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Transcripts For CNN Nomad With Carlton McCoy 20240707

do you guys have a second for the city of toronto? we re changing the cn tower to drake tower. he s proud to be from toronto and put the city on the map. a great ambassador for the city. would you agree? i m listening right now. i listened to that album twice this morning. we love drake. thank you so much. what doesn t? of course i m joking about changing the name of the building that identifies toronto s skyline but drake is more globally recognized and the biggest cheerleader for what may be north america s most overlooked city. we re going to make a change. we re going to make a change in these streets. i m carlton mccoy raised in inner city d.c., educated in kitchens around the globe. these days i make a living as a master smellier. i m a nomad driven to move in and out of different cultures, different worlds to celebrate diversity by talking about what makes us different and the same. and taking it on to the next destination. that s what live is all a

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Transcripts For CNN Nomad With Carlton McCoy 20240707

that was pretty aggressive. do you have a second for the city of toronto here? we re changing the name of the cn tower to drake tower. can you get behind that, please? can you get behind that? a new album just dropped? well, no. he s so proud to be from toronto. i feel like he really put the city on the map, you know? he s a great ambassador for the city. would you agree? oh, yeah. i m listening to him right now. i listened to that album twice already this morning. we love drake. . thank you very much. who doesn t? of course i m joking about changing the name of the building that identifies toronto s skyline, but drake is more globally recognized and the biggest cheerleader for what may be north america s most overlooked city. we re going to make some change. we re going to make some change in these streets. i m carlton mccoy. raised in inner city d.c., educated in kitchens around the globe. these days i make a living as a master sommelier. i m a nomad, dr

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Transcripts for CNN Nomad With Carlton McCoy 20240604 01:09:00

you guys should re-brand that. sarah hagee writes social commentary lieu the lens of a second generation somali torontonian. yeah. when did your family come from somalia? in 89. when my mom first came here she came without my father. the civil war hadn t started, and i think there was an idea that things were head in the direction of a civil war which is why my family came here so early and in 94ish there was a huge influx of somali refugees, and i think a lot of serbian and bosnian people as well because that war was going on around at the same time so it s a huge time for people to come to canada. do you know why she made the decision. because she knew people. there s really something for everyone here. there s something for every kind of person. there s a place called rasta pasta, exactly what it sounds

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Transcripts for CNN Nomad With Carlton McCoy 20240604 04:09:00

You guys should rebrand that. sarah hagy writes social commentary through the lens of a second generation somali torontonian. there. i said it. your family immigrated here from somalia. yeah. what year did you all come? my family came here in i don t know. i wasn t alive. they came in 89. when my mom first came here she came without my father. the civil war hadn t started, and i think there was an idea that things were headed in the direction of a civil war which is why my family came here so early. and then i think in 94-ish there was a huge influx of somali immigrants, refugees. and also i think a lot of serbian and bosnian people as well because that was going on around the same time. so it was a huge time for people to come to scanneda. canada. do you know why she made the decision? because she knew people here. there s really something for everyone here. there s something for every kind of person. there s a place called rasta pasta that s like you know, it s ex

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20170501:14:07:00

Conversation. so, the conversation began before the tape started rolling, while we were talking about andrew jackson and his impact in american history. and then the interview started, and then he, you know, referenced back to him, and he was talking about, before the tape was rolling, he was talking about sort of, you know, he wished the civil war hadn t happened, don t we all, you know. it was a very trying time. and then we went back to this because he was looking at the portrait of jackson that s over his left-hand shoulder when he s sitting at the desk. okay, doug heye, let me bring you in here. aside from the timeline issue of andrew jackson in all of this, and aside from the very what seems to be a bit of a bizarre statement, why was there the civil war, what s your takeaway from salena s interpretation? growing up in the south where

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