Skip to main content

tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  December 27, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST

1:00 am
a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world.
1:01 am
i'm bianca nobilo live from london. max foster has the day off. just ahead -- >> it is just an unfair, unethical situation what is going on here in eagle pass. >> thousands are hoping to get into the united states and law enforcement working overtime trying to keep them out. >> the u.s. looking to move away from the high intensity war. >> street battles raging across gaffe. gaza. >> we're being attacked from seven different sectors. >> toucdonald trump airing grie grievances. >> and he has made an entire political career of being the victim.
1:02 am
it is wednesday, december 27. 3:00 a.m. in mexico city and in the hours ahead, u.s. secretary of state antony blinken and department of homeland schedule chief alejandro mayorkas will be there meeting with mexico's president and security cabinet to tackle the unprecedented migrant crisis at the u.s./mexico border. the surge of migrants is very visible in eagle pass. and border agents are overwhelmed by the shear volume of people entering illegally. and thousands more making their way to mexico from central and south america and beyond desperate for a chance to enter the united states. the mayor is demanding that the white house act quickly and dec decisively. he wants the federal government to deport people. he says without that, this crisis are only keep growing.
1:03 am
>> this is unacceptable. our city has been getting slammed with 2,000 to 3,000 people a day and it is just an unfair, unethical situation what is going on here in eagle pass. we feel ignored by the federal government. i've called to the government that we need action. there needs to be a consequence to so many people crossing illegally. if somebody breaks a law, there needs to be a consequence and right now there are no consequences. >> and more than 11,000 migrants are waiting in northern mexico to cross into the u.s. they are living in shelters, open air camps and abandoned homes. rosa flores has the story. >> reporter: as a migrant caravan forms of thousands, the scene on the southern border has changed. the areas where thousands of my grants were waiting outdoors to
1:04 am
be transported for immigration processing last we're were emptied out this week. the flow appearing to be down to a trickle. and a senior official saying while the scene is improved, the agency is not out of the wounds yet. cvp still grappling with the migrant encounters. more than 11,000 are waiting in shelters in northern mexico, 3800 in tijuana, and 7,000 more, some opting to cross illegally. u.s. federal authorities reported a 7 day average of more than 9600 migrant encounters in december, it was 6800 at the end of november. u.s. secretary of state antony blinken is scheduled to meet with the mexican president wednesday in mexico city. the biden administration is expected to put pressure do mor
1:05 am
flow. and they are reassigning personnel to process migrants. and the surge is in part driven by pseudo legitimate travel agencies abroad that promise trips to the u.s. but instead connect travelers to smugglers south of the border. that might explain this recent scene in arizona. >> i work for cnn and i'm wondering where you are from. what country you're from. senegal? senegal? senegal? everybody from senegal? smugglers are dropping off 500 toigrant in remote areas creating a logistical nightmare for border patrol agents who have to find ways to transport them. for the volunteers who distribute water, it is the children who get them every time. >> it is heartbreaking when you see the little children. >> reporter: migration appears to be feeding migration. i met one migrant woman from
1:06 am
ecuador who says that the amount of violence in her country has spiked and that has led the job creators to flee her country and come here to the united states. and she says that is snowballing, that is forcing the workers to also flee their country and you guessed it, come to the united states. rosa flores, cnn, eagle pass, texas. donald trump is airing his grievances on social media against president biden and special counsel jack smith. kristen holmes has the details. >> reporter: former president trump continuing his quote/unquote christmas messaging into the week posting on truth social tuesday biden flunky deranged jack smith should go to 4e8hell. this after his post on christmas day where many world leaders or former world leaders were calling for peace and unity in a time of war. this is what donald trump was doing on truth social posting
1:07 am
merry christmas to all including crooked joe biden's only hope deranged jack smith. the out of control lunatic. he goes on to say may they rot in hell again. merry christmas. this is not the typical message you would see from any sort of world leader, but it is a message that you would see from donald trump who has made an entire political career of being the victim. and airing these kinds of grievances, particularly when it comes to legal cases. his agenda is to play this out in the court of public opinion and he does believe this rhetoric of attacking joe biden and jack smith is working for him. because he sees those poll numbers. and when you look at that, when you talk to senior members of his team, it is clear that he is not going to tone down this rhetoric or this language at any point. and it is not just these attacks that we see out on joe biden or jack smith. but it is also his aggressive anti-immigration rhetoric. as he has continued to ramp up
1:08 am
that language, those poll numbers at least in iowa have continued to rise. so right now there is no political pressure on him to tone it down or pull it back. obviously this could change if he is the gop nominee, if he does go up against joe biden in the general election and needs to find more moderate voters. but again, that remains to be seen. kristen holmes, washington. israel's military chief says the war will likely go on for many months. israel defense forces says it is using ground, air and naval troops to strike at what they claim are terror targets in gaza. on tuesday dozens of its fighter jets struck targets including tunnels and infrastructure. but scores of palestinians have also been killed. the hamas controlled health ministry says the death toll in
1:09 am
the enclave is now nearing 21,000 though cnn can't independently verify those numbers. and now there are growing concerns over the war expanding into a wider conflict. >> translator: we are in a multiarena war, we're being attentioned from seven different sectors. and we have already responded and acted in six of the regions. and i say here in the most explicit way, anyone who acts against us is a potential target. there is no immunity for anyone. >> those comments as a close confidant of netanyahu traveled to washington to meet with senior u.s. officials about the next phase of the conflict. the high level talks between the u.s. and israel also included the worsening humanitarian crisis in gaza as well as securing the release of the remaining hostages.
1:10 am
priscilla alvarez is in washington with those details for you. >> reporter: senior u.s. officials meeting on tuesday with a close confidant of benjamin netanyahu. the hours long meeting comes as the u.s. looks for israel to move away from its high intensity war. now, ron durmer met with antony blinken and jake sullivan. the big question, what does the next face of the war look like. up until this point israel has assured the u.s. that it plans to transition to a low intensity war with a more precise military strategy, but they haven't offered a time line. so u.s. officials were looking for more information on that again as that death toll continues to rise in gaza. over the course of the day, officials were expressing confidence about the nature of the conversations between the
1:11 am
u.s. and israel describing them as good and saying that the u.s. and israel are on the same page. but president biden is under increasing pressure over the destruction and devastation in gaza. and he said earlier this month that israel risks losing support on the international stage if it doesn't contain those casualties. so the u.s. officials and the close con fidant of benjamin netanyahu meeting here at the white house to try to get more answers on what the next phase looks like. priscilla alvarez, cnn, at the white house. and hamas has rejected a bran to end the war in gaza according to a reuters report. the report cites two egyptian sources saying the two groups refused to offer any concessions beyond the possible release of more hostages. and also that two officials from hamas and jihad deny this information with hamas member
1:12 am
saying that there can be no negotiations without a, quote, comprehensive cessation of aggression. a u.n. human rights expert says israel is working to expel the civilian population of gaza and permanently alter its composition with expanding evacuation orders and widespread attacks. in response, an israeli government spokesman asserted that the country has designated an area as humanitarian zone prior to the ground offensive and urged civilians to temporarily evacuate there. those comments come as the nearly three month long war has left so many civilians across gaza still struggling to find safety and shelter. will ripley reports from tel aviv. >> reporter: the terrifying sound of ongoing bombardment, israeli shells hitting targets. closer and closer to this u.n.-run school in central gaza. for thousands sheltering here,
1:13 am
it is time to move again. families forced to flee for their lives. and this is not the first or even second time for many. once again they carried the war-torn pieces of their lives in pursuit of elusive safety. just days earlier, many here vowed that they would never move again. never. a vow they are now willing to break only because they know that their children's lives are at stake. >> translator: there is no safety in in school. we're looking for a safer place. we're leaving because of the intensity of the airstrikes and the suffering. >> reporter: everywhere else is crowded. no guarantee that they will find a spot, but what else can they do? even if they have nowhere else to go, they can't stay here. they don't want to die here. the scene a grim reminder of what their parents and grandparents endured in 1948 when militias forced them out of their hometowns.
1:14 am
in the cold winter, blankets and mattresses are precious commodities. cars and fuel that run them are scarce. those who can afford it hire donkey carts. for the rest, it is a long trek on foot. very tough back there, he says. bombs are falling on people everywhere. people were injured there. we don't know where we're heading. everywhere is under threat. we're just moving with the rest of the people. the destination for many, relatives' homes, a roof over their heads even if they are in neighborhoods already by israeli airstrikes. street badges ra battles raging areas into ghost towns. the scars of battle raw. >> translator: we are in a
1:15 am
multiarena war. we're being attacked from seven different sectors. gaza, lebanon, syria, you dea, iraq, syria, yemen. anyone who a actions against uss a potential target. no immunity from anyone. >> reporter: iran's allies engaging in low level hostilities in response they say too israel's war in gaza. n houthis attacking ships that they claim are israeli affiliated. and iran's vow to avenge the killing of an airanian commande sparking new concerns of expanding the conflict especially on the leb with a sneeze/israeli border. artillery fire keeping both countries on edge since october 8. in gaza, a race for survival between a routine of airstriks,
1:16 am
rushing to hospitals and burials and ongoing search for food and water and pursuit of shelter for close to 2 million people displaced. will ripley, cnn, tel aviv. baghdad is condemning a series of airstrikes on iran backed militants inside iraq. the prime minister's office says one security serviceman was killed and 18 others injured. the strikes were retaliation for drone attacks on u.s. military positions in iraq that left three americans wounded including one person in critical condition. iraq says the airstrikes are unacceptable under any circumstances. u.s. central command says that the navy has intercepted a barrage of drones and missiles over the red sea. the launches started early tuesday and came from houthi rebels supported by iran in
1:17 am
yemen and there was no damage in the area. houthis have launched at least 100 attacks in the past month. ahead, what police are telling people about the death of one of the stars of the hit film parasite. and kanye west has made headlines for hateful comments about jewish people and now he's apologizing. what could be behind the sudden mea culpa, next.
1:18 am
1:19 am
1:20 am
1:21 am
new details are emerging about the shocking death of south korean actor lee sun kuhn known for his role in parasite. he was reported missing from his manager and later found in his car. police say the cause of death is presumed to be suicide. he claimed that he was tricked into using drugs and blackmailed. hannah montgomery is covering this live from hong kong. this is obviously tragic.
1:22 am
he was a hugely successful south korean actor but he was stressed because he had been under police investigation in on alleged drug use. >> reporter: yeah, as you mentioned, the death of sun-kyun was sudden and tragic for many of his fans. police say it is presumed to be a suicide and we know his family has not requested an autopsy. as you mentioned at the top there, he was currently being investigated for alleged illegal drug use. since october of this year. he has been brought into police questioning three times, most recently on december 23 when he was questioned for 19 hours. he was released on christmas eve. now, extremely significant to note that throughout the investigation, lee's drug tests have always come back negative and he also denied ever knowingly taking drugs.
1:23 am
he claimed that he was tricked and blackmailed. he has filed a lawsuit against the alleged blackmailer. on social media in reks to lee's tragic and sudden death, there has been an outpour of grief and messages of sorsorrow. he had to fame after the release of parasite that won best picture in 2020 and also won three other as oscars. in korea, he starred in a number of tv shows and films and he was a bbeloved actor in the country and there has been an outpouring of grief around the world today. >> hannah, thank you so much for joining us. just days ahead of him dropping a new album, kanye west is apologizing to the jewish community for anti-semitic remarks, it follows a host of
1:24 am
offensive statements that he's made about the jewish and black communities. elizabeth wagmeister has more for you. >> reporter: kanye west who has a long long history of anti-sem comments has apologized. in a post written in hebrew, he shared this message "i offer my sincere apologies to the jewish community for any unintended outburst caused by my words or actions. it was never my intentioned to hurt respect. and i recognize the importance of learning from this experience and i'm committed to fostering greater sensitivity and understanding in the future. your forgiveness holds significant value to me and i'm dedicated to making amends and working toward promoting unity." it is unclear what prompted the
1:25 am
apology but it is worth noting that he is expected to lease new album next month. it was more than one year ago that h adidas and caa severed ts with kanye after a tweet where he said that he was going d defdef con 3 on jewish people. and he sparked criticism again at a listening party in las vegas for his upcoming album seemingly comparing himself to adolf hitler. he also performed on stage in miami earlier this month rapping offensive lyrics. in a statement to cnn, the anti-defamation league said ft causing untold damage by using his vast influence and platfo to poison countntless minds with vicious anti-semitism and hate, an apopology in hebre may be the first s step on a lo journey towards making amends to
1:26 am
the jewish community and all those he has hurt." the nonprofit organization also said that ultimately actions will speak louder than words. ye does not currently have a list of publicists to seek comment. back to you. after some battleground disappointments, ukraine strikes a russian ship in crimea. details ahead. and plus thousands of americans are losing money in a fast growing financial fraud scam based in myanmar. a cnn investigation is next.
1:27 am
1:28 am
1:29 am
i'm a little anxious, i'm a little excited. i'm gonna be emotional, she's gonna be emotional, but it's gonna be so worth it. i love that i can give back to one of our customers. i hope you enjoy these amazing gifts. oh my goodness. oh, you guys. i know you like wrestling, so we got you some vip tickets. you have made an impact.
1:30 am
so have you. for you guys to be out here doing something like this, it restores a lot of faith in humanity. welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm bianca nobilo. if you are just joining us, let me bring you up-to-date with the top stories. u.s. secretary of state antony blinken and department of homeland security secretary mayorkas are expected to meet with the mexican president as thousands have joined a caravan headed for the iborder. and lee sun-kyun has been found dead and police say suicide is suspected. his agency says the funeral will be held quietly with family members and colleagues. ukrainian military claims
1:31 am
that it destroyed a russian navy landing ship in crimea in an overnight strike on tuesday. you can see that massive explosion there. cnn has not been able to independently verify that it was destroyed. the russian defense ministry doesn't say the ship was destroyed but does admit that it was damaged in the ukrainian attack. meantime ukraine's top general says ukrainian forces have now withdrawn to the outskirts of a strategically important village in the eastern donetsk region. for more, elena linkynn is join us. let's focus on what is happening on the battlefield. so the ukrainians have retreated from marinka which marks the
1:32 am
most significant in the last six months. >> reporter: hello, bianca. nice to see you agaiain. as you were saying, it seems russians are down playing this attack t to the navy s ship, bur ukraininians, this i is a big achievement. and reportededly this ship was used to transport drones which have been largely used to attack ukraine. just overnight, 46 drones, mostly in the south in kherson and other regions. the ukrainian air defenses were working for about seven hours and ukraine air force has managed to shoot down around 32
1:33 am
of those drones. but yet some of the drones were not shot down. and therefore there are some sites that have been damaged for example a shopping center in kherson, and also some buildings in odesa. a drone that was actually shot down fell on houses in the suburbs and there is at least one person dead and a few people injured. but as you were saying on the frontline, the news that come from marinka are also a highlight of the force especially at this time of the year. it is almost two years since the war in ukraine started, since russia invaded ukraine. and for the past few days, there has been some dispute whether or not ukrainian troops were still in this village. and now ukraine says that the troops have withdrawn, that lives have to be saved and that
1:34 am
there is pretty much nothing left of the village. >> helena lins, thank you. criminal gangs in myanmar are scamming millions of dollars online from thousands of unsuspecting americans and they are forcing human trafficking victims do their dirty work. ivan watson filed this report from the thai border. [ crying ] >> please help me! please help me! >> reporter: it has been a living hell. in northern california, this man piecing together his life after losing more than a million dollars in a crypto scam. >> i can never forget or forgive myself losing that kind of money. >> reporter: he is one of tens of thousands of victims of a fast growing new form of
1:35 am
financial fraud called pig butchering. he asks to remain anonymous to protect his family. it started in october 2021 with a text message from a stranger. what was the nature. person you were communicating with? >> she claimed her name was jessica. >> reporter: the two quickly became friends. she shared photos and he talked about the pain of caring for his dying father. after nearly a month, the conversation turned to money. >> she started to introduce me into cryptocurrency. trading gold, using cryptocurrency. >> reporter: and jessica showed him how to invest by installing a trading app on his phone that he says looked legit. little did he know he was a victim pumping money into a sophisticated con for the scammers a pig fattened up for the slaughter. >> i log back in, the account is gone. what did i do? that is 30 years of my wife and my life building up this wealth.
1:36 am
>> reporter: wealth that had suddenly disappeared. panicking, he begged jessica for help. >> please help me! i don't know what else i can do! i don't have anymore money, i lost everything! >> reporter: but jessica disappeared and probably never even existed. >> this is the professionalization of fraud services. >> reporter: the fbi has seen growth in losses due to the pig butchering scams. >> the bad guys are getting good and better. >> reporter: and an organization representing scam victims tracked crypto transfers halfway around the world to this border region in myanmar. u.s. scam victims say they have been able to trace their money to places like this, this walled compound across the river, just inside the territory of myanmar. and that is where we're learning about the conditions inside, that some people who work there,
1:37 am
they say that they were forced against their will to try to scam americans out of their hard earned money in conditions that they describe as amounting to modern day slavery. >> reporter: this compound is where an indian man named rak event sh says he was forced to work for 11 months without pay for a chinese criminal gang. the guards spotted us. until they recently released him back to thailand. >> and they told me that -- >> reporter: he too was the victim of a scam. rakesh says he threw to thailand for what he thought was an i.t. job instead he was tricked to crossing the border into myanmar where a chinese gangster told him to work or else. he threatened to kill you? >> he warned me like that. >> reporter: and the job? spend 16 hours a day on social media targeting americans with a fake profile.
1:38 am
>> using a russian tech profile. >> reporter: and posing as a salt lake city based investor, he flirted online with potential targets. >> 70% to 80% fell. >> reporter: and he shows secretly filmed images where at first glance seemed to be an ordinary office but he says the bosses routinely punished workers forcing them to do hundreds of squats and beating them if they didn't produce. and you helped rescue people who were trapped inside behind the barbed wire of that very compound. >> yes. >> reporter: and michelle moore is one of a group of aid workers based in thailand who have helped rescue hundreds of victims of trafficking like rakesh over the last 18 months. she drives me along the border. >> there is the guarauard towert there. >> reporter: and showing compounds where she says
1:39 am
trafficked victims are forced to work as online scammers. >> this is modern slavery right under everybody's nose. >> reporter: satellite images show rapid construction of the compounds on the border territory of men a mar over just three years. thailand's minister of justice labels these facilities as hubs for criminal scamming activity. >> translator: these scammers have to use telephone signals to communicate that is why they base themselves near the thai border so they can use thailand's telephone network. >> reporter: but he says thailand has no jurisdiction to crack down on suspected criminals operating across the border in myanmar. cnn asked the military government in myanmar why it hasn't taken action against alleged criminal gangs operating on the territory and did not receive an answer. so for now, it looks like no one is going to stop this poisonous cycle of exploitation. ivan watson, cnn, on the thai
1:40 am
border with myanmar. what will the trends with social media and technology be for the new year? we'll get predictions from an expert on artificial intelligence. plus if you are looking to spend some holiday gift money on a new apple watch, you may be out of luck. ahead, the fight to keep the watches on store shelves.
1:41 am
1:42 am
the power goes out and we still have wifi to do our homework. and that's a good thing?
1:43 am
great in my book! who are you? no power? no problem. introducing storm-ready wifi. now you can stay reliably connected through power outages with unlimited cellular data and up to 4 hours of battery back-up to keep you online. only from xfinity. home of the xfinity 10g network. welcome back. there were seismic shifts in the social media and tech world this year. elon musk rebranded twitter as x, mark zuckerberg launched threads and the popularity of artificial intelligence or ai exploded so fast it made our heads spin. and 2024 may see even bigger changes. joining us now to discuss the trends for next year is henry iden, generative ai expert. thanks for being with us.
1:44 am
>> my pleasure. >> so let's start with the practicalities and then i'd love to get into more philosophical existential questions about this. there are so many elections next year from the u.s. to the eu, indonesia, india, there are tons. how do you see ai impacting those elections and governments' inability perhaps to moderate them, the potential for different parts of society to be marginalized? >> yeah, so next year we have 76 countries i believe voting elections. a quarter of the world's population. and for many years now i've been asked every u.s. election in particular is this going to be the one that deep fake, a realistic fake audio or video destabilizesen a election or potentially swings the result. up until recently, i've said this has been something that, you know, has been much more costly to produce than let's say more traditional manipulated
1:45 am
media. but that has really changed the last year. as you said, this has really exploded the use of particularly generative ai. and the kind of impact we're seeing of this technology on electoral processes already even in 2023 have been pretty significant. we've seen fake audio of a candidate ending up losing going viral on the messaging app telegram and indeed here in the uk we've seen the opposition leader being targeted and in the u.s. particularly on social media, satirical deep fakes, kind of memes but also deceptive disinformation spreading quite fast. so i think that we'll see a lot of attempts to use deep fakes and ai in the electoral process particularly on social media to try to influence voters' opinions and potentially results. there is still a question mark about how effective it will be. we don't have sophisticated data or research on how much more per save receive they might be, but
1:46 am
it is clear that they will have some impact. in terms of what governments are doing, that is something which is more difficult. we're seeing the electoral commission in the u.s. looking for example restricting deep fakes or synthetic media in campaigns by politicians. something we saw in argentina. but it is a space which is incredibly hard to get full control of because of the amount of content that is being created particularly on social platforms. >> exactly, especially when a lot of the material that goes viral around elections is not generated by the leaders themselves or the people standing for office. i'm always reminded of the moment in 2018 when mark zuckerberg was facing congress and providing testimony and showed the discrepancy between how far behind poll tesch stands are when it comes to this technology. a refrain i keep hearing is how generative ai will become mainstream. obviously things like chatgpt are widely available now.
1:47 am
what will that mean in practice for people? >> i guess maybe living in my little ai bubble, i think that it already has become mainstream in 2023. i mean, you are right, chatgpt and other text generating models. and also tools such as mid journey, these are really taking off and they are getting baked into existing products, existing software, sorry, in a way that i couldn't have predicted a couple years ago. it has been truly exponential in the true sense of the term and indeed moving forward into new medium. for example text to video is getting very sophisticated very quickly, that is typing in a prompt and getting full fully fledged video content off the back. as well as what we're seeing with what are called auto agents, this is kind of using ai not just to kind of generate content that you then use to actually ask me to execute goals or tasks. and regulators are really kind of struggling on one that
1:48 am
although i do think that the deep fake problem is something that they have had to get to grips with because of course they are kind of uniquely vulnerable in that position. but ledges rate togislators arod are grappling with this. the ai receivsafety summit was year, biden with the executive order and so areas of discrepancy between areas of how society and ledges lay tors understand this technology and how we understand the impacts of a lot of these technologies. they are moving very, very fast but a lot of impacts may not necessarily be obvious until they become really embedded and have had time to kind of seep into everyday life that i think is already happening but you're right, i think in 2024 we'll see it in a whole other level. >> and with that proliferation, what challenges does that present to individuals in terms of their privacy and security,
1:49 am
what transparency will we see from companies that are using ai and also what will be available to people to control what data about themselves is being used to train ai? >> you're absolutely right that data is the fuel that is powering this kind of ai revolution along with massive amounts of hardware, compilation of hardware. and a lot of that data has been gathered, scraped effectively from the internet particularly when it comes to the text but also images and audio. and this is one of the big battles going on between some of the big tech companies and some of the big publishers. but also it is the everyday person who might be publishing posts on social media, it might be their images, it might be their artwork that they are generating. and a lot of people think that copyright is no really longer
1:50 am
fit for purposes in the ai age and that private individuals are kind of uniquely vulnerable to their likeness or their content being taken. it is a really difficult one to get a grip on. i think a lot of the cases that are ongoing will set precedent here. there have been some going more forward with the big tech companies, some going against. but i think that one thing that people really will want is transparency about the content that they are consuming. at the moment a lot of ai content is kind of hidden in plain sight. very realistic. it looks like it is real, but people don't have a way to necessarily know that. and i think in 2024 we'll see a real emphasis of people wanting just transparency. it is not about saying guiltily, oh, this is ai generated, but kind of letting people know what they are consuming, how it is being made both to kind of give that sort of just swrn general transparency, but also fight things like fake elections.
1:51 am
so trying to build a new technical standard to provide the transparency. but you're right, private individuals, the everyday person, you know, there are a lot of ways this is impacting them both in terms of building the models in their data, but also how they will interact with ai in a kind of transparent and clear way, i think that that will be really important to how we integrate the technology responsibly into society and the products we use. >> henry, i wish we had hours to do this. but very quickly, what is the thing you are mostly excited about in ai and the thing that most concerns you? >> i think that we've covered. what i'm most excited about is ai video. that is moving really fast, really realistic results. the election question is the big one. i think there is a chance that we'll see it have an i go is impact on the election. i hope it is not too little too late in terms of mitigations there government and social media companies.
1:52 am
>> henry, thank you so much for joining us. and we'll be right back.
1:53 am
1:54 am
1:55 am
1:56 am
the detroit pistons have a new place in the record books but it is not a record any team would want. the pistons lost their 27th consecutive game tuesday earning them the longest losing streak in a single nba season. and things won't get any easier as the pistons face the league's best team the boston celtics on thursday. in the english premiere league, manchester united overcame a two goal deficit to beat aston villa. the 20-year-old scored the game winner ending his league drought
1:57 am
of more than 1,000 minutes without netting a goal. and finally, a cat is believed to have made history as part of a boat's crew in the annual sydney yacht race. they set off for hobart on tuesday and hope to arrive before new year's eve. that is the video i was waiting for. so cute. as we know official record of cat on board in the race's 78 year history. that does it here on "cnn newsroom." "early start" is next and i'll see you tomorrow.
1:58 am
1:59 am
2:00 am
loving this pay bump in our allowance. wonder where mom and dad got the extra money? maybe they won the lottery? maybe they inherited a fortune? maybe buried treasure? maybe it fell off a truck? maybe they heard that xfinity customers can save hundreds when they buy one unlimted line and get one free. now i can buy that electric scooter! i'm starting a private-equity fund that specializes in midcap. you do you. visit xfinitymobile.com today.

105 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on