Attorney general william barr is under fire after a top prosecutor is pushed out. How the president is involved, and why congress is demanding an explanation. And driven by hate. A noose is found in the garage of Bubba Wallace. Nascars only fulltime black driver. Well show you how the sport is responding. First, heres todays eye opener. Its your world in 90 seconds. How do you think history will remember donald trump . I hope it will remember him as a oneterm president. We can get over one term. White house officials are pushing back against john bolton. The president has called bolton a, quote, whacko. And the white house claimed boltons new book is full of lies. I predict this. Hell not only not get the profits from that book but he risks a jail sentence. Democrats demanding probes into the firing of a federal prosecutor investigating peee i close to the president. He was trying to follow the law and that cost him his job. Florida is becoming a hot spot for coronavirus. New numbers r
Announcer its the late show with Stephen Colbert tonight super news day plus, stephen welcomes anthony mackie. And Susan Glasser. With a special appearance by David Alan Grier. Featuring jon batiste and stay human. And now, live on tape from the ed sullivan theater in new york city, its Stephen Colbert cheers and applause stephen hey how you doing, friendo . cheers and applause stephen hey, everybody. Hows it going . Stephen Stephen Stephen stephen good to see you. Very nice. Happy tuesday. Happy tuesday. Whoa thats nice. cheers and applause thank you very much. Thank you up there. Thank you down there. Welcome. Welcome, one and all, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome. Welcome, my friends, to the late show. I am your host, Stephen Colbert. cheers and applause tonight jon super tuesday stephen you know, you know, people are excited because tonight is the night its super tuesday, the biggest haul the biggest haul of the primary season, where tonight the lions share of the ga someone, i assume
The tv this weekend and every weekend on cspan2. Good evening everyone. Thank you for being here with us and im certain this will be a riveting conversation and easier to say that word than it is to spell it because i couldnt figure out to spell it. And president of the National Museum i welcome you here this evening for this book talk on ms. Alice Marie Johnsons book. I hope you had an opportunity to get it and if not, i believe we are selling it and she will be doing a book signing a couple things i wanted to mention for i introduce to you [inaudible] who will introduce ms. Johnson. You know, our hope here at the museum is that each time you come here you learn something. That will educate and inform and hopefully we are encouraging you to act in some way. I will not tell you what to do but we want to encourage you to do something. Every one of us has enough the exact same thing but all the people that we chronicle on the walls of the National Civil Rights Museum have and none of tho
Rights museum and with this book talk and to have an opportunity and she will be doing a book signing. And those that will introduce ms. Johnsonyo so each time you come here you learn something. That we are educating and informing and encouraging them to act in some way. Want to encourage you to do something every one of us has the exact same thing about we chronicle on the wall of the National Civil Rights Museum none of them had anything within themselves the differences they activated it. That you will have learned something. G that you will be encouraged to act. Last year 2018 the assassination of doctor king was commemorated in the title of the final book and to ask the question where do we go from here . With poverty and Shelby County in memphis over the last 50 years. And then to do the research and one of the elements focusing on incarceration. Know where do we hear doctor king talk about incarceration because it wasnt an issue. There was purity between white and black incarcer
Easier to say that word other than to spell it i cannot figure how to spell it but im president of the National Civil Rights Museum and i welcome you here this evening for this book talk on miss johnsons book and i hope you have had an opportunity to get it and i believe we are selling it and she will be doing a book signing. A couple of things to mention before i introduce to you who will actually introduce miss johnson, our hope here at the museum is each time you come here you learn something that we are educating and informing and hopefully encouraging you to act in some way. We dont want to tell you what to do but to encourage you. Every one of us have been asked the exact same thing of all the people that we chronicle on the National Civil Rights Museum. They never had anything different than what we have from ourselves. The differences they activate it so when you leave here this evening you will have learned something or have new information last year 2018 we commemorated their