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						 TV's 
						DeGeneres uses 'Finding Dory' to take dig at Trump 
						immigration ban 
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						[February 01, 2017]   
						DeGeneres, who voices the 
						forgetful fish Dory on a mission to find her parents in 
						the United States, noted that "Finding Dory" was 
						screened at the White House on Saturday, the day after 
						Trump signed an executive order banning refugees and 
						travelers from seven majority-Muslim nations from 
						entering the United States. | 
			
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				 Speaking to the audience of "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" in a 
				segment aired on Tuesday, she mentioned the protests sparked by 
				Trump's order. She said she didn't want to get political so she 
				talked instead about the plot of the 2016 film, which has taken 
				in $1 billion at the global box office. 
 In the movie, Dory and her friends arrive in America, where they 
				find themselves stuck behind a large wall keeping Dory from 
				finding her parents.
 
 "They all have to get over the wall and you won't believe it, 
				but that wall has almost no effect in keeping them out," 
				DeGeneres said.
 
 Trump has also pledged to build a wall on the U.S. border with 
				Mexico to keep out undocumented immigrants.
 
				
				 Dory crosses the border but is still separated from her family. 
				Luckily for her, DeGeneres said, other animals are willing to 
				help Dory and bring her into their world.
 "Animals that don't even need her. Animals that don't have 
				anything in common with her," DeGeneres said. "They help her, 
				even though they're completely different colors. Because that's 
				what you do when you see someone in need, you help them."
 
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			"So that is what I hope everyone watching 'Finding Dory' has 
			learned," she added.
 The remarks by DeGeneres were the latest in a series of direct and 
			indirect attacks by celebrities on the president's immigration ban, 
			which has caused chaos and protests at airports around the world.
 
 Actors at the Screen Actors Guild awards ceremony in Los Angeles on 
			Sunday also took aim at the ban in fiery speeches that ranged from 
			personal experiences as immigrants or Muslims to calls for 
			solidarity.
 
 (Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
 
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