Real Time With Bill Maher : CNNW : April 20, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive (2024)

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eastern and pacific only on cnn and taylor swift is topping the charts once again with her 31 so double album and that is swift's new song, fortnite featuring post malone from her new album, the torque, torque tortured poets department, excuse me. it was released friday at midnight with the surprise second part released at two who i am and it's been on repeat for so many swifties worldwide, ever since it h now otify's most streamed album in single day, breaking swift's own rd. or swift or the so-called the dean of the tortured poets department haalsoecomthe most streamed artists in a single day. in spotify history.

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congratulations to her and her legions of fans,nd thank you for joining me this evenin i'm alex marquardt. i'll see yoagain right here tomorrow ght, starting at 5:00 p.m. eastern an episode of the real time with bill maher sw starts right now the hbo original series bill i feel

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like there's gunman right okay we have a big show. >> i think i know why you're happy. it's a holiday tomorrow for each one. 20 cheese. >> i'm going to start my baking i'm getting i started earlier anyway this is a very special for 20 because it's for 2024 which is which is the same backwards and forwards. this

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only happens once every hundred years like like arizona updating its abortion laws various just so much going on this week a new taylor swift album and a donald trump trial something for this swifties and for the nut. so swiftie you have the album, you haven't already oh, it's amazing. it's called tortured poets department. and everybody loves it already. the tweens love at the team's love at the millennials, love it. dick cheney said, you had me at tortured this trial is really wearing on donald trump had been watching him. oh, my god, because they people get to talk about him and he has to sit

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there for hours without saying anything kinda like he did on january 6 he keep falling asleep and of course doing it. he says he says he just resting his eyes right and he's not drooling. his head is having a wet dream but i'd say it this race is getting quite interesting. did you see bobby kennedy? robert kennedy, rfk? he is now polling and 11.7%, not nationally just with his family well a lot of his family came out and said he should pull out at the rais and he said, please, i'm a kennedy,

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we don't know the meaning of the word he will he will be right there next week. >> so we're very excited about have you seen a lot of news from the middle east? i'm sure you saw a few weeks ago, israel bombed iranians and syria than this weekend or ran, fired 300 missiles and drone strikes at israel they didn't get anything make it better. but you will and then israel now fired back today and i tell you, when you get bombed in iran, it's it's very tough for the women there. they have to run for their life without showing ankle hopefully this is all coming down because israel, iran's is they have no plans now to retaliate to that.

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and i think that's great because like i know it's possible for persians and jews to co-exist. i've been to the beverly center the big issue in congress is funding. should we be funding israel and members of current this is, we've crossed the rubicon here. this is actually a big story, and then they're covering it that way. but i think it's big members of congress are now trolling each other with then legislation. they're writing the trolling into the legislation. marjorie taylor greene, remember when she because she's q and on she thinks they have jewish space lasers, whatever the that is so she wrote into the legislation you mentioned an amendment that israel has to be funded for space laser technology oh, lord i think it's good that you can laugh it herself because i'm exhausted now, then there's the

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people who don't want israel to get any money that's the pro-palestinian protesters they have been out this weekend. they were closing down bridges and san francisco, new york, several other cities that's a new thing. bridges get on the bridge and stop people from getting across the bridge. and the people are all saying, i'm trying to get on the bridge. where is a drifting cargo ship when you need it? >> and finally, a joe biden made some news this week by revealing, revealing that his uncle was eaten by cannibals. good night, everybody know, i'm not just say this story ago, joe was kind of riffing and he was talking about his uncle was shot down. this is world war ii in new guinea apparently there are cannibals there and they never found the body. so ipso facto, he was eaten by county i don't know if

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this is a true story, but i think it's a great metaphor for the times we live in because if you want to continue living, you're going to have to swallow some biden all right. >> we've got a great show. we have john and jane gregerson, but first here's a fitness and nutrition expert and host of the podcast, keeping it real. please welcome jelly at myco i like you i know you're there for you though. >> no, they're not for me. no, no we you're a fitness person, you always look amazing and that's where you made your bones in this business and people know you very well from what you have to say about health, i've always admired you because it's not easy to talk about health. it people make, they want to be healthy in theory. but when you talk about it, it gets personal. they take it and political now,

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which is shocking and brand new, bright, but they have a love-hate relationship with good advice. i mean, we know you from shows you that you were on where you told us how to live diet and exercise i wanted you here to now because everyone is talking about ozempic and i need to what what is your take? i mean, diet and exercise is the old fashion way we all said, well, there must be a short sizes the only way, the only way it is the only way i was reading your new book. thank you for sending that to me. by the way. oh everybody i got an early gallon. what this comedian said will shock you out. may 21 pre-order it. that's true you said you'd like when historians look back on people in the 21st century, they will characterize them as anti-science. >> and i thought son of a on both sides, truer words have never been spoken, especially when it comes to health, because the reality is that these drugs, they do work. but

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it's a devil's bargain. >> add an extraordinary price there's a solution, albeit simple but not easy. it has no negative side effects and nothing but upside about eating a little bit less and moving a little bit of what you're saying is not something i've heard a lot that really yes. >> well, oprah called it a gift, people call it a miracle oh or set, of eyes to call it a gift and this is why i want you here, because i don't think people are hearing this other side. >> yeah. why do you say it's a devil's bargain? what is the side effects? what's the downside? well okay, here's the deal. if we look at the box and i see this because it isn't my opinion and i have no judgment. it's not an easy way out if it wasn't easy way out, life is hard enough. take it right? >> so the side effects alone, 50% of the people that take it will experience nausea, vomiting, constipation, and a lot of people will get off of it because they can't tolerate

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those side effects. now beyond that, there's pancreatitis, kid kidney failure and it's like, oh, would you're saying it's causing those pancreatitis. those are side effects on the box. >> how much okay 400% increased chance of pancreatitis from taking this drug you've got sirois, tumors, vision loss you've got muscle loss, and now anecdotally we're seeing articles on the daily one that came out just yesterday saying that psychiatrists think it warps your brain because it how it impacts your body's ability to regulate dopamine others suicidal ideation. there's lack of libido. >> okay. well, suicidal ideation. i was reading about that. yeah, europe says no. we here at fda first they said no, then they say, well, we're studying it more and they said we do have 157 reported cases, to whatever they report them to the fda. >> there's a significant amount they did do steady, but they looked at people who

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committed suicide not people who had suicidal thoughts. >> why would this drug that make you think of suicide? >> i've spoken to multiple psychiatrists about this and there are different theories, one of which is that serotonin, which are feel good. one of our feel-good chemical this is made in the gut. >> and if you look at how this drug impacts that got which by the way, i forgot to mention stomach paralysis and intestinal blockage, are also deadly side effects it's arguably going to impact where your body makes serotonin. >> and now we're looking at dopamine and they think that it's in the way our body regulates dopamine. but they have no idea how. and if you wanna get really afraid the american academy of pediatrics is recommending this as a first-line of defense for children. now, 12 years old, but they're testing it on kids as young as six it's it's absolutely pernicious. >> why, why would the metabolism you have it six you can't be healthy to begin

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with, is just crazy and look, i hear you. look, i'm i'm basically on your page and all this stuff. like when you talk about this oh, it changes what is in your gut and your serotonin that's the kind of thing that i'm always talking get about on this show when people think i have two heads is what i mean, but it's so hard to talk about health because it's like, oh, what are you talking about? serotonin in your gut, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. but maybe a yak, and you know what? that's, what health is. it's, it's this interconnectedness that goes on in our body absolutely people do not want to hear it. but, but it's not always evident are on the surface what causes one thing when you do one medical intervention, what happens downstream, like whack-a-mole right. >> and it begins these problems that require new drugs to treat those issues but again, but what okay. >> so let's look at how it works and the reason i want to look at how it works is because i want to encourage people that eating less will work. >> what is it doing? what but they know that i hear

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constantly all the time. i can't lose weight, nothing works this isn't magic, but they know that would work what they're, what they're saying is i can't stop eating well, let's look at why the insatiable hunger then that's really important. >> and this is where big food comes into play. so you've got the psychology, a lot of people are utilizing food as a coping mechanism with defense structure on a kinsey scale, if you're there to do thank you for state purposely make it addicted. they have food companies have labs where they do this all day. >> can you just one getty, just one right exactly. >> i mean, then they know what they're doing. 100%. >> yeah. >> and so what happens is they're literally hacking your biochemistry, right? >> when you look at what these drugs do they mimic satiety hormones, you realized that our bodies are designed to have what's called mechanistic homeostasis. >> we are built to regulate body temperature or to regulate stomach ph, blood ph which you and i talked about on the brand. i'm right. right. we're

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also oh, bill, to regulate our appetite. >> but the issue is what's going to do it? healthy fats, protein, fiber, when you drink a soda, there's no fiber, there's no fat, there's no protein, no satiety hormones are being released. >> and in fact, hunger hormones get released when you eat these foods. >> plus, they hack the dopamine center of your brain. >> they are chemically addictive as much as cocaine, cocaine, and nicotine. >> okay. but first of all, i've read also the half the people who take ozempic are one of these three has no side effects, okay. right? mel, they will plateau. and we will play at absolutely. every single study illustrates that between weeks 68 and 72, the drug stops working, build a tolerance to it so it becomes inevitable that you'll have to figure this out organically anyway. and in addition, we really don't know what this looks like in perpetuity bill, people cannot get all have it and when they do all of the metal you have to be on it for life.

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life, you will get it all back and then some it's yo-yo dieting on crack. >> people are well but what people around lots of drugs look, i always say this medicine is playing the odds and it's always about what is the least bad option. >> if you really are one of those people who can't stop eating. and i understand that because that's not my thing. but if they said to me stop smoking pot all joking aside to be very hard to live the kind of i don't even smoke every day. i'm not the kind of potted people think i am i am not but when i want it, i want it okay so there's a line in the sand and i know what's four

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20 and everything, but i've never i've never lied about it and said, oh, it's health food. >> i mean, it's not i'm probably hurting myself just some degree. not like it did with cigarettes and liquor, which was really stupid. but, you know but it's a trade-off is what i'm saying. and people, what's wrong with saying, look, i'm going to eat, i just know i am. i've tried everything. it's not going to happen. this is the least bad option because otherwise, i'm going to have a heart attack or otherwise i'm going to have high cholesterol and all the other things that you can get. >> i would play that out with you all the way to the part where the drugs stopped it's working. >> okay. and my mother is a psychoanalyst and she's taught me for years that people who utilize food as a coping mechanism or defense structure, this food is providing them with something so significant that at one time or another month or psychological survival. so i'm going to say if you're struggling on that level, taken the aid or bucks a month, we would be spending on ozempic and get a fantastic therapist to help you work through it because you're going to be here and 68 to 72

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weeks anyway. >> and now you're all the way behind the eight ball. you'd think it's about it's in the mind. you think you can cure this in the mind. he said therapists, well, i think that it's twofold so food companies are absolutely at writing. >> you on a physiological level, but they're also exploiting your psychological hunger's& the truth of the matter is that there's so much shame around this because people who are overweight or obese have experienced discrimination for decades now. >> so what happens is we then turn around and say, okay, what narrative is going to make them feel the best? >> so big foods says we're going to push the anti diet narrative and you can be healthy at any size which is a message that actually meant health equity. we should provide equal access to health care for people at any size. but now it's don't even worry, go crazy. no food chain, theatre and then they he was never well, they buy off. registered dietitians to get them to say these things again, i never been a fruity, but

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it's it's not my advice, but there is a connection with the pod thing because when i smoke pot i mean, not right away first, it goes to my head. okay. then it goes to my dick then it goes to my stomach. i wanted goes to my stomach. i understand what it's like i mean, i really feel some particle with these people who can stop bidding because i know i am ravenous, but i have a simple solution. i don't keep in the house so i'll eat a lot when it's not terrible anyway, i gotta go to the could hey mike the fight against climate change. >> this is e car business blue carbon. we just need to protect

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nature will do the breast. >> corbyn cnn's filled tomorrow at nine lows knows there's nothing like the thrill of finding the best deal. that's why we've got door busters this spring fest happening. now, while supplies last shop spring fest door busters before they're gone not something happens i know it tastes gregg and lydia and joseon it's grammy get him checked on in her favorite chair or telling herself up to go hand the people between health raise ever seen i would describe my mom incredibly nurturing and encouraging truly my lock and most authentic and real person i am. ym because

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she is who she is diamonds for all my handle. that gold diamonds. >> okay, everyone. our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition are strength and energy ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein citizens of america, i got good news. >> america, these united number one movie in america, civil war what kind of american ari it's the movie event of the year civil war. we did our hold up if asthma isn't treating you, right, you might be treating a wrong. >> and i know you've been going through it. but what did you get to it? a key source of your asthma inflammation, enter new column. it isn't your rescue treatments and it's not a steroid. it's an auto-injector. you can do but home just once a month nikola targets and reduces eosinophils and helps her symptoms. >> thanks. >> less asthma attacks, less need for oral steroids. less

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cherokee, starting at 38,000 to 90 msrp. is it cheap.com for details. >> the white house correspondents dinner live next saturday at seven eastern on cnn they are he is apologia prize-winning historian or author of and there was light jon meacham is here susan award-winning journalist and author of no ordinary assignment. >> jane ferguson everybody has a book and now i have a book and i already plugged it is available for free order now, what this in february track your and john, thank you. gave me a blurb for this and i appreciate it very much more. you'll day. it was not going to be the same because of this okay. >> shall we start with the trump trial i was thinking

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today, it's years now since we started to say, boy, if we could only stop talking about donald trump that day just never comes so let me start with you as a historic because it is unprecedented. it's real criminal trial of a former president. and i definitely think he should be tried for the one in georgia and the one for trying to overthrow the government in that state tell me as a historian, haven't president's not been put on trial in the past for doing worse things than this one? >> no, i don't think know offhand know. nothing was worse than paying hush money to stormy daniels what number did anything but he's quite as vivid as that thank that what i have found this week to be somewhat reassuring he sitting there, he's obeying the rule of law there's a low bar. okay

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but right, gotta get over it and it is actually the prosecutorial discretion the prosecutor brought the case. he's there's a trial by jury unfolding in ancient right? and check and balance. going back to mega nacada donald trump and magna carta& the same sentence tells you something about 20:24 i think i think this is the beginning of accountability. is this the one you'd want to start with? >> no. >> but you can't have everything you want. >> okay what do you think as someone who's not from our shores originally, i think a lot of this is going to really come down to how it's covered in as a journalist myself and a lot of news organizations are still grappling with how much do they give a podium to donald trump? >> three steps out onto the steps of the court. just start speaking. >> is this essentially free pr free publicity above and beyond campaign fundraising i think

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it's a very risky if they lose this case. yes it does hand him that sort of martyrdom. >> car because it probably will be the only one we see this year so if you lose it, it's going to look bad, then it's gonna be held the conquering hero and maga land. >> yeah, it is. but that doesn't mean you don't proceed. and then lara trump, whose daughter-in-law who's now head of the rnc. >> she said, today it's four years of scorched earth when donald trump retakes the white house. >> so there's that to look for better about this case. nothing's on okay i want to ask you about, here's another quote. >> bill barr know bill barr, not del mar, bill barr. and we went through this basem*nt here on the show. i think he was here twice. former attorney general under trump, as conservative as it gets. i mean he's, you know, he's a mel gibson's dad, catholic but i

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also called him one of a small group who i called the goods but as it gets republicans, this is what i'm trying to convince my liberal friends at half the country is not going to self-report we have to learn to live together and people like bill barr, liz cheney, mitt romney, mitch mcconnell, mike pence, they all full-throated. lee said biden won that election stop the nonsense. that's as good as it gets in the republican party yeah. >> okay however, now bill barr says he's voting for trump he said, i think it's my duty to pick the person i would do would think would do the least harm to the country. >> the real danger to democracy is the progressive agenda trump may be playing russian roulette but a continuation of biden is national suicide. i think this is sincere. i don't think he's posturing. i think this is what a good part of this country

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believes discuss it is what a good part of the country believes. >> it's also a good part of the country's wrong about that it's irrational matter. now, politics and rationality are not complete bedfellows, which is part of the reason for the constitution, is that we were going to give reason a chance to stand against passion. what bar is doing, and what so many, i sometimes think of them as the peter malar republicans, right? these are republicans who we're not full maga people. they're men's grill types who don't want democrats picking judges are setting tax rates. they talk themselves into this twice. in 16 and in 20, and then came december and january of 20202021 and at that point, i believe and i say this with care that it's become evident to me anyway, that there's a patriotic duty to

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support president biden against donald trump for this reason, patriotism is allegiance to an idea. it's not just an allegiance to your own kind. that's nationalism. trump is a nationalist president biden is a patriot and i, i'm lucky& that i don't have particular policy passions particular issues. i want the constitutional order to continue to unfold and president biden is devoted to that constitutional order. donald trump is self-evidently not. and i would say to my republican friends and i live in tennessee, so that's redundant that it is, it is in fact a moral question and i was disappointed by what bar said he was, he got religion for a little while. there's a line and tom sawyer where twain says that evangelists came through town who was so good that even huck finn was saved until tuesday bill barr was saved i

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do wonder again, we're talking as though this was an inevitability that it would be these two i mean, more moderate conservatives who perhaps feel a little bit more homeless and the republican party might have been tempted to crossover is in the voter base. >> i mean, they have now hello, been presented with this choice where it was never an inevitability that it would be these two men mean what if there had been a different option within the democratic party? >> well, what if if if sands and buts were candy and nuts, we'd all have a very christmas as but this is what we have and the intermediates and think about the republican party is if you are in fact going to put partisanship as your central organizing principle. >> if reflexive partisanship is the most important thing i would argue that you need to go back and read george

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washington's farewell address. you need to read the founders that otherwise, they love, they love the founders when they can move it around to agree with them. it's very clear that if party spirit became the organizing principle that that was going to be fatal to the constitution. and it's very interesting when bar said, it's suicide. i mean, the idea that president biden's leading us to national suicide. i don't even sure what he's talking about but lincoln use that image and his first major speech to the 1830s, he said, if we ever fall, it's not going to be from a foreign foe. it's going to be from someone internally rising up and mastering those passions and those passions about partisanship. >> that's what's wrong. >> i don't disagree with anything he said. i just think there's not a big effort on the left to understand what they are talking about. because i don't think it's insincere in there, but i think they think we're going to hell in a handcart and one reason i think that is because the story that came out this week about nber

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npr is to them what this country would be if it was a permanent democratic governorship and if you miss the story on npr, it's, it's pretty interesting. a guy named early berlin or came out. he wrote a, he'd been there for a longtime 25 years, this guy, by the way, went to sarah lawrence and was raised by a lesbian peace activist. so he's very, very sean hannity. yeah. well very sean yeah he said, i've been at npr for 25 years. here's how we lost america's trust. and it's just about how this place which the show was called the big show was called all things considered. it's not all things considered. he's not wrong and he pointed out, for example, that of the 87 people working in editorial positions, there at are democrats even if you're a democrat, you can't think this is good.

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>> i think one of the sayyed is things about the increasing sort of rao out. then per row is just the latest we've seen so within the newsroom and the new york times, and there's really no major news organization in the united states that hasn't had some sort of news newsroom uprising recently, or critique satis thing about this is that he ended up quitting and back in the past there's all i don't know which is better what we have now people go public and talk about this newsroom issues and say, listen, there's not enough diversity of opinion, there's way too much pushback. >> this is not fair or in the past where what we've seen over the years is that people just quit. >> they'll believe one news organization and gravitate towards another as we people just become siloed in the newsrooms become silent and completely sort of tribal in that way. and i think that's the saddest thing that to see that he had actually left afterwards okay. >> so did you read the tweets from the person who is this

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never happened four on the show, i've been namesake& the newest, katherine maher is her name. i think that's how she pronounces it, although i kinda wish he pronounce it differently andrew sullivan wrote a column zinc called katherine maher is not a liberal and i agree. i mean, she's she's a portland de character. i mean, she's she says things like, i'm sure i mean, sure. looting is counterproductive but it's founded on treating people's ancestors as private property. yeah, i mean, cullum in a long time ago and i mean, this is just as she says, i someone with cis white mobility privilege i mean, it's the kind of white woman says she's beyond say, spirit animal. i just i i'm going to continue this discussion in vr, but i have to take a break because

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drugs cnn this is a travel show visit. my fans around the world you can't buy that kind of propaganda king in that's what i do, is my gif million turn-off alarm amelia, whether reasons emilia unlocked the door, i'm afraid i can't do that. >> can why not? did you against something my protein shake. >> the future isn't scary. >> not investing in it is so dramatic. >> emilia, by qian 100 innovative companies, one etf before investing carefully read and consider fund investment objectives risks, charges, expenses in more and perspective set invest go.com, when enamel is gone, you cannot get it back, but you can repair it with pronoun will repair it penetrates deep into the two to actively repair acid weakened enamel, i recommend from enamel repair with new pronominal

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people can say, well, i'm a caretaker, i've economic hardship. you have to work a little trump because it's trump. it was so easy for people to get out. first of all, the judge right away said who has things they can't be impartial, lost half the crowd immediately okay. so the other people, i mean, it just with trump, it just ridiculously easy to would you like to hear some of the excuse me? as i said, it's a conflict of interest. i also sell my own bible this woman's head i used to be a hooker in moscow and trump pete on me i never heard of this trump dude, but he looks guilty as this guy i look

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at this. i'm already on another trump jury definite conflict i'm totally into this trial because it's the one where the chicks shifts the bid, right now this guy really wanted to get out of this season. >> i'm dating is to keda and this will be our first time to and 17 i'm still grieving over the death of oj simpson. well expect that guy if trump goes to jail, i don't get deported, right i can't serve. >> i'm chained up in p danny's house and dad, it's me, tiffany the special to our

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to three-to-one, three-to-one today if you work in spaceflight, this is the worst possible thing i could ever happen my dad, died doing what he loved. >> space shuttle columbia, the

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final flight next on cnn. >> what does it mean to be out front? >> it's going there. >> we are just about three miles from the gaza border. >> it's finding out something unexpected. i relish all of our conversations, its context. the economy is by far the top issue for americans in this election curiosity. someone else de, to jump in the race & all. it's about sharing that. so you can be out front two. >> let's go out front erin burnett outfront week nights at seven on cnn neural re, non binary ontario man who last week's succeeded in his quest to get the government to pay for gender affirming surgery that would create a new while not ruling the old venus must

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tell us, are you a former boy scout biggest talked about, always being prepared the real you can hate the brazilian woman lin, who wield a dead man into a bank and tried to make his hand sign the paperwork for alone although it works for joe biden neurosurgeons, donald trump claims he stormed out this latest trial. he didn't. the asteroid met, he fell asleep and dreamt about storming out you must tell us what he was dreaming about. are all just have to film. it was jerking off two guys at one

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every week every week got no rule. if your last name is meth vin don't name don't name your daughter, crystal this is crystal meth vin who was arrested. of course, in florida for of course, using crystal meth and she was with her friend, mary joanna and to make matters worse, they tried to hide the drugs and anheuser busch their role in speaking of marriage, you want it in under

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a four 20 this another four, 20 this weekend, it's time to stop putting get getting high sequences in tv and movies written by someone who is obviously never smoked pot every time a character lights have been joined, suddenly the world turns into well, the wonka land hi, i'm bill maher& i hi, i'm bill maher and i will professional want us booker asking you to help with the growing problem harmful stoner stereotypes too often been media, marijuana smokers are portrayed as lazy, dead-eye dollars with hygiene issues who could barely dress themselves and form sentences and it's just not true. we're neighbors who don't have a job. and so what are your plans when you're out of town with the barista at your neighborhood coffee place,

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getting your order wrong where the guy from boeing finding bolts in his pockets and going where did these come from? we are the lifeblood of this nation. that's why i'm asking you this for 20 to give to the united's donors fund& end discrimination against weed smokers in our lifetime the donors fund, because the mind is a terrible thing when it's not wasted and finally, new rule as one of the few people in the public guy who's gone through life and never had kids summon us to tell me why am i always having to defend them? i don't even like kids, but i also think it's every adults job to protect them have you all been watching the max documentary called quiet onset the dark side of kids tv o mg

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nickelodeon. it wasn't a studio. it was never land ranch with craft services it, is just scene after scene clip after clip of the child stars of there de being subjected to obviously inappropriate, highly sexualized degradation and quite a few pickles going through glory holes i was grossed out and i've gone camping with john waters so i don't know if this documentary is the talk of your town, but it is out here because it didn't just expose a dangerous workplace. it also exposed hypocrisy because it must be pointed out that when the evil governor of florida was saying

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the exact same thing about kids and creepy stuff at disney that liberals now find intolerable at nickelodeon. he was dismissed as a heck& a big it, but why would a kid's content factory like disney be all that different than the one at nickelodeon? a 2014 cnn report discovered that at least 35 disney employees had been arrested for sex crimes against children& in 2021, disney child star allison's donor confess you only narrowly survived the toddler to train wreck pipeline in the next year, child star cold sprouts told the new york times that young actresses at the disney channel were heavily sexualized from an early age willie sutton said he robbed banks because that's where the money is. and the reason we find pedophiles and the boy scouts and the rectory and kids tv is that's where the kids are? desantis wasn't wrong. but we're so tribal now. the

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left will overlook child. if the guy from the wrong party calls it out sure. nickelodeon messed up a man two binds, but then mickey mouse club was, were britney spears got her start in. she's perfectly fine and get this after brian peck, who was one of the lead creeps at nickelodeon served 16 months in prison for the molesting he did there disney hired him naturally to work on a children's series for pedophiles in hollywood. it's a small world after all and and not just hollywood, there are instagram, mom's these days who are practically only fans zing there. >> anybody beauty queen daughters by having them wear skimpy bikinis& eat bananas to build social media stardom.

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they're called she renters a hybrid of sharing and parents aren't. i call them pimps, a hybrid of pimp and and people who believe in social justice have agreed this is wrong and this is bad and exposing kids to an adult world of lured costumes and garish makeup borders on abuse. now, hurry up and get in the car. were late for drag queen story hour not that there's anything wrong with being a drag queen, but maybe it's time to admit that sometimes drag queen story hour is more for the queen than the kids. >> sure. kids love a clown, but the clown have to have when.

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>> i see a five-year-old tipping tipping at a bar under a sign that says it's not going to look itself do i have to pretend that's cool in order to keep my liberal id card. sorry, i can't do that if you want kids to be more tolerant, why not have handicapped people read them stories. kids are more likely to encounter disabled people than drag queens in life geez, can't we just go back to the good old days when kids were read simple stories was simple laurels like if you're a lonely single man, just make a boy out of wood i've, said it before. wokeness is not an extension of liberalism anymore. it's more often taking something so far, that it becomes the opposite. teaching kids not to hate or judge those who are different great, proud. we got there all

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for that. but at a certain point, inclusion becomes promotion and contrary to current progressive dogma, children aren't miniature adults wise beyond their years, they're morons there are gullible morons will believe anything and just want to please grownups. and have any frame of reference. >> so they normalise whatever's happening. >> that's why endlessly talking about gender two, six-year-olds isn't just inappropriate. it's what the law would call trap meant which means enticing people into doing something they wouldn't ordinarily do for example, after nine 11, there were several cases of overzealous federal agents leading sad losers and terrorist plots like the undercover fbi agent who got seven out of word dudes and liberty city florida to sign

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onto a plot to bomb the sears tower in chicago. oh, please. these guys didn't even have a gun when someone said wouldn't it be cool if we taught the man are less than blue something up? they said, yeah, that would be got a cool entrapment suggesting someone into something they wouldn't otherwise do. and if you think that some of that isn't going on with gender in schools? you're not watching enough tiktok videos. >> i pledge allegiance to the queers. are not allowed to be out as trans non-binary at school. it's my response to this is to be as noxious asleep, where as possible. >> there's a certain kind of activists these days who wants to take heterosexuality, old old-fashion, boring, minding its own business, heterosexuality and lump it in with patriarchy and sexism and racism and tell kids wouldn't it be cool if you or anything but that?

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>> it also seems to be the theme of kind of a lot of kids books. >> these days i never used the phrase gay agenda because i thought it was mostly nonsense and it is mostly but a director for disney television animation did say after she was hired the show runners were super welcoming to like my leg, not at all. secret gauge. like i was just wherever i could just basically adding queerness. no one what stopped me a node was trying to stop me look, i'm all for adding queerness wherever i put something in my drink before i came out here but maybe we. >> should think about giving kids a break from our culture wars for a minute, or at least until the election is over. all right, thank you very much, everybody in short, like sending 21st the powerless in

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albany, may 19 and david copperfield at the mgm grand in vegas, june 21 and 22. >> thank you, john mitchell, james ferguson jillian michael is now gone to overtime on youtube. thank you very much. >> i brought in a juror bax protein with 30 grams of

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protein. those who tried me felt more energy and just two weeks here, i'll take that one. >> sure. not to protein 30 grams protein one prim sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals, and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic there's some kind of misunderstanding. >> we are american. what kind of american ari? >> civil war where you'd or detect this living with hiv. craig learned you can stay undetectable with fewer medicines. that's why he switched to nevado divider was a complete hiv treatment for some adults. no other complete hiv pill uses fewer medicines to help keep you undetectable, then davon detect this leo learned that most hiv pills contain three or four medicines. >> divider was as effective with just two if you have hepatitis b, don't stop nevada without talking to your doctor don't take to vada if you're allergic to its ingredients are taking dofetilide. this can cause serious or life-threatening side effects

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if you have a rash or allergic reactions, symptoms stopped of auto and get medical help, right? the way serious or life-threatening lactic acid buildup and liver problems can occur. tell your doctor if you have kidney or liver problems or if you are pregnant, breastfeeding are considering pregnancy, devito may harm& onboarding baby. most common side effects or headache, nausea, diarrhea, trouble sleeping, tiredness, and anxiety detect this. you could stay undetectable with fewer medicines ask your doctor about delano we are rahm. >> and when trucks are what you do you do truck month better than anyone else you do? >> folks that work harder play harder can you do trucks that when by breaking every rule of what a trucks should be, so this truck month would you shoot? do is drive her ram trucks. so what we do during ram truck must get new rollback manufacturers pricing with

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This week features a one-on-one interview with Jillian Michaels, fitness, nutrition expert, and host of the podcast "Keeping It Real: Conversations with Jillian Michaels." This week's panel discussion includes Jon Meacham.

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