tv CNNI Simulcast CNN November 5, 2014 9:00pm-10:01pm PST
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thanks for watching. >> you can check out all the election results at cnn.com. our live coverage continues right now. >> welcome to our viewers in the united states and all around the world. i'm rosemary church. >> ahead this hour, they're talking compromise in washington. >> to everyone who voted, i want you to know that i hear you. >> president obama and gop leaders say they're willing to work together. we've heard that before. what, if anything, can they really agree on. >> plus, a tug of war over one of jerusalem's holiest sites has caused rash of violence between israelis and palestinians. you will see the shocking video of deadly attacks on civilians. >> also ahead on this hour, a happy ending for a woman abducted from a philadelphia street. she's been found alive. and we have new details on the criminal record of her alleged
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attacker. >> but we start with u.s. president barack obama saying he heard voters in tuesday's midterm elections and he is willing to work with the new republican-led congress. >> he said. but mr. obama is giving no signs that he'll accept big changes to his signature health care law on bend on demands to energy or environment. and administration officials say there will be no backing down on immigration reform. we have more now from washington. >> obviously republicans had a good night. >> the power shift in washington comes the question will poet parties extend a hand or play hardball. both sides today publicly said they're open to compromise. >> we're going to start with the strew that maybe there are things we can agree on. >> i'm very eager to hear republican ideas about what they think we can do over the next couple of years. >> on friday, we'll get the first hint if this can stick.
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they'll lay out the terrain for the next two years with the congress controlled by the republicans. but no one thinks that terrain will be smooth for long. all signs point to confrontation ahead. administration officials say the president will go ahead with executive action, moving without congress. >> we're going to take whatever lawful actions that i can take, that i believe will improve the functioning of our immigration system. >> it's like waving a red flag in front of a bull to say if you guys don't do what i want, i'm going to do it on my own. >> let's take a look at what all this means going forward. >> the president did not take
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blame, he did not back down. what's the strategy here? >> i was really struck by the contrast from the last midterm when he said he took shellacking. he spent the next nine months trying to negotiate a deal with house republicans on the budget. when that cracked up, as you recall in august 2011 in the debt crisis showdown when john boehner could not mobilize his caucus, the president switched course and he hasn't really reversed from that switched course ever since. he has decided, i think, he doesn't think there's much he can compromise on. i think he's thinking there will be secondary areas where they can find agreement, but more than that, i think he's -- and you saw it in the body language and language today, he is expecting a bruising next two years.
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>> the republicans have they boxed in their campaign. if they don't work with president, will they blame them for gridlock. we're seeing more correlation between the way states and districts vote for president and the way they vote for congress. the vast majority of republicans were sent here by constituencies who also voted against obama in 2012. 40 of the republican senators in this new congress will have been sent here from states that voted against him both times. it's hard to see the electoral incentive for a lot of these republicans to find compromises. i think there will be a lot of pressure in the opposite direction.
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the republicans may feel irresistible pressure to vote against the health care after they reconvene in january. our politics face a structural challenge. >> the democrats won the popular vote in five out of the past six presidential election, but they are having enormous trouble winning congress. and that is a recipe between two coalitions that are very different dem graphically, different geographically and have antithetical visions on what the country should be focusing on. more likely than not, we're going to see this struggle between these two very different coalitions and a difficulty for washington to move very far.
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>> what do democrats take away from all of this? >> i think there are a couple of lessons for democrats. in the past three elections, democrats have lost 60%, roughly, almost exactly 60% of white voters. and while you can survive that in presidential elections when our increasingly diverse population turns out to a greater effect, you simply cannot consistently control the congress with that kind of performance. they have to find a way to sell the idea of an activist government to more middle class and middle age white voters. the other big lesson, i think is, that you can not run away from the president. you can run but you can't hide. whether or not democratic candidates invited him into their state, roughly 80% of the people or more in virtually every contested race voted for the republican. the lesson there is clear for 2016. democrats have to find a better way to explain and justify the record of the obama presidency or else they're going to face a
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similar fate. >> no sooner were ballots cast in tuesday's elections than talking washington and around the country turned to the 2016 presidential race. >> it would appear that the republican party would have a good shot at the white house. there's no top candidates. >> the race for the white house begins after a huge night for republicans, including those eyeing a presidential bid, like new jersey governor chris christie who's stumping in winning gop contests across the country has earned him more 2016 speculation. this morning --
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>> hinting he might run for the presidency as a washington outsider. >> that's the difference between washington and wisconsin. they are against is something. we are for something. >> but the intraparty scuffles are already under way. walker ticked off at christie for not sending more money his way. christie, scuffling with kentucky senator rand paul on foreign policy. and paul taking shots across the aisle, too. asked mitch mcconnell about his win in his home state, he turned the conversation to the democratic front-runner. >> i think kentucky is a repudiation of the president's policies, but also hillary clinton. hillary clinton was very active in kentucky, and an interesting thing is, gripes said she was going to run as a clinton
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democrat. >> she lost big, by 16 points. and democrat bruce braley in the important first in the nation caucus state of iowa, he lost by nine points. a clinton campaign for a key democratic winner, new hampshire senator jeanne shaheen, overall the losses outweighed the success successes. >> the republicans gain in congress felt a warm reception of wall street. >> both the dow jones industrial average and the s&p 500 finished wednesday at record highs. while the nasdaq slit only slightly. the energy sector did especially well along with other industries subject to regulatory issues. >> business loves gridlock. still to come here on cnn, there have been two separate driving rampages which have left israelis dead and injuried. and fiery protests have rocked east jerusalem.
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>> a vehicle slammed into three israeli soldiers. that came just hours after a dead livan attack in jerusalem. we have more. >> surveillance footage shows a moment a palestinian man drives into a jerusalem tram station. he crashes the van and continues his attack on foot. israeli forces shoot him dead. 13 people are injured. a border police officer was killed. >> there was no intelligence that a terrorist attack was taking place here. he's later identified as a 37-year-old palestinian, a resident of a east jerusalem refugee camp. it's part of a wave of violence in jerusalem, fuelled by tensions surrounding the nobel sanctuary known to jews as the temple mount. last week, there was an attack on a right-wing rabbi, one of
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the leading voices calling for jews to be able to pray at islam's third holiest site. for the first time in 14 years, it was completely closed, angering many muslims. >> they feel their place of worship is being lost. >> clashes broke out between israeli forces and palestinian youth. >> as you can see, the police have just cleared this area. they're trying to get all the people out here. >> minutes later, there's an uneasy calm. the city of jerusalem remains on edge. erin mclaughlin, cnn, jerusalem. >> police say the man who did drive that van into the people at the rail station came from a refugee camp in east jerusalem. and residents gathered outside that camp on wednesday. where they set fires and clashed
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with israeli security foorss. meanti meantime, israeli and palestinian officials are call on the u.n. to help defuse tensions. they say israel must withdraw extremists. israels blame the palestinians for inciting violence. >> police in pakistan have arrested at least 40 people in the mob killing of a christian couple. they say the husband and his pregnant wife were dragged from their home outside, beaten and thrown into the kiln where they worked. they had accused the couple of desecrating the koran. but rights groups said it was more likely a dispute over money with the owners. the couple had three young children and the woman was expecting their fourth. >> well, prince charles has described threats to christians in the middle east an an undescribable tragedy.
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>> he's alling on governments around the world to do more to ensure religious freedom. and his he's urging religious leaders to promote tolerance between people of varying faiths. >> reporter: for 2,000 years there's been a christian community in the northern iraq city of mosul. but in jewel july, militants swept through, giving christians a voice, convert or die. the city had been purged of any other religions, thous driven out, others killed. appalling acts that were widely condemned. but prince charles says religious leaders need to do more to defend christianity, in particular. he recorded this message for the chaurty aid to the church in need. to a company there, they report on religious freedoms under threat. >> it is an indescribable tragedy that christianity is under such threat in the middle east. an area where christians have lived for 2,000 years and across which islam spread in 700 a.d.,
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with people of different faiths living together peaceably for centuries. it seems our future as a free society, both here, in britain and throughout the world depends on recognizing the crucial role played by people of faith. >> as heir to the throne, part of the prince charles' role of the monarch would be the defender of the faith, origin originally bestowed on henry viii by the pope in 1581. he's spoken out before, calling for tolerance and religious freedom around the world. but this time, his message brought out a mixed response on the streets of london. >> this has nothing to do with a politician at all. or kings or queens like that. >> it's more of a secular society. i think it's more than a human rights thing than anything. >> whether he's more effective than any other world or religious leader or russell broond, i wouldn't say so.
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it's prince charles. >> the defender of the faith title has been held by every monarch since menry viii and has been proved controversial. prince charles himself has floated changing the wording to be more inclusive. but for prince charles to make such a symbolic change would require an act of parliament. >> all right. we will take a very short break, but the drama for the rock band ac/dv is ac/dc is accused of a murder plot. (receptionist) gunderman group.
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after months of denying it, baseball player alex rodriguez admitted to using drugs. >> he met with the drug enforcement agency in exchange for immunity in a case against his alleged supplier a-rod spent $12,000 a month on the drugs. >> rodriguez's spokesman declined to comment. the star infielder has been suspended for violating baseball's drug policy. but he's eligible to play again next year. >> and the drum fer ac/dc has been arrested for allegedly trying to have two people killed. he was taken into custody in new zealand but was later released
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on bail. >> local media reports ended in no plea at his court appearance. and officials did not release details about his alleged intended vick tums or who may have been a potential hitman. ac/dc is slated to release a brand-new album next month. >> well, we don't get too many happy endings, but here is one. a woman violently abducted from a philadelphia street has been found alive in maryland. that's according to the fbi. investigators just released this mug shot of the suspect a few hours ago. he's been identified as 37-year-old delvin barnes. >> the fbi says he's the man seen in this surveillance video grabbing a 22-year-old off the street on sunday. she suffered some minor injury, but is otherwise considered to be in good condition. her mother sfoek to reports woenz during their first call after her daughter was found safe.
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>> she was upset. she was crying and she just was asking me. and she made me come get her. >> what did you say to her? >> i'm going to get my daughter. i'm going to get my baby. >> barnes is being held on a virginia warrant for attempted capital murder in another case. >> the fbi says he will then be charged federally for the crime. how authorities found the victim and her alleged captor. >> reporter: police made the announcement a little after 7:00 last night that she has been found alive. she was found b in jessup, maryland, and police say that she was in the car with her abductor pulled over to the side of the road. they were able to locate him because they located his vehicle. they moved in, they apprehended him and they rescued her. she was taken to the hospital with minor injuries, police say. they began to question her. she's been through a lot, but they will find out more in the upcoming days. they do believe that was a
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stranger abduction. it was just sunday night at 9:40. and you can see the video here. it's an extraordinary horrific video, a kidnapping caught on tape from a surveillance camera that happened to be on and rolling that sunday night. as you can see, her kidnapper this purpose walks across the street, walks down it's believe she got off a bus, finds her, introduces himself, or at least speaks some words to her and minutes later, the kidnapping begins. she can't hardly struggle as the force of the kidnapper as he walks her up the street. she fights, she loses her cell phone and he actually gets her into his vehicle. the windows of the back passenger area were broken out. but he sped off. there's also video the next morning of him taking her atm card to get a small amount of money then and going to a
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convenience store. he's being held this morn on attempted murder out of virginia, waiting federal charges in this case in pennsylvania. >> we don't normally see kidnappings like that. >> let's go to derek van dam. he has the latest at the international weather center. >> this is all thanks to a strong lineover storms in the south of france. you can see the name or the title of this boat, which literally translated means love the islands. but it's not loving anything right now. it's washed ashore, all thanks to a low pressure system that's
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moving away from france. take a look at this footage, 100 kilometers outside of cannes. we had very heavy hateful, up to 344 millimeters recorded. in the past three day across so you were france. flooding roadways. 16 government regions put on orange alert. residents need to be very vigilant to the dangerous weather at play. now, this is all from the same energy. it spawned a low pressure off tunisia. that's going to move across sicily and italy. a possibility of heavy rain and severe thunderstorms. in fact, we highlighted the area where we're most concerned. we're expecting the possibility or high likelihood of heavy rain. we cannot rule out the possibility of isolated tornadoes. the dynamics in the atmosphere are just right for that type of weather condition. now, you can see that this storm system and also the moisture
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associated with it has already produced quite a bit of hateful from switzerland to austria. but good news for the skiers and snowboarders. the alps gets significant snowfall from this storm as well. we also have a series of cold fronts moving through, impacting places like scotland as well as ireland. in fact, we've had some hefty winds coming out of that area causing some delays this morning. we will take a look at some of those delays right now. we're expecting anywhere between 60 to 90 minutes you're traveling in and out of dublin. that's all from the world weather center. for now, we've got more news and headlines coming up in a few minutes. abe! get in! punch it! let quicken loans help you save your money. with a mortgage that's engineered to amaze! [ high-pitched ] nailed it! [ normal voice ] you're right, that was really easy.
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the holidays can be an especially difficult time. everything's different now. sometimes i feel all alone. christmas used to be my favorite. i just don't expect anything. what if santa can't find me? to help, sleep train is holding a secret santa toy drive. bring your gift to any sleep train, and help keep the spirit of the holidays alive. not everyone can be a foster parent, but anyone can help a foster child.
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>> we want the headlineses for you this hour. u.s. president barack obama and the new republican leadership in congress say they are willing to work with each other, but mr. obama is giving no signs that ehe'll accept big changes to his signature health care law. and is expected toby pass congress on immigration reform. wurn person was killed and more than a dozen injured after two car attacks in jerusalem on the west bank. >> 11 syrian children were killed. several of the wounded are in critical condition. there's been no claim of responsibility. the residents blamed forces loyal to syrian president bashar al al asad.
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officials say police turned students over to a gang and they had not been seen since. well, u.s. democrats are reeling after a series of stinging defeats on election day. the result mean republicans will soon control both houses of congress. >> the big question is now can the gop and barack obama actually work together for the last two years of his presidency. >> the united states has big things to do. we can and we will make progress.
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>> president obama says he hopes to meet the new senate majority leader for one of his home state's best known berchls. >> i would enjoy having some kentucky bourbon with mitch mcconnell. >> reporter: mcconnell offered the president something else to savor, a vow he repeated more than once that in a break with the past, republicans will not impose a funding freeze to close the government or threaten default on the national debt. and they want to cooperate as much as they can. >> there are probably some areas and that's what we're going to be talking about in the next few weeks. even with some seats undecided, the democrats took a drubbing. the republicans came out a lot stronger, but not insurmountable. they gained a majority in the senate but they're sort of the super majority for clear. those rules men determined
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democrats can stop republicans the way republicans stymied democrats in the past. an ongoing struggle between mainstream republicans and the party's insurgent tea party wing. it's not clear how many of the party's new lawmakers will lean towards the loyalists and the rebels. one potential candidate says the republicans should take on the white house at every turn. put the american people up to the and see if they will provide relief for the people that are suffering. >> it's not clear if the new republican congress will go to war against or work with the president. we'll know in a few months. the congress convenes in
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january. >> so when congress does convene, what could it actually mean for american foreign policy? there are a host of big issues on the table, all making headlines this year. the gop has a long distrust of iran which could impact current negotiations over the country's nuclear program. they will also likely give more support to ukraine for ongoing conflict with russia. and most likely renew support for israeli as tensions mount with palestinian militants. >> also look for the gop to increase spending on u.s. border security while scaling back on immigration programs. and finally, less red tape in the battle against isis. many republicans argue inaction in syria. plus the military withdrawal in iraq led to the rise of the terrorist group. >> the republicans and the white house may find common ground to syrian rebels as they battle isis. those rebels face multiple enemies in syria right now.
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soldiers to defend their towns and villages against isis. but their ultimate challenge, conduct offensive operations of isis toe to toe. today, president obama said identifying moderate groups is tough. >> we' gained territory from isis. that's always difficult. >> once the program time, the pentagon estimates it could take a year to finish basic training for individual soldiers and up to 18 months to train more advanced units. that means if the u.s. could get
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started right away, fighting units might not be in the field before november 2015. it's a policy with huge problems. teaching them ou to s. >> and the u.s. has no guarantee after training the rebels they will do what the u.s. wants. >> i think our mission is certain to go against isis. when you talk to those on the ground, they might have a different view of it. their primary mission is to go against assad. >> the man expected to be the new senate majority leard, republican mitch mcconnell says the subject of training those rebels and fighting isis will be a subject of conversation at his friday lunch with president obama. barbara starr, cnn, the pentagon. well, now to the latest in the fight against ebola. u.s. president obama is seeking
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$6 billion in emergency funding from congress to continue the battle against ebola in west africa. now, that comes as the u.s. prepares to open a medical center in liberia, specifically for the treatment of infected health workers. it's set to open this weekend. the high rate of infection among local health workers has discouraged volunteers. well, an ebola survival in spain is out of the hospital and continuing her recovery at home. we have more on the controversy her case stirred up on the country's readiness to deal with the virus. >> reporter: after a month in hospital, spanish nurses aid teresa romero is finally going home. she was the first person to contract the ebola virus outside of africa and survive. it's been shown we have the best health care system in the world, she says, despite sometimes bad
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political leadership can achieve miracles. i'm one of them. emotions ran deep for her hospital colleagues. romero was on the medical team that treated a spanish military who got ebola in africa and died in madrid. romero got infected after that and there's been a lot of finger pointing about equipment and training. while some officials even suggested romero might have made a mistake. i don't know what went wrong, or even if anything went wrong, she says. i just know i'm not bitter. and if my experience can help develop a vaccine or help save other, i stand ready. government officials and doctors say spain is better to prepared now to fight ebola than when romero was rushed to to the this hospital last month. they're sharing details with how romero was saved. but nothing could save her dog
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which was put to sleep on fears that it could have ebola. she says her new lawyers will do the talking from now on. . so let's check the latest numbers. they show more than 4,800 people have died from ebola out of more than 13,000 cases. now the w.h.o. says the number of probable and expected cases appear to be declining across liberia. the number of cases in guinea is stable, but is being an increase in sierra leone. i don't know, back to you. >> it's been nearly 25 years since the berlin wall came down. up next here on cnn, we'll see what's left of the wall today and why so many risked everything to try to break through.
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celebrations. >> and it's worth noting, more than 100 people died trying to flee east berlin during the 28 years that the wall separated the city. >> and some tried to escape, no matter what the odds. >> reporter: when berlin was divided on august 13, 1961, schneider was 21 years old and in the final stages of her medical studies. she and her parents knew they couldn't live in the communist east and decided to flee. we were unhappy. the dictatorship of the proletariat and we couldn't deal with it. a tunnel was dug from the basement of a house in the west to a location in the east. but when they came to the location, there was a nasty surprise. when we got to the house where
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the tunnel was supposed to be, one of the helpers came out, she says. he was totally pale and says the tunnel has been discovered. you can not use it. she was sent to jail for 2 1/2 years under harsh conditions with constant harassment and interrogations. a new exhibition at the berlin wall memorial shows the plight of people like her who kept thinking of new, creative ways to try to flee the communist state. a desire for freedom that put many of them behind bars. >> this is an exact replica of what the berlin wall and the death strip used to look like. now, most estimates say 138 people died trying to get from east to west berlin. there are people who tried to build tunnels. there are those who tried to climb across. and some built their own aircraft to make it to freedom. after getting out of jail, she immediately tried to flee again
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with a false passport via bulgaria. she was captured again. but she made a defiant vow to her interrogators. she would send them her wedding picture when she got married in the west. and that's exactly what she did. after being released in 1969 as part of a west german government program that purchased the freedom of jailed east germans. >> today, she says, the communist repression must never be forgotten. >> it was worse than you can imagine, she says. this was not a country of law and justice. it was never like that. 25 years after the fall of the wall, her testimony is more important than ever. as a whole generation has now grown up not knowing what german division was like. cnn, berlin. >> cnn was there when the wall was coming down and as part of our coverage of the 25th anniversary, here's a flash back
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to how we reported this historic event. >> yeah. and this is richard roth from november 10, 1989. >> the symbol of the cold war, the berlin wall, was under attack friday night. berliners from east and west wielded hammers, whatever they could lay their hands on to chip away at years of separation. border guards did not interfere. hammering was not the only activity here. first, they got through the wall and then they danced on it. west berliners welcomed and celebrated with their visitors from the east on top of the specter of repression which divides the two germanys. thousands poured through checkpoints with east german blessing. once again, party time at the wall. some wanted to preserve the memory. others could not begin to comprehend the magnitude of the
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event. they came through the wall in a steady stream. it was a difference between these arrivals and those of thursday. many stayed only for a few hours before heading back to the east but vowing to return. a brief taste of visit with family. many who did stay attended a rally at the town hall at west berlin, site of john f. kennedy's historic speech in 1963.. from these step, it was crow voued in 1961, west berlin would remain an open city. friday evening, he returned and predicted the berlin wall, the quote, historical monster, will fall. helmut kohl says a free europe now lives. events are occurring with such speed, west berlin residents could not keep up. >> i just can't believe it. i just lied awake and i can't
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believe it. >> the morning i danced with my son on the wall. and before four weeks was not possible. and i cannot believe it. >> german leaders said they had waited 40 years for this day. one may never be like it ever again in berlin. cnn, west berlin. >> so all this week, we are commemorating the breathtaking events of 1989. you can be part of this conversation by telling us your favorite thing about berlin 25 years after the wall fell. just finish this sentence. my berlin is and then upload your responses to ireport.cnn.com. or you can post it to facebook and twitter with the #my berlin is. and you may just see that right here on cnn. >> the commercial breaks might be short, but it is enough time
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for one tv anchor to try some dance moves. ♪ but it's how his co-anchor responded to his antics that made this video go viral. [ male announcer ] over time, you've come to realize... [ starter ] ready! [ starting gun goes off ] [ male announcer ] it's less of a race... yeah! [ male announcer ] and more of a journey. and that keeps you going strong. at unitedhealthcare insurance company, we get that. with over 30 years of experience, we'll be there -- ready to go as far as you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, these help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay -- and could save you in out-of-pocket costs. you'll also be able to choose any doctor who accepts medicare patients. call or go online today
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>> we only have a short amount of time. we want to speed through this intro. >> we got a delay. take us back to the beginning. >> does anybody have any peanuts? >> okay, this is the moment of cuteness where everybody goes aww. an abandoned 5-week-old seal is getting a second chance at life. >> check out this precious video of the otter who's been called 681. apparently someone walking on the beach in california heard her crying. she's so cute. >> she's alone so they took her to the monterey bay aquarium. california sea otters are on the threatened species list. and pup 681 is now settling into her new home in chicago. very sweet. okay, so you may have heard the phrase, dance like no one is
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watching. but what happens if someone is actually watching and they don't b seem to be amused by it all. >> we have the story of a television anchorman who likes to move and his less than enthusiastic co-anchor. >> sometimes an anchor has to rise -- >> rise from the ashes. 50. >> reporter: not from the ashes. from the anchor desk. dan thorn is shaking things up at wvns in west virginia putting on sunglasses and lip syncing to james brown. ♪ rapping along with t.i. stealing his co-anchor's ipad to use as a prop. when waiting to go on air, he's one anchor you can't anchor down. but it's his co-anchor's not so amused attitude that helped make the outfakes go viral. no matter how goofy his face
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miming to taylor swift she ignores dan thorne as if she's a thorne in his side. >> i was just trying to connect to my viewers and say hey, i'm not a stiff. >> you're not prooefed at him, are you? >> no, not at all. that's just who dan is. he's just a funny guy like that. by his third video, dan was roaming around the video. for more than a year now, dan and sarah have been co-anchors. and they both say they are very close. >> we do like each other and getting along isn't work. >> reporter: but sarah draws the line and dancing during commercial breaks. >> come on, dance a little bit. >> i can't dance on camera. >> future employers might see that and not take mecirously.
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>> reporter: what does dan say to those who call it unprofessional? >> this is just me being myself? >>. >> reporter: do you think he's a clown? not in a bad way at all. he's just a silly guy. >> now he joins talent in the viral hall of fame. ♪ you like it then you should have put a ring on it ♪ >> dan quoted the anchorman that he dressed up as halloween. >> he said that's ka lated quickly. >> boy, that's ka lated quickly. >> but don't drag sarah into this. her motto is, anchors away. >> he's got moves like you. >> maybe i'm annoying pop i know you're annoying. >> anyhow, you're watching cnn. i'm rosemary church.
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. >> i'm john vause. coming up all new next hour. newly released photos of kim jung un which might tell us what's going on behind the scenes. it's more than the driver. it's more than the car. for lotus f1 team, the competitive edge is the cloud. powered by microsoft dynamics, azure, and office 365, the team can gain real time insights and instantly share information around the globe. when every millisecond counts, staying competitive begins with the cloud. this is the microsoft cloud.
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