Episode Transcript
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0:34
Triple threat? I have
0:36
had four people. You say,
0:38
please run again. The
0:40
president claims there are
0:42
constitutional loopholes that would
0:45
allow him to run
0:47
for a third term
0:49
in office. Is this
0:52
a serious strategy? Or
0:54
a distraction from
0:56
his administration's other
0:59
controversies? Should I run
1:02
again? You tell me. Comedian Amber
1:04
Ruffin gets dropped as MC at
1:06
this year's White House correspondence dinner.
1:08
Is the media bowing to pressure
1:10
or did she talk herself out
1:12
of the job by refusing to
1:15
follow their script? I was like,
1:17
there's no way I'm going to be
1:19
fricking doing that dude. Then, Sarah
1:21
Gilbert talks about
1:24
saying goodbye to
1:26
one of TV's
1:28
most iconic families
1:30
on the final
1:32
season of the
1:34
Connors. And we've
1:36
got an Easter
1:38
basket full of
1:40
savings on an
1:43
all-new view-your-deal. Here
1:45
come hot topics
1:47
with Whoopi! Anna
1:51
Navarro. Sunny
1:54
Austin. And
1:56
Alyssa Sarah
1:58
Griffin. Now,
2:00
let's get
2:02
things started.
2:52
Do you know something we
2:54
don't know? Well, have a
2:57
seat. We'll tell you. We
2:59
love y'all too. So have
3:01
a seat. Let's tell you
3:03
what's been going on because
3:05
in an interview with NBC's
3:07
Christian Welker, yesterday you know
3:09
who said he's not ruling
3:12
out the possibility of running
3:14
for a third term, saying
3:16
I'm not joking. There are
3:18
methods which you could do
3:20
it with how. And
3:22
reporters asked him more about it later
3:24
on Air Force wine. Take a lot.
3:27
You said you were not joking about
3:29
a third term, about possibly wanting a
3:31
third term? Does that mean you're not
3:33
planning to leave office on January 20?
3:35
I'm not looking at that, but I'll
3:37
tell you, I have had more people
3:39
ask me to have a third term,
3:42
which is in a way in the
3:44
fourth term, because the other election. The
3:46
2020 election was totally rigged. I'm
3:53
just telling you I've
3:56
had more people say
3:58
please run again. They
4:00
said we have a
4:03
long way to go.
4:05
Is he actually planning
4:08
on this or is
4:10
this just another way
4:12
to take the headlines
4:15
away from all the
4:17
other mess as his
4:20
administration is actually dealing
4:22
with it? I
4:27
actually think that he is so
4:29
enamored of Putin and so enamored
4:31
with power that he wouldn't mind
4:33
being king, you know, with the
4:35
crooked crown. I don't know that
4:37
it's something that can ever be
4:39
accomplished because we know that FDR
4:42
historically had four terms. And so
4:44
they ratified the 22nd Amendment in
4:46
1951, making sure that a president
4:48
could only run. two terms, consecutively
4:50
or non-consecutively. So in order to
4:52
really legally do this, he would
4:55
probably have to change the 22nd
4:57
amendment and that would, you would
4:59
need like 34 states, three fourth
5:01
states to ratify that. So I
5:03
don't think it's ever gonna happen.
5:05
That doesn't mean he's not gonna
5:07
try. No matter how insane, stupid,
5:10
hair-brained and lawless, I think something.
5:12
He says might we I have
5:14
learned the lesson of taking him
5:16
seriously Yes, but what was interesting
5:18
is this was a hot topic
5:20
for all of us and none
5:23
of us picked it this morning
5:25
because we're all on to him
5:27
He is the distractor in chief.
5:29
So he doesn't want us to
5:31
keep talking about signal gate Which
5:33
is a real threat to national
5:36
security and every day more details
5:38
are revealed that Show us how
5:40
incompetent and reckless his national security
5:42
team is to talk about the
5:44
way he is tanking the stock
5:46
market with his embecilic tariffs, what
5:48
he's calling liberation. should be called
5:51
hypertension day because it's going to
5:53
give us all a heart attack.
5:55
He doesn't want us to talk
5:57
about Andrew, the 30 year old
5:59
gay hairdresser, Venezuelan, who without any
6:01
due process just because he had
6:04
a tattoo that said mom with
6:06
a crown and dad with a
6:08
crown was grabbed and disappeared to
6:10
the hell hole in El Salvador.
6:12
He doesn't want us to be
6:14
talking about any of those things?
6:17
And he wants us to be
6:19
talking about this. Well, and I
6:21
don't think he likes that behind
6:23
closed doors, supposedly. JD Vance and
6:25
some others called for waltz to
6:27
be removed due to this action.
6:29
They also have some new reporting
6:32
coming out in the Wall Street
6:34
Journal today that there were more
6:36
conversations that were potentially confidential happening
6:38
on this signal. So I do
6:40
think the distraction is big, but
6:42
I would. I would also just
6:45
warn that the more important thing
6:47
before any attempt at rewriting our
6:49
constitution would be the local elections
6:51
that happen before then. And so...
6:53
It's easy to kind of be
6:55
distracted by what he throws out
6:58
there, but there are some really
7:00
pivotal elections happening. What do you
7:02
mean? Well, one of the reasons
7:04
they pulled Elise Stephanic's name out
7:06
is there was going to be
7:08
a delay in her seat, and
7:10
they didn't want to lose the
7:13
House. So there's stuff happening on
7:15
the ground, and Republicans have proven
7:17
to be ahead of that. They're
7:19
more of chess players. So I
7:21
would make sure that Democrats don't
7:23
get distracted by the crazy, and
7:26
they keep their eyes. Shout out
7:28
to Louisiana. Shout out to Louisiana
7:30
because Louisiana had a special election
7:32
this weekend. And all four of
7:34
these proposed amendments died there. And
7:36
so Louisiana came out, the black
7:39
community really came out, 37% early
7:41
voting. Shout out to Cliff Albright
7:43
for organizing on the ground there.
7:45
So I think Sarah's right. The
7:47
local elections are really where it's
7:49
at right now. Well, I think
7:51
everybody's aware. God knows they've. been
7:54
given enough information of what to
7:56
do, but you haven't said anything.
7:58
I was just going to say,
8:00
I mean, the 22nd Amendment is
8:02
no joke. And even if you
8:04
somehow were to bypass the constitutional
8:07
process and try to run again,
8:09
there's just no evidence I see
8:11
that Donald Trump is going to
8:13
leave in four years at 82
8:15
so popular that the public's like,
8:17
never mind, let's keep him another
8:19
four years. That's just not what
8:22
we do in America. We tend
8:24
to be change elections in a
8:26
change electorate. But I do think
8:28
that he's got this way of
8:30
dangling things like this out there
8:32
like catnips so that certain corners
8:35
of the media bite on it.
8:37
I saw this leading a lot
8:39
of networks today, instead of the
8:41
fact that in 48 hours, tariffs
8:43
are going to go into effect
8:45
that are going to cost all
8:48
of us a lot of money.
8:50
I've got a graphic I want
8:52
to pull up. This is Fox
8:54
News. 69% of Americans believe that
8:56
tariffs are going to make the
8:58
cost of goods more expensive. A
9:00
plurality of economists, left, right, and
9:03
center, agree. It is really a
9:05
small fringe minority that says this
9:07
is going to bring down consumer
9:09
costs. And that's what he was
9:11
elected on. He was not elected
9:13
to take Canada and make it
9:16
the 51 first state. It was
9:18
to bring down the cost of
9:20
living because everything's too expensive for
9:22
Americans. So if he keeps going
9:24
the way he is, I don't
9:26
think we even have to worry
9:29
about this because I don't think
9:31
people are going to be interested
9:33
in a further time but I
9:35
think if I'm JD Vance who
9:37
thinks oh I'm the heir apparent
9:39
I'm going to be the next
9:41
Republican presidential candidate I'd be like
9:44
oh this is a little insulting
9:46
like he's just oh he is
9:48
not teeing it up for me
9:50
he's giving me the worst job
9:52
to do you guys remember when
9:54
Republicans used to say that at
9:57
82 Joe Biden was too old
9:59
to run yeah I mean because
10:01
you know when we look at
10:03
Donald Trump we all think picture
10:05
of great health he really is
10:07
going to be doing at 82.
10:10
He's actually going to be older
10:12
than Joe Biden. He's going to
10:14
be the oldest president at 82
10:16
and seven months when he leaves
10:18
office than anybody else. And you
10:20
know, I don't understand how anybody
10:22
graduated from Wharton Business School and
10:25
thinks that tariffs are paid by
10:27
the foreign country. No, you idiot,
10:29
they are paid by consumers, by
10:31
Americans buying things. You know, again,
10:33
I've been saying this for a
10:35
while, let me say it again,
10:38
do not wait for the politicians
10:40
to get their selves together. It
10:42
is up to us. Get out
10:44
there and vote. You don't like
10:46
what's happening, then stop what's happening.
10:48
Stop it. Get out there and
10:50
stop it. You know? Everybody says,
10:53
well, I feel so helpless. Well,
10:55
you're not helpless. You're not helpless.
10:57
There's a woman I read about
10:59
this morning whose school decided they
11:01
were no longer going to teach
11:03
black history. She decided that wasn't
11:06
a good idea, so she is
11:08
teaching black history on Saturdays at
11:10
the library. You can. There are
11:12
things, you know. Women's history, just
11:14
history in general, because there's nothing
11:16
worse than a country that won't
11:19
admit its mistakes, that doesn't fight
11:21
to change their bad habits. We
11:23
have an opportunity, and we have
11:25
the reputation of at least trying
11:27
to change things for the best.
11:29
And now we've been slipping backwards.
11:31
Well, if you want that to
11:34
stop, it's up to us. It's
11:36
up to me, it's up to
11:38
you. Just like this lady did.
11:40
She said, this is what I
11:42
can do. Figure what you can
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11:47
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on the view Michael Sarah, Michelle
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Williams, Jenny Slade, Lawrence Fishburn, Audrey
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McDonald, and Kevin Bacon. I love
14:33
that! On America's number one daytime
14:35
talk show, ABC's The View. The
14:37
Correspondence Association President Eugene Daniel said
14:39
the decision was made to take
14:42
the focus off the politics of
14:44
division and concentrate on honoring outstanding
14:46
journalists. Well, here are. Some people,
14:48
though, think that they got cold
14:50
feet after Amber shared her plans
14:53
for the event on the Daily
14:55
Beast podcast. Take a look. They're
14:57
not 100% interested in being like,
14:59
ha, you're here, look at your
15:01
stupid head, you're burned. I care,
15:04
like, you're kind of a bunch
15:06
of murderers. I mean, so like,
15:08
they were like, you need to
15:10
be, you know, equal and make
15:12
sure that the, that you give
15:14
it to both sides and blah,
15:17
blah, I was like, there's no
15:19
way I'm going to be fricking
15:21
doing that dude. I think it's
15:23
just that burns on Trump hurt
15:25
badly badly. And then it trickles
15:28
down to everyone who is around
15:30
him. Because y'all also guilty. So
15:32
I think it just, they got
15:34
their feelings hurt. But it may
15:36
want... that false equivalency that the
15:38
media does. They want that. It
15:41
feels great. It makes them feel
15:43
like human beings. But they shouldn't
15:45
get to feel that way because
15:47
they're not. You know, it's a
15:49
funny thing. Free speech. Yeah. What
15:52
do you think about the decision
15:54
to drop her? So at first
15:56
I thought the White House Correspondence
15:58
Association were being a bunch of
16:00
cowards, but then I watched that.
16:02
And the most important thing that
16:05
journalists need to do in this
16:07
moment is be able to show
16:09
that they can objectively, without fear
16:11
or favor, cover this administration, and
16:13
objectively is the key word. And
16:16
for a lot of Americans, when
16:18
there's record high distrust in the
16:20
media, if you have them sitting
16:22
in a room with somebody who
16:24
basically said... Trump administration, and I
16:26
think it was actually the prudent
16:29
decision. There were a bunch of
16:31
murders. It adds to distrust in
16:33
the press. It comes off as
16:35
a kind of a tacit endorsement
16:37
of what she's saying. And I
16:40
think it's an important event to
16:42
highlight good journalism. My worry is
16:44
without having a comedian altogether that
16:46
that will fall by the wayside
16:48
and fewer people will tune in.
16:50
But I actually support the funny.
16:53
I actually support the decision. And
16:55
I worked with most of the
16:57
people in the White House Correspondence
16:59
Association. I disagree. I mean, it
17:01
just seems to me that when
17:04
you capitulate and give into a
17:06
bully, that bully will continue bullying
17:08
you. It's like the school yard
17:10
bully. You know, if he takes
17:12
your lunch... One day, he's going
17:14
to take your lunch again. And
17:17
so this White House has taken
17:19
control of the White House correspondence
17:21
associations, many of its duties, including
17:23
who's going to be in the
17:25
press pool. Now they're rearranging the
17:28
seats in the briefing room so
17:30
that legacy media is going to
17:32
be in the back and some
17:34
right wing podcaster is going to
17:36
be in the front. I think
17:38
that you stand united as a
17:41
press corps and you do things
17:43
that you've always done. I mean,
17:45
this has been an association since
17:47
1921. There is a false equivalency.
17:49
She's... She's has the, you know,
17:52
she's a comedian, she's not a
17:54
journalist, and I think that it's
17:56
a time-honored tradition, and I think,
17:58
I know Eugene Daniels very well,
18:00
I think he made the wrong
18:03
call. I think he capitulated, just
18:05
like Chuck Schumer did. Right. You
18:07
know, I'm very disappointed. I'm very
18:09
disappointed, first of all, because Amber
18:11
Ruffin is really funny. also because
18:13
Amber Ruffin is a black woman
18:16
and queer and I think these
18:18
are communities that were being erased
18:20
that you know were under attack
18:22
and so I think you know
18:24
having her there would have had
18:27
a great significance and also because
18:29
this doesn't come in a vacuum
18:31
right it's It comes after attack
18:33
after attack on the press and
18:35
after we have seen media capitulating
18:37
to him and corporate America capitulating
18:40
to him and law firms capitulating
18:42
to him. And so I think
18:44
it's very disappointing to see all
18:46
of these institutions bending a knee
18:48
and giving in to the bully
18:51
that is never going to give
18:53
up bullying you because you've just
18:55
emboldened and legitimized them. And it
18:57
goes back to your point. We
18:59
can't look at the institutions. We
19:01
got to look at the people,
19:04
because everybody else in the institutions,
19:06
academia, media, all of these things
19:08
are afraid, but the people are
19:10
the ones that have to show
19:12
fearlessness and that have to guide
19:15
us out of their very dark
19:17
numbers. I know that the White
19:19
House Correspondence Association is separate from
19:21
the administration, but I'm guessing in
19:23
general you don't want to like
19:25
blow the place up when you
19:28
show up. I was surprised they
19:30
invited a comedian because his... presidential
19:32
run Donald Trump started as a
19:34
joke was made at his expense
19:36
by President Obama at the time
19:39
I just don't think this is
19:41
an administration with a lot of
19:43
sense of humor so I think
19:45
in hearing kind of the direction
19:47
she was going this wasn't going
19:49
to be a fun like like
19:52
throwing it out at everyone in
19:54
a room that's why a lot
19:56
of comedians work as hosts when
19:58
it comes to Oscars and they
20:00
go after every... one. I would
20:03
prefer it to be funny and
20:05
it sounds like this was going
20:07
to be like a tinderbox. So,
20:09
well, and we should know that
20:11
the Trump administration's boycotting the dinner,
20:13
they're not attending, and also Eugene
20:16
Daniels, the president of Wauke, is
20:18
a black gay man himself. So
20:20
there is representation that is going
20:22
to be there. He'll be chairing
20:24
it and emceeing the event, but
20:27
they're saying on journalism rather than
20:29
the comedic. What do you think
20:31
of a comedian? You know, people
20:33
make the decisions they make. I
20:35
do want to say that when
20:38
you chop up a comedian, whatever
20:40
you think the comedian's gonna do,
20:42
until they do it, you don't
20:44
know what they're gonna do. The
20:46
pre-chopp of this is just another.
20:49
Bad move in my
20:52
mind because we are
20:54
already seeing people being
20:57
stopped from saying what
20:59
they think one of
21:02
the great things about
21:04
being an American is
21:06
you can say anything
21:09
Anything and If you
21:11
can't take the heat
21:14
then you should not
21:16
have started this fire.
21:18
This is not you
21:21
know You know who
21:23
Amber Ruffin is, something
21:26
you said earlier today,
21:28
you knew who she
21:31
was, you know the
21:33
kind of humor she
21:35
does, and you know
21:38
she doesn't go tiptoe
21:40
lightly. So for y'all
21:43
to have invited her
21:45
and then going, uh-oh,
21:48
uh-oh, we should stop
21:50
that, seems to be
21:52
for me another hack
21:55
at free speech. And
21:57
I, that... That makes
22:00
me more funnier than
22:02
anybody else. She should
22:04
come and do it
22:07
here. Amber. You've been
22:09
invited. We'll be right
22:12
back. Tomorrow
22:22
morning Chris Powell is back
22:24
on GMA with what you
22:26
need to feel better look
22:28
better and live great Wow
22:30
and Wednesday morning Michael B.
22:32
Jordan Haley Steinfeld Ryan Kugler
22:34
and Noah Wiley live on
22:36
Good Morning America unless it
22:38
stops promoting what he is
22:40
calling divisive race-centered ideology. He
22:42
has also put Jade Vance
22:44
in charge of purging the
22:46
museum of anything that degrades
22:48
shared American values or divides
22:51
Americans based on race. This
22:53
is... No. Is this just
22:55
an excuse to ignore historical
22:57
facts about America? It is
22:59
a fact racism does exist.
23:01
It is a fact that
23:03
slavery... existed and every time
23:05
you try to cover it
23:07
up I think of y'all
23:09
as doing that catbox thing.
23:11
You can't cover it up,
23:13
you can't bury it deep
23:15
enough, there's too many of
23:17
us. We already know, we
23:19
already know. You know, what's
23:21
happening? And just so you
23:23
know, he's charged Mr. Vance
23:25
of removing improper ideology from
23:27
the following places. African American
23:29
History and Culture Museum, the
23:31
American Art Museum, the American
23:33
History Museum, the American History
23:35
Museum, the National Air and
23:37
Space Museum, the National Zoo.
23:39
What's his problem with the
23:41
zoo? Is it because the
23:43
pandas are broken? I don't
23:45
know. I don't know. And
23:47
the Woman's History Museum, which
23:49
is only in development, it's
23:51
not even built yet. So
23:53
what is this about? Is
23:55
this more catbox activity? You
23:57
know, it's interesting because he
23:59
calls the executive order restoring
24:01
truth and sanity to American
24:03
history. And, you know, it
24:05
may be, while it may
24:07
be an uncomfortable truth for
24:09
this president. and for many
24:11
people in this country, this
24:13
country was founded on slavery.
24:15
It was founded on free
24:17
labor and was founded on
24:19
the facts of black people.
24:21
And for anyone who hasn't
24:23
been to this museum, there
24:25
are a couple of exhibits
24:27
that are really, really important.
24:30
There's Emmett Till's Casket is
24:32
there, because I've been there
24:34
several times. There's an airplane
24:36
for the Tuskegee Airmen. And
24:38
there's an actual slave quarters.
24:40
That's a fact. That's a
24:42
fact. They're all facts. They're
24:44
all facts. None of this
24:46
is made. And so I
24:48
just think that the famous
24:50
picture of the man who
24:52
was whipped, the shackles of
24:54
the slaves coming on the
24:56
ship, I was just surprised
24:58
by this because I was
25:00
trying to think when I
25:02
had been there and it
25:04
was in 2018 with Vice
25:06
President Pence where he praised
25:08
the incalculable contributions the African
25:10
Americans have made to liberty
25:12
in the past and the
25:14
present and in the present
25:16
and in the future. Yeah.
25:18
No, I was just going
25:20
to say, one of the
25:22
sad, I'll go fast, the
25:24
sad parts is, we had,
25:26
people had to dig up
25:28
all of this information and
25:30
data because in slavery, in
25:32
the Holocaust, people were erased
25:34
and their histories, their roots,
25:36
their ancestors. So people have
25:38
worked hard to bring these
25:40
to. to a place their
25:42
hidden figures, every one of
25:44
them. Now listen to this,
25:46
because speaking of history, as
25:48
Women's History Month comes to
25:50
a close, we want to
25:52
make sure the heroic women
25:54
of our military are not
25:56
forgotten. Arlington Cemetery is the
25:58
final resting place for women
26:00
who served in the middle
26:02
of Terry, nurses, astronauts, cold
26:04
breakers, suffragettes. mathematicians, journalists, actors,
26:06
first ladies, and the Supreme
26:09
Court justices. Go to our
26:11
website to learn more. And
26:13
since this administration has been
26:15
accusing Denmark of being a
26:17
bad ally, I want to
26:19
honor a female Danish soldier,
26:21
Sophia Brun, who was one
26:23
of the many Danish soldiers
26:25
who died fighting alongside U.S.
26:27
troops in Afghanistan. They were
26:29
there helping us. during 9-11,
26:31
after 9-11. They went to
26:33
Denmark, didn't ask for anything,
26:35
asked for nothing. So the
26:37
next time vice presidents or
26:39
people who are in charge
26:41
of the military want to
26:43
disregard people's service, we're going
26:45
to keep reminding you. And
26:47
as service people yourselves, you
26:49
should know better. We'll be
26:51
right back. It's
27:01
2025 and a new year
27:03
means new opportunities. For a lot
27:06
of you out there, I know
27:08
you've been thinking about one
27:10
thing over the holidays, and
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that's starting your own business. But
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you have so many questions.
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How do I even get
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Shopify today. shopify.com/view. On April
28:18
11th, the amateur arrives in
28:20
I'm X. I want to find
28:22
and kill the people who
28:24
murdered my wife. Critics rave.
28:26
The amateur is a tense, unpredictable
28:28
ride. You're just not a killer,
28:31
Charlie. Train me. That constantly
28:33
finds new and inventive ways
28:35
to up the stakes. The first
28:37
one you kill, you let
28:39
the other ones know you're
28:41
coming. I want a moment. Academy
28:44
Award winner Rummy Mallick, an Academy
28:46
Award nominee, Lawrence Fishburn, the
28:48
amateur 80P13, maybe inappropriate for
28:50
children under 13, only in theaters
28:52
in I'm at 6, 11th.
28:54
Get tickets now. Welcome back
28:56
almost 37 years ago, Sarah Gilbert
28:59
became a member of TV's
29:01
most iconic families who are
29:03
saying goodbye on the final season
29:05
of the Connors. But she is
29:08
not going quietly. Take a
29:10
look. Sorry to bother you,
29:12
but could you take a picture
29:14
of us? Oh, sure, no
29:16
problem. Actually, can you take
29:18
another one with us looking into
29:21
each other's eyes? I don't feel
29:23
good about it, but I
29:25
can. Right. Now maybe just
29:27
one more where we're kissing. Uh,
29:29
listen. My beer came all
29:31
the way from Oregon to
29:33
be with me, and I don't
29:36
want to be rude and make
29:38
it wait. So last one,
29:40
all right? Okay. It's enough,
29:42
you guys. No. everybody.
29:59
I don't want to take it.
30:02
It'll take half the second. Exactly,
30:04
exactly. But the Connors is saying
30:06
goodbye after seven seasons. I know.
30:09
And this is, now you played,
30:11
I mean, I watched from the
30:13
OG days, in the original Roseanne,
30:16
and that premiered in 1988. So
30:18
you've been doing this for a
30:20
long time. Like 15 years. Any
30:22
idea you'd be back 20 years
30:25
later. So how does it feel
30:27
to wrap up to wrap up
30:29
this time? It's pretty sad to
30:32
be totally honest. It's hard because
30:34
you see these people every day.
30:36
They're like family and. and there's
30:38
something about doing it the second
30:41
time where you know, you know,
30:43
we're not coming back in 20
30:45
more years as you know, grandparents
30:48
or whatever. I mean, yeah, you
30:50
never know, you never know, you
30:52
never know. It's funny though, I
30:54
was saying to my mom, okay,
30:57
but I've done this before, I
30:59
know what this feels like, and
31:01
she was like, yeah, the last
31:04
time you were in your 20s,
31:06
you know, like, And you make
31:08
sure the show stuck to its
31:11
tradition of focusing on real world
31:13
issues affecting this working class family,
31:15
drug addiction, mass shootings, unemployment and
31:17
poverty. It stayed very grounded in
31:20
reality at a time when a
31:22
lot of folks are looking for
31:24
escapism on TV. Why was that?
31:27
Well, I mean, I will say
31:29
a credit to our writers, and
31:31
I'm one of many executive producers,
31:33
but I think it was always
31:36
very important to us to tell
31:38
the stories that Americans are struggling
31:40
with or going through, and hopefully
31:43
there's not just a divide between
31:45
escapism and something that makes you
31:47
think or feel, but we try
31:49
to bring comedy and make it
31:52
fun and tell stories that are
31:54
organic to these characters so that...
31:56
We don't want it to be
31:59
just a downer. Have you talked
32:01
about the price of eggs yet?
32:03
I don't, I think, well we
32:06
filmed this, we're ahead. Yeah. Well
32:08
Sarah, you landed the role of
32:10
Darlene when you were just 13
32:12
years old and you played it
32:15
through your teen years, then into
32:17
college where you attended Yale, so
32:19
you literally grew up on TV.
32:22
What's it been like now being
32:24
on the Conners saying a young
32:26
generation of actors come up when
32:28
you're on the other side of
32:31
it? Well, it's been great. Back
32:33
when I was on the show
32:35
originally, I won't say it was
32:38
like a free-for-all, but it definitely
32:40
was a different time in Hollywood.
32:42
Now people... like care more probably
32:44
about children. I actually did have
32:47
a great time growing up but
32:49
it is way more buttoned up
32:51
these days and and the kids
32:54
were incredible. Ames who played my
32:56
son he's really academic kid and
32:58
when I met his parents they
33:01
really wanted him to do well
33:03
and I had a teacher on
33:05
the original run Sharon Flannery who
33:07
helped I never would have done
33:10
as well academic. So when I
33:12
met with them, I was like,
33:14
listen, I know I got a
33:17
person I got a guy Yeah,
33:19
and so she helped and he
33:21
ended up at 16 years old
33:23
getting into Harvard. I mean this
33:26
kid's incredible look forward to? There
33:28
is. We've got Jane Lynch this
33:30
season. It was just so funny
33:33
and incredible. I mean just watching
33:35
her is unbelievable. We've got Seth
33:37
Green who is great for me
33:40
because we've been friends since we
33:42
were teenagers. He was one of
33:44
those Hollywood kids that moved out
33:46
and was living on their own
33:49
when they were really young like
33:51
a teenager and so I ended
33:53
up dating. his roommate, but sneaking
33:56
out, putting pillows under the thing
33:58
to go to Sats' apartment, got
34:00
caught. So kids, you'll get caught.
34:02
No, you were one of the
34:05
most famous faces in the country
34:07
when you were only a kid,
34:09
which is a lot of pressure,
34:12
but you got to host S&L
34:14
when you were only 18 years
34:16
old. Yeah. And you worked with
34:18
some of the all-time S&L great.
34:21
I think we actually have a
34:23
cook. Today I've got a friend
34:25
in the bath with me. Do
34:28
you want to meet her? Do
34:30
you? Her name is Kelly Clayton
34:32
and my daddy and her mommy
34:35
are boyfriend and girlfriend. She's ever
34:37
so nice. Hello? My mom says
34:39
I have to wear an eye
34:41
patch. I've got a wonky eye.
34:44
What do you remember about that
34:46
experience? Because S&L is still such,
34:48
you know, a celebrated institution. Yeah,
34:51
well, I mean, it was kind
34:53
of amazing because I was a
34:55
college freshman. So it was a
34:57
cool. thing to be like to
35:00
your roommates. Hey, do you guys
35:02
want to come to S&L? It
35:04
was really, I mean, I was
35:07
so lucky that that happened. And
35:09
then what was sort of full
35:11
circled this trip? I'm taking one
35:13
of my kids on a college
35:16
tour while we're here, so we're
35:18
looking at different schools, and she's
35:20
obsessed with S&L, so it was
35:23
her dream to go. So we
35:25
went and we watched in the
35:27
audience, and then one of the
35:30
people in the audience next to
35:32
me turned to me and said,
35:34
have you ever been to a
35:36
taping. And so I just said,
35:39
yeah, I think so, like a
35:41
long time ago. Sarah, it's such
35:43
a pleasure and yay for the
35:46
Connors. Thank you. My pleasure. And
35:48
our thanks to Sarah Gilbert, the
35:50
final season of the Connors, airs
35:52
Wednesday nights at 8 Eastern, right
35:55
here on Ah Besseh and Street.
35:57
It's the next day on Hulu.
35:59
Who knew? We'll be right back.
36:02
Spring into Easter on View Your
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38:02
amazing. Now, toasting with, you know,
38:04
toasting with Terry's. I love her
38:06
and I love everything she does.
38:08
Pull it off. That's right. This
38:10
is all about simplifying Easter Passover
38:12
and all entertaining. And you look
38:15
so fancy when you're entertaining in
38:17
this scene. Just go like this?
38:19
Would you like a drink? Exactly.
38:21
You look smart and they are
38:23
sustainable. Sarah. I knew it. So
38:25
you don't feel guilty about single
38:28
use. You've got cocktail napkins. You've
38:30
got your placemas. and pending little
38:32
cocktail holder, which I love. And
38:34
just like the rest of it,
38:36
they have a little separation that's
38:38
perforated. That's what Sarah's showing. You
38:41
pull them off and you use
38:43
them. They're so easy. So elegant.
38:45
And it feels like love it.
38:47
richer it's not like cheap no
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it's not and it's like linen
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and if you put this little
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you always have a napkin nearby
38:58
what does that mean for us
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in all states. On April 8th,
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the final season of the Handmaids
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42:06
of the end. And the revolution...
42:08
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42:10
going to throw in the fire
42:12
when it's enough enough. When there's
42:15
no one left to fight. Where
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is June Osbore? Rise up! And
42:19
fight for your freedom! The Hulu
42:21
original series, The Handmaid's Tale, final
42:23
season, premieres April 8, streaming on
42:25
Hulu. Alyssa is on our podcast
42:28
today. Have a great day everybody.
42:30
Take a little time to enjoy
42:32
the view and remember you're not
42:34
alone. She has dwarfism. Starring Ellen
42:36
Pompeo and Mark Duplas. Something is
42:38
off. He's just a little girl.
42:41
You think she's faking? She has
42:43
adulties? There are signs of puberty?
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Inspired by the shocking stories, the
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42:54
You have no idea how those
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people hurt this girl. The Hulu
42:58
original series. Good American Family. New
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episodes Wednesday. New episodes Wednesday streaming
43:02
on Hulu.
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