tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN June 5, 2016 1:00am-3:01am PDT
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see the full spectrum of human folly, and commit some follies of your own. hello, everyone, and welcome to our viewers here in the u.s. and all around the world. i'm michael holmes. >> and i'm zain asher. welcome to a special edition of "newsroom" as we continue to cover the life and legacy of muhammad aliment. >> the u.s. city of louisville, condition ken, celebrating the live of its hometown hero, muhammad ali. he died at the age of 74 on friday surrounded by his family.
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>> the ceremony is holding ceremonies friday and saturday. locals paying their own respects, attributes on their own, laying flowers and well wishes outside of alley al li's childhood home. >> the greatest brings everybody together and the best out of them. what's the call to action? sure, celebrate him. what are you going to do to make the world a better place. my hope is throughout this week people are asking themselves that question and really respecting those values he stood for. >> and joining us now is cnn world sports don wooddell with more on ali's life.
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>> they want this to be a public ceremony. it's going to be held on friday in a basketball arena which seats 22,000 people. we wonder if that's going to be enough. not just his fans, just the people he inspired zp he -- and hement so much to so many different people from so many different walks of life. that's where it's going to culminate in this basketball arena. there's going to be a procession of the hearse through the town. he's instructed the procession moving slowly so the chance to get a chance to pay their respects and at the final ceremony, it's going to be an inner faith ceremony. it will follow muslim traditions. >> the fact that it's going to be interfaith which shows he
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embodies so much to so many people. >> explain to us why billy crystal was chosen to give the ewe loling dsh eulogy. >> there was a day where ali was going for a run in a golf course. he said bud y why don't you come run with me? . he said i can't, i'm jewish. they won't let me run there. >> ali was lived. he stood up for what he believed in. and ali refsed to fight in the war. ali's stance really gave
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families like crystal's the strength and the backbone and the inspiration to stand up. no. we're not going either. so mrs. crystal made this speech to the draft board. she said you are not having our son. ali's stance zp words were words that we needed to hear. those examples really show what ali stand for. >> i'm curious one of the things that's sort of the dichotomy of -- it's a violent sport, a violent inside the ring but a gentle man outside. >> some of his fights were absolutely brutal.
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thrilla in manila, these guys pummelled each other for 14 rounds. it's not uncommon for boxers to be a bit more gentle outside of the ring. he's been described as the fighter who wouldn't fight, and he was so passionate about not going to vietnam, as i said, prepared to go to jail for it. it cost him the best four years of his career, descripd of his boxing title. to then come back and get his license, win the world title again, he's the only guy to whole the title three different times, three different occasions. remarkable athlete. from fellow boxers to world leaders tributes have been pouring in for muhammad ali.
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u.s. president boem says he was the greatest, period. michelle and i send our deepest condolences to his family and we pray that the greatest fighter of them all finally rests in peace. >> david cameron says mohammed alley was not just a champion in the ring, he was a champion of civil rites and a role model for so many people. manny pacquiao said we lost a giant today. mr. obama and a former presidential candidate took time
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to remember ali. >> he was a beautiful boxer and a great athlete, but the reason that ali struck a chord in the hearts of so many americans but not just his great boxing skill. it was his incredible courage. at a time when it was not popular to do so. >> so many people feeling those words, that was democratic presidential hopeful bernie sanders at a campaign event in california. and also in california, bill clinton who will eulogize at his funeral on friday. he touched on the box great's talent in the ring. take a listen. >> when i was a boy and i saw him box the first time, i thought, you know we're looking at something we may never see
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again. i mean, he was like golden state on the basketball court. right? it was like watching somebody you couldn't decide if this guy is a boxer or a ballerina, the way he moved, the speed, the grace. >> and donald trump joined in remembering ali who months ago tore into the presidential candidate who tore into -- for proposing a ban on muslims entering the u.s. and trump qitd this, obama said in his speech that muslims are our sports heroes. what sport is he talking about and who? is obama profiling? days later, ali said we as
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muslims have to stand up to those who use islam to advance their own personal agenda. true muslims knows or should know that it goes against our religion to try and force islam on anybody. muhammad ali remained a champion of human rights even as we approach the end of his life. >> you know what muhammad ali's passion spanned decades and international borders. in the final months of his life, ali tried to help free an american imprisoned in iran. i'm talk about jason resian. just after his conviction, while jason was hold up in an iranian prison cell, mumed al l --
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muhammad ali wrote to him. to my knowledge, jason is a man of peace and great faith, a man whose dedication and respect for the iranian people is evidence in his work. i support his family, friends, and colleagues in efforts to obtain his relieve. i want to ask you how much this statement meant to you? this call for your release from muhammad ali. >> i'm getting chills as a read that again. it meant so much to me at the time. my wife came to visit me, which she was allowed to do fairly rarely, and she told me this, that muhammad ali had made that statement and i can't tell you -- i can't express in words how much it meant to me, continues to mean to me.
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there were so many calls for my release, so much support, but getting the support of the champ touched me in ways that just still ripple through my life. >> jason, you say that the prison guards actually found out about ali's statement of support and started treating you differently. >> yes, the statement was covered in the iranian press as so many things about my imprisonment were, and they started treating me in a better way. i think it brought some doubt to them about the charges against me, and, you know, along with that, my spirits were really lifted and i felt empowered in a way that nothing else -- nothing else lifted me throughout that time. >> it's incredible that statement from so far away could reach you inside that prison cell so many thousands of miles away. i wonder if you could
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describe -- you spent a lot of years living in iran, just how important muhammad ali was as an american muslim leader, how important that was in bridging our world with those of a muslim country like iran? >> well, i think as he was in so many different countries, muhammad ali was somebody that the iranian people had been drawn to for many years, as a sportsman but also as a muslim and somebody who was doing great charitible work throughout his life, and he was -- he was everybody's champion just like he was here in america and around the world. yeah. >> jason, you were in that iranian prison cell until your release for some 545 days. this is the first chance we get to talk to you. i know a lot of folks back home would like to know simply how are you doing? >> better and better every day. i appreciate the support of
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everybody throughout the world and back here in the united states. it's just great to be home, and i'm in the process of readjustment. it will still take some time but by and large, i'm feeling really good. >> we know you are a warriors front. we'll root for them as well. glad to have you home. jason rezaian. >> he certainly had a lot of people telling him how influential he was. he was so influential in the ring but so influential outside the ripping as well. almost -- >> just calling him a boxer doesn't do him justice. woor going to continue this after the race. coming, democrats are battling out for the state of california. >> while, hillary clinton inches
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and we are just two days away from the last super tuesday of the u.s. presidential election season and hillary clinton could clinch her party's nomination in the next few days. the democratic frontrunner won the virgin island caucuses saturday and if she takes sun's primary in pr, she could receive enough delegates to put her over the edge. bernie sanders trailing far behind. the vermont senator says he could still win the california primary. it's a dead heat as you can see there according to a usc los angeles times poll. clinton does hold the lead among
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likely voters. 49 to 39%. the clinton campaign all but ignoring sanders. >> her focus is on donald trump, calling him dangerous. >> hillary clinton campaigning across the state of california with one rival in mind and that is donald trump. yes, bernie sanders is vowing to fight to the convention and yes there is this democratic primary here in california and five other states on tuesday. hillary clinton is focusing front and center on donald trump. she's trying to repeat some of the claims she made earlier that donald trump does not have the temperment and qualified to be president. she mentioned donald trump's divisiveness is dangerous. >> did the is not just -- donald
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trump is not just about wrong about the judge, he's wrong about america. he's wrong about what makes this country great. and on a day that we are mourning muhammad ali, it's worth remembering that we live in a country where people can break down barriers, where they can worship their own god, where they can choose their own name and where they can lead and follow their dreams as far as their hard work and talent will take them. >> even though hillary clinton is focusing on donald trump as she campaigns in california, which she will do so again today as well as monday. she will be heading to new york on tuesday. she plans to deliver a speech in brooklyn, where she believes that she will hit the number of 2383. that's the number of pledge and super delegates needed to unofficially clinch the nomination. bernie sanders is vowing to take this all the way to the convention, but he would need to switch super delegates.
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some 300 super delegates, those party officials who say there with her. 's an uphill climb to say the at least. the clinton campaign all but ignoring bernie sanders here in the final days. they still want to bridge that gap with him before she turns her attention squarely, fully to donald trump. >> in the meantime, sanders and his sporters are still holding out hope for a victory in california and overall in the democratic race as well, but despite his recent momentum, it is technically make -- mathematical mathematical mathematically intob -- impossible for bernie sanders to beat hillary clinton. >> while campaigning in los angeles on saturday, sanders vowing the democratic national convention would be a contested one. >> at the end of the nominating
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process, no candidate will have enough pledged delegates to call the campaign a victory. they will be dependent upon super delegates. in other words, the democratic national convention will be a contested convention. >> the white house keeping a neutral tone for now in the u.s. democratic race as you might expect, and while president obama not calling nis names per se, he is obviously speaking his mind in some very public ways. >> it's not just president obama. even mrs. obama is taking a few subtle jabs at some of the campaign rhetoric. we have more. >> reporter: this campaign trail or obstacle course may be rockier and more twisting than we've seen. but the white house likes to claim that it is staying out of
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it. president obama never even brings up donald trump by name, though it is lost on no one to whom he is referring virtually every time he speaks now. just this week. >> if we fall for a bunch of okey-doke, just because, you know, it sounds funny or the tweets are provocative, then we're not going to build on the progress that we started. >> one day later, making a lengthy case for why america is already great. >> we lead not by dictating to others but by working with them as partners, by treating other countries and their peoples with respect. not by lecturing, we need start,
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steady, principled american leadership. >> the first lady got on board this week. >> we don't give into to our fears. we don't build up walls to keep people out. taking some pages from her husband's playbook, without mention of the single world donald or trump. >> some of those to be suspicious with those we whom we disagree. we act as if name-calling is an acceptable substitute for thoughtful debate. >> president obama is champing at the bit in this political comment to get out there and rev up the democrat base. that he knows his power. his huge approval rating among dems. >> it's almost over.
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we've got on tuesday, big states, california and new jersey. i think we'll probably have a good sense next week of who the nominee will end up being. >> as soon as there is a democratic nominee, that's when you'll see the president unleashed and in their corner. >> the bun dates, they -- pun dates, they say one of the reasons that the republican party has picked the candidate it has. >> no booing. we're voting. >> they have the same answer. the democratic debate has been healthy. there is plenty of time for the president to jump in, but you look at those polls, you talk to insiders and you know president obama is ready for that signal, whatever it may turn out to be, maybe this coming week. for this to be down to one republican and one democrat and for him to play a very big role in it. michelle kosinski, the white
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house. the all important california primary two days away. tune in june 7th for the final super tuesday of the election season. well, there are very, very few men who can say they ever beat muhammad ali in the ring. >> we'll hear from one man who did and we'll talk to him about what ali meant to him. >> and there is relief ahead in europe, where the waters are receding and what play ahead. xr>
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welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. you are watching cnn "newsroom." i'm michael holmes. >> and i'm zain asher. let's get you caught up on your headlines. u.s. presidential race, bernie sanders is predicting july's democratic convention will be a contested one. he's been campaigning in california ahead of the state's crucial primary tuesday. it's mathematically impossible for bernie sanders to catch up with hillary clinton unless he can convince a number of super delegates to switch sides. >> hillary clinton crisscrossing the state. she won the virgin islands on saturday and if she takes puerto rico she could win enough to clinch the nomination. maduro is calling for not
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giving in to u.s. call to isolate him. and louisville will host ceremonies thursday and friday. fans are lining up around his childhood home. star athletes around the world are paying tribute to ali. i cannot imagine any athlete not being influenced in some degree by muhammad ali. >> he was a hero so so many athletes for so many different reasons. the cleveland cavaliers and the golden state warriors are in the midst of the nba finals. but their top stars paused to take a moment to reflect what
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muhammad ali sitting in here today. >> without ali, i wouldn't be able to sit here in and talk to you in front of these guys, i wouldn't go anywhere where blacks weren't allowed because of guys like muhammad ali. >> ali was the example of how you use your platform and speak what you believe, no matter what people say. look at him as a sense of confidence that's for sure. >> lebron james says he watched the thrilla in manila in his hotel room once he heard the night. michael jordan says this is the sad day for me and the world, muhammad ali was bigger than sports and larger than life. he said he was the greatest and he was right.
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serena williams, the true greatest of all kind. what a sad day for everyone to lose someone so brat and kind and someone who really stood up for what they believed in. he was my hero. mike tyson, god came for his champion, so long great one. tiger woods you'll always be the greatest for more than just what you did in the ring. a champion to so many people in so many ways. and formula one louis hamilton wrote this. i'm gutted. rest in peace champion. ali faced many boxers. we spoke to larry holmes about what a. l -- aa -- ali meant to him.
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>> remembering a legend. >> i moved around the ring. i used the jab combination. i learned all that from ali. >> he said he met ali when he was a young fighter. quickly became his sparring partner. >> we went to reading, pennsylvania and we boxed. he gave me a blackeye. they wanted to put ice on it. i said no, i'm keeping. >> holmes has all the greatest moments around his house. including the day he beat him. ali only lost five times in his entire career. he said i would never do anything to hurt you. you love me? you know i love you, man. he said why you beat me up like that.
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>> he remembered his kind heart and willingness to help people. but most of all his jab. >> they was great, but they wasn't as great as muhammad ali. >> that was amanda van alan of our affiliate wmz. mixed emotions i would imagine for larry holmes there. he cried quite a bit after his fight afterwards. he beat up his mate. it was ali's penultimate fight. he took an awful lot of punish many from larry holmes that night. with all the punches he took, he couldn't even defend himself. it was a sad fight. >> there could have been some guilt for larry holmes, possibly. >> before his last fight, his trainer told him quit while you are ahead and you kept going.
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now to other news, isis militants are under attack on two major fronts in syria and iraq. let's start with syria. humanitarian group says u.s. backed forces have taken control of the manbij road, cutting off a key supply route. and raqqah also. our own ben wedeman reports now has more. we want to worn you some of the video may be disturbing. >> iraqi army carriers rattle through the edge of the town. iraqi officials announced
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saturday they had taken control of most of the town. the short drive from the besieged isis strong hold of fallujah. the battle rages on however as a combination of the iraqi military, police, and fighters prepares for the next phase. these locally made rocket launchers have been brought up to the front for the eventual offensive to retake fallujah. they have a range of about 2 1/2 kilometers. fallujah itself is about 4 kilometers from here. fighting has been intense, but this veteran of many battles with isis senses an enemy beginning to wither away. their forces have dispersed he says. some have retreated to the center of fallujah. others have pled into the -- fled into the desert.
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nearby the half buried corpse of an isis fighter rots in the sun. in the areas we drove through, the damage was extensive. not a civilian in sight. where are they i asked him? we found them here in their homes he responds and took them out, put them in our vehicles and put them in camps. on the lookout for isis infiltrators, iraqi intelligence officers are holding men and women to talk to them. a spokesman for the popular mobilization units insists most of the isis militants in the area aren't from here. >> we have information, he says, that 75% of the isis members in
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fallujah are foreigners and arabs and 25% are iraqis. iraqi officials won't say when the final push into fallujah will begin. on the front, they wait and listen to the gathering storm. ben wedeman, cnn. iraq. you can find full coverage of what is happening on fallujah on our website at cnn.com? international. you can watch another report on how thousands trapped in fallujah are trying desperately to escape the fighting. parts of europe remain on alert because of flooding right now. >> the waters receding in some areas but the trouble far from over. what lies ahead for recovery, that's next. plus, rio beaches are ready for the olympic crowds, but from the zika virus to violent crime,
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welcome back, everybody. the french capital is trying to get back to normal after days of flooding. the river seine topped 20 feet before receding on saturday. >> four people died in the flooding in france. ten people also died in floods in germany. the louvre museum is set to reopen. a masstive wildfire burning west of los angeles, 5,000 people having to leave their homes because of the flames and smoke. >> this is a wealthy area. the area is home to a number of celebrities. more than 500 acres. more than 200 hectares have been burned. officials think the fire started
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after a car hit a utility pole and knocked down power lines. our meteorologist is here with more. firefighters getting any closer to stopping the fire. >> this is an extremely affluent part of california, still within the confines of l.a. county. this is highway 101 north and south along the coastal areas of california. this is a small region, around 500 acres, but still an incredibly wealthy area with large homes and as you mentioned there are celebrities located within this area and with over 5,000 people evacuated, you can imagine this is impacting some of those individuals. let's get a little bit more detail and zoom into the los angeles county area. here's highway 101. you may have driven that very scenic highway. it's just to the south of that
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in the city called calabassa west of los angeles, west of the inten intsh san bernardino valley. 516 acres burned. contained 15%. when the fire broke out saturday evening it was roughly around 200 acres and that grew to 516 overnight. this fire has a long way to go before firefighters can actually contain that. weather in and around the region at the moment. there is a low relatively humidity across the inland communities away from los angeles. the marine layer has settled into the coastal area. there is some fog blanketing the coastal regions but that really hasn't worked its way inland. still dry conditions in and away from the beaches. win conditions anywhere between 5 to 150s is 15 miles per hour. what we'll start to see across the next 24 hours or so will be more of an onshore component of the wind. it will bring more humidity off the coast. it will help break this
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persistent ridge of high temperatures. it doesn't look too impressive on this three-day temperature outlook. you don't have to work that far away from the coastal areas before temperatures start to spike into the 90s, at least fahrenheit and even triple digit heat for the interior communities of southern california. look at las vegas and phoenix feeling the heat. palm springs, temperatures have soared for the past few days and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. quick update on the flooding across france. astounding pictures from that region. if only we could bring some of that rainfall. a music festival, the rock am music festival in western germany had to be canceled or at least suspended because 82 individuals were affected by lightning strikes believe it or not.
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michael, zain, this is the second time this music festival has been suspended from lightning strikes in one year. >> it could be a message. >> it could be a message, loud and clear, if anything. >> 42 people were injured or something like that. >> 82. >> 82. excuse me. thank you for that. >> thank you, appreciate that. coming up on the program, as brazil puts the final touches on olympic preparations, a perfect storm steering some people and athletes away from the summer games.
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welcome back, everyone. thousands of people attended a candelight vigil in hong kong on saturday, marking the 27th anniversary of beijing's tianamen square massacre. on june 4th, 1989, china sent in tanks to break up demonstrations. >> one lawmaker urge those present to keep pursuing justice. >> i think we stand for the conscience of the whole nation and the conscience of mankind. so we should continue to preserve the truth of history,
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do not allow those in power to distort or whitewash the truth of history. >> hong kong is the only place on chinese soil where commemorations of the massacre are tolerated. the countdown begins, we are officially two months away from the start of summer olympics in rio de janeiro. >> overshooed politics, fears over the zika virus, and rampant crime and pollution as well. ticket sales are low. some athletes are saying now they are not going. we have more. >> reporter: a surprise announcement seven years ago that sent politicians leaping from their seats and set off a 24-hour party across the ocean.
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♪ >> on cope pa ka bana beat today -- beach day, the mood is uncertain. it's hard to find a lot of people rushing out to buy tickets. >> no, no comprehende english. >> with brazil mired in a deep recession only 67% of tickets have been sold. unemployment has surged. so has crime. we head out with police patrolling where drug gangs have the upper hand. our responsibility is higher with the olympics getting closer, he says. there's going to be a lot of international delingses, but for foreign visitors, the biggest fear is zika. with 150 doctors and scientists posting an open letter recommending the rio olympics be
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postponed or moved. the city fumigating venues and tourist sites, but athletes are getting nervous. >> not just my health, and the health of my family, but also the potential of the ep dim being to -- epidemic to pred around the world. >> then there's the political chaos. prompting rival protests as the suspended president fights to survive an impeachment trial. there are however bright spots. sporting venues are almost 100% complete. organizers working on temporary structures like the beach volleyball stands. >> busy time, adrenalin is high. a lot of work yet to be done, but also a huge sense of pride of what we've been accomplished so far. >> as for getting rio in a party mood, only time will tell if as brazilians say everything ends
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in samba. ♪ ♪ shasta darling ton, cnn, rio deyou can't ordinary yo -- de janerio. a public memorial will be held for the boxer in his hometown in louisville, kentucky. >> the power of ali's words are legendary. some of his most memorable moments. >> i must be the greatest. float fliek a butterfly, sting like a bee. >> this might shock and amaes you, i will destroy joe frazier. last week, i went to the jungle,
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i'm bad, man. can i dance? is the pope a catholic? the man to beat me hasn't been born yet. i'm the greatest. and if you get too smart i'll knock you out. last week, i murdered a rock, injured a stone, hospitalized a brick, i'm so mean, i make medicine sick. look at me now. don't tell me that ain't perfect specimen of a man. look at that body. slim, trim, and on my toes. i don't get hit. i'm the fastest thing on two feet. are you crazy? i'm not only a fighter, i'm a poet, i'm a prophet, i'm the res you are recollecter. if it wasn't for me, the game would be dead.
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hello, everyone, and welcome to our viewers here in the u.s. and all around the world. i'm michael holmes. >> and i'm zain asher. welcome to a special edition of "newsroom" as we continue to cover the life and legacy of boxing giant muhammad ali. >> alley, of course, was a here reto some people, especially in his hometown of louisville, kentucky. he died at the age of 74 on friday surrounded by his family. his body will be taken home soon ahead of his funeral. >> the empire world -- entire
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world shaken by this news. fans already cherishing a truly unique legend. they are lining up by his childhood home, placing flowers and signs outside. >> joining us now is cnn world sports don ridell with more. >> this is a place for people to come and honor the man. >> the planning for this funeral has taken place while muhammad ali was alive. he's very much involved in the ceremony and proceedings had taken place after he passed on. a very public event. there will be a procession through the streets of louisville. we're being told streets and areas that are of historical significance of muhammad ali's life. the whole thing is going to culminate is a basketball arena which can seat 22,000 people. the whole thing will be straemed
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live on life. it will be an interfaith sir moan and there will be eulogies from former president bill clinton, and billy crystal. if you are wondering why billy crystal is there, they had a lot in common in life. >> we're discussing plans for his funeral. has it sunk in yet, has it actually sunk in i couldn't say what the world has lost. >> one way to answer that there were so many people who were inspired by muhammad ali from a previous generation. i think a lot of people today are learning more about muhammad ali and are therefore learning about the kind of man we've lost. the argument was made today that without muhammad ali he won have
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president obama, for example. a lot of people are familiar with ali and the fights and what he achieved on the ring. perhaps people of this generation aren't aware of the massive influence he had outside of the ring. >> it's so problematic to compare eras. back when he was fighting, he fought some amazing boxers. >> does that help the claim for greatest ever? >> yeah. first of all he labeled himself the greatest. he was able to get away with it from what he did in the ring. when you look at the names he went up against, sonny liston, george foreman, leon spinks,
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larry holmes. just an incredible era of boxing. the sport has changed completely since then. we're not all familiar with the boxers of today. but back then these guys were really, really popular, and everybody knew them. >> and also comparing eras. sports people today are often hesitant to talk about politics or anything that's controversial because they don't want to lose their endorsements. muhammad ali was the complete opposite, where did the courage and spirit come from to be able to do that. >> you have to consider the time he grew up, the injustice he witnessed in his own neighborhood with his family and his parents. he was a rebel with a cause really. he had gotten out there and a lot to prove. he discovered boxing when he could have pursued other sports. football or other sports. he knew he would have to go to college and he nt going to be able to do that. so he knew if he picked boxing
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he could go all the way with that sport, i think he quickly realized he had a flat -- platform. he felt strongly about the vietnam war and prepared to take a stand on that. this is one of the reasons he's so celebrated today. it's interesting talking to people who knew muhammad ali and interacted with him. we can bring someone now who has done exactly like that. paul ku rnu, he's live from his from london. let's start with your experiences personally and directly with muhammad ali. how many times did you meet him? >> i interviewed him probably four times. three times in the build up to fights and once ats his home. i'm a great boxing fan, as a school boy and a student, i had watched his fights on, you know, on tv, and the close circuit
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cinema. sadly when he was the bureau chief in america i only got to know him in real life toward the latter stages of his career, but he was a remarkable man. without doubt the most charismatic and the most controversial sportsman of all time. he certainly -- he certainly epitomized if you like someone who was the lord of the ring in the ring, but probably his greatest legacy, his greatest impact and influence was outside the ring. it was the impact he made on social history and on civil rights. you know, he trans extended sport and that's the reason that he -- to my mind, he stands alongside figures like martin
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luther king and nelson mandela. truly, a truly amazing -- a truly amazing man. a bit of controversial figure, but the principles he showed, you know, at the height of his career over vietnam to lose three and a half years out of the ring, losing tens of millions of dollars for his principles, but as he said, you know, so what? i good to jail. he didn't go to jail, but it was a suspended sentence, but he said standing up for your beliefs is more important, and if that means going to jail, i'll go to jail. >> why not jump in and ask you about he was very famous, very quickly. world champion at the age of 22. but i think the establishment didn't really know what to make of them, did they? he was very controversial in the early days, very polarizing.
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at what point did he change? at what point did the establishment recognize him as a man to be celebrated? >> i think that happened gradually, after his stand on vietnam. but as you say, a quote of his stands out, i'm america, i'm the part you won't recognize me. get use to me, black, confident, cocky. my name not yours. my religion not yours. i think in a way that made him a hero so so many black people in america but also to white people who are opposed to vietnam, but gradually he was embraced, i think, by almost everyone, and his stand outside the ring, as much as his performance in it is what made him a global superstar and a global icon. if you look at today's papers in
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britain, the treatment there is, it's as if a -- the same scale as if a fairly senior member of the royal family had died. a sunday times for example has a complete wrap around front and back. most papers have on the front page, most of them have several pages of souvenir pull-outs, reporting his quotes and fights, and the most striking photographs. this is a man who trans extended spord and was -- is in fact a major figure in the social history of the second half of the 20th century. >> thank you for your insight on cnn. thank you. >> pleasure. that's interesting. paul brought up an important point there. it's not just the fact that the establishment changed but began to accept him but america as a whole changed and muhammad ali
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also changed. >> he was revered but he was also vilified at various times. we look back now at what he said and laud him correctly for what he said, back at the time there were those who were vehemently opposed to him at the time. >> thank you. from fellow boxers to world leaders, tributes have been pouring in for muhammad ali. president obama, put out this message on twitter. he shook up the world and the world better for it. rest in peace, champ. back in louisville the city that once segregated flags is lowering it in his honor. this man says he helped the city's hungry. muhammad ali was a champ of civil rights and a role model for so many people.
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fellow boxer manny pacquaio tweeted his sympathies. >> i'm a bit of a boxing fan and clearly ali was one of the great heaviest champs of all time. a beautiful boxer and a great athlete but the reason that ali struck a chord in the arts of so many americans not just his great boxing skill. it was his incredible courage. at a time when it was not popular to do so.
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>> it was his incredible courage. bernie sanders there explaining just why so many people revered and loved muhammad ali so much. there he was at a campaign event in california. also in california bill clinton who will eulogize ali on friday. he touched on his talent in the ring. >> when i was a boy and i saw him box the first time, i thought, you know we're looking at something we may never see again. i mean, he was like golden state on the basketball court. right? it was like watching somebody you couldn't decide if this guy is a boxer or a ballerina, the way he moved, the speed, the grace. >> and donald trump joined in remembering ali who months ago tore into the presidential candidate for his proposed ban on muslims ending the united
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states. after ali died, trump tweeted, muhammad ali is dead at 74, a truly great champion and a wonderful guy. >> in december, trump responded to a speech given by obama and he tweeted this, obama said in his speech that muslims are our sports heroes. what sport is he talking about and who? is obama profiling? days later, ali said we as muslims have to stand up to those who use islam to advance their own personal agenda. true muslims know or should know that it goes against our religion to try and force islam on anybody. we will have more on remembering muhammad ali throughout the hour. we have other stories we're following. democrats are battling out for the statele california. >> while hillary clinton inches closer to clinching the nomination, bernie sanders predicting a contested convention. >> plus, a look back at the
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thrilla in manila. one fan remembers the greatest more for his humility than actually his boxing. that's next. dad, you can just drop me off right here. oh no, i'll take you up to the front of the school. that's where your friends are. seriously, it's, it's really fine. you don't want to be seen with your dad? no, it's..no.. this about a boy? dad! stop, please. oh, there's tracy. what! [ horn honking ] [ forward collision warning ] [ car braking ] bye dad! it brakes when you don't. forward collision warning and autonomous emergency braking. available on the redesigned passat. from volkswagen. illuminates skin with pearl optics science. your concert style might show your age, your skin never will. with olay you age less, so you're ageless. olay. ageless.
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the democratic frontrunner won the virgin island caucuses on saturday and if she takes sunday in puerto rico, she could win the nomination. >> the vermont sander says he's he can win the california primary and the nomination. a dead heat among eligible voters according to a poll. clinton holding a ten-point lead over sanders among likely voters, 49 to 39%. meanwhile, the clinton campaign is all but ignoring sanders as she continues to crisscross the golden state. >> in the meantime, they are focus is squarely on donald trump. calling the presumptive nominee dangerous. jeff zeleny has more. >> hillary clinton cross the
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state of california with one candidate in mind and that is donald trump. yes, bernie sanders is vowing to fight to the convention and yes there is this democratic primary here in california and five other states on tuesday. hillary clinton is focusing front and center on donald trump. she's trying to repeat some of the claims she made earlier that donald trump does not have the temperment and qualified to be president. she's taking aim at some of the comments in the fraud case against trump university. she mentioned donald trump's divisiveness is dangerous. she brought up muhammad ali to make her point clear. >> donald trump is not just about wrong about the judge, he's wrong about america. he's wrong about what makes this country great. and on a day that we are mourning muhammad ali, it's worth remembering that we live in a country where people can break down barriers, where they can worship their own god, where they can choose their own name
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and where they can lead and follow their dreams as far as their hard work and talent will take them. >> even though hillary clinton is focusing on donald trump as she campaigns in california, which she will do so again today throughout the day, as well as monday. she will be heading to new york on tuesday. she plans to deliver a speech in brooklyn, where she believes that she will hit the number of 2383. that's the number of pledge and super delegates needed to unofficially clinch the nomination. bernie sanders is vowing to take this all the way to the convention, but he would need to switch super delegates. some 300 super delegates, those party officials who say there with her. it's an uphill climb to say the at least. the clinton campaign all but ignoring bernie sanders here in the final days. they still want to bridge that gap with him before she turns her attention squarely, fully to donald trump. >> in the meantime, sanders and
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his supporters are still holding out hope for a victory in california and overall in the democratic race as well, but despite his recent momentum, it it is mathematically impossible for bernie sanders to catch up to hillary clinton unless he can convince a number of super delegates to switch sides. >> while campaigning in los angeles on saturday, sanders vowing the democratic national convention would be a contested one. >> at the end of the nominating process, no candidate will have enough pledged delegates to call the campaign a victory. they will be dependent upon super delegates. in other words, the democratic national convention will be a contested convention. >> the white house keeping a neutral tone for now in the u.s.
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democrat race while there are still two candidates and while president obama is not calling any names, per se, he is obviously speaking his mind in some very public ways. >> it's not just president obama. even mrs. obama is taking a few subtle jabs at some of the campaign rhetoric. we have more. >> reporter: this campaign trail or obstacle course may be rockier and more twisting than we've seen. but the white house likes to claim that it is staying out of it. president obama never even brings up donald trump by name, though it is lost on no one to whom he is referring virtually every time he speaks now. just this week.
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>> if we fall for a bunch of okey-doke, just because, you know, it sounds funny or the tweets are provocative, then we're not going to build on the progress that we started. >> one day later, making a lengthy case for why america is already great. >> we lead not by dictating to others but by working with them as partners, by treating other countries and their peoples with respect. not by lecturing, we need start, steady, principled american leadership. >> he's on the campaign trail in spirit and all this a preview of what we can expect when he's really on it. two prompts listing his accomplishments and blasting republicans. >> the first lady got on board this week. >> we don't give into to our fears. we don't build up walls to keep people out. taking some pages from her husband's playbook, without a single utterance of the words donald or trump.
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>> some of those to be suspicious with those we whom we disagree. they act as if name-calling is an acceptable substitute for thoughtful debate. >> behind the scenes, president obama is champing at the bit in this political comment to get out there and rev up the democrat base. that he knows his power. his huge approval rating among dems. >> it's almost over. we've got on tuesday, big states, california and new jersey. i think we'll probably have a good sense next week of who the nominee will end up being. >> as soon as there is a democratic nominee, that's when you'll see the president unleashed and in their corner. >> the pundits, they say one of the reasons that the republican party has picked the candidate it has. no booing. we're voting. not booing.
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>> maybe even mentioning names. the whitehouse has been asked this all all the questions. they have the same answer. the democratic debate has been healthy. there is plenty of time for the president to jump in, but you look at those polls, you talk to insiders and you know president obama is ready for that signal, whatever it may turn out to be, maybe this coming week. for this to be down to one republican and one democrat and for him to play a very big role in it. michelle kosinski, the white house. well, the all important california primary just two days away now. of course, we will have all day coverage right here on cnn. tune in june 7th for the final super tuesday of the election season. it's been a long one, hasn't it? >> and it is finally here. we'll finally know officially who it is. >> there are a lot of super tuesdays. >> yeah. he was a champion fighter inside the ring but one fan who watch the thrilla in ma little
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in a looks at muhammad ali's kindness when the gloves were off. more on the damage left behind by isis as iraqi security forces regain control of key territory held by the militants. we'll be right back. what are you doing right now? making a cake! ayla reminds me of like a master chef and emiana reminds me of like a monster chef. uh oh. i don't see cake, i just see mess. it's like awful. it feels like i am not actually cleaning it up what's that make mommy do? (doorbell) what's that? swiffer wetjet. so much stuff coming up. this is amazing woah.
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the vermont senator has been campaigning across california lately ahead of the state's crucial primary this tuesday. it is mathematically impossible for sanders to catch up to hillary clinton unless he can convince a number of super delegates to switch sides. >> and you'll need a few. clinton has been crisscrossing the golden state ahead of the primary. the democratic frontrunner did win the virgin i'll caucuses on zad and if she takes sunday's primary in puerto rico she could receive enough delegates to clinch the nomination. and venezuela president's calls for other leaders not to give in to pressure that the u.s. is giving his credit. maduro claims an undercover
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coup supported by the united states is trying to trying to remove him. the hometown, a place he was born, grew up, this was it. louisville, couple, as you mentioned is a part of the south and that, too, plays into the whole narrative of his life and everything that came with it being a phenomenal athlete. which is a museum set up before and louisville will host ceremonies thursday and friday. fans are lining up around his childhood home. star athletes around the world are paying tribute to ali.
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i cannot imagine any athlete not being influenced in some degree by muhammad ali. >> he was a hero so so many athletes for so many different reasons. the cleveland cavaliers and the golden state warriors are in the midst of the nba finals. but their top stars paused to take a moment to reflect what muhammad ali sitting in here today. >> without ali, i wouldn't be able to sit here in and talk to you in front of these guys, i wouldn't go anywhere where blacks weren't allowed because of guys like muhammad ali. >> ali was the example of how you use your platform and speak what you believe, no matter what people say. look at him as a sense of confidence that's for sure. >> lebron james says he watched the thrilla in manila in his hotel room once he heard the night. michael jordan says this is the sad day for me and the world, muhammad ali was bigger than sports and larger than life. he said he was the greatest and he was right. serena williams, the true greatest of all kind. what a sad day for everyone to lose someone so brat and kind and someone who really stood up for what they believed in. he was my hero.
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mike tyson, god came for his champion, so long great one. tiger woods you'll always be the greatest for more than just what you did in the ring. a champion to so many people in so many ways. and formula one louis hamilton wrote this. i'm gutted. rest in peace champion. he always will be. god bless and help his family get through this incredibly hard time. >> one fan remembers the event being about ali's grace and
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humility. it's an incredible story. >> in my glory, i'm in my glory, joe frazier. >> muhammad ali arrived in the phillipines in october, 1975, for the thrilla in manila he was already a household name. in this boxing mad country. thousands of fans turned out to welcome him and thousands more just to watch him train. one of them was a young man, a hard core fan that just wanted a signature on his prized possession, a collection of newspaper clippings about ali. but he got a whole lot more than he bargained for. >> it was an experience that i cannot forget. one of the most memorable experiences in my life. >> he ended up not only meeting ali in private, but spending the entire afternoon alone with the boxer. the two of them watching movies. >> we were sitting on the carpet watching the movie and in between he would stand up, get some cookies, some juice,
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offering me, serving me, imagine the heavy weight champion serving me at a time with biscuits and juice. >> reporter: he didn't get to the fight. like millions of other filipino, watched it on television. a brutal encounter eventually won by ali and now regarded as one of the greatest bouts ever in boxing. >> reporter: a journalist watched the fight ringside. for him, the fight wasn't about the sport so much as the politics. the dictatorship of fernando marcos in power three years and the country was under martial law. marcos himself had been key to getting the fight staged in manila. >> as far as the world was concerned.
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>> but to a young fan the memories are not of politics, not even the fight but of muhammad ali, himself. >> for me, i would always remember himself as a very humble man. a man of huh millity and a man with a heart. my encounter with the greatest, a very great man a great champion in every word. >> andrew stevens, cnn, hong kong. isn't that just incredible? can you imagine an athlete in this era doing something like that ahead of a major fight, just taking a random fight, you know what, you and i are going to hang out and watch a couple of movies. >> he really had this human quality that transcended cult e cultural breakdowns.
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>> i think he dwt a big kick in having influence on others. he stood up when people said sit down. i thought that was a telling comment. >> a fighter who wouldn't fight. >> it's almost like he was here on a higher calling. >> he believed it. >> great to have you around. thank you. to other news now. isis militants are under attack on two major fronts on syria and iraq. let's start with syria. humanitarian group says u.s. backed forces have taken control of the manbij road, cutting off a key supply route. and russian groups have also
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got into raqqah. our own ben wedeman reports now has more. security forces have recaptured a key small town north of fallujah in a separate assault. we want to warn you some of the video in this report may be disturbing. >> iraqi army carriers rattle through the edge of the town. iraqi officials announced saturday they had taken control of most of the town. the short drive from the besieged isis strong hold of fallujah. the battle rages on however as a combination of the iraqi military, police, and fighters prepares for the next phase. these locally made rocket launchers have been brought up to the front for the eventual
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offensive to retake fallujah. they have a range of about 2 1/2 kilometers. fallujah itself is about 4 kilometers from here. fighting has been intense, but this veteran of many battles with isis senses an enemy beginning to wither away. their forces have dispersed he says. some have retreated to the center of fallujah. others have pled into the -- fled into the desert. nearby the half buried corpse of an isis fighter rots in the sun. in the areas we drove through, the damage was extensive. not a civilian in sight. where are they i asked him? we found them here in their homes he responds and took them
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out, put them in our vehicles and put them in camps. on the lookout for isis infiltrators, iraqi intelligence officers are holding men and women to talk to them. a spokesman for the popular mobilization units insists most of the isis militants in the area aren't from here. >> we have information, he says, that 75% of the isis members in fallujah are foreigners and arabs and 25% are iraqis. iraqi officials won't say when the final push into fallujah will begin. on the front, they wait and listen to the gathering storm. ben wedeman, cnn. iraq. you can find full coverage of what is happening on fallujah
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on our website at cnn.com? international. just type in fallujah in the search bar there. >> when you do that, you can watch another report on how thousands trapped in fallujah are trying desperately to escape the fighting. still to come, parts of europe remain on alert because of flooding right now. >> the waters receding in some areas but the trouble not over yet. what lies ahead for recovery, that's next. plus in the world of sport, a big disappointment for serena williams at the french open. we'll hear more as to the loss had a double sting. that's next. but grandma, we use charmin ultra soft
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candelight vigil in hong kong on saturday marking the 27th anniversary of beijing's tiananmen square master. it was on june 4th, 1989. on june 4th, 1989, china sent in tanks to break up demonstrations. >> one lawmaker urge those present to keep pursuing justice. >> i think we stand for the conscience of the whole nation and the conscience of mankind. so we should continue to preserve the truth of history, do not allow those in power to distort or whitewash the truth of history. >> hong kong is the only place on chinese soil where commemorations of the massacre are tolerated.
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the french capital is trying to get back to normal after days of flooding. the river seine topped 20 feet before receding on saturday. >> four people died in the flooding in france. ten people also died in floods in germany. the museums were closed as a precaution. the louvre museum is set to reopen june 7th. thousands of homes are in the path of that fast-moving wildfire, this is in the u.s. state of california, burning just west of los angeles, 5,000 people having to leave their homes because of the flames and smoke. >> this is a wealthy area. the area is home to a number of celebrities. more than 500 acres. more than 200 hectares have been burned. officials think the fire started after a car hit a utility pole and knocked down power lines. no word of any injuries so far. a number of celebrities have homes in this area. for more on this southern california fire, we bring in our meteorologist is here with more.
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>> tell us, are firefighters getting any closer to containing this blaze? >> this is another unbelievable photo behind me. to answer your question, zain, we're talking about this fire being only 15% contained, you can talk about the sheer ferocity of this firestorm that's gone from 200 acres to 500 acres in just a matter of hours. this is the latest details that we have from the l.a. fire department and 516 acres have burned so far. 15% contained. over 5,000 people evacuated. we're talking about an area west of los angeles. here's the calabasas region, residents are permitted to go back to their homes around 2:00 a.m. local time. the fires continue to rage along highway 101. this is the particular location where the fire continues to burn.
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in terms of fire weather as we speak, there has been a thick marine layer that settled in right along the coastal area. the humidity levels right near the beaches rather high. as we work our way inland, that's where things dry out significantly. we get the influence from the mountain ranges across this region and not to mention the winds that are currently off shore. that should be changing within the next 24 hours. we expect more of an on shore wind that will help break apart for the ridge of air that alouds for slightly cooler temperatures to settle in across southern california. quite a difference between the coastal areas and the inland communities. coastal areas in the middle and upper 70s today and through the rest of the week, you travel a few miles inland, temperatures soar into the 90s, triple digits further that you travel inland. look at these photos coming out
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of that region. unbelievable stuff. some rainfall totals in this area over 250 millimeters from belgium and france and germany. this is part of a large storm system that continues across western europe. this is responsible for 82 injuries at a rock festival in germany. get a load of this footage. they had to suspend the rock festival because of the lightning strikes and you won't believe this michael and zain, but this is the second time in a year that they have had to suspend this particular rock festival because of lightning strikes. >> that sends a message. >> i want to know who was playing. >> red hot chili peppers, actually. >> oh. oh, no. we love them. thank you so much. we appreciate that. >> he knows everything. >> he does. very smart boy.
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>> he is a smart man. >> keep it coming. a surprising finish to the women's draw at the french open. >> we'll discuss the new champion just ahead after this quick break. in a world held back by compromise, businesses need the agility to do one thing & another. only at&t has the network, people, and partners to help companies be... local & global. open & secure. because no one knows & like at&t. wprime cuts of meat.s fit kitchen. 25 grams of protein.
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welcome back, everyone. garbine muguruza is the unexpected french open champion upsetting top seed serena williams winning her first grand slam. >> williams was aiming for stef if i -- steffi graff's record win of opens. what went wrong in that. >> she would say that muguruza played the big points better. it was quite a close match. muguruza deserved it. my kids are playing tennis right now. i was explaining to them the difference between first and second serve. muguruza's tactic was she was going to keep serena on her
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toes. as a result she had nine double fawttle, which isn't good, but it's a strategy that paid off. it got her there in the end huge victory for her. 22-year-olds playing in her second major final for serena williams another disappointing result. she's trying to get 22 major titles. she lost -- he's -- she's trying to get to 22. >> she wants to tie steffi graff. >> you would think she would get there. the fact that she's competing in the business end of these tournaments clearly says she's good enough, but i wonder, the longer it takes and the more disappointment, at what point is that going to take a toll on her. she's good enough to get to 22 and beyond, for sure. >> because 21 sucks.
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who would be happy with that? >> let's talk about the men's because later on today you've got murray versus djokovic. what do you expect from those? >> djokovic has lost three french finals before. he's going for the grand slam. only a handful of guys have done it. he's good enough to do it. he's not had the dominant year that he had last year. he lost to murray very recently. djokovic has a bunch record over murray over the last few years. i think murray can give him a really good match. he was taken to five sets in both matches of his tournament and sometimes you look at it and say maybe he's just not got it, but actually it means he's up and running much quicker. he's not waiting until the later
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rounds to play proper tennis. i think he will give djokovic a run for his money. i think murray has a terrific match. >> how is murray's temperament? >> they -- he's got his temper much more until control. >> it's going to be a good one. >> thanks. we appreciate that. i'm michael holmes. thanks for being with us. and you are? >> i'm zain asher. nice to meet you, by the way. >> we'll give you the headlines quick after this quick break. put some distance between you and temptation with...
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i'm being treated very poorly. this judge is mexican heritage. i'm building a wall, okay, i'm building a wall. >> donald trump's not just wrong about judge curio, he's wrong about america. he's wrong about what makes this country great. >> the democratic national convention will be a contested convention. >> we went up to the ali center and i walked through there and i had to grab tissues. i
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