Welcome to the nation's ‘super deportation center,' inspired by Amazon and FedEx but ‘with human beings'
Suri — who was targeted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement for his Palestinian activism and his family ties to Gaza — arrived at the only ICE facility that doubles as an airport, without his attorneys having any idea where he was.
Officers told Suri that he had entered the nation's 'super deportation center,' according to his attorneys.
The college professor was shackled at the ankles and handcuffed then marched into a 70,000 square foot 'staging facility' in Alexandria, Louisiana, which has emerged as the nexus point for President Donald Trump's mass deportation machine.
Suri is far from alone. Since Trump returned to the White House, more than 20,000 people en route to other detention centers have passed through the Louisiana facility — which ICE officials have long aspired to operate like corporate giants FedEx and Amazon.
ICE's acting director Todd Lyons has bluntly compared the movement of people to packages.
'We need to get better at treating this like a business, where this mass deportation operation is something like you would see and say, like, Amazon trying to get your Prime delivery within 24 hours,' Lyons told a law enforcement conference in Phoenix earlier this year.
'So, trying to figure out how to do that with human beings,' he said.
The idea of 'running the government like a business' has taken root inside ICE over the last decade with lucrative public-private partnerships between the federal government and for-profit contractors, which operate roughly 90 percent of all ICE detention centers.
Since before the Trump administration, the ICE field office in New Orleans — which is responsible for removal operations in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee — was modeling operations after shipping giant FedEx and its 'spoke-hub' model.
Detainees are temporarily held in detention 'hubs' before they're sent to a network of detention center 'spokes' where they wait to be deported.
In Suri's case, he arrived at the Alexandria 'hub' before he was moved to a regional 'spoke' in Texas.
The idea for a staging facility in Louisiana 'started on a cocktail napkin' at Ruth's Chris steakhouse, according to Philip Miller, a former ICE official in New Orleans who went on to work for an IT firm that contracts with federal law enforcement.
Miller sought 'a more effective and efficient way of moving the growing number of foreign detainees,' according to 2015 newsletter from GEO Group, the private prison contractor that operates the Alexandria facility.
Trump's border czar Tom Homan tapped former GEO Group executive David Venturella to support the administration's deportation agenda, and he is now serving in a top role at ICE managing contracts for immigrant detention centers, according to The Washington Post.
Meanwhile, Daniel Bible, who worked at ICE for 15 years, including a year as the executive associate director of removal operations, left the agency in November 2024 to join GEO Group as its executive vice president.
GEO Group referred The Independent to ICE for comment.
Lyons, who has helmed ICE since March, addressed his now-viral remarks about treating immigrants like packages in an interview the following month.
'The key part that got left out of that statement was, I said, they deal with boxes, we deal with human beings, which is totally different,' he told Boston 25 News.
ICE 'should be run like a corporation', he told the outlet.
'We need to be better about removing those individuals who have been lawfully ordered out of the country in a safe, efficient manner,' Lyons continued. 'We can't trade innovation and efficiency for how we treat the people in our custody.'
The Independent has requested comment from ICE on its removal operations at the Alexandria facility.
Fourteen of the 20 largest ICE detention centers in the U.S. are in Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, a network that immigrant advocates have labelled 'deportation alley.' The jails — most of which are operated by private prison companies — hold thousands of people each year.
More than 7,000 people are currently jailed in Louisiana's immigration detention centers while Texas facilities are holding more than 12,000. More than 56,000 people are in ICE detention across the country.
But Louisiana is home to the nation's only ICE detention center with a tarmac. The facility in Alexandria has become the nation's busiest deportation airport with 1,200 flights to other U.S. detention centers and more than 200 planes leaving the country since Trump took office.
ICE has operated at least 209 deportation flights in June, the highest level since 2020. During the first six months of Trump's second presidency, ICE removed nearly 150,000 people from the U.S.
Alexandria, a city of roughly 44,000 people, is the ninth largest in the state but surrounded by forest and swampland, with summer temperatures regularly climbing into triple digits with humidity levels exceeding 70 percent.
Detainees at the facility in Alexandria cannot be held for more than 72 hours, and the facility does not permit access to visitors or even legal counsel, according to attorneys.
Suri was held there for three days before being transferred to a Texas detention center where he was housed in the 'TV room,' according to his attorneys. He was given only a thin plastic mattress. Suri was released after spending eight weeks in detention amid an ongoing legal battle.
Louisiana locks up more people per capita than any other U.S. state, in a country with one of the highest incarceration rates on the planet.
Most incarcerated people in Louisiana are in local jails, and the state pays sheriffs a daily rate per inmate, creating what civil rights groups fear is a cruel pay-to-play system that incentivizes locking people up.
In 2017, the state's Democratic Governor John Bel Edwards advanced legislation to reduce the state's prison population, which ultimately fell by more than 8,000 over the next five years.
But at the same time, the first Trump administration was ramping up immigration arrests and expanding capacity to hold immigrants in detention.
Following Trump's 2016 victory, ICE expanded the nation's immigration detention system by more than 50 percent, with contracts for private companies to operate at least 40 new detention facilities. Companies including GEO Group, CoreCivic and LaSalle Corrections own or operate facilities that jail the majority of immigrants.
All but one of Louisiana's nine facilities are run by private prison firms.
The 400-bed detention center in Alexandria is run by GEO Group, whose stock is valued at roughly $4 billion.
Inside, dorm-style units hold up to 80 people each, and each includes an expansive 'processing area' with rows of benches and walls lined with hundreds of shackles. People who are processed at the facility from arriving flights are placed in five-point restraints and forced to sit on the benches, according to immigration attorneys.
Before it opened in 2014, ICE transported people by bus from different jails to a local commercial airport or Alexandria International Airport, a converted military base that has emerged as what human rights groups called a 'national nerve center' for ICE Air, the group of charter airlines contracted with the agency to operate deportation flights.
'Alexandria allows the concentrated detention and staging of hundreds of people at a time, optimizing efficiency of ICE's deportation machine,' according to a 2024 report from a coalition of human rights groups.
In August 2017, the Department of Homeland Security's Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties found that the Alexandria facility 'is not properly screening for and identifying detainees at risk for suicide' and 'does not provide mental health treatment and programming,' the report found.
That civil rights office was among bureaus within Homeland Security that have been abruptly shuttered under Trump's second administration.
Alexandria is a two-hour drive from Baton Rouge and more than three hours away from New Orleans, where most of the state's immigration attorneys live and practice.
That distance has made access to legal counsel for the nearly 8,000 people in Louisiana's detention facilities enormously difficult. There is little if any access to the internet or law libraries and few chances to privately speak with family or attorneys.
To visit detainees at another facility, the Pine Prairie ICE Processing Center, roughly 200 miles from New Orleans, Tulane University law professor Mary Yanik and students with the Immigrants' Rights Law Clinic said they leave by 5:30 a.m. and return as late as 10 p.m., in order to speak with as many people as possible.
'That is a grueling schedule, if you think about the number of hours for a single visit with a client for a single court hearing,' she told The Independent earlier this year. 'They feel forgotten. They feel like they're screaming into a void.'
The most common question among them is 'why am I here?'
'They're so disoriented by what was happening to them, and so confused. At least one person thought they were in Texas,' she said. ''What is going on? Can't I just go home?''
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2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
19 Toxic Mothers Who Do NOT Deserve To Be Parents
We recently asked the BuzzFeed Community, "If you have an unhealthy relationship with your mom, what's been your experience?" Unfortunately there were many stories filled with horrific things moms did to their kids. They're extremely toxic and unbelievable, and have left a very damaging mark on folks today. So, here are some deeply horrible things moms did to their kids: Warning: Some stories include topics of child abuse, verbal abuse, and suicide. Please proceed with caution. 1."When I was a teenager, my boyfriend cheated on my mother. They tried to keep it a secret — when I broke up with him, my mother let him MOVE INTO OUR HOUSE. She tried to tell me I was 'crazy' to think that they would be together. I genuinely believed I may have been 'crazy' — who would do that to their own daughter? I must be 'losing it.' When I got a new boyfriend, this ex went wild. His own mother called the cops to my home because she knew he was angry (he told the cop that he was going to kill me if it was the last thing he did). I was put into a cop car for my protection, and he was put into a cop car to be taken for psych evaluation. I watched my mother follow the cop car he was in while I, at 16 years old, was there alone in a cop car." "I moved out of my own house. I eventually saw texts between them that proved they were together a few years later, and I confronted them again. They still tried to deny it all, but everybody knew at this point. They dated up until five years ago (11 years dating total). She was only open about the fact they were an actual couple once they broke up." —Anonymous 2."My earliest memories are of my mom telling me that she had only wanted four children, and had been so disappointed when she became pregnant with me (her fifth). That was the start of what has been one long, manipulative relationship. Now she's in her 80s, and she constantly tells stories from my childhood about what a good mother she was (these stories never happened). If anyone suggests that her recollection is less than accurate, that begins a months-long barrage of angry messages about what an ungrateful person I am. I keep her at arms length for my own peace of mind, as do all of my siblings. I just want it to be over honestly." —s42bb9c35d 3."I finally got the courage to leave my husband after staying for several years to be with my kids. My youngest child had been diagnosed with ASD, ADHD, and learning disabilities. My mother told me to stay in my unhappy marriage because 'no one would ever love me, let alone want to date me because of my son.' The joke's on her because I have been with my fiancé for six years now (I should have dated him in high school in the first place)." —Anonymous 4."Last year I attempted suicide, resulting in my mother and father moving me from Southern California to Idaho. They cared for me as I recovered, but when I refused to stay in their home for the two years my mother expected, she showed her true form. I was belittled for attending therapy (I ended up doing it via Zoom in their shed). My clothes were piled under the rear wheel of my car and run over, and the cherry on top? I was asked to leave briskly at breakfast after only a month of the proposed timeline — as in, my mother ushered me to pack my bags immediately afterwards. I left by noon the same day. My dad uncomfortably conceded to her requests and opinions." —Anonymous 5."My mother was terrible to me growing up — she was a covert narcissist. She would ridicule my appearance, told me that nobody would ever be friends with me, and claimed I would be a failure as an adult. She constantly compared me to my eldest sister, who was 'the golden child.' On my wedding day, she told me I looked pregnant in the wedding gown that I picked out (I wasn't pregnant — I was a size 0). My entire life I hated myself [because of her] — I was never good enough, smart enough, or pretty enough. In my 30s, I finally went to counseling and realized what was wrong. I cut her off a few years ago (my sisters did, too), and since then, I've learned I'll never be perfect. But I am beautiful and smart and successful, and I have a good heart (and I'm working on loving the person I am, which is much easier without her in my life)." —Anonymous 6."My mom told me she wished I had died on life support in the NICU. Her defense to the judge when she tried to then sue me for just shy of $12,000 was 'she was a difficult child — she deserved it.' We also had a 'couch funeral' for a family member where my mom turned the conversation topic to the red light district in Amsterdam and sex work. Additionally, she cheated on my father with multiple men (including an international drug smuggler) — the list goes on. We aren't in contact (for obvious reasons). Good riddance to her! I am proud to have broken the cycle." —Anonymous 7."I'm adopted, and my birth mom and I got in contact when I was 15. At first we were super close, but then she acted more like an older sibling than a parental figure. She flirted with guys I dated and would get my friends' numbers and talk to them regularly (but hardly return my calls or messages). My ex (who she didn't even want me to be with) and I finally split because he had been cheating on me and eventually left me for someone else. She told me I needed to do more to 'win him back.' When I got a new partner, she acted like she wasn't over my ex and me breaking up the whole time. But weeks later, my ex visited her with the girl he cheated on me with and posted pics online saying how good it was to see them and meet her." —Anonymous 8."My mother was a slew of toxicity, from giving me Playgirl magazines at age 11 to kicking me out of the car miles from home because she was mad at me for wanting birth control at 17. Then there was the time she picked on a random girl at a department store (who my mother thought her boyfriend was cheating on her with). She made me call this poor girl to scream at her and call her a 'whore' — I was 12 (and, my mother was married to my father at the same time). And there was another time when she tried to help when she saw a car accident — she discovered it was a classmate of mine who died. She came home and told me that she had a piece of my friend stuck to her shoe instead of comforting me. Sadly, the list goes on." —Anonymous 9."My mom and I have always had a very contentious relationship (she's a classic narcissist), and we've had plenty of conflict over the years. But, I've always tried to maintain some form of a relationship with her because hey — she's my mom. No matter what, I loved her. That is, until the day we ate lunch at Outback Steakhouse with my then-6-year-old daughter (who has ASD). My mom was asking how school and therapy were going, and we somehow got on the topic of ableism. I was about to make a point, and I started my sentence with, 'I don't bemoan the fact that she has autism,' and my mom cut me off with, 'Well, of course you wish she didn't have autism.' She said this IN FRONT of my daughter, who could understand every word her grandmother was saying. I stared at my mom for a second and said (as clearly as I could), 'I wouldn't change a single thing about her. Autism is part of who she is, and I think she's perfect.'" "My mom rolled her eyes and changed the subject, but something had shifted in me in that moment. I'm biased, but my kid is one of the sweetest, kindest, smartest, funniest people I've ever met. She hasn't had a friend or teacher or coach or therapist who didn't adore her, and the fact that my mom could say something so casually hurtful to her face? I've distanced myself and my family from her as much as possible since. I don't feel the love that I used to feel when I interacted with her. She killed it with one off-handed sentence — now I'm just focusing on being the best mom I can be to my own kiddo." —Anonymous 10."I think something that is seriously underestimated as a source of mother-daughter trauma is being your mother's emotional support person. That was me. Every problem, I knew about it. Every fight, I heard it — all her trauma? Yep, I was her personal therapist, all as a child. Things only got worse as I got into my late teens and early 20s. It turned me into a people pleaser, and someone who reflexively puts everyone else's needs before my own. It has taken me a LONG time and a LOT of therapy to even start breaking those patterns." —Anonymous 11."When my family unfortunately become unhoused due to my mother's erratic financial decisions, she purchased McDonald's for my sisters and me. She only did this to physically throw it into the bushes because we hadn't done our chores for the day (for context, we were squatting on a giant farmland). My sisters and I slept in an old shack, and my mother and dad slept in the van. They had been gone for over eight hours that day doing god knows what — we hadn't eaten for a couple of days and were starving. To this day I'm still not sure what chores they expected us to be doing." —Anonymous 12."My mom clearly has a preference for her husband (my stepfather) over me. I don't feel welcome in my own house, and they make it clear they'd rather it be just the two of them. They'd only do fun things together and barely with me. She's not willing to try to learn more about my interests (her interests are reading and Formula 1, so we can barely do anything together). She also doesn't have much maternal instinct — when I broke my foot, she was clearly annoyed at times when she had to take care of me. My girlfriend (who I had only been with for about 10 months) had to shower me because my mom had no interest in taking care of me, other than giving me some food." "My mother-in-law is more of a mother figure to me (combined with my very caring girlfriend, I feel healthy and sane). It'll always be sad to me that my in-laws will do a lot for me (they were willing to drive me places when my foot was still broken and other favors), and my mom seems annoyed to even bring me breakfast. When I tell her I long for a family like my girlfriend's, a tight family with parents who actually enjoy spending time with their kids, she'll invalidate my feelings. She basically says I can't feel that way. I get that she can't help my dad left her, but I'm allowed to mourn the family I could've had." —Anonymous 13."I don't have a relationship with my mother because she left my dad and me when I was 9 years old. No note, no explanation. She rarely showed for visitation or paid child support, and didn't fight for custody of me during the divorce. What was so devastating was prior to her abandoning me, I thought she was my best friend — I felt loved and cared for. After she left, she was distant and cold. I asked her so many times why she left me, and all she would say was, 'You'll understand when you're older.' The last time I spoke to her I was 15, and I'm 50 now. I don't know where she lives or anything about her besides what I've found online. Her abandonment deeply affected my ability to trust and love anyone — I never married and had kids." —Anonymous 14."During my teen years, nothing could happen without drama — everything had to be a fight (everrrrrrythiiiiiiing had to be a fight). I could be alone in my room (which was where I retreated to actively avoid her) and she would barge in with something new. I purchased a lock for my bedroom door when I was 13 years old. My dad (who she was still married to) had to be nice to me behind her back to avoid repercussions. I started to think maybe it was actually me because my siblings never felt any wrath — not a drop. They were given cars and houses (meanwhile, I was draining my bank account for Ubers because my car kept breaking down and my rent kept skyrocketing). To say they got away with murder is only an understatement." —Anonymous 15."We used to have a good relationship until 2008 — I could go to her house when I needed a break from taking care of my kids. She'd let me sleep in and take care of them. She always helped me out and was there for us — but after I moved out of state, she really screwed me over. I had to put nearly everything I owned in storage at home and moved two states away. I had a problem getting up-to-speed in the new place and keeping up with the payment on the storage unit. She convinced me to send her the key and she would get everything out and keep it until I could get established and get back home to get it all. I had no reason not to trust her, so that's what I did." "It took me four years to get back, only for me to find out she had gotten rid of nearly everything I owned — an entire house-full of stuff. She never told me why, and she has never admitted or apologized since that time. I completely stopped talking to her in 2008, and although I do see her (she lives with my sister), we don't really have a relationship." —Anonymous 16."I could give a laundry list of issues, but one of the major things she did that really messed me up was shutting down and withholding love when she got mad or upset with me. I would feel horribly guilty and desperate to win her affection back. I learned from my mom that 'I am upset with you' means 'I don't like you, and I am going to punish you by becoming emotionally unavailable, and it is both your fault and your responsibility to fix.'" "This led to me letting people trample my boundaries in a major way because I literally felt panic when people got upset (to the point that I would apologize even when the other person was in the wrong). I was so afraid of pushing people away that I would accept horrible treatment out of fear of abandonment. I think she did her best, I just don't think she had the tools to be the mother I needed. She hasn't changed, but through therapy I've learned to set boundaries and give myself the things I needed as a kid that she couldn't provide." —Anonymous 17."I was pregnant with my first child due May 2020, so in the beginning of the pandemic. My mom was mad because I canceled my baby shower because of the pandemic. She said, 'I'm coming anyways,' and I had to explain to her how that made me feel uncomfortable because I was pregnant (we lived in different states, thank god). A bit closer to my due date I had a lot of fear and anxiety, and I enrolled myself into therapy. Due to the work I was doing to prep for my first child, I told my mom that I needed space. I expressed how the pandemic affected me, and needed space (this only meant not talking every single day). I went to bed and woke up to an email she wrote me about how I'm selfish, I didn't let her zip up my wedding dress (I got married in 2018), and a few other things that supposedly caused her stress." "I didn't talk to my mom during the last two months of my pregnancy. I did let her know when I was in labor, but nothing more. I was so mad when the nurse told me my mom was on the phone (I was in labor, so I wasn't responding to her). I still have a rocky relationship with my mom, and I also still have the email she sent." —Anonymous 18."I have six younger siblings and would constantly have to watch them. My mom was gone for a couple of hours every day, and I would be stuck watching my siblings with no pay. The worst part is my mom would come home and yell at me for 'being lazy,' and she complained that the house wasn't clean enough. I was depressed growing up, but I was always too afraid to tell my mom about it. I hated that I never had a choice — I just had to go along with what my parents told me to do. Most of my childhood was taken away from me because of this." —Anonymous "After nine years of physical, mental, and emotional abuse at my mother's hand, she decided she didn't want me or my younger brother (7) anymore. She woke us up one morning and said that we were not going to school that day and to pack a bag (not explaining why). To say that we were confused is an understatement. Once our bags were packed she told us we were going to go live with our father (whom she had only allowed us to see a handful of times since their divorce six years prior). He was a virtual stranger to us. She marched us outside and made us sit on the curb to wait for him, turned around, went inside, and locked the gate and door behind her. She put us out like garbage." "Of course that was not the end of the story because she refused to relinquish control over us, even to this day. ALL my interactions with her leave me feeling like that 9-year-old little girl." —fierceogre39 Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity. If you are concerned that a child is experiencing or may be in danger of abuse, you can call or text the National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-422-4453 ( service can be provided in over 140 languages. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bernie Sanders Diagnoses Democrats' Biggest 2024 Campaign Failure
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) accused Democrats of turning their backs on the working class while recently breaking down why Vice President Kamala Harris' 2024 presidential campaign failed. During a stop in Wheeling, West Virginia, of his 'Fighting Oligarchy' tour, the nation's most prominent progressive told a packed auditorium Saturday that Harris had 'too many billionaires telling her not to stand up for the working class of this country.' Sanders was unapologetic when asked if his comments were too harsh during Sunday's episode of CNN's 'State of the Union.' 'I like Kamala, she's a friend of mine,' he told host Dana Bash. 'But her core consultants, you know, were very influenced by wealthy people.' 'How do you run for president and not develop a strong agenda which speaks to the economic crises facing working families?' the Vermont senator said. Detailing the struggles that every day Americans face, Sanders said, 'We have more income and wealth inequality today than we've ever had. We've got 60% of our people living paycheck to paycheck.' 'You've got a health care system which is broken and dysfunctional, and despite spending so much, we're the only major country not to guarantee health care to all people,' he went on. 'How do you not talk about these issues?' While Bash reminded Sanders that 'affordability' was part of Harris' platform, he dismissed her ideas as too 'vague' for average voters to see as real solutions to real problems. His strategy for winning back the working class? Unwavering support for struggling Americans. 'Is it a radical idea that we join every other major country on Earth and guarantee health care to all people? Is that a radical idea?' he asked. 'You tell me how many people are talking about that.' Also advocating for livable wages and easier access to higher education, he said, 'These ideas exist all over the world. They don't exist in America. And they don't exist because of the power of the oligarchs economically and politically.' 'In my view, the current political system in the United States of America is broken and corrupt,' he went on. Sanders' message wasn't without a glimmer of hope, however. 'If we stand together, if we're united, if we don't let Trump divide us up, there's no stopping what we can do as a nation in terms of improving life for ordinary people,' he told Bash. Related... Bernie Sanders Rips 'Extremely Dangerous' Paramount-Trump Settlement: 'Government Extortion' Bernie Sanders Says Yes To Love, No To AI Girlfriends Bernie Sanders Makes Rare Endorsement In New York City Mayoral Race


Forbes
4 minutes ago
- Forbes
Meet CNN's Jessica Dean: ‘We Take People All Over The World'
For CNN anchor Jessica Dean, the weekends are anything but quiet. Having just passed the one-year mark as host of the primetime weekend edition of CNN Newsroom, she leads around seven hours of live coverage every Saturday and Sunday — hours that often unfold against the backdrop of history in real time. Since officially taking the role on August 3 of last year, Dean and her small team have found themselves at the center of some of the most consequential breaking news of the past 12 months. They've navigated the chaos of the assassination attempt on President Trump in Butler, Penn.; reported on the fall of the Assad regime; covered former President Biden's cancer diagnosis; delivered updates on the Boulder fire attack; and tracked U.S. military strikes on Iran. 'You have to think really fast and you have to trust yourself,' Dean says about the work. 'And you also have to trust your team.' That trust comes from years in the field — which, for Dean, has included stints doing local news in Arkansas and Philadelphia, joining CNN in 2018 and covering the midterms that year, traveling with then-candidate Joe Biden's presidential campaign, and reporting through the early Covid pandemic. Dean says her job now feels like the culmination of all those experiences. 'People come to CNN when big things happen,' she says. 'We take people all over the world… and there's such value in that — to give them on-the-ground reporting and to help them through those moments. 'Going back to Iran, you know, we had Fred Pleitgen in Iran. We had Clarissa Ward in Israel. We're able to take people there … It's tough out there right now for news. It's a moment for us, I think, where we really need to prove ourselves to viewers and they need to be able to trust us. And, especially on our show, I really try to honor that, and we work really hard to get it right and make sure people, if they're going to spend their time with us, walk away knowing more and are better informed.' CNN faces a new era as viewers shift to digital Dean's work, needless to say, also comes at a pivotal time for CNN and for cable news in general. The network, founded in 1980 as the first 24-hour television news channel, built its reputation on major live events — from the Gulf War to election nights. Today's viewers, of course, don't get their news the same way anymore. People might bounce between live TV and clips on social media — or even no TV at all, preferring to get their news in snackable bites from social media. For CNN, the challenge is holding onto its reputation for real-time, trustworthy coverage while finding new ways to reach an increasingly scattered digital audience. Dean sees that as an opportunity. 'CNN has a lot of exciting things ahead as we transition more into the digital world,' she says. 'Right now, you can watch us on linear television, which is amazing. But being able in the next year to kind of expand beyond that is going to be exciting. And one thing I know for sure — there will not be a shortage of news.' Cable news viewership has been under pressure industry-wide, with competition from on-demand content and shifting demographics. But when a major story breaks, audiences (or at least a portion of news audiences) still turn one or more of the big three — CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC. Dean's weekend broadcast is often where those first crucial hours play out for CNN. 'It's not my job to tell people what to think,' she says. 'It's my job to give them information and let them decide what makes sense to them.' The pressure to be accurate, measured, and fast is real. 'We don't want to be alarmist, but we also want to make sure viewers are getting all of the information,' she says. 'It's not my job to tell people what to think. It's my job to give them information and let them decide what makes sense to them. And I've found that people respond really well to that.' The year ahead will bring continued experimentation for CNN as it looks to integrate more digital-first storytelling without losing its core live-news DNA. Dean, for her part, is focused on her lane. 'Those seven, maybe eight, maybe nine hours each weekend — we can do that well. We can get it right.'