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Transcripts for CNN CNN Special Report 20191229 01:31:00

shot through a cannon together. they took care of each other and supported each other. they loved each other and that came across. even when one of them would have a struggle, you could see the others stepping in to prop each other up. was there anyone for whom all of this, all the smash, all of the lime light, took a bigger toll on? i think that it s very publicly known that the show did take a toll on matthew perry. i was in denial about the serious nature of alcoholism and addiction. once i had a drink, i could not stop. i couldn t stop. okay. now, you stay out here and you think about what you did! that s a duck. that s a bad duck. i did show up to work in states of just insane hangover. in the history of television, producers have acted toward a

Transcripts for MSNBC Weekends With Alex Witt 20191221 17:05:00

russian help to elect a president, to have many this monarchist view of the presidency, all of this stuff is shocking. and what trump has done to auck ord subordinate these men and women of the republican party has been shocking. but impeachment is something he couldn t stop and for all his own power and own sort of monarchial power, he couldn t stop it. think he s angry. look at how this is going to be viewed potentially in history. it hasn t gotten to the senate yet. but the fact is impeachment will be forever associated with donald trump. how does history look back on this. it s interesting because with bill clinton impeachment had the asterisk on it because he was so popular. he had 63 to 66% approval. most of the public saw it as partisan and a silly reason to impeach a president. he lied to federal investigators and republicans would say this was all about lying. but the reasons for which he lied. he lied about a sexual affair and whether or not the kind of sex he had wit

Transcripts for MSNBC MSNBC Special 20191202 03:54:00

me and watch watergate. i was sitting in a dressing room making the film the great gatsby and to keep yourself from going mad you would watch the hearings and that was fine because the hearings were so interesting you couldn t stop. and what was interesting was the drama and the tension and the mystery. what s going to happen? do i understand that you are testi testifying the watergate hearings were an absolute unifying television experience for the entire country. i can remember watching it and thinking they re interrupting soap operas? wow. you just figure this must be something enormously fundamental to our democracy. most of us thought the most dramatic testimony would come

Transcripts for MSNBC MSNBC Live With Ali Velshi 20191202 20:33:00

that law is gone. but what their lawyer told the court today is that there are still restrictions that he says violate the second amendment. for example, he said, under the way the law works now, anybody trying to drive from their home to a shooting range, say in new jersey, couldn t stop anywhere. couldn t stop to get gas in the car or get coffee or go to the bathroom. but a lawyer for new york city today said, no, that is not the case. the city has no intention of that kind of enforcement. but violations of the previous law that s been repealed won t be used against anyone in new york. and that did seem to satisfy at least some of the conservatives. this, you know, you said you began this whole segment by saying this could be a case that develops a second amendment ruling for the whole nation. and you re right. it could. but it probably won t be. it did seem that most of the air is left from this case. there was very little discussion today of second amendment rights. most of the h

Transcripts for MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 20191130 05:11:00

going to jail for murdering an abortion doctor is seen as a noble sacrifice. before she shot dr. tiller, shelly shannon wrote warm approving letters to the man who killed dr. david gunn in florida. she wrote to him in jail as he awaited trial. when she went on to commit her own act of violence, that began the next chapter of her life as a hero soldier in the army of god. her prison term would stop her from personally carrying out any further violence. but it couldn t stop her from inspiring the next would-be assassin. meanwhile in wichita dr. tiller kept on with his work. you simply cannot retreat when you re committed. there is no way that we are going to be forced out of this particular moral, correct, legal health care experience. outside of the army of god

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