oats about what he did. can you explain these charges? sure. and i think your assessment is dead on the money, steph. jack smith, the startling thing in this indictment katie is right to say much of this information we knew. the startling thing here is the solidity of the strategic choices and the way smith avoids following into any pit falls by not charging any of the president s speech and instead focusing on his conduct in this period of time between november and january where smith clarifies trump was fully aware he had lost the election and nonetheless engaged in three different conspiracy, and that s the heart of this indictment. the conspiracies and how they re framed is critical to the fact an indictment will make it difficult for trump to offer the
it s called misdirection. i thought maybe the audience would think they d wounded and he s discovering he s got a big gash in his hand. and as he opens, he s got blood. as he flips over the covers then he sees that it s the horse s head. a book can say he had an incredible shock. well, how do you give that incredible shock? you have do it differently than the book describes. and you say here i think there s pit falls. if the audience does not jump out of their seat on this one, you have failed. yes, so i m like the guy the little voice saying all right, francis, you ready to do this and if you don t do that, you better do it fast. because i was scared, and i figured if i had this with me when i had to do the scene i would have this voice, this
especially right now when we re pandemic. it s not worth it. yeah. that s a very important point. obviously any time you re dealing with mental health it s a series issue. the body s internal clock gets disrupted. let me ask you, how do you steer clear of some of these pit falls in the coming months, the so-called winter blues as a result of day light saving time ending? well, unsuccessfully, i guess. i usually get through december and january all right. but it does get to me. february, march, it s tough. i remember i read at some point that the well day light savings thing was proposed by benjamin franklin because he was sleeping too late in the day when he was living in paris and missing too much of the sunlight. i know that s a problem we have when we go to paris and sleep the day away. i think we should keep it and
campaign. every time we spring the clocks back, we are more often in darkness, it causes depression, seasonal depression, people go on amazon and buy their sad lamps to defeat it. i had to do it when i was in college. it s just not a good thing for people s mental health, the bottom line. whatever other benefits that there may be, especially right now when we re going through such a mental health crisis throughout the pandemic. going into darkness sooner, losing that precious sunlight and daylight that is so good for our well being, it s just not worth it. that s a very important time. any time you re dealing with mental health, it s a serious issue, certainly coming out of the pandemic in terms of how it disrupts the body s internal clock. let me ask you, how do you steer clear of some of these pit falls in the coming months, the so-called winter blues as a result of daylight saving time ending? well, unsuccessfully, i guess. i usually get through december
the first ever president of the united states who attacks individuals including his own employees and american institutions on social media, as recently as several times just today. just tonight. the new york times has counted and reports the president has tweeted attacks against at least 487 people. a figure now dated, because of fresh attacks tonight. 487 people, companies, or institutions since launching his run for the white house. and this might have been the closest that the first lady came today to calling out obliquely her husband s behavior. let s face it. most children are more aware of the benefits and pit falls of social media than some adults. the president was back at it within an hour of his wife s speech.