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James Corden gives credit to Ricky Gervais after ‘inadvertantly’ telling his joke | CNN

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James Corden gives credit to Ricky Gervais after ‘inadvertantly’ telling his joke | CNN



CNN
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James Corden says he “inadvertently” instructed a joke initially made by fellow British funnyman Ricky Gervais.

Some viewers of “The Late Late Present With James Corden” took to social media to level out {that a} joke Corden made throughout his monologue on the October 31 episode was nearly an identical to at least one made by Gervais in his 2018 stand-up present, “Humanity.”

Corden’s joke was poking enjoyable at Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter.

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“Once you see Elon Musk speak about Twitter he does this factor the place he goes ‘Nicely, it’s the city sq.,’” Corden mentioned. “However it isn’t as a result of if somebody places up a poster in a city sq. that claims ‘guitar classes obtainable,’ you don’t get individuals within the city going ‘I don’t wish to play the guitar! I wish to play the piano, you piece of s**t!’”

The Twitter joke made by Gervais was nearly an identical.

“It’s like going right into a city sq. and there’s a discover for guitar classes and also you go, ‘However I don’t f**king need guitar classes,’” Gervais mentioned.

Gervais responded to a Twitter consumer who wrote “Didn’t ship it such as you although. I assume he requested to make use of that joke?”

“No. I reckon one of many writers ‘got here up with it’ for him,” Gervais tweeted. “I doubt he would knowingly simply copy such a well-known get up routine phrase for phrase like that.”

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On Tuesday Corden tweeted, “Inadvertently instructed an excellent Ricky Gervais joke on the present final night time, clearly not realizing it got here from him.”

“It’s sensible, as a result of it’s a Ricky Gervais joke,” Corden wrote. “You’ll be able to watch all Ricky’s wonderful specials on Netflix.”

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Trump Paralyzes Independent Rights Watchdog, Firing Members Selected by Democrats

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Trump Paralyzes Independent Rights Watchdog, Firing Members Selected by Democrats

President Trump on Monday fired the three Democratic-selected members of an independent civil liberties watchdog agency, leaving it paralyzed as Mr. Trump’s administration starts to put its stamp on the F.B.I. and intelligence community.

Last week, the day after Mr. Trump’s inauguration, Trent Morse, the deputy director of presidential personnel, sent emails to the agency, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, ordering the three members — Sharon Bradford Franklin, Edward W. Felten and Travis LeBlanc — to submit their resignations by that deadline, saying Mr. Trump would terminate them if they did not.

But the deadline came and went. Having received no further word, the three remained in their positions on Friday, when the board released a long-in-the-works study of terrorism watchlists, which keep people off planes or subject them to extra screening at airports.

On Monday afternoon, however, Mr. Morse sent emails to the three members of the board informing them of their dismissals. The New York Times reviewed one of the emails, and Ms. Franklin and Mr. LeBlanc confirmed that all three had been fired.

Mr. Trump did not remove the sole Republican-selected member, Beth Williams, and a fifth seat was already vacant.

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But the agency needs at least three members to take official actions like starting a new investigative project or issuing a board report with a policy recommendation, so the move has crippled its ability to function.

Mr. Trump would have been able to appoint a Republican majority even without the firings. Mr. Felten had been set to stay on until as late as January 2026, and Mr. LeBlanc till January 2029. But the tenure of Ms. Franklin, the board’s chairwoman, was about to end.

In a statement, Ms. Franklin called the firings unnecessary, while also expressing regret that the board would be unable to issue a planned report on a data privacy agreement between the European Union and the United States.

“This isn’t about me — my term was set to end later this week anyway,” she said. “But I am devastated by the attack on the board’s independence and the fact that our agency will have too few members to issue official reports.”

Congress established the agency as an independent unit in the executive branch after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to investigate national security activities that can intrude upon individual rights, like the government’s use of surveillance affecting Americans.

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It has security clearances and subpoena power, and is set up to have five members, appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, who serve six-year terms and can stay on for another after that if no successor has been confirmed. Some members are picked by the president, and some are selected by congressional leaders of the other party.

In a statement, Mr. LeBlanc thanked Mr. Trump for having appointed him in his first term, after Democrats selected him, but said that cutting short the terms Congress had intended the Democratic members to serve would undermine the board’s independence in performing oversight work that is “absolutely essential to accountability in a democracy.”

“I regret that the board’s partisan shift will ultimately undermine not only the mission of the agency, but public trust and confidence in the ability of the government to honor privacy rights, respect civil liberties, honestly inform the public, and follow the law,” Mr. LeBlanc said.

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Scott Bessent pushes gradual 2.5% universal US tariffs plan

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Scott Bessent pushes gradual 2.5% universal US tariffs plan

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Donald Trump’s Treasury secretary Scott Bessent is pushing for new universal tariffs on US imports to start at 2.5 per cent and rise gradually, according to four people familiar with the proposal.

The 2.5 per cent levy would move higher by the same amount each month, the people familiar with it said, giving businesses time to adjust and countries the chance to negotiate with the US president’s administration.

The levies could be pushed up to as high as 20 per cent — in line with Trump’s maximalist position on the campaign trail last year. But a gradual introduction would be more moderate than the immediate action some countries feared.

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Two people familiar with the discussions said it was unclear if Bessent had convinced other central stakeholders, including Howard Lutnick, Trump’s pick for commerce secretary, to adopt his proposal.

Tariff policy is already at the centre of fierce trade debates between hawks such as Peter Navarro and Jamieson Greer, and moderates such as Bessent. The Wall Street investor was comfortably confirmed as the next US Treasury secretary by a Senate vote of 68-29 on Monday evening.

Trump has threatened to force tariffs of up to 25 per cent on imports from Canada and Mexico as soon as this weekend, and in recent days threatened Colombia with 25 per cent tariffs in a dispute over deportees.

Another person familiar with Trump’s thinking said he was weighing different options. “There is not a single plan the president is ready to decide on yet.”

A person familiar with Bessent’s thinking declined to comment on the record about the proposal, but said: “He is not drawing up any plans but if confirmed looks forward to being a part of the conversation.”

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While Bessent and other proponents of the low initial tariff believe it would give countries and companies time to adjust and negotiate, critics counter that a higher initial rate would send a clearer message.

Trump made high tariffs a core of his “America First” campaign rhetoric last year, vowing in September to “tax” foreign nations “at levels that they’re not used to”.

But since his inauguration on January 20, the president’s main move has been to publish a memorandum outlining probes into US trade policy, the cause of the country’s trade deficits and whether competitors are manipulating currencies and unfairly taxing US businesses.

When asked by reporters last week whether he planned to introduce universal tariffs, Trump replied: “We may. But we’re not ready for that yet.”

Trade analysts and lawyers have said Trump could levy universal tariffs swiftly by using executive powers such as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which allows the president to respond to emergencies through economic means.

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However, trade experts have also warned that the use of IEEPA to issue broad tariffs would likely face legal challenges by business groups.

Trump, who has long railed against the US’s trade deficit, has suggested that tariffs would be a way to raise revenue for the country.

“Instead of taxing our citizens to enrich other countries, we will tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens,” he said in his inaugural address.

In his US Senate confirmation hearings last week, Bessent said that the Trump administration would use tariffs to tackle unfair trade practices, raise US government revenues, and strike deals with foreign countries.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

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Additional reporting by Myles McCormick in Washington

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How districts are responding after Trump cleared the way for immigration arrests at schools

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How districts are responding after Trump cleared the way for immigration arrests at schools

A deportation officer with Enforcement and Removal Operations in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s New York City field office conducts a brief before an early morning operation on Dec. 17, 2024, in the Bronx borough of New York.

Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP


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Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

President Donald Trump has put an end to a longstanding policy that restricted federal agents from making immigration arrests at sensitive locations like churches, hospitals and schools.

The Migration Policy Institute estimates 733,000 school-aged children live in the United States without legal status.

Chalkbeat reporter Kalyn Belsha says districts across the country are now educating their teachers, students and parents on how this change in policy may affect their schools.

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“They’re preparing for the possibility that things could be happening outside the school while families are dropping their children off or potentially waiting at their bus stop,” Belsha says. “But then also, what would they do if an agent actually knocked on the door and said, ‘I would like to come in potentially to talk to a staff member or a parent or a child?’”

The fear has led parents in some cities to keep their children home from school.

3 questions with Kalyn Belsha

Are you hearing of instances of immigration agents showing up to schools?

“We had an incident happen in Chicago on Friday where there were some federal agents that showed up at a school asking to come in to interview an 11-year-old who had posted an anti-Trump video on TikTok.

“They presented their credentials, they said [they were] Department of Homeland Security. The school was confused and said, ‘No, you cannot come in.’

“It turned out they were actually from the Secret Service, which does not enforce immigration law, but the school activated its protocol as if it were protecting that student, and said, ‘You can’t come in because you don’t have a signed warrant.’

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“It created all kinds of confusion and no one really understood what was going on for hours until we finally got confirmation that it was Secret Service.

“I think that’s the kind of example of, even if it isn’t an ICE agent, it creates all kinds of chaos for the school and for the school communities. We have not seen a documented evidence yet of an agent coming in to get a student.”

What are you hearing of the fears of the parents of students?

“I think that the more common thing we’ve seen play out has been workplace raids that have had huge ripple effects on children and schools. Sometimes children have gone home and their parent hasn’t been there, or the school has had to find an alternate place for them to stay because the parent didn’t come pick them up.

“We’ve also seen teenagers having to step up and be the parent and kind of try to figure out how to explain to their much younger siblings what’s going on. Often some family members have been released on humanitarian parole, mothers often, but then some are detained for a really long time and that really affects the family.

“So we’re going to have to figure out what happens now, whether or not there are people who are released on humanitarian parole or if family members are detained for much longer periods of time.”

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Are schools already experiencing effects of this policy change?

“In New York City, a colleague of mine spoke with several parents who were from migrant families who are staying in city shelters, and they said that they kept their kids home for several days last week.

“So I think it’s not totally widespread yet, but in certain instances some family members have decided to keep their kids home out of fear.”

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Hafsa Quraishi produced and edited this interview for broadcast with Michael Scotto. Quraishi adapted it for the web. This segment aired on Here & Now on Jan. 27, 2025.

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