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Transcripts For DW Faith Matters - Women In The Driving Seat - Revolution At The Vatican 20171202 23:30:00

respected by their male colleagues and treated as equals. to certain bishops or cardinals they're well aware of the problems many women in the catholic church are turning away because they don't feel they're taken seriously. women want to be more visible. this isn't in different parts of the world white church there's a growing sensitivity to that desire and it's also reaching the vatican only. becoming more visible is part of the challenge anybody sees what goes on behind the walls of the vatican. bought a quarter of the staff are women many more lay women the nuns and many of them highly qualified. editor in chief of the french section of vatican radio for twenty five years looking back she remembers how difficult it was at the beginning how some cardinals thought it beneath dignity to be interviewed by a woman and simply ignored her. also said. as soon as i left the studios to interview somebody at the vatican it was dreadful when i was in a larger group of men i always had the feeling that i was somehow invisible when i asked a question the cardinals would reply to my male colleagues not to me. although i was holding a microphone and had everything they need to recognize. this mentality of pushing women to the margins of the workplace still exists everywhere women are supposed to be mothers brides or nuns they may work but they shouldn't want a career. unfortunately that's what many women also think that it's wrong to seek too much attention to ask for too much. the catholic church teaches that humility and modesty are virtually pope francis himself is critical of career minded priests and he often speaks out against traditional power structures that may be why he wants to see more women taking leadership roles people like the director of the vatican museums. the catholic journalist. welcomes this development she says it doesn't go far enough she has recently written a book demanding power for women in the catholic church. is this why is it considered inappropriate for women especially for women to raise question the. of power when they raise this question which i also do in my book they're always told the church is not about power the church is about service and humility but that's not true it's also about positions of power the person who decides has power the person who can say you can't come in here or as a woman you can't be a priest has power. baba yaga takes a different view she doesn't speak about power though she will sit as a manager art historian and conservatory she runs an institution with a staff of more than one thousand considers herself fortunate alongside her administrative responsibilities she works in a field that has fascinated her since she was a child. by this you know sort of my mother's restoration work my sister was also a conservatory of paintings and stone. my grandmother was a painter i watched her making about pictures of in rome. that was the environment i grew up in and maybe genes and the family do play a role in the sea. will influence of i mean that it will work also. growing up in rome baba yaga was always fascinated by art she has also learned the skills of curating an exhibition her entire life revolves around art and religion. she is currently working on an exhibition about the history of catholicism in korea the vatican took an exhibition to solve and this is its counterpart most of the objects of being exhibited outside korea for the first time. is complementing them with items from the vatican's collections. i would like to see more international exhibitions held especially shows that have relevance to the vatican's collections. she says she diva be prepared to loan out more of the vatican's treasures. most impressed with you and your new single but it will be there what i mean is that he will have an exhibition is more than just a collection of art orks every item involves work with the administrators conservators and curators. but the. city even a city but it's all very important that we participate in these projects when they're academically interesting or promote ecumenism. because most of the. transition is the focus as in the korea exhibition i could even get it that's when it was set with it will of the it was in. south korea is one of the catholic churches success stories this exhibition documents the beginnings how in the seventeenth century diplomats from china brought the catholic faith to the korean peninsula. this chapter of church history is being shown at the vatican for the first time and the turnout is impressive cardinals and senior bishops some of the vatican's most powerful men are here today. is in her element explaining the structure of the exhibition catholicism was introduced into korea by lay people impressed by the jesuits in china. at first they had to operate in secret. they baptized each other because there were no priests in korea many women were drawn to the new faith perhaps because it promised justice and equality. the young church was actively persecuted as recently as the mid nineteenth century the exhibition chronicles this history of suffering and martyrdom and it also documents the strength and confidence that characterized the beginnings of the korean charge a korean version of the virgin mary a clear indication of how deeply the koreans internalized catholicism. even today many korean catholics draw inspiration and strength from commemorating this history of courage and perseverance through the dark days of persecution. how . the korean church is very focused on equality and has always throughout its history encouraged women to get involved that can be observed from the beginning from the first days of the founding of the church women have played an important role. pope francis commands women for witnessing to the faith and he champions the course of women. like his previous has as benedict times. paul the second he has a deep devotion to the virgin mary the catholic icon of womanhood. but francis is also a pope who understands our lives are not simply an embodiment of ideals. he reaches out to each individual passenger. this is a pope who encounters men women and children with the same warmth compassion and respect although at some general audiences you might think he was simply a pop star being mobbed by his fans. the pope's deputy spokesperson paloma c.e.o. of a hero explains the special report that he seems to have with women. if he's caught this evil pope francis grew up surrounded by women not what looks revolutionary in the vatican is really quite normal the pope always close his grandmother rossana he had sisters his mother and close female friends his right hand in buenos aires was a woman his private secretary who died a few months ago but what amazes. me that is. perhaps it was this female environment in which jorge bergoglio grew up that makes him more receptive to the role of women in the church. he wants to make sure the church is accessible to everybody. he has already done a lot to make that happen in nearly five years in office he has appointed five women as undersecretaries the third highest leadership level at the vatican. and it will be what we are on his last trip to colombia the pope stated that women should play important roles in society and in the church we represent fifty percent of the population. he says why should this resource be neglected why shouldn't we view women in the same way as men and all of us benefit those are the most holy. but gender equality and the role of women are not at the top of the agenda everywhere in the charge. there is still an immense gap between the vatican and the secular society when it comes to promoting women for instance by means of employment quotas. although pope francis never tires of saying that women must be given more responsibility they are still woefully under represented at the vatican. then if you compare him with his predecessors especially benedict the sixteenth and john paul the second i think it's clear that he goes further his predecessors would never have said something like that they had a very clear idea that the main duty of a woman is to serve the family as a wife and a mother of god and if women go out to work then only in social professions when the idea that they should do every job that men do was beyond their comprehension. in that respect francis is pretty advanced that is what. signified. agrees she has studied the situation of women at the vatican for years and has written books on the role of women in the charge. she believes pope francis might soon go even further. i was personally disappointed that for instance in a new vatican agency for the laity family and life the under secretary is a priest he could have been a lay person. maybe the pope couldn't find a suitable woman who is prepared to take the job. why a woman has exercised managerial responsibilities for decades in catholic organizations and then has to change to a number two position at the vatican it might not seem so attractive. consigner is meeting with her former vatican radio colleague from elder find out how they are founding members of donna in vatican the fast organization representing female staff at the vatican it has about one hundred members who made one some month to discuss issues of common concern however these women don't want to be labeled feminists networking is the password to their club is a registered association which means they have official recognition and transparent structures. people are still afraid to set up an organization and expressed themselves. when you talk about a women's group people immediately think it's about women being admitted to the priesthood. all those issues that are still taboo in the catholic church. and that our society doesn't promote ideas like that. these women are not demanding anything they are simply expressing a desire to make progress together in the church for christiana fog and that's not enough. women working in the vatican or in the catholic church in general have to proceed diplomatically. they can't raise the question of power as such why do only men or ordained men have the right to make the decisions. forty years ago even twenty years ago there was an aggressive generation that fought for ordination admission to the priesthood as well as to the diaconate would please the. days of the void today these women are either disillusioned and have left or they've resigned. yeah or they've left the church altogether. although they're strong opposition in many places to admitting women to the priesthood a quick survey of tourists in st peter's square suggests that european and north american catholics are generally open to the idea. benson form has a traditional it's easier for me to accept a man as a priest but at the end of the day i think the situation will change not soon but some time maybe. if you're through with people but i don't think it was visited by the clergy might benefit from a bit of femininity. the female aspect could open up new horizons and if not. it's not about positions of power whether male or female it's about serving the individual person rank is not important whether somebody is higher or lower the real task is to serve i would love to have a roman catholic priest that like women are good managers. and i suspect the vatican needs managing. institutions like being just as great as they may be they really should be much more inclusive man should promote women not only because they're women but because they're really good at what they do. to get it that mean if you want to abolish the patriarchy you should start with the church that would be a tremendous signal for believers. i mean really but is it the this has initiated positive changes. he has modernized the church and we believe he will complete the task but he needs time. we have full faith in francis catholics and as argentinians at the. many catholics believe that pope francis will succeed in reforming the church but he has stated clearly that he will not admit women to the priesthood the church has a long tradition of reserving the top jobs for men priests bishops and cardinals. the church as patriarchal structure is a sentry's old tradition and tradition is one of the benchmarks of catholic theology. relatively speaking pope francis is liberal he wants to give laypeople more responsibility so it seems quite likely that he will appoint more women like barbara yata to managerial positions. so far she has only met the pope once he hasn't yet visited the museums but she's hoping he will. she knows he has a full shadow but then so does she without efficient planning and the support of her husband this mother of three were never be able to manage the job. you'll miss a lot of any that done in class that organize my life well gaddafi could of course it's more difficult with the children but we divided up the household chores the young lady you know what i mean that wasn't very common thirty years ago not that that given that up is called i was lucky than that and then the fact one though i was able to combine family and work at that but i think i've managed my children are wonderful but in the end what about you must be grateful and what it might give she had all the louis there with the one with us and getting upset it would have been. barbara yachters simple positive way of accepting things stems from how face. if she didn't believe she wouldn't be able to walk in the vatican. and religion are inseparable here and as with the korean exhibition the focus is often the universal child which. nobody minister. to. jack. and. the limited set of the fighting and you know if i thought you never intended to have a career at the vatican even the idea of it is strange i just tried to do my work as well as i could to the premier that would have a problem a real image one of the did it it was i would take on it because that's my role as director of the vatican museums put a lot of responsibility on my shoulders. but it's also a privilege it is with that i'm very conscious of the fact that i work for the. and for the conservation of this tremendous world heritage. month with the lid on that but the bottom one of the one that. is director of the museum's. project. is the collections representing. christianity and thousands of years. do it yourself how to design and make your own skins. your romance. d.w. . the tumbling dice our entire scam for jurors or dealing with the name of the law they killed many civilians in the us coming including my father was the first and i was a student i wanted to build a life for myself. but suddenly life became elish consol. providing insights global news that matters w. made for mines. he's a doctor what kind of diseases can be here as forms that a reporter so what part of this implant is being side of the year but it's outside . draws on a wealth of insights totally different experts all fields of medicine. in good shape. long. matching being born as. your ally the calm prove it since. you want to look like no school to. you want to be useful but on allowed to. when you're sick the doctor knows when you fall in love they won't. you don't have children for fear they'll be invisible to. have knows. when you die and there's no never. every ten minutes. some like this is. ten million people in the world the stakes they have no

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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Street Food 20180120 03:15:00

we will taste life on the streets. and find food for thought in the process. by norman fun and keep me posted. and we'll do tomas i'm on my wife first off the united states. this is how a perfect day starts in portland oregon with hockey breakfast. at eight o'clock. i'm. sure it's. the. speed of the feast. sandra owner of the egg carton proudly presents the goods belmont sandwich and eggs benedict handmade homemade and made with long you. will find that this is a raspberry having your original so it starts weeds but it's going to end with a cake because have in your eyes will affect you later in the palate and it's it's definitely a hot ticket for us. with the common thing you'll hear from chefs food carts is well i'm not a real chef but michel sleiman is a prominent chef here in the united states and he defines a chef as someone who runs their own kitchen so i use that against those who got owners to help them realize she runs her own kitchen the food is amazing she has employees. supervising everything she's a chef and she's a great chef. live from portland oregon says tasty to zing than a nine point one f.m. portland radio project i am stephen show me your host the lie that you're here with me this morning as always we have three hours of also music rock folk and blues then coming up at nine am we'll have a food guest live and in studio. any different than in other cities in the u.s. but poland is different. maybe. for the average joe and jane as for the extra votes. is the perfect place for stealing his personal grief goes something like this. for thing on his radio show. in the rain shelly's garden now known as honk and huge burritos was one of the first food carts we've had here in portland we had a real explosion the food cart scene when the great recession hit the portland economy today we have more than six hundred carts open in the metro area pave the way for carts to come into being. many an american dream has been born in a. dream starts anew every morning in her. she thought she might be in the media but then decided against it she just couldn't see herself she tells me. don't personally. as a family. business. at the height of it about two year two thousand we had thirteen people on payroll we had ten locations in the city and i was much more of a manager at that time than a vendor because i was having i had babies and two little girls and so i was busy doing that stuff so i could be a manager as soon as the girls were about five six years old i came right back and started jumped in to be a vendor again and kind of size down at that point because i really i like a little less hustle and bustle i like having the one cart now. today there you have just one food caught in the heart of portland. walking burritos right or shine even people came through the rain you know that's lucky. enough the golden good looking thing. what are you doing today in the big world sometimes people were hungry and could come and just talk and share with their lives than share with me and we have something to eat for them and so we're trying to be a member of the community that way and now i've seen generations of people grow up and come back and bring their families and their grandchildren and and really love the journey of being in a place for twenty five years and the. customer has received a letter from. now people come to shani for advice she likes to home in a city where very very many people need how known as a progressive bastion of liberal values. long struggle to cope with homelessness. hungry constant even if they don't have money. you like to. do you like fresh go very nice house might leave you like. treated with courtesy and respect just like every other and share your laugh you're very welcome. so when it comes up in the food court here in portland there are four things you need that are absolutely essential one you need a place most of our food carts are not mobile they are and what we call food cart pods you have to have somewhere to put your cart the second thing you need is your actual cart and whether it is a trailer that you poll or an actual truck with an engine you need to get one of those contraptions some people buy them used some people have the manufacturer there's a number of really good manufacturers right here in portland that will make one for you. mike and his mechanics on the sunshine experts they build food trucks customers need to fork out plenty pint to fifty thousand dollars for a trailer bolting kitchen that's made to measure up every time two to three months but they can also manage to weeks because ultimately everything is possible. so far i know of two trailers that i've sold that didn't quite make it just two. which makes me feel that what i do is the right place this is where people grow and they make money and they're successful they're happy. it sounds like an easy formula and it sure worked his food trucks are a runaway success. but they get the part because you know it we visit the bar but if it can't be you can't be you might do it you know i know i have eight months so they upped it so it's good. that he's ready to roll literally from tomorrow mows new trail will be serving up freshly fried spring rolls. calorie pioneers cook up a storm on street corners across for live your dream do your thing that spirit is no longer everywhere in the u.s. but it is here in portland. is especially when it comes to food. steve on the radio host. and cullen are a storyteller it's made it his mission to help newcomers to the city. it's a jump that suits his tastes. that verges begging to be eaten. it is phenomenal. you get cheese you got bacon tomato lettuce thousand island. and wonder just runs down your fans like that the nominal right there at your burger of old baby. but it takes perseverance and hard work to strike don't stephen has no illusions they are bad for business being in the colony business is very very very hard work it's a scourging of long hours it's tiring and you don't make any money when i first started some people said oh you're just a cheerleader for food carts and i said you're right i am pompoms are free many skirt you have to pay extra for that because i wanted to cheer them on and i knew they could make it and every time a blue collar succeeds it was brick and mortar has multiple parts and makes his business go. it fills my heart with joy i want to see that make it did thomas is the american dream dent the innovation at least is alive and kicking on the streets of portland. down here in mexico the stories they tell sound like dreams every year in early november a miracle happens in the mountains outside mexico city millions of monarch butterflies arrive in several pinoy like thoughts on the wind. it's the end of an eight month migration to wide areas of north america and back a journey that takes the butterflies for successive generations to complete. come spring the monarchs will breed before flying north to lay eggs and then die it is not known how their offspring find their way back to mexico. but people on the streets of the capital have their own explanation one that's been passed down through the generations. we'll get into a little bundle yes a lot of them but we believe that when someone dies and is buried they rise again as a butterfly. and no other day of the day and all the day when we see a butterfly we say to each other look there is grandpa or that's our auntie over there. we see our lost loved ones again in the butterflies. it makes us feel good but it was that because nice is no better because it's easier to give up with the with. mexico is preparing to celebrate the sad and yet jovial holiday dia de los muertos in two days' time. victor a stout man with a big heart has his hands full. the entire family pitches in and a neighbor makes the tortillas. victor says with some pride this talk of those are the best in mexico city. of kentucky and the long line in his stall would appear to endorse that claim. they can but what do you recommend victor try the company johnno tacos there are specialty. mexicans like a hearty taco. and they package with a sausage. cheese from one pocket that melts into a cream. and then there's more me. it's all topped with fresh snow pollies the can't disprove and plenty of sumatra. and which salsa do you recommend you go for the red one it's the spiciest. i like it a bit spicy but you mexicans of course can handle a lot more right. than those a bit of the person that we give salt to to our kids so they get used to the spicy news from an early age for us there is no day without sauce. even if the spiciness gives us an upset stomach look we mexicans are modern doors we simply keep on eating. a lot of it is easy but. there's no elegant way to eat a taco it's simply a cornucopia of indulgence muvico very tasty if it is spicy. victor gets all the ingredients he needs around the corner mexico's markets are a celebration of the fullness and freshness of life. but on the day of the dead mexican celebrate something else as well as the morbid fascination with down. at their home in the countryside victor and his wife imelda have set up an altar for relatives who have passed on but it's a tradition. that. the candle we say this is for you my sister anita will. be candle there's the name of someone who has died. it's important to provide things that they loyalty would have for example so they can have a drink when they arrive to visit and this. put him. with my sister in law like tequila so we've also put out a bottle of tequila. and sweet things of course which the dead in mexico savor as much as the living. bread sprinkled with lots of sugar. colorful skulls made from pure sugar cane sorry. three generations into an old pickup truck. at the cemetery the entire extended family decorates the grave of imelda sister in law who died a year ago. good luck was her husband victor's brother is overcome by grief. his wife. her mother was only forty seven but the day is not dominated by sadness. it's something that he could have it. was often it's a joyous festival it has to me because life is short lived with the limbs that all that and one day will have to go to. see but i'm proud of the life i lead now and the like and i'm happy when people come to my stand to eat tacos and leave satisfied and hopefully to return again soon in the us. in the evening the smell of incense walked across the graves like a scene in of iraq painting. or and right behind the cemetery wall people are again cooking and eating like they seem to do everywhere in this country life and death pleasure and pain. they're never far apart in mexico. the following morning victor and his family are back on the street setting up their stand. they've altered their dead now life goes on. to take. in the mothers of those one day will be gone but my sons should carry on here and if they do a better job than me all the better. people always need something to eat naturally were no exceptions. and. death is part of life in mexico. but as victor would say as long as we're here we might as well eat the best tacos in town. mexicans live life to the full and that's not always possible for people here in colombia how to see where the fish are posing miguel munoz is fifty six years old he has eleven children and twenty one grandchild through to get along is of experience where you have to know how to handle the rope that's the key thing is how you spot a real body certo. arrows when they call you on the feet of the oh yes the chase what you call this type of fishing and to fish like this you need to control the rope otherwise you're nobody chettle with it yeah well. the whole family pulls together here literally fathers brothers uncles nephews the rope is two to three hundred metres long. not too fast not too slow the fishermen need to be acute to the rock that's the secret. and that is how the volage arrows of carter haina bring in the fish always hoping for a catch for a team a net. and johnny was shot. last. from the sea into the frying pan and from then into the bucket. from the bucket to the customer a squeeze of lime and it's ready to eat. supply afai outstrips the amount concertina street team his friend has. for one of. the hamas. laws that each one carries the way to peace passed through the city streets. like francisco that in terror of the coffee man. every day he makes his rounds about town there are hundreds of vendors like him hawking coffee pouring and refueling the more often the better obviously if you don't sell you won't survive. francisco is not from car to haymarket his hometown is a few hundred kilometers away. and i thought if we will. we have to leave our village because of the violence the war between government troops and the rebels. we had to flee to save our lives the lives of our families and children we left everything behind me that none of the will leave you to have a dad i am and always will be a former. member of the eagle libya i mean every day i go down on my knees and pray that we'll be able to return to our fields but the war in colombia and was once and for all and. the peace deal has failed to hold financing colombia and until it does francisco is staying here in qatar haina serving cabinet seato a small coffee that's a staple of the colombian diamond fast and easy powdered sugar water changes there's no more magic to it than that business is so sad. oh yeah i don't want my kids to be doing this they need proper jobs of course and see how they want to think out that little even if it means they'll never return with me to the village and to our field. anything i'm not they going to will be. caught again or the queen of the caribbean a dream destination for cruise ships and independent travelers. just fifty kilometers outside of the city and well it looks quite different. sunbeds sileo de palenque a well life can be bitter but the food is sweet. pollyanna and manuela make a sticky dessert out of coconut milk and a whole lot of sugar they've never seen the recipe written down but often heard it talked about. isn't that they are parents and grandparents showed us everything we watched and learned from them. have been there more that it isn't so easy not everyone knows how to make it. about anyone without writs out additions they know how. that is the. most residents of palanker are descendants of runaway slaves who founded the community as a refuge four hundred years ago locals say it was the first independent community in the americas a place with a rich past to make a future that's the impression you get walking its streets. and not a place that's easy to leave with their homemade goods when they are not in one way or set out for car to hannah. whatever else the sisters need for the day they pick up on arrival in the city and this is where any romanticism about the traditions of their ancestors and. the fruit in a supermarket they say is simply fresh air. business is slow in sweets and fruit. but a photograph with a colorful palin keris that something tourists will pay for. in peru norman hope has been passed down through the ages. it doesn't sound flattering when the people of lame out remark of their city its sky has the color of a donkey stomach but maybe it should be seen as a declaration of love the cool waters of the peru current lap the shores of lima they don't just bring fog they also deliver the freshest pacific fish to the capital's doorstep. the fact that we also find a dish that is so simple and wonderful it quickly makes you forget the grey skies. amid the fish stalls of a district that is poor and sometimes dangerous you find the best city check at dawn you have been here stand. you'll say yes i know the proper way to prepare i don't make anything else i wouldn't be able to sell anything else was. raw fish from the roadside yes it's fine at least if you buy it from don you're very. salt and hot chili as are added to the fresh fish the juice of peruvian limes alters the protein in the fish effectively cooking it without heat. she serves it with corn sweet potatoes and seagrass. don't have the heene years to feature tastes cool and fresh like the pacific earthy and sharp like the andes she's modest about her talent. so much as a single mother my daughters are in college i have to work so we can live and they can study it. is it tough. well you know how life is. look i want my daughters to have a better life that's all. you know anything she doesn't go anywhere without her family photos people. are going to know when i tell you we love. them is that this is it but. i ran away from home when my parents separated i didn't get along great with my mother but then i came to lima and was alone i had to fend for myself. after her husband left her it was the fish that secured her livelihood. for peruvians is more than just a dish they wager a bet sons of each day reconcile disputes over save each other and swap anecdotes about severe. years you are you'll be up. as a child i often rode my bike to the beach where a man's soul to be checked. he wanted to know whether i want to expire or not he got back then people thought he was dangerous unhygenic to eat at the street corner at that but for me it was like here to the most fascinating movie in the world of us you know that one that. if it weren't for his escape to the beach guest on our curio may well have become a lawmaker like his father but luckily he pursued a career as a chef and may well be one of the world's best his fish dishes embody peruvian history that is there is a reaching this is the original city joke on sisters chili salt fish it's the bond between the ocean and the mountains and a love story between the pacific and the ending slowly. that's because one of the key ingredients grows far away from the coast in the rugged wilderness of the andes. at an altitude of three thousand meters above sea level lies the sacred valley of the incas. valley so fertile it was a personal possession of the ruling family. the incas were the first to plant ricotta here. this almost magical chili pepper is still readily available today at markets in the mountains. you see this is because it is healthy when the body always needs something sweet and salty but i eat to help fight infections which is a scam and seeds are nice and toss. it out. rococo and salt preserve the fish a process that in ancient times insureds of each year could also be enjoyed in the highlands. relays a fast running couriers ferry the fish from the pacific coast to the n.d.s. . after their bloody conquests the spanish built churches and palaces on the ruins of the inca civilization. they also changed the local fish dish by adding lime juice and red onion. for star chef best on our curio civvy chase sums up the best of her room. and its recent rise as a major cullen ery export has made peruvians proud. foodies around the world are crazy for civvies. least so we church it's a recipe that our grandmothers have passed down through the centuries those offices away for a long time we didn't value it but that has changed today peruvian cuisine is famous the world over nice stuff but it's in the record. in lima don't you the heene yes starts the second half of her day. she's babysitting her young grandchild. goes a d.j. is what keeps her family together. and maybe one day she hopes proves national dish will help her fulfill a dream. act but i'm an asshole who left i lurk here on the street it was the nationally would like to find out. lots and had our own restaurant. that's what we all want something bigger something better something good. that i'll. warn from the scene mature in the end and loved by star chefs and street vendors. norman is much more than just a dish it's a way of life. i like that i'm sure that something will encounter in argentina too . there's a specific vibe here. if your desire. for meat the way to a man's heart is through his stomach naturally. no way. there's no obvious sign of an economic crisis when his artists at least not at first glance but the city has been gripped by economic malaise for many years the locals do their best to ignore it. they say here mind has its ups and downs but it's a city that needs to be experienced arrived in a taxi is a good way of exploring even more so when someone like cloudy how is your driver someone who takes you along from all the know right. now we are. going to meet up with the guys we always get together midday. twenty thirty taxi drivers are merely toes grow. they're more relaxed a bit have a bite to eat wash our cars share some of the jokes and drink moderately. the book . is cloudy oh he's fifty nine years. has four kids grandkids italian roots a third generation immigrant family. cloudier likes to enjoy himself he has no pretenses this is how his mates know him and like him. argentinians are passionate people and they indulge their passion for good food and good meat to the forest the world's biggest cattle market is located in the heart of one is ours it couldn't be anywhere else this is where you will really grasp the essence of the country cloudy hotels argentina seoul and argentina stop. saucer. shops schnitzel rum steak why did i see cut before my eyes on the grill in the oven oh die for. that's the best you can buy the animals are nervous they see what's going . on the first auction took place one hundred fifteen years ago and the rules have remained unchanged ever since it is up above. the cattle down below. up to ten thousand animals under the hammer each day the best quality is available for less than two euros. in a country with an insatiable appetite for steak the business with beef is always brisk. at times the government has helped out with subsidize because many task to be affordable a full stomach is less likely to complain about crises. i don't want to try it anything else would be a mistake char it so meat off the grill. delicately seasoned straight from the cattle market and it's open at canteen. time and again on this trip we were generously invited to dine with our hosts. i'm waiting for you a kilometer marker one o five. we're on our way. about time our paths cross again. we've traveled thousands of kilometers through the world street kitchens now to camp our adventure a final chapter that couldn't be any moral fantic out on the compound with account chose the cattle ranchers with the wind blows but there's no rush what better place to wrap up this long journey no one is a stranger here for long and that's certainly down to the fair to. argentina is very diverse but you're all united by a love of meat. absolutely meat was always and is always available we have an endless supply of cattle in the past they used the skins for leather and just at the tongue at least according to legend but there's never been a shortage of meat and nobody in the go hungry here argentinean meat is considered the best in the world or i would go. i got an attic and no no noise because you're absolutely no question about it when i get there and here in the countryside you get the very best only organic top quality the catalona you don't grasp no additives nothing bad. yes it is good. the barbecue the meat. the wine. but they could serve us who knows what. we'd probably find it delicious because food always tastes good in company a simple insight not a bad one tina is a good place for such reflection. the food on the road to go or on the spot. from east to west through asia. from north to south across the american continent so many countries sent many kitchens so many people the stories that could hardly be more diverse but there are things that unite them and us and that's good well being a recipe for life. climate change. sustainability. environmental friendships. globalization effect biodiversity species conservation exploitation inequality. human rights displacement. of the global and current of local actually. global three thousand and thirty minutes on d w o. show pair for the twenty first century. any ill treatment of injuries unique interpretation. a dazzling concert and the world of a young piano. are twenty one presents johnny in a tree for now a new show. starting january twentieth on d w. dortmund . favorite teams all the best goals we've got all the action. is the whole of germany but all share the experience everybody. just league of the weekend here w. look united. states.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Hannity 20171209 06:00:00

get out and vote for roy moore. do it. do it. do it. working with republicans in congress, we've already signed 88 pieces of legislation. we get no credit. they always say, well, you know, president trump really needs this tax bill because he hasn't passed any legislation. well, so far in ten months we've passed more during this period of time than any other president in the history of our country and the second -- let's call runner up -- is harry truman was second. so we passed all of this, including -- including the long-awaited veterans accountability act. you know what that is, right? david shilkin, has done a great job. the v.a. was a mess. they left me with north korea. they left me with a mess in the middle east. they left me with afghanistan which was a disaster, we have made a lot of progress in afghanistan just like we have with getting isis out of iraq, getting isis out of syria, knocking the hell out of them. they left me with a mess. but we're cleaning up the mess. we're cleaning it up and with time we'll have it spinning like a top. for decades, veterans have asked for a law to hold corrupt and incompetent employees at the v.a. accountable. but it never happened. then, we got it done. this piece of legislation for decades, they've wanted. you couldn't fire anybody at the v.a. if they were sadists, if they were horrible people, you couldn't fire anybody. now we look at them, they're no good, we say "you're fired, get out of here!" and i must tell you, i can't believe that arnold schwarzenegger bombed so badly on "the apprentice." it was so successful. a big movie star and he can't pull it off. we are respecting americans' heroes and rebuilding america's standing, all over the world they're respecting us again. when i came into office we inherited all of these problems all around the globe, years of america projecting weakness, not going over the red line, we go over the red line, you wouldn't have russia and iran going into syria but you know what, he said you're not going to do it, don't violate the red line. they violated the red line, he did nothing so russia went in and iran went in, but you know what, we had 59 missiles and they used gas and we said you can't do that. and we hit -- our great military, from ships 700 miles away -- 59 missiles and 59 perfect hits. [ cheers and applause ] and we've stopped apologizing for america and we have started defending the reputation of the united states. finally. can you believe the presidency has that kind of power? i don't want to ever try it. can you believe that the presidency has the power to send bushel-loads of cash to iran? probably for hostages. probably -- $1.8 billion probably for hostages. so sad. we don't do that. we don't do that anymore. as part of a campaign of maximum pressure on the vile dictatorship of north korea, we have imposed the toughest-ever sanctions passed by the united nations security council and we have a lot of other sanctions but i don't know that sanctions are going to work with him. we've got to give it a shot. you know, we'll see? who knows, i'll just tell you folks, you're in good hands. that's all i can say. that's all i can say. and i've strengthened our relationships with america's allies and asked other nato members to pay their fair share and now the money is pouring in. the money is pouring in. remember i went to nato a year ago and these fake people back here were saying, donald trump's performance at nato was unacceptable. you know why they said it? because i told the people of nato stand right behind me, while they were standing behind me, they are delinquent, they haven't been paying. i said you got to pay and now they've taken in because of that -- and i guess i emimplied if you don't pay we're out of there. and the press said donald trump was rude to our allies. well they're rude to us when they don't pay. right? so we'll have a nation that doesn't pay. then their nation gets frisky with whoever, russia. so we have a nation doesn't pay. the nation gets aggressive. we end up in world war iii for somebody who doesn't pay. so here's what happened. in the last short period of time, stultenberg who is the head of nato, we've taken in $11 billion extra and going into 2020 or 2021, we will have taken in $33 billion extra and they aren't even doing what they should be doing, just so you understand. it's terrible. the way our country has been disrespected, but we will be disrespected no longer, okay? now corm morning you will see from these fakers, donald trump again disrespects nato. i think nato is wonderful. but you know what? we're paying for 80% of nato. could be higher. they say 72%. so we're paying for 80% of nato. i can only tell you one thing. it helps them a hell of a lot more than it helps us, okay? and they should pay. germany's paying 1%. we're paying 4%. explain that one to me, right? and germany has unsustainable cash flow. i read a report. their cash flow is unsustainable. so i said to angela, i said, angela, send a little of that cash flow our way. and she said, but, donald, because we're protecting them. we have 40,000 soldiers in germany. nobody even knows that. i said angela, let us have some and she said, donald, the german people wouldn't be happy with that. i said well, you know what, the american people aren't happy with the way we have it now, okay? the american people aren't happy. and at home we're restoring the rule of law. we're interpreting the constitution as written, defending the second amendment, you'll keep your guns. and protecting religious liberty. we are protecting religious liberty. and we're getting rid of the johnson amendment. we've stopped the government's attacks on our judeo-christian values. because we know that families and churches, not government officials know best how to create a strong and loving community. we know that. getting rid of the johnson amendment. study that up, that's a big thing. that's a big thing. a lot of people are very, very happy about that. we know that parents, not bureaucrats, know best how to raise their children and to nurture their children. and above all else, we know t s this: america doesn't worship government. we worship god. [ cheers and applause ] all of us here tonight are united by the same values. we love our country and we are proud of our history. we are so proud of this country. we honor our heritage. and we treasure our freedom. we support our incredible men and women of law enforcement. we believe the united states military is the greatest force for justice in the history of the world. and we are going to take care of it. and we are going to properly fund it. and we are going to have the finest weapons because when we do all of that, we are much, much safer. [ cheers and applause ] and far less likely to have to use them. it's amazing how that works, isn't it? we believe that every american people and you see it all the time. you see it economically, you see it at the church. you see it in every different way. we don't sing a global anthem. our troops don't wear a foreign uniform and we will never surrender our rights to international tribunals. we won't do that. we proudly sing the "star-spangled banner." our brave troops fight and die for the red, white, and blue. and we protect and preserve the american constitution that we cherish. i've said it so often that my job is not to be president of the world. my job is to be president of the united states of america. [ cheers and applause ] yet there, are powerful forces in washington trying to sabotage our movement. these are bad people. these are very, very bad and evil people. they know who they are. these are the people who made their money, their names, their careers, their power, off the corrupt and broken system, and they liked it the other way. so they will do anything at any time and they'll never stop. but you know what, we're stopping them. you're seeing that right now. you're seeing that right now, we're stopping them. it's corrupt. it's rigged, and we're stopping them. they will lie and leak and smear, because they don't want to accept the results of an election where we won by a landslide. [ cheers and applause ] do you remember, there is no way for donald trump to get 270. we heard that for week after week. what they're doing is the fake news is called suppression. just like they give the fake polls. i call it fake news/fake polls. a poll came out today on cnn. such a fake. they'll have to apologize for that one. another one came out that was through the roof. it wasn't on cnn. but i will tell you, look, we need honesty. we need some love in the country. i'd love to bring both sides together, if that's possible. there is a lot of hatred out there. but i would love to be able to bring both sides together. but remember this, the same failed voices in washington who oppose our movement from the beginning are the same people who have undermined the credibility of our government institutions. they're the same one who gave us one terrible trade deal after another and one foreign policy blunder and disaster after another with no accountability or apology. the washington insiders who oppose our movement are the same people who sacrificed our sovereignty, our wealth, our borders. look at our country. we owe $20 trillion. think of it. we have spent as of two months ago almost $7 trillion in the middle east. and you know what we have ? we have nothing. it's worse than it was 17 years ago when they started. these are the people that fight us. and if i want to fix up the roads in this country, they say, oh, well, we don't want to spend money for that. it's a tiny fraction. we could have with that 7 trilli trillion, not billion, $7 trillion, we could have rebuilt our country three times over. they've had their chance at running this country and they've failed. so i think i speak for everyone here tonight, and i appreciate you being here especially in numbers where you can't even get into the corners. when i proudly say -- you know the beautiful thing i was telling some of my friends backstage, the amazing thing about this and all the people that couldn't get in, when an election is over, they tell me, what do i know? i've been a politician for two years, so what do i know? but i'm doing a good job, i guess, i'm president. i'm president. but it's sort of incredible. you look at everybody. you see everybody. you see the love in the room and you see what's going on with everything. and you say to yourself, this is truly a country that respects -- they say that when you don't have an election -- the election's over. there's no competition. there's no nothing although we always have the deep seats inside. but it's over. they say you can't draw a crowd. in other words, when an election ends you can't draw flies, they say. look at this place. look at this place. [ cheers and applause ] i'll never forget on the trail we'd have 20,000, 25,000. we went to mobile, alabama, we had 49,000 people. we went to michigan, the night of the election. i got there, started speaking at 12:30 in the evening. that means it was already election day. we had 32,000 people there. michigan hadn't been won in many, many years by a republican. hillary clinton went is there in an emergency because she was told that day she was doing badly in michigan. she had a crowd of 600 people. i had 32,000 people at 1:00 in the morning and i said why are we not going to win? and we won. we went to wisconsin, hasn't been won in many, many years. you remember that? we went to wisconsin, hadn't been won in many, many years. she decided not to go. thank you very much, hillary. i guess the russians advised her not to go. but -- she decided not to go and her husband supposedly said, you better go to wisconsin. you better go to michigan. i don't like what i'm seeing. i was in michigan and driving down the street and there is a trump/pence sign on the lawn all the way to the arena. you better go there. and she said no, no, no. my bunch of dummies -- a bunch of dummies. you know, i don't get credit for one thing. it always bothered me. i spent a tiny fraction of what she spent and we won. in the old days if you spent less and win that's a good thing. over here you don't get credit for it. she was at what number, $2.2 billion, i understand. do you think those consultants made a couple of bucks on that election? didn't she spend $12.4 million on a dossier that was a total phoney? $12.4 million? boy. so we spent a tiny fraction -- think of it. a tiny fraction of the money and we won. but we won because of people like you, because of people like you. and i'll tell you what. if the democrats had won that election, instead of being up 39 points in your 401(k)s you'd be down 50% from election day. it was ready to go down the tubes, i will tell you that. thank you, man. so we don't need the advice from the washington swamp. we need to drain the swamp and we're going to do it and we are doing it. that's why i don't really care about all the bitter attacks, all the phony stuff going on. big media, special interests, phonies all. they're not here to protect you. they are only here to preserve and to protect themselves and you're finding that out. i had a great life before i did this. think of where i'd be if i didn't do this, i'd be very happy. but i wanted to do it and i wanted to give back and i saw what was happening and i've always been good at doing the money thing. i saw what was happening to our country and it wasn't good. it wasn't good. [ cheers and applause ] i took this job on behalf of the forgotten men and women of our country. but guess what? they are forgotten no more. no more. people came out of areas -- you know, they didn't think you existed. you know that, right? remember? and remember the world deplorable? how brilliant was that? i was watching her with that speech. and she was reading a teleprompter and she said deplorables and i said, "huh," that's not nice. she's talking about a lot of people. little did i know, i was right. that thing blew up. that was one of the reasons she lost. and now we're all proud deplorables. we're proud deplorables. very proud. your voice will never, ever be ignored again. they're all going to be coming after you for every election from now on in this country. you will never be ignored again. your dreams are my dreams. your hopes are my hopes. and your future is what i'm fighting for each and every day. [ cheers and applause ] we're just getting started. we're on the verge of passing that wonderful, beautiful tax cut, the biggest in the history of our country. it doubles the amount of income taxed at the rate of zero. it lowers tax rates. it expands -- you know that, the child tax credit so broadly, it provides relief from the estate tax, also known as the death tax. it cuts small business taxes. it reduces the corporate rate, very importantly, from 35%, which is the highest in the industrialized world, all the way down to 20%. you're going to have new companies coming in. you're going to have jobs, jobs, jobs, and it brings corporate money from overseas back where it belongs. and we're talking about possibly in excess of $4 trillion that we can finally bring back. the typical family of four earning $75,000 will see an income tax cut of up to $2,000, cutting their tax bill in half. people don't know it. and they don't want to report it. these people don't want to report it. our business tax cut is expected to raise annual income for the typical household by more than $4,000. they don't want to tell you that. they don't want to tell you that -- fake news -- our plan means more companies will move to america, stay in america, and hire in america. we want every american to know the dignity of work, the pride of a paycheck and the satisfaction of a job well done. [ cheers and applause ] the democrats in washington want to grow our welfare rolls that you're going to pay for. they want to grow all sorts of things that you don't want to think about. i want to grow our employment rolls with great jobs, well-paying jobs, jobs of dignity, jobs where people love waking up in the morning and going to work. and that's happening. so we're going to lift our people from welfare to work, from dependence to independence and from poverty to prosperity. we will restore hope to our struggling rural communities and to our inner cities, where we're making progress. we're making progress. we will build new roads and bridges and tunnels and highways all throughout our land. factories will come roaring back to life. new works of iron and steel will be forged from fire and from spark and from our country. and they will be made with american muscle, american hands, and most importantly, american heart. and these creations will be branded with a very simple, but very beautiful phrase "made in the usa." we have it in our power to build this future together. a future of patriotism, prosperity and pride. we all share one home and one glorious destiny. and whether we are young or old, i feel very young. do you feel young? whether we are from the city or country, and whether we are black or brown or white, you've heard it before, we all bleed the same red blood. [ cheers and applause ] we all salute the same great american flag. [ cheers and applause ] and we are all made by the same almighty god. [ cheers and applause ] we are the nation that dug out the panama canal, won two world wars, put a man on the moon and brought communism to its knees. as long as we have the courage of our convictions and the strength to see them through, then there is no goal beyond our reach. as long as we are true to our values, loyal to our citizens, and faithful to our god, then we will not fail. [ cheers and applause ] this is your land. this is your home. and it's your voice that matters the most. so speak up, be heard, and fight, fight, fight, for the change you've been waiting for your entire life, for the change that you already see happening. our revolution didn't end on november 8th. that was just the beginning. [ cheers and applause ] the greatest adventure still lies ahead. never give in. never give up. never back down. and never, ever stop dreaming. [ cheers and applause ] because we are americans, and the future belongs to us. the future belongs to all of you. so with american pride swelling in our hearts, and american courage stirring in our souls, i say these words tonight, "together, we will, indeed, make america strong again." we will make america proud again. we will make america wealthy again. we will make america safe again. [ cheers and applause ] and put it all together and what do we have? we will make america great again. thank you, god bless you, god bless america, thank you, everybody. ♪ ♪ ♪ welcome to this special edition of "hannity," the trump agenda, i'm jeanine pirro in tonight for sean. president trump wrapping up his speech at a make america great again rally in pensacola, florida. joining us are matt slapp, former assist to president trump mark lotter. and noelle nick fort. every time i listen to the president speak and get those audiences fired up i say to myself, there is no one better than the president, than donald trump, with an audience. we were -- the cheering and the sense of americanism is -- infectious. matt, what do you think? >> it's electric. and i think, you know, donald trump is doing something very important that presidents sometimes fail to do. he's getting out of the bubble. he's piercing the bubble and talking to real americas. he's feeding off the crowd. it's electric. i think it really gives him energy and it's important for a leader to go around the country and tell them what he wants to do and he didn't leave anything on the table, judge. >> it's clear, mark, that matt is correct. he hit every note whether it was the sanctuary cities, the second amendment, religious freedom, buy american. what's your take from this speech? >> two things, one, he he is doing everything he said he would do. when you see the fake news about how he doesn't like being in the white house, this man loves being president and you saw it tonight. >> and noelle, what do you take away from tonight? >> you know what, judge jeanine, america needed this tonight. i was so proud to be an american and he puts america first and we needed this with all the division between the parties, between the gop and another thing is he listed why he is the champion, he's the mascot for the middle class, for the working american, this is such passion and you know he loves this. but he's not reading off teleprompters. this is his heart. this is who he is and why he ran for the presidency. and look at the markets that are enjoying the ride of a good economy, we're back on track. and america felt it tonight. >> and i'll go back to you, matt. one of the things he talked about which is one of the more interesting points is when he talked about the fake news media. he said, you know, maybe, with the drop in the 350 points, when brian ross came out with that some would say inaccurate or fake news, some might say a lie, about mike flynn possibly testifying against the president. he said, you know what, they ought to sue abc. that was a shocker. do you think that was an ad libnor the speech? >> a class action lawsuit for the losses in their 401(k)s. he comes back to the theme that he ran on. you hear the cadence of the familiar lines. but in the middle of it, judge, it's all coming from trump's heart. it's spontaneous and what he feels. it's coming right out. and i do think he has a grievance with the media, he's not talking about you, by the way. conservatives have been trying to prosecute this case against the left leaning media for decades after decades for generations. and he comes in with this concept of fake news and the american people don't want to hear it any more. >> and you know what, he opened everyone's eyes. everyone in the beginning thought, you know, fake news is ridiculous. but i think people are understanding it really is fake news that there is stuff that is inaccurate and outright lies. but you know one of the things that i wasn't aware of, the president said that black home ownership is the highest that it's ever been in the history of this country. you think anyone would give him credit for this? did you know this, mark? >> not until he said it tonight. when you look at the economic record of this president it's remarkable. the new numbers came out today. manufacturing -- obama was losing a thousand jobs a month in his final year. this president adding 16,000 manufacturing jobs a month. he's doing it. so so many of these things you're not going the hear unless the president says it himself. and that is what you saw tonight on full display. >> he talked about $7 trillion we have spent in the middle east. he saying we could rebuild the infrastructure of this country three times over. what do you think he was saying? >> i think he is saying look how much waste is out there. this is why a businessman -- this is why his leadership, we've had massive job creation. we have a rallying stock market. we have -- basically making america great again. i know that is oversimplifying things. but that's is what's happening. anyone who says donald trump is not doing anything, look at the numbers. the economy is not lying. the fact that people have money in their pocket is not lying. >> and the prediction is much more. i want to thank all three of you for joining us. and president trump is vowing to push forward on his promise to build a wall on the southern border. joining us to debate these topics are david abella and francisco hernandez. david, as it relates to the wall, the president made it real clear that this is still on the front burner for him. >> he even made it more clear at this week's cabinet meeting when on kirsten nielsen the new -- >> congratulations to her. >> on her first day on the job, someone in that cabinet meeting told me he repeatedly said to her, build the wall, build the wall, build the wall. he is very crystal clear on this. when you think about that in the context of the upcoming budget battle it's amazing to think that the democrats are going to stop funding for veterans homes so they can keep illegal immigrants here. >> and i suspect, francisco, that you might have a different take. but what was your take? >> he's talking like the democrats are in charge of congress and going to do away with this funding. but if president trump is down, illegal immigration is down 70%, we don't need a wall. but he can want get his congress to authorize one brick for the wall. >> when you say problem solved you can't help but look at the news and see some of the problems that are happening. you know, the opiod epidemic and the drugs coming from the border. there is still 30%. >> by next year we'll be down to zero. >> david? >> next year we'll be down to zero, i guess. >> let's make sure we are. >> guys, this -- this issue on the border and judge, you have been down there. you know the challenges we face with people being able to bring harmful -- particularly our enemies bringing in harmful -- >> what do they bring in? >> this is more than a personal security issue for americans this is economic security. all you need is one enemy to bring a bomb across the border and blow up the hoover dam or electrical grid and it could be catastrophic. >> they were here legally and stole a plane. come on, guys, let's get real about it. we are going to have to legalize 100,000 mexicans to build the wall. >> what about when the president said hispanic unemployment in this nation is at an all time low, something like hispanics said they weren't going to vote for me. but they want the wall too. they want security. >> i -- >> unemployment is not at an all time low with president obama. >> i get it -- >> you get it? >> citizen hispanics, i agree with it. but it has nothing to the with immigration. nothing. >> do you want to give him credit for that? >> i did. i did. but it has nothing to do with immigration. we can't even get illegal immigration right and now they want to reform legal immigration. really, guys? >> you know why? because when you have a lottery system and people come in and kill us, it's a problem. david? >> i'm with you on that. >> yes, ma'am. >> the president got elected in part because of his ledge to secure the border. the president is determined to deliver it. >> thanks, gentlemen. coming up, president trump blasts obstructionist democrats during his make america great again rally in florida. you won't see these folks they have businesses to run. they have passions to pursue. how do they avoid trips to the post office? stamps.com mail letters, ship packages, all the services of the post office right on your computer. get a 4 week trial, plus $100 in extras including postage and a digital scale. go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again. >> judge jeanine: welcome welcome back to this special edition of "hannity." joining me now with reaction to president trump's rally, the director of turning point u.s., charlie kirk. doug shell and deroy murdock. one of the things we didn't talk about in the last two segment was the president was talking about hillary. i'll start with you, doug, i don't know why. why do you think? he said the system is rigged and he said there are going to be changes. this is a sick system. what can the president do? i mean we saw christopher wray testify in front of congress and everybody is frustrated. what do you think is going to change? >> here's what we need, first i think and have said on this show before we need a special prosecutor to look at her, to look at the uranium one deal and to look at the dossier. >> let me ask you a question, do you get people who push back at you because you work with the hiltons -- with the clintons. >> i get more than push back. we'll save that for another time. but this week we have seen we need a separate investigation of the fbi. because we have overly partisan -- we have personal relations, we have documents changed. jeanine, this is just rotten. >> deroy, what did you take away from the speech? >> we have a man who is 71 years old and goes on for 90 minutes without notes and the nay sayers must have their tails between their legs. these failed economy -- we're at record highs, record lows of unemployment. all the good things are happening. and the nay sayers have been really, really disproved by this -- >> and charlie kirk, you know, what deroy says is so true. the president has incredible energy. >> incredible. not low energy like another presidential candidate at all. i tell you what is so amazing about the speech is it sounded like a campaign speech because he's doing what he said he was going to do. he's not changing his message. typically once politicians enter office they change. this sounded like he was back on the campaign trail. and look at all the progress we have made. i loved seeing it. >> sorry, guys, short segment. but coming up, president trump rips the fake news main stream media to shreds. stay with us. with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. the fake news media that the president keeps hitting on is more and more credible every day, he talked about people suing abc if they lost any money with the 350-point dow drop. >> 60% of trump supporters think that the media is the enemy. the liberal media is an advocacy group for the liberal agenda and americans are tired of it. but he made the point for folks to sue when people lost a lot of money when the market dropped. it is a funny point. >> he is an entertainer. besides being the president the man entertains. >> apparently he was supposed to have a physical impairment. didn't see that tonight. >> was that crazy? >> reckless. >> like an intentional hit every time the man shows up. when he goes through the list of what he's done, i mean, it's depressing there is so much hatred. >> i don't like hyperbole, but this week for political media in this country was one of the worst weeks in its history. four major stories were wrong. rex tillerson was supposed to resign. last check he is still secretary of state. number two, the brian ross/michael flynn story. oops -- >> a difference between a crime and a lie. >> number three, trump bank records were supposed to be subpoenaed. and the cnn report today that donald trump jr. was getting wikileaks documents on september 4th when it was on september 14th. at the same time when 46% of people think that the media is fabricating stories about this administration, these types of stories play into that narrative completely. >> when you talk about the percentage of trump supporters who think the news is fake, do you think it's going to be going up? >> i do think so. for trump to have the rally and to say that to his supporters and people know and it's a shame. the media is doing a disservice to america. >> because of unnamed sources. >> coming up, more of this sfes special edition of "hannity." my name is jeff sheldon,

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four ships for the breaching sanctions on the regime. three of those ships fly north korean colors. the flag of the fourth ship is not clear. north korea has defied u.n. sanctions and restrictions in the past. now a north korean defector tells cnn the regime has a sophisticated smuggling network and can easily trade in banned goods. cnn's brian todd has this report for us. >> we have new information tonight from this defector on exactly how kim jong un's regime gets weapons and other banned material out of the country to sell on the black market. this man knows how kim gets his cash and helped him get it, funneling billions of dollars a year to the young dictator. august 2016, a freighter is heading to the suez canal. around 30,000 rocket propelled grenades made in north korea. part of what a north korean defector describes as a smuggling to line the pockets of kim jong un. >> how do north korean smuggling operations work? are there people with false names? are there ships with false names being moved around? >> translator: smuggling is conducted by any means you can imagine. mostly done by ships, for example, by filing a cargo list from what's written is different than what is really being shipped. >> for decades, ri jong ho says he would sometimes hand bags of cash to ship captains. redefected in 2014, he says he worked mostly in legal imports and exports but gave us insight into north korea's smuggling operations which he describes as unstoppable. >> on the north korean sea, the yellow sea, there are hundreds of fishing boats, both from china and north korea. and others. >> he has the political loyalty, so he needs the walking around money to hand out. >> as a for our interview with ri jong ho, a north korean official says ri is telling lies to save his life. from the russia investigation to immigration policy to midterm elections that could reshape congress, the president has a lot of head in the coming year. he's already started to stake out his terms for addressing the so-called d.a.c.a. immigrants. the president tweeted legal protections for them would not be restored, would not be restored, he says, unless there is funding for a war along the u.s. southern border. as mr. trump wraps up his first year in office, his policies so far have not been popular with most americans. his approval rating at 35%. that is one of the lowest in a decade for any president at the one-year mark. make no mistake about it, that pa 35% that has been in place at the moment, the president's voter base insists that mr. trump is doing a great job and isn't getting proper credit for it. cnn's gary tuchman went out to speak with voters about the trump presidency. >> dawson county, georgia, is the heart of nascar country. it happens to be one of the most republican counties in a republican state. >> who did you vote for on election day? >> president trump. >> in the dawsonville restaurant where they honor bill elliott, they also now honor president donald trump and his first year in office. >> george washington was the father of the country. abraham lincoln held it together. ronald reagan saved us from communism and now donald trump is going to save us from ourselves. he's going to build a strong economy. >> he's done excellent as far as i'm concerned. >> restaurant regular sonny simmons is like many here saying good news about donald trump is getting swept under the rug. >> what do you think is getting done that is not getting reported? >> he has signed no telling how much legislation that does not get reported. >> he just said himself he signed more legislation since the president issy of harry truman. >> he has. >> objective people looked at this and said he signed less legislation than eisenhower. so the question is -- >> how do you figure that out? >> it's pretty easy. just count them. >> if it weren't for that democratic senate, we would have some good stuff done. >> does it concern you when he kind of embellishes a little bit, when he kind of fibs? >> kind of what? >> fibs. >> don't bother me at all. >> how come? >> because every one of them up there is big liars. >> many of them say the news media, democrats, and established republicans have been working to keep the president down. >> i don't blame him for nothing. he said what he can do. he's trying to do it. like i say, politicians, you know how politicians are. >> how come he doesn't get any responsibility for not being able to pull people together when he promised he would? >> he's trying. >> for proof of that, many here point to the legislation he just signed. >> a poor man ain't going to create a job. the rich people create jobs. >> so you like this tax plan because of the benefit to corporations? >> definitely. >> do you think that will benefit you? >> yes. >> how is that? >> everybody will be spending mope. it's going to stimulate the economy. >> so you have faith these big corporations are going to invest it in more workers and better salaries? >> yes, i think so. and here is the advice for the president from his most loyal supporters. >> he could probably do better with his had public relations. >> what would you advise him if you were his public relations expert? >> not to tweet. >> if you could be talking to the president, what would you say he should be doing? >> i would tell him whatever you want to. >> blank check with you. >> yeah. whatever you want to do, you're the boss now. >> gary tuchman, cnn, dawsonville, georgia. let's talk now about the president's year in review with gina from essex, england. from what you just heard there in gary tuchman's report, he went out and spoke to people who believe in the future of this presidency. what do you make of where trump voters stand right now? >> i think trump voters stand exactly where they stood before, which is that they support him pretty much no matter what they hear. and i think it's important to realize that somebody like president trump exaggerates quite a bit and tends to issue statements sort of at the extreme, for example, that he was treated better in china than any person ever has been. these people also expect that other people will be exaggerating just as much. so when gary tuchman said he has passed less legislation than anyone since eisenhower, that comes through as an exaggeration. and people don't really believe the negatives. had they believe the positives if that's what they want to believe. note that 35% approval is still more than the 25% vote that he got of all adults in the united states. so that is more people than actually voted for him. >> america is certainly still a divided nation. in gary's piece, we heard from some of the loyalists. take a look at this most recent cnn poll that shows his approval rating. at 35%, it's lower than most presidents at this time. so the question, three fold here, gina. who remains on the trump train, who is getting off that train and how does this set up the republican party come the midterm elections? >> this is actually a pretty complicated question. the people on the train are the people who have always supported him. there are some people on the train who are not really quite interested in politics. don't really care what's going on internationally. and they feel like their situation is just fine. the republicans are really scrambling to figure out what to do right now. some of them are going to have to be very much on the fence in terms of their support of mr. trump and they're going to have to ask him to step out of their campaigns in the midterm elections because his support could actually be damaging to them. but others are wondering whether they need to tie their wagons to him or continue to keep them hitched, so to speak. and they're sort of struggling with figuring out what to do and whether or not they need him as an endorsement. what this means going into the midterm elections is that we could actually see a lot of sort of desperation. and the fear is that when we combine this with the situation in north korea, for example, we don't want somebody to try to incite violence or try to encourage war to boost approval ratings. >> so the president has signed less legislation than many of his predecessors, though he does end this year with a win on tax reform. this is the new law of the land, divided right along party lines. but as far as his priorities for the year from infrastructure to health care and im dwragz, how important is it for this very polarized presidency to pivot, to gain bipartisan support? >> it doesn't seem like bipartisan support is necessary for him to pass monumental legislation. this tax bill is enormous. and huge in the sense of its implications but also in what it accomplishes that hasn't been done in 30 years or more. >> but even after the midterms, though, is the question, the uncertainty with what happens there. how important is bipartisan support? >> you're asking if it's critical for him to pass this legislation. it would be helpful to pass legislation prior to the midterm elections. it would be helpful for his approval ratings and for other republicans. but he doesn't seem to be courting bipartisan support, despite the fact that he says he is. so it really depends, i think, on if there are any critical events that take place between now and the midterms that might sort of tip public opinion in one way or another. and would sort of shame the democrats or shame the republicans into trying to get their act together. and gina, one other question that i have for you, the russia investigation, it continues to loom large. does it over-shadow achievements moving into 2018.? >> it absolutely over-shadows achievements. and, in fact, if the russia investigation heats up or if it seems to be targeting president trump or revealing evidence about him, i think we're likely to see a lot more drastic proposal of policies and activities coming out of the white house. >> gina reinhart, we appreciate you being on the show with us, giving us a perspective on the president's fist year in office. thank you. we'll be the in touch with you, for sure. >> thank you. rare political protests in iran taking mays, the largest in in nearly a decade. we look into what's driving the new unrest, still ahead. plus, families mourn their dead and yet another attack in the christian minority in egypt. details on one of the gunmen who opened fire at a church killing nine people. stay with us. growing up, we were german. we danced in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland. so, i traded in my lederhosen for a kilt. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com. this is a rare sight anywhere in iran, let alone in seven separate cities, including the capital, tehran. the u.s. president applauded the demonstration tweeting the this, many reports of peaceful protests by ranliranian citizend up. the iranian government should respect their people's rights, including the right to express themselves. the world is watching says president trump. in egypt, isis has claimed responsibility for an attack on a coptic church near the capital city of cairo. nine people were killed on friday when a gunman opened fire as people left the church service. grief stricken families held a funeral service for the victims. >> reporter: egypt is reeling after attack attack on its christian minority today. let's go through what happened. shortly after friday services ended, the coptic church in greater cairo as worshippers were leaving the church, two gunmen opened fire on the crowd, armed with guns. a gun battle ensued between them that lasted for about 15 minutes. nine people were killed. among them, one police officer and separately one of those two gunmen was killed, as well. the second one was arrested. he is the man that authorities have described as a known terrorist, one who has been involved in previous attacks and they say he had a bomb with them and he had intended to enter the church and detonate this explosive device. still, the attack was bloody and brazen, taking place during the day in cairo. it is absolutely terrifying for residents, but it is cryptic for this minority population. they have long said they're treated as second class citizens in egypt. as president cici has waged war on his opponents, as terrorism has been on the rise in the country, more and more of these types of attacks on coptic christians have taken place. one of the deadliest attacks on christians in egypt's history happened this year on palm sunday. that was in april. two churches were bombed. almost 50 people killed. but it's important to remember that it's not just egypt's christian community that is suffering terrorism. just last month, a mosque was attacked by isis. almost 300 people lost their lives. the entire country really reeling from terrorism. president sisi has issued his condolences to the victims of this attack and said it will only strengthen the country's resolve and during this holiday season when people are on edge, christmas for the orthodox community will be coming up in january during these times. they want to feel safe. but they're going to point to attacks like this one to say the state isn't doing enough to protect them. cnn, paris. >> thank you for the reporting. all this year, we've seen some stunning reporting on the world's biggest stories. our picks for the top seven stories of 2017 just ahead. plus, many places in the united states will see one of the coldest new year's eves in years. we'll tell you just how cold it will get and why that's not the only thing that officials in new life from atlanta this hour. thank you for being with us. more news right after the break. you won't see these folks they have businesses to run. they have passions to pursue. how do they avoid trips to the post office? stamps.com mail letters, ship packages, all the services of the post office right on your computer. get a 4 week trial, plus $100 in extras including postage and a digital scale. go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again. response to rising food and gasoline prices. the demonstrations have become mainly anti-government demonstrations. in egypt, families grief stricken. they held funeral services for the victims of friday's church attack in this case. nine people were killed when a gunman opened fire. near cairo. isis has claimed responsibility for that attack. in in new york city, security stepped up forces for the celebrations. officials say there are no credible threats at this point. they are just being cautious. there have been plenty of major headlines to cover around the world this year. cnn's reporters have been all over it. they followed every story, no matter where it took them. our klarissa ward looks back at the top seven international stories from 2017. ♪ >> reporter: it's our job as cnn correspondents to take you to foreign shores, to front lines. we at cnn go there. and in 2017, that journey unveiled the unthinkable. ethnic cleansing, countries collapsing, human beings sold like commodities. these are the stories that change the world. our first story, a cnn expose. >> a crew traveled into libya to track down a dark secret and they found it. >> some of the most desperate people on earth think they found a way to safety, but instead, they found themselves in the hands of predators. >> captured like animals and auctioned. >> 700. 700. 800. the numbers roll if in. these men are sold for 1200 libyan pounds, $400 apiece. >> the cnn report sparking self-reflection in europe and the u.s. about the west's own response to the migrant crisis. in audi arabia, a powerful prince is shaking things up. bolstered by close relations with the trump you white house. the crown prince embarking on a series of reforms, arresting many of his own cousins in a sweeping crackdown on corruption. >> he has swept away a generation of elderly and experienced ministers. >> while also taking on the kingdom's powerful clergy. >> there is only one country in the world where women can't drive and soon there will be none. >> reporter: but as he tries to take on an increasingly assertive iran, things get complicated. >> as defense minister, he initiated air strikes on neighboring yemen. >> reporter: involvement in a war that has brought 8.4 million people to the brink of famine. it's not the bombs and the bullets killing the most people. it's the humanitarian crisis that is growing by the day as yemen edges closer to become ago failed state. in venezuela, a perfect storm of economic and political crises. >> president finally admitted that its government can no longer afford to pay its bills. >> venezuela may now be in pore more violence and kayo ahechaos ahead of the dictator. >> politicians who spoke out against current president maduro were yanked out of their homes during midnight raids. >> a cnn team goes under cover and is stunned by what they piped. >> this food truck, breaking down for mere seconds before it was looted. basic food is scarce. virginia has been doing this for 18 months to feed her five kids. >> bringing with them a war crime so sickening, it is difficult to put into words. from his rooftop, he quickly sees this is no ordinary strike. i warn you, the pictures you are about to see are graphic. >> this is cnn breaking news. >> we are following breaking news, reports of a gas or some kind of chemical attack in syria, killing dozens. >> all around him, people are foaming at the mouth. convulsions racking their bodies. the horrifying scenes shock the world. victims, some of them just children, gasping for their final breath. the syrian government had dropped a sarin bomb on its own people. >> this led to the first american military strikes against the regime of bashar al assad. >> syrian president bashar al assad remains defiant. in 2017, two words would shock the world. ethnic cleansing. >> armed government forces are attacking their own minority citizens. >> in southeast asia's myanmar, the pariah state turned fledgeling democracy, the unthinkable was happening. >> they are beating us, shooting at us and hacking our people to death. >> some 600,000 of them have fled to neighboring bangladesh. >> the crisis, raising questions about the country's de facto leader. who was accused of doing nothing to stop the violence. >> growing criticism of nld leader aung san suu kyi over her handling of human rights abuses over the handling of rohingya muslims. >> coming in at number two, the fall of isis. some thee years after the terror group surged to infamy with staggering concontests across iraq and syria, its defeat came with a wimper, not a bang. >> the syrian forces taking to the streets and officially claiming the terrorist group of raqqah has been totally liberated. now they replace the black flag of terror. >> the historic syrian city of p palmyra reclaimed with the help of russia. in iraq, isis desperately tries to hold its ground in the country's second largest city of mosul. >> senior commanders take us in in the calm before their final storm. >> there are ambitions to build a caliphate crumbling as small pockets on of isis militants are flushed out. >> the iraqi prime minister is declaring full victory over voice and mosul, saying the entire war-torn city has been liberated from brutality and terrorism. >> in 2017, isis loses all of its major strong holds. lone wolf attacks in the maim of isis ensure their global reign of terror is still far from over. july 4th, u.s. independence day. north korea lights up the sky with its own frightening milestone. >> north korea releasing new video, appearing to show the successful launch of its first intercontinental ballistic missile. >> nuclear capable, but not yet nuclear armed. but by september, kim jong un's missile program reaches its final frontier. >> "the washington post" is now reporting that north korea has produced a miniaturized nuclear warhead that can fit inside its missiles. >> the stage is set for war, but for now, contained to a war of words. >> we can't have mad men out there shooting rockets a all over the place. >> i will surely and definitely tame the mentally deranged u.s. dotard with fire. >> but just miles away from the north korean border on his asian swing, president trump replaced the petty name calling with a more diplomatic tone. >> the weapons you are acquiring are not making you safer. >> the president continuing to push china to contain the north. >> the locker we wait, the greater the danger grows and the fewer the options become. >> and as the nuclear standoff continues, the question remains. will the next missile trigger a war? >> so with the top international stories of 2017, looking ahead now to 2018. officials say that new york's deadliest fire in 25 years was the tragic result of an accident, an accident at the hands of a young child. what happened next, we'll explain. plus, security and celebrations, the extra measures being taken to keep new year's eve in times square safe for the millions of people there. stay with us. even the toughest stains and odors with new super concentrated tide sport. the new tide sport collection- it's got to be tide he's a nascar champion who's she's a world-class swimmer who's stared down the best in her sport. but for both of them, the most challenging opponent was... pe blood clots in my lung. it was really scary. a dvt in my leg. i had to learn all i could to help protect myself. my doctor and i choose xarelto® xarelto®... to help keep me protected. xarelto® is a latest-generation blood thinner... ...that's proven to treat and reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots from happening again. in clinical studies, almost 98% of patients on xarelto® did not experience another dvt or pe. here's how xarelto works. xarelto® works differently. warfarin interferes with at least six blood-clotting factors. xarelto® is selective... ...targeting just one critical factor, interacting with less of your body's natural blood-clotting function. don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor as this may increase risk of blood clots. while taking, you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop. it may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you've had spinal anesthesia, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle-related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures and before starting xarelto® about any conditions, such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. you've got to learn all you can... ...to help protect yourself from dvt and pe blood clots. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. there's more to know. welcome back to newsroom. i'm george howell. we have more now on that fatal fire that took place in new york city on thursday. we now know that it started with a 3-year-old boy who was playing with the stove in his first floor apartment, this according to officials. his mother didn't realize there was a fire until the child screamed. they were fine, but in their hurry to escape, they left the door open. that open door allowed flames to spread throughout the building. 12 people were killed in that fire. it is the deadliest fire in new york seen in decades. also in new york, times square. it will be buzzing with excitement come sunday night. it's one of the focal points of new years celebrations around the world. 2 million people are expected to be in times square to ring in the new year and authorities are stepping up security measures to keep people safe. cnn's athena jones has this report. >> hey there. the new year's eve celebration here in times square is an iconic event. it's a massive security challenge. this is something the nypd has been preparing for since the confetti was swept up after last year's celebration. that's according to the police commissioner. we will see a stepped up number of police officers this year. where i'm standing right here, including several blocks north, south, east and west, it will be shut down to vehicular traffic starting relatively early on sunday morning. there will be 12 points for spectators who want to come in and view this area to view the ball drop, ring in 2018. those spectators are going to see teams of police officers, they're going to see metal detectors, bomb sniffing dogs, and they're going to have to go through two checkpoints, two screenings on of their bags and of their persons in order to enter the pins to celebrate the new year. also for the first time, the "new york times" is reporting that for the first time, police will be attaching reflective material to the outside of some of the buildings in and around times square and that is so that reflective material can help them locate any gunman or shooter should there be one. that, of course, is a lesson from the las vegas shooting. among the other stepped up efforts, there will be rooftop observation and sniper teams. police officers are also undergoing a special suicide attack training, training to try to help prevent any sort of suicide attack. we're going to see the familiar sanitation trucks filled with sand and cement blocks to help block off this area to prevent any sort of vehicular attack. authorities from the mayor, the police commissioner on doing saying there is no credible threat to this new year's eve celebrations, but they want everyone to remain vigilant. they say there's some 2 million people they expect to come out on sunday night shall remain j vigilant. as they say, if you see something, say something. it will be one of the coldest new year's for a long time in the united states. it creates some pretty cool images. take a look at this. niagara falls encased in ice. it may look completely frozen over. that is not the case. there is water gushing through that area. the only time the water actually stopped was in 1848 and that was because of an ice jam that took place up river. our meteorologist derek van dam, you would love that. >> i want to get my ice picks out and climb that water fall. >> let me look after you, friend. let's say you're feeling adventurous today, right? let's say you want to take a flight from minneapolis, st. paul, all the way to miami. i don't know why you would do that. >> i think i know why. >> you think you do. the temperature difference would be 100 degrees fahrenheit. that is quite a difference, right? and when you have temperatures that cold, this is what you can do. check on out this video. we see this time and time again when temperatures get to 20, 30 below freezing fahrenheit. but you just need to mix up a bit of soap and water, blow a bubble, completely windless conditions, perfect atmosphere conditions, i shall say, and you'll watch ice crystals form right in front of your eyes just like this gentleman did. astounding photos. check this out, graphics behind me. we here at cnn, i don't know if you know this, but we cross over from cnn international worldwide to cnn domestic across the united states. so i as a meteorologist have to go from celsius to fahrenheit quite often and back again. but this particular time, i don't need to because temperatures, when we're talking about 40 degrees below zero, celsius and fahrenheit, check this out, google this, they actually coincide at that temperature. negative 40. we're talking about windchills like that. these temperatures are one and the same regardless of if it's celsius or fahrenheit. looks like lake michigan is starting to get a bit of ice on the water as it should. we have this frigid arctic blast of air. it started the day before christmas. it has lasted right up until we edge into new year's eve. we're going to get into 2018 very cold in many portions of the united states. how cold? negative 11. the this is celsius, by the way. it will feel like negative 20 degrees celsius when you factor in the winds for the big apple. this could go down as one of the coldest new year's eve celebrations, at least the coldest since 1962 if the forecast holds, the coldest, by the way, set back in 1917. there will be colder location. in boston or vermont, temperatures will be down rooig frigid. i will leave you with this beautiful piece of information. george, it was colder in international falls, minnesota, a planet earth than it was on the surface of mars this week. >> what? >> so minnesota or mars, what do you say? >> miami. >> good answer. >> thank you so much. still ahead, spin-off sequels and superheroes, the block busters you just can't wait to see in 2018. we'll tell you about them. so we sent that sample off to ancestry. my ancestry dna results are that i am 26% nigerian. i am just trying to learn as much as i can about my culture. i put the gele on my head and i looked into the mirror and i was trying not to cry. because it's a hat, but it's like the most important hat i've ever owned. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com. afi sure had a lot on my mind. my 30-year marriage... ...my 3-month old business... plus...what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i made a point to talk to my doctor. he told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis had both... ...and that turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you. welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm george howell. with 2017 already in the rearview mirror and looking ahead to 2018, some of the year's most anticipated films seem a built familiar. >> reporter: the movies in 2018 might sound a bit like the '90s. "jurassic world: falling kingdom" will roar into theaters in june. the film joins flurry of blockbuster sequels. the franchise will release solo this summer. >> can we even say the name of the movie? i'll see you next year. that's director ron howard. the film is part of the strategy to apiece voracious "star wars" fans year after year. marvel studios will release a new film and the black panther will get his own spinoff. movie studios are going all in with sci-fi films in 2018, like a wrinkle in time based on the young adults book. >> we heard a crime up in the universe. >> we believe -- >> oprah winfrey, chris pine and reese witherspoon make up this all-star ensemble only to be rivaled by the cast in "oceans 8" where a trio try to steal ann hathaway's necklace. >> 150 million, actually. >> on the animation side, disney will release "the incredibles 2" more than 13 years after the original. >> you have powers! yeah, baby. >> you may have noticed disney will roll into the must year with its name on some of the biggest money-making franchises. perhaps no surprise since disney holds the top two highest grossing films of 2017 in the united states. "beauty and the beast" and "star wars: the last jedi," about $1 billion combined. >> a lot to look forward to. that's this hour of "cnn newsroom." i'm george howell at the cnn center in atlanta. let's do it again. hour number two of newsroom right back after the break. you're watching cnn, the world's news leader.

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Transcripts For DW Interview - What We Learned From The Luther Jubilee... 20171224 10:15:00

a shelf full of shelf. is we piece it's sad to go somewhere every day and see more and more proficient time in the scene gives me everything blames the wind have to give something back i feel obliged to. point waves surfers fighting against unseen pollution the sea starting in january seventh on t.w. . revolutionary divider of the church great communicator i'm talking about martin luther with johan english clausen from the lutheran church in germany the ek de welcome to the g.w. interview and. thanks for inviting me. exactly five hundred years ago luther nailed his ninety five theses to the door of the castle church invited him back an innovative way of communicating a message was luther the first blogger. yes. he might not really have used to hammer a nail but he didn't just use the printing press to convey his message. he created publicity and before that there hadn't been a public arena for debating and spreading ideas. you favor a traditional means of communication the book your latest one is called ninety five questions about the reformation it includes unusual questions such as who invented the most popular luther quote. so who was it. you know it's a nice quote that goes even if i knew the world were ending tomorrow i would plant an apple tree today and we don't know who came up with it and a lot of luther quotes were made up and that one dates to after the second world war. it was a message of hope and tribute doing it to luther gave it added impact. and what does your book tell us about its author how does luther matter to you. i love luther is existential religious intensity. the fact that faith was so pivotal to him i think his passion is amazing and. on the subject of books what would have become of luther if the printing press hadn't been invented just a footnote in history. he most probably would have been put to death during the persecution of heretics in the middle ages and his ideas would have been forgotten. hunted book was his salvation. it was not just an instrument for spreading his message it gave him a public platform where he and design ideas could survive. would prove to be so influential this happened five hundred years ago how much of luther is thinking is still relevant. yeah. that's a very good question. we've been examining it for the past decade and especially this year it's important for german culture in general after all didn't come all that much later. we think about our relationship to them what still moves us what's alien to us today. with martin luther there are issues that are still relevant such as the compatibility of faith and freedom the importance of personal faith and how this creates community. and also the question of how you live your faith and how it's reflected in your professional ethos. these questions still affect us today. would you say that luther fought against the catholic fundamentalists against fossilized beliefs and hypocrisy. protestants like to see it but of course faith and the individual but he also caused religious division which led to the violent and bloody religious wars in which hundreds of thousands died the big question is was it all worth it. thus. i don't know. that's a good question it's never worth it a single human life is worth more than any theological principle and from today's point of view what happened is horrifying. but at the same time it was a hard one lesson in the value of religious tolerance for germany and europe and you would think. so i did that these days efforts are being made to heal the rift between protestants and catholics has this year in particular helped rebuild bridges. yes. that's been a positive aspect of this five hundred year anniversary of the reformation. not everything worked out so well but on many levels from senior bishops to local communities there's been much cooperation all in a spirit of friendship a shared quest self-awareness and mutual curiosity. that can't easily be put into a legal or diplomatic text but it was a breath of fresh air for the ecumenical movement within what didn't work out so well. there were some advance where we were too self-involved and overestimated our capacity to mobilize the public they weren't as well attended as we had hoped. we don't celebrate an anniversary like this one every day five hundred years of the reformation is a milestone and we need to learn how to be visible to society at large. if you lutheran church wants to reach out to catholics there are still fundamentalist elements in the catholic church who believe in the infallibility of the pope which is exactly what luther opposed will you ever reach agreement. i think we'll have to live with the fact that there are different forms of christianity we should learn to stop be moaning our differences and live with diversity which you fight pretty these are for you personally the luther years meant hundreds of festivities church services podium discussions it's very stressful what do you gain from the luther year more interest in the church more people joining the church and not just attending church conferences but other events too. let's raise public awareness of basic issues that we address and which matter. and the media has played an important part meeting i think in addition to all the events there have been many high quality t.v. programs radio programs and newspaper articles that show that there's considerable public interest in finding out more. everybody wants to be recruited to the church but they're interested in reading and learning about it so we want to be there for them and to answer their questions present time. in recent years there have been reports about declining church membership including germany's lutheran church people are leaving in droves as the luther your stop this trend. you know it wasn't designed as a marketing campaign aimed at a turnaround but it might have had that effect exactly but i think major cultural events like this have a more subtle but also more sustainable effect that we've already gained a lot if we've awakened interest in religious questions in topics. for us it's important not just that people come back to the church but that we the church reach out to people with cultural events and collaborate with museums and concert venues that we go beyond the church walls and i think that has happened even if it. often i mean you see the media focused on the church thanks to the luther year and gave it a lot of coverage i've read that you didn't like one media description of luther as the first example of a so-called angry citizen why not. that was what it was a series in the magazine dish be good. but the media tends to over simplify. calling loser the first angry citizen associated him with the wave of right wing populism we're seeing in germany and i didn't like that association it luther was passionate he was extremely polemical he could be very hurtful but he was also willing to compromise he had a gentle side he wasn't a right wing populist but what is the main thing you would like germany to take away from the luther year. an awareness of that time in history that has marked germany profoundly. even in terms of the german language. and the question we should all ask ourselves how do freedom and faith go together. as the lutheran church a spokesperson on cultural affairs what do you think is luther's cultural legacy is it perhaps that the reformation is not just a german but a european idea oh. yes that's such an interesting aspect of the reformation. we put it to luther in germany but this year's events show that the reformation has a european context and piece of context that gives us a different understanding of our european neighbors france sweden switzerland and poland with their experience of the reformation with. henry the eighth in the anglican churches split from the catholic church helps us understand britain and breaks it down the hatred of rome then today's a trip to brussels so many associations that give us fresh insight into today's diverse and very turbulent continent and. that leads in neatly to our part of the interview where we ask you to finish three sentences. my take home message from the luther year is an awareness of the freedom of faith as an amateur footballer i'm envious of full soccer stadiums because we are lies. because of all the people singing in public like in church in places in germany where people sing together churches and stadiums because if people tweet more than they read to me as an author that's. not even offered him thanks for talking to us. your max highlights. was the last. best. chance we can just never get enough. lifestyle. the highlights was. the festive season in the. d.s. and gregorio our may know is the go to place for native of the figurines. from the virgin mary and the christ child to soccer stars and t.v. shows there's something for every taste. jesus mary and put chmela the nativities seasons of naples. in sixty minutes. on freedom and the whole. world i come from the region is rich in history on talent but so poor in education opportunity and freedom this makes it especially difficult for independent journalists i see many of the younger promising journalists who are now making names for themselves all over the world. some might

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Transcripts For DW Eco-at-Africa - The Environment Magazine 20180108 10:30:00

about environmental degradation. first in nigeria in the country around just to be precise it's a wetland area where they also used to be mined say now and the governments and local organizations are trying to create new jobs by helping people set up face fox let's go take a. chill my okafor does what she loves the most nature watch him she runs a conservation organization in a former mining area near the city of just one of the projects of the even creation care initiative is a fish from commercial business includes a vision ism is a perfect fit for careful the site has an old team mine insights alice transform into a fish farm in one thousand nine hundred six to produce fish for commercial purposes there was a change in management and left to deteriorate but we have come into management and aim is to raise fish and because of the. the fish farm breeds primarily catfish until last year the fish right on organic feed this wet mud for example attracts insects they lay their eggs in it. bred in small prawns the fish will later be transferred to these larger food. monitoring the mole is michael dunn jima. today is checking the water levels if you also make sure the fish are not full free to local coaches. in the. us you know all their farms different inside. well we doesn't have anything to do with them. so enjoying in the habitat is good for the eden creation care initiative also includes the plants nursery the seedlings will be planted around the pond and in a nearby forest the aim is to restore a landscape destroyed by hundred years of mining students regularly participate in data collection and bird ring game to discover new species sure mocha four is grateful for every helping hand some of the data we have collected are from birds plant and insects for the insects we identify the insects found in the farm and all the data being in the lice and reports to be made from it and hopefully will make scientific reports pay pass that could be plugged published in journals as well okafor has always had an interest in nature and wildlife and interest she's eager to pass on to her son she firmly believes that a healthy environment is vital for healthy living conditions driven by i believe that good place humans on earth to take you of the environment she sees our work as simply doing her duty. we hope that our project concept of us aparna project true which we can get a template i went through train all the fish from those who could go into conservation apple culture as. after six months the fishes saw at the local market in joss it's an organic and affordable protein rich food for charm okafor this is just the first step she hopes to one day find the funds to expand the project to the neighboring community. no smell no no ice no days no admissions i mean ferry has gone into service on the rebound with sally connecting germany on one side i love the other one special about the ferry. is that it is by electricity. you know that ferries can go green. ships are responsible for almost four percent of global climate change emissions german company. is doing something about it. it manufactures electric ferries. such as the santa maria ferry that traverses the mosul river. it doesn't need any petrol it doesn't emit smelly fumes and it's silent. electric batteries as well as solar energy keep the ferry going the whole day. forty five passengers and several cars fit on the santa maria. it's slightly more expensive than the usual ferry but it's worth it. the electric drive saves fourteen thousand liters of petrol every year. and above all it keeps the air clean. if you're also do you a bit tell us about it. this is our website or send us a tweet. tag doing your bit here your stories. not cuts used to be a fishing village and home to a few hundred since it became the capsule of. the population of. a minute. and he faces so many environmental problems sea level is rising the cost is eroding a lots of sand hasn't removed from the june for use in construction weakening defenses against the ocean sharon is a whole city going to be washed away i fervently hope not environmentally is that doing that best to protect the city they're getting young people involved and walking to stabilize the coast on the dunes let's take a look. alone palm tree among rows of dusty buildings trees and plants in general a rare here making shade a luxury in the mauritanian capital. those seeking respite from the beating sun have no choice but to huddle in the thin shadows cast by buildings. but that's all about to change at least in this street. a group of local young people are set on completely redesigning it. they've developed a model for the street as they foresee it. that. make the city green is a project run by the city's cultural center together with a german development agency. that nearly suggested planting trees in the streets. they'll provide shade but if we put benches around them that also provide a place where skilled pupils to hang out together so i do also discussing a possible ban on cars driving down the roll out in your corner when i come up with how i did that if they are what you thought he wanted their carry on and worth and . the problem is that people here chop down trees for their animals which isn't good. here so that. there's a lack of understanding here that trees and plants are important for the climate and when i love that we're going to ask is the city council needs to start doing its bit to clearing away the rubbish and spreading awareness about the issue is that to be. a new uk shot has many other problems to deal with the city is built on a salt flood large parts of it are below sea level and when it rains here it pours turning the dusty ground into a huge lake and streets into rivers not look problem. i'm not sure that our main concerns used to be siltation but since two thousand and nine because of climate change the water itself has become an issue we've had flooding here that's covered eighty percent of the city water is now our biggest problem and the people of the cut you want to impact the policing. of the young activists have collected photos documenting the flooding mixed up with trash and sewage it's a breeding ground for disease. heavy rains are becoming more common here and pushing up groundwater levels the water literally gushes up from below into the city. and there's another threat to new york shot along the atlantic coast close to the city. for years the german development agency g.-i said has been working with local n.g.o.s to try and curb this homegrown problem with. large amounts of sand have been removed for use in construction work toward a newer chart has expanded massively in recent years it's only really existed since one thousand nine hundred ninety eight and back then it had a population of just five hundred today it's one million which has meant a lot of sand being removed for building work that's created gaps in the dunes and leveled them so those that we still have need to be stabilized. tamarisk bush's have now been planted on fifty hectares of genes they're extremely tough and able to cope with the salty water and the lack of nutrients in the sunday ground. their job is to reinforce the dunes and protect new york chart from the dangers of rising sea levels. but it's only a city of venice is known for its beauty the renaissance by listeners its rich cultural heritage but it is in danger the two million tourists in the historic city every year extremely large cruise ships are a problem if a ship drops anchor the water in the commodes moves about twenty centimeters this has disastrous effect on the wooden bases of venice's buildings a local pressure group has italy to take action. every time talk i'd paolo put up so crosses the reality bridge he can't help but wonder where did his charming city go one that's now overrun with millions of tourists how can vanish protect itself from the onslaught he's sure this piece of world cultural heritage won't survive as a photo backdrop alone. and that of my love for the city makes me seek out places and people who are keeping venice alive. because there are enough people who are doing the opposite and steering the city into trouble and waters. because they get up and then go to. but like most venetians paolo lives from tourism. he now conducts special tours to draw attention to the city's problems like in his own district where rents are rising as flats are used as holiday homes driving venetians out. the cruise ships are also a huge problem activists to follow micheletti is outraged not only did these huge vessels flood the city with day trippers that also threatening the city's very foundations. the movement of the ship's propellers has a piston effect. churned up all the clay and so from the lagoon floor causing it to be gradually washed into the open sea. as a result venice a city built on wooden platform is slowly sinking and could eventually be completely submerged but micheletti isn't giving up his citizens' initiative has managed to prevent further cruise ships coming into venice. on the bus and on the surface when a ship like that goes by the water level in the nearby canal sinks by around twenty centimeters and then rises again straight away due to displacement this hugely powerful force away at the foundations of all the palaces churches and bridges. but not everyone in fairness is happy about micheletti initiatives the paltalk thora ts invested millions of euros in modern cruise terminals now due to the success of the protests only half of them can be used. for four years we've been listening to these fears that our ships could even plow right into venice i can only keep reassuring people even with the biggest ships the chances of that happening are zero. nevertheless in the future large vessels weighing one hundred thousand tons or more will be diverted to a neighboring industrial port leaving the historic center and water taxis but it will take years for the port to be ready and there are still issues concerning our pollution. so for now nothing's really changed. every year there are still thirty million tourists who swarm fantasist fifty five thousand residents. but of the cemented this paradoxical but the best tourist for venice is the one who stays at home. we're more than full with thirty million visitors a year the learn. something radical has to happen to reduce the number of visitors and the venetians will have to sacrifice some tourist dollars if they want to save their beloved city. back to africa in kenya santis from a british university have set up a pilot project in the countryside the project called song provides energy even far from lads grieve the experts from the university of laugh in central england walk together with the residents to install a local solar greed the people often. get lighter that does not rely on viral mentally helpful kerosene and electricity from the sun and even cheaper. is a self-taught electrician. until recently his only reviews are old bees. well now he knows a thing or two about lithium ion batteries. like this one to his abilities are not the problem of the better as i don't know nor do i but when i put the buzzer and the disgust loys. beeping sound. williams works the carrier is new power station which is swallowed by rooftop solar panels and it is stored in large batteries in a central hub cables transport power to standard cells which provide electricity for the village of smaller batteries. twenty percent of the households in a career i was gripped with batteries all of us are on the way to invest. the project was launched by two british university. damon thrusters a battery specialist from oxford explains how to update a battery software. the new batteries are ready for testing and eventually they'll utilise use knocked of batteries which is more cost effective and environmentally friendly. and once they're programmed the batteries will need further updates. these guys are doing hard core repairs where they're taking chips off and putting new new electronic components on when we go to using used batteries more or refurbishment where you can easily take a battery sell out and put a new one in colleagues and caroline hansen wants to take a look at the battery years on the site. user feedback is key for further project development. connect into the national power grid is too expensive for most of the villages and very one juror couldn't afford the one hundred fifty euro price tag plus another monthly fee for power consumption of. the rooftop solar cell can't even power three. d. he might be in the bulbs that i received a much brighter than the one i had before and the battery is an easy time. in the air now when i love the. committee meeting in the village provides feedback. people were expecting. he is only half a minute. for most villages the batteries can only power the light bulbs and radius so we are taking and the must be continually reaches. up now in fact they don't have enough power so we have agreed that they are going to recharge and bring more power to help the community that change from england will develop more powerful batteries in the coming months but first they'll have to solve some technical problems in the system. then all users will contribute about four euros a month into the village electricity community project manager john henry says it takes about five years for the investment to pay for itself and then the local power station going on through the community it's already been able to acquire an electric incubator and a grain mill that the villages can vent these business services create an income stream that income stream cannot be used to pay for the costs of the of the capital building the having the fast pace of buying all this equipment and for the continual expansion a maintenance of the system when i'm curing services the million devices it's much too small to meet launched unmanned many sonas consecrating instead they still drive into the city to have the. most the project generates more revenue they'll be able to get a larger. when kerry is already thinking about ways to use the green electricity they generate in the village for commercial use it's. now we had west a semi go where people are trying to take fate into their own hands when it comes to fighting climate change and environmental degradation mt knows them all that's right sharon local organizations called dimitrov clubs are being set up in san diego and several other countries in africa where women man and young people come together to work on bringing about change in their communities one example might be developing a project to protect the soil from the erosion let's take a look at how these clubs work. and and sat in and we've been invited to a meeting by the chief of sorry booboo village there already for demitra clubs here there are two thousand across africa set up and funded by the united nations food and agriculture organization and the global environment facility the discussion groups help promote participation and initiative within village communities. encourages the women to speak out it's still unusual for them to have a say in policy. today the young women's club is discussing a proposal made by the young men to build stone barriers to stop soil erosion see what i mean we'll talk about everything that affects the village with younger and older men equally. and even more importantly how we present our point of view at the village assembly along with other demitra. where our opinion is taken into consideration for decisions about adults community i mean that's the biggest challenge before we had no say at all on matters in the village. i am. sorry booboo with its one hundred sixty residents laws of the distance from the big cities. many of the crops are ready for harvesting but once again there wasn't enough rain which means not enough corn when it does rain the water rushes over the barren soil deforestation has left the soil loose and easily washed away. that's the topic of discussion at this village meeting opened by the chief. one after another the four demitra clubs present their opinions and proposals. not all the villages in the region have been willing to join the project but here the young people like oh not too dim have made a lot of progress. well i'm cool wouldn't you. say you know the environment has become an important issue in the village since the club started. we have to keep everything in and around our homes clean. without high job and there's no help and there's a community and we've made sure we keep our wells in better condition otherwise we have no water during periods of drought not for us nor for the communal gardens look we've already found solutions to these issues he yelled at in your report. the next day they start building the stone dikes to contain the rain water that flows through the aim is to make the soil around their village fertile again. one m g o two jell-o. supervises the more than sixty demitra clubs in the region he's managed to enlist the local farmers association to help the villagers set up the system of trenches. nearly all the small channels that collect rainwater from the surroundings and up here it's like a delta and evil at this point the water has enough force to wash away the fertile soil from the cultivated land. and. soon they'll plant trees here to restore the areas around the village the head of the dimeter project in senegal says this is an ideal case the two biggest challenges for the villages are getting local authorities to help and sourcing materials. yeah. and the but died before in the long term there has to be a direct exchange of information between the village communities and the authorities so that they can also find out what's happening on the ground. that's also a challenge for the dimitrov clubs and making themselves known to authorities and pushing their ideas and plans without us coordinators. a lot going on this is a pity so. the two young demitra club leaders from sorry booboo have been invited to take part in a chat show at a community radio station. a mother of four is asked to tell how they cleaned up the village after the rain swept garbage into their homes and connected dam talks about the brief rainy season and his dried up cornfields with. demitra club leaders hope that local radio stations will help spread their ideas and efforts to other villages. so. that's all for today on eco at africa we hope that you have been inspired to help protect the environment to find out more about the show second at our website my name is sharon the money if buy from me in nairobi kenya and if you are involved in not environmental project i would like to share your story getting in touch with mail social media thank you for watching and i look forward to seeing you again next time on court africa. bye bye from lagos nigeria. the be. the be. the be. the hottest tracks electrifying the and an infectious. the x. problem show six boys noise six and felix thanks to premier league crime drama teacher. for in thirty minutes on the be. black be our fighters want to start families to become farmers or engineers every one of. the children who have already been there. and those that will follow are part of a new process. they could be the future of. granting opportunities global news that matters d. w. made for mines. nicky has no children which makes her feel worthless and incomplete. in a society that expects them to be children this is a burden many married yet childless women in niger suffer from. a wife is only fully accepted upon. a very personal film about the suffering of childless women in the rich or the fruitless tree starting january fourteenth on t w. climate change is affecting us all. rising sea levels and a magic level join the rising mountain line through our streets. homes. and change grounds. through entire communities. follow for good news is our own choices in energy conservation. recycling. and transport can help all the line find out what you can do today at redraw the lines. this is the w. news coming to you live from berlin the first awards gala of

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Transcripts For DW Kick Off - More Than Football 20180126 07:30:00

i hope that this will make us more ethical persons what would life be like as a cyborg and what do you think will happen society does the human race need to upgrade i think it's only the beginning of its cyborgs human machines starting february first on t w. i have determined. that it is time to officially recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel. football is more than just a game when frank first left fact criticizes the us president. then becomes politics. the first. thing when charlie's out on peace moves from a portugal a neighborhood to the richest country in europe. and. then football turns into economics. when video evidence is used in football then does not fall into the category of lore and justice is to be all making more fair or is it just rubbish and when you do a study to find out whether fans can be bought like why is there not sociology right. kind of farmer's. markets here. on kick off life. football is more than just thinking i. so. let's find out who he really. are you the first professional footballer to come from this village and how did that happen. it's big story. when i start. it is all to. the smallest club in my village. so i want to go there and play there and my father told me no you must. be like you. i have three brothers. bigger than me. my cousin was big from behind and. in two thousand and four israel took his guns into life through the tragedy came an opportunity for tali to play football. my father was. he told me. he like football and. maybe you can live his dream and the football player. come and go you can start. his cousin steve ritchie mcabee high for recruiting and after several years he made it to the top when i was seventeen i play. my car behind. my first professional clinton. speaking of a beehive we had this image here looks like hell it is celebrating being held up by his teammates talk to me about it. the first. seven years and i was seventeen. he was very good the. europa league champions league. i also the my. national team when i was eighteen. my last year in haifa when i was twenty three we will win the cup after nineteen years it was. the. victory for the club. yet i finished. with a. good member. tally a new football family truck frankfurt is where his heart is now. my thing when he comes here i was really healthy and pretty and. we mean the same team you know. i i love my my team really teammates who are here like from me. you know how different is frankfurt there have to be huge differences. it's something you know it's all new life leaving the village and the people know you you go to everyone and know you and your family it's everywhere and you come here and. you miss this and i thought sphere in the village but. really when i come here and. turning into studying with my teammates i feel that i. that funnily. enough someone picture that i love because it's in my hometown. the bay area california i'm a california native. tell me about this picture it was just the first time you were there tell me tell me about that experience. the first and i afraid when we were walking this other really. five. to five this. is really right yeah very red and we was also. really nice how was the food did you talk to americans at all or the food was really good. people. how you say that movie and everything you know it's big everything. that movie theater. does really. form with only. ten days and i mean if you're. given you're interesting background. of being in a room israeli have you been watching the news lately. i have just turman that it is time to officially recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel. i think. it was. the president saying i think and i like this because. and. we love to resign him like do is love you is an enemy and. they must say it's for all people in the us of christiane. having jurors in. churches so. i think there is i mean for people. when somebody come and say. risen or lifo you do. it's make for. something bad inside. i wish that. would be. the life. in those i met. you must believe that i have. every one. thing. what you want the. words of wisdom from young thailand to watch a legend in his small village in israel the twenty five year old is now making a name for himself in the bundesliga. now it's time to test the loyalty of some funders league i found in a little experiment. sons of georgia and. i'm by and what often big sums of money just what you're legion says sort of the good die hard fans follow the cash just like the play and let's find out. some of the last minutes marked it all somebody was in ones which are not some. form kids you're one of them my guns could force their views into what i would be with his hand and skull. and guns cause his temper and. it's got to be. dying with this case. so p.t.s.d. it's friend that was over they would have. to see oh yeah i mean i'm good and i didn't think he was from the also could come in here and it's me sanker. it's occurred. meeting from try to move your. body. up. it's been on the boil before you can we are going to it's going to. be slowly going to be swift amount via. the dancing meter company and even on such measures he also could on time does a shift in much of the. time decision. to survive the clink of fear fear fear fear from. want to get gates and hear of a few good judgment calls and it's like yeah to not buy one not miles food in the fall be my own food i won't buy it you won't buy this is all to give me a. call to fourteen. i'm not from stage. to keep his ministry got rid of my gum so you didn't get a call dismissed. this is a noble. thing. as it's kind of it's just that hard response you're going to bore me and i struck off and. didn't really show mine the. mind i knew the i need to see what you see is just ok but this is so old and i suspect respect here and it's really. hard times love the club no matter what but do they love the bundesliga the big summer signing the video assistant referee. we've had the i.r. in the bundesliga for half a season and it's still not really clear if it was let's take a closer look at the video assistant referee gives us the lowdown and it explains. ok science fans have no idea what's happening. with. video assistance refereeing v.a.r. is one of the biggest talking points in football the n.f.l. has it. and now it's right in a beautiful game troy league include syria and of course. we may even see they are at the world cup this summer. if successful. so how does it work the recovery from now use video evidence when making tough decisions there are all these areas where they are can get simple. penalties. a mistaken identity if the referee is unsure about anything that's happened down the pitch we can get in touch with a team in cologne how these guys can see the match from all the different angles and in super slow motion or use this information to help the referee make the best decision in the first half of the bundesliga season it seemed the average number of incorrect decisions for the hard fifty two down to just twenty three it seemed nineteen penalties given a would have been otherwise and eleven goals that would have been falsely ruled out that's not bad right. so what is the everybody hates it we've got a few ideas number one it takes ages the d.f.l. promised that when they are launched that some decisions will be made in the ten seconds that's not the case the fans don't have time to get out of their seats get a beer get a breath and worst go to the toilet get another beer and return to their seat before decision has even been made ok we might be exaggerating a little but it does take a long time to be so tall and number two it's killing the drama plays used to rip off their shirts slide in front of the away fans when they scored a goal and now they're looking nervously over their shoulder wondering what the referee was doing with his finger in his ear so he was going on just looking. number three despite the new technology they are just making things confusing we see one player sent off only to be summoned back from the tunnel and given a yellow card instead and we've seen a player given a red card something that didn't even deserve a yellow plus those four key situations that we mentioned earlier i've gone out the window the referee appears to be in constant communication with the guys in cologne the fans have no idea what's going on. so what is going on here now that song is launched the bundesliga called they are video boys as it's known in germany the most significant development in football in the last fifty years he said that germany was at the forefront of footballing innovation that was supposed to be a huge leap forward for the bonus league has been met with tough criticism from diehard fans who believe the all is only interrupting the flow of the game. so what do you think is me are making for more fear or is it just rubbish lets us know in the comments if you enjoyed this video like and subscribe. now we're off the g.l.a. to find out about charlie's honoring piece the man who messi twice since midfield enforcer was once a shy and skinny kid and what is your little laugh to. say about a fan if. you saw it let's find out more about his roots and his path to football star to. santiago the chilean capital on the far outskirts of the city lights pointing out the home town to china less than. one of the poorest areas in all of santiago twenty outro is a sense with problems violence drugs discrimination. and the new model for music. how do you make it sound. it helps to meet the right people. am with a lance that respects ago. they could have put the code in all e.u. i guess and it's often law and so i thought i'd look in to see it like the middle of the moment there where the law i think that meant to give you thought the meal was the word feed so at the. end what it all saw we had an eye. you also need someone to recognise your talent for not try to make short cuts it is even though he's loath to take the credit even. davis jagan the stage for a little. bit of milking line and that not the needle nor do. i just read life took a different turn and told how to devise for charles and his friends something we might all have touch. you only they were friendly but it seemed of this in. their lives then they need to concede to. me you know million. or one silly. child lives knows just how true that is in twenty fifteen he tore his a.c.l. in training before he even got to play a game for his new club by eleven months of rehab following his. own i don't do that right. now but. on the. his job was very much on the rise of the time they just named to street and plenty also after him following chile's big win in the cup america beat messi every kid in chile knew his night the fans of the university down to chile love him the mongst he helped lead the club to three league titles and they treat him like a gold. club yet done yet again to salvage the underworld of history we're going through the one where he was very aware of it but when we tried to alert the billion one hundred that i knew we'd see big you know new england for the boy in. zero four i would examine to be allowed i'm game. it would mean you gave me a class who even they just knew they known. go away to allow then you would be left in the meantime kiss my mouth and say it would be the new year to date. back on his old straight fans painted a makeshift tribute to the typical chilean lot and his journey from pointing out to all the whites of the bundesliga he's a role model to many and to everyone my friends that's been his nickname since his time in boyhood club. for we need for. a. finance. kid sees each other less as proof that their dreams of a big career can come true. if you. can help us in it but i'm also a little he. quit on my idea you were a little boy. also they're going to have him say. it again that yes if a little rust in the previous immensely old that here too you know what the don't mean a good deal to leave so you know they want to. yes out of their money. but it's a god they want the. water in the man. got it they'd go where he. was and they could happen on a nano because channel is out and he's was just chatting is that i'm the sort of kid with hopes and fears before he was a mega star. as . the us and so. they. see. him from seeing the. beheading of keeping us. as the symbol of that. he remembers and also remembers how he made his house and went down so. fast that not all may not so old say i thought if i don't think of. a few your immortal soul. then that will find out. how it works and humility helps countless succeed and staying a typical chilean lot. of. the faithful. in the end of the family. from sickle she lands to the prince and she shall list and i guess. to play a sound i found song from the gun and capital of across the fish house fallin cademy yes that's right the track is fly fish excessive stumble has a branch in gemini's capital by lynn and thank you in turn have a football academy ngata. take it away boys. high order one man i mean who have gone up. and out into. a crowd to you and there we sing to express our song for you to become a star ok let's go on to when i do go back to where i go do one mind up yet on my i get a good day i think that's a new man oh yeah yeah i do but you. were doing no good you go to my yeah go good it is a lot of money yet oh my i gotta do. i say a new man oh my yeah yeah it did yesterday. maybe he who is so so so so it's not so basic that now no no no no no no. oh. no no no no no no no no no. but he. me he such are still bashing past so it's automatic us well out no no no no no i are oh yes you got it. yeah are. oh. yeah. and. oh and i'm on. right. now is the worst cell along the way so this thing that. like i don't know crocodile thank you very much and there are things that you think i'm going on right right right. and you know we're going to know mighty. fine for. language in this time of. young good. w. dot com the german. tells us story in story so. it makes us laugh. and cry explain the trouble and smile illegibly to cook images of emotion the exploration goals. can see every movie jammed on d w.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Ingraham Angle 20180331 02:00:00

have that somehow or another that trump is trumping back. i will say that there is pot calling the kettle black to say that somehow democrats are playing up these cultural issues. this is the willie horton party. >> laura: what michael dukakis came up with willie horton. >> reagan and welfare queen. jesse helms crumbling that up paper. the way that donald trump is race baited. >> laura: barack obama at the same point in his presidency was 46%, he wasn't above 50. look, this has been a wild ride for a year all i'm saying is when it comes to the economy when it comes to trade agreements slightly better for middle america. fewer people unemployed. that's good stuff. doesn't mean everything is perfect and there aren't big disagreements. i think that d.c. deep poll >> this was the party of barack obama using the irs if you like your plan can you keep your plan. relations in the oval office. we can't even talk about whawith my kids because they are under age. richard, please, give us a break about the honesty and integrity line. i'm a christian conservative, i'm saharan, too. i get it. >> laura: everybody is. >> that is absolutely ridiculous that the democrats are the party of honesty and integrity, come on. >> laura: we all have our issues. each party has problems on that score. we have seen that i whic think the economy in the end is what people are voting for. 56%, again to the dcc research 56% of americans in these districts are saying that they are confident about the future. i'm happy weighs the way people feel. it was a rough ride for many americans. we have a long way to go. i want to play a sound bite of al sharpton another big those jobs, traditionally entry level jobs. they haven't done a great job of selling that i think they should and i think donald trump should go into those areas, as uncomfortable as it might be and actually preach the good news of his economic reform. >> two things, first, remember donald trump said to the black community what do you have to lose? answer, healthcare, voting rights. medicare, social security. i'm just saying that there are actually, we now see after a year and a quarter that there are things that the black community did lose. >> laura: how are they losing voting rights. >> it seems to me if you look what the the justice department is doing and ♪ doing they are not standing up for the voting rights of the black community in districts and states around the country. >> laura: i just don't understand what examples do you have of that. >> let me just say one other thing about donald trump. the problem is his bona fides when it comes to race relations are frankly between what he said about the central park five. what he said about good people on both sides at charlottesville. he just also a no standing. i agree with you. the only way he is going to restore it is to go into those communities. >> laura: he should do that. >> say something meaningful as opposed to something that's trite and frankly -- >> laura: dan, close tout. >> richard, donald trump was celebrated by people in the civil rights community before he ran as a republican. richard, how do you square this circle black unemployment is down dramatically. black middle class expanded by a third under ronald reagan. and they are stopping black people from voting? did you just make that up and please don't tell me because it would be entirely racist to suggest that because you are black you don't know how to get an identification card. that would be entirely absurd for you to suggest that i hope that's not what you are saying, right? >> laura: do you want to make. >> what i'm saying is that every line in the economy is on a straight line starting with the pits that barack obama inherited to the great kind of record that he developed. so all donald trump has to do is step out of the way. >> blaming bush now. >> that accounts for why his numbers are as strong as they are. >> laura: clearly manufacturing rebirth that is happening. all the announcements from apple on down companies bringing back wealth to the united states, i don't think there is a strong argument that that would have were it not for the tax cut that he helped push through and all these other reforms. we will see how this goes. the republicans have a long way to go in selling the message of free market capitalism and, you know, individual initiatives that's rewarded into all communities, especially minority communities. they have a heavy lift. great segment, guys. dan and richard thanks so much. the democrats as i said seem to have no interest in working with president trump on cultural issues or anything for that matter. is that good politics? not according to a poll i mentioned just a short while ago. new private poll conducted for the democratic congressional campaign committee as reported by axios. they found that democrats running in these swing districts quote must express a willingness to work with the president. as i said. well, joining me now for reaction is shelby steel, a senior fellow at the hoover institution. dr. steel, great to see you. how are you? >> i'm good. i'm good. good to be here. >> laura: does that surprise you that there seems to be an unwillingness on the part of democrats on the issue of the president moving from daca kids from 800,000 kids who would have gotten amnesty, dr. steel, to 1.8 million would have received amnesty under the trump proposal. the democrats in the end as i predicted said not going to do it. >> that's right. that's right. there is the source of their power and on the american left. i think has a lot to do with supporting policies that win them a kind of innocence in the culture that put them on the side of the good show them to be redeeming, racist, sexist, so forth past. so that is what they are looking for in bills like this and in much of what they pursue today because the other side of that is that america has morally grown in the last 50 years. it is not the racist society that i grew up in, for example. today, it is -- you can say that the oppression of minorities is over with it's simply systemic part. this pulls the rug out from liberals. they have no mandate than to rectify history and rectify the past. they are a bit exhausted at this point. they don't know what to do next. stephon clarke funeral i mentioned. al sharpton flies in. he gets up and speaks at the funeral. people are very impassioned. he said i flew here 3,000 miles only for this family and to keep this going. we have a sound bite. let's watch. >> white house press secretary sarah huckabee sanders to say this is a local issue is the main reason that many of us said no matter what, we will be here. this is not a local issue. it's a national problem. >> laura: it's a national problem. now, we will see what the facts of this case ultimately show. but whether it was trayvon martin or michael brown or freddie gray. each horrible innocent ended up racial slash point regardless what the ultimate facts determined, dr. steele. >> well, the flash point, if we're going to have a flash point, should be mr. sharpton should fly to chicago where in 2016762 young black largely boys shot by other black boys committed that many murders in one year wheres that liberal sharpton again. again, liberalism goes after examples of victimization. what's amazing about mr. sharpton he has a passion for black victimization. he loves it he celebrates it he won't let anybody escape it because victimization is his only source of power. he has nothing else to offer. nothing to say about the economy. immigration, whatever. nor do most on the left. they can call people racist. take positions that give them this ora of innocence from the americans. i'm not a racist. i'm an in the, good-hearted american. we're going to go and have diversity and inclusion and so forth while they actually ignore the real problems. if you have got 762 boys being shot on the south side of chicago in one year that suggestings a profound unheard of level of human pathology particularly in the western world. well, what -- we will believe them again when they begin to have something meaningful to say about that circumstance. >> laura: dr. stool, we have talked about this before on radio and you are so insightful on what happened to the actual debate. i saw this going back to college there is an attempt to shut down debate. someone actually raises a point about what happens when our fighting forces become social experimentation places. then you are anti-trans. or anti-this or anti-that. instead of having a conversation what works best for the military or what works best for borders. i are anti-immigrant. the left does not want a discussion. they want to impose their will on others and if you do not bow down to them. they want to try to demonize you or, you know, isolate the sole solon ski tactics so patently obvious at this point. >> that's absolutely right they want to shame you. and that's really what they are about. again, they have no other other than sort of again identification with innocence moral superiority. one thing they resent the most is pragmatism. nuts and bolts of it how do we fix a problem like the family break down we see across the black america today? what do we do there pragmatically down on the ground that can actually move us into the modern world? now that as blacks we enjoy this level of freedom. what's going to help us meet that challenge? nothing to say. they want to take us back to the old world. he wants to fly to sacramento. stand before the cough continue of another black kid and basically identify that event with slavery and segregation and so forth and sohio himself to be humanely concerned with all of this he never appears in chicago or baltimore or st. louis or detroit. any of those cities. >> laura: doctor, it's a heart-breaker but it is utterly predictable and to a lot of people it's utterly depressing. but your insights are amazing. i could do a whole hour with you. thank you so much for coming on tonight. we really, really appreciate it and by the way, also something that's been stunning is roseanne's run away success. could it already be triggering a conservative renaissance in the entertainment industry? well, details coming up. plus, did the pope really say hell didn't exist? stay tuned. >> we hit the door at 110 miles an hour every morning. and if we're not moving at that speed, our colleagues will fly right by us. >> sandra: our job is to facilitate smart conversations so that the people who are watching us can better understand what's happening in the world. >> bill: to go deeper, to find a different question that other people are not asking. that's the real challenge. >> sandra: to give it to you straight, bad or good, like it or not, deliver the news. ♪ hey. pass please. i'm here to fix the elevator. nothing's wrong with the elevator. right. but you want to fix it. right. so who sent you? new guy. what new guy? watson. ♪ ♪ my analysis of sensor and maintenance data indicates elevator 3 will malfunction in 2 days. there you go. you still need a pass. ♪ ♪ >> laura: welcome back. over 18 million people watched that debut of the roseanne reboot on tuesday night. staggeringly high number in thisser wrath cable television and smart phones. according to a report in the "new york times," the idea to relaunch the show came from a brainstorming session at abc. this happened the day after president trump's victory over hillary clinton. it took a presidential election for the suits at abc to realize that regular americans had different values than the far left people who live on the coast. wow. joining me for reaction is cathy arrive ryu who is a publisher of catalina magazine and here with my in the studio is mollie hemingway senior editor of the federalist. i love this story. i love it so much. catherine, i want to start with you. >> okay. >> laura: the "new york times" writes this piece and says the meeting that took place on the morning of mr. trump's surprise victory led new york to reconsider strategies and had in place means of revised strategies centering on struggling midwestern family a show to appeal to the voters who had helped put mr. trump in the white house. is ben sherwood still the head of abc entertainment? he is a smart guy. i know ben. if he had anything to do with it doesn't surprise me. it is amazing. like these people have always existed. they have always been there we have a coast and america in between. i'm sorry that's tom wolf's line. why did it take them so long to figure this out? >> i think the election maybe inspired them. i would hope they were going to have this meeting anyway. they were number four when it came to the network channels in ratings. abc had not had a hit for a while. modern family had not been working. other shows had not been working. i wouldn't say that roseanne is the brand new answer because they are hitting on middle america. middle america loves empire. empire is fox's big hit ratings buster. walking dead huge hit. that's about zombies. i don't think that's about middle america. i wouldn't say that exactly roseanne is a reflection of what americans are looking for because it's them. >> laura: cathy, 18 million people tuned in. >> exactly. big bang theory. >> laura: big bang theory launched how many years ago. big bang theory a liberal favorite and funny show i watch it every now and then. it's on every channel all the time. >> right? >> laura: mollie, it's not like it's a conservative show. just treats people who are conservative like they are real people have a sense of humor: like "duck dynasty" in the beginning. they were really popular. >> what an audience. >> laura: it's massive. >> reflective of what happens when you make good art. this is such a small thing for a really large population of people. there isn't one kind of trump voter. yes, the people on roseanne might represent one type of trump voter. there are tons of different type of trump voters. so unrepresented in our art it's bizarre. this is a group that's large enough to elect a president and, yet, media treat them as if they don't exist or cartoon characters of evil. >> laura: speaking of which donnie deutsche on morning joe had this little snarky comment about the roseanne deal. let's watch. >> isn't a big part of this news is the demo that watches appointment television that means when it's actually on the air when ratings count are the more red state, lower income, lower education and, yes, when you put that on broadcast television, l-3 television, those numbers are always going to be higher. >> laura: cathy? >> i don't know. i don't always agree with donnie deutsche. i think middle america loves the walking dead and those were zombies. i think right now maybe roseanne yeah did come out with 18 million viewers. at the same time there is a sister there who is anti-trump supporter. >> laura: that's the point. >> that's what's beautiful. this is what is happening in america. i think the coast and middle america, everyone can relate to rose san right now because we all have trump supporters and nontrump supporters in our lives and this show is teaching us how to live with that we haven't seen this on tv right now. brand new arch were bunker and it was about time. i think all of us can relate to this show no matter what coast or middle states we are living in. >> laura: good point. i have family members who lo trump. family members who can't stand him. it is amazing that sometimes in families they can't even speak to each other. like, you guys are family. this is family. family should transcend politics. what are you talking about? >> i think it shows so many people in hollywood think they are being brave when they go up among their piers that have the same views and talk about how they have the same views. so much better when people do art grappling with members in the family. >> laura: that's real family. >> that's better than what we see usually from hollywood which is preachy. >> laura: cathy. >> beauty of the show appealing to all of us. >> laura: they love each other. >> they love each other and led by a trump supporter. there is the other representation. i think we are all learning from this show. hopefully the ratings can stay up because she is doing a favor to all of us right now. >> laura: do you guys think this will be replicated. everyone thought after the passion of the christ that everyone would see all these more religious films that were really well done. i'm not sure. i think most of these folks in hollywood, they put profits second and ideology first. you have an opportunity to have struck gold with this audience for decades and yet, they have not done it because they are ideologically incapable of seeing past their own, you know, the hanged in front of their face. >> yeah. every few years you get a lesson like this where people really do have, you know, overwhelming numbers of people coming out to see things that are different than the traditional values done by hollywood. and, yet, they care. >> laura: "american sniper." >> they care so much about ideology. >> laura: a little embarrassing for some of these executives, cathy, if they put on a show that a lot of these traditional folks like there is a strain of intolerance in that narrative. we would see more of it because we have half the country doesn't agree with the prevailing wisdom in hollywood and that half of the country is not served. cathy, can you wind it up for us. >> in hollywood they do say everyone first wants to be second. now that they see there is a winning formula. they will return to try to replicate it and i don't know if they can do it. roseanne has done it beautifully. >> laura: all right, guys. people of faith by the way speaking up. standing with president trump amid the stormy daniels controversy. we will tell you why. this holy week, did the pope really say that hell does not exist? our friday follies segment with raymond next this is wild. evangelicals still supporting donald trump. we have been hit with nonstop stormy daniels and other people coverage. >> other alleged relationships and it seems the evangelicals such a big part of the trump fan base and supporters, 8 to 10 they are supporting him and giving him job approval numbers at that level. will out of 10 evangelicals still support him. that's incredible in the face of what they have been seeing. >> laura: so the left thought that they would push the sex narrative, donald trump. >> the networks with doing it around the clock. >> laura: it is nonstop. they thought that would crack him. that would crack him. crack his support. it reminds me of the billie bush tape came out. they thought that was it we stuck a fork in him. he is done. again, they don't want to debate trump on the issues. they do not want to talk issues. they want to demonize and isolate him and destroy him. that's the left's tactic. >> look at this piece of video. this is cnn. they convened a group of evangelical women and they thought well, we will rattle them. we will play some stormy daniels for them. this is what happened. >> why would she come out and give this interview if she wasn't telling the truth? >> money. >> money. >> and more money. >> do any -- based on this interview, do any of you believe that stormy daniels did have sex with trump? >> >> i don't believe it i haven't seen any hard proof. >> believe the president of the united states. >> pick him over her. >> or a stripper porn star. >> i go with the president of the united states. >> this is a porn star. why are we giving it any credibility? >> laura: why are they sticking by him? >> they are sticking by him because, remember, during the campaign, i went out polling places and encountered a number of evangelicals and catholics why in the light of the billie bush thing are you voting for this man? >> laura: that's right. >> they sewed we believe he is check not only on government gone away we didn't like it to go but on our churches that have also gotten very political. they are talking about environmental issues and climate change and we don't agree with that they said. they see the president as a check in all those areas. look at the agenda and the record he has changed and dropped the obamacare regulations. >> laura: funding planned parenthood though. >> well, planned parenthood. >> laura: that's a billing mistake. >> stopped the funding of planned parenthood which he promised and protections. still willing to give him the benefit of the doubt also for a man not particularly religious, he speaks and talks about god with regulator. evangelicals like that. >> laura: i still remember the lighting of the christmas tree. i haven't heard jesus mentioned that much. that was unbelievable. >> it was a very heart felt. >> laura: religious. we are used to saying happy seasons greetings. >> santa claus. all about the baby in the manger. >> laura: the pope sent everyone over the edge through this interview that he did with 3-year-old the atheist. >> italian newspaper 93 years old. he has interviewed the pope five times. >> laura: why is the pope going to do interviews think he might convert him. >> convert him and friendly. see the world politically in the same way. look, he claimed the pope said hell does not exist. we will put it up on your screen. what exists is the disappearance of sinful souls, i won't go further because we are running out of time. >> laura: there it is. can you read the whole thing. >> hell does not exist. what exist u.s. is the disappearance of sinful souls. they are not punished. those who repent obtain the forgiveness of god and go among the ranks of the souls who contemplate him. those who could not repent therefore cannot be forgiven they disappear. now, as can you imagine, all of christian dom was up in arms when this headline hit pope says hell does not exist. >> laura: good friday thing. >> this is the second time he has claimed the pope said hell does not exist. >> laura: isn't that the whole point of the resurrection? >> this has caused -- people listening. they said the article is the part of his reconstruction which the exact words spoken by the pope are not quoted. no quotation marks in the above article should therefore be considered as a faithful transcription of the holy father's words. that's a non-denial denial. i mean, so people are still wondering what does that mean? >> laura: interpretation of the interpretation. >> the language wasn't exactly what he said. buff the question is subsubstantively did he capture what the pope meant. >> i doubt it the pope has talked about satan and the lures of the devil for a long time. they should decry this and say the pope believes in hell and this is a big misfire. >> laura: well, now walmart is removing -- we don't have enough time. they are removing cosmo. >> they don't want little girls sex and how to please your man. >> laura: good. >> happy good friday. >> laura: by the way p.c. mob sets its sights on monuments. thomas jefferson is next when the ingraham angle returns. just one free hearing test at his local miracle ear helped andrew hear more of the joy in her voice. just one hearing test is all it took for him to hear more of her laugh... and less of the background noise around him. for helen, just one visit to her local miracle-ear is all it took to learn how she can share more moments with her daughter. just one free hearing test could help you hear more... laughter... music... life. call now! for a limited time, you can get $500 off miracle-ear hearing aids! ♪ come fly with me, let's fly, let's fly away. ♪ want thomas jefferson, his statue outside the student center removed because our nation's third president owned slaves. and last year the city of new orleans removed several confederate statues. here is what new orleans democrat mayor mitch landrieu had to say about this issue earlier today. >> you can't change history by taking a statue down. you are just moving it to another place. these statues prominent places and reflect four years of new orleans 300 years history crowding out all of the other history. >> laura: joining me now for reaction is correspondent at large geraldo rivera author of the geraldo show a memoir and with me here on set is fox news political analyst gee an know caldwell. mitch landrieu also a had a number of statues removed in the dark of night. they have been there a long time. worth multimillion dollars and we don't know where most of them are. p.c. beauregard and other statues are just gone. what's your take on this? is this the right way to handle these historical monuments? >> putting aside what's happening in new orleans. and i really do like mayor landrieu. i think is he a very thoughtful man. i think his family has real roots. real cred when it comes to new orleans and louisiana history generally speaking. remember, laura, i resigned from my fellowship at yale university a year or so ago when they changed the name taking john c. calhoun's name off the college and naming it for more contemporary person. i fear when history starts being rewritten constantly through the prism of political correctness and contemporary thought, that we risk cutting ourselves off from our roots. i absolutely get that slavery, this abomination is different than a lot of things that happened in political life. this is something like the holocaust, that can't be forgiven but i think that to try and continually rewrite history, jefferson was a slave owner. so was george washington. what will happen when the entire first third of our history is cut off or in some way covered up, laura? >> well, there is levels, as i see it. you have the confederate statues. ones of generals and if you look at the history of the generals, most of those guys, they were military, generally speaking and that was pretty much it. so have you got these statues in public squares of individuals who fought to really divide our country. and when you look at it from that perspective it gives a greater degree of understanding why statues like that really should be in museums. now when it comes to somebody like thomas jefferson, for example, he is much more than a slave owner. that was a past of his. somebody who created had a hand in creating the declaration of independence. he said all men are created equal and in addition to that he was the president. he was a governor. he was a secretary of state. so, this is an individual i think that we can celebrate. although he did have past sins. these other individuals, however, their past sins was the majority of their career from the viewnt o viewpoint of g confederate -- >> laura: general beauregard did so much after the war. he helped build schools for minority children and ca did so much work to bring the fabric of the community together. i mean, he is a bee loved person post war. so, yes, sins of slavery, horrific. an entire life span, maybe not so much with everyone. i agree with geraldo that painting every historical figure living in the south at the time and might have fought in the war brush of take him away, take him away in the middle of the night. puts it somewhere where we don't even know does not serve us all that well. i'm not a black person. i don't know how it feels to walk by one of these statues and maybe you are told this person hated you and didn't think you were a real person. i can't imagine that. but, i do think that people who especially worked for reconstruction or forgiveness for bringing and healing the country, especially those people, i think we are on a real slippery slope if we start saying like, look, hofstra students were serious. they were serious at princeton about woodrow wilson a great internationalist. democrat hero. woodrow wilson has to go off the wilson center. this is what one of the hofstra students said on fox news the right to peaceful protest and assembly is at the core of our democracy. hofstra supports our student's rights to engage in peaceful demonstrations aboudemonstrationsabout issues o them. we look forward to civil discussion on the subject. that's what their statement was to fox news. it looks like groups of students mobilized at princeton university not successfully yet, but i think it's a matter of time before thomas jefferson gets put in that same place as robert e. lee who past american presidents including fdr hailed as one of the greatest generals we have ever had. one of the greatest christians gentlemen we have ever had. that's fdr's commemoration of robert e. lee. this is a wild territory we are in. i don't know where it ends, guys. >> i would have to disagree with that. i think it's a slippery slope if we are continuing to put these individuals, these confederate generals in similar categories as thomas jefferson. they are not in similar categories as thomas jefferson. you have individuals who really founded our country, christian principles. you talk about robert e. lee, democrat who lived to destroy the fabric of our very country. yet. >> laura: he didn't own slaves his wife did though. >> african-americans see this as a problem because you see many that celebrate this. and not put it in its proper categorization. if you want to put it in a museum by all means. we can't erase our history. i understand that. certainly not. we shouldn't be celebrating it in public squares and allowing for people to think that there was nothing wrong with that. >> laura: should we remain washington, d.c.? >> you know, laura, just going back to. >> laura: he owned slaves not too far from here. >> i get it. >> laura: thousands of acres of land. >> john c. calhoun in the 1950s was voted one of the five greatest senators in american history by an elite senate panel that included john f. kennedy. so senator kennedy was one of those who picked john calhoun as one of the great -- that was in the 1950s. my fear is that as con temporary more rays an more mo . there was a time in the beginning of this country beginning of reaction to reconstruction. beginning of jim crow where statues were erected specifically to stick it to black people, to let them know who was still boss. and who was subordinate. those statues, i think they may have the facade is historic monument but the real purpose is a racialist. >> yeah. >> social statement rather than historic remembrance. i think you can look at them. it's easy to find their providence and history and determine how you feel about them based on that. >> laura: all right. guys. great segment. hillary clinton by the way has a brand new victim card to play. i will perform a tune for her on the world's tiniest violin right after this. >> laura: welcome back to our special culture wars in the age of trump. if a cold shiver just inexplicably ran down your spine maybe you felt hillary clinton was coming. well she speaks out again this time about the backlash to constant election loss griping. >> i was really struck by how people said that to me, mostly people in the press for whatever reason like oh, you know, go away, go away. and i had one of the young people who works for me go back and do a bit of research they never said that to any man who was not elected? >> well, just tossing this out. maybe it's because no male failed presidential nominee in modern history has gone on never ending speaking tour blaming almost everything imaginable for his loss. what or who does hillary clinton have left to scapegoat at this point? joining us are reaction katie pavlich editor of town hall.com along with antwon seawright democratic political consultant. all right. let's talk about this. hillary clinton has been on a book tour that never ends. it just goes on and on and on. it's like cher's farewell tour it keeps going on and on and on. her book was titled "what happened." antwon, here is what happened. hillary lost and forgot middle america. hillary is now blaming sexism when democrats say time to leave the stage, please. your reaction to this? >> well, my reaction is this: i think it's -- i think it's quite disgusting for the right to harp on what hillary clinton as a private citizen is doing in her private life. look, she did lose the election. actually, she lost the electoral college because 3 million more people voted for her than president donald trump. she lost the electoral college. but she is in her private life. getting paid to do speeches. selling her book. and so why does the right wing want to harp on what hillary clinton says? i don't think hillary clinton gives two cents about what the right wing is doing. so leave her alone. let her be. hillary has served our country well first lady, secretary of state, u.s. senate, let her be hillary clinton her private life. >> laura: okay. as long as that's the way the left is going to treat the right. like we can just -- as long as we just don't talk about each other. >> laura, laura, laura what i don't remember is -- i don't remember anyone harping on whether it was joe biden, whether it was -- >> hk is -- i have only covered two major presidential elections, but i also remember al gore losing the election. instead of going out and talking about the reasons he lost unending, he actually found a pet project instead in global warming. hillary clinton could do the same. the global warming argument actually worked for al gore for a number of years to help his party and the left. hillary clinton is stuck in this idea that everything is still about her. she captains move on. she is insulting women across the board. >> that's not true. >> let me finish my point. she is insulting women across the board. insulting voters in red states where senate democrats are vulnerable. and it's not the quote right wing conspiracy that you are citing that is talking about hillary clinton. it's hillary clinton talking about herself and it's people like senator dick durbin and senator claire mccaskill who are democratic senators saying hillary, nothing helpful. time to move along. >> laura: i think the "new york times" and "the washington post" reported unnamed democrats don't want to give their names were hoping that hillary would just just enjoy retirement. they need to no move on from the clintons. they had their run. they had the clinton foundation, they did all that stuff surrounding that. they had their run. it's time to go. now we are looking to the future for the democratic party and they have kamala harris and a lot of interesting people. that's the point. it's not about sexism an antjuan they had their time and it didn't work. >> i agree with the fact that we have to move on from the 2016 election. there are a couple points. one, people actually want to know what happened. they want to know what happened in the election. so in the future democrats cannot perhaps make this trip up on the same thing that prevented them from winning the white house again. people want to know. i don't think there is nothing wrong with talking about what happened in the last election. you win or you learn. >> here is what happened. [talking at the same time] >> you win or you learn. she is talking about what she learned. >> she hasn't learned anything. >> great lesson for all of us. she talked about it in her book. >> laura: she said she drank chardonnay afterward. she used that joke 15 times. it's a joke the first time she said it i drink a lot -- okay. great. >> again, if mitt romney. >> excuse me, in learning from your mistakes and helping the party move forward. but instead it's a pity party for her. in the meantime she is damaging democrats who are in shamables in trying to get their party back together by revamping this deplorables argument saying white women only vote based on what their husbands do. elitist is what democrats are trying get away from. they are pulling her back in. she is enfu helpful to them. >> that's the point republicans want to pivot to something to take their eyes off the most toxic president that has ever occupied the white house donald j. trump with the numbers in the tarng as they are. >> at least he is in the white house. >> and they want to use hillary clinton as that something else. >> laura: all right. well, his numbers are the highest they have been since last year and they are not too far away from where obama was in his first year in office at 46%. but, great segment nonetheless. just in time, guys for easter. what may prove a heavenly secret weapon in college basketball's final four tomorrow? stay tuned. ♪ this is a tomato you can track from farm, to pot, to jar, to table. and serve with confidence that it's safe. this is a diamond you can follow from mine to finger, and trust it never fell into the wrong hands. ♪ ♪ this is a shipment transferred two hundred times, transparently tracked from port to port. this is the ibm blockchain, built for smarter business. built to run on the ibm cloud. of sister jean merchandise has been through the roof leading up to tomorrow night's game. i love it. the 11 seed loyola chicago ramblers take on the three transient michigan wolverines in san antonio. great match up. today, at a press conference, sister jean provided wisdom and perspective, much needed, on the game that i really like. >> we have a little slogan that we say, worship, work, and win. so you need to do all those things. and if god -- god always hears, but maybe he thinks it's better for us to do the l instead of the w and we have to accept that. >> laura: wow. here's hoping sister jean and loyola's cinderella run continuous. that is all the time we have tonight on this special edition of "the ingraham angle" ." a blessed good friday and passover to all of you. i'll be off next week for easter break with my kids.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Five 20180223 22:00:00

forgotten he was going to break the north korean sanction news there was so much other stuff. he spoke to reporters before he even got to the event. and i see what you mean about dliewght the message. juan, what was most offensive part of the speech? >> juan: seven years to go. [laughter] for an old man you are risking a heart attack. >> dana: are you going to make it? >> juan: seven years to go. the cpac audience went wild. so this was a rally. that's what i thought it was going to be and i think his staff thought it was going to be something about increasing sanctions on north korea. as you say, he has kind of got to it at the very end. but as an after thought. he was far more interested in to pick up on the steak house analogy of throwing out the chunks of red meat everywhere he turned. i was surprised that he was throwing out chunks though that had to do with things like democrats abandon daca. i'm the one who cares. wait a minute, he is the one who ended daca and set this march deadline. now he finds himself in a situation the deadline is approaching and he has got nothing. and the democrats are willing to take a risk. i hope they are having a little more spine than they did last time when schumer backed out on that budget deal. and then this business about lock her up. jesse, it just seems to me like, you know, what would you say, greg, i said a 1970s hit. do you know what i mean? we have been through that. but he still. >> greg: it's his free bird. >> kimberly: oldy but a goody. classic rock. >> jesse: snake. >> juan: it's like he is going back. he needs a hillary. he needs an obama. because he just needs somebody to be -- >> jesse: kimberly, i think every politician has a boogie man out there, whether it's at home or abroad that they use to score points against. and hillary continues to be out there in the conversation. so why not take a shot? >> juan: she lost. >> jesse: say that again, that's human psychology one-on-one. he was explaining why you lose in two years in a way at people at home understands. oh, it's so much work you already won. that's the best so persuasive, i think. you are looking at me like i'm from out of space. >> juan: this looks how unprepared is he for the job. never been a congressman and senator or governor. oh this is really hard. who knew healthcare could be so complicated? to me this is subject of ridicule. >> greg: at least that's honest. >> juan: honest, oh my gosh. >> dana: working on policies good foreve for our opponents. may not realize those policies are good for them but we are doing it anyway. i thought that was effective. >> jesse: said a few nice things he said about keeping his promise. he bragged obviously, the only politician that's actually kept more promises than he made during the campaign. but when you look back, besides the wall, a lot of the stuff he has delivered on and the audience really enjoyed that. >> kimberly: they did. he is a man of the people even though he is a new york billionaire. he's relatable because his language, his rhetoric isn't like floury. flowery. it's down to earth. something for everybody there this is my guy. he is not trying to talk above me. not trying to talk around me. making me feel like i'm here for you. we have got things in common. i'm getting it done. that's like a reassuring feeling. it's not like the typical politician where you go i can't relate to that person at all. >> juan: can i play skunk at the garden party for a second? >> kimberly: be yourself. i can smell from here. >> juan: i think he promised to do away with obamacare. >> jesse: mandate is gone. the mandate is long gone, juan. >> juan: obamacare is real scott walkner johnson thinking about getting out. infrastructure. i don't see any infrastructure spending, no. >> jesse: if democrats could come to the table, juan, you would actually get some infrastructure. >> juan: how about i promise to cut the deficit. the minute i get in there e oh. >> jesse: just wind isis off the map. how about that promise. >> greg: amazing democrats care about a deficit and trump did that for them. what kimberly and dana and juan says the presentation is an old school populist. gets up there and he is tell you this is what we are going to do when you pull back the reason we have disagreements all of you was do. almost everything he does is common sense centrism. he talk presidency enforced border and 1.7 million people. talks about gun talking about popular proactive solutions that some the nra might not like. tax reform, if people think that really helped the rich, they're wrong. >> dana: can i add one other thing he did today it wasn't in the cpac speech but in his press conference with martin turnbull. he talked briefly but it was interesting insight into that he is getting the briefings and he understands what's happening in syria. and he said it was disgraceful. 250 innocent people that we know of were killed targeted by russians and syrians and we have a huge mess on our hands there the one thing that's a little bit difficult to understand is he says that but also in the same speech or in the preference he says, you know, we have degraded isis. we have taken over their territory and we're out of there. that is not sustainable. both of those things cannot be true u going forward in a second year of a presidency your foreign policy pieces get really important and little bit difficult to deal with. >> jesse: absolutely right. >> juan: before we go, it's kind of a serious note there are stories now that indicate that the russians were in touch with top leadership before they attacked. >> dana: it's the same guy. that report is terrible. you could tell that the president knew about it and he was talking about it. >> jesse: all right. efforts there to protect stoneman douglas high school but he didn't take action. the president has some words for the armed officer that domgd his duties that day up next. ♪ [man] woah. ugh, i don't have my wallet, so - [girl 1] perfect! you can send a digital payment. 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i have no clue. we're just tv doctors. if this was a real emergency, i'd be freaking out. we are the tv doctors of america. together with cigna reminding you to go, know, and take control of your health. schedule your annual check-up today. to go, know, and take control of your health. we all want to know you know, the new, new thing. with xfinity's retail stores, you can now see the latest. want to test drive the latest devices? be our guest. want to save on mobile? just ask. want to demo the latest innovations and technology? do it here. come see how we're making things simple, easy, and awesome. plus come in today and ask about xfinity mobile, a new kind of network designed to save you money. visit your local xfinity store today. >> kimberly: break down on all levels, that's how one florida grave nightmare of the massacre. the sheriff acknowledged his office received 23 calls about suspected murderer nikolas cruz going back a decade. the fbi, of course, failed to properly investigate two tips it received and on top of it all, we have just learned the armed deputy sheriff at the school that day, did not enter the building to engage the shooter. instead he stood outside. scott peterson was suspended without pay and placed under investigation and chose to resign. here is sheriff israel. >> scott peterson, were you there when the shooter was still inside the building? >> yes, he was. >> and what should he have done? >> went in. addressed the killer. killed out killer. >> how much time went by that he did not go in that he could have gone in? >> minutes, minutes. i think it was upwards -- i think he remained outside of upwards of four minutes. >> what would you say to the family. >> devastated, sick to my stomach. there are no words. >> kimberly: president trump also had words about that officer today. >> he whole life example. when it came time to get in there and do something, he didn't have the courage or something happened. he heard it right at the beginning. so he certainly did a poor job. that's the case where somebody was outside. they're trained. they didn't react properly under pressure or they were a coward. it was a real shot to the police department. >> kimberly: the president addressing, obviously everybody devastated. can you imagine the family members and -- these poor students that were murdered to think my god, you could have done something if you reacted. how many lives could have you saved? what could have you done but, instead you stood and tried to protect yourself instead of trying to save others, which is your duty? >> greg: there is a couple of elements to this whole story that are just infuriating. and it makes me infuriated at sheriff israel because he said there are no words. but when he was up at that town hall, he had a lot of words for dana loesch. there were 18 calls from people about this guy. there were nearly 40 home visits. two tips to the fbi. you found out scott peterson had warnings passed on to him about this mad man before. this the fbi tip was pretty incredible. said the guy was going to explode. then have you sheriff israel deflect -- trying to get the audience at that town hall to focus on dana loesch. and like this wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for guns, guns, guns. meanwhile, if he is aware of all of this stuff. >> dana: what about him? >> greg: this guy has got to go. this is like -- this is -- i mean, scott peterson, who knows what happens when this moment comes, do you freeze, if he freeze, he did have prior knowledge about this. and their job for the police is they have to be the first one in there. they rush in so we can run away. and he didn't do it. >> kimberly: yet others that had no weapon rushed in to try to. >> greg: rotc guys. >> kimberly: rushed in and tried to save the coach and others rushed in and had nothing to defend or protect themselves. unbelievable to me. dana? >> dana: like a fire firefighter saying i'm not going in that burning house to save somebody. hang out out here. the thing that also bothers me about that sheriff. i didn't say anything on the day publicly, but he was so infuriating about and offputting thanking all of the first responders answered went through all of them. and did you such a good job. you did such a good job. and every single press conference for three days is great how everybody else had done. in the meantime whether they didn't know about this until recently or trying to cover it up is so devastating for the family. >> just that point i think it was jake tapper tweeted some information that they -- like deliberately egg northward the people that actually got there first. it was another county of officers. >> allegedly there was another police department that had gotten there first and did a lot in terms of first responding. and the sheriff israel kind of ignored that. he is a very political guy. he seems to be a real operator where you don't want that. you want more law enforcement. i have seen pictures of him smiling with hillary, smiling with bernie sanders. you know, i'm not accusing him of anything, that's not what i -- out of a sheriff, i just want a straight shooter. i have a few words for him. he said i have no words. how about i'm sorry? how about we failed. i would have liked to hear a little accepting responsibility with his deputy that didn't do his job. >> kimberly: he should go. >> jesse: he should go. when they found out that this guy was derelict. they just suspended him. they didn't even really fire him. you probably can't even fire someone. and now the guy retires with full benefits. the fact that state, local and federal agencies all failed. yet all the sudden they want to blame the nra makes no sense to me here. >> kimberly: okay, juan? >> juan: i thought he was trying to blame the fbi. >> jesse: the fbi should accept some blame, too they have more than the sheriff. >> juan: let me just say it's so easy to blame someone else. you think about it, jesse, almost a million calls. a million calls. they have got to pick a needle out of that haystack. that can be difficult especially when you are dealing with laws in florida. today a lookout of discussion about this so-called baker act which allows you to involuntarily take somebody and commit them because you see them as a trust danger to themselves or danger to others. well, apparently, psychiatric officials had contact with this young man but couldn't pass that threshold. and that threshold can be pretty tough. and i would think that conservatives would say yeah, we don't want people just somehow bad mouthing us or saying stuff about us and taking away either our guns or our liberty. >> jesse: i would think those people who evaluated him are probably feeling pretty bad about that right now. >> juan: i don't know. i think though on the guns part. i think back to columbine. i think to aurora. i think to what the president said today in light of what happened with the guard here in parkland, in every case, there was an armed guard. it didn't stop anything. >> greg: aurora was a gun-free zone. i think it's going to be hard politically for liberals to watch if donald trump outflanks them on this issue and actually comes up with the practical solutions that they claimed that they wanted but haven't put through. >> kimberly: bad news for kim jong un today, breaking north korea developments next. stay with us. ♪ across new york state, we're building the new new york. to grow your business with us in new york state, visit esd.ny.gov. to grow your business with us in new york state, and butch.aura. and tank. and tiny. and this is laura's mobile dog grooming palace. laura can clean up a retriever that rolled in foxtails, but she's not much on "articles of organization." articles of what? so, she turned to legalzoom. they helped me out. she means we helped with her llc, trademark, and a lot of other legal stuff that's a part of running a business. so laura can get back to the dogs. would you sit still? this is laura's mobile dog grooming palace and this is where life meets legal. i'm trying to manage my a1c, and then i learn type 2 diabetes puts me at greater risk for heart attack or stroke. can one medicine help treat both blood sugar and cardiovascular risk? i asked my doctor. he told me about non-insulin victoza®. victoza® is not only proven to lower a1c and blood sugar, but for people with type 2 diabetes treating their cardiovascular disease, victoza® is also approved to lower the risk of major cv events such as heart attack, stroke, or death. and while not for weight loss, victoza® may help you lose some weight. (announcer) victoza® is not for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza® or any of its ingredients. stop taking victoza® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck or symptoms of a serious allergic reaction such as rash, swelling, difficulty breathing, or swallowing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. so stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have severe pain in your stomach area. tell your doctor your medical history. gallbladder problems have happened in some people. tell your doctor right away if you get symptoms. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, decreased appetite, indigestion, and constipation. side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. change the course of your treatment. ask your doctor about victoza®. ♪ oh, lord, when it rains it pours. >> dana: slapped with the largest set of sanctions ever imposed by america on north korea today. targets ships and companies fund its nuclear weapons program. >> if the sanctions don't work we will have to go phase ii. phase ii may be a very rough thing. may be very, very unfortunate for the world. but, hopefully, the sanctions will work. we have tremendous support all over the world for what we are doing. it really is a rogue nation. if we can make a deal it will be a great thing. if we can't, something will have to happen. >> dana: the president's daughter ivanka trump arrived in south korea today for the close of the winter olympics. use her visit for maximum pressure on the north. so, jesse, turning off the heat. >> jesse: ratcheting up. i like how the trump administration has slowly delivered stronger and stronger sanctions without letting the north know there is a phase ii. maybe there is a phase 3. how many phases are there going to be the way a python squeezes its prey very slowly over period of time. >> greg: for a frog in a pot of water slowly boiled. >> jesse: apropos. you have ivanka trump coming with the soft power glitz and gram. >> dana: substance too. [laughter] >> jesse: not as substantive as the gun ships encircling the peninsula. i think it's carrot and stick. >> dana: juan, one of the things interesting about the timing of the announcement is when vice president pence was headed to the olympics, he made some very strongly worded speeches about north korea and being tough. knew what happened at the opening ceremony. ivanka trump is going for the closing ceremony. the head military intel guy from north korea is also going to the closing ceremony. and so i think it was a strategic move to put these sanctions out today as she is landing in south korea. >> juan: well, i'm not sure what's going on because, remember, they cancelled the meeting -- they thought pence was going to have a meeting. they cancelled that meeting at the last moment. now, there is no such prospect for ivanka trump. there is no such meeting scheduled. she will have, i think it's dipper or something with the south korean president. >> dana: yeah, tomorrow. >> juan: at his residence. the big event will be closing night for the closing ceremonies. you will have the two of them. ms. perino complained last time about vice president pence's seating tell us why. >> dana: i did. because i felt they put him in a bad position. i would have advocated for a different seating arrangement. >> juan: the question is now they can be seated. president trump is not there so we won't have to worry about the bald spot. >> dana: that's a small little thing. >> juan: they are not going to talk. the question is how it comes across. i think it's a lot of symbolism that she is there representing the president very much his number one child. >> dana: sanctions, kimberly we must have some idea the intelligence communities must know north korea hasn't tried to stop its nuclear program at all. >> kimberly: of course, right. they are getting realtime intelligence on this and updates as they should. they have to monitor it very closely. they are obviously receiving information showing they are not in compliance and therefore these kind of actions need to be taken. i like the fact that look we are being very well represented by ivanka trump. she is going there. and the president was obviously very proud of her to represent the country so i think that was nice. i'm glad that he sent his daughter. i think that's symbolic. send a strong woman over there. represent the country. while at the same time putting the fist to north korea. >> dana: greg, had you a good point in the commercial break. it's a new cold war tactic. old tactic for the new cold war? >> greg: declaring war on companies not just the country we have to go after the chinese banks which is going to be an issue. if i wanted to walk across the studio, but each step -- each successive step became half the length of the previous step, i would never reach the wall. do you know that? that's what these sanctions are there is an endless spectrum of intensity. and the hope is that you never reach the wall, which is the war. so the point is you have -- we hear this is the biggest one yet. each one will always be the biggest one yet. >> jesse: i like my python analogy better. >> greg: i was mad you took the python one. that's what the snake poem was about. i'm certain if we do go to war with north korea we will win because have you seen how they march? they can't get very far that way. >> dana: like they are taking half a step back. >> greg: very slow, right, juan? juan juan if i'm living in south korea or japan i'm thinking yeah you might not get hurt but what about else? >> greg: i know. i was trying to make a serious topic a little lighter. i failed, america. >> dana: we'll keep going on some serious topics. california is in president trump's crosshairs again. you will find out why next. ♪ try to get it while we can ♪ names in a tattoo ♪ or just a number on a hand ♪e or make me feel like i'm not really "there." talk to your doctor, and call 844-234-2424. that's it!girl! get it, woo, yeah! mom! my game's over. parents aren't perfect, but then they make us kraft mac & cheese and everything's good again. we the people... are defined by the things we share. and the ones we love. who never stop wondering what we'll do or where we'll go next. we the people who are better together than we are alone... are unstoppable. welcome to the entirely new expedition. do not give linzess to children less than six, and it should not be given to children six to less than eighteen. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain, especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include gas, stomach-area pain, and swelling. ask your doctor if 90 days of linzess may be right for you. ♪ >> juan: welcome back. california just got another lashing from president trump for failing to help the feds cush illegacurb illegal immigra. now he has a new warning for the state. >> frankly, it's a disgrace. the sanctuary city situation. the protection of these horrible criminals. you know because you are working on it. and the protection of these horrible criminals in california and other places. but in california that if we ever pulled our ice out. if we ever said hey, let california alone. let them figure it out for themselves, in two months they would be begging for us to come back. they would be begging and you know what? i'm thinking about doing it. >> juan: democrat dianne feinstein fired back saying the president's obsession with california is growing more outrageous by the day. his attacks are, quote patently false. kimberly? >> kimberly: yeah. i think it's kind of funny. is that bad? >> juan: no, no. >> kimberly: he gets upset about this. he doesn't like california and a lot of the politicians pon aggressive against him. they want to sue him about the wall and environmental reasons. they are upset because they feel they don't like his immigration policy. this is essentially the birthplace, the capital of sanctuary cities, right, with san francisco and the crimes that have happened. so they are a state that's very vocal and critical about the president, his policies. what he has been able to accomplish and what he is intending to accomplish like building the wall. so, because of that, they get his focus and attention. so he says things like that that perhaps not, you know, something that you would like to hear. but this is his personality. this is who he is. >> juan: wow, that was interesting. i mean you don't totally agree? >> i didn't say that i'm explaining to you where is he coming from based on the relationship which is a little bit complicated and has not been quite receptive. it's not his state. >> juan: so should chicago and philly be on the watch for a trump pay back? >> it's possible. i don't think it's an empty threat. you could hear the anger in his voice. he is very frustrated with california. california and the trump administration on a collision course. we are going to get a crash course in federalism if this continues. they have gone after him as they said on environmental on illegal immigration. on judges. a travel ban a few times. >> kimberly: ninth circuit. >> jesse: makes for entertaining discourse. at the same time california has been mismanaged by liberals. they have been run by liberals for decades. they are broke. there is a very high crime rate. homeless population is out of control. a lot of depend dense on the government there all they have is weather, great food, and great land scaption. so to make california out to be this paragon of virtue. it's just not drew. someone else should come in and take charge there because i mean, if it keeps going the way it's going we might not have a lot of the beautiful parts of california anymore. >> juan: just a quick question. short on time. silicon valley, hollywood? >> jesse: amazing parts of california, juan, not everyone lives like hollywood and silicon valley. >> juan: pretty successful. their economy is pretty amazing to me. anyway, dana, jerry brown, current governor of california, signed a california values act that forbids local authorities from asking about immigration status. this was back in december so it would seem that the president is putting it to jerry brown. i'm going to take away your ice agents or you undo that law. >> dana: right. if the president is spit ballinblowing ideas told by chif counsel actually sir you are not allowed to do that it doesn't necessarily matter from a communications standpoint he is trying to make his case. can constantly go back and said i would have taken them out of there. they deserves it i had to keep them. in becomes rhetorical device. it does send a strong message and other states would probably take a second look and wants to back away from the hot stove. >> juan: so we have two california people on this panel. one of them is greg gutfeld. >> greg: that's correct. thank you for noticing that every option on the table. why captains we use nukes? what's the problem with using nukes? and why can't we build a wall? you brought up california as a californian, it's depressing to me because i loved growing up there. it was the best -- probably the best time to live in california was during the 1970s. it was fantastic. it was this -- it was great. it was cheap. now it's not. i can't live there. but now. >> jesse: you can't afford it. >> kimberly: new york is really inexpensive. >> greg: california is in a crappy situation literally. san francisco i believe spent something like $30 million cleaning up homeless feces and syringes. >> kimberly: it wasn't like that when i was first lady. >> greg: ever watched that show called my 600-pound life? california is that person. it's too big to move. so everyone else is moving. everyone is leaving. silicon valley in hollywood. you are talking about the ultimate example in economic inequality. stockton right now is going to an act of universal based income because people they don't know how to deal with people not having jobs. meanwhile, silicon valley is the richest place on earth. something's wrong there, man. >> juan: all right. well, facebook friday with the man who contains clear liquids in his unicorn cup when the five returns. ♪ (keyboard sounds) dear freshpet, tank was overweight and had no energy. until freshpet... put the puppy back in my dog. and made it liberating. we took safe, and made it daring. we took intelligent, and made it utterly irresistible. we took the most advanced e-class ever, and made the most exciting e-class ever. the 2018 e-class coupe and sedan. lease the e300 sedan for $569 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. i'm your phone,istle text alert. stuck down here between your seat and your console, playing a little hide-n-seek. cold... warmer... warmer... ah boiling. jackpot. and if you've got cut-rate car insurance, you could be picking up these charges yourself. so get allstate, where agents help keep you protected from mayhem... ...like me. mayhem is everywhere. are you in good hands? ♪ apple jacks ♪ fun to eat ♪ breakfast treat. >> greg: those are fantastic so is facebook friday. nancy l. asks what is the most kind thing someone has done for you that you will never forget? oh a good meaningful question. dana? >> dana: that's kind of hard. because you are thinking of your parents? i think when president bush surprised me with a portrait of jasper as a puppy, it became my most favorite possession. >> greg: there you go. >> dana: i'm not sentimental about things but that thing i care about. >> greg: that's a good thing. jesse? >> jesse: i can't really say it on tv so i will say something else. i got into a little bit of a car situation when i was in high school and my dad swooped in and told the cops that he was driving. i could have been in a lot of trouble. >> kimberly: got your dad in trouble right now. >> dana: no statute of limitations in new york. >> jesse: it wasn't in new york. >> greg: i'm going to do a search. juan? >> juan: one thing that stands out in my mind, i once had an editor who used to just ride me. >> jesse: come on, keep it clean. >> juan: when i said ride you can do better. come o, come on. you can be an astronaut. what are you doing? and i remember thinking that's a wake-up call. take advantage. >> greg: tough bosses are good. i have always said that kimberly. >> jesse: usually are space spaced. >> kimberly: indeed. i don't know. i'm trying to think of something really really really good. i don't know that i have something really really good. but like thoughtful acts in general? >> greg: someone very kind to you you will never forget. like a short talk show host who might have lent you some food when you were hungry. >> kimberly: so dana. [laughter] but i think of nice things. i thought of right away because i have been super into them and missing them like when dana will give me little presents like my chocolate. >> dana: edwin marks chocolate. >> kimberly: salted caramels and for no reason and little things. >> dana: oh, yeah. >> greg: kindest thing kimberly told me yesterday the producers are scared of me. i went upstairs and asked my staff for the g.g. show. have you ever heard anybody saying in like that? one of the producers from the five described you as very difficult and used the d. word. >> jesse: woe. >> greg: diva. this is the whole side of this i had never experienced like me. >> dana: kindest thing. >> greg: am i difficult? >> jesse: you don't know you are difficult? >> kimberly: you don't know that you are. >> greg: i'm the easiest person in the world. >> kimberly: you are totally insane. you are also very quirky. you also have a lot of issues with your, you know, gas astro intestinal high pro-con drhypochondria. >> greg: i just want to do things. >> jesse: you don't know you are difficult? >> greg: this is all going back to the fact i have two one more things i did them faster than you guys do your one. >> kimberly: you do it regularly and they are afraid to stand up to you to go hey. >> juan: can't fault him on self-awareness. >> greg: i'm never going to forget. this it was very helpful to know what people think but all i'm saying. >> kimberly: i'm the thought 68 one by pointing out your -- >> greg: having never been to new york city. what is the one thing you would advise a first-time tourist to do. oh, that's so tempting. all right, kimberly. >> kimberly: here? >> greg: yes. >> kimberly: i think like going to broadway in new york is a very quintessential. >> greg: boo. i'm saying boo but go ahead. >> kimberly: experience. >> greg: juan? >> juan: walk. this is a great city for walking. >> kimberly: the park. >> juan: walk among the billions. the towers. it's incredible place. and if you want to go down to the world trade center and look at the new world trade center is pretty attractive. times square awesome. go up town and to like to the tombs and so forth. this is amazing. go to the churches. man, i tell you what, there are architectural wonders to god in this city. >> greg: what about you, jesse? >> jesse: i would say come right outside of fox and wave to us as we are doing the show right there and then wait for dana and greg to leave and give them big hugs as they leave the studio. they love that they absolutely love that. >> greg: love big hugs especially if you are really big and crush our spines. dana? >> dana: i would say central park has off leash hours from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. >> greg: what about the dogs? >> dana: go to the park and can you see all the fun that the dogs are having and have a nice walk around. >> kimberly: then you can wish you were a dog. >> dana: that's going to be in a guide book. can you come to me for the real stuff. >> greg: what i would advise first-time tourists to do hail a new york city cab. get in, go to the airport and get the hell out of here. go to some place sunny. and some place nice. don't come to new york. it's overrated. deign danel i love it. >> jesse: mayor gutfeld. >> greg: yes. one more thing is up next. ♪ milky way bar ♪ wherever you are ♪ real milk chocolate ♪ chewy caramel. that chevy silverado's are the most dependable, longest lasting full-size pickups on the road. which means that ford f-150s are not. (laughs) which truck would you pick? the chevy. the chevy. the chevy. there you go. boom. that was obvious. plus it looks cooler. no doubt about it. now they know what to get me. (laughs) and with ancestrydna liveson sale for just $69, now is the time to discover yours. you can find out where you get... ...your precision... ...your grace... ...your drive. and now, with more than 150 ethnic regions to connect to, only ancestrydna can put your greatness on full display. save 30% now at ancestrydna.com. we're family. we'd do anytbut this time...her. those bonds were definitely tested. frog leg, for my baby brother don't frogs have like, two legs? so they should have two of these? since i'm active duty and she's family, i was able to set my sister up with a sweet membership from navy federal. if you hold it closer, it looks bigger. eat your food my big sis likes to make tiny food. and i'm okay with that. open to the armed forces, the dod, veterans and their families. navy federal credit union. >> greg: time now for "one more thing." i'll go first. this weekend 8:00, check this line-up out. if you can see it's that small. we have kelly anne conway, diamond and silk and the party bros on some breaking news about the l.a. city council. you guys are not going to want to miss that. >> kimberly: can't make it up. >> jesse: can't make that up. juan williams? >> kimberly: one more thing? >> jesse: i respect the producers when they say one more thing. i do one more thing. >> juan: that's very good about you. talk about a hail mary. you know i love sports. here's the head master of a catholic school dressed about to perform a basketball miracle. take a look. yes. look at this, he gets on his knees, i'm telling you, a lot of nba players will be pointing to the heavens after that shot. the video gone viral. game over. three points for the head master. >> kimberly: that's so cool. >> greg: nice shot. knicks need to sign him. >> kimberly: i have a very sweet one more thing about a very special little girl. her name is charlotte. she's 9 years old. and she has a big heart and a lot of talent. she's started her own company called "stitches by charlotte" and she creates customized dolls for children undergoing medical procedures and surgeries. and her inspiration came from her own experiences because she had to go four different surgeries to correct a cleft, lip and palate. she has on-line crowd funding and already raised $50,000. she's very grateful for everything, it means she can bring more smiles to young patients going through procedures. i think it's very, very sweet what she's doing. charlotte gold is her name. >> jesse: speaking of dolls, dana? >> dana: how nice! charlotte gold was actually on "the daily briefing" and i had a picture marking the 100th episode of that 2:00 show "the daily briefing." thank you. i mean -- >> greg: just three months. >> dana: not that big of deal. >> greg: three months and one week. i don't care anymore! your opinions mean nothing to me. >> jesse: thank you. for two more things -- >> greg: go ahead, i'm sorry. >> dana: that's all i had. >> jesse: she had one. >> greg: i only have one one more thing and i have 90 seconds. >> kimberly: you've been shamed into behaving. >> greg: i'll do a very slow one more thing. >> dana: going to miss the news. >> greg: tomorrow night 10:00 p.m. we got lieutenant colonel alan west. always entertaining. we have federalist payton. it will be very exciting and we'll talk about guns and this latest news about the police officers which is spreading around and other stuff, too. >> jesse: actually only have one. >> greg: there's something else. you want to do another facebook question? >> dana: can i just say something, though, about your twofers. you do them fast. people love the animal videos and things like that. i think you can keep doing those. >> greg: i'm not doing anything anymore. i'll go to my room and listen to my albums. >> jesse: do less, greg. journal. they hurt your feelings. >> kimberly: eight part one more thing. >> greg: one who needs to do

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Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe 20180602 00:30:00

a tribute to twentieth century artists. old needs new exploring the northern germany city loopback. paris meets her living room to sample french cuisine in the german capital. we get off the show with an unusual trend that seems to be developing in some circles playing with slime now this past time was popular when i was a kid but now with the internet slime videos are making it even more popular across the globe and while it might feel gooey in your hand slime actually has a calming even meditative quality about it but don't just take my word for it here's more from the world of flying. concentrate on the hands in this video and the sounds they make. and what do relaxing i mean i thought when i've had a hard day and i come home from school i'll sit down at my desk and need something or watch a live stream somehow it relaxes you i honestly can't say why but somehow it makes everything right again. the success of these slime videos may be explained by the phenomenon of and yes m.r. or autonomous sensory meridian response this describes a calming effect to comes from viewing certain images or hearing certain sounds like handling bubble wrap thanks. in this simulation of a visit to the hairstylist. from whispering. broke. but. why particular audiovisual stimuli have such satisfying effects has not yet been adequately researched by neuroscience but studies indicate some preliminary conclusions. the assumption is that the release of hormones plays a role in a.s.m. or responses and they reinforce this feeling of well being. oxytocin for example is a hormone that specifically promotes and helps make for the experience of bonding with an affinity for other people. also repeated movements and sounds have been known to facilitate a meditative state of mind. unvented you direct your attention within to yourself and that sets us up so we can relax in a specific way. mary lou contrasts a nation with material that can be needed a muddled city she regularly cooks up new variations in her mother's kitchen p.t.a. or polyvinyl alcohol would you need that before you can turn something into slime. and of course the result has to smell good she stopped this creation caramel coffee and that's what it smells like the most important though is that it has to be fun to work. out if it's just not tempting enough to get interactive there are plenty of videos on the internet to keep you happy. whatever floats your boat i guess you are going on now from that slimy subject to a brief look at other stories making headlines on the culture scene starting with one of my favorite singers ed sheeran who has just received yet another out delayed war on that coming up in today's express. and sharon has been named songwriter of the year at the renowned i don't know that low awards in london the english singing a picked up the prize on thursday for his exceptional body of work in twenty seventeen when sharon said shape of you won the award for most perform song of the year. with. drying up a storm c one album of the yeah the awards are named after composer by the novella and are presented by the british academy of songwriters composers and authors in london. a bison cow has given birth to a white cat but belgrade zoo white bison are among the rarest mammals on earth the female cat named has been certified to be in good health but isn't that an area and . she's already trotting around her enclosure. the vet said no other white mice and cats has ever been born in europe. original map of winnie the pooh's hundred acre wood is going under the hammer the sketch by illustrator d.h. shepard for the one nine hundred twenty six children's classic has not been shown in public for nearly half a century it was animated for the disney classic winnie the pooh and the honey tree . the auction will take place on july tenth in london and saw the bees expects the map to sell for one hundred seventy thousand euros. as they say opposites attract and this is not only true for couples but also for friends a good example of this can be seen with the too late artist francis bacon and alberto jackal metsi one was british the other swiss they didn't speak the same language and aside from being an artist these two didn't have much and common but they did get to know each other through a common news and then a true friendship emerged and now a first to joint exhibition with some of their works is on display in switzerland. it's the first time works by these two giants of the art world francis bacon and i'll bet you have been shown together it may be hard to believe but only now has someone had the idea for a double exhibition after all the two were bound together by a short but intense friendship drac committee began by saying i think from this you are with greatest living artist and of course very close. to the said. you are the greatest living artist a mutual artistic appreciation that at first glance could seem puzzling their works appear so different make in the painter of tortured flesh this twisted heaps of people his lust for life force and aggression in search of the core of the human experience. in contrast to committing the sculptor his long legged human figures look so fragile that it gust of wind could blow them over but he too was always searching for answers and figures be represented spatially what does it mean to be human. they were both the first part of the human figure they were both obsessed by human fate they were both six three milly conscious of the present the. the ever present of death of the shortness of life or the fragility of life so quests was the intensity the maximum intensity is also something so as they had in common. and i think most of them were very intense passive narrative big characters and so they're well made to meet richard. they met in london in one thousand nine hundred fifty eight yes that exist. sculptor and the irish british bohemian what did they have in common the exhibition offers answers such as the caged motif. cometti build shelters and experimental fields around his figures to explore their spatial proportions. and bacon's work the cages looked like prisons were theatrical stages on which he places his body. certain stylistic devices like the cage to concentrate attention on the image would be taken from jack committee and the striking parallels to both worked in tiny cramped studios chaos as a source of inspiration both for social outsiders jack a metal was in love with a prostitute the bacon was gay and both had one in the same news isabelle rust or in the two artists together. both artists wanted to portray her because of this kind of animal vitality she had. and aftermath she was in love with. was in love with her. delicately intimidate june his girlfriend bacon splashed her on to the canvas wild and raw more a human animal than a woman but despite all the disfigurement it was their figurative thinking that connected them countless painted and sculpted portraits come together for the first time at the exhibition in basel switzerland. what's a show that is not truly is a portrait of somebody it's much more so fault of their own entire more goods and everything seemed to be more of him was abstract out. they were like saval you votes from a great tradition. to unconventional minds swimming against the artistic tide of their day. and what else did they talk about. in a moment to move since they got the point right through the muck it's obviously with a lot to bring with so they can bring people to hardly commit to smoking to have a link and now for the first time the two artists works have come to gether in perfect harmony. when you're celebrating your eight hundred seventy fifth birthday then you'd expect to have a major party and that is what is planned for the german city of lubec the port city already has a very special flair no where else in northern germany are so many houses preserved from the middle ages eighteen hundred of them are listed as protected sites making new back a unique go world heritage site but the city has a modern side to it as well which makes its inhabitants quite proud. this is how the northern german city of loopback is advertising its big anniversary . is not a typical big city. but let it work its magic on you the idyllic village it's my beautiful home town. it's cute. this city has been writing its history for eight hundred seventy five years many memorable events took place at mary's church. if you shoot the church has played a key role in lubec history as pictish but if we think of the time the city was part of the hands the attic leadership the merchants and the various craftsman's associations had their chapels here in this church and were able to immortalized themselves here here all for even he had the task of mayors senators and important figures of the city hang here that much has happened here in the church. so mary's is one of the most important churches in northern europe for the anniversary passed the hobbit five leads visitors through his church in the evenings these are very special moment. back then ships left from here today it's a meeting place for amateur fisherman. blue bank was the heart of the hands yet again for the baltic sea region salt and dried fish made the merchants rich they also traded calls spices and other speciality is. lubeck was the queen of the hand the attic league for five hundred years as part of the city's anniversary celebrations its hanseatic museum is presenting a special exhibition showing the influence that period continues to have to this day no where else in northern germany are there so many houses from the middle ages around eighty percent of the old town is a unesco world heritage site the city is also proud of its three famous sons philip hunt good to costs and thomas mann. because that's one of the fascination that comes from having three nobel laureates. lucic is i believe unique in germany i think this is simply a treasure for people who are interested in literature. and shouts i'm going to class immortalized his love for lubeck in a poem but lou because have long forgiven thomas mann for the fact the characters in his novel wooden box closely resembled prominent citizens and didn't exactly cut a sympathetic figure says but later did mom for twenty five years she has also worked with this museum the book imbolc house which is a magnet for tourists and locals it's also holding a special exhibition for the big anniversary. it's one of the city's hot spots as it was in the middle ages the shopping streets around the city hall unusual businesses such as this small then in shops in an area that was once home to craft guilds like the city so special. that the city center is an island and you can do everything on the island there are many small shops and cafes in the city and everyone has a place where they can relax to work on. the people of lubec are bringing their heritage into the modern day you can drink coffee and his four hundred fifty year old merchant's house but that was not always the case you know. courtyards used to be where the wells were but also the out houses and cesspools today we use them for much nicer things we have a cafe here. as celebrates almost nine centuries this year its people hope the many festivals and events will bring a lot of new life to the old city. hall that partying has certainly worked out my appetite and luckily for those in berlin you don't have to travel very far for international cuisine the german capital is a melting pot of cultures and some people who come here to visit like it so much. they decided to stay and open up restaurants like. there he decided to imitate a typical for region bresso levy right here in berlin for our series fifty kitchens one city he prepared one of his favorite dishes it's french of course so one of fifty. script bankers make sure there's nothing better in life than to spread a little joint to others you know i've discovered the best way for me to do that which is a sham good food good wine and a little humor with my guests from the more than just twenty thirteen frenchmen. fulfilled a dream by opening his own restaurant he had only just turned thirty he offers classic french cuisine with a twist the menu changes throughout the year to reflect the changing seasons. there are always for starters for main courses and three desserts his passing brings a little bit of paris to the heart of berlin this concept is it's cool to visit all parties yeah it's a standard concept in paris. we use market fresh ingredients mark and we don't have a big manuals on it changes every week or ten days. or and then we have one hundred eighty different wines on office for some one quickly too. news conference designed to be addictive for the guest. because she was born in one thousand nine hundred eighty three in the french capital he grew up with great food his father had a restaurant with two michelin stars and is still his great role model initially he wanted to be a soccer player but on finishing school he decided to train as a chef in paris then in two thousand and eight he moved to berlin. five years later he opened the president there the decor is typically french. ceramic floor tiles wooden chairs without cushions and no table cloths. the wine is presented on traditional wooden shelving the tables are positioned quite close together purposely so that the diners can engage in conversation if they want to. listen. really appreciate it and what makes working here really fun is that they're happy to be educated when it comes to food and drink. does and they're always happy to take advice. or it's not always like that it's wrong because the french always think they know better than the trained star. in the us and fuck off. in france good food is a way of life. the french tradition of cuisine and fine dining goes back to the seventeenth century in those days it was reserved for the king and the nobility it was during this time that the first cookery books appear and even today they're still the go to textbooks for fine french cuisine. influence of for. food goes way beyond the country's borders it's become a benchmark for fine dining all over the world. but each individual region of france has its own color unary specialties which is lead to great variety. of crowded soon to be a french tradition seasoning are used to bring out the flavor of the main ingredient such as pork belly for example. rather than the herds dominating the flavor of the main ingredient and that's one way to describe french cuisine and different conclusion and. taste of paris and berlin charlottenburg district it's a neighborhood that was once at the heart of former west berlin. the german capital covers an area of nearly nine hundred square kilometers making it eight times the size of paris. this enormous there has been heritage his love of berlin from his mother who was born here in the city my convenience any jewish feeling in berlin you're free to live out your own ideas. you need to stick at it but it's definitely possible. i could never have i mean the restaurant in paris for example the with the conditions are much tougher and you need a lot more money for them and is great. this. is both coast and some a year and all the wines on offer are of course french. but in the kitchen he has an international team of staff all of whom have worked in michelin starred restaurants and various parts of the world. it has repeatedly awarded the capacity and i'm a stamp. indicating good value for money. to put you through for me. when i put the. interior design at its best check out our you tube channel detail interior design stunning ideas spectacular buildings and d.i.y. tutorials on home to correction we'll take you inside the most beautiful european homes show you the latest in furniture fabrics and accessories subscribe and don't miss out. on you tube. and before we go we want to let you in on the winner of this week's draw no earlier in the week we've asked you to write in and tell us what your favorite summer activity is and lots of you send in your photos from vacation. to king adventures in the u.s. . there to playing in the mud. not slime but mud and now one is our winning part of this week from jorge mendez cost us from mexico so thanks to your hay and your kids and congratulations you have won yourself an exclusive one of a kind your own max watch so enjoy that but don't drop it in the mud for the rest of you keep taking part in our weekly drives and maybe you'll strike it lucky as well with that we're out of time for me and the rest of us here at euro max as always thanks for tuning in and we'll see you right back here tomorrow for our highlights edition until then buy from berlin. next time on your own max the highlight show. with high end fashion. probably luxury vacation. italy's like all places host to vehicles from hollywood movie. and art installations with a story to tell and lots more next time on your own max highlights. from. the book. the beauty. of. the book. let's. go to. the book. the book. blah. blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah. blah blah being stars deliver browsing performances good swift some call the big seven and blows out the fall of the big. in concert with. the freedom of expression. a value that in ways has to be defended and new. all over the world. are a freedom of freedom of art. a multimedia project about artists and their right to express their views freely. d w dot com or to freedom. to the. posts. cut. through. you can tell a lot about a society by its garbage. the few smokeless for the rich but for many poor people you know first their only chance of survival. and i could be lunch for today just like to. know reporters travel to nairobi and work and meet people who know the true value of courage. it has created a thriving parallel economy. but what does all this mean for economic inequality around the world you guys are starting class war the response to that statement should be yes we all start in class warfare because with time we

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