loss of their monarch, while here in the u.s., a day to commemorate a wound still raw after two plus decades. 21 years to be exact. in great britain, the body of the queen traveling from her beloved home in balmoral or to edinburgh, scotland. where the public will have their first chance to pay respects. [applause] and king charles will travel to scotland tomorrow, part of a weeklong visit to the countries of great britain ahead of the queen s funeral. here in the united states, remembrances of a very different kind. 21 years after 9/11. the somber eagerly ceremony at ground zero, where nearly 3000 people were killed. the president, marking the day at the pentagon while the first lady traveled to shanksville, pennsylvania. the president promising to never forget. 21 years ago, 21 years and we still kept our promise. never forget. we will keep the memory of all those precious lives, stolen from us. i know, for all of those of you who have lost someone, 21 years has both
first later at westminster abby. i want to head now to matt who s in london for us. and covering the lead up to september 19th. matt, talk to us. we know, as i mentioned, the queen s coffin arrived in edinburgh today. take us through the six hour journey and what we can expect in the days leading up to her funeral. it really was quite emotional, yasmin. it lasted for six hours and princess and was there the entire. time you saw as the people of scotland and tourists and others who are gathered around the root of their coffin, it was traversing through the scottish highlands, we had a glimpse of some of the fantastic country sides up there. it did not go direct from balmoral to edinburgh. it went up to inverness, the highest was from the most northern of all of the cities in scotland. the only city in the scottish highlands. and then attacked south to where it went to autumn barrow, to hollywood house, that is the only real state residents. of course, the queen died in balmo
september 10th i am velshi, and we have people standing by in london. a city that thousands of people have travel to in the past thousand hours to pay respect to queen elizabeth the second. britain s longest serving monarch who died at age 96 on thursday. it is the literal end of the narrow. as a young woman, she made the choice to serve her whole life, whether it be long or short. and quote. she was true to her words as she saved british people s queen for several years, far longer than any other monarch in british history. shorter only than the rain of louis the 14th in the history of all european monarchy. 15 prime ministers have assumed their role during her reign. she met 14 american presidents and five popes in her lifetime, and far more often than not she was the only woman in the most powerful woman in any room into what she stepped foot. much has changed over the past seven decades. the world has undergone a radical transformation that has seen the industrial age evo
estranged from the family. it was a very public sign that they are together in mourning. this is coming as we are learning for the first time the plans for the funeral for the queen. a state funeral at westminster abbey, and week from monday with the position to london afterwards. a service backup when they will mark the end of this morning period in london. today charles officially proclaimed us king, and a day filled with the kind of ceremony you would expect for a moment like this. prince charles, philip and george is now by the death of our late sovereign of happy memory, become our only, lawful and rightful each law, charles the third. by the grace of, god of the united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland. and if this other realms and territories came ahead of the commonwealth. god praised the king. three cheers for his majesty, the king. hip, hurray. hip! hip! hooray! hip! hip! hooray! all right the new king hosting top of uk officials at buckingham pala
pick the one you want, i recommend starting with the first one, but if you want to treat yourself to the one that we just published today. i m telling you, norma s a voice is a thing of wild and furious wonder. that will keep you awake for days. new episode today, another episode will come out next monday. you can get it where you get your podcasts. all right, that does it for tonight, i ll see you again soon. now it s time for the last word with lawrence o donnell. now it s i m just finishing ms on how you listen to a podcast. so, i m feeling, i can t believe it, i can t believe i m sitting here at 10 pm on a monday and i haven t listened to episode four. one and two, i listened to them immediately when they came out early that monday morning. same thing with episode three. today, i guess i was locked in john ferrell s new news making book about ten kennedy which we are going to discuss at the end of the hour. a lot of important news in that book. somehow, that held me away