fleabag: i m not obsessed with sex. i just can t stop thinking about it. dan levy: sexuality has come a long way in sitcom history. larry: can you donate a peninis to a p person who o s transitit? > i m not obsessssed with s. i justst can t stotop thinkingnt itit. sexuauality has c come a lony inin sitcom history.y. c can you dononate a peninis person w who s transnsitioning? laughter is a a great way to deal with a very tricky world. daddy horny, my god. > sitcoms t talk about t sex my underwear. my god. and about relationships. i i m breakining up with h h tonight.t. thehese shows c changed the that we ththink about t sexuali foror god s sakake, ellen, , him you u re gay. > you re tatalking abouout g rirights. you re talalking about women s rightsts. g gender diveversity. > dismantliling the patatria youou know, sexexual revolul so i m m officiallyly out of to [ b bleep ]. i i have to geget married d or but i if you can n make them laugugh,
was for the pandemic. and according to researchers. with higher prices and added service charges that many restaurants say are vital to keep them running. more restaurants are offering takeout and delivery services. they re booming. in short restaurants have had to adapt and evolve in order to survive. one of the establishments that didn t survive is bobby flay s restaurant, gato. he s a well-known chef and host of the food network, which is owned by cnn s parent company. he closed the doors of gato just days after lockdown began, and that experience led him to think about who made it through the pandemic and why. over the next hour, bobby flay takes us to restaurants from around the country from oregon, kentucky, new york, introducing us to some of the leading chefs and experts in the food world. he said dining out has changed for good. march 2020. states were shutting down restaurants. that s an industry sector that has literally switched overnight. like so many in th
has been no evidence of what he claims is an inside job, even though he makes that claim time to get. it wasn t long ago that the man who was convicted for crushing that metropolitan police department officer inside the door was convicted. i think it s just an insult to those officers who were in hours long battles with rioters that day. to say that s right in many many many of them have admitted. this they ve not just been convicted, but they also said yes this is what happened, i was misled, i went there and i did this. so he s even saying to the people who were convicted, and admitted it he s saying, no you re wrong, that can t be true. what about, one thing that he always turns to when he s talking about january six and he s pushed, as abby was pushing him for the facts on what he was saying. is to michigan governor question whitmore, in the attempted kidnapping of her. what are the facts of what he said there. was it true? what are the facts there. it s true that
we hope that some of these stories have inspired you to get involved and do your part because you, too, can be somebody s hero. thank you and good night. [ cheers and applause ] what s it like being billie jean king? i have no idea. i think since i was young, i mean i told my mother at 7, mommy, mommy, i m going to do something great with my life. i know it. i can feel i it. being billie jean king means knknowing from the beginning sh was destined for greatness. i knew the first t time i we off to getet free inststructionh in lonong beach, i i knew at t d of thahat session n i wanted t the numbmber one tenennis playe the worlrld. h how old werere you? i was 1 11. that w was only ththe second t picked up a racket. she quickly fell in love with the sport but also quickly noticed deep inequities in tennis that reflected the same about ththe world. at t 12, i was s playing ata los angegeles tennisis club. all the big tournamements were therere. i i was sittining i