be surprised if there's commentators of cnn or m as in dc that are not too keen on joe biden, but they have to read the script that they're given. they have to come on there and do their job. that's the thing is like they're trying to sell an image. they're trying to sell a certain types of politics. they're trying to support the state department on narrative, and that really is their job. i just wish more americans realize that. do you think uh, here's where the rubber meets the road, or it's not so much what the, the editorial is,
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or the boss's cnn, or on a 70 c or fox, or anywhere. what they say. great, is that your executive producer? it's the people who are set on board rooms, who want to make sure that the entity stays whole. so why would i do a story on, for example, the fact that politicians have to take bribes legal bribes so that they can have campaign funds so that they can then run for office when those campaign funds are then fed into cnn, and fox and tv to do commercials. so if i was to go on there and tell the truth, which is almost every politician in the united states is taking a legal bride. and politicians are being paid off every day by giant corporations. right. but because that money goes back to cnn and back to fox and back them as nbc in the form of advertising, they're not going to talk about it. and they're not them and criticize it. that's
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just one example that besides other businesses determining the editorial slab of the news. and unfortunately, this is how it works. and that's why people have to look at who owns these companies, where the shareholders that are invested in these networks. you really have to trace it back and see if you look at a company like black rock or via gartner states state street. yeah. they're shareholders in the media space. and this is really important for people to understand. so the people that you see on the screen, they are merely just a pop it like they don't really have get the opportunity to say their real opinion . you know, this is why they were so critical against someone like bernie sanders because to bring him on the network and to hear him say, the billionaires are the problem. well, that doesn't sit well with the people who are on the board of the network. you know, so of course they're going to some your, someone like it, you know, it's interesting in the case of tucker, once again, he really played it. he played both sides against the middle because he knew foxes audience is very old and white and male. right?
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so the great for ponder and of foxes audience probably between 80 and 90 percent are white. a man's, um certainly white. uh and the males pretty high as well. right. so he knew that he had to play a certain argument for them. and that's why tucker, when it came to the traditional arguments from the right, which i'm sorry, tends to be a little on the anti immigrant side. pardon me, i'm an immigrant, but you're not gonna hear fox news advocating for the rights of latinos in the united states. or african americans for that matter. not a fairly pace better for me. place for that audience. tucker, knew how to continue that rhetoric sort of speak. but he gave a more. he didn't just and there he didn't just do you know what a riley and hannity do, which is just play down the middle to the republican talking points. he stayed on some republicans having boards, but then took them out of their holding and talking points, like you said,
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with the situation in the ukraine, which, which was a level strategy. i've never seen anybody else do that on any network, which is i'll give you some of what i think you want, right? i'll give you your, your, your, your, uh, your dessert for lack of a better word or description. but you know what, here's your spinach and you're going to learn this. and by doing that he actually was leading the conservative cause toward trying to straighten out our foreign policy greeting debacle. that it is no. yeah, i would say so i think, you know, he's trying to show again he was trying to give them what they want, but at the same time kind of slowly walk them to where they should be headed. and i think that's not easy to do. i don't think a lot of commentators do that. they usually tend to be one sided, one way or the other, but i said this when when tucker was, was fired. i said tucker, crossing can start a youtube channel tomorrow and probably already have
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a 1000000 subscribers. a lot of people like to listen to them and not just conservative their democrats. they used to watch like talk across and show. so i think people have to understand whatever he was doing. it was engaging in a way that people wanted to turn in and watch him. do you think? what do you think you'll do? i mean, 1st of all, we should know. he doesn't need to do anything because he's a swanson air and that means he is, you know, rich beyond anyone's wildest imaginations. and if he didn't want to work another day in his life, he didn't have to. however, i do believe like most of us, but he has an ego that needs to be fulfilled and he wants to be famous that he wants to be on the tv. and he will be well, according to the lawn mosque, he's supposed to do a show on twitter. yeah, so this should be interesting. i'm not sure how that will work out, but i think people will tune into twitter to see like tucker, because a lot of people like him is going to be different. i think this is a whole shift in the platform. apparently they're going to allow people to
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subscribe to the show as well. so we'll see what happens and maybe more people may go that way. 100000000 people, a 100000000 people watched tuckers blurb on twitter announcing that he was going to be creating a show on that format. 100000000. think about that, do do, do you know truckers everybody gets excited about ratings, but cable news readings are actually pretty small. tucker on a good day. had 3000000 people watching. and in terms of the demo, or what we call the $25.00 to $54.00 audience, which is the audience that matters. this audience was relatively tiny compared to the population of the united states, maybe 500000, not a good day, maybe, maybe 6, maybe 4. who knows? i mean, that's basically what the numbers were in a country of 350000000 people. it's not a huge, not now a 100000000. that's
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a big not. what does that say? yeah, more people have gone away from cable to be honest with you like the a lot of people i know don't have cable subscription, haven't had one in years. their streaming services, so more people have like, especially my generation netflix, hulu. uh, but everybody, uh, for the most part, my generation is on twitter. so twitter, again, like the social media sites. youtube is another one that a lot of people are more willing to watch than cable. so i think again, i think the days of just like cable news, either they're going to have to do something drastically different to engage a new audience, particularly your younger audience. or they're just going to fade away. sabrina, somebody. uh my, uh, my thanks to you. the host of the savvy sab, you can capture broadcast on, uh, the uh, revolutionary blackout network. and uh, and she's out there and we thank her for us taking some time to uh to have those lively conversation with us today about the tucker carlson firing or lack of
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a better term or maybe using the most correct term. thanks again. sabrina. thank you. hey, before we go, i want to remind you of our mission here. it's simple really. i want the silo the world. we've got stuff living in these little boxes to still live in boxes. they're everywhere. commer sanchez. and i'll be looking for you again, right here for our help to provide a direct impact the, [000:00:00;00] the,
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[000:00:00;00] the, with the end of world war one, the movement for indian independence from the british empire flared up with renewed vigor. the british responded to the growth of the national liberation movement with arrest and brutal violence. repression cause active resistance. in march 1919 at the call of mahatma gandhi, a peaceful strike began in the country. but the british responded with a new round of violence and far bade the indians to gather more than 4 people. on the day of the sea bass at the festivals a huge crowd of civilians gathered in the center of the city of i'm the start in northern india,
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seeing these as outright defiance. general reginald dyer gave the order to open fire on the on arms people. the barbaric execution claimed the lives of at least 379 indians, including 40 children, the youngest of who was 6 weeks old. the indian national congress considered the official figures to be underestimated and announced the death of more than $1000.00 civilians. the well known greatest newspaper, the morning post called dyre, the man who saved india gave him a sword and 26000 pounds sterling as a token of gratitude for the massacre. the amorous, our massacre went down in history as one of the most brutal grinds of the british invaders, and only escalated the affair. struggle of the indians for liberation from the colonial yoke. the
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a nice sort of questions for solving for now, are you going to spend just now? no problem ma'am. ma'am, by the name of up love, the
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light, the your email. i just the, the color me with your position, you go under the fill out to the yes, some little motion or use the some more snow a little could respond. jump the somebody,
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me on the story you shortly. i forgot the as much to my law number nights mean. yeah. but also in your process here where you must, despite in, jump to for our flow, right. and then just by the end of integration, divinely. let me put it that way. i need us to go, i thought, of course i knew the maximum position if we just need to spend mcclure the advisor because my board of deadlines because i'll thumbs up from the federal set of pleasure in yeah, come on 0. but there is that in there, and then billy from the village of some fuzzy, it's a friend format of almost a thump. so i say i'm going to try if i'm so sure my partner device to brother is
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present bill the show on us can get sign. you can just put the agree on the rise to that or crash or to if i wasn't professional on such a frontier future then people look up a small business . no. yeah, the state shows the patient. isn't the show more for social well
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that those law, no man throws, no, you haven't on the start of severe to go for the most to show at the blue link, the blog most boss noise the article i suggest what the zip smart is, but yeah, my definitely good is on to what the new property or some that category gives me at the top. not really a show golf course go with the car. new ship was the xerox from the gulf coast guard. just text me of a silver number. would you be solid? rock look, a whole glass at those nipples. wine unity met this golf course. could be a c h service because i know what image of offering you think he'll be able to between the nozzle pretty see a lot less,
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but i'll send you a voice here which is to just about being in settlements cuz i'd die up. are you able to watching up any other news here for sure. so, so much of stuff is ation in the line. you're more interested in that the anesthesia, like the myers is not. i mean by us are still on the phone with the music. she, i'm ready for progress. she is the one we have the issue, but as a cover letter for your stuff i sure the smart city reference books, kamesia myers the know the trick them and do this. all right, so so what is your mission over that door? those are those not just because of the rooms i go to sleep. so because before you
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look on, you looked at the look because it does somebody and they divide it by jump to the bit. that's still going to be on the shelves the same. and yet they can shrink destiny, and there's just because i know it's nice to me successful point to show about this now clause. so people going to just show me see me got there and i get it back out of it. so 6 through 0 them my is that for me both of us are not the most expensive the one? yeah, it is

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