4.4 • 621 Ratings
🗓️ 5 June 2020
⏱️ 17 minutes
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0:00.0 | Rated T for Teen. |
0:02.0 | Each year, thousands of adults lose their shred. |
0:05.0 | It's an epidemic simply known as shred loss, but it doesn't have to be this way. |
0:09.0 | Because rekindling your shred is as easy as playing the new Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 and 4. |
0:14.0 | With new parks, cross-platform multiplayer, and sick new game modes, |
0:19.0 | we can put an end to shred loss everywhere. |
0:21.6 | Let the new Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 and 4 and show the world that the shred's not dead. |
0:26.6 | Get Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 and 4 available now. |
0:29.6 | This feel and look so different. |
0:34.6 | It is so much more massive and all-inclusive to see people from all over the world. |
0:44.9 | Taken to the streets, to do what I call getting in trouble. People now understand what the struggle was all about. |
0:58.2 | Thank you. People not understand what the struggle was all about. Civil rights leader John Lewis, reflecting there on CBS News on the differences between today's movement that we're seeing in the streets of America versus what he witnessed and participated in in protest in marches of the 1960s. |
1:14.1 | Hello, everyone. I'm David Challey and the CNN political director. This is the Daily D.C. |
1:19.5 | George Floyd's memorial service marked a second day of reduced tensions across America, but not |
1:25.7 | reduced activism. The energy of the demonstrations around the country continued. |
1:31.0 | This latest protest movement is an American tradition going back to the country's founding, |
1:36.1 | quite frankly, and it shows no signs of stopping any time soon. |
1:40.4 | It's a level of mobilization that many observe has not been seen in America since the 1960s, |
1:46.4 | prompting people to look to that past for lessons on what today's movement could potentially |
1:52.7 | achieve. So joining me now to help us understand those lessons of the past. Elizabeth Hinton, |
1:58.0 | an incoming professor of history, law, and African American Studies at Yale University. |
2:03.2 | Professor Hinton, thanks so much for being here. |
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