Episode Transcript
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Repeat offender. Secretary of
0:36
Defense Pete Hegsepp lashes
0:38
out at the media
0:40
over reports he shared
0:42
sensitive military intelligence on
0:44
another tax chain. Hoaxers.
0:47
This group, no, no, this group right here. Full
0:49
of hoaxers. And while the president
0:52
says he's still all in.
0:54
He's doing a great job. Are
0:56
House Republicans starting to fold? The
0:58
People's Poe. As the
1:00
world mourns, the co -hosts
1:02
get personal about the passing
1:05
of Pope Francis. Plus,
1:07
from proposed federal rollbacks that
1:09
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to everyday innovations that can
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News chief meteorologist, Ginger Z,
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has the hottest topics on
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Earth Day. Eva Longoria
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talks about taking you on
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savings that help save the planet. Here
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come Hot
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Topics with Whoopie,
1:38
Sarah
1:41
Haynes, Joy
1:44
Baeha, Anna
1:48
Navarro, Sonny
1:52
Hauston, and
1:55
Alyssa Sarah Griffin. Now,
1:58
let's get things started.
2:31
And welcome to The View Again. Thank
2:35
you. We
2:37
love you too. We're back from vacation.
2:42
Yeah. Thank you,
2:44
ma 'am. It's
2:47
just so odd to be here.
2:49
It was short. It
2:52
felt short. I felt like
2:54
we left last week. And
2:57
I guess that's what we did. And
2:59
now we're back. But of
3:01
course things don't stop happening just
3:03
because we leave. So
3:06
Secretary of Defense Pete
3:08
Hegseth is defending himself again
3:10
over a New York
3:12
Times report claiming that he
3:14
shared sensitive military plans
3:16
with his wife, his brother,
3:18
his lawyer, another
3:20
signal chain. He defended himself
3:22
while he was at. The
3:25
family White House, he was
3:27
at the White House Easter egg
3:29
roll yesterday. Take
3:31
a look. This is what the
3:33
media does. They take anonymous
3:35
sources from disgruntled former employees and then
3:37
they try to slash and burn
3:39
people and ruin their reputation. I'm not
3:41
gonna work with me. This is
3:43
what we're doing it for. These kids
3:45
right here. This is why we're
3:47
fighting the fake news media. This is
3:49
why we're fighting slash and burn
3:52
Democrats. This is why we're fighting hoaxers,
3:54
hoaxers. This group, no, no,
3:56
this group right here, full of hoaxers.
4:02
Does that mean they're hokey? I
4:05
don't know what a hoaxer
4:07
is, but that's okay. a hoaxer?
4:10
Not a hook or a hoaxer. I
4:13
think it's someone who plays tricks
4:15
on people, hoaxes. I've never heard
4:17
of that. I've never heard it,
4:19
folks. You made that up. But
4:22
there are reports that the
4:24
Pentagon is in chaos, and
4:26
his days could be numbered.
4:28
But the White House says,
4:30
no, they're behind them, kinda.
4:33
Where do you see this going? I'm
4:35
gonna ask you because, you know it.
4:37
In that clip, he said these fake
4:39
news reports from anonymous sources, one of
4:41
his senior aides, John Oliot, who I
4:44
actually worked with you is at the
4:46
NSC when I was at the White
4:48
House. Pendent op -ed in Politico saying,
4:50
the Pentagon is in chaos. I respect
4:52
Pete Hegseth, but he needs to step aside.
4:54
He put his name to it, which
4:56
I give him a lot of credit for.
4:58
Listen, this individual was always under qualified
5:00
for this role. Yes, he served our country
5:02
in uniform, but he did not have
5:04
the years of experience it takes to run
5:06
this big of a department. And the
5:08
cracks are showing, and there are going to
5:10
be more stories like this. And what
5:12
I would say to people, whether they support
5:14
the president or don't, national security is
5:16
above politics. You should want the most qualified.
5:18
person in this role. And I think
5:20
of when I was working at the Pentagon.
5:22
There were days that I couldn't tell Justin
5:25
what I was doing at work because it
5:27
was classified because I was working on something
5:29
that was sensitive. That was just a simple
5:31
agreement. And my role was not nearly as
5:33
sensitive as this individual. He just seems to
5:35
lack the sort of judgment. And there are
5:37
people who are imminently qualified that could do
5:39
this. I think of Senator Joni Ernst on
5:41
the Armed Services Committee. If he wants a
5:43
Fox News personality, General Jack King, a
5:45
retired four star general who supports Donald Trump
5:47
but is qualified to run the biggest, the
5:49
most powerful military. on the planet, I think
5:51
that people smell blood in the water, advisors
5:53
are gonna get to Trump and say, this
5:55
guy is too big of a distraction and
5:57
his days will be numbered. Trump has been
5:59
saying that it's a big nothing. I think
6:01
he wants to get through the first 100
6:03
days and then I think he's... It seems
6:05
like... Aren't we through 100? We're not through
6:07
the first 100 days. I
6:10
don't get impression. I
6:12
don't get the impression. I
6:16
don't get the impression that Trump even knows
6:18
what goes on in these signal meetings. It's
6:20
like Hexeth's wife knows more than the president.
6:22
Well, that's the thing is, this was a
6:25
concurrent message. The message that we talked about
6:27
when I first saw this news story, I
6:29
thought it was like a more recent one.
6:31
This was a concurrent signal chat happening between
6:33
his wife, his brother, and his lawyer. And
6:35
his orthodontist. Well, and you have to ask
6:37
yourself, why would someone do that? And the
6:39
only thing that could come to, I guess,
6:41
a reasonable mind is you're trying to say,
6:43
look at my big job. And if you're
6:46
looking for something, like that, you should probably
6:48
be like a press secretary or someone in
6:50
front - president of this - Or go back
6:52
to being a Fox News host, which is
6:54
what he was doing. When he eked by,
6:56
remember that J .D. Vance had to give
6:58
the final vote to tie break for Pete
7:00
Hegseth. The big concern was his lack of
7:02
judgment and his qualifications. And I think, like
7:04
you said, the cracks are showing, because this
7:07
is an instance where he's trying to say
7:09
everyone's a hoaxer and this is fake news. you
7:12
gotta know the difference and be able
7:14
to discern between people coming after you for
7:16
just a nothing burger and national security.
7:18
Like what he's holding on to puts people's
7:20
lives at stake. It's everyone that's out
7:22
the field. this one was a goal for
7:24
a question in on this one. No,
7:26
I didn't do it. But they just recently
7:28
had two people or three people that
7:31
were fired with no explanation and two of
7:33
those people were on this signal chat.
7:35
And they admitted that he started the chat.
7:37
I had the same kind of reaction
7:39
that Alyssa had because I was a little
7:41
a lowly federal prosecutor, and I would
7:43
present things in front of the grand jury,
7:45
which are secret proceedings. My
7:47
friend is here in the audience saying yes,
7:49
you know, under Rule 6E, and Manny would
7:52
say, hey, what you do today? I couldn't
7:54
say, oh, well, I was in front of
7:56
the grand jury with somebody that's in the
7:58
WITSEC program, and I asked these questions,
8:00
like, you would lose your job for something
8:02
like that, someone even at that level, so
8:04
that in and of itself was just such
8:06
a breach of decorum and national security, but
8:08
the other thing that I thought of to
8:11
your question Joy, which is... seems
8:13
to be behaving as if this
8:15
is nothing. There's quite a
8:17
double standard because he's standing by
8:19
Hexeth, but if you remember, he sang
8:21
a different tune when he called
8:23
for America's first black defense attorney, Lloyd
8:25
Austin, appointed by President Biden in
8:27
2021 to resign after he failed to
8:29
disclose that he had undergone a
8:32
surgical operation to treat prostate cancer. And
8:34
he was kind of gone for
8:36
about four days. I'm not saying that
8:38
that was good either, but I
8:40
don't think those two things are the
8:42
same because Trump said Austin should
8:44
be fired. immediately for improper professional conduct
8:46
and dereliction of duty. If
8:48
that was the case then, then
8:50
President Trump, that's the case now. That's
8:53
the case now. Good luck with
8:55
that. But he accessed
8:57
himself. said in 2016, any security,
8:59
professional, military, government, or otherwise would
9:01
be fired on the spot for
9:04
this type of conduct when it
9:06
came to Hillary's emails. So
9:08
again, it's an inconsistency, it's a hypocrisy,
9:10
a double standard. Where's the Republicans in Congress
9:12
though? They should be opening their mouths.
9:14
I think they're already opening too. Don Bacon
9:16
from Nebraska is called from the resign.
9:18
I think some others are gonna start. Well,
9:23
you know. Double
9:25
standards have not changed. Double
9:28
standards are still double standards and
9:30
they don't sit well with anybody.
9:33
So we're gonna keep watching, but I just
9:35
wanna commend the people of the United
9:37
States. I wanna say
9:39
thank you for still getting up
9:42
and getting out over the
9:44
weekends and protesting and making your
9:46
voices heard. I wanna thank
9:48
you for that. I
9:50
wanna thank you for not
9:52
being afraid. to say
9:55
we are not happy. And
9:57
it's both sides, it's Republicans,
9:59
it's independence, it's everybody. It's
10:01
American citizens saying there's something wrong
10:03
here and we don't like it and
10:05
we're not standing for it. And
10:07
I just want to say thank y
10:09
'all because that's what it's gonna take.
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is set for a sizzling
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political view with Senator
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Rafael Warnock, the Shinola Hampton,
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Bo and Yang, and
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Cheech and Chong reunited. All
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in America's most watched daytime
13:24
talk show, ABC's The View. Welcome
13:34
back. Yesterday was
13:36
a tough day because
13:39
Pope Francis, one of the
13:41
great popes in my opinion,
13:44
passed away just hours after
13:46
sharing a very timely Easter
13:48
message at the Vatican. He
13:51
called on people to
13:53
embrace those who are different
13:55
or who are from different
13:57
lands because we are all
13:59
children of God. Now
14:02
his final message to
14:04
us was that, do
14:06
you think it will resonate? Gosh,
14:09
I would sure hope so. It's interesting when
14:11
people speak of the Pope right now, they
14:13
talk about the type of Pope he was.
14:15
There's liberal popes, there's conservative. When
14:17
I think of this Pope, he was
14:20
the most Jesus -like. You know,
14:22
when you read of Jesus and what his
14:24
word was and how he walked, this is
14:26
what I think of, a person who lives
14:28
their life this way. He also said at
14:30
one point in 2013 regarding gay priests, if
14:32
someone is gay and he searches for the
14:34
Lord and has good will, Who am
14:36
I to judge? And these messages
14:38
were what resonated with me, not as a
14:40
Catholic, but just a Christian. The
14:42
love thy neighbor, love all thy
14:45
neighbors, and do not judge. And he
14:47
lived that through his words and his actions.
14:49
I don't if I love all my neighbors though.
14:54
I love that you said that
14:56
because as a Catholic, my
14:58
whole life, and all of you
15:01
know this, I've spoken to
15:03
many of you about it, I've
15:05
struggled with Catholicism because of
15:07
so many of the church's, the
15:09
doctrines, especially when in regards
15:12
to the LGBTQ plus community. in
15:14
terms of the sex scandals. I've struggled
15:16
with being a Catholic, but this pope
15:18
changed things for me, and Whoopi and
15:20
I have spoken about that. And I
15:23
remember I was having this discussion with
15:25
you, Joy, about how I feel like
15:27
there's this crisis of empathy in this
15:29
country, that unless it happens to you,
15:31
you can't feel the empathy of it
15:33
happening to somebody else. They're gonna deport
15:35
that person. It's not gonna affect my
15:37
family, so I don't care that it's
15:39
affecting others. And I was
15:41
watching a 60 minutes piece that
15:44
he was interviewed on, and he
15:46
said, we have to get over
15:48
our hearts to feel again. We
15:50
cannot remain indifferent in the face
15:52
of such human dramas. The globalization
15:54
of indifference is a very ugly
15:56
disease that this country is suffering
15:58
from. That's the kind of pope
16:00
that he was, and that's the
16:02
kind of pope that I hope
16:04
will replace this pope after the
16:06
conquest. I wonder though, because there
16:08
might be a backlash against how
16:10
good he was and how much
16:12
humility he had compared to some
16:14
of the leaders in this world
16:16
right now. So there might be
16:18
a backlash to it, and they'll
16:20
get some conservative guy in there
16:22
who is anti -gay. and
16:24
everything else. I would just say I'm a Protestant,
16:26
but I loved this pope and I loved how
16:28
he advocated for refugees, which is just a core
16:30
tenant of the Christian faith. He
16:33
visited, he was the first pope to
16:35
ever visit Iraq and meet with Yazidi Christians
16:37
who'd been displaced by ISIS. He
16:39
brought Syrian refugees to Rome. I mean, he was
16:41
just an incredible person and somebody will miss. And
16:43
I know you met him personally. Yeah,
16:46
he was great. I mean, listen,
16:48
he brought, and this
16:50
sounds crazy. But
16:52
he brought 100
16:54
comedians from around
16:56
the world, 100
16:58
of us, into
17:00
meet with him. And
17:03
what he said was, what
17:06
he
17:09
said was,
17:12
I want to laugh more. We
17:16
all need to laugh more. And
17:18
then he looked at the hundred
17:20
of us and he said, what
17:22
you do is very important because
17:24
without you, it's a grayer day.
17:27
Now I don't know any other
17:29
pope in my lifetime. My pope
17:31
was John the 23rd, who I
17:33
was a little kid and saw
17:35
him and he was going by
17:37
in a pope -mobile and he
17:40
looked over and it was like,
17:42
I see you, and I thought,
17:44
I see you too. And
17:47
this pope, his
17:50
thing is this, he
17:52
grew up around refugees.
17:56
He understood what people
17:58
needed. He got
18:00
it. Now, whether you
18:02
like it or not, refugees
18:05
are with us around the
18:07
world. So why be
18:09
negative, why not be
18:11
positive and help, which
18:13
is what he has always said, and
18:16
help and walk in the grace
18:18
of God? Because that's how that
18:20
works. One
18:23
of the things that stands out. Pictorially
18:27
is a picture of somebody like
18:29
Musk and Trump who are cutting
18:31
back on helping children around the
18:33
world. You know, cutting back on
18:35
services for sick children and et
18:37
cetera. And then you see the
18:39
Pope washing the feet of the
18:41
poor. The contrast is astounding
18:43
really. You were talking about the
18:45
legacy and whether there's any legs to
18:47
this. Yes, I think that those
18:49
pictures should be put out there all
18:51
the time because this administration is
18:53
basically hurting children around around the world
18:55
with these cuts that they're doing. USAID
18:58
and all of this other stuff. a disgrace.
19:00
And hurting other people just to put a
19:02
button on that. You know, what he said
19:04
when he saw Trump during the first administration
19:06
with the building a wall and Mexico's gonna
19:09
pay for it. We know Mexico didn't pay
19:11
for anything. He said, the
19:13
Pope said this, a person who thinks only
19:15
about building walls wherever they may be and
19:17
not building bridges is not Christian. Well
19:19
you better tell that to some people.
19:21
Well we think they're Christians. Hopefully,
19:27
hopefully the conclave will
19:29
find a way to
19:31
continue on his path
19:33
because what it has done
19:36
is it seems to
19:38
have brought people back
19:40
because they're not afraid
19:42
of being divorced, because the
19:44
Pope wasn't mad about
19:46
it. Because you're
19:48
gay, Pope said, look, you love
19:50
God, I love God, why am I mad
19:52
at you? All of these things, went
19:55
on to bring people
19:57
back into the church.
20:00
And if the church is smart, they
20:02
will not waste this. This
20:05
is a legacy that
20:07
has legs. We'll be
20:09
right back. It's
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21:50
one of your assistance assistance to switch
21:52
you to mid-Mobile today. He
22:18
not only preached in word,
22:21
he preached in deed. The
22:23
papacy of Pope Francis in
22:25
one word, humility, modesty, accessibility,
22:28
mercy, mercy, mercy. It's
22:30
beautiful. Celebrating
22:34
Francis, the People's Pope,
22:36
the television event tonight on
22:39
ABC. activists
22:47
are hitting the panic
22:49
button over massive rollbacks on
22:51
environmental safety measures. So
22:53
there has never been a
22:55
more vital time to
22:57
take Earth Day seriously. Here
23:00
to tell us more is
23:02
ABC News chief meteorologist, Ginger
23:04
Z. Ginger Z. Great
23:08
to be here. Happy Earth Day. So
23:10
joy it's you. Yes. So
23:12
Ginger, it was reported this month
23:14
that the Trump administration will
23:16
be canceling funding for the United
23:18
States Global Change Research Program,
23:21
which produces the federal government's climate
23:23
change study. This is
23:25
just one of the many rollbacks on
23:27
climate research so far. I
23:29
would like to just add
23:31
that the pope was outspoken
23:33
against climate change and he
23:35
blamed it on wealthy countries,
23:37
just FYI. So, since
23:39
they're rolling back all of these
23:41
things, how quickly are we going to
23:43
see the impact of this on
23:45
our climate, which we all happen to
23:47
need? Well,
23:49
the Pope was right, Joy. Those with less
23:52
feel it first. That's how this works. But we
23:54
all are feeling it. And that's the thing
23:56
is no one can escape these impacts at this
23:58
point. It's just that some of us will
24:00
have better resilience. I think with the rollbacks and
24:02
what we need to know is climate research
24:04
and data is critical. It's critical to
24:06
what I do. I know in the
24:08
last couple of weeks, we've seen websites disappearing
24:11
that we use all the time as
24:13
meteorologists. So those are like our receipts to
24:15
see how the atmosphere and how our
24:17
earth is doing and how we are moving
24:19
a needle in one direction. or another.
24:21
Important, yes, but I think most climate scientists
24:23
would say an administration that is going
24:25
headlong and headfirst into supporting fossil fuels and
24:28
turning away from renewables, that's the thing
24:30
that's having the most immediate impact on the
24:32
changing climate now. I happen to think
24:34
that every time somebody gives the weather, they
24:36
should mention some of these things. That's
24:39
not enough to just say 52
24:41
degrees outside. This should be
24:43
included in every weather report from now on. It
24:47
changed the way I do what I do. I
24:49
do what I do, sure. And
24:51
Jinger, you're doing great work in this
24:53
space. Now you're coming to us from a
24:55
farm in North Carolina where the farmers
24:57
are using rock dust to fertilize farms and
24:59
help clean the atmosphere. Can you tell
25:01
us a little bit more about this process?
25:05
Yes, on this Earth Day, I'd say a
25:07
solution that probably makes me the most
25:09
optimistic I have ever felt in covering this
25:11
for the last quarter century or so.
25:13
So what I'm standing next to is very
25:15
basic basalt dust. It comes from a
25:17
waste product that is made at a mine
25:19
nearby. You know, they make asphalt and
25:21
concrete and things. They just had this stuff
25:23
piling up. Then this company, Lithos Carbon,
25:25
comes around. They said, hey, do you have
25:27
any of that rock dust? Because we
25:29
want to take it, put it into a
25:31
spreader and put it over big farm
25:33
fields here in North Carolina. and actually in
25:35
more than 11 states across the nation.
25:37
What that does is takes a process that
25:39
happens in nature pretty naturally. If you
25:41
have like a regular rock, it is wonderful
25:43
at absorbing carbon dioxide out of the
25:45
atmosphere. However, it takes thousands or millions of
25:47
years when you break it down like
25:49
this and you put it all over the
25:51
soil. It takes two to three
25:53
years. And you're seeing drone video, I
25:55
think, of what we did earlier. We spread
25:57
one truckload. That's 20 tons of this
26:00
rock dust. And is the equivalent of taking
26:02
out the emissions of five American homes
26:04
for an entire year. So it's really effective
26:06
and really exciting. That's incredible, Ginger.
26:08
So this week, you also spoke about
26:10
sustainable housing that's made entirely with recycled
26:12
materials. How does this work? And will
26:14
we start to see more of these
26:16
homes in the near future? So
26:20
most people know that construction and
26:22
building is the worst when it comes
26:24
to the carbon footprint in our
26:26
world. It produces the most waste. Definitely
26:28
the biggest emissions compared to even
26:30
aviation or transportation. So we have to
26:32
find other ways of building, you
26:34
know, concrete and steel. For example, they
26:36
have more emissions than most. countries. So
26:39
what we did was we looked at several
26:41
different companies, one of them called Renco, which has
26:43
built these kind of Lego like bricks where
26:45
you can make apartments, homes. You can
26:47
make them really fast. Like they built
26:49
a 96 apartment complex in eight weeks,
26:52
all out of. reused materials. We also
26:54
looked at the University of Maine who
26:56
has made these 3D printed homes. So
26:58
you just make them right on site.
27:00
They can be made within a week.
27:02
They can be really prolific, but also
27:04
pretty inexpensive. And that's the excitement. You
27:06
can also break those things down right
27:08
back into the pellets they came from
27:10
and reuse that again. Wow.
27:13
It's amazing. It's amazing. Well,
27:15
listen. Thanks
27:21
to Genjaze. We hope she'll be
27:23
back soon because we always like when
27:25
she brings us information we don't
27:27
know anything about. So it's fantastic. Thanks
27:30
Genjaze. We'll be right
27:32
back. 11
27:41
generations ago, one of my
27:43
ancestors left Spain for the
27:45
new world and a new
27:47
life. 400 years later, I'm
27:49
back. I'm so excited to
27:51
see how the land and
27:53
its people have created one
27:55
of the world's most exciting
27:57
cuisines. I have an important
27:59
question. Are you hungry? I'm
28:01
hungry. Perfect. Yeah.
28:03
Hey, that was just eating
28:05
along Gloria with a new
28:07
series, Searching for Spain, where
28:10
she's taking you along on
28:12
her journey through Spain's rich
28:14
culture, people, and diverse cuisine.
28:18
Please welcome back the
28:20
more fabulous Eva
28:22
Longoria. How
28:48
are you? Love the dress. Thank you. You look
28:50
good. I wore it for y 'all. Trying to
28:52
bring sun to New York. that. We need it. And
28:55
so I heard that you had the
28:57
big birthday recently. You had the half
28:59
-century mark. 50, yeah. Yeah, yeah. I
29:01
know. It
29:03
was fun. I had a month
29:05
-long party. I heard. And Anna
29:08
Navarro and her constant companion
29:10
Chacha. Yeah, she was there. Were
29:12
there. She was there. You
29:15
said that you're looking forward to the
29:17
next decade. Is there anything in particular?
29:19
No. I'm
29:21
looking forward to a nap. No,
29:25
yes, I'm tired. You're very busy. No,
29:27
but I do like working and I'm... I'm
29:29
blessed for that, but no, you know,
29:31
I feel like the first 50 years of
29:33
your life is about saying yes, especially
29:35
like your 30s and your 20s and your
29:37
30s and your 40s of like, yes,
29:39
I'll do that. Yes, I'll date him. Yes,
29:41
I'll move to Spain. Yes, you know,
29:43
do it all. Yes, say yes to everything.
29:46
Now I'm about no. Yeah,
29:49
everything, everything. They're
29:51
like, do you want to do this? No,
29:53
I really, you
29:55
know, but it is about curating, curating your
29:58
life to things that matter and having
30:00
different. priorities, obviously, I'm a mom
30:02
late in life, and so I
30:04
have a very young, he's six, yeah.
30:06
Yeah, Santi. Yeah, Santi, he's my
30:08
angel, that's my husband. Also
30:10
looks like an angel. My
30:12
husband is an angel. Yeah,
30:14
so just curating your life
30:17
experiences. Well, speaking of curating
30:19
experiences, I was obsessed with searching for
30:21
Mexico, so I'm so thrilled to see you
30:23
in searching for Spain. You're hosting and
30:25
executive producing, and you travel all over, you're
30:27
eating, you're seeing beautiful places. Where are
30:29
some of the places you went and did
30:31
you have a favorite stop along the
30:33
way? Oh my gosh, all
30:35
of them. I love Spain. I live
30:38
part time in Spain, in the south,
30:40
in Marbella. So I know that area
30:42
more, but in the north, my family's
30:44
from Asturias, so I got to visit
30:46
Asturias. I'd never been to Galicia, which
30:48
has, I've always wanted to go because
30:50
there's a Camino de Santiago, which is
30:53
a Catholic pilgrimage that ends in Galicia.
30:55
miles. Yeah, it takes 30 days. It
30:57
starts in the south of France. to
30:59
do the pilgrimage and - They walk?
31:01
Yes, walk. Yes, they walk. They're
31:04
golf carts. You can take a bike, you
31:06
can take a horse, you can do 30
31:08
miles a day. Yeah, I
31:10
forget how many kilometers a day, but
31:12
I've always wanted to do it, so
31:14
I didn't, haven't done it, I will
31:16
do it, but I was at the
31:18
cathedral at the end in Galicia and
31:20
to see the pilgrims arrive, whether it
31:22
was church groups or youth groups or
31:24
backpackers, and they're in tears and just
31:26
like full of face. It's a beautiful,
31:28
beautiful site. So that was one of
31:30
my favorites. This is a beautiful, beautiful
31:32
series. I watched it last night with
31:34
my husband who was born in Madrid
31:36
and whose family's from, my family's from
31:38
Galicia. So I was in love with
31:40
it. And the show, we also get
31:42
a special peek into your home in
31:44
Marbella in Spain. And you
31:46
host this dinner for friends. And you've
31:48
said that one of your favorite things
31:50
to do is cook for your friends
31:52
and fellowship with your friends. What's your
31:54
favorite thing to cook? Actually Mexican food. That's
31:58
fair, that's hard in Spain because they have no
32:00
spicy food. They don't like the chili all. No,
32:02
they do not. No, but I love cooking. It's
32:04
very therapeutic for me and so that's why this
32:06
show is like a perfect match for my personality
32:08
because I love to eat, I love to drink,
32:10
and I love to travel. You
32:12
guys are gonna really be, it's beautiful.
32:16
You're gonna wanna go everywhere we went. You're gonna
32:18
wanna do that. You're gonna feel like you
32:20
went with you. We've been talking
32:22
a lot about the Pope's passing yesterday, and
32:24
you got the opportunity to meet with him with
32:26
your husband a few years ago, but also
32:28
you gotta see him again with your sister. Can
32:30
you tell us about that? Yes, yes, well
32:32
first of all, you guys were talking about how
32:34
he really opened up the church to divorce
32:37
people, and my husband and I are both divorced,
32:39
and so we went to meet the Pope. or
32:41
we were about to get married, and so I said,
32:43
well, you, you know, my husband asked, will you bless us?
32:45
And he said, of course, and he holds our hands
32:47
and then he goes, I go, we're divorced. I
32:50
go like I needed it. Confess
32:53
now. Because I didn't know if
32:55
it was like, you know, for Paul, for him to
32:57
bless us, we're divorced and he just That's like a major
32:59
confession. Usually it's a deal. No,
33:01
I really didn't say, like, we're sleeping
33:03
together. It's
33:06
like, okay, just my husband's like,
33:08
let's not use this moment to confess.
33:10
Let him do the blessing. But
33:12
no, my sister, which Anna was
33:14
there, Anna and I saw him at the White House,
33:17
the Pope, because my sister, who has special needs,
33:19
she's my oldest sister. And I said, who do you
33:21
most want to meet in the world? And I
33:23
thought she was gonna say like, George Clooney, which would
33:25
have been doable. And she said the Pope. That
33:28
was like, oh, that was hard. But you know why she
33:30
said, I said, why do you want to meet the Pope? And
33:32
she said, I want him to heal me. And
33:35
so I said, I gotta make it happen. I gotta
33:37
figure it out. I just wanted her to have that moment.
33:39
That was nice of you. So you
33:41
also have a production company that believes
33:43
in growing a pipeline of future talent
33:45
in the entertainment industry. Good for you.
33:48
Diversity, the inclusion initiatives are being stripped away
33:50
as we saw every day from many
33:52
places in the country right now. So have
33:54
you seen it happening in Hollywood and
33:56
how are you fighting against that with your
33:58
production company? Oh yeah, I mean, it's
34:00
not just the media industry, but it's all
34:02
industries. But I think we have to
34:04
remember why was created and
34:06
it was too... correct historical exclusion.
34:08
That's right. Which is not just
34:10
about being Latino and black, it's
34:12
women, it's disabled, a
34:16
lot of LGBTQ plus, it's a
34:18
lot of marginalized communities that never get
34:20
to tell their stories. So correcting that
34:22
historical exclusion and then also authentic. Why
34:24
do think they're doing that? Why do
34:26
you think they're doing that? Well, I
34:28
don't know because it's bad business.
34:31
It's not just a moral imperative. Like
34:33
I do it because it's morally right.
34:35
I want authentic storytelling. I want the
34:37
people who have lived these stories to
34:39
tell them, but we are creating
34:41
programming for the most diverse audience ever
34:43
in the history of the world. And
34:45
so it's not just a moral imperative,
34:47
it's just good business. And at the
34:49
end of the day, I'm a business
34:52
woman, so why wouldn't you wanna
34:54
create for the growing market, not the
34:56
shrinking market? And also, you know, you
34:58
can say it's going away. We're
35:00
not going anywhere. So
35:02
we're going to keep making the movies we
35:05
want to make and telling the stories. And listen,
35:07
if you want to say it's not happening, we'll
35:09
pat your hand and say, okay. Our
35:14
thanks to
35:16
the fabulous Eva
35:18
Longoria, her
35:20
CNN original series,
35:22
Eva Longoria Searching for
35:24
Spain. We'll premiere on
35:26
Sunday, April 27th. I
35:29
actually got it right. We'll
35:31
be right back. We
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41:53
Rapper Sean Diddy Combs was
41:55
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41:59
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to Bad Rap, The Case Against Diddy,
42:18
a new series from ABC Audio.
42:20
Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts.
42:31
Hey! Joy was on the behind
42:33
the table podcast. We
42:35
want you to have a great day,
42:38
everyone. Take a little time to enjoy
42:40
the view and do not forget, we
42:42
are in this together. Keep making your
42:44
voices heard. Hey,
42:47
I'm Brad Milke. You may know
42:49
me as the host of ABC Audio's
42:51
Daily News Podcast. Start here, but
42:53
I'd like to add aspiring true crime
42:55
expert to my resume. And
42:57
here's how I'm going to make it happen.
42:59
Every week, I'm going to unpack the biggest
43:01
true crime story that everyone is talking about. ABC's
43:04
got some unique access here. So
43:06
I'll talk to the reporters and
43:08
producers who have followed these cases
43:10
for months, sometimes years. We're bringing
43:12
the latest developments and the larger
43:14
context on the true crime stories
43:16
you've been hearing about. Follow the
43:19
crime scene for special access to
43:21
the people who know these stories
43:23
best.
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