Gotcha sorry. [laughter] i wanted to ask you about public confusion, connected with Attorney General barrs release of your report. I will be coding you are in march 27th letter. Sarah, in that letter and at several other times did you convey to the Attorney General that the introductions and executive some summaries accurately i have to say the letter itself speaks for itself. And those were your words and that . Continuing with your letter, you are to the Attorney General that the summary letter the department sent to congress and released to the public late in the afternoon of march 24th did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance of this offices work and conclusions. Is that correct . Again, i rely on the letter itself for its terms. Thank you. What was it about the reports context, nature, substance that the attorneys letter did not capture . I think we captured that in the in the March 27th Responsive letter. This is from the letter. Im directing you to the letter its
then all the basic freedoms to choose what happens with their own body and not have politicians make decisions about you in the doctor s office, whether or not people can have more access to the american promise and economic growth, whether or not people can send their kids to a school where they re getting a quality education and not having the dictionary band in the school like we re seeing in florida. this president has been crystal clear about what is at stake in this election. i don t think anybody shares that message better than joe biden. the clip we played of him talking about the biden economy, to his credit much better than is widely understood or is colloquially understood, we are told that that s the message that needs to be hammered home over and over and over again across the country. but you re talking about democracy, which i agree with you as a super important part of american life. is the democracy message the thing that is most resonant, for example, with black vot
where they get a quality education and not having a dictionary like we are seeing in florida. this president has been crystal clear about what is at stake in this election, and i don t think anybody shares that message better than joe biden. the clip we played of him talking about the biden economy, to his credit much better than is widely understood or is colloquially understood, we are told that that s the message that needs to be hammered home over and over and over again across the country. but you re talking about democracy, which i agree with you as a super important part of american life. is the democracy message the thing that is most resonant, for example, with black voters, young black voters that we know have not been as supportive of president biden in recent months as they were in 2020? this is not an either or proposition. our democracy is the foundation that allows everything else that we need to be possible. and so when we think about the
should be adapted. it s what it does to the person watching, isn t it? it s a reference, perhaps. but, i mean, you know, he knew. he knew absolutely everything, as far as i m concerned, shakespeare, about every condition. and, therefore, that s why the plays have gone on for so long, because so many things mean different things to different people. and as well as that, all the emotions mean different things to people. mm. and he was able to somehow say it in a way that we use today, colloquially. mm. we don t know that we do it so often, i think. the next role that i d like to talk about is another powerful, tragic woman cleopatra in antony and cleopatra. and you played opposite anthony hopkins. idid. ..in a peter hall directed
mmm. and he was able to somehow say it in a way that we use today, colloquially. mmm. we don t know that we do it so often, i think. it s just occurred to me, i ve said the word macbeth several times in your house. that s ok with you, is it? oh, yes. the next role that i d like to talk about is another powerful, tragic woman cleopatra in antony and cleopatra. and you played opposite anthony hopkins. idid. ..in a peter hall directed production at the national theatre in 1987. i ve read that you questioned peter hall s judgement when he cast you as cleopatra. idid. what was your worry? isaid, well, you ll get a lot of laughs. she s meant to be a very, very tall girl, i said. laughs queen of egypt. not quite right.