tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN September 15, 2016 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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you are watching cnn newsroom live from los angeles. >> ahead this hour born in the usa. feeling nice like sugar and spice. hillary clinton on the campaign trail. exploding phones and a major recall in the united states. hello. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm isha sesay. >> great to have you with us. i'm john vause. this is the second hour of
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newsroom l.a. drumpb's campaign is now saying he does believe that president obama was born in the usa. this is five years after trump became the leading figure in the so called birtha movement. hillary clinton took thee days off to recover from pneumonia. while she wwas. clinton says trump maybe saying different things now but she insists he hasn't changed. >> he's tried to reset himself
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and his campaign many times. this is the best he can do. this is who he is. so we need to decide who we are. if we just sigh and shake our heads and accept this, what does that tell our kids about who we are? >> hillary clinton slanders you as deplorable, and ir redeemable. that means you can't ever get better. she doesn't understand you. i call you hard-working, american patriots, who love your family and love your country. while his campaign has disowned the birtha movement we haven't heard trump say it
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himself. >> not the words. we have more on it and why it is a central part of his campaign. >> a spokesman for the trump campaign releasing a statement saying, in part, having successfully obtained president obama's birth certificate when others could not, mr. trump believes that president obama was born in the united states. now, this is something that we have heard from top campaign officials before. we have to be clear this is a campaign spokesman saying this. we have not heard it from donald trump himself. for years he openly questioned president obama's birthplace or dodged when he was asked to give a definitive answer on the topic. here's the question, does the candidate repeat what his campaign is saying? is he going to do it in an interview, perhaps in a tweet? what's going to happen there. keep in mind the timing is significant. the statement from a spokesman came hours after donald trump's comments to the "washington post" were published. they really blew up.
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the post asked him if obama was born in the u.s. and he said "i'll answer that question at the right time. i just don't want to answer it yet." . hillary clinton jumped on that statement. she said this while addressing the congressional hispanic caucus institute at their annual gala. >> he did it again. he was asked one more time, where was president obama born? and he still wouldn't say hawaii. he still wouldn't say america. this man wants to be our next president. when will he stop this ugliness, this bigotry? >> donald trump says he is making a play for african-american voters or as many see a play for voters that are turn td off be by what they
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believe is an ineffective attempt to reach the black community. a key voting bloc. hillary clinton has been losing some ground in some key states, not to trump but third party candidates. she's been quick to seize on any of his missteps. these birther comments are off putting to black voters because they are seen as an attempt to delegitimize the first black president. the day after she rather calmly and briefly interrupted his address to her congregation once he started to criticize clinton by asking him to keep his comments apolitical. >> joining us is dave jacobson and john thomas. let's get back in the time machine. a few hours ago when donald trump was a stillbirther and how this began.
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it was only a few hours ago when the "washington post" moved that story on its website. it was an interview where he gave it to the reporter on the tarmac, plane's engines were running. he asked it this way. i will answer it at the right time. i don't want to answer it yet. i don't want to talk about it anymore. the reason i don't is because then everyone will be talking about it opposed to jobs, the military, vets, security. mission accomplished. we still haven't heard from trump himself. john, to you, how important is it that trump actually says those words? >> i don't know how important it truly is. the campaign is an arm of donald trump but i think at some point
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he should say it in a sit down interview with cnn, maybe on this show. >> that would be great. >> he should say it at some point. donald trump is saying i'm on a roll. look at my polling numbers. i'm on the uptickment i don't want to distract from the message. but this is the case where you have to hang a lantern on the problem or rip it off like a band-aid and move on. >> everyone is talking about it. >> the fact his campaign a felt a need to issue a statement of clairecy underscores the fact he knows he has a ceiling in the race. he is polling 42, 44% but not breaking above that threshold. the question is how does he appeal to persuadable voters in key states he needs to get to that 270 electoral college threshold. one way is to not come off like a racist, budget or xenophobic and the way to do it is come off on issues like the birther movement. this guy is the founder of the
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birther movement. will he go on the record and say the president was born in america, period. >> one reason that could be out there why he doesn't want to say it is because there's a certain group of supporters backing donald trump, a lot of them, who believe obama was not born in the u.s., and he doesn't want to alienate. >> that maybe the case but they are going to vote for donald trump because they don't like hillary clinton either. >> or stay home. >> a question of enthusiasm. does he wants to alienate those folks? will they stay home if he pivots to the moderate position. >> i think hillary clinton calling them deplorable is enough to motivate them to the polls. >> back to the days of trump not breaking past the mid-40s number. going after the pastor in flint is perhaps not the way to do it. let's play the clip of what he said when he did it. >> when she got up to introduce me, she was so nervous, she was
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shaking and i said, wow, this is sort of strange and then she came up. she had that in mind, no question about it. >> does it bother you? >> no. everyone plays their games. it doesn't bother me. i will tell you what made me feel good, the audience was saying let him speak, let him speak. >> what do you make of that? >> verbal diarrhea of the mouth. when donald trump have a tell prompter in front of him, when he goes off script is when you see his poll numbers tank. we had the khan family, the gold star family, we had the judge. this is his challenge in this race when he shoots from the hip and he goes off script and he's not disciplined, he gets off message. he is not talking about the jobs and the economy. he is not talking about his opponent, hillary clinton. as long as he stays on message he will narrow the gap. when he pivot and attacks real
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americans that's a challenge. >> he has seen some gains in the african-american communities. he is still down. >> really? >> the latest l.a. times tracking poll. >> pro-trump. >> he was down to 2% and now he is 19%. >> wow. >> the trend lines are moving. >> any other poll at 19%. >> that's fine. well, he's making inroads with all segments of the electorate. >> making inroads and then you go and do something like this. >> that's right. trump is not a politician. this is the first time he's run for office. you can't expect him to be perfect. >> he is a politician now. he is now a politician. >> he is trying to be one but not a career politician. >> he is in the game now. >> you are right. he needs to tighten it up but it is hard. it takes years of practice. look at hillary clinton. she still makes mistakes and reboots and resets. >> at the end of the day she is not good at campaigning. >> or honesty or many other
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things. >> come on. okay. >> we have heard from president obama in the last couple of hours. he was at this gathering for the congressional hispanic caucus. he was pretty blunt. didn't mention trump by name but had a few things to say. >> look, throughout this political season, the talk around the issues has cut deeper than in years past. it's a little more personal, a little meaner, little uglier. and folks are betting if they can drive us far enough apart and if they can put down enough of us because of where we come from or what we look like or what religion we practice than that may pay off at the polls. but i'm telling you that's a bet they are going to lose. >> so, dave, when we look at the turn of this election campaign, it has been pretty nasty. the president makes the point
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that eventually this has to come to an end. >> look, he ran on a platform of hope and change. he had an optimistic campaign and pivot to eight years later and it is doom and gloom. the reality is we have seen a shift in the clinton campaign. she's trying to strike an inspiring, hopeful, optimistic tone, balancing it on attacks on donald trump but now she is shifting to a more positive message. i think that is something that will improve her likability numbers. think she fundamentally understands she has to paint a picture of the differences between the two candidates in the race and weave in more positivity. >> i feel like you have been saying that for months. >> i think you are right. hillary has a likability problem. her numbers are locked in stone. only thing she can do is tear down donald trump. in 2008, barack obama ran on hope and change but 70% of
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americans think it is the wrong track. if we are on the wrong track it is not all roses and petunias. >> when the message was more positive it reflected in the numbers. there is something to that. >> people like optimism, but then they realize they are left stuck with hillary clinton. oh, man. >> okay. >> okay. let's finish with donald trump. will we see tax returns or not? paul ryan is the latest to pile on. here's what he said. >> i'll defer to donald trump when he thinks is the appropriate time to release his returns. i know he is under an audit and he has an opinion when to release those. >> coyou think it is a good idea. >> i released mine and i think we should. >> donald jr. has a different take. >> he has a 12,000 page tax return. that would create probably 300
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million independent financial auditors out of every person in the country asking questions that will distract from his main message. >> if you cut through what he said, he is saying if donald trump releases his tax returns people will look at them. isn't that the point. >> talk about candor. that's he reality. and the challenge is by saying things like that, and getting off message, yeah, we want to take the magnifying glass and see all of these potential conflict of interests he may have in the country and abroad. "newsweek" came out with this earth scorching story that talked about the potential conflicts of interest that donald trump has with our allies and adversaries. americans ought to look at his financial ties across the world. >> this is where donald trump should pull out the "art of the deal" and he should release his tax returns, assuming he can. he should say i will release my returns when you release your wall street spreechs and use it as a piece of leverage.
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americans get everything they want in that deal. >> my question is when paul ryan says we should release our taxes, what does that mean, we the republicans, the republican party. >> we the politicians who are running for office or president. >> we the president. i think that's what he had to mean. >> okay. >> silence is golden. >> we will leave it there. gentlemen, thank you. >> good to see you guys back. all of the controversy over donald trump and whether or not he believes president obama was born in the u.s. has been overshadowing his policy speech on the economy that outlines major changes to his original plan. >> he scaled back some of his tax cuts and promised more benefits for lower-income families. >> over the next ten years our economic team estimates under our plan the economy will average 3.5% growth and create a total of 25 million new jobs.
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>> let's talk trumponomics. we just heard promising economic growth averaging 3.5%, 25 million new jobs. that would be impressive given the fact that u.s. economy has never produced that many jobs in one decade. come close but never 25%. >> 4% is basically double what the economy is growing right now. to be honest, a lot of this is magical thinking. i gotta say. these numbers, 3.5, 4% growth are predicated on the idea that trump's plan of tax cuts would create that growth momentum. unfortunately for the last 20 years that's not been the case. it is not bipartisan thing. you can look at the tax cuts under george bush in 2001 and 2003. these were big cuts. they did not create a big jump
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in growth. before the financial crisis, more bush cuts in 2008 and then everything obama did afterwards, in terms of trimming taxes, did not create growth. basically you have 20 years of evidence that this trickle down theory is not working. it makes these numbers hard to figure. >> okay. did you say 3.5% economic growth? from donald trump, wait, there's more. he is promising the economy can grow even faster. listen to the republican nominee. >> it's time to start thinking big once again. that's why i believe it's time to establish a national goal of reaching 4% economic growth. and my great economists don't want me to say this but i think we can do better than that. >> again, so the question here
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is you can put this out there. you can say whatever you want, but if you look at the economic policies, which the trump campaign is putting forward, is there any explanation how the economy can grow better than 4%? >> there really isn't, john. in fact, you have a lot of economists worried that some of these policies, protectionism around trade, tax cuts, without spending cuts can, which by the way, with the reagan norm la. reagan cut taxes but never i cut the budget. that's why at the end of his tenure you had the national debt three times what it was before. all of these things economists are worried will shave growth. a consulting firm believes if all of trump's plans are put in to place including barriers to immigration, which demographics create growth and that is one of america's great advantages, they believe it would shave a trillion dollars off the u.s. economy. >> that's interesting point about the immigration policy. it seems to be where the
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economic policy slams head on with the population immigration policy. we know donald trump said he would like to deport millions of undocumented workers. some said you would have to double immigration intake. how does that work? >> if you think of what is growth? it is basically the number of people working and how productive they are. so, as i said before, one of our great advantages in the u.s., compared to in particular europe is we have more immigrants a slightly higher birthrate. if you cut those things you cut economic growth. >> okay. donald trump said revise his tax plan. before it was costing $10 trillion over ten years are and now $4.4 trillion and included in that tax plan is a big corporate bonus. listen to this. >> one of our greatest job creation measures is going to be
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our 15% business tax rate, down from the current 35% rate, a reduction of more than 40%. i know that's what you people have been waiting for. >> okay. so if you look at that tax cut, the child care tax rebate. big boost of spending on defense and infrastructure. this paid for by stronger economic growth. is there a provision in the plan if the economic growth doesn't materialize? >> not that we have heard. again, cutting taxes and not cutting spending is a recipe for more debt. it's not a recipe for growth. by the way, we are entering a new period in the global economy. it's a period when monetary policy is probably going to start slowly tightening. you will not have the same 40 years of easy money you had in
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the past. this is not the time to add unproductive debt to the u.s. economy. >> also, it does seem the world is in this model or formula of low economic growth any way. >> yeah. >> it seems unlikely the days of the '90s, no one is returning to those days. >> if you think of what was happening in the '90s, that was the beginning of the tech boom, the internet was coming on-line, a lot of connectivity. people were getting computers. that period is over. that's tapped out. in fact, a lot of economists think that most of the benefits from that big computing boom are finished now. we're not going to see that again. unless there is something mayor jor on the horizon, some new invention, shift in global demographics it is hard to imagine 4% gret in the u.s. right now. >> oh, the '90s, they were the days. good to have you with us. thanks so much.
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>> thank you. >> great conversation there. >> yeah. she's very smart. much smarter than me. >> yeah, she is. >> next on newsroom l.a. the battle to retake mosul from isis. new signs it could be coming soon. another set back for galaxy note 7 as apple launches its new iphone. we will have the latest in the smartphone wars when we come back. ♪ mapping the oceans. where we explore. protecting biodiversity. everywhere we work. defeating malaria. improving energy efficiency. developing more clean burning natural gas. my job? my job at exxonmobil? turning algae into biofuels. reducing energy poverty in the developing world. making cars go further with less. fueling the global economy. and you thought we just made the gas. ♪ energy lives here. afoot and light-hearted i take to the open road.
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welcome back, everybody. cnn has learned hundreds of u.s. military personnel have arrived in iraq to support iraqi forces when they begin an offensive to retake the city of mosul. >> barbara starr reports that major show down with isis fighters could be coming soon. >> near mosul in northern iraq, u.s. bombs hit this isis chemical weapons plant 50 times. >> intelligence indicated that they converted a pharmaceutical complex in to a chemical weapons productions capability. >> the fight to retake mosul could begin next month u.s.
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defense officials tell cnn. additional u.s. special operations forces may be sent in to help advise iraqi units moving on mosul. u.s. advisers are expected to be closer to mosul's front line, facing more danger several officials tell cnn. hundreds of u.s. military personnel are on site providing support for iraqi units. u.s. jets could soon be flying attack missions from there. timing of the mosul assault depends on how ready iraqi units are, and if they don't get bogged down in coming days. >> the big remaining piece is the city of mosul, which is where isil has tried to establish its so-called caliphate. that's the next front. >> reporter: the administration is optimistic on what may be the biggest test so far for iraq. >> the iraqis, with the strong support of this coalition that we put together, has taken back
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more than half of thor the toin that isil once controlled. >> reporter: getting fresh intelligence is job one. >> i'm constantly reviewing our resources, whether it be isr, strike platforms, tankers, people to anticipate the operational environment. >> reporter: for now there's less optimism on syria and the proposed u.s. agreement with russia. in aleppo, with a drop in air strikes, children are out playing, but desperately needed humanitarian aid has not arrived. >> understanding we have the department of defense that those aid trucks have not yet been put in position to deliver assistance we think is critically required. >> barbara starr reporting from the pentagon. when we come back, more on aleppo. we go inside the city and find out what life is like after five years of war and 72 hours of calm. 75,000 syrian refugees
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stranded in the middle of the desert with no food or aid. why amnesty international says jordan is violating its international obligation. there are two billion people who don't have access to basic banking, but that is changing. at temenos, with the microsoft cloud, we can enable a banker to travel to the most remote locations with nothing but a phone and a tablet. everywhere where there's a phone, you have a bank. now a person is able to start a business, and employ somebody for the first time. the microsoft cloud helped us to bring banking to ten million people in just two years. it's transforming our world. sorry, just getting a quote on motorcycle insurance from progressive. yeah? yeah, they have safe rider discounts,
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this is the new comfort food. and it starts with foster farms simply raised chicken. california grown with no antibiotics ever. let's get comfortable with our food again. welcome back, everybody. you are watching cnn newsroom live from los angeles. just about 10:32 here. i'm john vause. >> i'm isha sesay. the headlines this hour. donald trump's campaign says donald trump believes the president was born in the usa. earlier on thursday, trump refused to tell the "washington
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post" if he thought obama was born in the u.s. hillary clinton went after trump's comments in her first day back on the campaign trail after a bout with pneumonia. he said that trump refuses to stop his ugliness and bigotry by continuing to question where the president was born. the world anti-doping agency says russian hackers leaked medical records from 25 athletes. they say it is retaliation for 118 russian athletes being banned from the rio olympics. they released information about four athletes. russia is suspected of hacking the u.s. democratic national committee in june. air raids targeting isis killed 23 civilians in syria. activists say it hit a school helping families displaced by the war, at least nine victims were children. >> it is unclear who carried out the attack but the area is
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outside of the area of the cease fire. the cease fire appears to be holding for now but mistrust is growing between russia and the united states. >> they are flying a drone to look for cease fire violations. >> more than five years of civil war have scarred large parts of aleppo. neighborhoods, like this one, controlled by the government in ruins. now finally with the cease fire some respite and seemingly little things become special. for the first time in months, 9-year-old abdul and his friends can go out, collect firewood for their families. >> translator: we need this wood to cook dinner because we have nothing else, he says. this neighborhood was on the front line until recently. rebels shelled the district from
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a nearby hill laying waste to many of the buildings. government forces used air power to bomb the opposition areas. amid the destruction, families continue to live in the ruins. ahmed has been here for three years and stayed even after the rebels fired makeshift rockets in to the flat next door, blowing away the wall separating the two apartments. it was very dangerous, he says, we were too afraid to go out because there was a sniper covering the street and we couldn't go in to this living room. now he stays here with his wife and eight children. the kids trying to rest in the badly damaged flat. by all accounts, the situation is even worse in the rebel-held parts of aleppo. russia and the u.s. trying to ensure safe passage for u.n. nad to the besieged areas. if the agreement holds and syrian forces withdrawal from this area, the costello road will be the main entranceway for
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aid in to eastern aleppo. this is the road the u.n. trucks will use. the cease fire has brought much-needed calm for the residents of this once so beautiful, now so battered city. while many of them cherish the calm, few are convinced it can truly last. fr . >> so much destruction. 75,000 syrian refugees are trapped in the desert in no man's land near the border with jordan with virtually no access to food or aid. amnesty international says jordan is violating its international obligations. jordan has been taking fewer refugees citing security concerns. >> amnesty obtained video that shows a makeshift gravesite next to the camp. they say some are dying from preventable diseases. crisis response director for amnesty international is joining
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me via skype. thank you for being with us. 75,000 people trapped on the border with jordan in a no man's land. jordan said they are a threat to security, but we know they have vigorous vetting measures, which they have used before, to skren refugees before allowing them in to the country. why not use them now? what's changed? >> that's a good question. there are 75,000 people living in absolute squalor in the middle of the desert. jordan stopped allowing refugees in after a car bomb, which is suspected to be by the islamic state group detonated in the 21st of july. what has happened since then is no humanitarian assistance has come in and no one is coming out. jordan is saying we are trying to protect our citizens and jordan as a country and we have a responsibility to do that. while no one questions jordan has a responsibility, you can
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not put safety above your international obligations. it cannot be at the expense of, is what amnesty international is saying. there's no good reason that jordan cannot vetting refugees immediately and no reason jordan cannot open its borders right now and start allowing full, unfettered humanitarian assistance to go in so people have adequate food, water, stop dying from preventible hillneils such as hepatitis. there were nine deaths related to childbirths, women or infants who died during childbirth in the last month. in the absence of humanitarian aid being allowed in, explain to our viewers what will happen to these tens of thousands of people. >> well, these tens of thousands
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of people are under going immensely hard conditions right now. it's just an absolute, you know -- it's a picture of human misery. the thing is that this situation is completely solvable, but we can't just focus on jordan and say jordan can fix this problem, because it is an international problem. actually the situation at the berm, in this particular stretch of land with these 75,000 refugees is a great snapshot, or a grim snapshot, i should say, of the international here. international governments could increase their quotients, in a government such as the u.s., uk, australia, could be ingreecing the amount of refugees they have in an organized structured way that would relieve the burden on countries like jordan who have
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felt they have carried the majority of the burden from the syria crisis, along with turkey and iraq and lebanon. and this will not be solved unless we see world leaders who are meeting next week actually in new york. to try to find a solution. but so far we have seen very little coming from governments who are interested in solving the problem by increasing their own quotas for resettlement of refugees. there's no other on option but doing that and having global responsibility sharing. >> 75,000 people stuck in no man's land. the world is watching. something has to be done. thank you for joining us. >> thank you very much. coming up next here on newsroom l.a., new warnings about samsung phones and what you should do with your galaxy
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u.s. regulators have made it official formally recalling 1 million samsung galaxy note 7 phones. >> the device caught fire while charges. customers have been urged to stop using the phone immediately. samsung said it would stop selling the device and customers can ask for a refund or different phone. >> for more on the recall, we are joined by heather kelly. thank you for being with us. first question, have they worked out what is causing the problem here? why are the phones bursting in to flames? >> they have. they are faulty lithium ion batteries. they are used in pretty much every phone out there. even in tesla electric cars. there was an error in the
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manufacturing process causing the batteries to overheat and even explode. sometimes while charging and sometimes while not. >> a big error. this is bad timing for samsung. the note 7 had good reviews but now the recall comes just as the iphone 7 hits the market. >> it's really unfortunate. it had great reviews, people loved the stylus, the big screen. it was going to be a big competitor forethe iphone 7, especially the iphone 7 plus which had just gone on sale. samsung's stock isn't doing well with the news and customers will have to wait if they want to stick with the android phone. there could be a chance that people switch over to apple. >> samsung users love the phone so much. two weeks ago the company put out its own voluntary recall, most people didn't take them up on that. they kept using the phones. now there is an official recall,
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is it likely to change? >> hopefully -- i think there's some criticism of how samsung handled the original wording of the recall. they worked very fast. they started the recall on the 2nd but wasn't until the 10th when they emphasized that people needed to stop using the phones to prevent them from catching fire. there was a delay there. some people thought, hey, you know, it's a minor problem, it won't be my phone that explodes. this official recall will make it seem a little more serious for everybody hopefully. >> famous last words. bochlt line for samsung, what will it end up costing the company? could there be concerns about other samsung products now? >> so far it is limited to this one phone. they are offering exchanges for other existing samsung phones, as part of the recall. there doesn't seem to be a concern and they are saying it is a small portion of the 2.5
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million 7s that have gone out. hopefully it won't go up again if it was just an error in the manufacturing process. but this is something we may see like we did with the hover boards and other products that use lithium ion batteries. >> stay with us. we have an update on the iphone 7. you mentioned it is going on sale. the new model just came out. in fact, they have been lining up around the world just to get their hands on this. employees in tokyo counting down the seconds for the store to open. one waiting in line said she was happy with the improved camera and another excited about using the iphone to pay the fare at the subway. australians are the first to purchase the new iphone. they waited in the rain to get one. it seems that as the phone has been launched and people have had a chance to look at it, people are warming now to the iphone 7 a lot more than a week
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or so with ago when aal put the details out there. >> yeah, i have been using one for a couple of days. it's been pretty great. when you look at the controversies, one is missing a port for head phones and the other catches fire. so when you take a step back, the iphone 7s are looking great. >> that's a good selling point. buy your own iphone. it won't explode. >> should be their new advertising campaign. >> excellent. okay. >> thank you so much for being with us, heather. we appreciate it. heather kelly, cnn money. >> thanks. >> i think you are on to something. >> i should be in marketing. stroke of genius. >> let's think about it in the break. a quick break now. donald trump says he has super ideas and super plans for the u.s. but we didn't know he had super powers. >> he does. >> that's according to a new billboard in times square. we will explain next.
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thosthey are.sses? do i look smarter? yeah, a little. you're making money now, are you investing? well, i've been doing some research. let me introduce you to our broker. how much does he charge? i don't know. okay. uh, do you get your fees back if you're not happy? (dad laughs) wow, you're laughing. that's not the way the world works. well, the world's changing. are you asking enough questions about the way your wealth is managed? wealth management, at charles schwab. welcome back, everybody. well over the last 20 years that this election campaign has lasted or seems to have lasted
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we've seen a lot of strange things. now we can add this to the list. a trump superman. >> naked trump statues are coming back. our jeanne moos explains. flying above times square. >> it is a bird, it is a plane. >> reporter: it's super trump. a group supporting the donald shelled out $25,000 for this to run on a digital billboard for three days. i think the donald would agree with the second half of this description. >> strange visitor from another planet who came to earth with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men. >> reporter: some were amused. but for others -- >> it is a worry. in australia we are worried about donald trump actually getting in. >> reporter: if you peel off super trump's tights, this is what you get, naked trump is back. back atop two buildings. one facing traffic at the holland tunnel headed into new york. the other in miami. look familiar? they are the same statues that
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appeared briefly in public space last month before being unceremoniously taken down. now the mane contemporary art center is hosting naked trump on its own private prormt. so just as the donald is tell dr. oz. >> the one thing i would lining to do is be able to drop 15, 20 pounds. >> reporter: his bloate likeness has been dropped on rooftops n. miami it was placed on a billboard then taken down after police said it was tying up traffic. by the light of a mull moon, naked trump was reinstalled and now mooning people from atop a art gallery. >> awesome. >> reporter: they were adding new locks after someone tried to break in. the art center suspects trump supporters wanted to remove him. >> the trump statue is a perfect metaphor for his campaign, offer color, and a big joke. >> reporter: the center says it will take it down if the done
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releases his tax returns. somebody get that statue a cape. who is that? oh, it's trump. super trump. jeanne moos, cnn. make america naked again, jersey city, new jersey. >> it does kind of sum up the campaign, doesn't it? those who support see him as super trump. those who don't have a less favorable opinion. >> yes, nicely said. >> he we have all wondered or at least some of us have wondered what donald trump's rather amazing looking hair feels like. >> i know i have. apparently, so too has host jimmy fallon. the host of the late night tv show asked if he could fuel me mess with trump's hair when the presidential candidate was on his show tonight. trump seemed game for it so fallon went in. take a look. >> go ahead.
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yes! donald trump, everybody. >> yikes. >> it looked comboverish. >> yes. good sport for letting him do that i wouldn't let you do that to my hair. >> and i wouldn't dream of it. >> all right. you are watching cnn newsroom live from los angeles. i'm isha cess say. >> i'm john vause. cnn tonight with don lemon is up next. everyone else will be back. you are watching cnn. ♪ (crickets chirping) ♪ (jet engine) ♪ (heart beat) ♪ (water splashing) (rain drops)
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she's back. and not a moment too soon when you lock at our new poll. this is cnn tonight, i'm don lemon. hillary clinton's lead cut in half in our latest polls, back on the trail after her bout with pneumonia and speaking tonight at the congressional hispanic caucus dinner in washington. >> i'm more confident than ever our best days are still ahead of us. >> donald trump, meanwhile, in new hampshire. >> my economic agenda can be summed up in three words; jobs, jobs, jobs. >> he's talking about jobs there
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