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text. now welcome to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. >> i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom two us presidential nominee is hitting the campaign trail, one, continuing her swing state blitz in arizona, the other making a stop in ruby red montana an israeli strike on a school in gaza reportedly leaves dozens dead as us officials work to avoid a wider conflict in the region. and rebuilding parents we'll check in on maui one year after deadly wildfires ravaged the island live from atlanta. >> this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber the democratic presidential ticket is on a tear through western swing states that could determine the outcome of the election. >> kamala harris and running mate tim waltz head to las vegas, nevada later today. but while in glendale, arizona,
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harris reiterated her plan to sign the bipartisan border security bill that failed to pass congress earlier this year. accusing her republican rival, donald trump of torpedoing the bill for personal gain. trump is expected to attend fundraisers in wyoming and colorado in the hours ahead, he made his first campaign stops since the democratic ticket became official in bozeman montana. now, none of these western states are considered battlegrounds raising questions about his campaign strategy will have more on trump's montana rally. but first let's go to eva mckend in glendale, arizona with the latest on harris's campaign stop the harris campaign continuing to enjoy a surge of momentum, this arena to the rafters, the vice president addressing he's fire protesters directly saying that she too wants a ceasefire and the hostages to be returned home and that she's working in concert with president biden towards that effort, though,
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let me say, i have been clear now is the time to get a ceasefire deal and the president and our working around the clock every day to get that ceasefire deal done. and bring she also addressed immigration in this border state, saying that if elected president, she wouldn't be tough on the border, but she also wants comprehensive immigration reform and a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. >> eva mckend, cnn, glendale, arizona next week for us president will make his first public appearance with harrison's dropping out of the race and passing on the torch, will attend the ceremony together in maryland during an interview set to air sunday on cbs, joe biden spoke about that decision. >> and what matters most to
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him, harris when i ran the first time, i thought to myself has been a transition president. i can't even say how old i am. it's hard for me to get out of my mouth the great honor of being president i think i'm an obligation to the country to do what i most important thing to do. and that is we must, we must, we must defeat trump during trump's rally in montana, he attacked harris over immigration and told the crowd what he plans to do if he's elected in november. here harris he is all we're going to do. >> it's going to be called a trump mass deportation because we have no choice vote republican and we will begin the largest deportation operation in american history. cnn's alayna treene has more from bozeman, montana well, former president donald trump traveled to bozeman, montana on friday was his first rally since vice president kamala harris had announced her
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running mate and selecting tim walz on tuesday. >> now montana is an interesting state. it is not a battleground, it is a reliably red state, one that donald trump's senior advisers tell me they're not concerned about him winning in november, but he came here instead to stomp for tim sheehy. he's a businessman as well as a former navy seal, and he's locked in a tight senate and it race with jon tester, the long serving democratic senator of montana, and really, when i talked to people on the ground as well as people on capitol hill, they say this is one of the most it's hardest fought races in the battle for the senate. majority. now, i actually caught up with steve daines, a senator from montana as well as the chairman of the national so republican senatorial committee. and he told me that he was the one who actually privately encouraged donald trump to come here. he said, we know it's not a battleground, but this race it's incredibly important so a lot of reasoning for why he wanted to come here
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tonight. now, we did see donald trump mentioned she he as well as give shout-outs to both him and others republican lawmakers. but most of his speech really mirrored what we heard him do on thursday at his press conference in florida he attacked harris over immigration crime flation, but also mocked her intelligence argued that she was running to the left of joe biden, that she was a dangerous liberal and also attacked her running mate tim walz. now one thing that was new that we haven't seen before is he actually stopped in the middle of his speech on two different occasions to play a video going after harris, i want you to take a look at what he did so don't take my word for it. listen kamala harris is agenda straight from her own mouth. would anybody like to see her? let's do it for a couple of seconds. go ahead. >> yeah, i am radical ebay to get radical about what we're doing. take it seriously. >> kamala is grossly incompetent. and in my opinion, has a very low iq, but we'll
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find out about her iq during the debate. okay. let's find out about her now, i think it's clear from that that we have really entered this new phase of this election cycle. donald trump's campaign, but also the harris campaign their attacks at becoming cree singly personal and nasty and i think it's reflective of just the state of the race right now as they're sprinting to november. and one thing i can tell you, at least so donald trump's part on this when i talked to his team, is that he has been increasingly frustrated with the democratic enthusiasm surrounding vice president comma harris. you know, she's sustain this enthusiasm for several weeks now and you've heard him attacker crowd size attacker for having celebrity performers all of those things have been getting under his skin. and i think that's a lot of where this is coming from. alayna treene, cnn, bozeman, montana all right. >> i want to bring in richard johnson, who is a lecturer in us politics at queen mary university of london. >> and he's with us from
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oxford. thank you so much for being here with us, so we just heard our reporter there talking about sort of the sprint two november for donald trump, at least for his campaign schedule, it seems more like a slow walk. what do you make of the fact that trump isn't really stumping in the swing states i think that's a good observation. kim and i i'm thinking back to 2016 when donald trump had an extremely vigorous campaign schedule indeed, donald trump was at this point in the race doing more campaign events than hillary clinton and when we look back at 20:16 race people criticize the clinton campaign, for example, for not going to key swing states after the convention like michigan, which of course she lost to donald trump and helped give trump that electoral college victory. >> so it seems to me that the trump campaign could be at risk, are making the very mistakes that saying the hearing clinton campaign and
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made against him in 2016. >> yeah, that's a great point so if there's a lack of energy there, there also seems to be sort of a lack of focus in terms of trump's attacks on harris harris and her running mate. but one thing that we have seen his campaign do is sort of seizing on waltzes military service record for democrats sort of an unpleasant echo of the john kerry swift boat controversy. will this be as effective as that was? do you think? >> well, i think if you go back to 2004 carry campaign, may john kerry, his military service as central part of the message against george w bush. remember the united states was in at war both in iraq and afghanistan. george w bush had taken the united states to war but going back and looking at their records it's in vietnam. george w bush did not serve to seize and vietnam, john kerry did and was injured in 13 purple hearts and at the
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democratic convention in august of 2000 for john kerry began his speech by saying, i'm john kerry reporting for duty and it was a swift boat adds that followed really almost immediately after that convention that took away the compound combative convention bounce in 2004. tim waltz is appeal. >> i think. >> of course his his, his military record is something that the campaign we'll be talking about and wants to talk about. >> but i think that the context is very different. >> the united states is not in the same context of war as it was in 2004 and tim walz has not presenting himself as a military hero in the way quite rightly because he john kerry's had a particularly distinguished record in vietnam so i think he's less vulnerable to this attack then john kerry was 20 years ago. >> i mean, while pivoting to the top of the ticket, kamala harris was in a swing state arizona seeing huge crowds
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there, apparently, despite passing over arizona senator mark kelly for running mate. do you get a sense that it still part of harris's honeymoon period or have the fundamentals of the race really changed here? >> this has been remarkable few weeks for the democratic campaign off to remarkably poor few weeks. just before that this election is about two bouts. the rust belt and the sunbelt and kamala harris's selection as the nominee has put both in play for the democrats is in a serious way. harris i think puts the sun belts key sun belt states of georgia, arizona, in nevada back in play for the democrats because she can appeal to core constituencies that help put those states and a democratic column, particularly turning out both african-americans, but also suburban suburban voters who are becoming increasingly
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important in states like arizona and in georgia. and then to months has been chosen to help strengthen that appeal in the rust belt states it's very anya michigan, wisconsin and also, i'd say kamala harris has an important appeal there. african american voters are important in those states as well. and suburban voters are also important that so i think this is quite a strong ticket. and one of the reasons why the trump campaign i think is foundry at the moment, is they weren't anticipating in fronting a ticket like this and having to recalibrate and their machine is not clicking into gear quite as quickly as it needs to. now the democrats should be complacent about this and a lot can go wrong, a lot a lot of surprises can happen but at the moment, they're in, they're in a good position and they should try and maintain this momentum going into the convention. >> and then and then using the convention to kind of give an extra boost in the sprint towards the final general
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election. >> yeah, and the tightening polls seem to reflect what you're talking about. there. richard johnson in oxford rafah to leave it there. thank you so much for speaking to that's really appreciate it it. >> thank you gaza officials say an israeli airstrike has killed at least 90 people at a school in gaza city now is a civil defense, says displaced palestinians were staying at the school they also say emergency crews are working to rescue the injured and recover the bodies of those killed. >> now cnn can't confirm the death toll, partly because gaza is inaccessible to the international media. but israel confirms that it struck the building. the israeli military says it attacked quote, hamas terrorists operating within a hamas command and controls center in the school located next to a mosque. while the idf says it trying to mitigate the risk of harming civilians, egypt is accusing israel of deliberately killing civilians now the strike comes as the united nation says, more than 80% of gaza has been subject to
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evacuation orders since the war began last october you're tired of this life by god, we are fed up death is better than this. let the country's see and find a solution we're tired. >> we've died, died, died, we died 100 times. we've died ceasefire talks are expected to resume next week, but there are new fears of a widening middle east conflict in northeastern syria. a drone strike hit a us and coalition base. there are no reports of injuries at this time at the pentagon says medical evaluations are ongoing meanwhile, us secretary of state antony blinken spoke with israel's defense minister on friday. us officials say he discussed efforts to de-escalate tensions in the middle east. deputy commander in iran's revolutionary guard says the group is ready to carry out orders to put harshly punish israel for last week's assassination of a hamas leader in tehran israel hasn't claimed responsibility for that attack. demons jomana karadsheh is live
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in london, latest on the middle east situation. so jomana, what more can you tell us on that strike on the school and the aftermath that we're seeing now well, kim made is being described by local officials in gaza as well as residents as a horrific massacre that happened in the early hours on saturday at dawn prayers they say is people had gathered for prayers it is in the tabia in compound on this is a compound in the northern part of the gaza strip to the east of gaza city. >> it is a compound that contains both a school and a mask. wear internally displaced civilians have been sheltering. now, we understand from local authorities, they say that at least 93 people so far have been confirmed killed, but they say a lot of these bodies have been left unrecognizable by the
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strike. but at this point, they're saying at least 11 children and six women are among the dead, and they are expecting numbers to rise as many people were seriously injured and they have been transported to one of the last barely standing hospitals nearby. now the israeli military is disputing these casualty figures as is the case when you have a large number of casualties, we have seen this in the past. now it also acknowledge that this is a compound where residents of gaza, they say have been sheltering. but in their initial statement, the israeli military says that this was a precise strike, that it was targeting a hamas command and control center. and hamas terrorist there we have asked them for evidence that we have not yet received to support that claim. they also say that they took numerous steps to mitigate the risk of harming civilians, including precise
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munition, aerial surveillance, and intelligence. but no mention of asking civilians to leave, no warning to civilians in that compound. and this is something that's reza the survivors eyewitnesses are telling us they did not receive a warning. now an idf spokesman, kim, a short time ago, also posting on x saying that 20 hamas and islamic jihad terrorists, including senior commanders. he says were operating from that compound and the compound and the mosque struck within it served as an active hamas and pij military palestinian islamic jihad military facility. again, disputing the figures, but say and saying it doesn't align with the information they have, but they are continuing to examine it. it's worth mentioning. this is obviously not an isolated incident just in this past week alone, several schools, in different parts of gaza have been hit by israeli strikes. of course, these are places where displaced civilians are
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sheltering the united nations commissioner for human rights, saying, earlier for this week in a statement that there horrified by what they say is an unfolding pattern of israeli strikes on schools and gaza, killing displaced civilians and we've said this so many times over the past ten months. people have nowhere left to go. nowhere is safe in gaza when you have schools mosques, and what has been designated as safe zones being struck him? >> yeah. nowhere is safe. as we say, jomana karadsheh live in london. thanks so much 61 people are dead and a nation mourns after a passenger plane crashed into a neighborhood in brazil will have the latest on that disaster while so ukraine and he is pushing its military incursion deeper into russian territory. the offensive appears to be widening as russian authorities scrambled to respond, we'll have the latest coming up. please stick
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is observing three days of mourning after a plane crash killed 61 people with no survivors disturbing eyewitness video shows the planes dissent just seconds before the crash the passenger plane was on internal resilient flight when it slammed into a residential area outside of sao paolo, as people on the ground shouted in fear now the death toll would have been even higher if it hadn't been to the fact that many people who were supposed to be on board the plane went to the wrong gate and missed the flight. listen us i argued with the airport worker and that was it. >> he saved my life. i know people must be calling now, thinking i was up there when people said the plane crash i still think that must have been an intervention from god because the plane might crash i was in a moment of anger with the airport stuff, but this guy, i need to know his name because he really saved my life they see a team from the brazilian air force will lead the investigation. >> but as of right now, there's no firm information on the cause. stefano pozzebon has
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more from the crash site the recovery operations are going on through the night for the bodies of the 61 people on board of the voi pass airplane that crashed in vinhedo, brazil. >> it's a residential city, about 100 kilometers northwest of the sau paolo. the plane crashed in a residential complex called recount to florida. and as you can see, there are still even in the middle of the night operations by the police. forensic medics and the civil protection, you need to, as they are trying which will recover as many bodies as possible as quickly as possible under the rain to recognize and to identify the bodies of course, because of the circumstances of the accidents and the state of that body, debt could take some time at this moment, we know that at least three bodies have been taken to sell baudler to the institute of forensic medicine
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in the capital sao paolo, about 100 kilometers from here. and that the relatives have been advised to go there at this moment, brazil has declared a three-day national mourning period governor of the state of sao paolo has already visited the crash site just behind my back. and the company voepass has said that they have still no information about how that plane could have crashed onto these houses of what could have happened there however, they did recover the black a box. so hopefully more information will come up in the next few hours for cnn, this is stefano pozzebon, vinhedo, brazil russia says it has introduced counter terrorist operations in three regions as ukraine's military incursion stretches into a fifth day. >> now this video shows ukrainian troops at a strategic gas transit hub in russia's
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kursk region on friday. it's the last pipeline through which russian gas still reaches europe via ukraine ukrainian forces say they control the town, but the mayor denies it. russian military bloggers suggest fighting has spread to a much wider area. the governor of russia's lipetsk region says a massive ukrainian drone attack wounded at least nine people and damaged energy infrastructure the ukrainian sources, an airfield was hit in an ammunition depot, destroyed meanwhile, the u.s. on friday unveiled a new $125 $125,000,000 aid package for ukraine military analyst and retired major general mick ryan says kyiv's offensive into russian territory caught moscow and many others by surprise. here he is i think this has been a massive surprise, not just on the battlefield, but strategically, most countries did not expect ukraine to be capable of large scale offensive operations, at least until next year so it's not just taken the russians by surprise, but many of his supporters to be fair, it's a
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pretty pleasant surprise that's because it's been a very successful offensive into kursk. but it really remains to be seen how long the ukrainians can remain on the attack for it's been one year since the tragic wildfires that devastated maui, hawaiians are remembering and rebuilding. >> speak with the chair of maui's county county council when we come back, please stay with us every weekday morning. here are the five things you need to know to start your day. >> cnn's five things with kate bolduan, streaming weekdays on max how do i love the let me count the ways love can get a little messy good thing. there's resolved love the love. >> resolve the mess. >> ocd is more than what you see on tv and in the movies, it comes with unrelenting intrusive images, thoughts, and
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me. it can.com and get paid me. he said welcome back to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom thursday marked the first anniversary of the wildfires that devastated lahaina on the hawaiian island of maui the nation's deadliest wildfire in more than a century destroyed the historic town, killing 100 people or 102
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people rather the governor of hawaii, josh green joined with local and federal officials marking the date and honoring the memory of those who died. he paid tribute to the resilience of survivors, thousands of whom were left without homes by the disaster. curious this was unprecedented for us the year was filled with immense challenges. >> as you know. but people were so resilient. and that's what we've seen over the last 24 hours, especially as we've been with all of the families who had so much loss additionally, dozens of surfers, voters and paddlers put together a paddle out to traditional act of ritual remembrance in hawaii, honors loved ones the beach and park were packed with people blowing conch shells and scattering flower petals in the water, remembering the past. >> but looking to the future all right, to find out about how people there are doing. i'm joined now, live by alice lee, who's the chair of the
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maui counts. maui county council. thank you so much. for being here with us. i remember we spoke in the aftermath of this a year ago. now, a year later, more than 2000 homes lost more than 12,000 people without housing. a year later, how are they doing? how is the rebuilding process going? >> well, thank you. first of all, for having me here tonight. >> i i'm glad that you keep chicken checking in on us. what's happening now is the properties are being cleared of the debris and we're almost at 100% at this point. >> and once all these properties are cleared, then they will be able to apply for building permits and some people have already we have a special company, which just
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strictly handles building permits. so that we can expedite the process so that is moving along how long do you think it will be before, you know, people are back in homes well, some may be back in a short while, but for the most part we still have major challenges with infrastructure transmission lines are broken with regard to the water transmission lines, sewer transmission lines some of the roads have to be repaired all of these things have to be one before people can actually move in as a community. >> but little by little, they can start doing it now, in some areas where there is infrastructure. >> and i know there has been a 4 $4,000,000,000 settlement how will that help? and when will that money actually flow in terms of making a concrete
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difference the settlement hasn't been approved yet. >> it's a little over 4 billion. as you said. and what we believe that the it'll be completed in short order but for now, we need a few more people to sign on to this settlement. some of the big peers will well, i can't really give you a breakdown of who's paying yet completely. you know, the county is paying the states paying some of the big companies are paying the 4 billion but we do have an issue with the insurance companies. they have already paid out about maybe 2 billion, little over $2 billion so there are filing lawsuits for subrogation for reimbursement for the monies that they have paid out.
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so we have these details to work out. and as soon as we then the money will start flowing to the people in terms of economically, i mean, it's so hard to rebuild businesses that have been affected and lost here. and i know a recent study has found that a significant number of maui county residents are suffering from financial strain and many others are thinking about leaving the island because of poor economic conditions. so what have you we've been seeing and what can be done to help them we're doing everything conceivable that we can think of that to help those in need the federal government has been the biggest help of all fema providing direct assistance to those who lost their homes. >> and we've been staying first in hotels unfortunately, they have had to move from time to time then many of them have now moved out of the hotels
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into short-term rentals so these families are having a very difficult time because there's no real stability and secondly, some of their they've lost some of their jobs so yes, some people have moved away and some people have decided to stay and after this week's events of remembrance and community involvement, i've seen a change in a lot of people where they start are starting to feel a sense of hope because the community, the county the government, is not going to abandon them. we're going to stay with them throughout throughout until they get their homes back on the longer term, we know major fires will happen again. >> so what has the community learns a year on now and how are you planning to make things safer should something like this happen again it's very
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difficult to do something very quickly, but what we're doing is making sure that coordination and communication is improved. >> we are making sure that our fire trucks and the apparatus, they have the latest equipment that we can afford for instance all the trucks will now have these new thermal detect detectors, which can detect fires that have not gone up completely we are creating escape routes as far as improving roadways we are enforcing our breath abatement laws more strictly so that those who have large swaths of land must maintain their properties and we're doing everything we possibly can to
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try to prevent something like this from happening again. >> we'll have to leave it there, but wish you the best as you and your community continued to rebuild alice lee. thank you so much. we shouldn't thank you very much. well, the remanence of debby, which hit florida monday as a category one hurricane are still wreaking havoc in parts of the eastern us on friday, fast rising water triggered the most severe flood alert in communities along the border of new york and pennsylvania the national weather service said numerous areas were flooded in southern new york with people trapped homes. governor kathy hochul declared a state of emergency for all of new york. but from many, the road to restoration is paid with questions this is terrible now we're going to go through this again i don't know what's going to happen now because the storage just off for been wiped out again whether they rebuild back or not, i have no idea. in
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pennsylvania the state's national guard were dispatched with helicopters and boats for water rescues. governor josh shapiro announced a disaster proclamation spanning 21 counties. millions remain under some level of flood alert along the eastern seaboard but rainfall associated with debby should be leaving northern new england in the coming hours is the last full day of competition in the paris games. when we come back a recap of history making wins on friday, we'll go live five to paris with a look ahead at the 38 remaining gold medals up for grabs today. stay with us the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19 on cnn and streaming on, i feel like they lose track of at least $500 a month. maybe that's because you saw you spreadsheets, haven't heard of rocket money? no. >> you probably going to cut me up and tell you that it's not automatically attracted spending in real time, larger bills and fisa cancels sneaky subscriptions sign me up, stay on track with your finances and download rocket money today. >> i'm jonathan larson here to tell you about life insurance
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look at this kid! coming in tight on the line. team usa, what a run! it's gold for team usa. noah lyles with another gold medal. in case there was any doubt, who was the breakout star of these world championships. imprint imprint.com for certain. i'm arlette saenz at the white house. >> and this is cnn we are well into the last weekend, what's been a historic and thrilling summer olympics in paris. >> 35 gold medals were awarded on friday, the u.s. and china are tied for the most gold medals with 33 each the us maintains its lead with the most metals overall today's competitions kicked off with the men's marathon and tell me read tolowa of ethiopia, just grabbed the gold, setting a new olympic record runners from
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belgium and kenya respectively, taking the silver and bronze. now, later say the two must-see finals or women's football or soccer with team usa in brazil vying for golden glory and men's basketballs, these host nation france, facing off against the u.s. all right, joining me now, live from paris is cnn world sport anchor, amanda davis i can't believe it's almost over and dozens of gold medals still on the line today. last full day of competition, but just take us through sort of the best from friday yeah. >> kim, we are hanging on to every last moment and medal it has gotten so incredibly fast. but on the track, we've got one of those generations of stars in the men's 400 meter hurdles that we really have been lucky to where knows, but it's one that the u.s. record holder, right? benjamin had feared was going to leave him without the medal he deserved last night though, he finally got his hands on a limb gold his first individual title after beating world record holder karsten warholm of norway and brazil's
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alison dos santos think this whole experience being in the village, actually having a real wind pick experience just it's been amazing so far and try to different approaches here, trying not to be too tense, too serious, and just have fun and just be light, be cool. >> so i think that was kinda like my focus going into this year kenya is beta is chebet days an incredible distance double adding the ten 10,000 meter gold to have 5,000 meters brown from earlier in the game. >> so scuffle the hopes of defending champion sifan hassan is kenya's first gold in the women's 10,000 to add a games belgians nappi tm though, made it an inquiry credible three in a row, the first person to win three straight heptathlon goals in one of the toughest events, seven disciplines over two days. it was a real battle that went right down to the phone final events against team gb's katerina johnson-thompson, the
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800 meters, but both ran a personal best, ultimately, tm victorious again over last year's world both champion. and speaking of battles, awards, amens verbal final, it was and despite all the home support in a packed part due process and the legend that is yerry on regarding the french the all too familiar story of recent times in football's spain emerging as the winner, they didn't have to fight for it. they came back from 3-1 down to force extra time, ultimately, they want it 5-3 to win olympic go to the first time since 1992. this under-23 success, adding to european championship victory from berlin last month, men's under 19 european success as well women's world cup victory last year many of us, but an education here on friday as olympic breaking or breakdancing i should say, made its debut. >> it was japan's amy you asa, who took the first ever olympic gold, who got the men's final
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today. but who knows if we'll see it again? it has already been dropped? it's from the agenda for la 20281 in the last couple of days, gold-medal-winn ing serve champion casually vows has been celebrating his successor surfing down the river seine in the shadows of the eiffel tower. he's made the journey. hear from paris to claiming his goal 10,000 miles away the competition has been taking place in tahiti. and i am delighted to say that coli is with us now. thank you so much for joining yes, i know it's been quite a whirlwind hasn't a couple of days. you are from it. >> but representing france, hear what was it like, claiming that that gold, which is now around your neck, this is the best thing that can happen to me. i'm actually the best actually the goldman and champion they're happy guy on earth right now i mean, it is
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the perfect story given the fact you are from tahiti, that is where the surfing took place. >> but how confident were you heading into it? >> yeah. >> it's a perfect storm. like you said, was there harm competition but the expectation lot of pressure because it's at home and i want to do good for sure well. yeah it was just insane just to be part of the olympic games have the chance to have the spot at home and. actually winning over there? i don't it's the best thing that can happen for me and i'm just super happy right now. and the best best day of my life, how much did it feel like? >> olympic games? because we're obviously here, we've got the older tree on the eiffel tower. we've, we've seen the events taking place. you guys were a long, long way away, didn't feel different to your normal company? petitions? >> no. you feel different. it just failed the same that we were probably like far away but more focus on the contest. one job to do, hit by heat and just
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to be out there. actually we looked all the discipline from here on the phones. we were doing like opening all their computers and stuff and watching. for example, new mug shot four gold medals. >> it was really a good motivation for us actually, i'm talking about the teen the french team. >> we were strong lot of a lot of goods surfer and yeah it. was just like a lot of motivation watching them winning the gold. there was the goal and make, make us dream in. hit by hit was we were closer to the dream and yen happened to me and i'm just super, super stoked, super happy. >> did you have an advantage? do you think you started surfing on those waves when you were 6-years-old? >> for sure it's having finch for local local boy from the who bore it's that's how we call local knowledge. and know it's, it's just really good advantage because one thing is that during the whole contest,
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we were surfing different conditions every day. it was different. the condition were different and i you spend so much hours training out there, so much time spending in the water on every conditions windy cloudy, and raining, and stuff. >> and that's why when i was doing every day for example, i was surfing the free surf every morning. i was just like, remember, i was like, oh, i already served his country i do remember i know exactly where to go and exactly which i need to catch him. i think it helped me one of the most iconic images we've seen. >> we saw the rainbows but we saw the whales. is that normal? how normal is that view is just insane yet to have these animals, were really close to the animals mean to the ocean because we live in the middle of the pacific ocean we probably like, i can say, we lost pretty much in and all around the island, we have the ocean. >> so everything we do since we
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gave and stuff, we do everything while the ocean swimming fishing, and just surfing. and so that's why i really close and you see the wells, it's something special and that's how we call the energy grid, energy that's end to hitting me well, the manner and it was just a beautiful yeah. >> yeah, absolutely dotting and enjoy the next couple of days here in paris. >> congratulations, once again, it's been a real pleasure to speak to you i canvas about too you so much more action now, the biggest day in terms of medals here at the games since, since 2000. so a lot more to look forward to absolutely. >> i was an unbelievable picture you showed there and what a great story to hear. amanda davies in paris. thank you so much. appreciate it it. >> won gold medal winner from friday's action is proving the best revenge is success. >> algerian boxer imane khelif, who overcame a torrent of online abuse regarding her gender throughout the games. won gold in the women's 66 kilogram final, becoming the first one women in her country to win any medal in this event. here's what she told those bullies after winning only two
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i am a woman like any other woman. i was born a woman. i lived a woman and i competed as a woman. there's no doubt about that when if nikki in the out-of-court, they hate me and i don't know why i really don't know why i sent them a single message with this gold medal. and i say my dignity, my honor, is above everything else. >> now one olympian sacrificed any chance of making the podium on friday, but olympic debut of breaking also called breakdancing, as we heard, well, she's a refugee athletes, maneesha talas shoigu fled afghanistan after the taliban takeover. after losing her about she was disqualified from the b-girl breaking competition for wearing cape emblazoned with the words free afghan women during her pre-qualified event known competitively as b-girl talla. the 21-year-old is one of 37 athletes representing the refugee team at the paris games. >> we'll be right the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19 on cnn
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points or just 0.1%. the s&p 500 and nasdaq composite both added half a percent. now, despite the turbulent week, stocks are still on pace for strong returns for the year, investors next week will parse retail sales data and earnings from home depot and walmart for insight into consumer trend well, how much would you pay for a few pounds of coffee? how about $10,000 at an auction, japan's saza coffee paid that price for a kilogram about 2.2 pounds of panamanian beans called alito geisha, natural wealth now the price broke last year's record by about $8 a kilo the company that grows the coffee says, it's special because it's grown. the high altitude and in volcanic soil at $10,000 a kilo, one cup would cost you between 70 and $80 secretive street artists known as banksy, has now
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revealed five new artworks this week, each with an animal theme now look the latest works found friday in northeast london depicting to pelicans eating fish. artist has been busy unveiling new work across london every day this week. subjects also included a goat to elephants, three monkeys, and a wolf howling at the sky. and the wolf sensible on what appeared to be a satellite dish was stolen poulin hours after it was discovered. all five were confirmed as authentic on the artist's instagram account all right. >> that wraps this hour of cnn newsroom. >> i'm kim brunhuber. i'll be back with more news in just a moment, please. do stay i'm thinking if i'm going to die and i thought that was it. violent earth with me in freiburg back-to-back episodes? it's tonight at nine on cnn.
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