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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  July 25, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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airline is following the law. transportation secretary pete buttigieg -- >> we're concerned about how the outcomes for passengers on delta seem to be so different than what we're seeing across the airline industry. the crowdstrike outage affected the entire world, but most airlines were able to recover within a day or two. >> we're all pretty fried. >> reporter: lauren walbridge. >> jordan harris and their 1-year-old son finally made it from portland, oregon to detroit tuesday to visit family. they've been bitten by cancellations since saturday. >> i was changed to 11 different flights all told. i'm just glad to be not seeing a delta flight for a good number of days. >> that again was mark strassmann reporting. in other consumer news, a warning now about so-called zombie mortgages. they're second home loans that get lost in the shuffle or the lenders stop sending monthly billing statements.
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cbs' ash-har quraishi explains missed payments can come back to haunt you. >> this is gorgeous. >> thank you. >> reporter: your little sanctuary. >> sanctuary, yes. >> reporter: after this iraq war veteran came home to california, she built her own tranquil backyard getaway to find a peace after years in a battle zone. what do you use this space for? >> meditation for sure. >> reporter: a home she calls the heart of her family. but last year, after more than a decade of paying her mortgage on time, laverne simmons found out she could lose it all. were you surprised when you got that notice of default ten years after you got your loan modification? >> definitely. i haven't been late or asked for a payment range or anything. >> reporter: when simmons took out a second mortgage in 2014, she believed her new monthly payment covered both her original mortgage and her second, but she was mistaken. when you buy a house, federal law requires your lender to send out periodic statements you know how much you owe. simmons says over ten years, on
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her second mortgage, she never got one. with interest and late fees piling up, her original $65,000 loan ballooned to more than $140,000. she has to pay up or lose her home. >> they were ready to strike, like a snake, you know. waiting for the right moment. >> reporter: her loan servicer, realtime resolutions recently settled a class action lawsuit with a different homeowner who claimed she had been foreclosed on without ever receiving the required monthly statements. rtr denied wrongdoing and told us they aren't interested in speaking with us. >> it's been pure hell. i served my country. i got injured in iraq. i come home and this is what i have to go through as a veteran. >> exhausting? >> yes. >> reporter: she turned to california realtor rich sherman, who says he has seen it happen to more than 100 homeowners like simmons. now he is helping some of them fight to keep their homes. >> what happens is the debts get sold in the secondary market to these what i call vulture capitalists who buy these things
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for pennies on the dollar, and then they turn around and try to enforce the full face value of the loan including all the back interest, all the back penalties and everything else. >> reporter: how is this legal? >> in many cases it's not. we're really worried this is a predatory scam, and we want to stop it. >> reporter: the director of the consumer financial protection bureau. thinking is a big failure from the lead-up to the financial crisis where regulators in washington weren't watching what was happening on the ground in local communities. >> reporter: are you hopeful that you're going to win this battle? >> i hope so. i'm determined to fight for my home. i'm definitely determined. and if i lose this, i don't know what i do. i don't know. >> that was ash-har quraishi reporting, and he says one of the best ways to protect yourself is to regularly check your credit report. stay with us. this is "cbs news roundup."
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release of a new live louis armstrong album more than 50 years after his death. ♪ >> reporter: it was july 1968. ♪ hello dolly, this is news, dolly ♪ >> reporter: and over two nights in london, the bbc recorded louis armstrong and his five-piece combo live before a studio audience. ♪ from the broadway tune that surpassed the beatles' number one hit -- ♪ you need tell me, boy, because i know ♪ >> reporter: to his long-time theme song. ♪ when it's sleepy time down south ♪ >> reporter: satchmo, as he was known, thinner and recovering from pneumonia, broadcast that signature baritone across great britain. ♪ good evening, everybody ♪
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>> reporter: a performance the general public had not heard in its entirely until now. how did we come about this find? >> so this find has always been in the vaults. we have a copy of it here in the louis armstrong archives. bbc had a copy of it. i don't think anybody really thought this was magic. >> reporter: jazz historian ricky riccardi says armstrong knew. >> he wanted his fans to hear this recording. that's 1969. so it took 55 years. the fans are finally hearing it. >> reporter: it's all in "louis in london," a 13-track set, including six unreleased songs. billed as armstrong's last great performance. chronic health issues would claim him just three years later. an ardent fan himself, riccardi is director of research collections for the louis armstrong house museum.
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home to some of the musician's most precious possessions. >> this was his favorite trumpet. he bought this one in paris in 1952. that's a gold-plated selmer. >> reporter: including the trumpet he used at the '68 concert in london. >> it's labeled satchmo, 1957. >> reporter: the jewel of the collection. >> that's where he lived? >> this were he lived for the last 28 years of his life. >> wow. >> is best shown across the street. >> he would sit here with the kids, play the trumpet for them. >> reporter: inside the corona, queens home he shared with his beloved wife lucille. armstrong's den was his oasis. >> this is where louis would listen to the recordings. he would play them for friends. he would catalog everything. that's one of his indexes there where he would put the number of the reel and write down all the tracks. he was his own archivist. >> reporter: outfitted with a top of a line sound system, his wife hoped it would keep him off the road to nurse an ailing
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heart condition. it certainly kept him busy, entertaining friends. >> louis would sit behind the desk and reach over, either drop the needle on the record player, hit play on the tape. they would listen to music, tell story, tell jokes, relax. this was the man cave. >> reporter: in may of 1969, he recorded a pair of guests listening in on the bbc concert. >> a couple of concerts. >> that's louis? >> and i'll play some of it. ♪ >> reporter: so we're listening to them listening. >> right. >> to the bbc. >> exactly. >> reporter: armstrong's star power and appeal always registered overseas, outside the separate but equal confines of america. allowing his bands and audiences to integrate and change mind-set over music. ♪ i see trees of green, red
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roses too ♪ >> reporter: in fact, it was the runaway success of "what a wonderful world" that brought armstrong to london in the first place. >> so this is the original arrangement. >> reporter: it had reached number one there well before the u.s. >> this is it? >> that's it. >> reporter: where it received little to no promotion and barely any reception. >> good morning, vietnam! >> reporter: nearly two decades later, it climbed to number one -- >> special song going out to you right now. >> reporter: thanks to a popular movie with robin williams. >> armstrong became determined to let the world hear this music. >> reporter: a grammy winner for best album notes two years ago, riccardi held the honor of penning the inside cover for louis in london. >> while in london armstrong gave an interview to the bbc in which he revealed his personal
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inspiration for singing with so much love and warmth. it reminded him of all the kids he watched grow up on his block in corona, queens. >> here is part of that interview. >> and they all with the children, the grandchildren, they come back to see uncle satchmo and aunt lucille. that's why i can say "i hear babies crying, i watch them grow" -- ♪ they'll learn much more than i'll ever know, and i think to myself ♪ >> reporter: a timeless song, armstrong's best known on an album now passed to the next generation. >> and i think this is a perfect gateway that somebody could hear and man, that was great. i want to hear more. and once they're hooked. >> reporter: there is no going back. >> he'll never let them go. ♪ what wonderful you are ♪
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[ applause ] >> that was michelle miller reporting, and this is "cbs news roundup." ok, 500 deluxe garden gnomes. wow. i only meant to order five. there's not enough money in my account for these. i'm gonna get charged. two things i just can't deal with. overdraft charges. and garden gnomes.
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finally for us this half hour, it might be the middle of july, but toy-making companies the holiday season.g ahead to -
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cbs' bradley blackburn dropped in at an annual new york city toy extravaganza to find out what might be on the top of wish lists later this year. >> go! >> reporter: in the race to be this year's top toy, laurie schacht knows how to pick a winner. >> laurie, you're the pro! >> reporter: she has tracked toy trends for decades at the toy insider and brings top toymakers together for the annual sweet sweet event in new york. >> we know that parents love to share things with their children that they had when they were children. >> reporter: that means old '90s favorites are back like the ninja turtles. but it's today's kid influencers like kyra and cam from jersey missouri who have the real super power to shape trends. >> kyra! >> ooh, what's this? i've got to get this open! >> reporter: their videos reviewing toys can get millions of views. >> it's july. you're already making your christmas list? >> i know. i want that shaking thing where you shake.
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>> reporter: shaking things up this year, there is plenty of new. >> what do you want the do, peanut? >> peanut the playful monkey blinks, walks and swings with more than 100 interactions. don't worry, there is still an offswitch. >> there is the offswitch, right on the foot. >> reporter: and meet poe. >> this is our ai storytelling bear. >> reporter: kids tap prompts in an app and then openai creates a custom story. >> what did it make you think of? >> teddy ruxpin. >> right. but this is a whole different generation. it's a story created from the kid's own ideas, what they've chosen. >> reporter: it's not just kids, craft kits are huge right now. kids love them and so do parents. a new spin on old classics, toys ready to bring joy to the next generation. bradley blackburn, cbs news, new york. and that's today's cbs news roundup. for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us
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online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul.
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hello and thank you so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the top stories on "cbs news roundup." president joe biden marking the end of his political career, addresses the nation. jumping into her presidential bid, kamala harris asks women of color for support. and in a fiery speech to congress, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu vows total victory over hamas. speaking directly to the nation, president biden made his most extensive remarks on his decision to step down from reelection. cbs' skyler henry has this report from capitol hill. . >> i believe my record as president, my leadership in the world, my vision for america's future all merited a second
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term, but nothing, nothing can come in the way of saving our democracy. >> reporter: in a prime time oval office address, president biden spoke to the nation about his decision to drop out of the 2024 presidential race. >> so i've decided the best way forward is to pass the torch to a new generation. it's the best way to unite our nation. >> reporter: when he announced over the weekend that he is no longer seeking reelection, biden threw his full support behind vice president kamala harris for the nomination. >> the defense of democracy, which is at stake, i think it's more important than any title. i draw strength and i find joy in working for the american people. >> reporter: president biden, who stepped down under intense pressure following his poor debate performance last month says he plans on staying in office until the next president is inaugurated in january. >> they'll continue to lower costs for hardworking families, grow our economy. i'll keep defending our personal freedoms and our civil rights.
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from the right the vote to the right to choose. >> reporter: in charlotte, north carolina, former president donald trump held his first rally since president biden exited the race. >> but really what happened was the leaders of the democrat party, in a very undemocratic move, the buses said either you get out or we're going throw you out using the 25th amendment. that's what happened. you know that. >> reporter: on thursday, vice president harris is set to deliver a keynote address in houston to the annual meeting of the american federation of teachers. >> and skyler henry joins me now from capitol hill with more on this. skyler, we're also seeing some new reporting this hour on who vp harris might be considering as her running mate. >> yeah, shanelle, good to see you. we know eric holder is in charge of vetting the potential picks, and really, they range from democrats all across the country at the federal and state level.
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governors and sunbelt states, rust belt states, even those in the south as well. it will be interesting to pay attention to is whether the vice president chooses to run alongside someone who can help her in some of those meaningful battleground states that of course were vital back in 2020. we'll see what she ultimately decides. we know she has to choose by august 7th to make a decision. shanelle? >> okay, skyler henry, thank you. now in her first week as the likely democratic presidential nominee, kamala harris gave a speech in indianapolis wednesday calling on women of color to, quote, make history. cbs' weijia jiang is traveling with the vice president. ♪ >> reporter: at their convention in indianapolis -- >> we are not playing around. >> reporter: vice president harris urged 6,000 members of the historically black zeta phi
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beta sorority to turn excitement into votes. >> and i deeply believe in the promise of america, a promise of freedom, opportunity, and justice. not for some but for all. >> reporter: cbs news has learned her team is vetting about a dozen possible candidates, including governs josh shapiro of pennsylvania, roy cooper of north carolina, and tim walz of minnesota. members of the biden administration, secretaries pete buttigieg and gina raimondo are on the list, and so are people who do not currently hold office. a vp pick could add to the enthusiasm for harris. almost 40,000 people registered to vote in the 48 hours after president biden dropped out of the race, the largest number of signups in a two-day period for this election cycle. in a new memo, the harris campaign chair stresses support among female, nonwhite, and younger voters is critical to success. >> i gave my first campaign
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donation to vice president harris' campaign. >> reporter: voters like kanita hickman. >> we're theory say this is the last time a black woman is going to be passed up for a job she is qualified for. let's get it. >> reporter: black voters were key to biden's victory in 2020, but his support has since slipped. trump has had missteps about trying to court them, saying this about the border. >> they're taking black jobs now. >> reporter: on wednesday, trump held his first campaign rally in north carolina, a state democrats argue they can flip from 2020 because they say harris has an advantage with younger and minority voters. weijia jiang, cbs news, indianapolis. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu took his case to congress wednesday, asking for continued u.s. support in israel's war against hamas. cbs' scott macfarlane reports on his speech and on the protest outside.
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>> free palestine! >> reporter: thousands of raucous protesters converged near the capitol, some burning an american flag and an effigy of prime minister netanyahu. inside the capital, the israeli leader took them on. >> yet incredibly, many anti-israel protesters, many choose to stand with evil. they stand with hamas. >> reporter: netanyahu urged the joint meeting of congress to continue backing the war and his country's efforts to free the hostages, though he has been unable to reach a ceasefire deal to bring them home. he defended hiss nation's prosecution of the war as the death toll nears 40,000. many civilians in gaza faces extreme food shortages. >> if there are palestinians in gaza who aren't getting enough food, it's not because israel is blocking it. it's because hamas is stealing it. >> reporter: political tensions pulsed through the audience. michigan democrat rashida tlaib held a sign that said "war
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criminal." dozens of congressional democrats boycotted the address. >> well, i think it's important not to legitimize a leader who has attacked democracy. >> reporter: as netanyahu spoke, protesters in tel aviv booed his speech as it played live on television. multiple reports say ceasefire negotiations are reaching their closing stages, and that will be on the agenda when netanyahu meets with the president at the white house. scott macfarlane, cbs news, the capitol. well, it was a very near miss for one utah family when a small plane crashed into their front yard just outside their living room window. amazingly, the two people on board suffered only minor injuries. when "cbs news roundup" continues, new details from the director of the fbi about the assassination attempt on donald hi, i'm peyton manning and i am partnering with the american red cross this year to tackle blood shortages. giving blood's important because every two seconds someone actually needs blood, and unfortunately,
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this is cbs news roundup. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. we are learning new details about how quickly donald trump's would-be assassin came up with his plan and the tools he used to execute it. cbs' nicole sganga reports from capitol hill where the fbi director testified before congress. >> reporter: we're learning the gunman who nearly assassinated former president donald trump entered a chilling google search a week before the shooting. >> on july 6th, he did a google search for, quote, how far away was oswald from kennedy. >> reporter: an fbi analysis of crooks' laptop said he did the search on the same day he registered for trump's rally. it references lee harvey oswald, who assassinated president john f. kennedy in 1963. investigators are still looking into whether the gunman hid his firearm ahead of the rally.
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>> the weapon had a collapsible stock, which could explain why it might have been less easy for people to observe. >> reporter: a cbs news analysis found crooks fired eight bullets in less than six seconds before being shot and killed by a secret service sniper. >> why was crooks allowed to get off eight shots? >> well, that i think is something we're still digging into. >> reporter: in his testimony, wray also detailed what crooks did to prepare ahead of this assassination attempt. general barrasso with our cbs station in pittsburgh has more from butler, pennsylvania. >> reporter: hours before shots rang out, 20-year-old crooks flew a drone roughly 200 yards from where we're standing right now, and from where president trump was standing on july 13th. investigators recovered the drone and at least two crude explosives in crooks' vehicle, as well as another explosive in his bethel park, pennsylvania home.
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new body cam video shows law enforcement confirming the 20-year-old shooter had been identified as a suspicious person before opening fire. >> it is quite frankly a dangerous time to be a prominent official. >> that was jen barrasso and nicole ganga reporting. 18 people died and shortly after a plane taking off in the airport in nepal. only the pilot survived. >> reporter: dramatic video shows the moment the crj-200 regional jet crashed just after taking off from nepal's main airport. the plane made a turn before the impact. witnesses described smoke and fire coming from the wreckage. the plane was headed to another city in nepal for maintenance, and most of the passengers were either mechanics or airline employees, according to airport officials. the pilot's injuries are not considered life-threatening. the cause of the crash is not yet known. kris van cleave, cbs news, burbank airport. back here in the u.s.,
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wildfires burning in the west have forced thousands to evacuate their homes. cbs' jonathan vigliotti has more. >> reporter: it's an early and intense start to the fire season in the west. >> it's a huge fire, very fast. >> reporter: the sweltering heat is helping to fuel wildfires, especially in oregon, where more than 30 large fires are now burning. >> it looks like it's going to be another monster of a fire year here in the pacific northwest. >> reporter: holly craig is with the u.s. forest service. >> the forest and grasslands behind me are tinder-dry. and when you add 2,000 lightning strikes in 48 hours, that's bound to cause intense and fast-moving wildfires. >> reporter: and in alberta, canada, multiple wildfires there have forced about 25,000 people to evacuate the popular jasper national park and its alpine town. smoke from the fires is also creating unhealthy breathing conditions throughout the west. hopefully canada won't repeat last year's record fire season which blanketed the u.s. in smoke as far as the east coast.
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>> we think about fires and wildfires as an emergency. smoke is an emergency as well. well see both increases in hospitalizations, emergency department visits, physician visits. >> i'm jonathan vigliotti. two fishermen off the coast of new hampshire have a whale of a tale to tell. they were thrown overboard after a breaching whale crashed on to their vote. tom hanson has this remarkable video. >> reporter: before this whale leaped out of the water and crashed down on to their boat, greg packet and his friend kenny were fishing off the coast of new hampshire early tuesday. >> mayday, mayday, two passengers safe on another vessel. boat sinking. >> reporter: the force of the whale landing on the boat sent both men overboard. here you can see one of them jumping into the ocean. >> thankfully, it was slow enough that i could swim away before it completely capsized. >> reporter: with their boat capsized and the taking on water
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and the whale nearby, they kicked into fight or flight mode. but they weren't in the water nearby. luckily fishing nearby with two teenaged brothers, collin and wyatt yaeger. >> this is unreal. completely unreal. >> reporter: the teen boys say they were also in shock, but sprang into action and drove their boat over to rescue the two men. both men were uninjured, thankful for the teens' help and a greater appreciation for a space shared by both human and creature. >> he had a mouthful of fish coming in and crashed down on the back of the boat. >> this is their home. it's their ocean. we're in their way. >> reporter: i'm tom hanson. there is a lot more just ahead on "cbs news roundup." “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar i & ii depression.
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could come before the end of next year. hiv kills more than half a million people every year. the number of covid cases is spiking across the country. nearly 40 states are now reporting high covid activities, this according to the cdc. and emergency room visits are at their highest for the coronavirus since february. >> the virus continues to evolve to stay ahead of our immune systems. that's what we're talk about. your immunity to infection only lasts about three months. your immunity to severe disease, hospitalization and death, that lasts much longer, which is why people are not getting sick the way early in the pandemic, but it is exto be expected every fe months, maybe every year or so we'll see a big wave across the country. >> current guidelines are to isolate if you're mothers until you're fever-free for at least 24 hours without the help of fever-reducing medications and
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them 2,000 feet from the shore of oak island, north carolina. but rescuers had eyes on them the whole time thanks to the deployment of a drone. within a few minutes, they were safely aboard a rescue boat. the fire department here in oak island is one of a few in the country using this kind of technology for ocean rescue. sean berry is a firefighter turned drone pilot. >> this drone is capable of flying in all types of weather and environment. >> reporter: it's equipped with a camera that can switch between modes, including infrared to spot people in distress. responders can communicate instruction through a speaker. and just as important is its ability to carry life-preserving equipment. >> this is triggered by a co2 cartridge and has a triggering device that's activated by the intrusion of water. as soon as it's activated, it inflates. >> reporter: here is a real-life example. after a 911 call from shore, the drone went up and spotted the
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swimmer in distress. you can see the moment one cartridge was released and then another, giving him two floating tubes until help arrived. like many coastal communities, the population here at oak island can balloon from 10,000 to 50,000 during the summer tourist season. and riptides, columns of water rushing out to sea and hard to detect on the surface can happen at any time. every year there are about 100 deaths due to rip currents along u.s. beaches. it's estimated more than 80% of beach rescues involve rip currents. lee price is oak island's fire chief. you think people underestimate the force of a rip current? >> they do. people are oh, i'm a good swimmer. they go out there and then get in trouble. >> reporter: for chief price, the benefit isn't just a much faster response time, but also not putting rescuers in harm's way when through the camera and speaker they can determine when someone isn't in distress. why aren't more jurisdictions
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you think adopting something like this right away? >> i don't necessarily cost is a factor. the cost isn't tremendous. but having somebody train and able to operate and perform that capability, it's like anything. as technology advances, it takes a little bit for everybody to catch up and get used to it. >> the drone is hovering directly over our victim. >> reporter: sean berry is improving both his piloting skills and the drone's capabilities. in this demonstration, he showed us how it can bring a safety rope to a swimmer while rescuers prepare to pull the person to shore. >> rapid accuracy speed and safety overall. >> reporter: it's an eye in the sky and a potential life-saver in the water.
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tina zimmerman: five years ago, i reconnected with my estranged father, and that's just something i never ever thought could happen. but when he became a believer, he just had this insatiable
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appetite to learn the bible, and he began to watch dr. stanley. dr. stanley: god always blesses obedience without an exception. tina: he teaches in a way that it just makes sense, and i feel like that's the way our heavenly father would teach us.
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hold on... this trip got me alaska gold 75k status?? looks like i leveled up somewhere between san francisco and new york. i knew you earned miles faster than other airlines but like...okay, this is next level. i wonder if they'll take my photo. and put it in every seatback. on every airplane. i really hope fame doesn't change me. it's thursday, july 25th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings."

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