continue here. conservative lawmakers and organizers, they argue tha this is just about restricting performances that they say children should nazi but they described as overly sexualized and they say that is not a ban but the performers insist that with the current language of the bill, it is vague, it is difficult for them t understand how to operate thei businesses, and a judge for no decided with them. i want to take a listen to som of the performers that i hav talked to to hear how lgbt community members here i tennessee have been feelin these last few weeks all we can do is say that it s bad and it s wrong, pleas don t do this to us, but the have found us to be a really effective political tool we need all hands on deck because when they finish wit us, don t be naive enough to think that they re not comin for you. and it is important put thi in context, to, alex this bill was signed by th governor at the same time as they passed and signed a bil that will outlaw g
determine the balance of power here in washington. joe biden is spending like a drunken sailor at every single opportunity. he just says yes. i ve stood up to democrats when they re wrong on this issue including, by the way yes? including the president. when the president decided to do something dumb on this and change the rules, you know, that would create a bigger crisis, i told him he was wrong. back to that in a moment. up first, strong new economic numbers and why they just might clash with how you feel about things right now. the government s monthly jobs report came out, 263,000 jobs were added to the economy in september. and you see upward revisions in the july and august numbers, too. unemployment falling to the lowest level in 50 years. 3.5%. the superlatives are plenty. 21 consecutive months of job growth. half a million more jobs now than in february 2020. wage growth up, too, but a little bit slower. americans going back to the office. in normal time
thing. teambeans.shop. i ll tweet out the link. if you want this hat, make me an offer. thank you for watching tonight. let s get to the big show. cnn tonight with the big show cnn tonight with the big show d. lemon. captions by vitac www.vitac.com a wore this today. i wore this one as well. this is scott beagle. he died in the marjory stoneman douglas school shooting. so, the mask makes us remember covid. and this for really amazing colleague and his entire family, team beans. i went there today. so, make sure everybody, you go there, you support it and it goes to supporting cancer foundation. and not one more child should have to deal with this. not one more family should have to deal with it. kids are going to lose but we can make a difference. the reason we did it, we care about our own always. but andrew and his wife, special people who fought a hell of a fight and really did it in an inspirational way. i ve never seen people and they re young too. i ve nev
this is a tough night. we mark one year of our nightmare collectively, right? here at cnn and our family, it s not just tough because what we ve all lived through with covid. the president was right. we need to be the answer for one another, and that is brought home in such painful variety today. yeah, it s a year for all of us. but there s something else today should have been. today would also have been the first birthday for a very special little girl to us, francesca, known forever as beans. that s what they called her. the daughter of our dear friend and colleague, the brain behind the k-file, investigative genius. his wife, rachel, beans smiled bravely in the face of another health monster, a rare form of brain cancer. she fought. they fought. they moved. they did everything. they believed. they loved. inspired all of us. with what they were clear eyed and committed to. she didn t make it. she fought. she died on christmas eve. i remember it. i remember hearing about it
can the audience be open to understanding what it s really like inside a black home or just being in a black body and our struggles and what things are really like from our point of view versus just maybe what is the comfortable thing to be understood. so i think it s a lot more about the empathy factor and wondering if the country is ready to reckon with that while it s reckoning with real life. and this series takes us on a journey from the roots mini series in 1977. i think i was in elementary school when that came out. it was seismic. it really did change a lot in your watching of a program, your commitment to a show, learning of history and then we also saw the evolution of story telling involving black people all the way up to shondaland today. so if your view, what have been