somost every part of society. it s affecting schools, our government, corporations. cihools,overnmenit s everywhere. it seems inescapable almost now. it seenescapabnow what are theyt to realize that they belong past? wheree past mainstream americans are. last weekend, during a pride event at the white house, for example, that was attended by children. there s a trench activist named rose montoya flaunting her bare on the south lawn of biden s white house and sparking u.s. backlash. 2024 republican presidential candidate tim scott. he said he is, quote, livid and in sense by this whitesidena house, not only for the kids present ate said h the event, bt the message it is sending to our children across t the country. meanwhile, nikki haley also weighed in, reminding people of biden s call to restore honor and decency to the white house before adding, yeah, it s time for joe to go. and governor romne to go ay, des slamming biden over the incident. take a look. i think whe
so what keeps his creativity alive? sir peter blake, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. are you still creating, painting, doing the collage every day? do you still get that urge? i do. i get quite a lot of pain at the moment. i ve got a sore neck, which sometimes begins to hurt and i have to stop, but i work every day. i haven t worked today yet, but i looked at what i m working on. let me take you right back, because i m always interested with artists to figure out what impelled them to create. you had a tough childhood in some ways. you were a war child. yeah. you spent years away from home and family, in environments where there wasn t actually much to play with. it was sometimes quite lonely, and you had to use your imagination. do you think that was important in your development? it probably was, and i ve never really thought about that. it probably was, but at the time it wasn t part of my plan. i mean, i had no intention or thought about being an artist. and the period yo
this building. and you know what? we had the top marginal rates to 28%, the lowest. and that began in the fifties and sixtie and 60ss and seventi, where the temple the world economy in a way that was unimaginableth the w to its lart double digit interest ratesgit n inflation. it gave us the longest at the time period of a period ofte peacetime economic growth and trickle down economics and created 20 million new jobs and a lot of exacerbated that d we re still trying to deal with as it relates to injustic a e you a and back to blame reagan no, i m not blaming reagan for everything. a lot of democratsre do. in fact, i inspire on gun policy to being ronald reagan said ak 47 should not be used for defense. s, in background checks, shot an ak-47. not only ak 47 are different platforms. m-16s. i shotm-16 a gatling gun. a 50 caliber also means, you know, you actually get whatever means i shot a musket. yeah, i stil l trying to get the. but it s amazing, right? i mean, with all he had a zero
i had this idea that, by working the way we were, this crowd who had gathered around this fictitious band of sergeant pepper could be anybody. i mean, literally anybody that one could say a name to could be there. so in doing that, i made a list, jan made a list, robert fraser a the list, and the beatles each made a list. is it true thatjohn lennon wanted adolf hitler to be in the background? as a joke. he never. we did actually make him, and on some of the outtakes, there is this little figure of hitler. the ones that didn t make it were hitler, jesus. mahatma gandhi. it captures something about the late 60ss, doesn t it? that image is sort of surreal, is full of playfulness,
would you do this for practically nothing? this single mother does. but why? chicks, inc. forget the music, forget the makeup. this may be the smartest band in the history of rock n roll. can you put a dollar sign on the kiss empire. $500 million, $750 million. a billion dollars. the genius of kiss, inc. revealing investigations. fascinating characters. stories with impact. this is cnn presents with your host tonight soledad o brien and son jay gupta. good evening. we begin with a murder in mississippi. ray brutal killing allegedly fueled by race and rage. we broking this shocking story right here on cnn. a young white teenager accused of killing a black man just because of the color of his skin. over our four-month investigation we found more disturbing details uncovering how the teenager and some of his friends had this history of violence and racist incidents. and raising questions whether authorities turned a blind eye. drew griffin has been digging into