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Kristi Noem Throws TANTRUM FIT After South Park Humiliated Her In SHOCKING Episode!

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All

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right, everyone, stand by. [music] We're

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just here to assist in any way we can.

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That's what Homeland Security does.

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>> If they wanted to criticize my job, go

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ahead and do that. But clearly, they

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can't. They just pick something petty

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like that.

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>> Okay. South Park is taking no prisoners

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in its new season. And despite backlash

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from Trump administration officials,

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they are unfaced. Christy Noom just

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erupted in a full-blown tantrum after

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South Park humiliated her in a shocking

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episode that turned authority into a

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cruel punchline. What started as satire

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instantly blew up, exposing how fragile

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power really is. The episode lasted

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minutes, but the nation watched her

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carefully built image crack in real

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time.

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>> Homeland security to Department of War.

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The protesters are headed your way.

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>> Hard thing about South Park is like you

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go at them and they go back at you twice

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as hard. But South Park does not mock

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gently, and in this episode, it does not

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blink. It takes Christy Gnome's public

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image and stretches it until it snaps,

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turning authority into obsession and

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power into parody. The show doesn't

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argue with her politics or debate her

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policies. It strips her of seriousness

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entirely and leaves her exposed as a

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character meant to be laughed at. That

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kind of satire is lethal because it

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doesn't shout. It lets the audience

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laugh, and laughter is the one thing

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power cannot control. While South Park

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is, in Ellison's words, highly

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profitable and a huge hit on streaming.

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>> There's too many of them.

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>> What makes the episode so shocking is

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how deliberately it leans into real

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tension without ever naming it. The

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exaggerated ice imagery, the rigid

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obsession with control, the cartoon

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authority barking orders into chaos. It

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all feels uncomfortably close to

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reality. South Park doesn't explain the

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joke or soften the blow. It trusts

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viewers to connect the dots themselves.

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In doing so, it turns a political figure

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into a symbol, and symbols are far

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easier to destroy than people.

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>> But I'm actually was a little surprised

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that was her reaction cuz she's tough. I

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mean, she does not she's taking

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criticism forever. I don't actually look

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at it as a woman issue. I just look at

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it as they're just making fun of

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everybody. I mean,

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>> there is no dramatic buildup, no warning

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shot. The humiliation spreads instantly,

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faster than any response team can

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contain it. Clips fly across the

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internet and each replay sharpens the

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damage, turning satire into perception

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and perception into truth. South Park

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doesn't chase relevance here. It

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dominates it, proving once again that a

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cartoon can shake power more brutally

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than any press conference ever could.

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>> They whack the woke. They're now having

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a crack. And anyone who of course has

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seen the Book of Mormon would know

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that's their kind of humor. DHS hag

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Kirsty Noom, who is terrorizing

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immigrant communities, is a little upset

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that South Park had the gall to make fun

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of her appearance. South Park didn't

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just mock Christy Noom. It stripped her

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down to a caricature built on control,

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anger, and obsession with power. The

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episode exaggerates her image until it

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becomes uncomfortable. She's shown

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barking orders, clinging to IC symbolism

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like armor, turning enforcement into

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spectacle. It's absurd, but that's what

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makes it sting. The writers never say

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her real name out loud in some moments,

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yet everyone knows exactly who they're

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talking about. That's the danger of good

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satire. It doesn't accuse, it reflects.

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And what it reflected back wasn't

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strength, it was rigidity.

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>> They actually released this bonus clip

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on Twitter last night, poking fun at DHS

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Secretary Christine Gnome's past.

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>> The episode lands at a time when

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immigration enforcement is already a raw

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nerve in the country, especially with

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recent tensions and federal actions

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making headlines. South Park doesn't

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explain any of that. It doesn't need to.

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It lets the audience connect the dots,

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and that silence hits harder than a

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monologue ever could.

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>> At first, Gnome was in on the joke. She

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and Ice use the show as a recruitment

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push on social media, but it was fun

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until it wasn't.

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>> What makes it worse is the response gap.

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After the episode airs, there's no

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immediate rebuttal from Gnome's office.

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No calm dismissal, no humor, just quiet.

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Meanwhile, laughter fills the vacuum.

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Within hours, clips are chopped into

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seconds long bites and launched onto Tik

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Tok X and YouTube shorts. Some rack up

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millions of views overnight. People who

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haven't watched a full South Park

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episode in years suddenly know exactly

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who Christy Gnome is supposed to be in

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this story. Memes paint her as unhinged,

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obsessed with law and order to the point

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of parody. It's brutal because it's

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simple. Satire becomes perception, and

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perception starts rewriting reality.

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Once that happens, control doesn't slip

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slowly. It drops.

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>> Obviously, one Trump applauded and is

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now said, "That was so great. Get rid of

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all these other other late night hosts

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on other networks. They eliminated the

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DEI programs."

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>> By the next morning, the numbers tell

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the story. Her name is searched more

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than any of her recent policy

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announcements combined. But it's not

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curiosity, it's ridicule. And that's

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when the tone changes. Noom finally

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responds, and it's not measured. It's

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emotional, defensive, sharp. The

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language jumps straight from leadership

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to accusation. Suddenly, the episode

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isn't a joke anymore. It's an attack,

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not on her, but on law enforcement, on

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national security, on people risking

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their lives. That framing is deliberate,

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but it feels rushed. Viewers can sense

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it. This doesn't read like strategy

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crafted by a calm team. It reads like

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someone who took it personally and hit

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post anyway

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>> at the end.

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>> Yeah, she's getting she's getting looser

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and looser and then they got to put her

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face back on. Yeah, the all caps energy

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doesn't help. The repetition doesn't

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help. Every message sounds louder than

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the last, and louder doesn't mean

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stronger. It means rattled. Critics

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immediately point out the irony. A

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cartoon makes her look obsessed with

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control, and her real life response

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confirms it. Supporters try to rally,

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but the internet doesn't slow down for

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nuance. Late night commentators,

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political streamers, even neutral

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observers pile on. The narrative hardens

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fast. She wasn't attacked. She

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overreacted. And once that idea sticks,

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it's almost impossible to shake.

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>> You know, like kind of like, we're cool.

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We can handle it. Then at some point,

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Trump is like, I will burn this building

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to the ground.

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>> Yeah, exactly.

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>> There's another layer beneath all of

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this that makes the moment heavier. The

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country is already tense around

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immigration enforcement, especially

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after recent IC related shootings and

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protests in Minneapolis that left

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communities shaken and demanding

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answers. These aren't abstract debates.

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People are emotional. Trust is fragile.

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Against that backdrop, South Park's

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exaggeration feels uncomfortably close

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to real headlines. Noom tries to link

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the satire to dangerous rhetoric,

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suggesting it fuels unrest. But that

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move backfires to many viewers. It

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sounds like deflection, like blaming a

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cartoon for emotions that were already

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boiling. What kind of lawyers do they

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have? They got cool lawyers. Well, if

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it's parody, right, you can do anything.

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>> Then comes the press appearance. This is

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    Kristi Noem Throw… - Transcrição Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev