tv New Day CNN February 2, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PST
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will be running out there. >> we certainly will. >> reporter: so the story here in new york city once again, there is snow coming down. there is freezing rain. there is sleet. once again, this is the good part of the situation. this storm only gets worse as you move around. you have tens of millions of million in the way, 18 states affected. chicago seeing historic problems with this storm. they are only going to get worse. the east coast is still digging out. let's start with our coverage. we have it everywhere that is relevant. alexandra field let's start with you. >> reporter: good morning, chris. you know it takes the sting out of a winter storm like this waking up calming yourself super bowl carolinas. the people here in boston they will try to take this in stride t. roads are the big concern this morning him we had a little snowfall overnight. slush out on these roads, this snow is going to continue through about midnight and this comes on top of the big storm
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that hit here last week. the sixth snowiest storm in history. the big cleanup fought done yet. take a look at this mound of snow, nearly tells me in some parts of it. it is caused by this fresh snow t. kids have all day to celebrate that super bowl championship. they are not going to school but public transportation is still opened. government offices still opened. so a lot of people have to get out there and deal with a much slower rush hour also some 200 flight cancelled in the boston area him we will keep an eye on that as this storm is expected to clear out of here until after midnight. chris. >> reporter: i can't imagine alexandra, on top of that another foot of snow they have to deal with in boston. we will stay on that all morning long. least they have something to celebrate with the patriots. now to chicago, 17 inches of snow blizzard conditions. blanketing the windy city.
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kids have snow days. everyone else is going to suffer. we got ryan young joining us now from chicago. some baptism by heavy storm for you. welcome to this show. >> reporter: well thank you so much chris. you can see the snow is still falk at this hour. just look above us. of course a bus is passing bit. we seen a constant snowfall so far. you can see what's tooild pilepiled up over here. more than 350 vehicles are pushing the snow off the streets. can i also tell you on the side streets, in the suburb it is a mess out there. we are hearing about accidents all over the place. of course schools have been shut down. a thousand flights have been cancelled in the area. you look from this corner over here you can see a woman that just fell. it's treacherous out here cops are passing by. it's getting slippery. they're telling everyone to be careful. obviously, they're trying to keep the streets clear so people can get to work safe.
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chris. >> reporter: thank you very much you are spot on with that different precipitation brings different problems. we have that here in new york city. it comes down sometimes as freezing rain when it hits the ground. people are slipping. the car literally slid sideways in new york central park. we will also be talking about these small problem, being careful where you go. so let's bring in chad myers because as we're talking here, near freezing rain. some sleet, which means it's frozen. you know that you taught me. it gets worse when you get your you a came accumulations and totals cleveland, it's not a record. but it is the most they've had this winter. boston is a problem. what is going on around this? >> you know the world does not revolve around manhattan. we think it does. cleveland and the alleghenys are socked in this morning with over a foot of snow. this is heavy snow. this is back breaking snow.
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>> reporter: why is that? why is it heavy storm? >> because the storm came up from arizona. this storm made rain saturday and sunday into parts of phoenix. we were watching that saturday saying oh my gosh the super bowl, it's going to rain? no the storm pulled out across the mid-west. now it's here. we are here close enough to get west. west chester a couple miles awhat is all snow so far, they're getting dumped on. new hampshire, massachusetts, it will be a foot or more up there. >> reporter: you have 16 million people 18 different states. everyone everybody has to get to work if they can. this is really tough as it is freezing as it hits the ground and creates that coating layer. what are the variables? >> today may be tougher tan last monday. because tonight we change over to snow around 2:00 or 3:00sh everybody is trying to get home. tomorrow morning, if we're standing here, it will be 11. right now we're at 33.
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this will be one big ice chunk. you will need zamboni to get to work tomorrow. >> reporter: you will have varying temperatures. thank you for teaching me about sleet and freezing rain not like experiencing it in my face. let's go to mark savage communications will be a problem. you are looking at a scene. that's the most snow they've had this winter. i can't see it. you k. it's not a record. just to get a sense of how things are changing we are here in new york city. it's less tan 12 miles of laguardia airport. they have been having a different experience there than in manhattan. jean what's it like there? >> reporter: all right. we don't have jean. we will get to jean. we will get do martin savage.
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alisyn obviously, communications are a problem within have you this storm. you have all of this precipitation. once again, new york city is seeing the best of what is certainly the worse for some 60 million people in 18 different states. >> we saw martin satisfy annual doing his snow dance there. he couldn't decide which way to face with the wind pelting him. we can relate. we will be outside shortly, too. thanks, so much. for more on how the storm is impacted in boston. let's bring from the emergency management director renee fielding. she joins us on the phone. good morning renee. >> good morning. >> it's deja vu all over again. we were speaking ability the megastorm that will be hitting new york and boston and here we go again. how is boston looking this morning? >> well we have already started to see the snowfall. so we probably have an inch or two on the ground right now. and we're expect another 1208 inches before this is done. it's groundhog day for us. >> it might literally is.
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it might be a foot we are told by our cad meyers. the freezing rain is a big problem for the commute in. it's very dangerous. what are you doing about that in boston? >> reporter: yeah so for the morning commute, we are expecting to see the light, fluffy snow. we might see that for the evening commute. so we've encouraged you know everyone to take public transportation to work to stay off the roads. so public works can continue throughout the day with plowing and sanding. >> are schools closed? >> reporter: yeah they are. we cancelled schools yesterday. we put a snow emergency parking ban if effect this morning. >> see now last week here in new york there was a travel ban. it was frustrating to some. but it probably saved some lives. there were no cars that were allowed in and around the new york metropolitan area, new jersey and connecticut. are you considering a travel ban there? >> reporter: no the governor did not call a travel ban this
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im. the winds are expected to be high. they're not going to be blizzard winds. so he did not call one. >> what about those icy road conditions? >> reporter: i'm sorry. >> the winds, yes, those are a problem, but the icy roads are a problem, also. >> reporter: right, it's only supposed to impact southeast massachusetts, though not the whole state like the blizzard was. >> all right. so what are you telling boston residents this morning? >> reporter: so this morning we are telling them to be careful when they get up. there is going to be a couple inches on the snow and it's going to be coming down and inch or two an hour so we're just asking them to take their time and to be careful coming in to work and dress warm. it's going to be really cold today and it's going to be even colder tomorrow. >> oh my goodness. something tells me i will be talking to you about the picture. thanks so much for taking time on "few day." >> let's head to cleveland. we understand cleveland will have its largest snowfall all
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winter long there. crews are scrambling to get those roads cleaned up for the morning commute. martin savage joins us from cleveland. you get our reward of the day the conditions are inclement to say the least. how are you doing? >> reporter: yeah good morning to you. thank you very much for that award, by the way. welcome to my hometown. 'i am real familiar it's unfortunate, these kind of conditions. it is snowing. maybe you can tell it is blowing right now. we're on the edge of public square. they plowed it but they can't keep up with it. the streets here are snow packed. the good news is they are also deserted. i had to block the mic from the wind. let me show you a danger here. these down lines, it's not a power line although i'm not going to get any closer to prove it wrong. but that is an issue here with these gusty winds. up to 30 35 miles an hour schools closed.
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roads very treacherous, buses, mortgages vehicles the only thing out here on reporters, freezing very brutal temperatures 1 degree i think is where we're at. it's going to get colder. it's definitely blowing at about 30 miles an hour to the west. toledo they have even harsher conditions and they're under a level 3 snow emergency. the mayor of toledo suffered a heart attack after delivering that emergency information. he's in the hospital. there is a lot of misery. in northern ohio as you might tell. mikaela, chris. back to you. >> oh my goods? . >> oh my goodness. martin i'll take it from here. you have depicted what is out there. i can't imagine. >> it's going to get colder. >> a more freezing live shot t. winter storm is we'll be right backing havoc on air travel. thousands of delays at major
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airports. how sit looking, jean? >> reporter: well at this point over 2,300 flights have been cancelled throughout the country. the numbers are fluid. they are continuing to rise. right here at laguardia, this is where a lot of flights begin to go around the country. as you can see, we will show you the sign boards with the american airlines terminal t. departures look at that. they are all cancelled. there are two flights at this point that are coming in from dallas-ft. worth. everything else is canceled the arrivals too. we want to show you the major airports that have cancellations here first of all, chicago o'hare at this point this morning 326 cancellation newark liberty 296. boston lo been 192. new york laguardia, 186.
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the issue is they begin and go throughout the country. not to speak of. the people in phoenix, arizona that probably want flights back home today. alisyn >> all right, jean thanks so much. in other news japan is mourning the death of kenji go interest to at the hands of isis. the prime minister is promising revenge for the death of two japanese hostages vowing to make the terrorists pay the price. the fate of a jordanian military pilot held captive still unclear. jordan has renewed its offer to swap the pilot for a prisoner on death row. but no proof of life has been provided. president obama weighing in on the measles outbreak saying unvaccinated sclirn pose a riskchildren pose a risk. now, new york health officials say an infected college student roads an amtrak station.
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he has been isolated while he recovers. the late whitney houston's daughter remains in a medically induced coma. bobbi kristina brown is on a ventilator and unresponsive. she was found face down in a bath tub in her georgia home. a spokesman said the 21-year-old had no heart beat when she was found. her mother whitney houston was found in a bathtub three years ago. our thoughts to that family. >> from hard news to good news depending on who you are. super xlix super bowl champs the ending the ending everybody is talking about the ending. the blessing an curse of sports. andy scholes watched it all unfold. they are saying it came down
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from one play all around the country this morning. tell us about it my friend. how was it to be there? >>. >> oh chris, this is awesome. it will definitely go down as one of the best super bowls, the drama at the end of this game. amazing. you have to think of the issues with the deflate-get and the distractions the patriots have gone through over the last couple of weeks. they really played a big game and made the big time plays. things weren't looking good when the fourth quarter taim came down. tom brady led them on two touchdown drives to give them the lead. then the seahawks came down the field and arguably one of the greatest catches in nfl history. this put the seahawks in the position. they were on the '021 yard line a questionable play call that will be questioned for a long time rookie malcolm butler his
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first career interception. richard sherman can't believe it. the patriots are going nuts on the side lines. they went in dramatic fashion 28-24 and tom brady is your super bowl mvp for a third time. >> you have gone the other end twice now, being late and not being able to make the plays to win. this time we made the play to win. it's just awesome. >>. >> so brady has now won four super bowls tying him with his childhood idol for the most all time. when we had that conversation of who is the greatest player in nfl history. tom brady will definitely be at the top of the list. they have had a field goal with the deflate-gate controversy check out the cover of the daily news it reads, balls of steal!
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pretty awesome. you know who doesn't care about deflate-gate guys the patriots. the investigation will eventually reveal what happened. they are partying deflate-gate couldn't be the farthest from their minds right now. >> they did make the plays to win the gym. i'm not a patriots fan. i am a jets fan. it was inadvertent. but they got to win games. you got to close games. the seahawks got there. the green bay packers, andy scholes will be back with you. these patriots in this second half during the third quarter, i tweeted, i didn't want to tweet it. >> they dominated. >> if the seahawks don't step it up the patriots will win. they were down ten points at the time. they were the better team. >> see, when i went to bed, the seahawks were winning. i thought i was going to be paying a very expensive steak dinner for the wageer we had bought i mean made i came into work this morning, i said what? i get the steak dinner?
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>> i would disqualify you. not watching the game. i have to check the ryder's to the contract. >> no, no no. >> we'll be talking about it more. we got light treatment on this last play t. player of the game, he's the mvp, tom brady, this malcolm guy, what a play the biggest play of the game. he's going to join us on "new day." he will tell us what it's like to be a super bowl hero. millions of people in the northeast getting pounded again by another powerful winter storm. schools and highways shut down this morning, chaos at the airports, so we'll tell you what you need to know as you wake up. that's ahead. >> as we were talking about, just a yard away from the second straight super bowl victory 3-feet. people. here's the question who is going to take the fall for that call? we'll discuss next. ♪ you're going to hear me roar ♪ can do that is impactful?"
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the prayer position. >> i can't believe it happened still. i can't believe it happened. i'm so happy. super bowl xlix is what we are talking about. it was a great game anyway you look at it. the new england patriots beat the seahawks 28-24. it's how it happened. they were losing the whole game. it came down to this last play. the seahawks marched down the field, why don't they run? why didn't they pass? who was that guy 21? wilson is supposed to be calm. he had him on the inside shoulder. the ball was thrown perfectly. how does this happen? ends the game. watch this guy, a perfect read on that play no chance of pass interference, now, everybody is saying loo look at richard sherman, remember the old abc sport the thrill of victory, and the agony of defeat. those are the two phases. it all comes down to that play.
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was at this time right play? was it run the right way? should this have happened? let's bring in senior editor of "time" magazine sean gregory, a die hard patriots fan john spinoza berman and brian stelter. brian has been saying this is one of those games that the game was better than the commercials. sean let's start with you. they are getting criticized as is the blessing and curse of sport. wha was that play a mistake in its inception as opposed to outcome? >> nobody number himmed all game. it seems give the ball to marshawn lynch. it wasn't a horrible you know, kind of choice but it was not executed well. the receiver is supposed to pick each other off. it didn't happen. a great read by malcolm butler who we never heard of this morning. now he's the most famous guy in
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america. >> so the seahawks blew it. they should have given it to marshawn lynch their boast. why didn't they? >> a lot of people say it's inexplicable. he ran it 100 times. >> he said marshawn lynch was given the ball five times this season at the 1 yard line only scored one touchdown. it might be he's so good but he needs more momentum. >> it's hard on the goal line, too, though. >> no interceptions from the 1 yard line all season. you think no one gets picked off at the 1 that's not a risk here. that maybe what they were thinking. i don't want to be obscured, whatever the calm it was a ridiculously good play by malcolm butler. this is a guy, 24 years old, undrafted free agent, this was a guy kicked out of the first college he went to. he's on the feel he reads that play perfectly.
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an unbelievably athletic play. he picks that ball off and makes my life a lot better. >> i want to go back to what you were talking about, sean some people some sport writers were saying this was the worst call in super bowl history. do you see it that way? to me there is a risk. of any time you make the call it's going to go the other. >> you see the outcome, it's easy to say that i think marshawn lynch, he was playing great, he was a kind of a sure thing. even after he was hit, he would get those extra two, three yards. >> that's the hardest yard of the game the on the goal line. r. they were not pushing those patriots back. they have this guy, a nose guard, no. 75. this guy is the size of two normal nfl linemen and he was being very effective. when you pass the ball. we were talking about this earlier, if you hand the ball off to me the whole defense knows, that's where the ball is. there is one guy is their complete focus.
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when you are passing the ball the defense is on its heels, they have options. >> you also have a terrifically mobile quarterback. you didn't let him use his feet. the other option would be to let him move out. uconn fuse the defense, he can run it in himself. >> this is sports. but, if. >> if you go out for the super bowl, why not go out with the ball in the hand of your best player in this case it would be marshawn lynch. they didn't do that. >> russell wilson threw it into a lot of traffic. while it may be a great play it wasn't the best choice. >> let's talk about the ads, the commercials, which ones did you think were most noticeable? >> this conversation, by the way, this is why the nfl can make millions of dollars on tv rights for football. this is why it will probably be the highest rated super bowl ever we know the highest live stream ever. i'm sure it will be 110 million for tv. the ads were like pg-rated this year. it was a sort of a strange year
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for the ads. you saw somber messages thoughtful messages social messages. i actually liked it. it wasn't the kind of sex-fuelled advertising that we are used to seeing during the super bowl from there was one in fact caught me by surprise. it got a lot of hate if you will online. it was a public service announcement about protecting your kids about this little fellow right here. a lot of people were not expecting it to take the turn that it did. >> brian. >> no in fact nationwide hasn't come out with a statement and saying we were trying to start a conversation not sell insurance. in the ad it's the kid back from the dead who says here are all the things i won't be able to do in my life because i died. it was like an awkward moment at the seauing parties. i have to say, i thought it was a clever way to get their brand out there. you got saturation advertising during the super bowl. dozens of brands competing for attention.
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if you make people pay attention by fought being funny or silly or have a celebrity. you might make people pay attention a little more. >> thumbs up or down for the katy perry halftime show? >> i saw a bunch of kids they loved it. >> cuomo kids loved it more than i ever seen them watch anything of its kind. >> brian you said two thumbs up? >> she can do no wrong in my book. >> brian, we weren't expecting. thanks so much. >> the super bowl is about the event, the ads, the halftime show and the game when it is good. this was a great one. we will get a chance. so will you, to hear from the man who really made the night. malcolm butler no. 21 ladies that's me. he caught that amazing interception for the patriots. he will be on the show. >> thanks, so much guys. all right, a deadly winter storm devastating million, air travel an absolute nightmare. breaking news coverage ahead for
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you. >> at least 14 states report the measle outbreak. it's triggered vaccinations should parents who don't vaccinate their children go to jail? we will hear from both sides on a very emotional debate ahead. aquinta.com sends him a ready for you alert the second his room is ready, ya know what salesman alan ames becomes? i think the numbers speak for themselves. i'm sold! a "selling machine!" ready for you alert, only at lq.com. the exhilaration of a new engine. painstakingly engineered without compromise. to be more powerful... and, miraculously, unleash 46 mpg highway. an extravagance reserved for the privileged few. until now. hey josh! new jetta? yeah. introducing lots of new. the new volkswagen jetta tdi clean diesel. isn't it time for german engineering? startup-ny. it's working for new york state.
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. a storm is upon us it is bad, 16 states under a winter storm warning. thousands of flights cancelled. public schools shut down and over a dozen cities from chicago to boston. >> that is the situation. let's get the latest. we have meteorologist chad meyers. what are we seeing? when does it end? >> reporter: it's getting colder in. it's down to 32. it's raining. given to connecticut, it is snowing. it is snowing hard. massachusetts same story. snowing hard 18 degrees in hartford 24 in boston. it's not going to be changing over to rain there.
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there you see the number there, the new number for new york city 32. just to the south, it is all rain. but to the south of there, philadelphia all rain. then you look at this big purple area here. that's all a foot of snow or more from new city to schenectady upstate to syracuse water town you make the connection to boston. i don't know what you do with more snow boston. i don't know how high you have to pile it. more is coming. portland for you as well. new brunswick into part of nova scotia. significant storm coming. this one moves across pennsylvania right now. see how we are just in this warm front for new york city that will go away rather quickly today. the cold front will come by. this city goes from 32 to 11 in the next 12 hours. and that is going to freeze everything up. this could be a very difficult commute home by tomorrow morning, single digits. wind chills well below zero in
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all the cities from chicago to boston. chris. >> all right, chad thank you very much. we will check back in with you. i appreciate you being back there for us. japan is mourning the death of a journalist goto's wife issued a statement saying she is devastated by proud of her husband. meanwhile, japan's prime minister says the terrorists will be held accountable and is defending his policy towards racism terrorism, pardon me. the fate of a second isis hostage remains unclear. jordan continues to try to secure his release. officials still are requiring evidence that he is still alive. after being locked up in an egyptian prison for more than a year the reporter has been released. he and two colleagues that remain in jail were convicted of supporting the muslim brotherhood, something they deny. a reprieve was granted in his native australia. in a few hours, president
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obama reveals his budget a plan including a boost to middle income and raising taxes on the wealthiest americans. also in the budget crosshairs closing tax loopholes for large companies that make huge profits overseas. the president's plan calls for hundreds of billions in tax savings. >> that will go towards infrastructure projects. an epic battle didn't play on the field on super bowl xlix. it was on the "tonight show" between will ferrell and kevin hart. ferrell's take on beyonce's drunken love ♪ that's life ♪ ♪ tell me baby baby ♪ ♪ i want to in the ♪ i, i -- >> so it goes on from there,
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jimmy fallon upped the ante is drew barrymore, they lip synced to "dirty dancing." i've had the time of my love" and then kevin hart made ferrell fake cry during his version of john legend's "all of me." >> it's precious. ♪ you're all of me ♪ ♪ i'm all of you ♪ >> if only it weren't 13 minutes, we could play the whole thing. it takes a bit of a chunk out of the show. >> it caused controversy, did will ferrell lip sync that better than beyonce? that's the thing. >> controversy, you decide. >> he looked good crying to kevin hart. so from the funny to the not funny at all. you know what that is right there? measles. hundreds of people in new york may have been exposed thanks, to
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a college student on a train. one scientist is demanding parents who do not vaccinate their kids to be jailed. is there any basis in science? certainly not in law. we have a debate ahead for you. plus the man who stole the super bowl victory with an incredible catch. we will talk live to malcolm butler. there comes a time in everyone's life when you want more. like a new meticulously engineered german sedan. finely crafted. exactingly precise. desire for such things often outpaces one's means. until now. hey matt, new jetta? yeah. introducing lots of new. the new volkswagen jetta. isn't it time for german engineering? when salesman alan ames books his room at laquinta.com, he gets a ready for you alert the second his room is ready. so he knows exactly when he can check in and power up before
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>> measles outbreak is spreading. just this past week hundreds of people in new york may have been exposed when a college student rode an amtrak train through the states. this morning, 102 reported cases in 14 state. this has put new focus on the debate surrounding vaccinations. so let's have that debate. let's bring in the founding editor of real fair science, le wrote a column about parent refusing to vaccinate their children and mary holland a researcher at nyu school of law. she has written a legal blog against action for parents. great to have you both here this morning. alice this controversial op-ed
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you wrote for "usa today" said parent should be jailed. you say, like drunken drivers, the unvaccinated pose an imminent danger to others. they pose a lethal threat to the most vulnerable the immunocomprised. anti-vaccine parents are turning their children into little walking time bombs. they ought to be charged for endangering their children and others. al is alice, are you trying to get a reaction intention amelie being extreme or do you think thousands of parents should go to jail? >> no i think we should implement some sort of enforcement through persuasion through pediatricians that will refuse to accept patients unless they implement fines and as a last resort in extreme cases, you know put someone in jail for 24 hours while they vaccinate their kids. i certainly wouldn't purport prison for people though.
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>> so mary as a legal scholar and the mother of a childhood progressive autism what do you say to people like alex he's not alone, who thinks that parents who choose to not vaccinate should be dealt with strongest measures. >> i think as a legal matter all vaccines are consider unavoidedly unsafe. all the illnesses carry inherent risk. people are injured by vaccines more than 3800 people have been compensated by the federal government for vaccine injury including death. so brain damage and death are common side effects of the vaccines, just as they are the illness. >> well death is a common sidesque there have been 57 from what i read in terms of the numbers from the health and human services there have been 57 deaths in the past 25 years. it's not much. but if you are the parent of one of those 57 kids it's a shocking number. >> it is. if you look at the deaths from
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measles, the disease in the united states according to cdc there has been one death in the last 20 years. so in some respects the vaccine poses real risks to some people. i think the best people to make that decision are the parents based on informed consent. >> alex what about that that legal argument that parents need to know that vaccines can be risky. they can result in deaths as the hhs numbers show and parent are not told that by their pediatricians. >> well, the numbers are very very, very small. in 1980 before we started widespread mass vaccination, 2.6 million people globally died from measles. to this day, 400 people throughout the world die every day from measles. measles kills one in 1,000 children who get it. one in 20 who get it will come down with pneumonia, which is a very very serious infection, which can be lethal in and oft. so you have to compare the risk
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of getting measles to the risk of vaccinateing against measles. i was checking the cdc statistics. they said there is no reliable mortality data on the mmr vaccine. the most serious side effects from seize yeshs, which happen about one in 3,000 vaccines and allergic reaction which happen about one in a million. but the cdc itself says there were no deaths from the mmr vaccine. >> i think alex is not talking about the federally funded program to deal with vaccine injuries. the pharmaceutical industries and doctors have almost no liability. for that reason we created there. so in that program, there have been 57 allegations of death and over 350 allegations of compensated cases for vaccine injury from mmr. >> what about alisyn's larger point? just one second about his largest point, if you give parent the choice they're not the experts. if parents choose not to
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vaccinate their children there could be outbreaks and the kinds of deaths that we saw prior to 1980. >> right. i think life carries real risks. i this i the best people to make decisions are parents together with their health care providers. remember we have mandates in 50 states for the mmr. it's not like we have vast numbers of people opting out. that i have lawful reasons to opt out. >> go ahead, alex. >> just because you can get a win in a courtroom doesn't mean it's scientifically valid. everyone remembers erin brockovich where the bromium caused cancer in this community and the company supposedly guilty ended up settling out of court for $330 million. ascent epidemiological explanations totally debunk. >> forget erin brockovich for a moment. you are saying there has not been vaccine injuries? >> no no absolutely not.
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vaccines are not. they're nothing in life is 100%. right? so you can become injured by a vaccine, these are rare compared to the injuries caused by the diseases that they are vaccinateing against. >> that may be. who is in the best decision to decide. that's the question should it be jailed or parents together with their health care parishioners. i think doctors and parents have to make that call. they're tough. >> thanks, so much for the debate. we'd love to hear what you think about this. you can find me on twitter. we will continue the conversation in our 8:00 hour as well. thanks so much. >> thank you. >> chris. >> all right. alisyn forget about me. take a look at who will be joining us on this show. you remember this play from last night that we talked about forever, you are going to like that if you have that guy number 21 on the field, no. 1 in patriot fans hearts. there he is malcolm butler. he will join us on "new day." congratulations, champs, good to have you on the show. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger.
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. >> you are right. >> they'll say, this is the biggest. this is the most. this is not an exaggeration this play decided the super bowl. that man 21 that play made him a super bowl legend. richard sherman is crying in his dread locks, but no. 21 malcolm butler he robbed the seahawks of a touchdown and the super bowl as a result. we have him here on "new day."
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there is the champ. malcolm butler. congratulations to you. a quick question. did you get up early this morning or have you not gone to bed? >> umm, kind of both and good morning, first of all. >> good morning. >> kind of both. good morning. i kind of didn't sleep, waking up thinking about it. it beings off and on. >> look it's an amazing thing. help us out here. put us in your head during that play what you were telling us what you were telling yourself and what happened in your perspective. >> the play before that a play or two before that i can't remember like that but you know i tipped the ball up and karachied and ended up catching it. you know i tried my best to my best on that play and somehow i
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still ended up grabbing it and i was out for a play. i went to the side line. i'm thinking it was over with. so the coach called the line three corner. i said three corner. they got the best running back in the league why would we feed three corner? so i was thinking pass and the formation brought back my memory to practice the way the receiver where the line in. i got beat on that play by josh boyce at practice and i remember them telling me that you got to make that play and i knew it was do or die time and i just went with my instinct and made that play. >> wow! you know it's even more dramatic because of what happened before
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you reminded me. there was this amazing play by curse, chris falls down it bounces off his cleft. he catches it. everybody thought they were snake spit and lose the game and the guy caught the ball against his head t. same player winds up making the play. >> you vindicated yourself malcolm. so how does it feel to wake up this morning and have everybody know your name? . >> it's a great feeling. you got to stay home at the same time continue to get better work hard thank all my teammates. it wasn't just all me. it's not one against 11. it's 11 on 11 and it's just a great job to the coaches and especially my dv coach and defensive coordinator, bill, being so hard on me and expecting the best out of me and tonight i guess what they got the best out of me and it's just
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a blessing and a dream come true. >> hey, malcolm. i have to thank you. because of you, i am getting a very fancy steak dinner out of chris cuomo and mikaela ferrara my co-hosts. we had a bet i was going to have to buy them an expensive steak dinner. i woke up this morning and said oh my gosh if you want to come with me and have them buy us a steak dinner the invitation is yours. >> say no. >> thank you thank you. that's so nice of you. thank you and i guess we can just get back on that another time. >> that right. >> i thank you for the offer and everything. it's not a deny i'm just saying. >> no i'll take that as a no i'm cheap. i love you, champ, i don't want to have to buy udiner especially as a jet's fan.
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does this mean more to you to get where you are, hard time earlier in college, coming out of vicsburg mississippi, getting back into the game going undrafted having to fight your way up does it mean even more? >> i tell you like this i could have came from a rich family or had everything in the world, if i still would have made if i would have made that play not traveling the journey that i took i still feel the same way today. because that just don't happen too often. it's just a blessing. >> congratulations malcolm butler. thanks, so much for being on"new day." the country is looking at you, this morning. >> thank you thank you for having me. >> our pleasure. such a sweet guy. >> congratulations to the champ and to the patriots.
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>> we are following a lot of news this morning. let's get right to you. >> we are tracking snow sleet, freezing rain. >> the real concern right now is that morning commute. >> we will make sure the city on the move stays on the move. >> it's pretty rough. this is pretty bad. >> it's pretty bad out there tonight. >> they are in position for the game winning touchdown, a questionable play call. >> i'm the one getting the ball. >> patriots win it 28-24. >> that is the best super bowl me and my friends have ever watched. >> we have been on the other end now this time we made the play to win. meezments is the most infectious disease known to man. >> it's something to be aware of. >> this vaccine is highly affective in a scary stage. >> this is "new day." >> and good morning. welcome back to "new day." apparently i have drawn the short straw. i am outside the studios in
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manhattan. it is icy cold and wet. alisyn, it's your turn next. >> i know. i'm not warm for long. i will be out there mikaela, how is it feeling? >> it is bitterly cold. it is wet. what the problem chad is telling me is that this wet will turn to ice. we know 65 million people in 18 states are staring down the barrel of another brutal rain storm. right now the northeast is getting hit. many will try to clean up from last week's enormous blizzard we know all too well. we know there have been two deaths in nebraska blamed on this storm. >> icy roads, terrible obviously for commuters. people trying to get to work. it's not shut down the way it was with the blizzard. the storm will create all kind of drama up in the air. airline versus cancelled thousands of flights. schools are being shut down from michigan to massachusetts. no surprise there. of course it is groundhog day all over again, this is the
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home of punxsutawney phil. his forecast for spring is expected to be next half hour. it's not clear how the snow will affect his shadow. so a lot to watch there. right, mikaela? >> well the biggest concern is does punxsutawney phil have a shovel? all right. our team coverage begins with alexandra field. she is in boston. a snow emergency has been declared there. how are things looking today? >> mikaela, i think you can probably get a sense around the snow is coming down, they're trying to keep up with that cleanup. this will be a big task. at some point this morning the snow will be falling at a rate of one-to-three inches per hour. when all is said and done the city can see ten, 14 inches of snow. i know you are thinking this is deva have you dede vu. if we look at this intersection it will be the problems they have here at rush hour this
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morning. a very slow commute for people. they know they got to try to take this in stride. the other big issue the fact that you have snow coming down now, temperatures expected to plummet later today. also concerns with this added snow and the snow already in place the probability of bridges collapsing. so they are keeping their eyes on a number of different issues out here in boston schools were cancelled. mikaela, what do you do if you are a kid waking up in boston this morning? you don't have to go to school? >> i think gloating and basking in the glory of last night's game are probably at the top of the list. >> best kind of snow day ever in boston is what i'm thinking. alexander, obviously, it's going to be slow going there. we leave you in boston. heading out to cleveland, getting the biggest snowfall it's seen all winter. our ohio boy martin savage got sent home. he's fit for it. these latest conditions though are just brutal martin. >> reporter: oh they are, absolutely so. you know i have to say, i feel
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like i'm trying out for disney's "frozen" at this point. we are standing off public square. nothing that the city can't handle. i got to block my face from the wind. it's like needles out here the microphone too. that's why i have this unusual posture. they got about eight to ten inches. they are dealing with that just fine. it is the wind it is proving to be the real problem. snowdrift on public squares, streets. they're passable. they are snow packed. let me show you one of the hazards here. and that is this. power lines. this is not a power line. it is something else. but i will tempt fate by getting any closer. but this is an issue you are having. that's what the high winds are doing in addition to of course piling up the snow in snowdrift that now really become almost impassable. it will freeze and freeze solid. so it is a tough day not too many commuters above.
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a few brave souls besides me. but the wind chills here are easily at zero or below. the wind gusts are 30-to-35. the airport is opened but if you are going to fly, well it is tough to get in or out. let's just say a lot of people are staying home. >> that is the wise thing to do today. it's going to be brutal at least through mid-day. the snow will stop but the cold that's just digging in. mikaela. >> wet fit for snowplows and snowmen, neither of which you are my friend. we hear it's minus 6 with wind chill there in cleveland. let's go to chicago where a historic blizzard is slamming that beautiful city. more than 17 inches of snow fell at o'hare international airport. those hazardous conditions forcing schools and businesses to shut down. it's where we find my colleague, our brand-new colleague to cnn ryan young. we sent you right to the thick of it my friend. >> reporter: look it is cold here i almost feel like i'm in
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a snow gloechlt one of the things i want to show you is all the ice and snow starting to accumulate. we're standing right outside a coffee shop, everybody has been walking by. we were talking to them about the morning commute, so far so good they say. if you look here, this has been some of the treacherous areas, the wind chill here below zero. there is more than 350 trucks out there on the road trying to get all this stuff off the road. their transit system is working, kids here they have the day off as well. because, obviously, this snow keeps falling. if you look up here you can see wind is just blowing. isn't it a cold cold morning. much colder than yesterday. but everyone in chicago is taking this in stride. they say they know they got 17 inches as you can see, people are moving the buss are running and everybody seems to be okay with what's going on so far. >> yeah hardy folks there in chicago. they were used to this kind of thing, obviously, they want to take extra care food they are out of work. it seems the word "treacherous"
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are the word of today, especially for the morning commute. miguel marquez is braving i-95 in stanford connecticut. we drove through there, it was horrendous. how are conditions looking right now? >> reporter: like we do a lot of sillily live shots, sometimes during these weather hits. this is absolutely life-threatening. we have seen cars spun out on the roads. we seen people out of tear cars on the road t. southbound lanes are pretty heavy if you look outside there. and the roads are just packed with snow and ice. we are in that area of the storm. it is 24 degrees out right now. we are in that area of the storm where it turns from mixed ice and rain into snow and for the last three, four five miles, just outside of new york city the snow the roads have been packed with snow and ice. we are expecting up to 13 inches in this carry about a tenth of an inch of ice, miserable, miserable life-threatening conditions if you can, stay
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home. don't come out here. mikaela. >> yeah that's the thing. people think the authorities are trying to just keep you from getting around. it's for your own good. these roads are closed. travel bans are put into place, we don't know heed those warnings you heard me miguel marquez, it is potentially life-threatening. all right. let's turn to the man that knows what is in store for us. meteorologist chad myers is here this storm, it's warmer it is also creating much dangerous situations. how bad is it going to get? >> for new york city, it's 31 and rain. you can't get worse than that. they will be icing up the airplanes and roadways. we will see that snow continue from boston to hartford all across connecticut, getting slammed right now with that rain-snow mix right through new york city to the north of new york city west chester county a lot more snow and look at this next graphic. the purple area the darkest
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purple is 12-to-24 additional inches on top of what you already have now. now, if you look at new york city very little additional because it's going to be in the form of rain. rain in 31 and that's not going to be any fun because this road here here in columbus circle could be much worse tomorrow than it was a week ago on tuesday after the big snow here because it will be 11 degrees here in new york city tomorrow morning. everything that looks just like a slushy chunk will be a big ice chunk and although there has been snow chicago, the brand-new total just given to me 19.3. the winner in chicago or the loser, depending on your point of view this was a widespread snowstorm from nebraska through chicago all the way to new england, where last weeks was really new england, a little bit of new york city. this affected so many more people 70 million by last count, alisyn. >> 70 million people. that's incredible. chad in the freezing rain is
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such a bummer so this wicked snowstorm is taking a toll as chad just said on air travel as well as creating flight nightmare with thousands of cancellations and delays let's go to jean at laguardia airport. how is it looking at this our? >> reporter: alisyn they're not de-icing the planes at laguardia because the flights are cancelled. nationwide the flights keep increasing 2,300 flights, it continues to grow. here at laguardia, it's getting busier it's the employees showing up. look at security. there is no one going through security. when want to show you the board over here that really typifys what's happening. look at the departures. they are cancelled these flights. there might be one that at this point is still on time but it is early in the day. the arrivals flights are not coming here because they are cancelled. we want to show everybody the airports that are really impacted which can impact the
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rest of the country. first of all, chicago-o'hare at this point right now 200, 328 flights are cancelled. newark liberty 296 flights are cancelled. boston logan 195, new york laguardia where i am 187, jvg 90 jfk 90 flights. they are giving waivers so they will not pay for the cancellation and the fees. >> we will keep monitoring that situation. thank you very much. the other big story today, the patriots beating the seahawks 28-24. you don't need the hype. it is the truth. you see that the game came down to one play 2nd down on the 1 yard line and then -- that face andy scholes live in green dale arizona, right outside the stadium with the dramatic details. what happened my brother? >> reporter: chris, we rarely
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get a super bowl come down to one play to decide it all. we had that last night. it blew up twitter. everyone is talking about it this morning. the seahawks got down to the 1 yard line. they were on the brink of scoring a winning touchdown. they decide to throw the ball. why not run it with marshawn lynch? beesmo always gets a yard. marshawn lynch carried it five times from the 1 yard line this year. he only scored one and no quarterback threw an interception from the 1 yard line all season until that play. so that being said he still probably should have ran the ball. marshawn lynch would have scored a touchdown and they'd be super bowl champions this morning. hey, that's why we play the game. let's talk about tom brady, he kept his cool. he has been dealing with all kind of distractions with deflate-gate. throughout the whole thing, kept his cool led the patriots on two touchdown drives in the 4th quarter.
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he is now the all time leader with touchdown passes passing his childhood idol joe montana, brady got four super bowl champions, that ties montana and terry bradshaw no question when you talk about the greatest players, brady to be at the top of that list. >> you know we've ended the twice now, being ahead late not being able to make the plays to win, you owe, this time we made the play to win. so it's just awesome. >> these guys they get counted out many times during the course of the year by a lot of people. they always believe in themselves. >> reporter: while this was the fourth super bowl for brady and belichick, this was the first for tight end gronkowski. loud gronk celebrating the big win. rachel nichols asked him about his win. >> i will celebrate with my
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team my family. we appreciate all the support from everyone. >> reporter: how long is the party going to go on for? >> i don't know until we go to bed, which we may not. ha ha. >> i tell you what chris, malcolm butler did look a little tired earlier in an interview with us talking about this big game winning play right here. and the patriots they are probably still celebrating right now. they will be celebrating for quite a while. we don't know if they will be able to get back to boston with that big snowstorm hitting the east. >> one for the ages it will be remembered. i tell you, one of the big reasons is we love sport because it's life written large. right. you look at it today, tom brady, if he had lost he would have lost six trips to the super bowl. the kid, butler malcolm butler two plays earlier, he tips the ball he misses it. this guy camps it almost scores. now he's the hero. >> i can turn on a dime.
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>> one minute i was eating steak. now i'm hating myself. >> i know that's so great. >> that's not really unusual. >> that's right. well more on that later in the show. meanwhile, japan is mourning the beheading of veteran war reporter kenji goto japan's prime minister promising revenge for the deaths of two hostages vowing to make the terrorists quote pay the price. the fate of a jordanian military pilot remains unclear this morning. jordan renewing its offer to swap the pilot for a prisoner on death row. no proof of life has been provided. ukraine, facing full scale warfare, now the u.s. is considering getting involved. secretary of state john kerry will be in the region thursday both he and nato's military commander are on board with providing defensive military weapons and other equipment to the government in kiev. sunday peace talks were replaced by heavily armed separatists pounding government forces.
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rebels are now launching a company to recruit more volunteers russia is believed by ukraine officials to be behind it all. >> it was the furry fury on the field, watch these two as they take part in animal planet's 11th annual puppy bowl. oh my gosh this is so cute. comp ticks was fierce. puppies struggling with doggy toys trying in vain to get a touchdown. in the end, team rough beat out team fluff with the final score of 87-49. >> i like the way he scored. it's like he has been there before. >> confidence. i saw there. mitt romney gone, now what, for the dozen or so presidential hopefuls it is time to seize the money. who benefits the most? john king will tell us on inside politics. big question did the seahawks snatch defeat from the jaws of victory? 2nd down on the 1 yard line you
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clinched it then. then the interception seals the game for the patriots. i want to talk with a sports columnist, george martin is here co-captain of the super bowl 21 winning new york giants of the player's association, neither of you look bleery eyed. you must have gotten some sleep. first to of all, did you anticipate that? did you scream at the tv like everybody else did? >> everybody screamed at the tv i think four aparps over we could hear people screaming at the television. it's classic overthinking things. you hear pete carroll's explanation after the game. he basically says if you throw on 2nd down then you have a chance to run i on 3rd. if you throw on 3rd you have to take a timeout. overthinking it. go with your guts play. you never want to end the game like that. >> gorgeous george what do you think of that play them going with the throw on 2nd down
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instead of handing it to the beast. >> reporter: well first of all, guys congratulations to the new england patriots. i think the call was absolutely abysmal. it was the worst call i have ever seen in my life. walking out of the stadium, i was surrounded by seahawks fans. the worst call they had seen or experienced. >> really you think this is going down in the history books as the worst call? wasn't it too predictable to just hand it off to marshawn? >> mikaela, they hadn't stopped marshawn lynch all day. they had not held him to negative yardage. i got to tell you, pete tar roll is eng but unintelligent. that was not a smart play. you run with the person that brought you and marshawn lynch had a great day. it was over 100 yard rushing. instead of chris said snatched defeat from the jaws of victory. >> i wish i could know what was going on when he made the decision. i want to ask you, do you think
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that's going to be something that will be hard for him to shake? >> i mean absolutely. we have to remember there is precedent here in 2006 when usc was in the bcs title game he didn't run reggie bush and i think people are really remembering that this is kind of a little bit of a pattern not going to the running back in the last five times, stats matter marshawn lynch gets the ball on the 1 yard line five times, only scored one touchdown. no team threw a pass and was intercepted from the 1 yard line all season long. >> and one of the times you get your first nfl career interception. hindsight is 20-20. this is one of those things from sports i think bill belichick anticipated they were going with that throw. >> he put in three quarterbacks. >> genius on display. >> george what about those stats chris is touting? >> you can't handle the truth,
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george. >> chris, you looked at the season stats. i think you have toly to those out and look at the game stats for this sunday. you look at the fact they hadn't stopped marshawn a single role could go into immortality. everybody, all 90,000 people in that stadium anticipated marshawn would get the ball and would be successful at it. so why not go with the odds in this case pete decide to roll the dice. by the way, they say when you throw the football. there are two possibilities, two are not good. >> we like that. we are armchair quarterbacking today, which is awesome. i want to talk about the quarterback. george i'm curious, mvp he has what now six -- >> mvp six four times he won. >> is he the greatest of all time in recent memory of the decade? the greatest quarterback, what? >> well i think it's a bit premature because his career is still going. i think if it continues to
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blossom as it has, i think unequivocally he will be the best quarterback. i thought it was not braid-esque brady-esque. i think bill belichick crowned him as being one of the greatest coaches in the nfl. >> do you agree with the assessment? >> i don't think he needed this win to be considered among the great effort of all time. frankly, you see how things can turn on a dime right. if that interception isn't made we are talking about the two interceptions he threw in the first half and not fourth quarter. >> all of a sudden maybe he is mediocre. that's the way sport is. the ads, i think it's the first super bowl i ever remember where i remember the ads that made me feel as opposed to laugh. i don't know if you got to watch them george but there was one about caring makes a man. you know it was a soap commercial. >> that got me. then there was a dad that was
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sending his daughter off obviously joining the military. he was crying. >> that got me. then there was like a girl. you saw all these people impersonating the stereotype what it's like to fight and run as a girl. then it said girls, their self confidence crashes in puberty. were you surprised by those? >> i think this is a part of the concerted effort the nfl is making to combat this hyper masculine image. absolutely. >> that has contributed to the domestic violence issues in all of this right now. i think we still need to see actual results on paper, with how they handle future domestic violence how much of this was messaging. it was a nice start. >> george we know you located katy perry, thumbs up on her halftime show? >> fantastic performance, off the chart. her interest alone was mind boggling the entrance on the lion. >> was eight lion or a tiger? >> we will assess that on break. tweet us if you think it was a lion or a tiger.
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go to facebook.com/new day. thank you always for joining us. >> both lion and tiger in the song. that's why i say it. >> i knew that. the big story this morning, obviously, the storm. lightout conditions literally. that's cleveland. martin savage taking the beating out there for us. we will tell you what you need to know before you step out the door. plus you would think new jersey governor chris christie recognized everywhere he goes. everybody recognized chris christie. not the case. especially when he shows up on super bowl sunday. what was he doing there? john king will explain on "inside politics." ready for you alert the second his room is ready, ya know what salesman alan ames becomes? i think the numbers speak for themselves. i'm sold! a "selling machine!" ready for you alert, only at lq.com.
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. >> right. i got tongues towny phil news for you if the rodent sees his shatd dough it's six more weeks of winter. you know what he saw his shadow six more weeks to go. what does he know? people have been questioning the veracity for years now another winter storm is pummeling the northeast right now. thousands of flights already
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cancelled public schools shut down. let's get the latest for you and maybe nods to when this end, chad myers, meteorologist, what do you see? what happens? >> i want to know how phil never sees his shadow when there are 6500 light on him. it's ricked. >> what do you know? >> reporter: i think it's 31 rand raining. when i got here it was 32 now 31. it will get colder tonight. it will get down to 11 degrees. things will get icy all across the weekend from central pennsylvania all the way over to hartford all the way into boston. that's what we are seeing now. that what we will get tonight. this cold air mass is separated from rain down to the south, sandy hook all seeing rain, up to the north of there, i-95 in
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connecticut is an absolute mess. snow coming down at two-to-three inches per hour. the plows can hardly keep up with it all the way up to boston same story into portland into eastport. we will see that dark purple area. >> that is one foot of snow or more still to come. new york you get ice. not snow. this time. but ice to me is worse to drive on than some of that. by tonight, when the temperature is down to i'd say probably 20 for the drive home. everything that you see out there that looks like slush is going to be one big ice chunk. chris. it's windy here back to you. >> fix your hat, chad fix your hawaii thank you for the latest. let's get to inside politics now on "new day" with john king. look at the colors i'm wearing, john. >> i like it. we're coordinated. this is good. >> feeling good about yourself aren't you jk? >> i'm feeling good and lucky t. super bowl is not always a great game. that was a fantastic game. >> crawls my friend well
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earned. >> a nice chat with malcolm butler. i can't believe they got him up at 4:00 in the morning a. busy day to go inside politics on this happy monday with me to share their insights cleveland brown fans the daily beast. you can be there for a day. let's start, mitt romney got out of the race at the end of last week. we are talking presidential politics who benefits from this? the des moines register has a poll out that says in the short term scott walker froeb nobody is a front runner everybody is lumped together. but there is a bit at the moment of a scott walker boom. he was just out of the big iowa event. he performed very well. the poll was taken days after that event. scott walker bumps up way up for 4% when this poll was taken in october. let's look at scott walker yechld he's on abc. he knows jeb bush is probably
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the front runner. scott walker says the republicans need to turn the page. >> people want now fresh leadership big bold ideas, the courage to act on it. if we take on a name from the past which is likely to be former hillary clinton, i think we need a name for the future. >> if you are scott walker or anyone else you want to peak a year from now. not bad, how does he take advantage of it? >> scott harper seems to hark out this interesting middle. the establishment likes him. the conservative wing in the party seems to like him. he's not offensive to either. because of that speech in iowa he is experiencing this him boo. donors who might not want another bush presidency aren't sure about chris christie are definitely taking a look at scott walker at this point. >> yet, you have to say the biggest instant winner of romney getting out is jeb, right? >> oh absolutely. i think there were donors who were basically hiding in a corner sort of keeping their phones off, because they wanted
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to avoid that tough decision between romney or bush. that's an easier call in the short term yes. in the broader term it's tough to tell. walker is an interesting figure. you know in that same interview yesterday, john he sounded a joe namath note speaking of the super bowl saying don't bet against me he had won three times there from that state in four years. so he is not lacking in confident. watt interesting, don't forget about his history with romney because, you know he's making a play sort of romney donors now. don't forget walker was critical of romney 2012 sharply critical, in fact. >> right now the biggest issue is who can raise the money. the guy, one of the questions is do the republicans turn to a new days, a walker, a ted cruz or do they go to somebody who has won before in iowa. mike huckabee is an evangelical pastor. in fwoith his campaign fluttered out. other issues there, he is trying
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to explain his personal views on homosexuality and same sex marriage. he called eight choice like smoking and drinking. then he was very careful. he said he gave a speech to a lot of gay people. he listens to them. he respects their views. he says it's biblical. he's not going to change it. >> this is not just a political issue. it is a biblical issue and as a biblical issue unless you know i get a new version of the scriptures, it's not my place to say, okay i will evolve. it's like asking somebody who is jewish to start serving bacon-wrapped shrimp in their deli. >> i respect anybody's opinion, but can he sell that? can governor huckabee sell that beyond the evangelical base in iowa we have seen what 31-plus states allow same sex marriage. it will but the court in on this issue. >> you'd imagine that he's i mean among conservatives, yes, that's what they want to hear.
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>> that is his base. if he wants to expand it. >> that view may be problematic. >> it's mike huckabee using the colorful metaphor it sort of pushes the envelope there a little bit. certainly get some attention. he has been a paster at that both in politics and cable news! tick. it also speaks to his limitations, too, in the sense that, yes, the right loves it. written the sort of big donors aen the party yes still matter here that. >> let's take a look chris christie is overseas in the united kingdom this morning as he had hoped to be at the cowboy super bowl t. orthopedic sweater is gone. look at chris christie with the scarf at the arsenal game vs. as aston villa. chris christie wearing the colors. there has been some buzz before we came on a lot of people didn't know who chris christie was. that's a good thing, they're not supposed to know. >> it's like the infamy. this is one of the things that presidential contenders do to
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furnish their foreign policy credentials. he is also meeting with david cameron today. >> yeah i'm guessing john if some prominent official say in wales showed up for the new york jets game i think it's par for the course and, but here we are seeing governor christie to establish himself as more statesman. it will be fun to watch. >> he said a few minute ago across the pond. he was asked about vaccination, he says he has had his kids vaccinated. he said there should be some options for some parents in some cases. he is wading into a debate front and center that comes up every now and then. >> you wonder we were talking about this a little before you wonder who he would have found if he said you know vaccinate your kids full stop. the entire vaccination movement
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seems to be such a small focused group of people at this point. who is he going to offend by saying that? i'm really just curious. >> it's partially those who have become a part of this a very small group of anti--vaccination parents are affluent liberals mostly in san diego, los angeles. it's not really a right wing. >> it's not every vaccine is created equal. that what i meant by that. we will continue to watch those. the president releases his budget today. he says it's a blue print for middle class economics. republicans say it's denial. he asks for a bigger government role higher taxes, a redistribution of wealth. is there, what's the most important thing the president can do today knowing congress doesn't like this budget. he is hoping to increase his lever annual down the road. >> corporate tax reform something they can agree on. is. >> is this a starting document
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that can create a compromised or is this heated starting the gun for the 2016 primary? that's the question. >> thanks for coming in this morning on the first day of the patriots' super bowl reign. i was so happy to hear about the state dinner. i heard cuomo say he was cheap. don't let him be cheap. >> he said where he wants to go had i lost so we're going there. john you can come, too, i'm inviting you. >> amen it will be a very expensive dinner then. >> thanks so much. they think i'm gloating and it's true. so true. all right, meanwhile, just what john was talking about in terms of vaccinations there are strong words from the president. president obama also talking about the need for vaccinations as this measles outbreak spreads. a renowned expert infectious diseases joins us next.
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now with the xfinity tv go app, you can watch live tv anytime. it's never been easier with so many networks all in one place. get live tv whenever you want. the xfinity tv go app. now with live tv on the go. enjoy over wifi or on verizon wireless 4g lte. plus enjoy special savings when you purchase any new verizon wireless smartphone or tablet from comcast. visit comcast.com/wireless to learn more. . >> all right. welcome back. listen up to this. measles is spreading. it is deemed and outbreak by officials here's why. putting up the measles map. starting in december a handful
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turned into 58 cases, now there are about 100 all across the country. coast-to-coast you whether see them now. the question is why, how do we stop it and are we doing the right things? here to discuss the outbreak is dr. anthony foucher, the director of the national institute of lrnl and infectious diseases at the nih. doctor thank you for joining us. let's talk about the rate and the concerns of the spread? >> well, the concerns as you said correctly, that it is spreading. and the reason it is is because there is a group of percentage of the population of children who have not been vaccinated for a variety of reasons. we have a very effective measles vaccine. measles is a highly infectious zeechlts for disease. we are trying to explain. i don't think parents are trying
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to do anything bad. think they need to understand. >> we will get into that decision-making process. we will play it out, test it. i will test the other side of you on that. >> okay. >> how will this end in 2000 the government had said measles was gone. why is it back? what will make it gone again? >> well it's back because there is not the level of vaccination that there should be. we need to get pockets of people who have not been vaccinated vaccinated. you have a vaccine that if you get two of the prescribed doses, you can be up to 97 to 98% effective. when you have regions of the country in which you have maybe 10% of the people of the children don't get vaccinated then you have a vulnerable group. >> that is the reason why we're having this outbreak which is a direct answer to your question. the way around that is to make sure we can get vaccinations for the children who can be
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vaccinated. very very few exceptions about that. >> all right. now let's play to the concern here. okay. >> all right. >> i'm the parent. i don't want to get my kid vaccinated. here's why. one, measles is a remote risk and i will have side effect chances on my kid. they could die. there have been 57 deaths because of the vaccine going wrong. you had almost 4,000 people compensated for government vaccines it's not worth the risk. i'm not doing it. you can't make me. >> first of all, you don't attack a parent for their decision. you try to explain to them the risk benefit. and the risk that the parents sometimes put on the vaccine is not based on scientific data. what we forget is the seriousness of measles as an infection. some people say it's trivial. well the reason we don't have measles in this country in 2000 until it now has come back is because there has been
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vaccination which not only protects children who can be vaccinated but also protects children who can't for a variety of reasons. of immunosuppression or what have you. there is a two-pronged reason one to protect your own child and two to protect the community. we try to explain to parents why that's the case. measles is not a trivial disease. you talk about the very rare toxic or adverse event of a vaccination. when measles was in this country prior to vaccination, we had serious problems. we had 500 deaths per year during the peak in the world today. right. there are 20 to 30 million cases of measles and about 150,000 deaths. you can't forget that. we should not forget that. >> so let's put it there. it's much worse where they don't do the vaccine protocols. so what are you going to do about it? just talking to people obviously, isn't the solution because the problem is being
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created because people aren't heeding your warnings should government do something more in terms of enforcement. >> well i think what we need to do first of all the state restrictions are handled by the state. what we can do is try to respect the parents, but try and get the information to them to realize many parents don't want their children vaccinated not for deep philosophical reasons but because they feel it might hurt them. it hurts, it's painful or there are too many clusters. if you balance that against the deletereous effect of the disease, i think with proper and getting people to understand the risk benefit that you will start to see patients turn around or parents turn around and get the children vaccinated. i think the amount of attention right now about the outbreaks, it's something that's a wake-up call to people. if you don't see any measles at all, that's one of the problems with vaccinations. we're the victims of our own
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success. because you suppress the disease, people don't see the threat. when they saturday seeing the threat they can change their mind. >> victims of our own success. the threat is real. we are seeing it spread across the country. dr. anthony fauci, thank you for the word. we will help you as the data changes. we will report on the story as responsibly as we can. mick. >> all right. the dip and the wings have been eaten. the beer fridged cleaned up after that epic super bowl party you what were the seahawks thinking by not running marshawn lynch? we'll get our panel of experts to weigh in. (vo) after 50 years of designing cars for crash survival, subaru has developed our most revolutionary feature yet. a car that can see trouble...
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the markets, they're squirrely so far this year. why? i don't know either. but i know who does. chief business correspond christine romans laughing her way all the way to the bank "in the money" center. you can use it. >> squirrely, a good technical term for the market. january was the worst in the year. the dow fell almost 4%. s&p 500 fell almost 3% thanks to falling oil prices and global growth worries. last january was even worst and the s&p 500 finished the year up 11%. super bowl ads got serious this year. one fan favorite this emotional budweiser ad. bud brought back the clydesdale
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and puppies for this year's hit and also dad vertisments celebrating fatherhood and mcdonald's asking customers to pay with acts of love or complement and this campaign unsurprisingly getting laughs on social media. a lot of sarcasm on social media. >> a lot of them got me last night. >> it wasn't the beer drinking girl chasing guys so many advertisements in the past have alleged. >> we all take a cry over that said no man ever. winter storm warnings in almost 20 states. we'll tell you what to expect if you travel today. stay with us.
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on the move stays on the move. >> it's pretty bad. >> pretty bad out there tonight. >> the seahawks were in position for a game winning touchdown. but a questionable play call. >> you have to blame it on me because i'm the one that gave him the ball. >> it is the best super bowl me and my friends have ever watched. >> we've been on the other end twice now and this time made the play to win. >> the most infectious disease known to man. >> something to be concerned about and aware of. >> there is every reason to get vaccinated. there aren't reasons to not. >> this is "new day." >> good morning, everyone. welcome back to "mu day." it's february second. i'm coming to you from outside the studios in midtown manhattan. man, is it miserable out here. you guys downplayed how bad this is. how warm is it in the studio?
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must be awfully toasty and nice. >> a little hot. >> can you bring me a cup of ice for my latte? >> very funny. i will be back inside in a minute. it is lousy out here. there is another monster winter storm pileing on the northeast. this morning, 65 million people are feeling the force of this. there have been two deaths in nebraska being blamed on the storm. there is chaos at the nation's airports. thousands of flights already canceled and the roads and highways to nebraska are choked with ice and snow. they're dangerous and they are a mess. let's begin with team coverage with alexander. how is it looking there? >> they thought they had it behind them. the snow started overnight, expected to last well past mid night and looking at 14 inches of snow on top of snow.
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you still have it on the ground here from last week snowbanks covered with fresh snow. this is the cut they made in the snow when they tried to clear things out after last week's snow trying to clear things out for this week's snow. it is a mess and the snow is only part of the concern looking at temperatures plummeting later in the day and will cause flash freezing. this is a mess throughout the day. boston public schools closed for the day and public transportation still open. the next few hours, this is the tough part of the snow for people in boston. looking at snowfall rates of 1-2 inches per hour and the wind blowing picking up the snow and sort of throwing it into the roads. ails alisyn you saw pictures. and this city has bragging rights and this morning they have bragging right on top of bragging rights. you can't put a damper on the
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spirit of the city this morning, considering last night's victory, easier to take this in stride. alisyn. >> you're right. there is that silver lining and we're struggling to find one outside of midtown manhattan. also cleveland has been hit with the biggest snowfall it has seen all winter. right now, it is 12 degrees there. winds are brutal. feels like negative 17 degrees. that's where we find martin savidge on the ground to tell us about it. martin i know you can feel my pain and yours is even worse. how is it? >> reporter: alisyn we are pegging the misery meter, i can tell you. the worst is past us the good news. they have 8-10 inches here more to the west. it is going to snow a little bit more. it is the wind and blasting us. right now, coming from the exact opposite direction of yesterday, which means this storm is moving
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away. it's like needles against the side of the face 20-30 miles an hour. let me show you what it's doing, stuff like this lines that are down creating problems not just the hardzard knocking out power and traffic lights and traffic lights don't work. streets are snow covered, trying to plow but the wind is causing it to drift. they can't keep up with it for the moment. it will get better as the day goes on. lots of flights canceled or delayed. every school in the area just about closed. offices are open, courts some are closed and some delayed scheduled and frozen lines on the rails is a real problem. for commuters on a monday morning, it is a rough go. i'd say the same for reporters, alisyn. >> yes i agree. case in point.
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you're right. it is the wind the wind is so strong. it is sleeting at the moment. it does feel like needles, as martin said on your skin. it is a historic blizzard. also belting chicago, whopping 17-inches of snow at the chicago airport making it the snowiest february day in the city's history if you can believe that. let's go live to ryan young for the very latest. you're making history, ryan. >> reporter: we've been told the snow is almost up to 19-inches here. you can see what's left behind as we see the people trying to clean the sidewalks. we talked to one woman who said she's been trying to get to work for one hour and trying to dig herself out couldn't do it and decided to take public transportation and walking the sidewalks is treacherous, as you can see, some clear and some not. the big work has been on the roads. they also canceled school here
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and people have been pushing through. the windchill factor here is below zero whipping our faces and even hard to talk at some points. so far so good in terms of the morning commute. alisyn. >> you're doing a great job talking. be careful on those sidewalks, you're right, extremely slippery and the roads are also very treacherous. miguel marquez is driving on i-95 in fairfield, connecticut, to give us a sense how dangerous it is there. what are you seeing miguel? >> reporter: if you could stay home and eat waffles all morning and maybe all day, i suggest doing that. it is miserable out here. take a look at i-95 northbound just north of bridgeport connecticut. we've been on the road about three hours now and can only get to 30 miles an hour at the most. we haven't been able to get out of the area where it is mixed rain and sleet and snow in this storm. just north of us it's snowing even harder. we can't get that line because
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we keep falling along in this icy rain that we are experiencing right now. we're seeing cars spun out alongside the road people stopping to get the ice off of their wipers. we saw one person walking across the freeway amazingly enough. there are a lot of snow plows on the road having a tough time keeping up with it. there are six plows that go all the way across the road and get the snow off and ice underneath that. there is a 10th of an inch of ice in this area and it is miserable. >> because of your traffic report i called my family and said do not drive anywhere roads are very dangerous. thanks so much for pointing that out for everyone watching how dangerous it is. how much snow will fall today and how cold is it going to get? let's bring in cnn meteorologist, chad myers. wow, this is lousy, chad. >> it is.
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a sweep just started again. it stopped for a while. when i got here this morning, it was 34 then 33 and now 30 raining and sleeting. i think people in this town are taking this too non-challantly. this will freeze up about 2:00 and the whole place will look like it needs a zamboni. there you go. the issue is at this point in time the ice freezes up in about the next two hours or so. if that happened and people are now just to their jobs or to their schools whatever they're going to get caught off guard in the city. connecticut, you're getting pounded, massachusetts, rhode island island all the way up to maine, so much snow coming down just like we saw in chicago, 15 inches of snow coming down there. there is your radar and you begin to see a little bit of changeover. that's the pink area the sleet and snow. if i drive you up here and move you to connecticut, that is all snow along i-95.
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new haven getting slammed with snow, three inches of snow for at least the next three or four hours. and the whole location see the purple area a foot of snow to go where new york city gets only probably a half-inch of ice before it changes to snow again later this afternoon. this is going to be a mess tonight, all the cities. even though it looks wet right now, by tomorrow morning where i'm standing it will be 11 degrees. everything will be frozen. be careful as you walk drive, slide home tonight. it will get messy. >> and dangerous, my friend. that's why we want people to know ice on the roads. we know how that goes. you stay safe and we'll talk to you more. what are the implications? if you're at home prepping to fly, don't rush. if you're at home for today, enjoy. following this flurry of cancellations and delays for us what do the big boards say?
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>> reporter: the big boards are saying the majority of flights are canceled. 2300 flights plus are canceled at this point all across the country. here we are at laguardia. so many flights go out. look at the security line. there is nobody there because of all the cancellations. let's show you the boards here. you can see the majority of flights are still canceled. there are some saying they are on time now. even one to boston. we'll see if that happens. so many airports have canceled or delayed flights that take airplanes across the country. chicago, number one with 333 canceled flights. newark liberty, 297, boston logan, 208 and goes from there. the majority of airlines are giving waivers to people so you won't pay cancellation fees. let's not forget phoenix, sky harbor they expect 100,000
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passengers today in that airport. many flights that begin or change planes go to phoenix or come from phoenix. there may be cancellations or delays from all those people trying to get back from the super bowl. >> tell them to hang tight there, probably not going anywhere fast. the worst of this massive storm swept through pittsburgh and leaving behind another major problem, freezing rain. joining us right now from pittsburgh the mayor of pittsburgh. thank you for joining us mr. mayor. >> thank you. >> punxsutawney phil 80 miles from his city he saw his shadow and we will get six more months of winter. you have to answer for him. >> i can't answer for him. i made that jaunt twice before. i was hoping he would be with us this time and giving us a little bit of a break. >> it sounds as though you guys had quite an evening there.
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how are things looking this morning? did you avert a potentially bad situation there? >> we did. fortunately. it can change in a matter of minutes. really what we're watching we're still under it the threat of ice, rising temperature, frozen surfaces. you can pretreat and even that melts and allows it to turn to ice once again. we're going through a rush hour cautiously right now. >> i imagine you're advising people to take caution going out the door. how are your road crews doing? you mentioned freezing rain and getting down to the teens there and icy conditions are a concern. >> we actually changed to a 12-hour shift at 6:00 p.m. last night and had a shift over at 6:00 a.m. and upped the crews from 33 to 45 around 70 at this point. what we're doing is pretreating
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and making sure the salt is going down again. what we also did is we combined with mellon university this past year and created a snow tracker system. for people at home you can sit in your living room and find out by getting online where your plow has been and where it's going and watch in realty the operation. >> -- in realtime the operation. >> it gives people a chance to plan whether they should brave the elements at all. >> probably by next year we can do that and show a route and type the address like a map system to show where the roadways that have been done. for us we were able to see what streets were being missed under a system that wasn't automated before. >> are you anticipating at any point, given the temperatures expected overnight, freezing temperatures and more moisture are you expecting freezing temperatures all together and putting a travel ban in place? >> at this point, we're not. we're at a level 1, five levels
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being a full emergency operation. we had downgraded it when the temperature started to rise late last night. at the same time we anticipate we will be doing that later this year. winter has a way of hanging around in western pennsylvania and usually doesn't go until after st. patrick's day. >> you folks are top there at pitt. you know how to handle this thing. thanks for joining us. we know you have a busy day ahead. >> thank you. so the big game was indeed a classic. and it really did, just like all the hype and exaggeration of sports it came down to one play. andy schultz is live in phoenix. give us the score and more my smiley friend. >> reporter: the score was 28-24, patriots. the drama was so real so exciting. this play has a lot of people
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talking this morning. seahawks got down to the 1 yard line. all they had to do was punch it in with marshawn lynch. they're going to run the ball right? but, no, they throw the ball and malcolm butler comes up with an interception. why do you throw the ball there? in the seahawks defense, marshawn lynch, he had run the ball from the 1 yard line five times during the regular season and only scored a touchdown once and no quarterback all season had thrown an interception from the 1 yard line. so they had that in the back of their heads. that being said no one would have second-guessed running the football. but they threw it and malcolm butler will forever be a patriot hero for the interception. this was such an impressive effort from the patriots considering all the dis distractions of deflate gate they had to go through during the week and catching up with robert kraft on his team's performance over what they had to deal with over the past few
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weeks. >> reporter: how did all the accusations about the footballs and deflate-gate affect this team and how does it influence how this team feels? >> i'm proud of brady and belichick and the way they've handled themselves. >> reporter: how much do you think you guys will be talking about deflated footballs in the coming weeks opposed to champion rings? >> i know that trophy isn't deflated so we're all good. >> reporter: for tom brady, his legend continues, now won four super bowls matching his childhood idol joe montana for a qb. thrown the most touchdowns in history and super bowl history. he has three super bowl mvpst. we had the conversation who is the greatest quarterback, tom brady could be at the top of the list. he could have easily been 3-3 if malcolm butler didn't come up with that interception. what i think he could easily be 6-0 elayi didn't make those plays.
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>> why did they do this play? nobody saw it. he was supposed to run. you know who saw it coming bill belichick, the coach of the pats. he put in an alignment. that's coaching. >> malcolm butler. >> that's me! >> i'm happy to be back. i'm dethawing. >> where did you go? >> i went out to the worst conditions ever! new york is really getting pummeled. >> i do like that. appreciate that. >> whets your appetite. >> japan says it's planning to expand its support for the fight against isis as the country mourns journalist kenji goto beheaded by isis. goto's wife issued a statement saying she was devastated but proud of her husband. the fate of a second isis hostage, jordanian military
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pilot still unclear. jordan still trying to secure his release but want proof he is alive. a medical trial for a drug to treat ebola has been scrapped. why? because the number of infections in liberia has sharply dropped in recent weeks and leaves only a handful of patients enrolled in this study. the world health organization says ebola continues to fall in three countries hardest hit in the last year ginny,uinea, liberia and sierra leone. >> i've seen a lot of things but not this. a man hooked himself to pair of skis and back of a vehicle and, yep, cruising along, until a local news crew spotted him and broadcast his trip live. the local mayor happened to be being interviewed by the station at that time not impressed. he called on police to track down the skier and ticket him. and they did that. >> that's not allowed?
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>> not allowed? . you can't waterski behind a car in the snow? >> apparently not. >> he was snow skiing. >> that is sort of like waterskiing, right? >> yeah. he was tethered. >> we have a lot of work to do. she confuses waterskiing -- >> the dynamic is like that. >> i don't want to like you today because of the patriots. when you're right, you're right. you have to ticket the guy. coincident i don't like theunnecessary government or police action but you have to ticket the guy or he could get hurt. he looked cool. cool points. we are following the deadly winter storm. there is a blizzard forcing schools to shut down in chicago and cleveland and connecticut. it has paralyzed airports. it is an absolute mess. breaking news coverage for you. measles is no joke and practiced to the east coast. so many illnesses going around
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let's bring in dr. gallagher, and infectious disease and public health specialist and debra, who chooses not to vaccinate her son. i want to start with you. you vaccinated your first son but you choose not to vaccinate your second son. why? >> my first son reacted very badly to the mmr vaccine. he had a fever. he showed signs of encephalopathy brain swelling. after that his health suffered and he was diagnosed with autism. we've took him to an immunologist. that vaccine not only injured him but failed. the injury was so serious i couldn't dare risk my second son's health with it. >> what do you say to parents like becky, who believe ss it
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would put her second son at risk were she to vaccinate him? >> i had a chance to read about her family in advance of the show. it sounds like there is a history of auto-immune in the family. if he's not responding that points to his immune system not being normal and not responding normal the way yours and mine would. her son is precisely the type of child who has a medical reason not to receive the evacuation sin. the best protection for children like her son is for everyone else around her son, his classmates and so on to be vaccinated. that way, he's not exposed to the measles virus. >> becky is not alone. becky is not the only person in this situation. many families don't take this lightly, they're not vaccinating their children for a reason similar to or in their mind medically based and it's hard
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when they're being vilified. >> there's a lot of misinformation what are the risks associated with measles vaccine. in the case of her son, if you have a weak immune system. the strain of the virus in the vaccine for you and me is not dangerous, a weak strain. for somebody with a weak immune system it behaves like the actual wild measles virus. she describes her son had encephalitis infection of the brain. he could have had that from the wild measles virus as well. the difference is the average child can conquer the virus strain in the vaccine but not the wild one. >> becky, what do you say that people like you and you are anti-vaccine? >> i'm not anti-vaccine. i want parents making informed decisions and knowing everything about these vaccines beforehand. i had no idea my son was
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immunocompromised. i don't know if he could have had encephalitis from the wild measles vaccine. there are problems with the mmr vaccine. japan took it off their schedule only after four years and 2,000 adverse events. there are problems with the vaccine. we have 58 deaths associated with the vaccine and vaccine compensation program. we are from a family with auto-immune disorders. no one warned us beforehand. now i have a son that has permanent brain injury the rest of his life and parents need to know that. >> she thinks the parents need to know that because when you go to your pediatrician let's be honest they never say there could be risks to this vaccine, what's your family history. here's the schedule of your family history and here's the schedule of the vaccines let's do these vaccines. >> you need to prepare your family history, is there a history of immunoauto disease.
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after your son had a bad reaction to the vaccine. there should have been a question asked at that time and shouldn't have continued to give repeated doses. >> they told me he had the flu, there's nothing wrong. it happened twice. his brain has suffered for the rest of his life. there are consequences. >> i think the problem is it's not the vaccine, per se it's the physician providing it not asking the appropriate questions first. >> what do you say to people who say by not vaccinating your second son, the son who is healthy, you're putting other children at school at risk? >> i asked them what they would do in my situation, to really think about it? would they risk brain swelling and permanent injury to save all the other children around them or would they take their parenting responsibility for their child. i think almost everybody would make the same decision as my
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husband and i made. >> doctor what's the answer here. >> i don't fault her for the decision she's making. there's a family history of auto-immune disease. her first son sounds like he had an immunodeficiency and the second son may be at risk. >> what about those debating this right now? what is the answer for them? ask more questions. >> ask more questions. for those interested in learning the details on my twitter feed i posted the data includeing institute of medicine reports and looked at what the safety issues are. measles vaccine does not cause autism. encephalitis does not cause autism. it's brain damage from the infection, but not autism. it's important to understand these distinctions. >> we invite people to do their own research and becky, thanks for joining us and dr. gounder, thanks for joining us.
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please tweet us @newday or facebook us. love to see your comments. 65 people across 18 states are dealing with what you see right now. we have the latest on the conditions flight cancellations and information what is next. amid all that snow the northeast is cheering the patriots win and the northwest feeling the pain. they just missed a victory of the super bowl by a mere 3 feet. we will discuss what went on. who takes the fall for that call? our experts up ahead. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me and you're talking to your rheumatologist
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from chicago to boston. let's bring in chad myers for the latest forecast. tell us about this. it is going to get quite gnarly by the end of the day. >> reporter: it is. it is 30 and by the evening it will be 11. there have been a lot of places from chicago through detroit, buffalo, across parts of the poconos now, snowing hard in boston hard along i-95 corridor up into connecticut, very heavy snow seeing mixing still sleeting. laguardia is seeing 29 degrees. you see a little bit of mixing along i-95. everything will re-freeze tonight. >> might be the least of our problems. at least you get traction. by tonight and the places where it changed over for a little while, whether new york long island or parts of connecticut, all of it will re-freeze and this thing will turn into a hockey rink. it will be very difficult to
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drive. today, as they call it in the city today is a train day, take mass transit. trying to get home tonight in a car will be very difficult, michaela. >> chad thank you. time now for five things you need to know for your new day. that powerful winter storm hitting hard after battering the midwest. from chicago to boston thousands of flights canceled. >> new england patriots and their fans celebrating superbowl xlix over the seahawks. the goal interception kept seahawks from winning and repeating as champions. obama says parents should get kids vaccinated. many out of boundses are linked to an outbreak at disneyland in california. japan mourns murdered isis
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hostage, kenji goto. his wife says she honors him. and whitney houston's daughter bobby brown found in a bathtub full of water, face down. is that jordanian pilot captured by isis alive? that's the burning question after terrorists be headed a japanese hostage. we'll break it down for you. what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
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serfaty. japanese journalist kenji goto has been murdered like so many others. isis releasing a video this weekend flaunting their crime. jordan attempting to negotiate with the terrorists. that went nowhere. isis never showed proof of life with their pilot who remains with them as does the woman. what to do about this jane harmon. always good to have you with us even though such dark matters to
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discuss. what do you do when a group of murderers comes to us and says we have one of yours. >> our policy against paying ran some of is a good policy. we pay ransom for some guys they will kidnap more of our folks. >> the policy is supposed to be no negotiating at all, not just ransom. >> i -- i -- i don't agree with that. i don't think that actually is our policy. i think there are some conservations not reported on the air waves we should be having. certainly, it was clear we made and effort in syria to capture a couple of our guys who sadly were beheaded after that. our policy against paying ransom is the right policy. trading, when interest is a prisoner of war is a different policy. that doesn't always work out well either. the good news is there is some good news on this icy snowy day in new york. that is that isil is overplaying this. the reaction in jordan and japan is very strong now.
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if we're building a more unified front with all these countries vigorously fighting this menace they lose. >> you look at the bergdahl situation, there is a lot of controversy surrounding him. government awkwardly quiet on the status. you make a trade, five guys for one. the big concern, these are bad guys going to be bad once again and looks like it's headed that way. what's the story there? >> i don't know the full story. i know what the public record shows. i don't think that trade was fully vetted. i think that's unfortunate. i think there were people in our u.s. government who should have been consulted about the five guys. >> they weren't. why not? >> i don't know why. that's what i said. i don't know the back story here. i think there was more to know about bergdahl and the five guys. i don't think trading is bad for prisoners of war. i think there was an issue about him and about them. if they go back to the fight and
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these are serious vicious leaders, i think that's a big problem for us. >> let's check a few more boxes. ash carter you know him. >> i know him well. >> he has a very rich pedigree and will be the next secretary of defense if everything goes right. secretary hagel says he doesn't like what was happening with the white house, how he was getting second-guessed on situations. what can you say about ash karlt carter that will portend it different. >> the president has the right to have who he wants there in his government. and hagel came out of the senate and caused his colleagues to be annoyed. ash carter is different, physicist from harvest and deep in the pentagon building secretary of defense and head of acquisitions program before that. i think he's his own man. he's made that very clear.
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i serve on the defense policy board, full disclosure here. my sense is he will carry out the directives of the commander in chief and will give advice. good news this new budget coming out today and tomorrow blows through sequestration through defense spending and domestic spending really good call for president obama. >> will have what he needs to keep his own head. >> yes. >> romney is out. how do you think it is shaping up for your team? >> i think both sides in this race will have governors in them. if hillary clinton is on my team she'll have a governor as a vice-presidential nominee. i don't know who's on the other team but there are a lot of good governors who are very well qualified to be president of the united states. one's name is bush and there certainly are others and all in washington this weekend for the aillfalfa dinner. on the other side used to be governors of virginia.
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they are both senators now and there's a good governor in colorado his name is hickenlooper. these are purple states these are the kinds of states the democrats will need support from to win. >> on name alone. hickenlooper tough to pete. tough to pete. jane harman thanks for being with us always appreciate the perspective. perspective. we will talk superbowl xlix. did one bad call lead to defeat for the seahawks? highs and lows for superbowl xlix next.
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♪ ♪ it is the play seen around the world for the patriots the catch made by malcolm butler a rookie. and john s. berman and andy scholes live outside the stadium. and our reporter for "entertainment tonight." normally i'd start with the lady. i have to talk to my man, andy what it felt like in the stadium, if you can recall the moment when the call was made and the end result. i understand it was packed with seahawks fans in the stadium. >> reporter: absolutely.
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i'd say it was 70-30 seahawks fans and they were pretty much celebrating like they were going to win the game. why wouldn't they? patriots fans that were in attendance were pretty much wiping aware their tears thinking they had lost their third straight super bowl and then the play we're talking about, malcolm comes up with an amazing question. why the seahawks decided not to run the ball is the million dollar question this morning. >> john berman how much are you lording this over him? >> the whole thing is still unbelievable to me. two plays before when jermaine kearse caught the ball in the best play ever seen i was certain the patriots would lose because they would hand the ball off to marshawn lynch several times in a row and it would end because that's what you do when you have the best running back on earth. i was shocked when they didn't do it.
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the seahawks have done gutsy plays. >> that's how they scored at the end of the half. >> that's how they scored a field goal two weeks ago and do crazy stuff. >> i'm letting you gloat. you enjoy this. i don't like the way the team got beat up with the de deflate-gate and they played last night and the seahawks did not. talking about the kid that made the catch. there's your boy. he made the catch. the call from your coach you always tell me is the smartest coach in the history of the game everybody thought they were going to hand off. not him. >> he had the package in there. that's not totally true. they had the run-stoppage in there, patriots did. >> three corners. >> seahawks had three receivers in. they didn't have the right package. what malcolm butler said was bill belichick had coached us on this formation for two weeks. so malcolm butler said i recognized this because bill belichick told me this is what
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it was going to look like. because they coached me up on this i knew what to do. i knew how to jump the route when it came to this moment. >> never heard that statement before. let's talk about other stuff that is obviously big in the aftermath of super bowl. michele, overall, how did you think the show was? halftime and commercials. i know you were watching it all because you're a football fan. >> i don't want to rain on john berman's parade. can we talk about that call? it was tweeted this morning, that was the worst call he had ever seen in the history of football. i have to concur. i don't think that was a gutsy call. that was a bonehead call by pete carroll. he will never forget that. after the halftime show i was still singing get your freak on with missy elliott. i didn't even really pay attention to the second half of the game because i was so hyped with katy perry. >> that's what was wrong.
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>> reporter: exactly. the commercials were a little bit disappointing. i kind of felt like we were trying to give dads a lesson how to be a parent throughout the whole football game. i'm kind of disappointed with the commercials. the puppies an dogs got me and like a girl commercial. >> it was fantastic. >> the like a girl was strong also. >> he was choking up. >> the dove commercial with the dads catching their kids got me. >> there was a shroud of anxiety over my eyes at commercial. i saw nothing. looking at the screen the whole time i saw nothing. >> were you wearing your brady jerseys? you and the boys? >> we were jumping up and down screaming, a wonderful thing. >> what's the feedback on katy perry? did people like the halftime show? >> i saw a lot of is she riding on the more you know shooting star at the end shooting fireworks. but i think people liked it. i think i was hearing they wanted more lenny kravitz.
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people were really excited about missy. there's a little bit of general consensus, missy elliott kind of outshown katy perry. she let her do three songs and gave her a great assist. i thought it was a really good halftime show. i'm telling you, i put it up against prince and beyonce and i don't think any's given better halftime shows than them. if i have to rate it. >> what's your rating? >> middle of the road for me. but i love missy and i'm a katy perry fan. >> i'm a lenny kravitz fan. thanks for joining us andy scholes and john berman you can gloat a few more days. >> like he played the game. >> are you kidding me? i'm still show. didn't even know i was putting on red and blue in the morning because it was dark. i hate myself even more. congratulations to you. we're trying to cover what's going on with this storm.
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it's not easy. we have a story for you. missing dog and one firefighter. a little bit of good stuff for you. that fire dog is called a whip whipit, by the way. right when you feel a cold sore, abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days when used at the first sign. without it the virus spreads from cell to cell. only abreva penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. you could heal your cold sore, fast, as fast as two and a half days when used at the first sign. learn how abreva starts to work immediately at abreva.com
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when salesman alan ames books his room at laquinta.com, he gets a ready for you alert the second his room is ready. so he knows exactly when he can check in and power up before his big meeting. and when alan gets all powered up, ya know what happens? i think the numbers speak for themselves. i'm sold! he's a selling machine! put it there. and there, and there, and there. la quinta inns and suites is ready for you, so you'll be ready for business. the ready for you alert, only at laquinta.com! la quinta! . the good stuff here. fire department. new york city firefighter david kelly recently trapped a stray
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dog to keep it safe from the blizzard we had. he discovered the dog was no stray, burt missing for five months. there was a facebook page. he made a few clicks and reunited the owner with the dog five months later. >> she said she was very thankful and wanted to reward me. said no that's not what i'm all about. she was very happy to see her dog. >> what a hero. >> he's so low-key, of course. >> true heroes. that's it for us. a lot of news this morning. let's get you to the "newsroom" with carol costello. throwing you the ball. 21 ladies that's me! >> i decided to run it. >> smart lady. >> have a great day. "newsroom" starts now.
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