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tv   New Day Sunday  CNN  October 23, 2016 3:00am-4:01am PDT

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another woman has come forward today with accusations against donald trump. he surrounded us tightly in a hug and kissed each one of us without asking permission. >> every woman lied, total fabrication. the events never happened. >> you know, he's losing and he knows it. >> we're going to see the best days of america ahead of us. >> in 17 days everything is going to change. >> the cubs are going to the
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world series! >> so overwhelming it's awesome. >> we've been waiting for it for a long time. best fans in baseball. >> slow the moment down and really, really enjoy it because it is that special. wonder if you're fully awake this morning after watching last night. i'm christi paul. good morning on this sunday. >> i'm victor blackwell. good to be with you. break out the champaign. the chicago cubs advance to the world series for the first time since 1945. >> oh, it's been decades of misery. my husband's from chicago, trust me, i hear it. the teammates finally break the curse of the billy goat and the team is just four wins from their first world series title in 108 years, people. yeah, that's chicago. thousands of people celebrating in the streets into early this
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morning. some may just be getting home when they're watching this. no doubt probably still celebrating throughout the day today. >> of course, we're covering this historic moment with a team of reporters and analysts. andy scholes has more on the curse of the cubs and christine brennan is breaking down just how monumental this is. let's start with cnn international correspondent ryan young live outside of wrigley field. ryan, i'm sure you can feel the energy. >> reporter: oh, you can feel the energy. look, i live five, six, seven miles away from here. last night when the game was over you could feel the explosion around the city. there were fireworks around the city that had nothing to do with the stadium itself. people were so excited. when you talked about people going home maybe to watch this, i'm not so sure about that. we are still bumping into people who are out celebrating. when we were walking outside there were still people trying to get cabs to go home. some people wanted to show up to take pictures, to be a part of this. you have to understand, no matter where you go, cub nation
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is strong. even as christi was talking about it, my producer loves the cubs. you have to hear the sound between a father and son who couldn't believe the excitement of last night. >> i'm happy for him. it's not about me. for 50, 60, 70 years. unbelievable to share it with my boy and three other boys at home that are cheering like crazy along with my wife and some friends. how many years? he asked me three, four years ago. why do you like them? character. here's your character right here. >> i'm a huge sports fan. the only thing i can really kind of compare this to is when the new orleans saints won the super bowl. you can feel and see new orleans and all the people who were happy after that win, especially
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after katrina. i can tell you this, walking the streets of chicago and just watching the people's faces here, it's been tremendously amazing. they are planning for those next four victories. they want to see what happens, obviously. they know cleveland has got in as well. the talk here is go, cubbies, go. when they were singing that song last night, you could hear it from miles away. >> all right. ryan young there for us outside wrigley field. thanks so much. so the cubs and the indians, as you said, this close to breaking two of the longest championship droughts in major league baseball. for decades, you know, the tough losses, the heartbreak, the season ending too soon. cnn sports anchor andy scholes has more on those difficult times and the happy ending. >> reporter: wait a minute, cubs win the world series. looks like marty mcfly may have been a year off. back to the future he traveled to 2015 where the cubs had won the world series.
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didn't quite happen as predicted. no one in chicago will be complaining if the cubbies win their first title in 108 years. >> i just figured out why the cubs lose each year. >> reporter: not this year. fans think they may have finally shaken a century of bad luck, hexes and curses. legend has it the owner of a chay town tavern put a curse on them when he and his pet goat were kicked out of wrigley field. some people think that was a baaad move. the cubs went on to lose 4-3. then came steve bartlett. cubs five outs away when bartman and kept them from potentially catching a ball. the cubs ended up surrendering eight runs and lost 8-3. that painful memory was put to rest forever when the ball was blown up on live television.
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>> listen to the roar of the crowd as the indians take the field. the indians have had their share of misery as well. they haven't won a world series title since 1948. they came very close in 1997. indians went into the ninth inning of game 7 with a 2-1 lead over the marlins. they blew the lead and lost in the 11th inning. >> maybe things will turn around a little for the indians this year. >> reporter: both the indians and cubs have had their agony featured in movies over the years. >> just get it over the plate i want them to swing. >> last time i did that the guy hit one that hasn't landed yet. >> reporter: each one has a happy ending. >> yes! yes! >> the indians win it! the indians win it! oh, my god, the indians win it! >> reporter: the world series one fan base will finally have their long awaited championship. the other, misery will continue.
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>> andy scholes is here now with more. you highlight that, we've talked about the cubs, but this is going to be even if they lose a big year for the indians. >> 68 years since the indians have won a world series. 108 for the cubs. these are the two losing teams in major league baseball. the loveable losers. so fitting that they're meeting together in the world series. one of them will at least get to end their longs -- the long drought that they've had in winning the championship. the cubs are the longest in all sports. this would be the biggest thing to happen in the sports since the red sox won a world series. just so you know how big this is for their fan base. to get into game one, just to stand in the stadium, $940. a seat will cost you over 1,000. that's nothing compared to chicago wrigley field for game day guys. standing room only, $2300. just to stand in there. you don't even get to sit.
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that's how bad these two fan bases want this win. >> wow. all right. andy scholes, you get to go? >> i'll be there tuesday in cleveland. >> you don't have to pay anything. andy, thank you. historic moment obviously for sure. a lot of fans off celebrating, they were celebrating yesterday. they weren't even alive the last time the cubs won the world series. in fact, some of their parents might not have even been born yet. >> for more on how historic this is. let's bring in christine brennan. good morning. the last time the cubs won the world series theodore roosevelt was president. only 46 states in the union. just give us some context. put some meat on the bone here, the significance of this win. >> you know, this is really what's good in sports. often we talk about the bad things in sports. today we get to talk about the good things. yes, these are the droughts -- well, the cubs and the indians, but really the cubs as andy was
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saying. this is the drought of all droughts. everyone knows it. if you are a cubs fan, you say, i cheer for the cubs. people say, you poor thing. i feel sorry for you. the indians the same way. well, now people are going to say -- have a different view, almost the way the red sox -- it changed for the red sox as you eluded to. so sports takes us to so many conversations that are important. we've talked about a lot of issues, bad things. here's a good thing. and two cities, the civic pride. the things that can really change. kind of the wonderful feeling you have day to day, the happiness in an office building. i mean, it really can be different, and i think that's what we're seeing here. >> that's what i was wondering because, first of all, you look at if it's the indians, i'm an ohioans. you have lebron, you have the rnc. you know what lebron has done for the city.
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if the cubs win the series how might that change the city? and i say that because so much of our reporting is about the violent crime and the murders that are up in that city and just wondering how something like this might modify what's happening there if at all. >> sure, christi, great question. i'm a northern ohioan as well. i remember the 1968 detroit tigers. the tigers brought the city together. didn't change everything. the people in detroit talked about how meaningful it was to have the tigers win the '68 world series and they had three african-american players on that team which is a little bit unusual for baseball back then. also you think about the boston red sox after the marathon. you think about the yankees and baseball returning to new york after 9/11. this is palpable. it's real. not just kind of a myth. it's a true thing. so the notion that chicago could maybe come together and have this rallying cry, i'm not a
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polyana, not going to change everything, but it could change something and that would be wonderful. >> this is deep in the psyche of chicagoans. christine brennan, good to have you with us. >> thank you. >> an 11th woman now coming forward accusing donald trump of sexual misconduct. we'll hear her account and the campaign's response. also, it could be one of the biggest media mergers ever. breaking down how a deal between at&t and time warner could affect you. when standard cancer treatment no longer works
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key battle grouped states. both of them already also getting new endorsements. donald trump from the las vegas review, hillary clinton from the new yorker. we understand clinton is going to be in raleigh, north carolina today. meeting up with a group, mothers of the movement. many had children who died in police custody or as a result of law enforcement action. donald trump will be in florida, a state he really needs to win the white house. he's following up this big day with a speech in gettysburg where he started out urging americans to follow lincoln's example and heal the divisions of the country before claiming again that the elections are totally rigged and vowing to sue the women who have accused him of sexual assault or impropriety. now that claim that he's going to sue these women comes as now an 11th woman accuses him of sexual misconduct comes forward. cnn politics reporter jeremy diamond has details for us. >> reporter: good morning, victor and christi. donald trump stumping right here
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in cleveland, ohio, taking the stage a few hours after yet another woman has come forward to accuse him of inappropriately touching her without her consent. >> i said i didn't feel right going alone so two other women came with me. he grabbed each of us tightly in a hug and kissed each one of us without asking permission. >> reporter: but donald trump in an uncharacteristic fashion actually not addressing the allegation on stage. instead allowing his campaign to come forward with a statement. the statement reads in part this story is totally false and ridiculous and it also says that this is, quote, just another attempt by the clinton campaign to defame a candidate. there's no evidence that the clinton campaign had anything to do with any of these allegations against donald trump, but donald trump is striking a more combative tone on the campaign trail. just on saturday he was stumping in several battleground states making the case that he has the outsider candidacy needed to
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make change in washington, to bring change. so what he says is a corrupt system essentially. he laid out his plan for his first 100 days in office on saturday morning and -- but, of course, he was still bogged down by these accusations spending several minutes talking about these accusations saying that they are all liars, fabricating these stories essentially, these allegations of sexual assault or sexual misconduct in some cases and he even said that he plans to sue some of these women after the election is over. >> every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign. all of these liars will be sued after the election is over. >> reporter: donald trump has said many times that he plans to sue various groups from the media to people who have come out and accused him of various things and none of those lawsuits that he's promised have come to fruition, but he's going to continue to push this combative stating to press against hillary clinton and just on saturday night here in cleveland we saw him going on
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the attack against hillary clinton accusing her of being another all talk no action politician. so that's how donald trump is seeking to reframe the debate just as he is sinking in a number of polls, both nationally and in key battleground states. victor and christi, back to you. >> thank you so much. early voting turnout indicates there may be a break in tradition in some states. the battle between hillary clinton and donald trump may be closer than ever in traditionally red states. if you're going to make a statement... make sure it's an intelligent one. ♪ the highly advanced audi a4, with available virtual cockpit.
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listen to some of the new numbers we're talking about today. early voting numbers, they appear that they could be
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promising for hillary clinton as the countdown to election day. so far 5.1 million votes have been cast, nearly 3.4 million in key battleground states and the numbers show there have been more democratic ballots returned in states such as north carolina, arizona compared to this point in 2012. errol lewis, political anchor of new york 1 news now, we want to be clear about this obviously. the breakdown does not tell us who they voted for. this is such a unique election, errol, we can't look at this and say, well, because this many democrats have gone to the polls, that means this many votes have been counted for hillary clinton. what do you make of those numbers in this political climate? >> reporter: well, it's not good news for the trump campaign. it's not good news for the republicans who are trying to one down ballot races in all three of those states. so, you know, their particular metrics may suggest to them that, yes, they're going to get a late surge if you're a
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republican strategist, but generally speaking what strategists do is use the last election as their baseline of voter behavior for the current election and based on that just what you said is something that they should be concerned about, which is that if democrats are out pacing what they did in 2012 and they won in 2012, that's not a good sign. and the three states it's worth noting, christi, have different dynamics. they're all dynamics that strategists should be concerned about. in arizona, for example, there's been a lot of activity a among the latino population. they're not leaning towards donald trump with some of his tough talk on immigration. in north carolina they've been demonstrating over voter registration rules. they've jammed up a movement that was already in full tilt before the election season even started. of course, in florida you've got a lot of different dynamics.
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they include latino politics including this important factor of a lot of puerto ricans moving from the island to flee that island's fiscal crisis and ending up in florida. those are all core democratic voters in all three of those states. >> speaking of florida, apparently there republicans are out numbering democrats in nevada and florida in terms of early voting. we know donald trump is going to be in miami tonight. what do you think we're going to expect to see from him? and what can he do to try to hold on to florida? >> reporter: what everyone has said, every strategist has said florida is a must-win state for donald trump if he has any path to victory, it must include florida. so they are very wisely putting a lot of resources, putting a lot of chips on that one state. he's actually going to get some indirect help from somebody who he has feuded with openly throughout the course of the campaign season, which is senator marco rubio who decided to run for re-election, has a commanding lead, has a ton of
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money which really counts because you have ten media markets in florida. so this is a place that it's going to be do or die for donald trump and he's going to have to work there probably every other day, i would say, for the next couple of weeks if he really wants to try and pull it off. >> well, i want to go back to something that he said last night because we were -- well, actually yesterday afternoon. we were talking about the getty'sburg address. they were looking at it. top aides were telling us the gettysburg address was going to be a speech about policy, with details in it. here's how he started off for about the first 15 minutes. >> every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign. total fabrication. the events never happened, never. all of these liars will be sued after the election is over.
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>> is there some sort of benefit, errol, to him continually bringing this up? you have to think, if he wouldn't talk about it, it wouldn't continue to be on the front burner. >> reporter: well, it would probably still be in the news a little bit. some of the accusations are really quite shocking. >> sure. sure. >> reporter: yeah. your basic point i think is correct, which is that he seems to have this inability to move beyond it. by saying things like i'm going to sue them after the election, which by the way is probably not going to happen, he's made a lot of threats. he threatened to sue "the new york times." we haven't seen any follow-up on that. he doesn't want to expose himself to liability or to the testimony under oath that would involve all of this stuff. i think this is personal to the candidate because i can't imagine any lawyer or political strategist who would have told him, hey, make sure you talk about that in the first five minutes with two weeks to go before election day. it just -- it just doesn't work for him, but it seems to be something that has gotten under
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his skin personally and that is just not going to work for him. i mean, almost every other day it seems like we're getting a newak cue sayings. these people can just torment him all the way up till the end. >> yeah. it makes you wonder whose ear he might have behind the scenes in his camp that might be able to help turn things around in terms of what he says when he gets in front of that podium. errol lewis, appreciate it so much. thank you. >> reporter: thank you. down ballot dilemma. the republican candidate could be putting congressional raceness jeopardy. how gop candidates are struggling to create some distance but in this case stay close to but not too close to donald trump. plus, the chicago cubs advance to the world series for the first time since 1945. finally got your chance to break that curse. the things they love to do most on these balloons. travel with my daughter. roller derby. ♪ now give up half of 'em.
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good sunday morning to you. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. good to be with you. >> the cubs are going to the world series! >> it's overwhelming and it's awesome. >> they've been waiting a long time for it. best fans in baseball. >> slow the moment down and really enjoy it because it is that special. so this is a big day, especially for chicagoans as the chicago cubs advance to the world series for the first time since 1945. this comes after decades of waiting and waiting. the team finally breaking the
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curse potentially. maybe that has the chance to break the curse of the billy goat. >> the team is just four wins from their first world series title in 108 years and look at them go. >> yeah! >> yeah, they're holding up their phones. thousands of fans there celebrating into the streets early this morning. no doubt some probably still celebrating at this hour. congratulations, guys. all right. to politics we go with victory nearly, some say, within reach according to polls or some polls. hillary clinton apparently has a new target, down ballot republicans. >> yeah. this is how she went after incumbent republican senator there in pennsylvania pat toomey last night in philadelphia. >> pat toomey heard donald attack a grieving gold star family, lost their son in iraq,
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he heard donald call mexican immigrants rapists, he heard him say terrible things about women. now how much more does pat toomey need to hear? if he doesn't have the courage to stand up to donald trump after all of this, then can you be sure he'll stand up for you? >> well, those attacks now coming from democrats and donald trump's possible loss as republicans worry about what washington will look like in 2017. manu raju has the story for us. >> reporter: gop officials now fear that if donald trump loses by a landslide, he could take down the congressional majorities with him. >> not only am i concerned about the presidential race, i'm concerned about what the impact on the down ballot races, including the senate. >> reporter: in new hampshire republicans sound like they're treating a trump defeat as a foregone conclusion with an ad
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that attacks democrat maggie hassan saying voters need a senate gop majority to keep a clinton white house in check. >> just imagine what she'd do on shift in washington with a new president. >> reporter: if clinton wins democrats need four seats to take back the democratic majority. republican seats in pennsylvania and new hampshire are in danger of flipping. democrats have a serious shot of winning in red states like indiana, north carolina, and missouri, and the battle for retiring senate democratic leader harry reid's seat in nevada is a true tossup. reid trying to tie republican joe heck to donald trump. >> the man we have running here for a senate in nevada who is a mini trump, heck -- >> reporter: heck revoked his support of donald trump. >> i cannot in good conscience continue to support donald trump. >> reporter: opponent katherine
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cortez masto is not letting up. >> after nine months being his biggest supporter and now realizing donald trump's sink is sinking, no, you don't get credit for that. >> reporter: in the house, trump has become so toxic that speaker paul ryan is scrambling to prevent democrats from picking up the 30 seats they need to win back the majority, but ryan's refusal to defend trump is causing some conservatives to threaten his speakership. >> a lot of the people who believe so desperately that we need to put donald trump in the white house, they question the loyalty of the speaker. so i do think that there will be real discussions after november 8th on who our leadership will be and what that will look like going forward. >> all right. thanks to manu for that. let's bring in two of our cnn political commentators, donald trump critic tara setmeyer and scotty mall hughes.
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scotty, i want to start with you. what's your reaction to what you heard from hillary clinton last night in philadelphia. in a way looking beyond donald trump and looking down ballot? >> well, i'm not going to defend supposed republican candidates who have a less than stellar conservative records like pat toomey. you look at what happened. you look at his score right now, heritage action scorecard, a benchmark from the conservatives. he only has a 60% rating. very neutral when it comes to donald trump. he has stayed out of it. i think a lot of these people -- a lot of these people in these contentious races are going to look back and go, maybe we did not do ourselves any favors having a very liberal record and going against the top of the ticket nominee. i think they're going to reassess and find out it's not necessarily donald trump that's taking it, it's their own voting record. >> let's listen to pat toomey on monday during the debate. >> i've been very public about my many disagreements with donald trump. i have been willing to criticize
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him because i think he's a badly flawed candidate. on the other hand, i also know if he were president he'd probably sign legislation that would be constructive, like repealing of obamacare and restoring sanctions on iran. >> tara, this week senator toomey told another reporter that he's stuck with essentially just stuck there with donald trump and he can't get away from donald trump and can't get too close to him. let me ask you, we heard from scotty there that, you know, she's not going to defend him but if toomey loses this seat to mcginty and donald trump's in, then he's going to lose potentially an ally in the senate. so it puts trump and his supporters in a very difficult place. >> right. i don't think that donald trump gives two hoots about whether the republicans maintain the majority of the senate. that's clear. donald trump has made more of an effort to go after republicans than he has really to go after hillary clinton at certain times during this election. so, you know, in the final month of the election he's really made
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going after paul ryan and all of these people a center piece of his stump speeches now, which is counterproductive. if he were really a team player, he complains that republicans aren't being loyal to him, but he has never been loyal to the republican party. he has no personal investment in the republican party and if he did, he would do the same thing that bob dole did in 1996 when the poll numbers weren't going quite his way. bob dole was gracious enough to do anything he didn't hurt the republicans running alongside. this is not the first time that we've seen the republican party or others say, look, every man for himself. we need to preserve our majority. you can't have it both ways. pat toomey's in trouble. we already knew this was going to be a tough seat to defend. what's even bigger is that six out of the seven competitive senate races right now democrats are going to out spend republicans by a significant amount of money on tv ads in the final stretch. the nrsc, which is the senate republican committee that raises money for senate campaigns,
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they've been out raised by $40 million by the democrats. they don't have the same resources. in pennsylvania alone they're looking to spend $17.2 million compared to pat toomey's 8.5. there's a problem in the final stage. donald trump has been a drag on fundraising and everyone knows it. >> scotty, let me jump to you. tara brings up a good point. i've watched more than my share of clinton and trump rallies over the past year. when a nominee comes up they thank their local members, send this in clinton's case, send this democrat to washington, send this democrat to the statehouse. donald trump doesn't mention another person who's running, even in a district where it would help when he comes up. does he -- does he care about those down ballot races at all? >> well, it's not about not caring, but he's running against a broken establish am, a broken house and senate that, yes, involves very moderate rhino
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republicans that are the reason why they're losing. once again, i love this idea of team player, that donald trump has to be on a team but therefore the team doesn't have to support donald trump like they have not from the very beginning. if those senators had stepped up to the plate knowing that we have record voter turnout we're seeing right now, we saw it in the primaries, overwhelmingly set records for donald trump, maybe they should have said, maybe we should align ourselves more. once again, this is not about donald trump, this is about their less than stellar records that in many cases democrats rank as better conservatives than the republicans themselves like what we're seeing in new hampshire. for tara to put the focus on money, that's the problem with washington, d.c. money should not be what's getting people elected. you should have enough. more importantly, it should be your record and your message. >> that's the reality, scotty. >> if you were involved with campaigns you would know that, money makes a difference when you're running with ad gaps, putting on television ads, staffing. the trump campaign doesn't have a traditional internal infrastructure in the campaign.
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they're short staffed. >> that has nothing to do with it. >> yes, it does. if you don't have people on the ground you can't get people to the polls. you can't have it both ways. >> we have to wrap it up. >> the fact that you're criticizing people for not being conservative enough shows you that the donald trump has nothing to do with the na saying majorities. >> thank you both. i will say this, it was donald trump's financial independence during the primary that helped him continue on when potentially someone who was causing so much trouble the party could have pulled back resources but since he was funding his own campaign that money kept him going. >> this is a general. >> it is. very different. speaking of money. one of the biggest deals in media history is done. an $85 billion deal between time warner and at&t. what does this mean for you? they've helped make our e-commerce so easy, and now we're getting all kinds of new customers. i know.
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mortgage rates dropped this week. week. here's a look. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (whispers rocket)
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♪ don't just eat. ♪ mangia! bertolli. well, it could be one of the biggest media mergers ever. at&t vows that it plans to buy time warner in an $85 billion deal. all transparency, time warner is the parent company of cnn. let's talk about it with host of "reliable sources" brian
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stelter. you're looking at the numbers and everything involved in this. break it down for us, will you please? >> reporter: sure. what this means, a union of sorts, of programming and distribution. at&t, we all know at&t, tens of millions of people's phones with wireless phone service and data. what at&t doesn't own though is content, entertainment and news. that's what it's gaining by buying time warner in this $85 billion deal. just to explain what time warner means. it does mean cnn, this channel, includes hbo, one of the biggest brand names for media in the world. "game of thrones" and the warner brothers movie studio and shows like "the big bang theory." what they're going to acquire are all of these networks. at&t wants these channels because if you're a giant media or tech company these days shts it's not enough just to own the distribution, you also want to own entertainment and news.
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that's what comcast was doing five years ago when it bought nbc universal. in some ways this proposed deal is similar. >> i know a lot of viewers are sitting there thinking, okay, i'm a customer of at&t. what does this mean for me? >> reporter: well, i think in the short term it means nothing. in the long term it means that at&t says it will be able to innovate and experiment, come up with new ways to consume media, new ways to watch tv and, of course, new ways to pay for it. for time warner this deal is enormously profitable. the stock was trading $80 a share before the rumors happened a couple of days ago. now it's going to be sold for $107.50 a share. there's obvious business logic especially for time warner shareholders. for customers at at&t, what it means is at&t will be able to own all of these channels as well as, for example, the wireless service. what that means down the road, we're going to see the companies experiment and find new ways to distribute media. >> could be new stuff coming.
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if donald trump is coming he says he'll reject that. we'll talk about that next hour. it is a done deal but it's not in a sense. >> reporter: that's right. regulators in d.c. have to approve it. it will take about a year to go through the d.c. approval process. we'll get to donald trump next hour. >> sounds good. brian stelter, sounds good. you can watch his show "reliable sources" later on at 11:00 a.m. on cnn. this morning we have new information on the massive cyber attack that infiltrated devices in your home. we know that tens of millions of i.p. addresses were used to take down popular sites like twitter and netflix. now hackers used malware to hit the company in three ways causing outages that many of the internet sources tracked the websites. some political satire from snl last night. >> let's talk immigration.
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mr. trump, why are your immigration policies better than secretary clintons? >> she wants open borders and that is crazy. i mean, people are just pouring into this country from mexico and a lot of them are very bad hombres. >> bingo. bingo. i've got bingo. i've been playing. >> i talk with my mouth but i sell with my hands. incredible bladder protection in a pad this thin, i didn't...
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did you know that every year in the u.s. 7 million children are bullied, either at school orion line.
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and when matthew cappern realized his little brother was one he took action even though he was only in eighth grade. during the past five years he shared his free anti-bullying program with more than 4600 middle school students and that's why he is this week's cnn hero. >> the term peer pressure is thrown around a lot, and usually when it is, it's meant as a negative thing, but i believe that we can actually harness peer pressure for good. what if it was cool to be kind and that's what positive peer pressure is all about. creating a culture where being inclusive and kind is the norm. >> to see matthew's positive peer pressure program. anderson cooper is revealing them next wednesday, october 26th on "new day." the 2016 election, it's the gift that keeps on giving to late night, isn't it? >> "saturday night live" --
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>> up. >> whoo! is securing hillary clinton and donald trump. equal opportunity bashing. the cast embodied tom hanks to fill in as the moderator. >> in the first debate i set the table. in the second debate i fired up the grill and tonight i feast. >> chris, i'm going to start this debate in the quiet voice possible. in the past i have been big and loud, but tonight i am a sweet little baby trump. >> that is good to hear. >> if she wants open borders, that is crazy. i mean, people are just pouring into this country from mexico and a lot of them are very bad hombres. >> bingo! bingo! i've got bingo. right? i've been playing all year and
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i've got it. bad hombres, rapists, miss piggy, they're all living in hell and she wasn't my daughter. >> wikileaks has been releasing your campaign e-mails, many of which raise some serious questions. >> thank you for bringing up my e-mails, chris. and i'm very happy to clarify what was in some of them -- sorry, what, carol? what? i'm sorry. thought i heard my friend carol. anyway, back to your question about the way that donald treats women. and that is how you pivot. >> so you're just never going to answer a question about your e-mails? >> no, but it was very cute to watch you try. donald said he was going to be tough on mexico, but when he met with the president, he choked. >> wrong. >> he said he's going to be tough on russia but he's
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basically putin's puppet. >> liar. >> he's promised to be tough on isis but he's never explained how. >> that's not exactly true. here's exactly what i'll do. first off, mosul is sad. and we're going after mosul because isis is in mosul, but she created isis and iran should write us a letter of thank you because iran is taking iraq and so we're going to mosul and iran's going to write us a letter of -- listen, where aleppo is a disaster and iran is iraq. with mosul is isis. >> mr. trump, we have to move on. >> thank god. >> what are you going to do after the debates are over? >> then they've got election night and they've got the transition. they'll find something. >> well, i know. i mean in the next two weeks because we're just two weeks away from election day. >> they will have some inspiration. i'm pretty sure somebody is going to give them some. presidential candidates, of course, campaigning in key
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battleground states. we've got lots to talk to you about in the political arena coming up.
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this is truecar. eleventh woman has come forward today with accusations against donald trump. >> he grabbed each of us tightly in a hug and kissed each one of us without asking permission. >> every woman lied, total fabrication. the events never happened. >> he's losing and he noesz kno >> we're going to see the best days ahead of us. >> in 17 days everything is

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