podcast about grief all there is now available, you can point the carrot q r code on the screen right now, link will appear on your phone. you can click down on. it in the latest episode i talk with a rare park mull woman, known as mama shoe in the hardest right area. to every four kids have been killed. three years ago 23 old son, was working a security guard when he shot to death. and 2007 her two-year-old son, was killed in a hit and run. what s incredible about mama shoe, she is turned her loss into love, and she says her grief into gloria. she dedicated our life to transforming a rundown streak into vibrant communing, called apple on village. she was one of cnn s top ten heroes of 2023. you will find the episode and others on grief and loss on apple podcasts, spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. thanks so much, i hope you enjoy. the news continues, the source with kaitlan collins starts now. tonight straight into the source, donald trump takes the stand ag
beginning of the recorded music era for $5. it was an i irresistible proposition. the new original series the 2010s premiers tomorrow might here on cnn. good morning, everyone. welcome to cnn this morning. it is saturday, may 13th. i m amara walker. and i m victor black well. so pasta, the 6:00 hour we have been debating pasta. you love it. can can you believe that? i could take it or leave it really. the reason is because it s just a vehicle for the stuff that i think taste best. could eat the sauce with a spoon. it s the texture for me. and i love certain textures of pastas. it has to be perfect. if it s home made, i can eat it with no sauce. so your theory about being a vehicle for sauce is so wrong. we could split a dish. i ll take the sauce. you take the pasta. here s what we re watch ing for you this morning. i have to admit it s nice to be able to breathe one more time, but wit can t let our guard down. we still know it s coming. cities among the
says she was the target of a plot to kill jewish elected officials in michigan. dana nessel says the fbi informed her she was the target, one of the targets of a heavily armed man who made threats on social media for more on this breaking news we want to bring in cnn s chief law enforcement and intelligence officer john miller. there is a lot of jewish students, apparently this university he used to work. what are the questions that this raises for you right off the bat? well, the questions and answers, this is part of this growing antisemitism that is bridging from speech into violence into discussions of violence and the kind of extremism, domestic violence extremism accelerationism to topple the government has become a salad bar of these issues where you can pick, you know, the qanon conspiracy theories, add in antisemitism, you can add in anti-government. in this kiss, jack carpenter, who is charged in this case, starts off as an anti-vaxxer which gets him fired from th
why do the doj have a winning argument? well it came down to who has the greater interest, on one hand doj has a really strong interest in getting access to these documents right away, because they need to resume their criminal investigation, and the federal government in general needs to look at these documents and decide if people are in danger, spies, intelligence assets, that type of thing. on the flipside, the court says donald trump has no possesses or interest in these records. what this means though, that these classified records are now doj right, now the alternative would have been the have to run through the special master first. if they were privileged, they would end up right back in doj hands anyways. so doj now has the more quickly. hold on to, this don t let me grab. i thought what you are, saying don t, mcgraw i thought this was going to be happening with those documents. that everyone was going to have a chance to look at them, right, which was obvio
is beautiful. but calabria means something more to me. it s my ancestral homeland. and i want to get to know the region that my family left behind all those years ago. is this jogging your memory at all? that s a long time ago. i m stanley tucci. i m italian on both sides, and i m traveling across italy to discover how the food in each of this country s 20 regions is as unique as the people and their past. caught between a rock and the sea, the calabrese are notoriously tough. but this is a place where southern hospitality is a way of life. oh, my gosh, look at the size of it. you should open a restaurant. and in this poor region. all right. every meal is a celebration. oh, wow. there s like a million different flavors in there. calabria sits in the toe of the boot of italy, connected to basilicata in the north and separated from sicily in the south only by the narrow strait of messina. it s a region of rugged landscapes, dramatic mountain ranges, and