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Could These be the Best Places for Quality Beef Jerky in Montana?

We live in cattle country, and beef jerky has always been a go-to snack for wary travelers since before Montana was born. So where are the best places to stop on a journey across the Treasure State?

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CNN NewsNight With Abby Phillip

company that backed it, is not actually financially stable. >> this is yet another salvo in this whole thing. >> what do you think, judge engoron is going to do about that? >> yeah. i mean, the bond is a little weird, right let's let's be on it. it's weird and you can contrast it even with the ball on the in the carroll case, that is a bond that has backed by chubb accompany everybody knows and trusts this bond coming from a company. nobody event that is not new york, that nobody really knows. there was some questions whether there was any money behind it. it's it's structured weird as though as though it's actually trump's money as opposed to the surety company's money. there's a lot of reasons to be worried about this bond. >> it's $175 million. so it's not chump change maybe maybe compared to what it could have been. it's jumped change, but it is not chump change. >> and by the way, the reason you want a bond is because on the one hand, you don't want the defendant who's responsible

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All In With Chris Hayes

estate, the people that come through mar-a-lago, palm beach, has become this sort of, like, man of the vote of a certain set of americans, in places so far from manhattan that load it, and that he has, like, the weird, yeah, the sort of symbol of that loathing, even though he clearly loves it. >> is also, you know, the people who really support him believe that the elites are out to get them, so when he gets up, and very convincingly says the elites are out to get me too, and he genuinely believes that, on some level, it reads as authentic to people who want to support him. >> yeah, and i think that authenticity of house burned he feels all the time it's actually the thing that actually works in a way that doesn't work in many of his knockoffs. do you think, what do you think about the trajectory of this in terms of the campaign? as someone who's covered this. >> it's interesting, because by normal standards of a campaign, in a normal playing of existence, this would not be a positive development, right? like, it's no good to have your

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Ana Cabrera Reports

this case was, how historic it was going to be. >> everybody. >> what were you guys talking about? >> it is a historical case, and, you know, this is going to define so many things. but at the same time, our job as a juror, right, is to be impartial, like to be unbiased. so, it was, yeah, it was, you know, weird, like, the whole atmosphere, like, you know, it is such an important case at the same time, yeah. >> did you talk to anybody that really wanted to serve on -- in that jury? >> that anybody -- that they wanted to serve? >> any other jurors you spoke to, are there people that said i want to do this, i want to serve on this jury, i want to be part of this? >> no, but they feel the duty, definitely. >> they feel the duty. >> yeah, that's how i -- >> did you feel that duty as being a new citizen of this country? was there a part of you that said i want to serve? >> i feel a duty, yeah. i'm a citizen, yeah, i have responsibilities, right?

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Jose Diaz-Balart Reports

we're at 57 having walked out. that's way more than half. i actually had the opportunity just a couple of minutes ago to speak to a potential juror who in fact raised her hand when asked can you be impartial. and she said no. and subsequently walked out. take a listen to what she had to say. >> when did you realize that this was a trial involving the ex-president of the united states, donald trump? >> we were here on tuesday from 9:00 a.m., but we realized that it is about this case around 4:00 p.m. we went to the courtroom, and we saw donald trump. it is a historical case, and, you know, this is going to define so many things. but at the same time, our job as a juror, right, is to be impartial, like, to be unbiased. so, it was, yeah, it was, you know, weird, like, the whole

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Jose Diaz-Balart Reports

atmosphere. >> reporter: jose, first time citizen of the united states. she got her citizenship back in august. this is going to be in november the first presidential election in which she will vote in. this is the first time, jose, she was called to jury duty. and imagine she walks into the courtroom and sees that donald trump, the former president of the united states, is the defendant. unbelievable. they're going for the 42 questions now inside the courtroom, and then they'll move on to the voir dire process in which the prosecution and the defense will ask their own questions, jose. >> welcome to america. what is the count now as far as jurors that are seated, those that aren't, and what happened to other jurors? >> so, one of the jurors, juror number two, this morning, came back, she had been seated and she came back today, because she

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