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the covid global health emergency is over. that's the word from the world health organization. a historic moment since he declared an emergency more than three years ago. it also comes as the u.s. is set to end its own public health emergency. bracing for a surge. right now homeland security alejandro mayorkas is at the u.s. southern border as worries grow about a sharp rise of migrant crossings days before a covid-era policy ends. live from there. a major threat to putin's war in ukraine. the head of a mercenary group deployed in the war against ukraine by tens of thousands,
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wagner, says he could pull out from a battle as russia raises a major counteroffensive against ukraine. this, all coming in here to "cnn news central". it is a historic moment in the global fight against coronavirus. the world health organization today announcing covid-19 is no longer a global health emergency. it was more than three years ago now that coronavirus was declared a public health emergency of international concern. here is that moment on january 30, 2020. >> i'm declaring a public emergency of international concern. over the global outbreak of coronavirus. >> about six weeks after that,
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the statement made by the w.h.o. at the time would go on to call the covid outbreak a pandemic. now the director of the world health organization says the pandemic has been on a downward trend for more than a year helping us get to this moment today. >> it's therefore with great hope that i declare covid-19 over as a global health emergency. however, that does not mean covid-19 is over as a global health trend. >> let's begin to cnn medical correspondent elizabeth cohen for perspective. obviously, coronavirus as a pandemic a global health emergency, is over, but the director general there expressing concern it is still a threat. >> reporter: that's right, boris. you know, let's take a -- a minute to sort of mark this moment. as you said, this all started, the public health emergency was
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declared january 30th, 2020. here we are may 5th, 2023 marking that it is over. let's look at the damage that this virus did. if we look just to deaths. not at all the other horrible stuff. more than about 7 million people across the world died. more than 1 million americans died. so this -- i mean, the havoc that this virus caused is quite incredible, and that's why the w.h.o. is saying, look, we still need to track it, see if there are mutations and be on the lookout for other new viruses. we saw what this virus was able to do. boris? >> elizabeth cohen. thank you so much for that reporting. jessica, over to you. >> all right. the end of the pandemic also means the end of title 42 here in the u.s. that's the health law imposed during the covid outbreak that allowed officials to quickly turn away migrants at the border. that policy expires next thursday, and border officials are bracing for a massive surge of asylum seekers.
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homeland security secretary of state alejandro mayorkas is at the border for a second day and spoke a few moments ago announcing a plan to open processes centers in south america. >> we are reaching the people where they are. it is not only our security obligation. it is our humanitarian responsibility to cut the smugglers out, and that is indeed what we are doing. >> reporter: cnn's rosa flores is in el paso. mayorkas warned about smugglers trying to seize on this moment. what are you seeing there in el paso right there on the border? >> reporter: you know, smugglers, definitely seizing on that moment. in essence, smugglers are using this information and guiding lots of migrants to cross into the border illegally. let me show you around. this is actually the front of where this shelter is at this
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church. right now women and children were just allowed into the church. that's why when you look around me, what you see mostly are adults without children. adult men, adult women. you can see it's getting hot here in el paso already. a lot of them are using what they can find around them. american red cross blankets to protects themselves from the sun. according to the city of el paso about 2,300 migrants live on the streets of el paso right now. about 1,800 here in the location that i am right now. according to city officials they are expecting to open shelters in the coming week. they're expected to prepare to use other city resources, and a lot of those monies are fema dollars. now, that is going to impact the scene out here for the following reasons -- fema dollars can only be used according to the city of el paso to help immigrants who have done the right thing. turned themselves in to authorities and been processed by u.s. immigration authorities.
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a lot of the individuals you see here, though, decided to enter the country illegally. it's what you were talking about exactly jessica, that misinformation used by smugglers that then luring immigrants into entering the country illegally. now, why? why is that? there are tens of thousands of migrants. what you see here is also replicated in northern mexican cities. tens of thousands of migrants waiting for the lifting of title 42. some of those individuals have grown very impatient. so they do believe the lies from smugglers, jessica, and decided to enter the country. a lot of the people you see here entered the country ill leelee and the city of el paso says they will likely not be able to help them. >> thank you so much. in el paso. cnn has more reporting how new york is handling this influx of migrants. what have you learned? >> reporter: exactly right. what my colleague rosa is seeing
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on the streets of el paso is what new york city is preparing for, because over the last year we have seen tens of thousands of migrants arriving here in new york city after being bused from the southern border. now, we have just gotten our hands on an internal memo by the adams administration outlining all of the possibilities the administration is looking at in order to respond and prepare ahead of the expiration of title 42 next week. now, i've been speaking to sources inside the adams administration who tell me that this is an all hands on deck moment. they are looking at every possible option. some of the yzs cidea considere tents in central park, coney island beach. the parking lot of a city field. where the mets play. citi field. it shows you how much of a crisis the city is anticipating.
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now, none of these plans are finalized. however, the city tells me they are already running out of room. last night they had to resort to sheltering people inside an old nypd training gym, because the shelters are at capacity, and they are running out of room. >> hmm. all right. painting quite a picture. gloria, thanks so much. jim? really good economic news. u.s. jobs market shrugged off recession fears today with a blockbuster april jobs report. analysts had been expecting 180,000 new jobs. employers came in hotter. 253,000. as you can see, dow's loving it. there is the ongoing question, though, how the fed responds to all this, and how much it tries to rein economic growth in. matt egan following this. matt, i know we always like to do, take the good with the bad. take the good for a moment. that's a very vibrant job market. that's good news for americans looking forward.
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>> it is, jim. i mean if there is a recession coming, it's not here yet and it is definitely not showing up in the jobs market. which looks strong. i mean, i argue looks shockingly strong given the banking crisis and the fed's inflation. hiring unexpectedly accelerated to 253,000 in april. now, there were downward revisions to both february and march. so if you look at the trend, the median turn trend. hiring slowed but not alarmingly so. it's actually kind of exactly what the fed wants. right? a gradual slowdown not a collapse in hiring's if you look at the unemployment rate, down to 3.4%. that is tied for lowest since 1969. that spike on the left side of the chart there was back in 2020 when unemployment went to almost 15%. we were miles away from that. and looking at the sector breakdown, hiring was really
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solid. really across the board. professional business services, health care, leisure and hospitality all adding tens of thousands of jobs last month alone. jim, put it together, there's nothing about this jobs report that speaks to an imminent or ongoing recession. >> so, listen, fed raised interest rates earlier in the week, a quarter point. seemed to senate they're not wedded to another interest rate hike at the next time around. inflation numbers have been coming down. dop they, then have to factor in the strong job market? i mean, when you think of economists how do they add it all up as they already look forward to the next fed decision? >> jim, it is a confusing picture. a lot of moving pieces. the fed did open the door to a pause in interest rate hikes. and the thinking among economists and investors right now is that today's jobs report, while it was strong, it does not remove the possibility for a fed to pause at the june meeting. what's interesting is that in
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the last 24 hours or so investors had started to anticipate the fed could actually start cutting interest rates as soon as july. this jobs report has forced investors to take those bets away, but, listen. markets are ending what was a very nervous and turbulent week on a decidedly positive note here, jim. the dow up 600 points. basically a session high and even regional bank stocks, the ones plunging yesterday, they are skyrocketing today. >> matt egan good to see it going in the right direction. boris? coming up, a shock withdrawal. putin's hired forces telling him they are leaving part of eastern ukraine. we're going to take you to the front lines. plus, the supreme court is just halted the excuse of richard lawson. a live report on that. fewer than 24 hours away from britain's first coronation in more than 70 years. a royal expert tells us what she'll be watching for as a new king and queen are crowned.
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this just in to cnn. fighting escalating in the russian annex region of zaporizhzhia, ukraine. russian authorities there have gun evacuations. now, kyiv notes that russia has ordered evacuations like this in the past. forcibly support ukrainians. meanwhile, a different type of exodus playing out, possibly, soon in eastern ukraine pap months' long russian siege of the city of bakhmut led by the wagner group, a private company comprising tebs of thousands of russian mercenaries but now their leader says they're going to pack up and leave in nine days if they don't get more supports, specifically ammunition from the kremlin. >> translator: i am officially
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informing the defense minister chief of the general staff and the supreme commander-in-chief that my guys will not be taking useless unjustified losses in bakhmut without ammunition. so on may 10th, 2023, we are pulling out of boakhmut. we have only two collapse kilom capture out of 45. >> so nic robertson in each ukraine. i want to begin with what we're learning just now about these evacuations around zaporizhzhia, of course in the news a great de, because of a nuclear power plant that's there in the midst of the fighting. how you ukrainian officials reading these evacuations in that area? >> reporter: you know, we were down in that area earlier on today. not where evacuations are happening but in the general area. this is an area where the russians seem to think that ukraine could launch a counteroffensive and what the russian-backed administration
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saying in that russian hell pot of ukraine that they control, they're saying there's an increase in shelling and therefore we need to evacuate some of the civilian population. they did evacuate some about a week or so ago, but ukrainian officials said, look, they're just evacuating a few high-up people in a sort of local russian-backed administrations, but this looks like, jim. it looks like what happens in kherson when the ukrainians were about to go on their offensive and take back that territory. russians started loading people on buses and shipping some of them out of country. saw it in mariupol last summer. ships thousands of children, thousands of ukrainians off to russia. didn't give them opportunity to go back to ukraine. could this, so could this be the russians interpreting what they're seeing in that area as the beginning of a, the ukrainian counteroffensive? it wouldn't be surprising to me having been around that area if they were.
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>> the last thing russian s woud want. and a major commander saying he'll pull them back. keep yourself and your team safe. boris. we talked a lot about the himars rocket system the u.s. provided to ukraine, but another key piece of fire power for kyiv has been the fleet of tanks supplied by europe teen allies and morin on the way. cnn's fred pleitgen in germany for a firsthand look training ukrainians are getting to operate this fleet. >> reporter: as ukraine seems on the cusp of its massive counteroffensive against russian forces, arms donated by the u.s. and its allies keep pouring in. the bulk of western main banks bound for ukraine, more than 100 donated by germany, denmark and the netherlands. old, but still dangerous,
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ukrainians training on the tanks tem me -- we hit a russian tank, it's done. this tank can fire from afar. speed and maneuvering also great. we caught can up with german and danish troops training ukrainian croups from driving to battlefield maintenance. ukrainians have about six weeks to learn to operate the tank and effectively use it as a weapon and we asked whether or not that's enough. they said they simply have no other choice. i have now doubt we were lyn, wis this gunner says. we almost won this war already, to be honest. ukrainians have a tough offensive in front of them and a lot of territory to regain. still, the russians appear mired in turmoil. yevgeny prigozhin saying his mercenaries will pull out of bakhmut because they're not getting the ammo needed from the russian defense ministry.
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in a video, he show what's he says are bodies of dead mercenaries and blames the defense ministry for their deaths. >> translator: i am officially ning the defense minister chief of the general staff and the supreme commander in chief that my guys will not be taking useless unjustified losses in bakhmut without ammunition. so on may 10th, 2023, we are pulling out of bakhmut. >> reporter: moscow also lashing out after the alleged drone attack on the kremlin on wednesday. russia's deputy defense minister saying the u.s. and russia are close to an armed conflict and the kremlin saying it holds the u.s. and nato responsible for the incident which the u.s. calls ridiculous. germany's defense minister, though, telling me moscow's threats won't deter the western alliance. >> i'm not very concerned about that and from my point of view it doesn't have any impact on our support for ukraine. >> reporter: many more of these
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tanks will soon be shipped to ukraine, the germans say. hoping to help kyiv turn the tide once its forces are ready to counterattack. fred pleitgen, cnn, central germany. still to come, the moment a dad sucker punched an umpire at his son's baseball game. wait until you hear why he was so upset. just into cnn, the supreme court halted the excuse of richard glossip. what happens next, aftfter this keeps you cool, while sleep does it's scientntifically proven thing. rise sharper, happier,r, an overnight success..
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new developments in the case of oklahoma death row inmate richard glossip. the supreme court put a hold on glossip's execution. he was convicted of capital murder ordering killing of his boss and maintained his innocence throughout. cnn is following the story and i wonder what led to this day. >> reporter: a lot that led to this day but i've grot tot to t you jim he was getting final visitation from his wife and republican lawmakers in support of him for several years. that was happening when this stay came down from the u.s. supreme court. richard glossip doesn't even know right now that his execution has been halted momentarily. listen, what's happening here is
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the u.s. supreme court said in an 8-0 decision wants to look at two filings glossip's attorneys with support of the attorney general says there's enough evidence to at least support a new trial. they want to stop the execution until looking at those filings. that's what's happening here. now, this goes back, you know, covering this quite a while. this goes back aways where his attorneys were essentially saying there's a lot of new evidence in this case that casts a ton of doubt whether or not he should receive the death penalty for what he was convicted of. and there are criminal court of appeals in oklahoma denying those and that's why his attorneys went to the supreme court. i want to give you reaction from his attorney who in a statement said there is nothing more harrowing than the thought of executing a man who the state now admits has never received a fair trial. thankfully for the time being
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mr. glossip is out of peril. hoping they'll reverse the decision of the oklahoma criminal court of appeals and vacate mr. glossip the conviction once and for all. i spoke to him yesterday planning burials, making a list of his final witnesses. all going on, because his execution was set for next week and now there is good news for him. a stape in the case. >> good news, but saying he doesn't know that news? still thinks he'll be executed? >> doesn't even know that news yet, because his wife is visiting with him. they don't have access to phones while that's happening. we're supposed to be hearing he'll find out in the next hour or so when he wife leaves. what he thought would be his final visitation with his wife. >> can't contact anyone with that news. thanks very much. do stay with cnn. next hour glossip's lawyer and some people with him today will join cnn to speak about all this. that's ahead on "the lead with jake tapper." jessica. a florida father out on bond
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today after punching an imumpir during a high school video game. video showing the 41-year-old approaching the field and sucker punches the 63-year-old umpire. cnn is following the story. carlos, what on earth happened here? >> reporter: well, jessica, of all things, an unsportsmanlike conduct warning from that ump pai led to this encounter. the imp pyre says he gave that warning from a player from one of the teams during a high school game in osceola county and the father of that player you see him there walks up to him and punches him after the umpire and this player had a back and forth about this uns sportsmanlike conduct warning. the 41-year-old, jorge gonzalez charged with battery on a sports official, a felony in florida as well as disruption of a school function. he'd bonded out of jail.
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this isn't the first time gonzalez has ban bit of a disruption at a baseball game and he showed no remorse for any of this. as for the umpire, jessica, he is doing okay. he says that he is ready to effici officiate his next game. >> a model to put out there for children, gosh. thanks so much. boris. next, what are royal experts watching for at tomorrow's coronation? we'll ask one in minutes. plus, oregon police reopened a decade-long cold case thanks to a mushroom hunter. we'll explain when we come back on "cnn news central."
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shape in london right now. by this time tomorrow king charms iii will have his crown. his coronation first in the uk in 70 years. today he met with members of the public outside of buckingham palace. some camping out for days just to catch a glimpse of the monarch. dignitaries from around the world also are there including first lady jill biden, who's leading the u.s. delegation. princess katherine of wales releasing this photo of their meeting a short time ago. standing with them, ukraine first lady. joining us to discuss, royal "h.
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thank you for joining us. what are you watching for? >> the ritual tradition and also the new elements of this ceremony, because the king has done a lot to try and make this as inclusive and as relevant to modern britain as he possibly can. i think it's going to be an amazing blend of rituals datin back 1,000 years and the multiple people who make up this country today. >> tell us about the items he's going to be using used by some of his family members previously. >> well, that's right. we're going to see some incredible gold vestments. priestly robes that were made many, many years ago. worn by both queen elizabeth ii and by the king's grandfather george vi and great-grandfather
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george 5. warn over the years and older still, an item worn by george iv. going back to the 18th century and we're going see these items preserved for this occasion on show in the abbey tomorrow. >> speaking to what you just noted about what so many in britain are watching right now. a new phase for the uk and in ways a difficult one given so many folks are dealing with inflation and this sort of re-using of traditional garb. kind of an acknowledgement that folks face difficult times? >> very much so. look, i think no one is pretending that this isn't going to look wildly popular tomorrow given the cost of living prices people are experiencing in this country at the moment. the fact that these items are within the royal collection, normally kept at the tower of london. part of the crown jewels. you know, you have to understand
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that these belong instead of to the state to the crown. not to the monarch himself and people will understand that re-using them is as much part of tradition as, you know, the sustainability that the king is so famous for. but it's entirely fitting he hasn't commissioned new items. >> emily, we can't ignore potential drama watching unfold tomorrow. prince harry recently estranged by his family. his book recently released. will he sit with the royal family? >> i think he will sit with the royal family but not royal working members. like at the queen's funeral, cousins princess eugenie and beatrice. part of the family but not in any official role. the same for his uncle, the duke of york, of course. they're there as members of the family but not as part of the working firm. >> a lot to be on the lookout
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for. emily nash, thank you so much for that, and don't forget. cnn's coverage of the coronation begins at 5:00 a.m. tomorrow. jim? after a decade-long search police believe they may have found remains of a missing woman. what investigators think could have happened to her. and celebrity host maria menounos says she has beaten p pancreatic cancer. amazazing. that's coming up. th mor e agili♪ ♪ the old way of working is deadeder than me. ♪ ♪ we'll scale up, and we'll scale down ♪ ♪ before you're six feet underground. ♪ ♪ yes, this is how, this is how we work now. ♪ - double check that. eh, pretty good! (whistles) yeek. not cryin', are ya? let's tighten that. (fabric ripping) ooh. - wait, wh- wh- what was that? - huh? what, that?
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other headlines watching this hour. oregon investigators have a new lead in a reopening nearly
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10-year-old missing persons case. stephanie ann warner you see in this poster disappeared july 4, 2013 after attending a parade with her then boyfriend. police think she wassen the victim of foul play. now they say a mushroom hunter found human hair and tissue samples not far from where he used to live. investigators are testing the samples hoping for new clues's didn't show the picture but will get it for you. weight-loss chain jenny craig is going out of business. the announcement made on facebook. uncertainty ban last week with layoffs and closure of centers across the u.s. and canada. delivery subscriptions canceled. the company is is considering filing for bankruptcy if it cannot find a buyer. and decisions, decisions. try nearly 200 decisions. new orleans high school senior dennis barnes received more than 185 college acceptance letters, more than $10 million in
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scholarships offered. that is a record for a college-bound student, and he's only 16 years old. graduating nearly two years early with a 4.98 gpa. when i was a kid only went up to 4. where's this going? barnes chose cornell university study science in the university of engineering. >> congratulations to him. maria menounos is opening up revealing her battle with stage ii pancreatic cancer and describing getting an accurate diagnosis. she's cancer-free and encouraging others to be the ceo of her health as she calls it. we're following this, and doctors originally could not figure out what was wrong with her. what is she saying others can learn from her fight? >> reporter: well, jessica, i can tell you that maria said that here's her journey. first experiencing some
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abdominal pain after speaking with a friend of hers decided to get a full body mri scan. an elective mri and when a mass was found and she was then diagnosed with pan crazy cancer. elected mri costs around $2,500 and not how most of diagnosed. it's difficult to detect this cancer early, but jessica is raising awareness around the symptoms of pancreatic cancer and importance of listening to your body. symptoms include abdominal discomfort. yellowing of wiest eyes and skin. also white-colored stool, dark-colored urine. seens and symptoms of pancreatic cancer we typically see among cancer patients. >> amazing she's cancer-free.
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you hear pancreatic cancer as a diagnosis, typically it's pretty serious. what's the typical prognosis for someone with that sort of cancer? >> reporter: it's absolutely serious. typically with this type of cancer compared with other cancers, it has a five-year survival rate. that's around 5% to 10%. why it is very incredible that maria was able to diagnose this early and as she says now doing well. that's typically the survival rate we see with pancreatic cancer. >> incredible. glad she's cancer-free and doing well. jack rin hqueline howard, thank may is mental health awareness month and according to the national alliance on mental illness one in five american adults struggle with their mental health. less than half receive treatment, though. this week 2021 cnn hero michelle fernandez sayres critical advice saying let go of the stigma and
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reach out for help. >> i think our >> i think our society has told us there's something wrong with you if you feel broken and that mental health breakdowns equal weakness. i believe that the truth is it's the ability to allow ourselves to be broken that opens opportunity for healing. one of the things that we underestimate as a society is how our global mental health impacts us as individuals. and we have seen it over and over again as we experience gun violence. on one hand, we can see what happens when people don't get the help they need. there can be tragic consequences. on the flip side of that, you have families dealing with the grief and trauma of living
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through or not living through gun violence. so we are in this canoe together. we are all impacted by gun violence, and how that influences us changes depending on where we sit in the canoe. if you're actively struggling with your mental health and you haven't told anybody, i'm asking you today to please share your struggle with one person. and if you don't have a personal relationship with someone where you feel like you could make that call, please use one of the many mental health hotlines that are available. it feels so lonely when you're struggling by yourself. know that you're not alone in this. i promise. >> for more advise from michelle neff hernandez and several other cnn heroes on nurturing good mental health, go to cnnheroes.com, where you can also nominate your own cnn hero. stay with cnn. we're back in just minutes.
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2010s in the united states could be the most consequential decade since the 1960s, marked by political, social unrest, the rise in social media, of course capped off by the year that changed everything, 2020. now, cnn's acclaimed decades series is back with the 2010s, and a definitive look at the transformative decade. first we examine the rise of
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peek tv and its impact on pop culture in america. here's a preview. ♪ >> the 2010s have ushered in a new era. >> the like button was a market genius. >> it can be frustrating, this business of democracy. >> i am running for president of the united states. >> it was a moment that said, we have to tell our stories. >> i made the voice of my generation, or at least a voice. >> joining us now are two actresses who made an indelible mark on audiences in the 2010s. jennifer robertson, who played jocelyn, and karen robinson, who played ronnie on the award-winning show schitt's creek. karen, there is so much love for this show, and it really
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culminated in that huge seven-category sweep at the emmys in 2020 just before the final season premiered on netflix. what did that feel like to get that kind of recognition? >> it felt like we were this -- we were always this little show that could, you know? this little canadian show that had this incredible impact, which we were all so grateful for. but even at the emmys, those of us who could get together did get together, but we couldn't all be together because of covid. so it still felt like we were this little family that had all this stuff coming at us. and, man, that was overwhelming. it's still overwhelming to this day. i was with dan talking about it, and we're still sort of like, did that really happen? so i think that's where we are, and hopefully that's where we'll always be. >> what was the secret to that electricity in the cast?
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>> you go, jen. >> i mean great casting. yeah, great casting for the show. then just a great energy. going to work every day on that show, you realize how lucky you are once you've been on other shows. everybody was so incredible and professional and so funny, and it was just a joy every day to go to work. >> i felt like i was really in the presence of comedy royalty. every single day i felt so lucky to be amongst those people. and i feel like the casting process, like jen said, was so well-conducted, and it was so -- it was so very specific. dan levy is the kind of person who does not stop until he gets it right. and so you just know that every single person he chose, he chose because he knew that they would add their particularities of self to the role that he was
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casting them in. and he wasn't wrong. he was not wrong. >> i'm curious to get from both of you, starting with jennifer, what your favorite memory is from filming the show. >> very hard to pin down a favorite. any day with the jazza gals was a delight. once all the jazza gals were gathered, there was singing on-set all day long. from were so many great memories. the last day of shooting, as karen will say, was really special and tender and sweet. so many great memories. it's really hard to narrow it down. >> so many great memories for sure. that does it for us at cnn news central. don't go anywhere. "the lead" with jake tapper starts right now. donald trump's deposition from that ci

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