you know, i have the funny feeling, i don t know when i remember watching her rise to power. i remember watching her at the regency hotel back in 91 when she and bill clinton ferris presented themselves in new york. it was a freebie, breakfast, y could go. it wasn t about money or anything. i went there and i thought, hmm, she gave the first speech, bill gave the second. they were running as a duo, remember, two for the price of one. she had an ambition somewhere in her head that she was going to rise up, maybe not to the presidency, maybe all of this just came to her, but she was never somebodyho went out there and loved to shake hands, you know, she wasn t bill. bill was easy to take, because he had no moral pretensions. he liked hamburgers and women, and that was it. oh, my goodness! sorry. sorry! reporter: he s gregarious. he loved being the last guy to leave the party. yes. but i actually feel sorry for her. she had trouble connecting. and where this was most pronou
regency hotel in 91 when she and bill clinton presented themselves in new york. it was free. it was breakfast. you could go. it wasn t about money. i went there and i thought, she gave the first speech, bill gave the second. she was they were running two for the price of one. she had an ambition that she was going to rise up, maybe not to presidency, but maybe all this came to her. but she was never somebody that went out there and loved to shake hands and she wasn t bill. bill was like bill was easy to take because he had no moral pretensions. he liked hamburgers and women and that was it. my goodness. i m sorry. that was he liked people. he is gregarious. the last guy to leave the party. but i feel sorry for her. she had trouble connecting. where this was most pronounced is when president obama would be on stage with her. you would see just people looked like groupies who were going they would do anything for him. it s hard. how many great politicians
feeling, i don t know when i remember watching her rise to power. i remember watching her at the regency hotel back in 91 when she and bill clinton ferris presented themselves in new york. it was a freebie, breakfast, you could go. it wasn t about money or anything. i went there and i thought, hmm, she gave the first speech, bill gave the second. they were running as a duo, remember, two for the price of one. she had an ambition somewhere in her head that she was going to rise up, maybe not to the presidency, maybe all of this just came to her, but she was never somebody who went out there and loved to shake hands, you know, she wasn t bill. bill was easy to take, because he had no moral pretensions. he liked hamburgers and women, and that was it. oh, my goodness! sorry. sorry! reporter: he s gregarious. he loved being the last guy to leave the party. yes. but i actually feel sorry for her. she had trouble connecting. and where this was most pronounced is when the presiden
four more people are facing charges for their roles in the flint water crisis. the new round of criminal charges announced by the michigan attorney general joined at a press conference by a special prosecutor and investigators. let s talk about those new charges. cnn correspondent sara gannon now joins me. this is a big deal because these are two of the highest level officials to be charged so far in this water crisis. two emergency managers. they were essentially in charge of the city of flint and all of the decision making while the city was in financial crisis. they reported directly to the governor, to governor rick schneider and that s why this is so important. now the charges are false pretensions and conspiracy. what they essentially did what we re learning for the first time today, is they misled the michigan department of treasury into getting bonds for a city that was in debt, $13 million in debt, and didn t have a credit rating. they misled the state to get money to build
our dishwasher didn t show up today. you are our new dishwasher. and i said, oh, really. and the next day i put on the apron and didn t take it off for 30 years. i d wake up, all of us go to the beach, hang out on the beach until like 2:00, 3:00. yeah, it was fun. roll into work. work all night. drinking, getting high, drilling out food. you have all the food you wanted, all the liquor you wanted. all the sex you wanted. all the sex you wanted. it was true, it was fun. we had a good time. and yet you still were an essential part of the economy. it was a lot of fun, believe me, i remember. the flagship, it s where my cooking career started. where i started washing dishes, where i started have pretensions of culinary grandeur. it was a good gig for anybody. who else got to live like that during that time? you had to be in a band, here we were, we were dishwashers. yeah, you get older and more sense and you realize that like, you know, you got to like pace yourself a l