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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

federal prosecutor who served as robert mueller's especially assistant at the department of justice. add he's the host of that set with michael zeldin podcasts, michael great to see you so opening statements tomorrow.& in case of this magnitude, how long do you expect those statements to go? >> they could last in hour or two each. i don't think it's that complicated the case. you probably could get it done within 40 minutes or so. but lawyers these days seem to talk a lot longer in opening statements then when i was trying cases. so we'll have to see fred, but this is a pretty straightforward case. >> factually. >> and what the prosecution needs to do is define what the terms of this case are about, which is business fraud. >> this is not a private agreement between private citizen trump and private citizen stormy daniels, something that they could have done. but rather this is a

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CNN Newsroom

CNN Newsroom
vimarsana.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vimarsana.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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The Media Show

but what they called the taylor swift—driven summer, which included beyonce, barbenheimer and all of that services demand was responsible for an $8.5 billion boost to the us economy. 0k. not bad at all, then! thank you so much, augusta saraiva... 0h, not at all! ..and laura snapes from the guardian, too. thank you both so much for coming on the media show. that is it for today. thank you to all my guests. we'll be back at the same time next week, but it's goodbye from me, katie razzall. thank you so much for your company. if you'd like to hear a longer version of today's show, search "bbc the media show" wherever you get your bbc podcasts. hello there. many parts of the uk had some lengthy spells of sunshine on friday but there were a few showers around. the remain of some of this shower cloud in wolverhampton gave this fine end to the day a fine sunset, and the majority

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The Amanpour Hour

podcasts welcome back to the program. >> israel and iran are in a face off with no direct globally bag forums for discussion was the 20 iran cle classic arms control agreement reached under the obama administration that contained iran's nuclear program under intrusive international inspections in exchange for billions in functions relief. but since donald trump abandon the deal back in 2018, at israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's urging iran has been enriching near weapons-grade uranium and surging ahead with its ballistic missile program from my archive this week, we revisit my conversations with all the key stakeholders at the center of what had been a landmark deal, a vital reminder of how negotiated agreements actually made that region more

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Newscast

and i think that has really affected chat shows. it's really affected panel shows. it's affected loads of things on tv, because you can actually get to know people. it's kind of the opposite to something like prime minister's questions, which i think turns a lot of people off politics because it's black and white, this or that, whereas i don't think it's a coincidence that this, the rest is politics, the news agents and various others... never heard of them. never heard of them! but they're big podcasts, because people want a balanced chat, you know? you know what i mean? it's the opposite of shock radio. josh, thank you very much, and i hope it goes well with the new series. i'm looking forward to it. cheers, josh. cheers, mate.

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Newscast

i think podcasts have had a brilliant effect on things, because people want to hear genuine content rather thanjust maybe one pre—rehearsed point or one pre—rehearsed joke or anecdote. yeah. the key word in all of that is conversation. people want good conversation, of course we do. we want it in the pub or in a cafe, and you want it when watching the telly or a podcast or whatever. that can include humour, of course it can, as well as, i don't know, more serious, profound or sad stuff or wherever the conversation authentically goes. i totally agree. there's occasionally — not occasionally — there's often a thing levelled at podcasts which is that it'sjust people chatting. but that's why, the strength of it is that it's totally real. you get more out of people when you interview them on a podcast. i don't know whether you've found that on this, but if you interview someone in this room, you'll get more out of them than if you sit them on the news at ten or newsnight or wherever and interview them there.

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Newscast

up people will be worried when we turn up in _ people will be worried when we turn up in their_ people will be worried when we turn up in their parish! i think there's more similarities between the last leg and what me and chris do than some people might assume. we're working with the same raw material and we're just being ourselves, chatting about it. totally. you do it with more viewers... i don't know! tv is dying! podcasts is the coming form. i'd say what happens there is that i think podcasts have genuinely influenced the way television shows are made. i agree. i think they're a lot more discursive. two things happened to the last leg that have made it less gag, gag, gag and more discursive. one was that i think podcasts changed. people want longform interviews. people don't actually talk about stuff. yeah. and the other thing is, we had to do it without an audience for 18 months or something because of covid. and when you're doing that, it turns into more of a conversation.

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Newscast

and that is all for this episode of newscast. as you've heard, many other podcasts are available, but thank you very much for consuming this one. we will be back with another episode very soon. bye. bye— bye. newscast. newscast from the bbc. hello. quite a chill in the air earlier on, but at least that sun's quite strong. talking about cold weather, this is what we call the anomaly map across europe. where it's blue, temperatures are below the average for the time of the year and you can see across many countries, it's been colder than what we would expect in april. in fact, across some northern parts of europe, we have had snow. here's helsinki today — three degrees, flurries of snow. central parts of europe not even making double figures. and we are feeling that chill as we see colder air arriving from the north. but at least it's high pressure, so that does mean

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The Media Show

the taylor swift—driven summer, which included beyonce, barbenheimer and all of that services demand was responsible for an $8.5 billion boost to the us economy. 0k. not bad at all, then! thank you so much, augusta saraiva... 0h, not at all! ..and laura snapes from the guardian, too. thank you both so much for coming on the media show. that is it for today. thank you to all my guests. we'll be back at the same time next week, but it's goodbye from me, katie razzall. thank you so much for your company. if you'd like to hear a longer version of today's show, search "bbc the media show" wherever you get your bbc podcasts. hello there. it's been a chilly start to the weekend. we've got some cold weather overnight where we have the clearer skies. temperatures may be a bit higher in scotland, mind you, because we've seen this cloud moving down from the north and we'll continue to see a bit of light rain or drizzle on that weak weather front there as it runs into our area of high pressure.

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CNN Newsroom

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