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tv   Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown  CNN  December 4, 2014 9:00pm-10:01pm PST

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breaking news coverage on cnn. footage of breaking news earlier on times square where some protesters went up against police officers. there have been some arrests tonight. we don't have actual numbers but we'll continue to follow that for you. our coverage continues in the cnn sentner atlanta. >> welcome to our viewer es in the united states and of course all around the world. i'm rosemary church. >> i'm errol barnett. we're here with you for the next four hours. the first thing we want to do is get you back to new york city. there you're seeing and hearing the scenes that have played out over the past few hours. we're seeing much about the chokehold death of eric garner.
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brook baldwin will join us live from the heart of the protests. >> and we're also getting new information into cnn, details about what the grand jury heard and why some say there's a shocking disparity between police testimony and what we all witnessed on that tape. this is a case that's not only gripped the u.s., but really has gripped the entire world and we're going to bring you all the latest information this hour. we want to begin in new york city where the streets are filled with protesters now for a second straight night. and it seems as though the size of these demonstrations are bigger than what we saw 24 hours ago. thousands of people marched through the city. and if you're familiar with the layout of manhattan, i could tell you that they went from the holland tunnel in manhattan, they marched up the west side highway and across the brooklyn bridge. and at many times, everyone would lay down in the streets
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blocking traffic. to make their point. >> yeah. that's right. and pro-protester also turned out in chicago, boston, washington, baltimore, atlanta, oakland, and of course other cities. they are calling for an end to what they sai see as aggressive and discriminatory practices by police, especially against minorities. the decisions by two grand juries not to indict police officers in the deaths of african-americans suspects sparked these protesters. you may remember there's the case of michael brown an unarmed teep who was shot in ferguson, missouri in august. on the right of the screen you see eric garner who died after he was put in a chokehold by new york policemen. >> eric baldwin has been out on the streets of new york all night with protesters. it's just after midnight there, you've been out all night as we say watching as protesters are marching right in front of you. what is going on right now.
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>> it's so nice to talk to you this evening. that's exactly right. it's midnight here new york city time. i have to say, this is the first time myself and my crew have truly heard die sense. you can see an imty square behind me and that is because it is beginning, let me stress, beginning to wind down. i know we have different live pictures around the island of manhattan and beyond. but what a night it has been. this is our seven now as the whole night began right where i'm standing. if you're not familiar with new york, this is foley square. this is foley square and this is where vi hall, city government, new york police department headquarters, all here. and so this is here where hundreds and hundreds if not thousands of people initially converged. and it was quite organic. eventually, different sections of these groups began marching
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in different sections of manhattan. myself and my crew walked past the headquarters and police. we walked on to the brooklyn bridge. just to put this into perspective for you, i've never seen anything like this where the police ahead of time participating the protesters' route. shut down the brooklyn-bound lane where is cars should normally be during rush hour and protesters continued into brooklyn. and then we saw them continue, turnaround and come back into manhattan. we have lots of different pictures that we can show you of these different crowds converging within different places within the city. that's exactly right. in the last hour, i saw for the first time really with my own eyes multiple people getting arrested with we had just returned into manhattan in china town if you're familiar with the city. a lot of young people, different ethnicities coming together to
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show their solidarity in the wake of this nonindictment in the eric garner case. saw a number of people getting arrested, which we can show you those pictures in just a moment, but for of an active scene, let me go to laurie see gal. she's elsewhere here in new york. so tell me exactly where you are, and are you still seeing marchers where you are? >> hey there. we're in times square right now. it's somewhere peaceful here, but a little bit earlier, i'm talking 20 minutes, brooke, we walked five blocks down and there were about, i would say 100 pro-it issers. and there were people, let me just paint this picture for you. there were just people lined up being arrested by cops and being put in these vehicles. i actually asked someone, what are you being arrested for? he said i don't really know. d disorderly conduct. and people were smile into the cameras as they were being arrested.
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a bunch of protesters were trying to get by the cops and they had one ringleader who said, you know, who was very polite. he called the cops sir. he said i want to know why we don't have the right to move forward, sir. one thing i'll say about this, when you look, you see these protesters protesting but you see that they might say hands up don't shoot, but they have their cell phones there. so you can actually see that they're recording. and they're tweeting and they're making sure that their messages are out. here earlier, when it was a little bit calmer, i spoke to two young women who were college students protesting and they said they found out about this on facebook. people using facebook as as an organizal tool. we came back after seeing quite a bit happening downtown. and people were just lying on the ground and it was a very silent protest. and, you know, i spoke to one
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man earlier. and i think we actually have a picture of him. he was a painter an he had a very clear message. he said he actually picked up a paint brush in three years, but he was so inspired by all the emotion and how charged it was to actually paint that it took him 45 minutes and he painted a picture about a broken system. to zo obviously the emotions are pretty high. but here right now, it is peaceful. again, things have really started to calm down here, brooke. >> thank you so much. it is interesting. i have to say, i just saw at least half a dozen massive white new york police department correctional buses. that is how they're transporting at least several dozen people who have been arrested from these different protests around the city. but it's not just new york. it's not just this story. this is the kind of story that's reverberating nationwide here, as far as how certain people are feeling about law enforcement,
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not necessarily even among racial lines. but among socioeconomic lines and also just in terms of misuse of authority when you talk to a lot of these people. can you tell me what you're seeing? >> what you're seeing here, brooke, and i'm offcamera because i want you to take a look at this. you see the chicago police pushing their bikes, moving their line. they have made two announcements over the loud speaker saying anyone who is in this street is going to be arrested. they had a final warning saying that everybody needs to be moved off. and what you're seeing is the chicago police line basically trying to push everybody off the street. and clear this pathway, this road for traffic. we haven't seen any one -- i can't tell from where i am, but i haven't seen anyone getting arrested. people have said they don't want
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to move, but right now, it looks like most people are complying. but you can see here from the shot, it's a tremendous crowd here. there's a couple of crowd issues. the bears game, the pro football chicago bears game just ended. so you have a lot of people leaving the bears game. and then you have these pro-t s pro-terss who have been laying down in the streets trying to clog the streets making the point they want the city to pay attention. they want the nation to pay attention to the outrage here in chicago, brooke. >> i think it's an interesting point you make there. you and i both have been walking amongst the people, if you will, for the past couple of hours. and it makes you wonder, you know, my last moments when i was walking back into manhattan from brooklyn with these hundreds of people on one of the bridges, you know, people intentionally walk into traffic, frustrating, understandably so. a lot of these drivers.
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some of whom were very supportive, honking their horns, taking their own cell phone video as they simply stopped trying to move. and others, visibly frustrated. it makes you wonder why stop traffic? why line the middle of the street. but i'm curious what other people have been telling you. it's rally not, not necessarily about new york, but chicago, dallas, atlanta, l.a., to stop and pay attention. if you're not going anywhere, they want you to ask why. why? because of what's happened here most recently in staten island, right? >> yeah. it's all about attention. it's trying to make people aware beyond just the people watching the news, just the people who are directly affected by this. as you look at this very large crowd, yeah, they're starting to push back off the street on to the sidewalk, and they're talking to people who are leaving the bears game, making
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sure that they know why they're out here. they're chanting and saying they want people to become engaged outside the activists. the people you're looking at predominantly are students, younger people. we've been talking to a lot of them. columbia college students, at uic here in downtown chicago. they're the ones initially who ran on to the highway and tried to block the highway. they're the ones who have been laying in the street and walking all over the city. miles through downtown chicago. you can hear this chanting. >> no justice, no peace! >> they've always been saying black lives matter. and they've been also saying to the police, who do you protect? who do you serve? and it's been that way throughout the evening. we should point out that the chicago police have been very measured. we haven't seen very much conflict between the chicago police and the protesters here, even though the protesters who number at one point well into the hundreds had been yelling at
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the officers at some point, you know, challenging this em. no one has been physical. it's been pretty, pretty calm. there was some crowd control that took place, but generally, it's been homingly peaceful. the police, measured, and the crowd very, very pieceful. and as you're watching the officers really try to each up this road and move dozens and dozens into the hundreds of these protesters off this ro roadw roadway, i'm not seeing too many people being taken away. in fact, i'm not seeing any. it's a very big crowd. it's really hard for me to see, but the chicago police seem to be successfully clearing out this roadway. >> good. that's good to hear. thank you so much. we're going to stay in close contact with you as we continue to check in with other cities around the nation who are marching and want their choices heard in the wake of these recent nonindictments both in
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stat enisland and in new york. we talked to a lot of these people, this is about so much more than these two recent cases. so that's keong lau in chicago. chris welch who is in downtown manhattan not too far from me, northwest of me in tribeca. chris welch, i don't have pictures so i can't see what it looks like from where you are. what have people there been telling you as you' been walking tonight? >> of let me give you a little sense of what we see. within the last half-hour or so, we followed a group, i know you followed a group that went over the brooklyn bridge. we were where that massive rally was earlier tonight before the group split off. it was right there when we came across another group of marchers really, coming from up town, headed back into downtown into
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the square where we were. went to one police plaza. they made an announcement that things were essentially done for the night. if you choose to go home, do so safely. then a certain number of people, i would say probably less than 100 continued to go on. they marged through the streets. i'm not sure if we have this video for you. it was just a few minutes ago. i'll give you a sense of the scene right now. we are looking at a pretty heavy police presence now. and we saw police walk do you think the streets viftly, shart shouting at the group of marchers. they were saying if you're in the street, if you're obstructing traffic, we will arrest you. so it sounds like at this point, this time of the night, police are starting to crack down a little bit more. and trying to clear some of these streets and get people to head home, brook. >> yeah. we're in the seventh hour of these protests.
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and just to see that people are still out, it's cold. it's really, really cold tonight. one of the coldest nights we've had in new york. i think people are -- you know, they're ready to go home. or those who don't want to go home are definitely getting arrest .3 don't know if they're going, but the fact that people in chicago, atlanta, new york and potentially all across the country are still out, still with their signs, still singing, still chanting, i think speaks volumes for this side of the story. back to you. >> definitely. and brook, we're seeing more protester in more cities. some people suggesting this is a turning point for the country. we will see. and we will come back to you, brooke baldwin, live there in
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new york city. many thanks to you for that. >> and the big thing that we keep seeing from this is that it's not just this one incident. it wasn't just about michael brown. this doesn't seem to just be about eric garner. but this kind of nationwide response of the relationship between police and the people they're supposed to protect. even in phoenix, arizona, a place i know well, there was a shooting of an unarmed black man by a white police officer, a fatal one. people were protesting there today. so this has really struck a nerve. >> eric garner, ferguson, and what happened in cleveland, those are the three big high-profile ones that have really triggered this. and we're really seeing such a shift across this nation. >> all over the u.s. >> we'll see what happens with it. but also just ahead, a typhoon bears do unon the philippines. >> that's right. we'll get you back to new york shortly. but we'll also have the latest on emergency preparations here. and a live look at its path and its intensity.
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strike the same place where people were tiled by hayan just six months ago. let's get more guidance on where this storm could strike. >> there was much dispute. people couldn't settle on the actual track. what was that all about? >> with we're starting to get answers of where we're expecting the land fall to take place from the eye or center of thf storm. >> just to give you an update, it's dropped just below the threshold of super typhoon status, just by about ten kilometers per hour. this storm is still a very formidable typhoon. people across the central and eastern philippines need to pay attention because we're about 24 to 48 hours away from land fall.
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230 kilometres per hour. that makes it an equivalent category four hurricane in the atlantic ocean. pu fluctuations can be expected. it's very difficult to maintain that kind of a strength in a typhoon. take note, we've had what's called an eye wall replace. . the center of the storm regaining strength across the central process. a great indicator this is a particularly strong storm. this is called the cone of uncertainty. you can see how the path has a circumference of about 200 kilometers. and that is very, very important. let me show you the difference in the computer models for the different meteorological agencies. one takes it just to the north of samarm. thor takes it across northeastern samar. that's in the central
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philippines. late saturday evening into early sunday morning. the meteorologists believe land fall is imminent. nonetheless, the real threats here, storm surge, strong damaging winds and localized flooding from 200 to 400 millimeters of hateful. errol and rosy? >> and all of that in an area that was hit so hard 13 months ago by another massive super typhoon. >> we're going to have updates all night, guys. >> thanks a lot for that. still to come here on cnn, survivors living among the ruins of the war against isis. we're about to take you inside kobani. ♪ hi. i'm new ensure active clear protein drink. >>clear huh? i'm not juice or fancy water. i've got 8 grams of protein. new ensure active clear protein. 8 grams protein. zero fat. ensure. take life in. because it helps me skip the bad stuff. i'm good. that's what i like to call, the meta effect.
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♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ >> let's bring you the latest information on the battle against isis in syria. most of the residents of kobani from fled as the months long siege continues. but some residents do remain. desperately hanging on despite the constant violence around them. >> yeah, and a cnn crew managed to get into kobani for a first-hand look and a talk to its people. nick payton marsh reports. >> reporter: kobani feels haunted by those who are still alive in it. in humane enough that the noise of coalition car planes above is a strange comfort. the destruction, so near complete the fight is more now for victory alone, not for its
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spoils. here, they've even given up on hospitals. this, the last one, frattened by a kaer bo. the wounded now taken straight to the border. you can see what months have fighting has done. absolute devastation. almost impossible to imagine the city sustaining anytime in the near future. but still the fighting persists. the shelling almost constant. so much of it caused by homemade devices like this. >> there are civilians here, those who refuse or cannot flee. and children besieged who cannot be protected from indis-christmas nit constant selling. usef can list the friends who have left. but they show us their only option, what they do when the blasts strike. their uncle told them to hide
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like this. this couldn't be further from play time, though. they are the remnants of lives enjoyed, but also of lives taken early. the spot where a week earlier his young daughter was killed by a random mortar. the first we escaped from, the second we escaped from and the third fell on us. my daughter was 7 years old. and she died. god bless and help us. he brought his six daughters and the 150 sheep they live off here after isis attacked their village. she was 7 years old, he says. she was so beautiful. small. people who saw her felt the need
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to lift her up and down. >> he went to her grave the day before and sat there for 30 minutes. >> it is the graveyard that tells you about the near future and the more distant one. a trench dug for the dead next to those they have already buried. again, a morbid playground. they will decide what kind of life survival here could leave them with. nick payton walsh, cnn, ckobani. >> impossibly heart breaking scenes there. we're going to take a very short break, but just ahead here on cnn, we will take you back to protesters out there on the streets of new york city and
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elsewhere across the country. and we will tell you all about this in relation to the chokehold death of eric garner and the deaths of other black men in the hands of white police and the debate that that has triggered. we'll be back in a moment. discohi! card. so it says here i can redeem my cashback bonus for cash. do i need to have a certain amount? nope, now you can redeem your cashback for any amount, any time. that's great. yeah, you can use it for a statement credit or even get the cash. nice. i could use that extra cash for a last-minute gift...
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it's reliable. just like kung pao fish. thank you, ping. reliably fast internet starts at $89.95 a month. comcast business. built for business. >> welcome back to those of you watching in the u.s. and all around the world, i'm errol barnett. >> i'm rosemary church. we do want to bring you up to date on the headlines at this hour. thousands of people filled the streets in new york for the second night in a row, protesting what they call racism and harassment by place.
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the protests have been largely peaceful but a number people have been arrested. tens of millions of people are bracing for the worst right now, stocking up on suppliesstr scrambling to get out of the way. police have arrested a woman they say stabbed an american teacher to debt and they say they foiled another crime. let's get you more information on breaking news out of new york. several dozen people have been arrested during a night of sprawling protests in new york city. brook baldwin has been walking with protesters for many miles.
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you were many manhattan, you circled back. my question is you, spending that much time with the protesters as they moved through a densely populated city, what was their strategy in making a statement but keeping it peaceful and keeping it moving. >> it's a great ke. i think your question was strategy. incredibly simple answer was that there wasn't a huge strategy. what i did notice, and this is where it all begin, b i'm joining you froley square. this is the heart of downtown manhattan, government buildings are, city hall, new york, police department headquarters, and so this was the genesis this evening. and this is what our seven that i've been out with these people. and so this is where it began. but to your point, it was very organic. it was incredibly organized and
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well orchestrated. there were organizers in the backs of the marches and the fronts making sure people, you know, were abiding the law for the most parts. in terms of crossing streets before people started walking into traffic. you saw people starting here in lower manhattan towards siem fooims square. my group we went straight over the brooklyn bridge. police had anticipated a lot of these marches. so we walked along the brooklyn bridge on the brooklyn-bound side, where the cars would normally be. multiple lanes. continue to cross into really the heart of brooklyn. i'll never forget this. it was the poignant image. at the front of this particular protest in which i joined for several hours tonight, they were
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carrying about half a dozen cardboard cough coffins. and etched on the coffins were names. these represent people that these folks feel in the city of new york were unjustly shogt and killed by new york police officers. in the main thoroughfare in brooklyn, dozens of people lay down. they were calling ate die-in. and four multiple minutes it was just quiet. you heard the power and voices in song. but in those few moments it spoke volumes for that what these people were trying to get across. we can go to times square. laurie see gal was in the middle of it tonight. it's quieting down where i am, laurie, but i'm wonder, one of the things that really struck me, being with really a mix of
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people for the most part incredibly youthful group of people. >> absolutely. that's something i noticed, too. i was talking to a lot of young people. a lot of students. some of the women i talked to, one was a student here at columbia. i said to them, what brought you out here tonight. she said we feel like we have a sense of responsibility. we're joining these fake groups. and the different types of people i spoke to in the crowd, it was such a diverse group of protesters. first, it was very calm. just a handful of protesters. they were actually having a conversation about race. and what one guy said to me, he tuled me aside and he opened his wallet and showed me a card that said friend of the nypd. he said my brother is in the
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nypd and he doesn't like what happened. another guy chimed in and he said i have family with the nypd, too. one guy said the reason i came out here, too, is because i knew it was going to be peaceful. that sentiment did change throughout the evening. there was quite a few arrests happening. there was a confrontation with protesters. but one of the protesters when he was talking to the policeman said why can't i go forward, sir. he was very polite about it. and we came back and there was, as you said, people were just laying down protesting silently. then they were chanting. you see people on their phones tweeting. you see people taping everything. you see really this role of social media. it's interesting to be here in times square. this is where a lot of tourists come to to take pictures and
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experience new york. you have this really impactful protest happening here tonight. and one woman tapped me. she was with her daughter and she said i heard people going through the streets. i heard the protesters and i needed my daughter to understand what this was because this is historical. and i wanted us to join. so it was a very nice moment. now things have died down quite a bit. and of course, it's new york. >> it's interesting hearing the tourists talking about the people getting out of the chicago bears game, the football team and just sort of standing and observing what was going on. just walking around through brooklyn, through manhattan. it was pretty stunning to see. i mean, this is just not something you see. entire major thoroughfares in one of the busiest cities in the world stop. stop for these people so they
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can walk. in addition here in lower manhattan, we also have chris welch. he's standing by and he's been walking with a number of people. is this something you thought about? in the hours and miles of wa walking if for the most part peaceful protesters. there were times we would stop and people would break out in song, people would chant, people would sit down. i saw the end of my group and they were arrested. but this is only one group's perspective. i'm not saying this is on the right side of history. but i got the feeling these mostly young people felt like they were in the middle of something, in the middle of history here tonight in new york. >> absolutely, brook. i was with at one point chris cuomo. we were walking with a group on the west side highway. you got the same sense there are a lot of young people. people from all ages, but there
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is the sense that people feel that they are a part of something important. we talked to people tonight who said look, we weren't out here last night and that was a mistake. we wanted to be out here tonight to show our support. because this is a cause that we believe we want to go on the record for. we want to show our support for the issues that we've been speaking about over the last several weeks. since this past summer, really. we saw groups kind of wind down. one of the leaders of the protest groups in the march that we were with said essentially they were done. continue walking. they did. they kept moving on. we got the sense that police wanted to clean things up. this is what we talked about a little while ago. we really sensed when they started moving in and opening up the bull horn saying we're going to start arresting people if they don't get off the streets. we saw one person get arrested. we saw a couple of other people
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get arrested but by and charge, this was a peaceful night of protests. i also thought, i just wanted to point this out, one thing that we found very interesting and i think it illustrates the point that a lot of people have made on our air the last few weeks, whether it's covering ferguson and the riots that developed there or whether it's here. there are often a few individuals in the punch that tend to make more trouble and spart more of the violent acts. in ferguson, they believe that was people from out of town. it wasn't people in ferguson. there was a very clear few one or two people starting to cause trouble amidst this group of police that was starting to come up on these people and threatening them with arrests. there were people throwing new york city heavy trash cans throwing them in the streets. and then we saw people behind
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them, protesters start picking up all the garbage that that one person just threw on the streets. we saw this happen a couple of times. and i think that's a pretty good illustration, i can't think of a better one, at least not tonight, that the majority of people who are out here are not looking to cause trouble. they just want to get their point out. brook? >> yeah. everything i've seen, i 100% agree. thank you so much in lore manhattan. in downtown bhant me tonight. as we sit and reflect hours later, night number two of these incredibly well organized yet very organic protests, it really begs the real crux of this, which is what are the solutions? you know, i was talking to one mother who lost her son 2 1/2 years ago to police violence. i said can we be specific. it's about race, poverty, breed. people bringing up wall street.
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we're not too far from wall street. but what are the solutions? we heard the president of the united states mention 50,000 more body cameras on police. we heard from the police commissioner from new york and the mayor saying we're retraining the entire new york police force in three days. is that enough? what else can be done. that's really the big question. >> something we're seeing that's representative of this emotion all over the us u.s., and it seems as though young people, african-americans, whites, getting on the same page and saying everyone benefits from having a better police force. what is the answer. it's unclear. how long will it take? we don't know. everyone seems to agree that something isn't right. >> looking for change, looking for improvements say, you know, clearly at this point, i think most people would agree that black men get treated differe differently to white men. and the statistics back that up and it's time for a change. >> we'll continue watching all
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this. it's an interesting commentary on twitter. white americans give stories of times they've broken the law and the police told them just to go on and keep on their way while black americans tend to get the hard hand of the law. fascinating glimpse if you want to check that out. we will check in with that later on cnn. my grandson's got this blankie that gets filthy. but he's got such sensitive skin that you worry about what you use in the laundry. so i use new tide pods free & gentle, to get a deep clean that's gentle on skin. new tide pods free & gentle.
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tens of millions of people across the philippines are bracing for typhoon hagupit. you see it highlighted beneath almost the red part of the storm on your screen. that's the radar. thanks l thanks so much for connecting with us. i know you're probably busy right now. i know there's a lot of people evacuating to higher areas. you were hit in a place so badly 13 months ago. how prepared are you for this storm to hit? >> we are more prepared now than we definitely were before. we've already declared schools closing of schools and even establishments in the last two or three days. and we have already evacuated
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95% of the people now we're occupying the universities and the big big emergency shelters. the center of the region, in the past three or four days, people have been leaving the city. the population is way down. we have less people now to worry about here. >> you've been through so much just in the past year. remind us what happened when typhoon hayan made land fall and devastated the region. it's very difficult. we are also experiencing the difficulty right now.
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apparently they're not all together, or they're not the same. there are many different opinion s that's what happened. we were optimistic and we got the report. now we're on the safe side and we're looking now of being very conservative and seeing how erratic the weather is. >> as it won't make land fall for a number of hours, it could make that hard left turn and almost make a direct hit where you are. it gets more natural disasters than any other place on the
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planet. with all the storms and effort to rebuild and now evacuate, do you ever think that perhaps tacloban is a place that needs some type of reform or, as far as bit bildings are structured. do you need to move to a different area. most of the businesses and financial center was not actually hit. they created about 50 kilometers north of the city.
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we've gotten more scientific data for that. and it's just really late, you know, you have change. very powerful storms. and the last storm we had, we have a spark similar to that about 100 years ago. so it's just coming in again now now. it's difficult for us to make the adjustment. >> at the end of the day, it this is home for you and millions of other people. speak on the line there with the mayor ahead of a very powerful supertyphoon, expected to make land fall. we're going to continue to watch this situation closely and bring you more details as they become available. some people still living in tents trying to rebuild their lives in that part of the country.
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we'll keep an eye on that. we'll have more news for you on the other side of the break. do stay with us. i have a cold with terrible chest congestion. better take something. theraflu severe cold doesn't treat chest congestion. really? new alka-seltzer plus day powder rushes relief to your worst cold symptoms plus chest congestion.
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a in uh cast of villains and bond girls, more from the unveiling in london. >> the world east largest running film franchise celebrated its half century last time out by taking the box office action to new heights. sky fall took over billions of dollars worldwide. thursday, filmmakers gathered at pinewood studios 007 sfaj for what's become a must-see moment in the cinematic calendar, the
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naming of bond's latest mission. of course, the countdown clock didn't reach 0, stopping tra t dramatically on everyone's minds. that is the moment bond 24 becomes "specter." the acronym of assassi assassiassassin assassins .special eck executive counterterrorism robotics and extorti extortion. it offers the prospect of bond renewing an acquaintance with an old enemy. he'll do it with a new set of wheels as his aston martin perished during sky value. the dv-10, not so much an vehicle but an extension of bond's character. and then there were human characters to introduce. "skyfall" marked the changing of a guard at mi-6. but the absence of the great
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judy dench seemed to haunt the cavernous room. >> i'm working to find my own path, but i think still keep true to some of the things that judy has accomplished. a toughness and a ruthlessness. >> then came the new fill lains. -- villains. >> the first question i asked him when i met with him, i said is he a bad ass? he said absolutely. >> another pillar of 007 movies is the role which less enlightened times was referred to as the bond girl. >> she became more masculine and bond is more feminine now. >> james bond in italy, fwu i think all over the world represents the perfect man. >> after "skyfall." the director took his time before committing to another 007 movie. but the specter of leaving bond behind proved too great.
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>> when i'd taken the time and sort of, you know, wasn't quite so exhausted as i was at the end of the last movie, i felt like i wanted to tell a story. >> he did such a wonderful job with skyfall. you know, came down to do the next one and he seemed to be the obvious choice. >> bond's new mission begins next week with filming in london, rome, mexico, morocco and the austrian alps to complete before fans goat see 007 on screen once more in a year's time. neil curry, cnn, london. >> looking forward to that. it's good, huh? >> yes. i'm errol barnett. we'll get back to new york after the break where we see massive protests and some arrests over the chokehold death of an african-american eric garner and the grand jury's decision no the to indict the police officer.
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o. >> hello. i'm rosemary church. here's our top stories this hour. more protests from coast to coast across the united states. americans standing up demanding a change after the latest police related death. cops and cameras, can these small devices being the answer

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