Transcripts For CNNW Reliable Sources 20191103 : comparemela

Transcripts For CNNW Reliable Sources 20191103



we recently highlighted the lasting scars of people that worked at ground zero. we want to get the word out about those who covered 9/11 that are eligible for health insurance. will right wing media protect trump from being convicted and removed from office? right now evidence is mounting that trump abused power and possibly broke the law. but trump just keeps on going. he keeps on attacking the process and the whistleblower and other witnesses, perhaps on stru -- obstructing justice in realtime. he keeps saying the whistleblower got it so wrong. of course, the damning information from the whistleblower keeps getting corroborated and proven that it's true. people know who the whistleblower is but don't want to reveal the person. maybe some beat reporters think they know who the person is, but it's far from common knowledge. i have no idea who the whistleblower is, neither do my colleagues. so this is what the president is doing now. he wants the whistleblower to be outed, he wants the hoax ended, even though the whistleblower is protected by law. outrageous conduct by the president, but hannity and others on fox news seem to be a-okay with all of it, and their opinions are crucial in all of this. they are working to defend the president every step of the way. so does right wing media stand between trump and removal from office? many political pros think so. here's former bush aide gershwin saying no matter what this reveals, fox can prove a narrative to which partisans can claim. look at this, laura ingraham telling them to stick with potus or else. >> now is the time for republicans to stand together and defend the leader of their party against these smears. there is no gop in 2020 without trump. i hope senator mcconnell and senate leadership is listening. >> pretty explicit right there. judge empiro is also getting in on the scam, telling the gop that trump is not being stood up enough. his fox friends always say des s are worse. the dems rigged impeachment rules, they're pushing a fantasy, they're obsessed with impeachment, radical liberal policies hurting america. this is the message every single day on these shows. this is how they're talking every day. fox plus talk radio. that firewall right now is holding for president trump. i don't think we should ur underestimate the power of that right wing narrative. i'm going to bring in one of the challengers, congressman joe walsh. you've been calling this out saying the alternative reality is something americans need to understand. >> hey, brian, good to be with you. this is an absolute shame, and i think you have to call it out for what it is. the americans who listen to fox news and conservative talk radio are being lied to and manipulated every day when it comes to impeachment. it's not a surprise. they were lied to and manipulated every day with the russia investigation, really with all things trump, and it's dangerous. look, no matter where you stand on impeachment, and i believe this president deserves to be impeached, the vast majority of the american people understand that when it comes to ukraine, he did something wrong. but those people who listen to the opinion shows on fox and those people who listen to my former world conservative talk radio, they have no clue because they're being told every day, he's done nothing wrong. they're being told every day, brian, it's the deep state and it's hillary. they're being bombarded by that every day. that's so dangerous. >> so you're saying this is a problem. you're saying it used to be part of the problem. what changes this calculus? does anything change this? >> look, most of the people in the conservative media are not going to change. you've got people like hannity and ceb gorka, they've got their nose so far up the president's butt, they're not going to change. they'll do anything he tells them to do. i got pressure every day from my syndicator. you have to speak well about trump. don't criticize trump. if you have a conservative talk radio show these days, you're told, don't criticize the president. and, brian, it's like a lot of my former republican colleagues in congress. privately you know, like i know, they doechbt like trump. they can't stand trump. but they're afraid to say that publicly because they're afraid of trump's voters. most of these conservative talk radio hosts, they want to keep their listeners, they want to keep their shows so they lie to them, they lie to their listeners and they keep feeding them what they want to hear. >> but how, if the fox firewall is holding, if the right wing radio talk firewall is holding, how do you get your message out what i would call the long-range meditation. are you booked on fox these days, joe? >> no, i don't get booked on fox, but fox stopped booking me a year or two years ago when i began criticizing the presiden., well before i was a candidate for president, fox told me, we don't want anybody -- brian, i'm a conservative. they said, we don't want anybody on fox news that criticizes the president. i look at the polls and we see every day that even more and more republicans understand that the president did something wrong. the "washington post," brian, they had a poll out just this past week, donald trump's approval rating is down to 74%. that's a 17-point drop among republicans. >> other polls have it a little higher, but let me show the brand new "wall street journal" poll because i was really struck by these findings. trump's approval rating, 45% overall in this approval rating. look at strong approve versus somewhat approve. 31% strongly approve and 14% just somewhat approve. joe, that tells me his base is actually three out of ten americans. it's not actually four out of five in the country. is that your conclusion as well? >> it's what all these fox shows tell you it is. it's about 30% of the american people who will support the president if he shoots someone in new york city. and that's all trump talks to, and brian, that's all his sycophants in conservative media talk to now. it's a shrinking pool of listeners. look, i know it's an uphill fight taking the president on, but more and more republicans out there, especially the republicans who are trying to go elsewhere besides conservative talk and fox news, they're tired of this president and his lies increasingly every day. >> let me put that poll back up briefly, because the other striking finding is that of the 53% who disapprove of the president, almost everybody strongly disapproves. look at that. the intensity of the polarization continues to get worse and worse. joe, thank you so much for being here. great to see you. my panel is standing by to react to what the former congressman said. good for jack dorsey, good for twitter. mark zuckerberg and facebook now under scrutiny when it comes to allowing lies in political ads. connections. patterns. you can see what others can't. ♪ you wanna see something thatamazing?ing. go to hilton instead of a travel site and you'll experience a whole new range of emotions like... the relaxing feeling of knowing you're getting the best price. these'll work. the utter delight of free wi-fi... . oh man this is the best part. isn't that you? 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maybe you could free zoltar? thanks, lady. taxi! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ i was on the fence about changing from a manual to an electric toothbrush. but my hygienist said going electric could lead to way cleaner teeth. she said, get the one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's gentle rounded brush head removes more plaque along the gum line. for cleaner teeth and healthier gums. and unlike sonicare, oral-b is the first electric toothbrush brand accepted by the ada for its effectiveness and safety. what an amazing clean! i'll only use an oral-b! oral-b. brush like a pro. twitter will ban political ads, jack dorsey announces. facebook, however, says they will decide what runs and what doesn't run. are they making it easier to know what is true, or are they making it harder to know what is true? because president trump's campaign is continuing to use facebook to spread misinformation this their political ads. of course, they're not the only campaign doing so, but because these ads are so intensely targeted, so personalized, they're able to contribute to the polarization and radicalization in this country, and that's why i'm concerned about this issue. let me bring in my panel and see what they say about this issue vovrling political ards. mills is a political commentator, colby hall is the founding editor of "meteorite." and we have a national contributo contributor. are they able to continue spreading lies? >> they're wrong. it's clear that mark zuckerberg and the gang care more about profit than they do about principal. this is not about free speech or it's not his job of getting in the way of people saying what they want to say and having their own point of view. every day they are functioning more and more like an actual media con glom raglomerate. >> and allowing them to tell lies about propaganda, et cetera, i think we need to hold facebook accountable because they absolutely should not be putting out all this information because it is screwing up the public discourse. they know it, we know it. we watched it happen in 2016 and they don't really seem to care because they're making more money. >> do you agree, do you think they don't care? >> think they can admit that the day-to-day market that's showing political ads, that's a slippery slope and would lose money. twitter doesn't make that much money from political ads. they have this deep dive demographic data, so it was an easier decision for jack dorsey to make. if mark zuckerberg says they can run political ads, it undermines the core business model and that's what we're seeing here. >> they have said they don't make a lot of money from political ads, but i think it needs to be viewed in a broader context. if they are saying we need to show politics and everything else, we know they have done so with authoritarian regimes like pakistan and turkey who have asked them to take down information. they have some of these tools. they have quoted themselves in free speech arguments, mark zuckerberg said facebook began to protest the iraq war. i was not there, i don't think that's true. it's a justification not just about the political ads but every ad that's on there. this is sort of a proxy war about facebook's power. it's deeply concentrated power because a lot of the misinformation is not in the paid ads, it's in the organic posts. it's the same with twitter, we talk about it all the time, it's on president trump's twitter feed all the time. what are they to do about the organic information? the answer is facebook is too powerful? at least news networks have greater competition. >> there is misinformation and smears being spread on tv as well. that brings me to sean duffey who was on the air to denigrate one of the figures to corroborate the account. i wonder what you make of this debate because some have called out duffy screaming bigotry. is it appropriate for duffy to be on our air? >> first of all, i want to commend all the cnn anchors who held him accountable and said, wait a minute, you're a liar. this is absolutely not true, and you should not come on this platform as a way to make donald trump lover y you even more. this is an interesting time in the media. those of us who are fact-based and credible, we can call each other out. that's why we have so much problem with facebook right now because they're kind of this big titan in the room that's not really creating space for real discourse because they're allowing this propaganda to ply. >> you said it was great. >> at least there was enough room at this network to be some real discourse where enough of us and enough of the anchors could actually push back and let people know this was actually false information that was coming out of this guy's mouth. >> colby, i feel like you had a media take this week. your article was entitled, it's not just good television, it's good for the national discourse. explain. >> 40% of americans, 16 million people-plus voted for president trump. there are a lot of debunked conspiracy theories and falsehoods that are out there, some of which are being promoted by sean duffy. i agree with mark zuckerberg's position that he took with you about the cnn thing saying it's better to have a discourse and a dialogue with someone. john berman has done a great job on "new day" of pushing back on that. >> i think that's what's important, whether there's pushback or not. >> this conspiracy theory is like a virus. do you want to ignore that and let it metastasize or engage it with physical therapy. what you see on the network is a dialogue of those two sides. >> irin? >> i'm happy there is a ndiadi e dialogue, i'm happy there is fact checking, but when you talk to conspiracy theories, it helps to legitimize them when you talk about them on the air. i often talk to people who have views totally not based in fact, and i have to figure out how to show them. i don't think you can pay them and give them a title because there are journalists here every day who are trying to make sense of what is real and not real. to give someone that title to have debunked conspiracy theories and spout these ads is wrong. >> do you think these are people on the right? >> i think no matter where it is found, we need to have rig or, and i just think giving people a title and a paycheck legitimizes them to their point of view. >> i don't want to create these false dichotomies, right? the truth is on the left it is not a core strategy of the democratic party or progressives or the left to create mayhem, to literally use hate, to use vile bigotry, to undermine our democracy in order to win and have power. and i think that is fundamentally a strategy of conservatives, fundamentally a strategy of the right and we're literally talking about good and evil. >> let's go back to the very beginning of the program, colby. will right wing media protect trump from conviction in the senate? >> i'm reminded of howard baker. he was a senator in tennessee in 1973 who was the first republican who sort of turned on richard nixon that led to his resignation. i read a column a year ago that said don't look to the gop senators to do the same, it's the thought leaders at fox news that will be the first to turn. i don't think that's going to happen. i think that's too strong a barrier, and if someone in right wing media, they're afraid to lose their audience, and if they were to turn on president trump, they would not just lose their audience but they would become ostracized and become a pa eriah. we shouldn't expect right wing media to turn on president trump any time soon. >> let me get one line from you before we take a break. >> i think the senators who are going to be for this impeachment is appealing to a swath of the country who is older, wider and more rural. if we had a popular vote, hillary clinton would be president, democrats would have the senate. democrats won the house in part because of numbers but we have to view the fox news echo chamber that the electorate does not represent america. >> that electorate republicans are going after are only about 35% of the population. they are a relatively small minority and i think it's really important we're reminded of that. the majority of the people think trump is crazy, the majority is moving toward impeachment. we need to move to the majority and stop pandering to this 31%. thank you all for being here. that story i mentioned at the top that i hope you're listening to, the two journalists who responded to their role in 2001. 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>> longer than that. >> what was the news yesterday? >> the news was my prostate is complete and my eligibility is confirmed. it took about a year and a half for the process to work out with the help of michael's firm, and, you know, it's a relief knowing that it's finished. >> thinking about that day, bruce, did you think, as you were walking through the dust cloud, that you might be in danger? >> i had no idea. as a journalist, the main motive is just to get the story, get those pictures, never thinking years later you're going to end up dying from it. >> what is your current diagnosis? >> it's not good but i am very grateful for the life i've had. >> when you think back to that day, you don't think at all about the feeling that, you know, you're going to be assigned by a boss to go there -- it was all instinct, right? >> i was never assigned. i always kept a hot video camera in my apartment. i just started walking down 7th avenue, knowing everybody had the money shot of the building, but i wanted to get the reactions of the people who were walking away. >> what's the status of your claim? >> i have reached the end of the line, and i'll be soon getting that award. but it's not about the money right now. i just want everybody to know they could still make those claims even years later and they could still be helped by the victims' compensation fund. >> and brian, it's not just the victims' compensation fund. thank god they got that passed. it's a sad indictment that you need a celebrity to get anything done in washington these days, but congress also passed the world trade center health program, and that's why i'm imploring everybody, the 25,000 residents, the 300,000 office workers and the 50,000 students and teachers who were exposed to those toxins, sign up now while your witnesses are still around, because you're going to have to prove with two witnesses that you were exposed to that dust, that you were working downtown or living downtown, and as the years go on, it's going to be harder and harder to find those witnesses. so there is so much information out there. i know we don't have a lot of time, but if your viewers go to 9 911victimfund.com. they'll learn a lot more about how to sign up for the free nationwide health program. >> they should sign up -- excuse me -- even if they don't have a 9/11-related illness right now, but if they were in the area, they should sign up. >> proactively. vinnie, do you think there is sometimes a stigma about, other than the policemen and firefighters who were there, feeling like they weren't that deserving? i can see where reporters, a cynical bunch, are resisting. >> the news crews are considered responders, but we weren't there to save lives. what we did do that day, there was a lot of panic and fear, and we were able to show that there were no more attacks, and i think it helped the public understand that, you know, things were calming down. also, i'm proud of the fact that we documented what the police and the firemen and the iron workers all did that day and the weeks after. >> at the very beginning, you're absolutely right, there was this feeling that i don't want to take mona way from the responders, like the first firefighters and cops. but thanks to congress permanently extending the victim compensation fund, you're not taking mona way from anyone. you're not taking health care funds away from anyone. again, everybody should sign up now. >> i want to thank all three of you for being here. i'm grateful. let's put back on screen about how people can get information about the victims' compensation fund and the health program. thank you. a quick break from "reliable sources" and back to politics news. sometimes how the littlest lies, the littlest deflections can tell you the most about what's going on. ♪ yeah that's all me. ♪ nothing and me go hand in hand ♪ ♪ nothing on my skin ♪ that's my new plan. ♪ nothing is everything. keep your skin clearer with skyrizi. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. of those, nearly 9 out of 10 sustained it through 1 year. and skyrizi is 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. ♪ i see nothing in a different way ♪ ♪ and it's my moment so i just gotta say ♪ ♪ nothing is everything skyrizi may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. before treatment your doctor should check you for infections and tuberculosis. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms such as fevers, sweats, chills, muscle aches or coughs, or if you plan to or recently received a vaccine. ♪ nothing is everything ask your dermatologist about skyrizi. ♪ ithere's my career...'s more to me than hiv. my cause... and creating my dream home. i'm a work in progress. so much goes into who i am. hiv medicine is one part of it. prescription dovato is for adults who are starting hiv-1 treatment and who aren't resistant to either of the medicines dolutegravir or lamivudine. dovato has 2 medicines in 1 pill to help you reach and then stay undetectable. so your hiv can be controlled with fewer medicines while taking dovato. you can take dovato anytime of day with food or without. don't take dovato if you're allergic to any of its ingredients or if you take dofetilide. if you have hepatitis b, it can change during treatment with dovato and become harder to treat. your hepatitis b may get worse or become life-threatening if you stop taking dovato. so do not stop dovato without talking to your doctor. serious side effects can occur, including allergic reactions, liver problems, and liver failure. life-threatening side effects include lactic acid buildup and severe liver problems. if you have a rash and other symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop taking dovato and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have kidney or liver problems, including hepatitis b or c. don't use dovato if you plan to become pregnant or during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy since one of its ingredients may harm your unborn baby. your doctor should do a pregnancy test before starting dovato. use effective birth control while taking dovato. the most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, nausea, trouble sleeping, and tiredness. so much goes into who i am and hope to be. ask your doctor if starting hiv treatment with dovato is right for you. i am sorry to say president trump's lying is spiraling out of control. look no further than friday, his rally in mississippi. dan dale found lies on unemployment to president obama to cnn. there's this thing trump does at rallies where he complains that the cameras in the back suddenly turn off when he starts criticizing the media. he said this again on friday, daniel, and it was a lie again, right? >> it was a lie again. we had a photojournalist on scene who never stopped recording, and even if he does stop recording, there is no camera that goes on and off, he has it permanently set to off. so these are reporters telling them in this very room something is happening when it's not. i think this is egregious lying, and not just because i now work for cnn. >> it's significant detail and i was glad you highlighted it this weekend. when we know for a fact that trump is lying to his crowd about cnn turning off a live feed of his rally, if we know that, and we do, doesn't that make us doubt everything else he's saying, or rather, shouldn't that make us doubt everything else he's saying? >> yeah, i think he's given us reason to doubt literally everything he's saying. i think one of the things that distinguishes trump as a liar is he lies about even the most trivial stuff, the most obvious stuff. it's not just the typical political lying to defend one against a scandal. he is proactively lying about stuff all the time. >> this brings us to last weekend, because the president claimed repeatedly that this dead terrorist was whimpering and crying right before he blew himself up. the "new york times" looked into sources who have no idea what the president is talking about, and we've heard attorneys on the record saying they can't confirm any whimpering, any crying. it does seem the president made up these details about what was an excellent day for the united states military, and yet trump took it too far. he made up these details about a terrorist whimpering and crying. how do you handle this when you can't definitively prove that he's making it up, but he's lost the benefit of the doubt on these issues? >> so i still try to give trump maximal benefit of the doubt even after thousands of lies and other false claims. so i don't think at this point i'm going to include that on my weekly list of false claims, because there is still some tiny possibility, even if it seems highly unlikely, that he is not making this up. so i think what we do in these cases where it's not sure is we provide the context, we provide the quote if we need to, and then we say the commander of central commander, the secretary of defense and other officials said they cannot confirm these details. give readers the context and help them understand, at least. >> present them all in that way. daniel, do you think this is measurably a worsening that's happening? are there a greater amount of lies now than a year ago? >> a year ago was actually his peak because it was the midterm campaign period. as i said to you earlier, there seemed to be a deliberate strategy of dishonesty during the runup to that 2018 vote. he is being more frequently dishonest in this period than he was elsewhere last year. and elsewhere last year was also more dishonest than he was in 2017. so aside from that midterm spike, there has been a general increase between 2017, 2018 and now 2019. >> daniel, thank you very much. thank you for doing this for us. thanks for the fact checking. one of the reasons why there is so much fact check is because of the impeachment inquiry right now. cnn is doing sunday night specials in the next few weeks covering what will happen on the impeachment inquiry in the next few weeks. we'll take a quick break from "reliable sources" and then, another way of reviewing the president and his comments on twitter. we have crunched the numbers of the misspellings of the president of the united states. see the data, right after this. you mean this one? 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(all muppets) yup. ♪ we are farmers. ♪ bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum they're america's bpursuing life-changing cures. in a country that fosters innovation here, they find breakthroughs... like a way to fight cancer by arming a patient's own t-cells... because it's not just about the next breakthrough... it's all the ones after that. the amount of student loan debt i have, i'm embarrassed to even say. we just decided we didn't want debt any longer. ♪ i didn't realize how easy investing could be. i'm picking companies that i believe in. ♪ i think sofi money is amazing. ♪ thank you sofi. sofi thank you, we love you. ♪ everybody makes spelling mistakes. i do, everybody does. but on twitter, donald trump makes a lot more of them than most people. just this week he misspelled republican and unfair, but those are hardly all the examples. he has called showbiz shoebiz, there's hamberders, marine core and even misspelling his wife melania's name. >> i think you have some typos on your shirt. >> no. this was taken verbatim from one of your tweets, therefore, it's correct. >> that's the thing, death by tweet. i know english teachers are horrified by the president's poor form. other people are embarrass bid -- embarrassed by it, too. fact base is this excellent website ha ththat has every sin word the president says. it looks at all his tweets for data typos and screw-ups. they only counted true misspellings and incorrect homophone word phrases. trump makes at least 188 spelling errors on twitter. what do we compare this to? let's take a look at trump's family members. let's take a look at the 2020 democratic candidates as well and see how trump compares. this says it all. someone like andrew yang, 14 mistakes. bernie sanders, three misspellings. obama, zero. this is during the time trump took office. donald trump tweets a lot, so 90 mistakes for donald trump jr. president trump is really the odd man out on this with constant misspellings on his feed. it hasn't always been this way. in 2015, only 18 misspellings. the thing he gets wrong most often is councsel, as in specia counsel. capitol hill he gets wrong a lot. there are a lot of these absurd errors that happen all the time. trump often misuses the words it's and its. who can forget covfefe and all of those. everybody makes mistakes. trump started tweeting in 2009, obama started tweeting in 2012. if you compare their errors since joining twitter, trump has made 358 of those spelling mistakes, those errors. barack obama, four. we could all use a proofreader, right? i think president trump could use two or three proofreaders. here to put it all in perspective for us, let's talk to the man who helped us do this research at fact base. his name is bill fishel and he joins me from d.c. it took you a lot of hours for this and we're grateful for it. what's the lesson learned? >> turn on auto correct. most of the errors we found, what was surprising is, particularly comparing it to a cohort, the top ten errors we found were coming from family members. the highest of the numbers were four times lower than donald trump's number. all of these were avoidable. twitter, iphones have built in auto correct. these are things that could have been avoided, and it's kind of surprising that since he's the 11th largest twitter account in the world, somebody should be checking it or having a bot check it. >> some of his aides claim the misspellings make him authentic. i just think his english teachers would have flunked him for that excuse. >> my mom is an english teacher and i would agree with you there. i don't think that's a reason. >> it's not the biggest thing in the world, but accuracy matters. >> bill, thank you. bill frischl ing out of factbased. a little change of subject, maybe something to give you a break from the news. some natural history programming. with esri location technology, you can see relationships. connections. patterns. you can see what others can't. ♪ hour 36 in the stakeout. ♪ limu emu & doug as soon as the homeowners arrive, we'll inform them that liberty mutual customizes home insurance, so they'll only pay for what they need. your turn to keep watch, limu. wake me up if you see anything. [ snoring ] [ loud squawking and siren blaring ] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ so bob, what do you take for back pain? before i take anything, i apply topical pain relievers first. salonpas lidocaine patch blocks pain receptors for effective, non-addictive relief. salonpas lidocaine. patch, roll-on or cream. hisamitsu. sometimes you need a moment of zen, at least bbc america thinks so. so it's launched a new network and every saturday the channel is going to run a 24-hour dose of nature documentary programming. i spoke with sarah barnett, the president of amc network's group about why now, why is this the moment to expand on natural history programming. >> we've had success on bbc america for the past several years with natural history programming and if you think back to the middle of the first decade of the century, natural history programming was huge. and it was huge for a reason. hd televisions were rolling out to america and there was nothing more spectacular than natural history documentaries showcasing this new technology. so people were buying these tvs and natural history program connected with that moment. fast forward a decade or so, and i think the natural history programming is connecting again for a different reason. less maybe about the spectacular, and more maybe about some deeper reasons. >> is that because cnn and lots of other channels like this one are covering bad news all day? >> yeah, when we launched planet earth ii in january of 2017, it was two days before the trump inauguration, and it was the biggest new series launch we ever had on bbc america. and we were seeing before we launched it this huge division and we had this idea that this program connected in a way that was kind of transcendent. so the way we launched it was with lines like gather together or we're bigger than our differences. it felt like this event that fit the moment perfectly. similarly in the uk right after the shock of brexit and i had been amazingly strong there, too. so over the last few years as you and your viewers know better than anyone, the division, the polarization in our world hasn't gone away. in fact, it's exacerbated. so we do believe that we can program the world with the world. >> take this week, for example. fires out west, floods in the east. between all the concerns about climate change and the interest in this programming? >> for sure. i think that that is absolutely true, and i would even take it a step further than just the surface of that, although that is true. i think that the general ways in which people are feeling so rocked by our changing world, so overtaken by the speed in which technology, politics, climate change, urbanization, a host of other things are confusing, unsettling, upsetting people in profound conscious and unconscious ways. so i think watching this kind of content, there is proof, there is data around the fact that this kind of content makes you feel connected to something bigger. there's data behind this. it's shown that being in nature makes you happier, not just being in nature, but also watching nature shows makes you happier. 78% of the people in the study talked about their improved sense of happiness, of inspiration, of gratitude after watching these kinds of shows. >> that's all for this edition of "reliable sources." we will see you back here this time next week. for all of the heroes who serve us, t-mobile is here to help serve them. that's why we're offering 50% off family lines for military, veterans and first responders. so they can stay connected, on our newest, most powerful signal ever. and now, we are also offering half off our top samsung phones for military, veterans and first responders. our service is just one way we say thank you... for theirs. some farms grow food. this one grows fuel. ♪ exxonmobil is growing algae for biofuels. that could one day power planes, propel ships, and fuel trucks... and cut their greenhouse gas emissions in half. algae. its potential just keeps growing. ♪ its potential just keeps growing. it's what gives audible themembers an edge.listening; it opens our minds, changes our perspective, connects us, and pushes us further. the most inspiring minds, the most compelling stories: audible. [ referee whistle sounds ] ♪ sport dr[ cheering ]s when you need the fuel to be your nephew's number one fan. holiday inn express. we're there. so you can be too. going public, democrats announce open impeachment hearings, as president trump fights back in his own way. >> we've got to impeach him because we can't beat him. >> how far are republicans willing to bend? we'll ask counselor to the president, kellyanne conway and the number three house democrat, jim cli burn next. >> iowa's show of force. >> i think they're running in the wrong presidential primary. >> democrats test their strength in iowa. why are the early states still up for

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we recently highlighted the lasting scars of people that worked at ground zero. we want to get the word out about those who covered 9/11 that are eligible for health insurance. will right wing media protect trump from being convicted and removed from office? right now evidence is mounting that trump abused power and possibly broke the law. but trump just keeps on going. he keeps on attacking the process and the whistleblower and other witnesses, perhaps on stru -- obstructing justice in realtime. he keeps saying the whistleblower got it so wrong. of course, the damning information from the whistleblower keeps getting corroborated and proven that it's true. people know who the whistleblower is but don't want to reveal the person. maybe some beat reporters think they know who the person is, but it's far from common knowledge. i have no idea who the whistleblower is, neither do my colleagues. so this is what the president is doing now. he wants the whistleblower to be outed, he wants the hoax ended, even though the whistleblower is protected by law. outrageous conduct by the president, but hannity and others on fox news seem to be a-okay with all of it, and their opinions are crucial in all of this. they are working to defend the president every step of the way. so does right wing media stand between trump and removal from office? many political pros think so. here's former bush aide gershwin saying no matter what this reveals, fox can prove a narrative to which partisans can claim. look at this, laura ingraham telling them to stick with potus or else. >> now is the time for republicans to stand together and defend the leader of their party against these smears. there is no gop in 2020 without trump. i hope senator mcconnell and senate leadership is listening. >> pretty explicit right there. judge empiro is also getting in on the scam, telling the gop that trump is not being stood up enough. his fox friends always say des s are worse. the dems rigged impeachment rules, they're pushing a fantasy, they're obsessed with impeachment, radical liberal policies hurting america. this is the message every single day on these shows. this is how they're talking every day. fox plus talk radio. that firewall right now is holding for president trump. i don't think we should ur underestimate the power of that right wing narrative. i'm going to bring in one of the challengers, congressman joe walsh. you've been calling this out saying the alternative reality is something americans need to understand. >> hey, brian, good to be with you. this is an absolute shame, and i think you have to call it out for what it is. the americans who listen to fox news and conservative talk radio are being lied to and manipulated every day when it comes to impeachment. it's not a surprise. they were lied to and manipulated every day with the russia investigation, really with all things trump, and it's dangerous. look, no matter where you stand on impeachment, and i believe this president deserves to be impeached, the vast majority of the american people understand that when it comes to ukraine, he did something wrong. but those people who listen to the opinion shows on fox and those people who listen to my former world conservative talk radio, they have no clue because they're being told every day, he's done nothing wrong. they're being told every day, brian, it's the deep state and it's hillary. they're being bombarded by that every day. that's so dangerous. >> so you're saying this is a problem. you're saying it used to be part of the problem. what changes this calculus? does anything change this? >> look, most of the people in the conservative media are not going to change. you've got people like hannity and ceb gorka, they've got their nose so far up the president's butt, they're not going to change. they'll do anything he tells them to do. i got pressure every day from my syndicator. you have to speak well about trump. don't criticize trump. if you have a conservative talk radio show these days, you're told, don't criticize the president. and, brian, it's like a lot of my former republican colleagues in congress. privately you know, like i know, they doechbt like trump. they can't stand trump. but they're afraid to say that publicly because they're afraid of trump's voters. most of these conservative talk radio hosts, they want to keep their listeners, they want to keep their shows so they lie to them, they lie to their listeners and they keep feeding them what they want to hear. >> but how, if the fox firewall is holding, if the right wing radio talk firewall is holding, how do you get your message out what i would call the long-range meditation. are you booked on fox these days, joe? >> no, i don't get booked on fox, but fox stopped booking me a year or two years ago when i began criticizing the presiden., well before i was a candidate for president, fox told me, we don't want anybody -- brian, i'm a conservative. they said, we don't want anybody on fox news that criticizes the president. i look at the polls and we see every day that even more and more republicans understand that the president did something wrong. the "washington post," brian, they had a poll out just this past week, donald trump's approval rating is down to 74%. that's a 17-point drop among republicans. >> other polls have it a little higher, but let me show the brand new "wall street journal" poll because i was really struck by these findings. trump's approval rating, 45% overall in this approval rating. look at strong approve versus somewhat approve. 31% strongly approve and 14% just somewhat approve. joe, that tells me his base is actually three out of ten americans. it's not actually four out of five in the country. is that your conclusion as well? >> it's what all these fox shows tell you it is. it's about 30% of the american people who will support the president if he shoots someone in new york city. and that's all trump talks to, and brian, that's all his sycophants in conservative media talk to now. it's a shrinking pool of listeners. look, i know it's an uphill fight taking the president on, but more and more republicans out there, especially the republicans who are trying to go elsewhere besides conservative talk and fox news, they're tired of this president and his lies increasingly every day. >> let me put that poll back up briefly, because the other striking finding is that of the 53% who disapprove of the president, almost everybody strongly disapproves. look at that. the intensity of the polarization continues to get worse and worse. joe, thank you so much for being here. great to see you. my panel is standing by to react to what the former congressman said. good for jack dorsey, good for twitter. mark zuckerberg and facebook now under scrutiny when it comes to allowing lies in political ads. connections. patterns. you can see what others can't. ♪ you wanna see something thatamazing?ing. go to hilton instead of a travel site and you'll experience a whole new range of emotions like... the relaxing feeling of knowing you're getting the best price. these'll work. the utter delight of free wi-fi... . oh man this is the best part. isn't that you? 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maybe you could free zoltar? thanks, lady. taxi! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ i was on the fence about changing from a manual to an electric toothbrush. but my hygienist said going electric could lead to way cleaner teeth. she said, get the one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's gentle rounded brush head removes more plaque along the gum line. for cleaner teeth and healthier gums. and unlike sonicare, oral-b is the first electric toothbrush brand accepted by the ada for its effectiveness and safety. what an amazing clean! i'll only use an oral-b! oral-b. brush like a pro. twitter will ban political ads, jack dorsey announces. facebook, however, says they will decide what runs and what doesn't run. are they making it easier to know what is true, or are they making it harder to know what is true? because president trump's campaign is continuing to use facebook to spread misinformation this their political ads. of course, they're not the only campaign doing so, but because these ads are so intensely targeted, so personalized, they're able to contribute to the polarization and radicalization in this country, and that's why i'm concerned about this issue. let me bring in my panel and see what they say about this issue vovrling political ards. mills is a political commentator, colby hall is the founding editor of "meteorite." and we have a national contributo contributor. are they able to continue spreading lies? >> they're wrong. it's clear that mark zuckerberg and the gang care more about profit than they do about principal. this is not about free speech or it's not his job of getting in the way of people saying what they want to say and having their own point of view. every day they are functioning more and more like an actual media con glom raglomerate. >> and allowing them to tell lies about propaganda, et cetera, i think we need to hold facebook accountable because they absolutely should not be putting out all this information because it is screwing up the public discourse. they know it, we know it. we watched it happen in 2016 and they don't really seem to care because they're making more money. >> do you agree, do you think they don't care? >> think they can admit that the day-to-day market that's showing political ads, that's a slippery slope and would lose money. twitter doesn't make that much money from political ads. they have this deep dive demographic data, so it was an easier decision for jack dorsey to make. if mark zuckerberg says they can run political ads, it undermines the core business model and that's what we're seeing here. >> they have said they don't make a lot of money from political ads, but i think it needs to be viewed in a broader context. if they are saying we need to show politics and everything else, we know they have done so with authoritarian regimes like pakistan and turkey who have asked them to take down information. they have some of these tools. they have quoted themselves in free speech arguments, mark zuckerberg said facebook began to protest the iraq war. i was not there, i don't think that's true. it's a justification not just about the political ads but every ad that's on there. this is sort of a proxy war about facebook's power. it's deeply concentrated power because a lot of the misinformation is not in the paid ads, it's in the organic posts. it's the same with twitter, we talk about it all the time, it's on president trump's twitter feed all the time. what are they to do about the organic information? the answer is facebook is too powerful? at least news networks have greater competition. >> there is misinformation and smears being spread on tv as well. that brings me to sean duffey who was on the air to denigrate one of the figures to corroborate the account. i wonder what you make of this debate because some have called out duffy screaming bigotry. is it appropriate for duffy to be on our air? >> first of all, i want to commend all the cnn anchors who held him accountable and said, wait a minute, you're a liar. this is absolutely not true, and you should not come on this platform as a way to make donald trump lover y you even more. this is an interesting time in the media. those of us who are fact-based and credible, we can call each other out. that's why we have so much problem with facebook right now because they're kind of this big titan in the room that's not really creating space for real discourse because they're allowing this propaganda to ply. >> you said it was great. >> at least there was enough room at this network to be some real discourse where enough of us and enough of the anchors could actually push back and let people know this was actually false information that was coming out of this guy's mouth. >> colby, i feel like you had a media take this week. your article was entitled, it's not just good television, it's good for the national discourse. explain. >> 40% of americans, 16 million people-plus voted for president trump. there are a lot of debunked conspiracy theories and falsehoods that are out there, some of which are being promoted by sean duffy. i agree with mark zuckerberg's position that he took with you about the cnn thing saying it's better to have a discourse and a dialogue with someone. john berman has done a great job on "new day" of pushing back on that. >> i think that's what's important, whether there's pushback or not. >> this conspiracy theory is like a virus. do you want to ignore that and let it metastasize or engage it with physical therapy. what you see on the network is a dialogue of those two sides. >> irin? >> i'm happy there is a ndiadi e dialogue, i'm happy there is fact checking, but when you talk to conspiracy theories, it helps to legitimize them when you talk about them on the air. i often talk to people who have views totally not based in fact, and i have to figure out how to show them. i don't think you can pay them and give them a title because there are journalists here every day who are trying to make sense of what is real and not real. to give someone that title to have debunked conspiracy theories and spout these ads is wrong. >> do you think these are people on the right? >> i think no matter where it is found, we need to have rig or, and i just think giving people a title and a paycheck legitimizes them to their point of view. >> i don't want to create these false dichotomies, right? the truth is on the left it is not a core strategy of the democratic party or progressives or the left to create mayhem, to literally use hate, to use vile bigotry, to undermine our democracy in order to win and have power. and i think that is fundamentally a strategy of conservatives, fundamentally a strategy of the right and we're literally talking about good and evil. >> let's go back to the very beginning of the program, colby. will right wing media protect trump from conviction in the senate? >> i'm reminded of howard baker. he was a senator in tennessee in 1973 who was the first republican who sort of turned on richard nixon that led to his resignation. i read a column a year ago that said don't look to the gop senators to do the same, it's the thought leaders at fox news that will be the first to turn. i don't think that's going to happen. i think that's too strong a barrier, and if someone in right wing media, they're afraid to lose their audience, and if they were to turn on president trump, they would not just lose their audience but they would become ostracized and become a pa eriah. we shouldn't expect right wing media to turn on president trump any time soon. >> let me get one line from you before we take a break. >> i think the senators who are going to be for this impeachment is appealing to a swath of the country who is older, wider and more rural. if we had a popular vote, hillary clinton would be president, democrats would have the senate. democrats won the house in part because of numbers but we have to view the fox news echo chamber that the electorate does not represent america. >> that electorate republicans are going after are only about 35% of the population. they are a relatively small minority and i think it's really important we're reminded of that. the majority of the people think trump is crazy, the majority is moving toward impeachment. we need to move to the majority and stop pandering to this 31%. thank you all for being here. that story i mentioned at the top that i hope you're listening to, the two journalists who responded to their role in 2001. [ cheering ] when you need the fuel to be your nephew's number one fan. holiday inn express. we're there. so you can be too. for all of the heroes who serve us, t-mobile is here to help serve them. that's why we're offering 50% off family lines for military, veterans and first responders. so they can stay connected, on our newest, most powerful signal ever. and now, we are also offering half off our top samsung phones for military, veterans and first responders. our service is just one way we say thank you... for theirs. it also has the highest growth in manufacturing jobs in the us. it's a competition for the talent. employees need more than just a paycheck. you definitely want to take advantage of all the benefits you can get. 2/3 of employees said that the workplace is an important source for personal savings and protection solutions. the workplace should be a source of financial security. keeping your people happy is what keeps your people. that's financial wellness. put your employees on a path to financial wellness with prudential. thbecause with nband after thleague pass on xfinityr. you can watch the out of market games you want- all season long. and with the all-new xfinity sports zone, you get everything nba all in one place- even notifications about your favorite teams. watch the dropped dimes, monster blocks, and showstopping dunks. plus get instant access to your teams with the power of your voice. that's simple, easy, awesome. say nba league pass into your voice remote to upgrade for a great low price - or go online today. annoepidemic fueled by juul use with their kid-friendly flavors. san francisco voters stopped the sale of flavored e-cigarettes. but then juul, backed by big tobacco, wrote prop c to weaken e-cigarette protections. the san francisco chronicle reports prop c is an audacious overreach, threatening to overturn the ban on flavored products approved by voters. prop c means more kids vaping. that's a dangerous idea. vote no on juul. no on big tobacco. no on prop c. on the morning of september 11, 2001, as most people ran away from the burning towers, firefighters, police officers and emts ran into the fires and the smoke and in many cases stayed there afterward, combing the area for survivors. there were also reporters and producers, some who have been linked to forms of cancer linked to ground zero. one of those reporters shot the footage you're seeing now. they want you to know the compensation fund that was recently extended is open to anyone exposed to the toxic dust and debris. in fact, this astounded me when i found this out, several journalists have registered with even one of the lawyers who are involved, and potentially more should if they knew about these available programs. an attorney is here representing two of the men you see here with me, as well as many other affected journalists. winston novak rushed there that day, and they also jumped into the fray. thank you all for being here. >> my law firm represents all these guys, but also the cameramen, the guys behind the scenes you wouldn't know about, and they were breathing the same toxic dust as the new york city firefighters and cops. they weren't just from new york, they were from all over the country. so my firm now represents 53 of these men and women, but i suspect that's just the tip of the iceberg and that there are hundreds of journalists, just like there are thousands of people who have cancer. they now presume 68 cancers are ling links to these t linked to these toxins that the epa said were safe, and it's just not true. >> you have prostate cancer after being at ground zero for about ten days? >> longer than that. >> what was the news yesterday? >> the news was my prostate is complete and my eligibility is confirmed. it took about a year and a half for the process to work out with the help of michael's firm, and, you know, it's a relief knowing that it's finished. >> thinking about that day, bruce, did you think, as you were walking through the dust cloud, that you might be in danger? >> i had no idea. as a journalist, the main motive is just to get the story, get those pictures, never thinking years later you're going to end up dying from it. >> what is your current diagnosis? >> it's not good but i am very grateful for the life i've had. >> when you think back to that day, you don't think at all about the feeling that, you know, you're going to be assigned by a boss to go there -- it was all instinct, right? >> i was never assigned. i always kept a hot video camera in my apartment. i just started walking down 7th avenue, knowing everybody had the money shot of the building, but i wanted to get the reactions of the people who were walking away. >> what's the status of your claim? >> i have reached the end of the line, and i'll be soon getting that award. but it's not about the money right now. i just want everybody to know they could still make those claims even years later and they could still be helped by the victims' compensation fund. >> and brian, it's not just the victims' compensation fund. thank god they got that passed. it's a sad indictment that you need a celebrity to get anything done in washington these days, but congress also passed the world trade center health program, and that's why i'm imploring everybody, the 25,000 residents, the 300,000 office workers and the 50,000 students and teachers who were exposed to those toxins, sign up now while your witnesses are still around, because you're going to have to prove with two witnesses that you were exposed to that dust, that you were working downtown or living downtown, and as the years go on, it's going to be harder and harder to find those witnesses. so there is so much information out there. i know we don't have a lot of time, but if your viewers go to 9 911victimfund.com. they'll learn a lot more about how to sign up for the free nationwide health program. >> they should sign up -- excuse me -- even if they don't have a 9/11-related illness right now, but if they were in the area, they should sign up. >> proactively. vinnie, do you think there is sometimes a stigma about, other than the policemen and firefighters who were there, feeling like they weren't that deserving? i can see where reporters, a cynical bunch, are resisting. >> the news crews are considered responders, but we weren't there to save lives. what we did do that day, there was a lot of panic and fear, and we were able to show that there were no more attacks, and i think it helped the public understand that, you know, things were calming down. also, i'm proud of the fact that we documented what the police and the firemen and the iron workers all did that day and the weeks after. >> at the very beginning, you're absolutely right, there was this feeling that i don't want to take mona way from the responders, like the first firefighters and cops. but thanks to congress permanently extending the victim compensation fund, you're not taking mona way from anyone. you're not taking health care funds away from anyone. again, everybody should sign up now. >> i want to thank all three of you for being here. i'm grateful. let's put back on screen about how people can get information about the victims' compensation fund and the health program. thank you. a quick break from "reliable sources" and back to politics news. sometimes how the littlest lies, the littlest deflections can tell you the most about what's going on. ♪ yeah that's all me. ♪ nothing and me go hand in hand ♪ ♪ nothing on my skin ♪ that's my new plan. ♪ nothing is everything. keep your skin clearer with skyrizi. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. of those, nearly 9 out of 10 sustained it through 1 year. and skyrizi is 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. ♪ i see nothing in a different way ♪ ♪ and it's my moment so i just gotta say ♪ ♪ nothing is everything skyrizi may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. before treatment your doctor should check you for infections and tuberculosis. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms such as fevers, sweats, chills, muscle aches or coughs, or if you plan to or recently received a vaccine. ♪ nothing is everything ask your dermatologist about skyrizi. ♪ ithere's my career...'s more to me than hiv. my cause... and creating my dream home. i'm a work in progress. so much goes into who i am. hiv medicine is one part of it. prescription dovato is for adults who are starting hiv-1 treatment and who aren't resistant to either of the medicines dolutegravir or lamivudine. dovato has 2 medicines in 1 pill to help you reach and then stay undetectable. so your hiv can be controlled with fewer medicines while taking dovato. you can take dovato anytime of day with food or without. don't take dovato if you're allergic to any of its ingredients or if you take dofetilide. if you have hepatitis b, it can change during treatment with dovato and become harder to treat. your hepatitis b may get worse or become life-threatening if you stop taking dovato. so do not stop dovato without talking to your doctor. serious side effects can occur, including allergic reactions, liver problems, and liver failure. life-threatening side effects include lactic acid buildup and severe liver problems. if you have a rash and other symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop taking dovato and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have kidney or liver problems, including hepatitis b or c. don't use dovato if you plan to become pregnant or during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy since one of its ingredients may harm your unborn baby. your doctor should do a pregnancy test before starting dovato. use effective birth control while taking dovato. the most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, nausea, trouble sleeping, and tiredness. so much goes into who i am and hope to be. ask your doctor if starting hiv treatment with dovato is right for you. i am sorry to say president trump's lying is spiraling out of control. look no further than friday, his rally in mississippi. dan dale found lies on unemployment to president obama to cnn. there's this thing trump does at rallies where he complains that the cameras in the back suddenly turn off when he starts criticizing the media. he said this again on friday, daniel, and it was a lie again, right? >> it was a lie again. we had a photojournalist on scene who never stopped recording, and even if he does stop recording, there is no camera that goes on and off, he has it permanently set to off. so these are reporters telling them in this very room something is happening when it's not. i think this is egregious lying, and not just because i now work for cnn. >> it's significant detail and i was glad you highlighted it this weekend. when we know for a fact that trump is lying to his crowd about cnn turning off a live feed of his rally, if we know that, and we do, doesn't that make us doubt everything else he's saying, or rather, shouldn't that make us doubt everything else he's saying? >> yeah, i think he's given us reason to doubt literally everything he's saying. i think one of the things that distinguishes trump as a liar is he lies about even the most trivial stuff, the most obvious stuff. it's not just the typical political lying to defend one against a scandal. he is proactively lying about stuff all the time. >> this brings us to last weekend, because the president claimed repeatedly that this dead terrorist was whimpering and crying right before he blew himself up. the "new york times" looked into sources who have no idea what the president is talking about, and we've heard attorneys on the record saying they can't confirm any whimpering, any crying. it does seem the president made up these details about what was an excellent day for the united states military, and yet trump took it too far. he made up these details about a terrorist whimpering and crying. how do you handle this when you can't definitively prove that he's making it up, but he's lost the benefit of the doubt on these issues? >> so i still try to give trump maximal benefit of the doubt even after thousands of lies and other false claims. so i don't think at this point i'm going to include that on my weekly list of false claims, because there is still some tiny possibility, even if it seems highly unlikely, that he is not making this up. so i think what we do in these cases where it's not sure is we provide the context, we provide the quote if we need to, and then we say the commander of central commander, the secretary of defense and other officials said they cannot confirm these details. give readers the context and help them understand, at least. >> present them all in that way. daniel, do you think this is measurably a worsening that's happening? are there a greater amount of lies now than a year ago? >> a year ago was actually his peak because it was the midterm campaign period. as i said to you earlier, there seemed to be a deliberate strategy of dishonesty during the runup to that 2018 vote. he is being more frequently dishonest in this period than he was elsewhere last year. and elsewhere last year was also more dishonest than he was in 2017. so aside from that midterm spike, there has been a general increase between 2017, 2018 and now 2019. >> daniel, thank you very much. thank you for doing this for us. thanks for the fact checking. one of the reasons why there is so much fact check is because of the impeachment inquiry right now. cnn is doing sunday night specials in the next few weeks covering what will happen on the impeachment inquiry in the next few weeks. we'll take a quick break from "reliable sources" and then, another way of reviewing the president and his comments on twitter. we have crunched the numbers of the misspellings of the president of the united states. see the data, right after this. you mean this one? ) (ernie) rubber duckie! (cookie) what about a broken cookie jar? (burke) again, cookie? (cookie) yeah. me bad. (grover) yoooooow! oh! what about monsters having accidents? i am okay by the way! (burke) depends. did you cause the accident, grover? (grover) cause an accident? maybe... (bert) how do you know all this stuff? (burke) just comes with experience. (all muppets) yup. ♪ we are farmers. ♪ bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum they're america's bpursuing life-changing cures. in a country that fosters innovation here, they find breakthroughs... like a way to fight cancer by arming a patient's own t-cells... because it's not just about the next breakthrough... it's all the ones after that. the amount of student loan debt i have, i'm embarrassed to even say. we just decided we didn't want debt any longer. ♪ i didn't realize how easy investing could be. i'm picking companies that i believe in. ♪ i think sofi money is amazing. ♪ thank you sofi. sofi thank you, we love you. ♪ everybody makes spelling mistakes. i do, everybody does. but on twitter, donald trump makes a lot more of them than most people. just this week he misspelled republican and unfair, but those are hardly all the examples. he has called showbiz shoebiz, there's hamberders, marine core and even misspelling his wife melania's name. >> i think you have some typos on your shirt. >> no. this was taken verbatim from one of your tweets, therefore, it's correct. >> that's the thing, death by tweet. i know english teachers are horrified by the president's poor form. other people are embarrass bid -- embarrassed by it, too. fact base is this excellent website ha ththat has every sin word the president says. it looks at all his tweets for data typos and screw-ups. they only counted true misspellings and incorrect homophone word phrases. trump makes at least 188 spelling errors on twitter. what do we compare this to? let's take a look at trump's family members. let's take a look at the 2020 democratic candidates as well and see how trump compares. this says it all. someone like andrew yang, 14 mistakes. bernie sanders, three misspellings. obama, zero. this is during the time trump took office. donald trump tweets a lot, so 90 mistakes for donald trump jr. president trump is really the odd man out on this with constant misspellings on his feed. it hasn't always been this way. in 2015, only 18 misspellings. the thing he gets wrong most often is councsel, as in specia counsel. capitol hill he gets wrong a lot. there are a lot of these absurd errors that happen all the time. trump often misuses the words it's and its. who can forget covfefe and all of those. everybody makes mistakes. trump started tweeting in 2009, obama started tweeting in 2012. if you compare their errors since joining twitter, trump has made 358 of those spelling mistakes, those errors. barack obama, four. we could all use a proofreader, right? i think president trump could use two or three proofreaders. here to put it all in perspective for us, let's talk to the man who helped us do this research at fact base. his name is bill fishel and he joins me from d.c. it took you a lot of hours for this and we're grateful for it. what's the lesson learned? >> turn on auto correct. most of the errors we found, what was surprising is, particularly comparing it to a cohort, the top ten errors we found were coming from family members. the highest of the numbers were four times lower than donald trump's number. all of these were avoidable. twitter, iphones have built in auto correct. these are things that could have been avoided, and it's kind of surprising that since he's the 11th largest twitter account in the world, somebody should be checking it or having a bot check it. >> some of his aides claim the misspellings make him authentic. i just think his english teachers would have flunked him for that excuse. >> my mom is an english teacher and i would agree with you there. i don't think that's a reason. >> it's not the biggest thing in the world, but accuracy matters. >> bill, thank you. bill frischl ing out of factbased. a little change of subject, maybe something to give you a break from the news. some natural history programming. with esri location technology, you can see relationships. connections. patterns. you can see what others can't. ♪ hour 36 in the stakeout. ♪ limu emu & doug as soon as the homeowners arrive, we'll inform them that liberty mutual customizes home insurance, so they'll only pay for what they need. your turn to keep watch, limu. wake me up if you see anything. [ snoring ] [ loud squawking and siren blaring ] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ so bob, what do you take for back pain? before i take anything, i apply topical pain relievers first. salonpas lidocaine patch blocks pain receptors for effective, non-addictive relief. salonpas lidocaine. patch, roll-on or cream. hisamitsu. sometimes you need a moment of zen, at least bbc america thinks so. so it's launched a new network and every saturday the channel is going to run a 24-hour dose of nature documentary programming. i spoke with sarah barnett, the president of amc network's group about why now, why is this the moment to expand on natural history programming. >> we've had success on bbc america for the past several years with natural history programming and if you think back to the middle of the first decade of the century, natural history programming was huge. and it was huge for a reason. hd televisions were rolling out to america and there was nothing more spectacular than natural history documentaries showcasing this new technology. so people were buying these tvs and natural history program connected with that moment. fast forward a decade or so, and i think the natural history programming is connecting again for a different reason. less maybe about the spectacular, and more maybe about some deeper reasons. >> is that because cnn and lots of other channels like this one are covering bad news all day? >> yeah, when we launched planet earth ii in january of 2017, it was two days before the trump inauguration, and it was the biggest new series launch we ever had on bbc america. and we were seeing before we launched it this huge division and we had this idea that this program connected in a way that was kind of transcendent. so the way we launched it was with lines like gather together or we're bigger than our differences. it felt like this event that fit the moment perfectly. similarly in the uk right after the shock of brexit and i had been amazingly strong there, too. so over the last few years as you and your viewers know better than anyone, the division, the polarization in our world hasn't gone away. in fact, it's exacerbated. so we do believe that we can program the world with the world. >> take this week, for example. fires out west, floods in the east. between all the concerns about climate change and the interest in this programming? >> for sure. i think that that is absolutely true, and i would even take it a step further than just the surface of that, although that is true. i think that the general ways in which people are feeling so rocked by our changing world, so overtaken by the speed in which technology, politics, climate change, urbanization, a host of other things are confusing, unsettling, upsetting people in profound conscious and unconscious ways. so i think watching this kind of content, there is proof, there is data around the fact that this kind of content makes you feel connected to something bigger. there's data behind this. it's shown that being in nature makes you happier, not just being in nature, but also watching nature shows makes you happier. 78% of the people in the study talked about their improved sense of happiness, of inspiration, of gratitude after watching these kinds of shows. >> that's all for this edition of "reliable sources." we will see you back here this time next week. for all of the heroes who serve us, t-mobile is here to help serve them. that's why we're offering 50% off family lines for military, veterans and first responders. so they can stay connected, on our newest, most powerful signal ever. and now, we are also offering half off our top samsung phones for military, veterans and first responders. our service is just one way we say thank you... for theirs. some farms grow food. this one grows fuel. ♪ exxonmobil is growing algae for biofuels. that could one day power planes, propel ships, and fuel trucks... and cut their greenhouse gas emissions in half. algae. its potential just keeps growing. ♪ its potential just keeps growing. it's what gives audible themembers an edge.listening; it opens our minds, changes our perspective, connects us, and pushes us further. the most inspiring minds, the most compelling stories: audible. [ referee whistle sounds ] ♪ sport dr[ cheering ]s when you need the fuel to be your nephew's number one fan. holiday inn express. we're there. so you can be too. going public, democrats announce open impeachment hearings, as president trump fights back in his own way. >> we've got to impeach him because we can't beat him. >> how far are republicans willing to bend? we'll ask counselor to the president, kellyanne conway and the number three house democrat, jim cli burn next. >> iowa's show of force. >> i think they're running in the wrong presidential primary. >> democrats test their strength in iowa. why are the early states still up for

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