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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  July 30, 2024 6:00am-7:01am PDT

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12-years-old but if you have a risk factor obesity, asthma, something else, and increases your risk, then yeah, if you look at like what does that translate to? it does mean a meaningful reduction hospitalization about 51% reduction hospitalization for those who took paxlovid. that's sort of met those criteria. versus those who didn't. so i wouldn't say for everyone, but if you're high risk because of age or something else, then that strongly consider it. >> so interesting, it's great to see you, sanjay. thank you so much. >> you got it. take care and who doesn't want more, sanjay. >> okay. that's my one question for you today because sandra is gonna be back later this week to take your questions about justice. you can scan the qr code that you see on your screen, submit questions about the covid summer surge, and we'll bring you those answers later. and you see new hour of cnn, new central starts now the senate
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about to ask some serious questions about the security failures that led to donald trump's assassination attempt. why the acting head of the secret service he's now expected to testify that he is ashamed. the harris campaign drops a new attack ad against trump and also sees the pool of potential vp candidates shrinking and it's now not just childless cat ladies comments. >> turns out that donald trump's running mate, j.d. >> vance, a longer history of some disparaging remarks about people without children. i'm kate bolduan with john berman and sara sidner. this is cnn new central we are standing by for tough questions on the failed assassination attempt about donald trump, including we will hear for the first time from the new acting director of the secrets service ronald rowe. >> we just got to look at is prepared opening statement to two senate committees. he will
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say, quote, what i saw made me ashamed with us now cnn law enforcement correspondent whitney wild, what are we expecting to learn today? whitney? >> what we're going to hear from the acting director is that one of the first things he did in his role as he went to butler and he climbed up on that roof, john and he laid prone and he saw the gunman would have shot saw. we have seen and right now, what he's saying in his prepared remarks that we will hear live at about an hour from now. is that he cannot defend why that roof was not better secured. so there are many questions about the advance here. and one of the things that i continue to hear from sources and certainly the acting director will be asked about this today, is how is it possible that that building just 150 yards from the podium was not within the secured perimeter. why was it so vulnerable and why was it? exploited in such a way? so those are going to be certainly some of the main questions here. and then further, john, what senator josh hawley has made very clear is that he is looking for accountability. he does not feel even after the
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resignation of the secret service director, that there's been enough accountability at the secret service. what we heard in a previous hearing were questions about whether anybody had been had been disciplined or placed on administrative leave and the aftermath of that attack? certainly that question will come up again today and so finally drawn what the senators are going to be looking for is more detail on what the secret service is doing right now, right this second, to ensure that this never happens again, acting director ron rowe bove says in his opening remarks that they are stepping up their threat assessment, stepping up their security plan. they have also picked up new protectees. so this workload is growing, but they are adamant that they are looking at their operations, increasing security for the protectee's to make sure that this never happens again, and that they are well prepared, especially john, as they move in to some of these he's larger events like the democratic national convention. that's going to be here in chicago in just a matter of weeks, john, and we will see if those members of congress are any more satisfied with the answers they get today, then from the last hearing, which is what, just one week you go,
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whitney wild. great to see you this morning. thank you very much. sara. >> all right. in just a few hours, kamala harris will head back to georgia to make her case to voters in the key battleground state. it's a state her campaign believes she can win. part of their new strategy, win over disenfranchised republicans a new harris campaign memo says, quote, trump has waged a full-on war with georgia's top republicans, including governor brian kemp and secretary of state brad raffensberger. and it points to trump's performance in the republican primary. and the votes he lost to nikki haley, the harris campaign, also launching a new 50 million dollar ad campaign in battleground states today, seeing him still, alvarez is joining us now, what can we expect? priscilla alvarez is no, not priscilla from alvarez, but from kamala harris in georgia this morning well on her campaign is trying to keep this state in play. of course, they want to build on the surge of enthusiasm over the last week in what is a critical
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state as a reminder? they're president biden only narrowly won the state in 2020. and when he did, it marked the first time a democratic presidential candidate had won and nearly 30 years. so that is why they are paying such close attention to this state. and of course, other swing states are going to a release and they already have released that ad that looks back at her history as a process so cuter, making the argument that they don't want to go back, they're looking forward. that is part of the attack against former president donald trump. but when i've talked to democratic strategists, they say hey, look, there was a lot of apathy among voters with two unpopular candidates, former president donald trump and president biden. that was especially true in georgia. he was president biden was there earlier this year and there wasn't there were some disillusionment among voters, but now what those strategists are now saying is that there isn't fuzi asm that they're observing among voters who are now at least thinking about putting in their vote
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instead of just not voting at all. and that is what they want the vice president to capitalize on. but even if she does, it is going to be he competitive. take a listen to how the campaign is framing this we have 24 offices in the state of georgia, and we do to georgia has very competitive. >> it's clear the vice president is energizing and mobilizing or base it's also true that republicans, that excuse to donald trump it had problems that republicans in georgia look at geoff duncan, who is a statewide official in that state whose repeated trump's record and made it clear he is not fit for office now, the vice president is expected to be joined by democratic lawmakers and officials, but she's also bringing the star power. >> she will also be there with him megan, thee stallion. so this is a rally that they're hoping again, can energize voters and a rally that they hope will bring big, big turnout. sara. >> all right. priscilla alvarez. thank you so much for your reporting there from the
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white house. >> okay. >> joining us right now is the chair of the d triple c, the house democratic campaign arm congresswoman suzan delbene of washington guardsman. thank you so much for coming in. so the d trip says it had its best day of the cycle in the first 24 hours after biden's announcement that he was stepping aside one of the best online fundraising days in in the house democratic campaign arms history if vulnerable democratic seats are better off with harris at the top of the ticket. now how much better off would you describe it? >> well, there is a ton of energy and enthusiasm all across the country. people know what's at stake. this election. our rights, our freedoms, our democracy, and our future and so that energy enthusiasm, turning out every vote is so important in battleground districts across the country because we know that when people hear our message, we win. and number one, we've got to make sure people hear that and those resources that are coming into our campaigns make a huge
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difference. we'd been outracing republicans on the house side. all this cycle and when people hear our message and we are able to turn out the vote, we win. so that excitement, enthusiasm is gonna be really important as we head into november, house democrats have to win four more seats if all incumbents are re-elected to retake the house majority, how much of an impact does a vp pick have on those chances? >> well, actually i think our candidates are really authentic candidates running in their districts. so these are very local races, but definitely the enthusiasm at the top of the ticket the energy out there to turn out the vote is important. so the top of the ticket will be important, but the most powerful full thing in our battleground districts are our candidates themselves. they are strong voices for their communities and their independent thinkers. and that makes a huge difference. people can sense that and they know how important it is like someone who understands their district not that whoever
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kamala harris would pick what hurt any one democrat and one of these in one of these districts, do you think a vp pick could make a have a significant impact impact on helping in any of these places. >> i mean, i know a lot of a lot of swing the swing districts or the crossover districts aren't really in the states that we're talking about these vp, vp candidates are, but still well, i, you know, there's a lot of great options for a vice president harris to pick from so she's going to make the best selection as she looks at all the various qanon but i think there are strong options that really articulate the contrast that's so important this election between extremism and dysfunction and folks who want to govern and stand up for families. and the middle class and so i think all of her options are strong options and and i'm excited to hear her choice project 2025. >> we know that the d trip is
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seeking to tie swing district republicans to project 2025 with now less than 100 days left to the election, started circulating a memo this weekend accusing republicans of pushing this. donald trump says that that is not true, that they're not pushing project 2025. chris lacivita, the campaign manager and it made clear during especially during the convention that they were distancing themselves from the document at the convention do you think this is what sticks with voters? because many you have to assume still don't know what you're talking about when you say project 2025 welwyn people hear what their plans are they are strongly against it and we are seeing that more and more across the country. >> people's concerns about the republican agenda and their support for project 2025 they have been very clear that they want to take away reproductive rights across the country, put in place and nationwide abortion ban you've heard donald trump talk about his
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immunity and ability to do whatever he wants. he even talked about if folks vote this cycle, they never have to vote. again this idea of kind of unchecked presidential powers, gutting medicare under overwhelming are taking over or undermining social security all of these things are things that are part of the agenda of project 2025 and things that republicans have been working on already. so i think it's important that we hear what they're saying. they're extreme. we talk about the issues that they continue to push in congress, like taking away reproductive freedom and we've seen that across the country, iowa put in place one of the strongest abortion bans just yesterday. so as house democrats, we have opportunities. in fact, we have two great pickup opportunities in iowa abortion since also going to be on the ballot, we have a strong messenger and vice president harris, on
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standing up for reproductive freedom. and so that also will be a strong issue for folks as we head into november, republicans are definitely making clear that in terms of talking about extreme, that is how they are describing vice president harris. republicans are leaning hard on a 62nd ad which started running, i believe yesterday in pennsylvania by the republican senate candidate there. part of it, a laundry list of statements that harris has made in the past in 2019 and 2020. listen to this nonpartisan gov track has raided you as the most liberal senator. >> i am prepared to get rid of the filibuster to pass agreement there's no question. i'm in favor of banning fracking. >> would you ban offshore drilling? yes harris, his campaign has says that she no longer she would not ban fracking, but i think the question then becomes as the new york times put it, is, does harris of four years ago, is harris about to haunt the harris and the down-ballot of 2020? >> for with those statements
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well, i actually think when we talk about extreme republicans or the definition of extreme and we're going to drive that contrast i mean, we have, we're not in session this week in the house because republicans who are in the majority are incapable of governing, they can't even agree with each other. >> we've seen chaos and dysfunction this entire congress. they want to put in place a nationwide abortion ban. they are continuing to undermine our economy. you heard donald trump talk about wanting to put tariffs and basically race costs for american families. this is the republican agenda. and so i think that contrast is very, very clear. we're driving that contrast. vice president harris is going to prosecute the case versus donald trump and house democrats are going to prosecute the case vs house republicans and republican candidates across the country for their extreme he msm folks want to see governance work. they want us to find solutions to the problems that american face. that's what we've come
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to congress to do. we're going to elect more people who want to do that. take back the majority in the house and worked with president harris to get that done. >> very clearly going to see more of that contrast playing out on the airwaves and on the campaign trail. from here on out. thank you so much for coming in. congressman john. the newly discovered comments by j.d vance about childless americans. he calls them quote, more sociopath hathcock and less mentally stable today, we could see the first major effort by congress in decades to hold social media companies accountable. new reporting on the bottom hi paula pushed to keep kids safe online, and then they came from the sea or maybe they came from the other direction, to be honest, i'm not really sure where they came from, but the important thing is they should showed up and they terrorized unsuspecting rhode island beachgoers. we have a survivor of this onslaught hear her dramatic story ahead.
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report from the k file team. they did a great job on this, but you're exactly right, kate, essentially, what they found was that you know, despite vance last week trying to clean up his remarks and saying that those comments to tucker carlson in 2021 about childless cat ladies, that wasn't a one time thing. he has had a history of saying multiple similar things, calling people without children sociopathic, psychotic. i want you to take a listen to what he told us podcast in 2020 there's just these basic cadences of life that i think are really powerful and really, really valuable when you have kids in your life. >> and the fact that so many people, especially in america's leadership class just don't have that and their lives. you know, i worry that it makes people more sociopathic and ultimately our whole country a little bit less less mentally stable. >> and of course, you talk about going on twitter. final point i'll make is you go on twitter and almost always the people who are most deranged
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and most psychotic, are people who don't have kids okay. just i mean, stunning remarks from donald trump's running mate. i'll tell you this. i've spoken to both vance's team as well as the trump campaign extensively about some of these comments and having them resurface. and what i've been told is luck, of course, they are not happy with these remarks coming to light and being resurfaced especially on really what it was was jd vance's first real week on the campaign trail after being announced as trump's running mate. and so at the same time though they're saying that vance is not being reconsidered, that donald trump is not thinking of having someone else be named his running mate, but i do think that they're going to continue to try it yeah, of course, clean these up and see what they can do to try to move the media narrative away from these comments. >> yeah, that's right. and also there's new reporting. jd vance's team is responding now alayna to the reporting from the washington post about what he said in a private fundraiser
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to donors about the impact of calm kamala harris kind of taking over the top of the ticket. let me play this for everyone from the washington post a little bit of a political sucker punch. >> the bad news is the commonly harris does not have the same baggage as joe biden because whatever we might say a lot younger and kamala harris is obviously not struggling in the same ways that joe biden did this is the exact opposite of what we just heard from donald trump say in an interview with ingram last night i miss is, remarkable reporting from isaac arnsdorf at the washington post. i mean it's very clear that what they are saying publicly is not necessarily what they believe privately. and that's totally exemplified. but what j.d. vance said in that private donor meeting it also is in line with what i'm hearing from donald trump. his team, they acknowledged that of course kamala harris is an entirely different opponent and
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they do think it's going to be more challenging to face off against her especially after they've seen some of the enthusiasm after her becoming the apparent successor of joe biden. i can tell you that after that june 27, cnn debate, donald trump's team was incredibly confident. they were essentially measuring the drapes for november and now they're not ashore and they're of course still trying to figure out how they're going to define her something they're also struggling with. i do want to quickly read this statement though, from vance's spokesperson in response to that washington post reporting, they wrote quote, poll after poll shows president trump leading kamala harris as voters become aware of her weak failed and dangerously liberal agenda, her far-left ideas are even more radioactive than joe biden, particularly in the key swing states that will decide this election like pennsylvania, michigan and wisconsin, and so that's their response to this. but again, i mean, he said it himself, he
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saying whatever we might say, it's clear that she's much younger and choose an entirely different opponent. and so i think that gives you kind of all the insight you need, kate. >> yeah, definitely not denying what was said on the tape case closed it's good to see alayna. thank you. sir. >> all right. with me now to continue this discussion, is michael blake, former democratic national committee vice chair and liam donovan, former aide for the national republican senatorial committee. thank you, gentlemen, both for being here. michael, i'm going to start with you jd vance's past comments, the people that are most arranged and most psychotic are people that don't have children. he's now not only attacking women, he's attacking anyone who doesn't have kids, how big of a gift is this to the democrats? >> oh, it's the gift that keeps on giving. i mean, jd is going need a cat one day, take a loss in november because he's going to keep talking like this is only going to help us says it's sexist, is derogatory. he's clearly not walking away from this. and let's also be clear, he doubled down on this multiple times. he truly
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believes this. and so for anyone who doesn't have a biological child, he's making it very clear that you can't take care of families. now, let's make sure we're clear on the contrast. vice president harris leads the maternal health taskforce. she leaves on homeownership. she's clear the highest ranking woman to serve in this nation's history and so to say that she can't help families, let's be very clear when she's commander in chief, he's going to help more families and j.d. vance every day what his books. she also is a stepmother and that's sort of been swept aside as not being a mother, didn't call them lamola. i mean. right. let's be clear. >> let me let liam i'm going to go to you next, but first i want you to hear how vance talked about this and tried to clean this up just recently. let's listen the simple point that i made is that having children becoming a father, becoming a mother, i really do think it changes your perspective and it pretty profound way people are focusing so much on the sarcasm and not on the substance of what i actually said and the substance of what i said, megan, i'm sorry. >> it's true it is true that
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we become anti-family. it is true that the left has become anti-child. a lot of liberals and a lot of people on the left will say, well, we can just replace american children with immigrants so he did not really clean it up there there are 21 million women in the united states between the ages of 2039 from the data, i looked up in 2022 that had not given birth, is this real liability for donald trump's campaign? we'll look, i think it's a reflection of two things. number one is the political incentives on the right of trying to build a name for yourself. it plays to a glib nas and a tone that doesn't really play when it comes to national politics. but there's also reflects the fact that donald trump has been able to say and do whatever he's wanted for about nine years. and democrats have found sounds sort of a soft spot on this ticket. and by going after j.d vance, he's judged by a different standard than donald trump does. my question is, why has it been two weeks without without j.d. vance really taking the opportunity to
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reintroduce himself i like j.d. vance. i supported him in his senate campaign. i see a lot of myself in him as a millennial dad. i think his family is probably the best thing he brings to this ticket, but he hasn't been able to be out there and introduce himself to most of the country which hasn't really met him. they might have a vague notion of who he is, but they're really seeing the playing field to democrats. and i think that's a mistake. they need to get on an offensive message and reintroduced jd in a proactive way, not a reactive way, trying to play cleanup if you're cleaning your loose i guess. following that, can he be reintroduced, michael? i mean, these comments have said over and over and over again, it's kind of hard, clean something up that you keep repeating over time. >> let's be clear. the subtitle of his book when we're talking about reintroducing so is a memoire of a family and culture in crisis. he was talking about himself, right? so the notion that somehow childless cat ladies, all its absurd sir, it's sexist and let's make very clear is derogatory and racist that now he's saying, well, it's immigrant children are gonna be doing this. and so at the end
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of the day, they had to, they did a terrible vetting job. they clearly were not prepared for the moment and they have a disastrous candidate for their vp nominee, which will make it much easier for kamala harris i'm present, united states. >> i want to ask you one more question about vance, his former classmate was on with erin burnett last night. they were in yale together. and he said, he's, she showed all these emails and text message between him and j.d. vance at the time and they were very personal, but in it, some of those text messages said things like that. he hates the j.d. vance hates the police and there were some shifting views that you start to notice can you imagine at any time, kamala harris using the words, i hate police and that not being used by the other side, it would be disastrous. >> and let's be clear the so-called law and order party is ignoring the fact that they have a vp nominee who literally wrote and said to his friends, he hates the police. so i don't hear anymore about us being liberal, us being left in saying that in regard to your
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question, there is no scenario where they would not be up and down tv losing their mind talking about us if they ever had a black woman talking about, she hates the police. they want to talk about her being a prosecutor maybe they should get their house in order first. >> liam, what do you think republicans need to do to deal with kamala harris? because it seems like the messaging keeps changing. it's like they're trying to find the attack, but they haven't found it yet. >> they've been slow, they've been on the backfoot as j.d. vance mentioned, it was a bit of a sucker punch. i think they they weren't surprised by the shift away from biden. they were they are surprised by how quickly people have coalesced around kamala harris. they thought they were gonna have a few more weeks of chaos to exploit but i think, they really need to coordinate this message. i think it's pretty clear from the best message we've seen up on the air that needs to be communicated and distributed. the surrogates are not on message. there need to organize this and really prosecute the case against kamala harris because she is not defined in the way that joe biden was, but that means that the american people need to hear the case against her. there's plenty to work with in
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her own words, she has staked out positions that are out of step with the mainstream. that's what people need to be reminded of. and that's what i expect to see for the next 900 days. >> but it may make sense. how are you going to prosecute a prosecutor? as i'm saying, they don't want to have their message insight even there on surrogates can even get it right. i mean, the reality is there in complete disaster, the notion that there say they weren't prepared for the vice president to be running that just shows where they're at right now and they have no message. they have no argument. their entire framing was jill biden old while your candidate is old, you have no policies, you know, no vision and the reality is, they have candidates who do not have anything to say to the american people, which is why we have seen so much energy for the next president, united states, we will see how this all tumbles out. the democratic national committee he is happening august 19. that's that's when it begins. we will see how this goes up until that point and beyond liam, michael. thank you both for being here. john. >> all right. we are standing by for a major vote in the senate. what it could mean for the seat? do you have children
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for the harm that they cause. cnn's lauren fox is on capitol hill following all of this, lauren, it was a long road getting here yeah. >> i mean, the last time that congress tried to tackle children's safety online i'm kate was 19 1998 and it has been years in the making bipartisan lawmakers trying to find a path forward and we should note that this bill has large bipartisan support. it has more than 70 co-sponsors. that's almost unheard of when you were talking about a bill coming to the senate floor? and it really does combine some odd bedfellows. you have marsha blackburn, a really conservative republican working very closely with richard blumenthal, a democrat from connecticut they really helped spearhead this bill get it the attention and support that it needed to get to the floor. and it really does two separate things. it puts the onus on companies online to try and protect children to do everything in their power to make that the case that
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children are not victimized online, that they are not seeing the kind of content that could hurt them or create issues with body image that's something that we've talked so much about on cnn the other question that it deals with is targeting in advertisements directed at children. it really tries to stem the tide of that. and so you have here a bill and a package of bills that really does lot of things to try to protect kids online. and we should just note, kate, that this is the kind of legislation that in an election year you may not really see that often because it's bipartisan. it's something that everyone can go home and campaign on. now, this builds future is still a little bit uncertain in the united states house of representatives . but speaker mike johnson said that he looks forward to reviewing this legislation and of course, we expect that it could come to the floor in the house after the august recess and what have or are the tech companies saying about this moving forward yeah. i mean, there's really a divide over
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this and there are some groups like the aclu, who are really concerned kate about this legislation, arguing that it could infringe on the rights of internet users. and i think that that has been one of the battles that lawmakers have had the face really is the fact that this is not a bill that everyone loves. and yet they are still able to move forward with it today all right. >> lauren, thank you so much for bringing that to us. what happens, sir? >> right ahead, dangerous conditions in paris today, the record temperatures making it even more challenging for the olympic athletes there plus a day beach straight out of the old testament. look at this that first, there was, there were a lot of dragonflies and then there was million and the waiver hood. every delivery is a treats one statue over you, sir what strawberry place? oh
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competency-based masters at university of phoenix, i'm tom foreman in washington. and this is cnn all right. >> right. now, it's 95 degrees in paris and feels like 101 officially making it the city's hottest day of the year. pad news, of course, for the olympic athletes set to play tennis, rugby, soccer, and beach volleyball today, cnn's derek van dam is joining us now ouch, that is really hot for paris in particular. >> i mean there's nothing they can do about this, right? >> i mean, it's outside yeah. >> look, sir, it's well-documented that paris is europe's most vulnerable city to heat. but understanding why it's like that is so important for olympic big organizers to plan ahead for such a scenario as today, it's all about the urban heat island effect. we get it in our large cities here in america, but in paris, in particular, the heat is amplified because of the
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concrete, the asphalt the buildings in this very condensed urban environment that the city of light hi, it resides. and you can just see it with this picture. so we've got the greenhouse gas emissions that we emit into the air and that traps the heat close to the ground where you and i operate, including the spectators and the athletes. it's hot today and it's amplified by this urban heat island effect. in fact, the temperature right now cool, a. degree or two since what you reported just a moment ago, but anyway, you slice it, it's very hot. you factor in the humidity, it's very uncomfortable and downright dangerous for the athletes and that will continue through the course of the day today but with all of this extra added heat baked into the atmosphere of past 100 years since paris just last hosted the olympics, we've seen a 5.5 degree fahrenheit increase in our average temperature during this two-week period that the olympics is undergoing right now. so this allowed for event
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organizers to be concerned about the potential for severe weather that could pop up fueled by this extra added heat. and today there's a prime example of just that with this heat, we have the potential for these bubbling of thunderstorms that could cause some heavy rainfall, large hail, strong wind gusts. and we know sara how the heavy rain impacts the river sen. and how it's already impacted the triathlon events as well. we'll see if that isn't the thing that bothers john berman the most. >> the san is not clean and they can do the triathlon without the sen. clint athletes. >> thank you so much. derek van dam, and more headlines coming from the summer olympics day for the summer olympics. >> and coco gauff just faced a stunning loss in her third round match. let's get over to andy scholes for the update on this andy, what happened while you paris games go off to an amazing start for coco, we all saw she was one of the flag bearers with lebron james. but i mean, today was just a nightmare for so she had set point in the opening set up 5-2, but croatia is donna vekic, not only saved is that
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point she came all the way back and won it in a tie break and then in the second set, the umpire overruled. an out call that just infuriated coco. she argued with the umpire that the ball should have been replayed. do to her claim that the earlier out call had interfered with her shot coco got so upset she was in tears, sank. she's always being cheated. she ended up getting no relief and would then lose that set as well six to so coco is now out of singles her olympics though not over. she still going to be competing in both the women's and mixed doubles. now, elsewhere there in paris, a big day for the women's gymnastics team as they look to reclaim the team gold three years ago at the tokyo games at team got silver. that was after gold in 20 2012 and 2016. now simone biles says she's good to go despite tweaking that calf on sunday, the u.s should be pretty confident today. they had three of the top for all around performers on sunday during qualifications, you've got biles and jordan chiles slated to compete in all for events today, suni lee on the bars beam and floor and he got
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jade carey going to be on the vault women's team final starts at 12:15 easter in the men's team. meanwhile, they got a new hero. his name is stephen nedoroscik. and if the pommel horse specialist could deliver a flawless routine yesterday, the u.s would win a metal in the all-around and he came through big time nedoroscik. he knew it after that disk about the whole team mauldin, they had a big celebrates it right there on the floor the nedoroscik known as clark kent for those thick rimmed glasses. and he certainly had a superman performance. it got the u.s. the bronze. it was the men's first team medal since 2008, and just there fourth since 1932 went up there, do my routine and during that dismount as just like already smiling, i think i saluted the judges and looked at these guys and they were jumping up and down. i mean, it was just the greatest moment of my life. i think so happy to have them there those are great moment. >> now, during the lead to the games, there was a lot of discussion on whether the water
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and the river sand was going to be clean enough to hold events officials, they kept insisting that it would be the paradigm air, even swimming in it to try to alleviate concerns well, this morning they postponed the men's triathlon because they tested the water and it was found to have too much pollution in order to swim in it. they're blaming the heavy rain on friday and saturday for the levels there. kate, there's hope that the triathlon will be able to take place tomorrow after the women's race we'll wait and see. but if i was one of the athletes, i would not be very confident jumping in that water at this point i know and like, all i want to do, i want to do is to get in the water and to compete. >> it's so brutal it's really rough. i mean, thank you, andy and when going into the games concern wasn't just pollution, it was e coli in the senate, like, you don't want to leave with the bronze and e coli that's a bad combination sure. >> we say it all the time. >> we say all right, when dragon attack, our cnn reporter
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thanks. medical guardian, five foot-9 men not included. i'm larry madowo in port-au prince, haiti. and this cnn never seen him my life that dramatic video dragon flies swarming assaulting an unsuspecting rhode island beach over the weekend, there could be millions of them flying, right there imagine being there.
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>> we don't have to anymore. why because cnn law and justice reporter katelyn polantz was there. she survived. she is here to tell the story kaitlan are you ok this morning john, i know you want me to say it was scary, but i'm going to say it was magical. >> this is what happened. i was at the newport folk festival over the weekend and on friday, right around 4:00, this swarm of dragonflies just rose out of, i guess, the narrow gantz and bey and flew open fort adams state park at the moment that it happened, i was listening to this band named guster and people started looking around and saying, are these locus, what's going on? it was a little scary. it's at the beginning, but then the guy who's the front man of guster, he yelled, dragonflies and he jumped into the crowd and people we're putting their hands up, the dragonflies were landing on their hands. the music was playing, the sun was out. it was a beautiful day,
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and it was really amazing because john dragonflies, they don't hit you. i really thought that we would be getting pelted in the face, but their amazing flyers and so they were landing on people's hat it's they were landing on people's hands. and it really was just an amazing moment. so i usually am your law girl, but i'm here to tell you today that science is cool too now, kate was wondering caitlin were they mating could you tell what was it like he sees it big. i don't know i don't know that much about etymology, but i from what i have heard, they, they travel impacts because it allows them to eat other bugs. >> that is what i who ran the internet since this happened. and no other further explanation, but it really was something that maybe it was lucky. i don't know it, but it was a dragon flies swarm in the middle of the newport folk
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festival. and apparently across the waters of rhode island. >> at least they weren't locus because i'm going to tell you right now, i've been in a swarmer locus. they do hit you and they're mean and they hurt swear israel dragonflies are can i then a cicada. >> yeah, totally less noisy really beyond just sitting here kaitlan, we're so glad you're okay this morning, we were concerned when we heard that you were the hair we appreciate you coming on this morning so much for joining us. >> this is cnn news central. see that newsroom with pamela brown up next what makes a medicare supplement insurance plan like an aarp medicare supplement insurance plans? >> and from unitedhealthcare, a good choice for people on medicare. it's smart for you to have now, i'm 65 and later on for the future, you i'm 70. >> it's really martin. >> hey, looking good. you made
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