Episode Transcript
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0:00
Hey, I'm sure how to Wagstaff! And
0:02
hi there I'm Rohit Joseph. And were
0:04
asking for ten minutes of your day
0:06
to go through. the ten things at
0:08
the Un recommends we can all do
0:10
when it comes to climate change. Please
0:12
don't leave. No and hawthorne it's aren't
0:15
new. We just wired to not do
0:17
them. We promise you to help you
0:19
figure out your brains and you and
0:21
your people can make better choices to
0:24
combat climate change. Ten Minutes to
0:26
Save the Planet is available now on
0:28
Cbc listen and everywhere you get your
0:30
podcasts. This
0:32
is a Cbc podcast. It's
0:41
been really hard for I've been a
0:43
one hundred and eighty four days where
0:45
the lot of hope. That. It not a
0:48
the. A grim milestone. It
0:50
is six months since the October
0:52
Seventh Hamas attacks that started the
0:54
war with Israel, and peace still
0:56
seems a long way off. Welcome
0:59
to World Tonight this Sunday, April
1:01
Seventh. I'm Stephanie Scan Eris also
1:03
on the podcast. This federal program.
1:05
Is asking the dentist to sign
1:08
a contract that's like seven pages
1:10
strong with a lot of unknown
1:12
factors and unnecessary terms and conditions.
1:14
Teething problems With the new National
1:17
Dental Care Plan some seniors say
1:19
they'll be left out unless they
1:21
ditch their dentist and a taste
1:23
of history. The new exhibit of
1:26
menus from around the world that
1:28
show how food has fueled some
1:30
defining moments. In.
1:44
Jerusalem. Thousands of Israelis stand together
1:47
calling for the release of hostages'
1:49
being held in Gaza. many holding
1:51
placards with the faces of they're
1:53
missing loved ones. It was six
1:55
months ago today that Hamas lead
1:58
fighters launched a surprise Us. assault
2:00
on Israel, killing 1,200 people
2:02
and dragging more than 250 others back into Gaza. For
2:07
Israelis like this woman, October 7 represents
2:09
a turning point for her country. I
2:11
don't think that Israel will ever be
2:13
the same. I think that you
2:15
walk down the streets and you have to
2:18
continue with life, but you feel the sorrow.
2:21
Israel's military retaliation against Hamas continues
2:23
to this day, and Gaza's health
2:25
ministry says more than 33,000 people
2:27
have been killed. Ceasefire
2:30
talks appear at an impasse, and
2:32
today the IDF said its troops
2:34
are regrouping for the next stage
2:37
of the war. Sarah Levitt has
2:39
our lead story tonight. In
2:42
Jerusalem, a man bends down to
2:44
light a candle, beside it a
2:46
photo of a hostage yet to
2:48
be released by Hamas. Thousands gathered
2:50
to mark six months since Hamas
2:52
attacked Israel, and the war
2:54
began. In Tel Aviv, we need to
2:56
bring them back home today,
2:59
not tomorrow, not in a month.
3:01
With hands painted blood red, Yifat
3:04
Khaldurun is calling for the hostages
3:06
to be released, including her cousin,
3:08
Afar. Please do everything. Pay the
3:12
price, whatever the price
3:14
is, the higher price. About 130
3:17
hostages are still being held in
3:19
captivity. Ziv Abboud survived the
3:21
attack at the Nova Music Festival, but
3:23
her boyfriend, Elia Cohen, remains
3:26
a hostage. I feel terrible, she
3:28
says, six months into the war
3:30
and I'm doing everything I can
3:32
to get my boyfriend back. The
3:35
repercussions of the October 7th
3:37
attack are felt worldwide. In
3:39
Montreal, members
3:43
of the Jewish community also gathered.
3:45
Raquel Look was there. Her son,
3:47
Ediksand, was killed during the attack on
3:49
the music festival. Pain is still
3:51
just as sharp and feels in some
3:54
ways the time is stood still. In
3:56
Gaza, there's
3:59
also more Learning Reputable an
4:01
artificial sweeteners restaurant. For. Six
4:04
months we've come to this hospital
4:06
to pray for the martyrs. says
4:08
Islam abu his i eat as
4:11
he leads the prayers, Families cry
4:13
bent over body bags, gases. Health
4:16
Ministry says more than thirty three
4:18
thousand people, mostly civilian women and
4:20
children have been killed. Israel's response
4:23
to October Seventh vast, devastating, and
4:25
increasingly criticized the United Nations says
4:27
Israel's bombardments and ground offensive has
4:30
meant hundreds of thousands of Palestinians
4:32
in Northern Gaza. Are starving?
4:35
Prime. Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada
4:37
is watching closely. The humanitarian
4:39
costs of this crisis or
4:42
abominable are horrific. The her
4:44
own families is tremendous. We
4:46
need to see a ceasefire
4:48
in which from asked lays
4:51
down it's arms and releases
4:53
the hostages. But. Today, Israeli
4:55
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
4:58
reiterated. Provoking a few Love the news.
5:00
A cease fire will not happen
5:02
until Hamas releases the hostages. She
5:04
said. Most of them of
5:07
money. It's a song that the
5:09
reaction of a resident of Khan
5:11
Yunis and Southern Gaza returning home
5:13
to a city of rubble today
5:16
Israel pulled some troops out of
5:18
Southern Gaza. Israel Defense Forces says
5:20
it's temporary as it prepares for
5:23
future operations in a war that
5:25
appears to be nowhere near as
5:27
sent. Several. Of it's Cbc
5:30
News. And true. Prime. Minister
5:32
Justin Trudeau has unveiled a multi
5:34
billion dollar plan to help bolster
5:36
Canada's A I sector. He was
5:38
in Montreal today, making this latest
5:40
spending promise ahead of the April
5:43
sixteenth budget and once again provoking
5:45
criticism from Conservative leader Pierre Paul.
5:47
Yes State Mckenna breaks down the
5:49
backlash. Conservative leader Pierre Paul. he
5:51
as is calling on the Prime Minister to
5:53
put the brakes on Sunday. It's like. He's
5:56
a. He's. Bringing billions
5:59
of dollars, There's out of a
6:01
fire hose. But. It's
6:03
more like spraying gasoline. On.
6:06
The fire. He sent a letter
6:08
to Justin Trudeau outlining his request for
6:10
the budget is calling on the Liberals
6:12
to help pass a bill to give
6:14
more carbon tax covered to farmers to
6:16
require cities to permit more home every
6:18
year as part of a condition for
6:20
receiving federal infrastructure money, and he kept
6:23
sending by finding a dollar in savings
6:25
for every new dollar of spending. For.
6:27
Trudeau has another visit his criss
6:29
crossing the country, making near daily
6:31
pre budget announcements. This week he
6:34
announced billions and funding for housing
6:36
and today in Montreal he announced
6:38
two point four billion dollars to
6:40
build capacity in artificial intelligence. We
6:42
need to make strategic investments that
6:44
will create jobs. Most of the
6:47
money would help give access to computing
6:49
capabilities and technical infrastructure to researchers in
6:51
industry. It's also money to boost a
6:54
I start ups and support workers who
6:56
may be impacted by a I. Trudeau
6:58
defended the proposed new spending, saying it's
7:01
responsible and will spur economic growth. But
7:03
once again, pure polio. Is.
7:06
Wrong. Is. Not
7:08
listening to experts and economists
7:11
and he's willing to hurt
7:13
the things that Canadians rely
7:15
on to get through these
7:18
difficult times. But pressure is building.
7:20
Six Premier's are demanding a meeting to
7:22
talk about their opposition to a carbon
7:24
tax including New Brunswick Premier plane hit.
7:27
By that but I would I would.
7:29
Old is a real frank discussion on
7:31
on the reality of what is being
7:33
proposed. I'm in the possibilities of do
7:35
exists within our country. Trudeau. Hasn't
7:38
accepted that invitation. Reiterating that most
7:40
families get more money back and
7:42
rebates than they pay. For
7:44
right now all we see
7:46
is Premier's misinforming Canadians. And.
7:50
wanting to take a waste the can have
7:52
a carbon rebate checks that are making a
7:54
huge difference in people's lives he of justin
7:56
trudeau is so sure of his plan the
7:59
core drupal that carbon tax to 61
8:01
cents a litre. He
8:03
should have the courage to sit down with our
8:05
premiers and explain that to them.
8:08
Trudeau is set to make more
8:10
pre-budget spending announcements this week before
8:12
the budget is actually tabled later
8:14
this month. Expect to see more
8:16
measures aimed at Millennials and Gen
8:18
Z, two demographics struggling with one
8:20
of the biggest political issues in
8:22
Canada, affordability. Kate McKenna, CBC
8:24
News, Ottawa. In less
8:26
than a month, some seniors will start
8:29
being covered under Canada's dental care plan.
8:31
The national plan is intended to fill
8:33
the gaps for Canadians without private coverage
8:35
but as Marina von Stackelberg reports, many
8:38
eligible seniors are finding out their dentists
8:40
don't want to take part in the
8:42
program. In
8:47
just weeks, denturist Adam Lima will start
8:49
seeing patients at his Ottawa clinic who
8:51
for the first time have dental insurance.
8:54
I personally think it's a great idea to
8:56
have some subsidy for seniors because we do
8:58
see a lot of people that
9:00
have financial issues. The Canadian dental
9:02
care plan will eventually cover one
9:04
quarter of Canadians. Ottawa
9:07
is rolling out eligibility starting with
9:09
seniors first. So far, 1.6 million
9:12
of them have enrolled. We're happy to
9:14
be part of it especially if it works the way
9:16
it's supposed to. But getting enough oral
9:18
health care providers on board might be
9:21
like pulling teeth. Health Canada
9:23
will only say thousands of them
9:25
have registered so far for the
9:27
voluntary program. Dental associations
9:29
warn sign-up is low. Case
9:31
in point, their presidents, working
9:33
dentists themselves, tell CBC News
9:35
they won't run the program
9:37
in their own practices. Dr.
9:40
Jenny Dirksen, head of the Alberta
9:42
Dental Association, says that's because they
9:44
don't know what they're signing up
9:46
for. Unlike other dental Plans, This
9:48
federal program is asking the dentist
9:50
to sign a contract that's like
9:52
seven pages long with a lot
9:55
of unknown factors and unnecessary terms
9:57
and conditions. Engine
10:01
and. Dentists also say clinics
10:03
are thin on office staff so
10:05
they won't be able to handle
10:08
the paperwork Auto requires to process
10:10
claims. Doctor Rob Lonski is President
10:12
of the Bc Dental Association. Myself
10:14
have told me and no uncertain terms they don't
10:16
want to do the program because the Be just
10:19
cannot handle the extra burden that comes with it.
10:21
I. Was annoyed I was really close.
10:23
Some seniors like current trimming ham have
10:25
found out there dentists won't participate. The
10:27
eighty two year old Some Yarmouth, Nova
10:29
Scotia doesn't want to have to travel
10:31
to another dentist. It does what it
10:33
mean to me. It's. Just going to continue
10:36
pay. I just said the minimal amounts of
10:38
things. That. I mean
10:40
I'm self funding is. To replace that I
10:42
love the couple of months ago
10:44
and to just over the Gap
10:46
senior Joanne Kibo says her dentist
10:48
in Victoria isn't taking part either.
10:50
It really irks me. That
10:52
the Federal government came out announced a dental
10:54
plan but they didn't do their homework to
10:57
get the thing and place so that my
10:59
dentist could be part of it's A. Canada's
11:01
Health Minister Mark Holland may be looking to
11:03
sweeten the deal of. Working actively on creating
11:05
an alternative to audible allow dentist to
11:07
operatives who paid or just directly when
11:09
a patient comes in front of them
11:11
to just put in the information and
11:13
be able to put that claims. Another
11:16
sore spot for dentists and patience.
11:18
The Federal government initially pitch this
11:20
as free dental care, but it
11:22
only covers some procedures man at
11:25
a lower rate the many clinics
11:27
charts so you should still expect
11:29
the bill after visiting the dentist
11:31
chair. Maria. Von Stauffenberg. Cbc
11:33
News Ottawa. Coming
11:39
up on the podcast got Sir Eclipse glasses
11:41
ready. will set up tomorrow's big event and
11:43
take you to one of the best places
11:45
to view it Niagara Falls that still ahead
11:47
on your world's in. rwanda
11:57
is marking a somber anniversary
11:59
It's 30 years since the
12:02
1994 genocide when hundreds of
12:04
thousands of people were killed in a
12:06
massacre that spanned 100 days. Philip
12:09
Lee Shanok looks at what people are
12:11
saying today, including those who led a
12:13
Canadian peacekeeping mission there. At
12:16
a ceremony in Rwanda's capital, Kigali,
12:18
a flame of remembrances list for
12:21
the victims of a months-long rampage
12:23
in the East African country. This
12:25
flame symbolizes not only our
12:27
past, but the hope for
12:30
tomorrow. It will keep burning for the next
12:32
100 days. That's the
12:34
number of days extremists from
12:36
the country's ethnic Hutu majority
12:38
massacred ethnic Tutsis and moderate
12:40
Hutus using machetes, clubs and
12:42
guns 30 years ago. At
12:45
a ceremony attended by representatives
12:47
from dozens of countries, President
12:49
Paul Kagame paid tribute to
12:51
the international peacekeepers, including many
12:53
from Canada who attempted to
12:55
stop the genocide. Many
12:58
of the countries represented here today
13:00
also sent their
13:02
sons and daughters. Both
13:05
soldiers did not
13:07
fail Rwanda. It
13:09
was the international community which
13:12
failed all of us. The United
13:14
Nations already had a peacekeeping force
13:16
in the region, and they did
13:18
attempt to broker a ceasefire. However,
13:20
those efforts failed and the UN
13:22
withdrew most of its peacekeeping troops.
13:25
Retired Canadian Lieutenant General Romeo de
13:27
L'Air led the mission. In
13:30
places like Myanmar,
13:32
like Ukraine, like
13:34
Gaza, the world
13:37
is not in any way, shape
13:39
or form any more
13:41
effective in preventing, let alone stopping,
13:43
mass atrocities and abuse of human
13:46
rights to innocent people. Ceremonies
13:49
were also held in Montreal and
13:51
Ottawa. On Parliament Hill, survivors held
13:53
a moment of silence. Pascal Kanyamire
13:56
lost many family members in the
13:58
genocide. Many survivors,
14:00
he fears, perpetrators are here in
14:02
Canada. So can you imagine,
14:04
you have a neighbor that probably killed
14:06
20 people in Rwanda. Do you want
14:09
to have that person as a neighbor? I don't
14:11
think so. Felix Ndehenda is a researcher
14:13
at the University of Rwanda in Kigali.
14:15
He says that tension is something the
14:17
country is still struggling with. Where you
14:19
have communities of perpetrators and survivors living
14:21
side by side, but at the same
14:23
time, the demons of the past are
14:26
very much part of the present. But
14:28
he says the people of Rwanda are
14:30
resilient. It's been quite
14:32
surprising cases of people intermarring,
14:35
even in survivor and perpetrator
14:37
communities, which would shock many.
14:40
And he says while it's important to
14:42
commemorate what happened, it cannot really be
14:44
expected or possible to fully heal from
14:47
deep psychological wounds. But there
14:49
is hope for a full reconciliation one
14:51
day. Phil Tishanak, CBC
14:53
News, Toronto. India's
14:56
Supreme Court has taken up
14:58
the case of a divisive
15:00
citizenship law. It allows some
15:02
migrants who escaped religious persecution
15:04
to get Indian citizenship more
15:06
quickly. The government of Prime
15:08
Minister Narendra Modi announced who is eligible under
15:10
the law last month, just as he was
15:12
gearing up for his election campaign. As
15:15
freelance reporter Murli Krishnan tells us,
15:17
there are widespread suspicions about the law
15:19
because of who it leaves out. The
15:22
implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act
15:25
on the cusp of elections has
15:27
riled India's Muslims and opposition parties
15:29
alike. The CAA
15:31
fast-tracks citizenship for religious minorities
15:34
who migrated to India before
15:36
2014 because
15:39
of religious persecution in
15:41
Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh.
15:44
Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis
15:46
and Christians are covered by
15:49
the law. Congress Party
15:51
MP Sashita Roor says the
15:53
law goes against India's secular
15:55
identity. thereby
16:00
exclude people of only one religion.
16:02
Muslims fleeing religious persecution from countries
16:04
like Sri Lanka or Myanmar are
16:07
not being granted the same privileges.
16:10
Taroor says this is a clear
16:12
sign the intent of the law
16:14
is discriminatory. There is a pure
16:17
communal message, a dog whistle as
16:19
they say, a whistle to some
16:21
people saying your communal agenda is
16:24
what we are pursuing. The CAA
16:26
was a key promise in the
16:28
ruling Bhartijanasa Committee's 2019 election
16:31
platform. The BJP disputes
16:33
the accusations of discrimination, noting
16:36
that the law does not strip rights
16:38
away from Muslims. And
16:40
BJP spokesperson Nalim Kohli argues Muslims
16:43
do not need same protections as
16:45
other religious minorities. For a Muslim
16:47
who wants to be an immigrant
16:49
or wishes to seek citizenship here,
16:51
to say that I should be
16:53
fast-tracked when he is coming from
16:55
a Muslim-majority country and has the
16:57
option to go to 50 other
16:59
countries, which a Hindu doesn't have,
17:01
a Sikh doesn't have is discriminatory
17:04
then to their entire cause and
17:06
purpose. There are fears that enacting
17:08
the CAA could be a forerunner
17:10
to a National Register of Citizens
17:12
or NRC. The
17:15
NRC is a register meant
17:17
to identify and deport all
17:19
undocumented immigrants even if
17:21
their families have lived in India
17:23
for generations. Only the
17:25
North Eastern state of Assam has such a
17:27
registry, but the BJP has
17:30
signaled its intent to implement
17:32
the NRC nationwide. This
17:34
NRC or CAA law, it
17:37
is meant to relegate Muslims
17:39
to second-class citizenship. Former
17:41
Chairperson of the Delhi Minorities
17:44
Commission, Zafarul Islam Khan,
17:46
says the NRC is
17:48
part of the BJP's Hindu first
17:50
agenda. They say that we do
17:52
not consider people who believe in
17:54
religions which came from outside India
17:56
like Islam or Christianity. These are
17:58
not at par. with Indian
18:01
religions. More than 200 petitions have
18:03
been filed in India's Supreme Court
18:06
against the citizenship law. The
18:08
petitioners argue the law is
18:11
unconstitutional. In late March,
18:13
the Supreme Court refused to issue
18:15
a stay on CAA and
18:17
gave the government until April 8 to
18:19
respond to the petitions. Murali
18:22
Krishnan for CBC News, New
18:24
Delhi. SUTHERAN,
18:39
ONTARIO, HAS ECLIPSE FEVER. A ONCE
18:42
IN A LIFETIME. SOLAR ECLIPSE WILL
18:44
PASS OVER NORTH AMERICA ON MONDAY.
18:46
The area around Niagara Falls will
18:49
have some of the best views.
18:51
Hotels have been sold out across
18:53
the region for months, and businesses
18:55
and police are bracing for a
18:58
massive influx of sky-gazers. Katie Nicholson
19:00
is there. They're
19:02
vegan, gluten-free. Thea Davidson
19:05
swirls cosmic purple frosting over
19:07
chocolate donuts in her Grimsby
19:09
cafe. What are these? These
19:11
are yours. There are eclipse
19:13
donuts. Galaxy eclipse donuts.
19:16
It's still a day away, but she
19:18
says her business is already seeing an
19:20
eclipse bump. Like I said, yesterday was
19:23
extremely busy. Lots of people coming in for
19:25
the donuts. So, yeah, I
19:27
think it's just going to be crazy. In
19:30
Niagara on the lake, Treadwell, a
19:32
fine dining restaurant, also going full
19:34
throttle. Unusual for April,
19:36
says founder James Treadwell, who remembers
19:39
the last time there was this much buzz in the
19:41
area, a Mumford & Sons concert
19:43
that flooded the tiny community. We,
19:46
as a town, ran out of money in
19:48
our ATMs. So there
19:50
were huge lines outside various
19:52
business. We were incredibly busy all day long.
19:54
Down a few stretches of Country Road, Greg
19:57
Virtus Vineyard is hopping with a
19:59
eclipse. He's curated a
20:01
wine tasting for each stage of
20:03
the eclipse. So we're actually going
20:05
to be sampling four very, very different wines, almost
20:08
like an eclipse where you start with something light
20:10
and bright. You work your way through
20:12
the darker red wines that we have here and then
20:14
you might finish again with the sun coming out. The
20:16
only thing that could ruin his plans? Bad
20:19
weather. So have you looked at your
20:21
app yet for some more? Nope. I
20:23
am trying to after watching it. So we're just
20:25
hoping that we're going to get good good glimpse
20:27
at it. Estimates of crowd size
20:30
in Niagara Falls and surrounding communities have
20:32
varied from a million to several hundred
20:34
thousand. Emergency services providers and
20:36
police have been making safety plans for
20:39
more than a year. And
20:41
tomorrow, Niagara Regional Police still don't
20:43
know what to expect, says Constable
20:45
Phil Gavin. There's a lot of people
20:47
saying big deal, it's just an eclipse. But we
20:49
have to plan. We can't just hope for the
20:51
best and not do anything. For many, it will
20:53
be a game day decision that many
20:56
others are already in place. Jason
20:59
and Jeanette Brown and their dog
21:01
Cookie drove eight hours from Woodbury,
21:03
New Jersey to experience this celestial
21:05
event here. We didn't
21:07
see the complete eclipse in 2017 and
21:10
at that time it was
21:12
put on my bucket list. And
21:15
20 years, who knows where we'll be
21:17
in 20 years. So live for
21:19
today. Question Monday morning, how
21:21
many others will decide to do just
21:24
that and join them? Katie
21:26
Nicholson, CBC News, Niagara Falls. Most
21:30
of us don't give much thought to
21:32
menus. We order our food and drinks
21:35
and then probably forget about them. But
21:37
they can give us a glimpse into the
21:39
past. A newly opened exhibit in
21:42
Rome has put some 400 menus
21:44
on display showing what people were
21:46
eating during some of the most
21:49
consequential moments in modern history. Megan
21:51
Williams takes us on this tasty trip
21:54
through time. that
22:00
menus both the object, the paper,
22:02
prints and design, and the list
22:04
of dishes on them for centuries
22:06
were at the center of world
22:08
politics. Now
22:11
laid out in the World of Menus
22:13
exhibit at the small Garam Museum of
22:15
Gastronomic History here in Rome are hundreds
22:17
of menus that span more than 200
22:19
years. They provide fascinating
22:22
glimpses into defining moments
22:24
of diplomatic aspiration. Shows
22:27
of wealth and power, creative
22:29
acts of defiance, and calm
22:31
before catastrophe. It's a very
22:33
simple menu with Italian dishes but not
22:36
an impressive one. Says museum
22:38
director Matteo Guirigini of the menu
22:40
from the first meeting between Italian
22:42
fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and Adolf
22:45
Hitler, who in 1934 held
22:48
up Mussolini as a model. The
22:50
menu for their meeting in Venice
22:53
was a run-of-the-mill offering of Italian
22:55
cuisine. Crabs from the Adriatic, beef
22:57
from Piedmont, and void of
22:59
any signs of trying to impress or pander
23:02
to. Mussolini didn't care about
23:04
Hitler at the time. A
23:06
little super clown he said after
23:08
the meeting. Also
23:10
annoying. Two menus
23:12
from the Franco-Prussian War of
23:14
1870 provide a gripping contrast.
23:16
The Germans had laid siege
23:18
to Paris, starving the city
23:20
into submission. They set
23:22
up their headquarters in nearby Versailles, where
23:25
they dined on puff pastries stuffed with
23:27
meat. Parisians, facing
23:29
famine, plundered the zoo, eating
23:32
elephants, donkeys, camels, and bears.
23:35
In an act of defiance, a top
23:37
Parisian chef made an intricately decorated menu
23:39
of the zoo animal meal now on
23:42
display. So Germans in
23:44
Versailles eating volouvain, and
23:47
Parisian people eating the animals in
23:49
the zoo are rats. Museum
23:55
founder and menu collector Rosano Bolscolo
23:57
shows me original copies of the
23:59
menu. menus for the final meals
24:01
onboard the Titanic, a lavish banquet
24:03
for the first class, a supper
24:05
of gruel, cabin biscuits and cheese
24:07
for those down below. The
24:11
originals exist, he says, because a menu
24:13
collector was friends with the printer. Others on
24:17
display include a meter-long menu for
24:19
the coronation of the last Tsar
24:21
of Russia before he was killed
24:23
by revolutionaries, as well as the
24:26
first and likely the last meeting
24:28
between Pope Francis and the Russian
24:30
Orthodox Church Patriarch and Putin apologist
24:32
Kirill. While menus for diplomatic
24:34
encounters continue, those for private events
24:37
have lost their importance, says Girigini,
24:39
who created menus to celebrate the
24:41
birth of his two daughters. Sad,
24:43
in my opinion, to not have
24:46
a menu. It's something
24:48
that you can preserve, read again after
24:52
years, and you can
24:54
remember a moment that's important to
24:56
remember. Megan Williams,
24:58
CBC News, Rome. If
25:02
you don't want to go, love me
25:04
like you mean it.
25:08
Pulsi Ballerini there with love me like
25:10
you mean it, the 2014 hit
25:12
that she's performing at tonight's Country Music
25:14
Television Awards. Ballerini is back as host
25:17
for the fourth and she
25:19
says final year. She's also one of
25:21
the artists leading the pack for nominations
25:24
with three, including the biggest prize, Video
25:26
of the Year. This
25:38
year's show features appearances by
25:40
icons like Tricia Yearwood, who's
25:42
receiving the inaugural June Carter
25:44
Cash Humanitarian Award. And
25:49
three tributes to Toby Keith, who died in February
25:51
of stomach cancer. This
25:58
summer, should have been a big surprise. been a cowboy,
26:00
you can cover a dry brick and gun. There's
26:12
also space for budding stars like
26:14
Dasha. The CMT's executive producer says
26:16
she was only booked to perform
26:18
about a month ago, right when
26:20
this song started blowing up on
26:22
TikTok with 6 billion
26:24
views. Despite it being called Austin,
26:26
this is the 24-year-old Californian's
26:29
first trip to the city where
26:31
this year's ceremony is being held. Meanwhile,
26:42
Jelly Roll had a bumpy trip to
26:44
Austin with his private jet having to
26:46
make an emergency landing. But he's ending
26:48
the show with this song, Half Way
26:50
to Hell. So we'll end ours with
26:52
the same. This has been Your World
26:54
Tonight, this Sunday, April 7th. I'm
26:57
Stephanie Skanderas. Thanks for listening.
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