tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN July 15, 2017 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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>> most of the news and talk shows on the networks have been surprisingly, to me, surprisingly good. and then there were eight. new details emerge about the june 2016 meeting in trump tower attended by trump jr. and kushner and paul manafort. we know a russian-american lobbyist. welcome to "newsroom." it's 10:00 a.m. in paris. >> and let's get started. it's 4:00 a.m. on the east coast. >> welcome viewers in the united states and around the world. the u.s. president donald trump returned to washington, d.c. friday after two days at the
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french capital. he and first lady guests of honor at bastille stday. at the center of it all, the meeting that took place in june of last year with the president's oldest son and russian lawyer who supposedly had dirt on hillary clinton. now exactly what was said or discussed in the meeting is not clear. the details keep changing. we now know there were more people in the meeting. twice as many as previously disclosed. o our jessica schneider explains. >> reporter: another player erupts from the meeting with donald trump jr. and the russian lawyer. he disclosed everything there was to know with the several e-mails tuesday. >> as far as you know, this is all of it? >> this is everything. this is everything. >> reporter: now news that the
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russian-american lobbyist was in attendance. he told the associated press he was in the room for the 20-to-30 minute meeting with the openlde son and the lawyer and jared kushner and paul manafort. cnn has learned at least two others were in the room. a translator and representative for the agalarov family. he is focused on overturns the sanctions in russia. he mentions lobbying caught the attention of chuck grassley who describes him as a russian immigrant. apparently with ties to russian intelligence. that was in a letter to homeland security secretary john kelly requesting his immigration history. he denied to the washington post he served as an intelligence
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agent. he said he served as a soldier for two-years, not the russian government. i was not an intelligence officer. never. the e-mail chain release indicated another person at the meeting. british publicist rob goldstone. wrote this two days before. i will accepted the fasend the o people meeting with you later today. >> as far as my son is concerned, my son is a wonderful young man. he took a meeting with a russian lawyer. not a government lawyer, but a russian lawyer. it was a short meeting. >> reporter: president trump defended his son while speaking in paris. he continues to insist he did not know anything about the meeting until the e-mails were released. kellyanne conway seemed to suggest more evidence was needed
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to prove collusion. >> even the goal posts have been moved. we were promised systematic collusi collusion. >> reporter: the hurry to respond to the trickle of news coming out. it could be called robert mueller to explain what they mean about the trump tower meeting. sources close to the trump team, say white house aides started managing the disclosures in june from the e-mail from don junior. nancy pelosi is pushing to have kushner's security clearance revoked. >> it is not justified in any way. the president could revoke it in a moment and he should. >> reporter: no official response from the white house.
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we know top aides are well aware the top aides know about the meeting and not happy with the shifting details. jessica schneider, cnn, the white house. >> the president's attorney is speaking to cnn about the meeting with the russian lawyer. the attorney praised the president's son for releasing the details of the e-mails. he asked him if he still felt that way now. >> because the "there" was the e-mails that resulted in the meeting. he put the entire chain of the e-mails out. anderson, i go back to something we talked about before. you look at the situation and as the lawyer here, you look at the situation and understand it is getting a lot of attention, obviously. the question is what law has been violated here or might be violated here. you had a number of experts on cnn. i was on the other night with
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jake tapper who did the special. jonathan turley was on. everyone agreed there was not a legal violation with the meeting. they let donald trump jr. put out the chain of e-mails and the question is the meeting takes place. no exchange of information. russian-american lobbyist said that. natilia said it. donald trump jr. said it. nothing transpired. the president has stated clearly that he was not aware of the meeting and did not attend. meeting. that has been undisputed. he was not aware of it. did not attend it. with regard to the e-mail chain itse itself. i became aware of the e-mail chain by the time you did. and actually saw the e-mails. i'm in the reviewed the e-mails. i have not reviewed any other documents until this usual you
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ca issue came out. here is the thing that is important. remember this. the president was not aware of the meeting and did not participate in the meeting. that is fundamentally the issue that i'm concerned with as one of the president's lawyers. >> you were listening to the president's attorney speaking with anderson cooper earlier. he said that people kept coming in and out of the meeting and it was brief. a former top trump campaign adviser said he never heard anyone in the campaign mention russia. michael caputo testified on friday. the public relations specialist lived in russia for years. he is one being questioned as multiple investigations into russian meddling. >> i had no contact with russians. i never heard anyone in the trump campaign talking with russians. i was never asked about my time
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in russia. i near heard the word russia and we did not use russian dressing. there was no discussion of russia of the trump campaign until the day i left. >> cnn's drew griffin sat down with caputo friday before capitol hill's hearing. >> mike am chael caputo denied involvement in russia while part of the trump campaign. he is a long time supporter of donald trump. he was fired from the trump campaign in june of last year after seven months of in-fighting with corey lewandowski. he said he told house members he saw no collusion with russia. he said no one in his circle spoke to russia at all.
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not even over policy decisions. >> let me ask something. before, during or after your involvement with the trump campaign, did you bring russians to the campaign? did you talk about russia or the possible help the russian government could give to the campaign? >> never once. >> did you overhear anyone talk about collusion through information or fake news spreading? >> i heard nothing of the kind. we were so busy just trying to keep up with the sun rising and setting on that campaign that i cannot imagine anyone had the time nor the with all to go out and do something like this. anybody who covered the trump effort knew this was a pell mel operation from the moment you woke up to the time you went to bed. >> i heard this was described as a [ bleep ] show. too harsh?
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>> too harsh for a family television show. >> this is cable. >> in many ways, it was a [ bleep ] show. he is not a politician. >> michael caputo is important to the investigators because of the long time ties to russia and several other players in the trump campaign. he was a protege of roger stone. he worked for years as a political consultant in russia and working for russian politicians and major russian companies with ties to the kreml kremlin. and for donald trump jr. meeting with a russian woman, that took place 11 days before caputo was fired. he was still a communications aide at the time. he said he never heard about the meeting or russian lawyer before, during or after it took place. he learned about, he says, just
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this past week. drew griffin, cnn, atlanta. >> drew, thank you. let's get analysis from the professor of international politics at city university in london. live in the london bureau this hour. it is good to have you with us. donald trump jr. said there was nothing more to this. you heard that in the piece that ran previously. the drip, drip, drip continues. we know there were more people in the room. more than previously disclosed. how big of a problem is this for the white house? >> this seems to be this is the first hard evidence that has come about with official meetings or collusion with russian individuals with people who are very close to the trump leadership and campaign. i think this is a very, very difficult one. this has changed the game.
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prior to that, there was whether somebody did this or that. there wasn't any evidence. in the e-mails, it suggested active attempt to try to get some very, very polar information or good information if you like on hillary clinton. and to use it. i would say there is still a big question. quite a few links to be made to president trump or candidate trump at the time. the other thing is the whole issue if it had any effect on the actual election outcome as well. there are some people saying the democratic national committee had its connections with ukraine for example. >> and it is very important to point out there has been no direct connection between any of this and the president of the united states donald trump. here is the question. what is the likelihood the president's son-in-law jared kushner could have security clearance revoked by the president. has it risen to that level of
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alarm for the white house in your view and if he were to have clearance revoked, how will this help or hurt the administration? >> i think that would be a very major admission on the part of the administration that something has gone wrong. there are links to the white house itself. i would say that is unlikely to happen. that will happen pretty much at the 11th hour when everything has got really bad. i suspect donald trump will cling on. i don't think he will change anything at the moment. revoking jared kushner's security clearance would be a major step and huge admission there are further connections to be investigated. >> as for the president's base, many are looking at this and saying there's no evidence. there's no "there" there. they are saying let's give him time. one conservative is breaking from many of the ideological peers. charles krauthammer saying it is
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evidence of collusion. this was published in an article that he publiced. i want to read this. this is not heresay. this is not fake news. this is an e-mail chain released by donald trump jr. himself. how significant is that? >> i think it is very significant. charles is not a big fan of president trump or candidate trump for that matter. last summer in criticism of trump not being fit for office. when we look at the effect on the base. the base, if you like, not a whole mass. there are people who believe it is fake news. there are a lot of other people who are genuinely interested in exactly what did happen that the investigation should continue and they are worried that these investigations are also diverting attention from what
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many people were basically saying during the election campaign last year. there are many things which have gone wrong with american poli c politics. politics are not reflecting the interests of ordinary people. ordinary people are not able to achieve the american dream. and the role of politics and elected representatives is to try to do something about that. a lot of people think this is a lot more political theater and this makes them more fed up with politi politi politics. that alienation which led donald trump and bernie sanders campaign, that is continuing to alienate. this is the volatility. we can see it in america. we see it in europe. we see it in france with macron and elsewhere as well. mistrust of government and i think that's changing the way in which politics operates. i think donald trump's political base is not as secure as he believes. there are people who are secular
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about them and watching the investigations and alienated by the whole mount of time which is spent on this question. >> you mention that mistrust that plays out in so many different ways. different people see facts in different ways. these facts continue to emerge. one other question on transparency. donald trump jr. releasing the e-mail chain. praised by some for being transparent. was this mr. trump trying to get ahead of the big story coming like it or not. >> i think we know enough about this pemedia savvy character of the trump camp about how to release information. i think there is enough sophistication in the enemies around trump and friends and camp to know this would he vejsvej venetianly come out and you have
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to manage the release of the information. they realize that there are many con tetending forces with lots information. i think there are a lot of agencies operating. i suspect the drip, drip will continue from both sides of the particular theater. >> live in our london bureau, thank you for your insight today. >> thank you. >> this is cnn newsroom. still ahead, turkey marks one year now since the failed coup attempt. how one mother dared to defy soldiers right in front of her. we will have her story. a possible breakthrough for the parents of charlie gard. the family at the center of the controversy british court case. stay with us.
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welcome back to cnn newsroom. i'm george howell. in tehran, report of police shooting and killing a subway attacker. three people were injured in the incident. the cell phone video you see in the subway station was shot by an eyewitness. we will bring you more information on this as we continue to dig and get more on it. the pentagon confirms a u.s.
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air raid killed the leader of afghanistan's isis offshoot on tuesday. the drone strike hit the headquarters in kunar province east of kabul. the pentagon said the leader of the group was killed there. he is the third leader of the group killed by u.s. military in the past year alone. turkey also is marking a major anniversary. a one-year mark since the failed coup attempt. there are reports of more than 7,000 police and academics and civil servants dismissed. here is what the president erdogan said about the purge. listen. >> translator: they're asking how many people are dismissed from work and how their needs will be met from now on. let them work in the private sector. will we think about them? let them work in the private
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sect sector. will the state look after them? the state looked after them and they betrayed the state. >> there are marks to honor the anniversary in coming hours. we have more on this report. a mother who defied soldiers when this happened. >> reporter: few people knew her before this moment. she led a quiet and simple life but this conservative mother of two surprised herself. during the coup attempt last year she stood up to tanks and soldiers. she said she made a split second decision that she would go out to confront the soldiers trying to topple the government of egypt president erdogan. she said she thought she could stop the soldiers and appeal to
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their conscience. she says when she would not leave, they threatened to shoot her. i told them i wasn't afraid of them. they roughed me up but i kept saying i'm not afraid and they could shoot me if they wanted to. when soldiers began firing on the groucrowd, she said she was fired upon while carrying an away the wounded. she is glad to see those responsible for the coup behind bars. while many in turkey you are united, it has been a tollerabl place. more than 100,000 people have been detained or arrested. tens of thousands, civil servants and journalists have
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been dismissed from their jobs. critics of the government say the post-coup crackdown is a cleansing of all voices of dissent with the coup and crackdown leading scars on the fractured nation. gul istanbul. the body of the chinese nobel peace prize winner is on public view. he had been serving an 11-year sentence in prison. he was allowed to go to hospital, he remained in custody. the international community condemned the way china handled the case. and the charlie gard case if lond in london. the judge ruled the doctor from america can come and review the
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case next week. he and his family want to go to america for an experimental procedure. the judge agreed at least to begin with that the procedure would cause him pain. the child's condition could indeed improve. coming up on cnn, newsroom, the number of people meeting with the russian lawyer doubles. we will meet one of them. we will look at donald trump's two-day visit to france for bastille day and his budding friendship with the french president. stay with us. ♪ (shrieks in terror) (heavy breathing and snorting) no, no. the running of the bulldogs? surprising. what's not surprising? how much money aleia saved by switching to geico.
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great to have you with us. you are watching cnn newsroom. i'm syril vanier in paris. >> it is a beautiful day in paris. i'm george howell in atlanta with your headlines this hour. twice as many people attended donald trump jr.'s meeting than was first disclosed. at least eight people were there. including a russian-american lobbyist. the president's son agreed to the meeting after being told he would get damaging information about hillary clinton. police have shot and killed a subway attacker. this happened in tehran. according to iranian media. three people were injured during the incident. in this cell phone video, you see inside the subway station. we will bring you any updates and more information as it becomes available. in turkey, the nation marking one year since the failed coup attempt against recep tayyip erdogan. it comes among reports of a
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government purge. more than 7,000 police, academics and civil service have been dismissed. the pentagon says sayed was killed tuesday in a drone strike in kunar province. the commanders pledge to drive isis out by the end of the year. more on the meeting by donald trump jr. with a russian-american lobbyist in the room and he is well known in the diplomatic circle, it is not clear if he has links to russian intelligence. jim sciutto has more details. >> reporter: the june 2016 meeting at trump tower with trump junior and jared kushner and paul manafort had more than the russian lawyer. russian-american lobbyist told several media outlets he was in
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the meeting. he told reporters for the times and post that he is a veteran of the soviet army. in a letter to the chairman chuck grassley described him as someone with ties to russian intelligence and conducted disinformation campaigns as part of a russian lobbying effort. >> this russian attorney and this other third party if they were present, they were there to both deliver a message as well to receive a message and plainly moscow understood this is contact the trump campaign would appreciate. >> reporter: he denied any links to the washington post saying at no time have i worked for the russian government or agencies. i was not an intelligence officer. never. he also told the post he was born in russia and became a u.s. citizen in 2009. he mentions lobbying efforts on
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behalf of the russian lawyer and aimed at repealing the act which sanctions russians with human rights abuses. he claims that effort was on behalf of the kremlin. he was accused according to court papers filed in new york in 2015 of hacking on one company in computer systems of arrival company to steal information in a business dispute. the company imr withdrew the lawsuit. in an earlier case, he accusati computer specialist. i am not capable of hacking. he is connected to powerful people in russia both in the business world there and in government. one more note. he was born in russia, then the soviet union, he is now a u.s.
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citizen. he can be spokubpoenaed to test. jim sciutto, cnn, washington. >> u.s. president donald trump is back in the u.s. after being guest of honor for bastille day here in paris. he and the first lady were invitin invited by president emmanuel macron. the two seemed to enjoy the two greatly. the highlight was the military parade along the champs de. then helping secure defeat of germany. u.s. fighter jets participated in what is the crowd favorite here. the flyover. joining me now in paris to suggest the significance of the trip is amy green. the author of the book published
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in french. "america after obama." what did we learn from the latest foreign trip by the u.s. president? >> what we learned is a lot of opportunity now for french-american relations to assume the full place. the two leaders of state and heads of state have a great personal relationship. they seem to have accentuated the convergence with the united states and france. wediscord. we did not see any advantage on climate change or the paris accord. we saw french-american relations in a good state. a lot of opportunities to work together. there are issues where the two leaders are not eye to eye. >> trump did actually verbally recognize that there could be some change. he hinted maybe he could change
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his mind. what does your gut tell you? was that politeness? >> i'm not sure. some element of politeness. it is important for leaders to highlight the fact there are differences for emmanuel macron. he had no interest in showing before the french public that he sees eye to eye with the u.s. president. donald trump cannot necessarily retract position of a few weeks ago. there may be opportunities for progress to be made. i think this was simply a polite ov overture. and the approach of saying i'm open to any number of things. i'm not going to engage or let anyone know what i'm thinking. perhaps he was pleasing the crowd. >> this is my read, but we made a lot of the tension with donald trump and several other european leaders. this trip showed me there actually is a way forward for the leaders to just plainly agree to disagree on a number of things. then actually identify where
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they can move together. >> absolutely. if you look at the french-american relationship with george w. bush and the advance of the iraq war in 2003, we see that with the two countries. a formal friendship among serious discord. emmanuel macron is the natural spokesperson for donald trump. when donald trump calls europe, he calls emmanuel macron. of course, the president of the united states, no matter who it is, is the leader of the most powerful nation in the world. in that respect, no important problem could be solved without the u.s. nothing can get done without having the u.s. in the fold. >> and that's pretty much what the french president was saying. we have to work together where we can. going into the trip, we were highlighting and maybe i'm guil guilty. we are highlighting the personal differences. 36 hours later, we notice all of
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the areas of convergence. even personality. >> right. look at the two figures. they both had incredibly rapid rises in politics. macron had more experience. no one could have seen his election a year ago. same for donald trump. two men from business backgrounds and having broken the mainstream political system and looking to change something and create something new. in that instance, whether you agree or disagree, the reality is they are looking to do something similar. they are obviously interested in the symbolism. you saw the military parade. obviously pleased that the u.s. president and french president. whether he was receiving vladimir putin or donald trump, doesn't hesitate to use the historical elements of symbolism to welcome foreign leaders. >> that was a tool. he almost used it as a diplomatic weapon. amy greene, thank you for
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welcome back to cnn newsroom. we are following a story from the u.s. state of pennsylvania. two cousins charged with the murders of four men. their bodies found buried on a farm belonging to one of the suspects. our miguel marquez has the report. >> reporter: authorities here is a that everyone involved in the murders of the four individuals are now in custody. this is a police afternoon thfi the district attorney filed. it reads the account of the depravity of the individuals sunk to in the killing of the four young men. the first killing last wednesday, it reads, was over a marijuana deal gone bad or so it
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seems. jimi tar patrick killed on the first day and buried in a six-foot hole in the remote farm in bucks county. two days later, the other three were executed. mr. dinardo and his cousin as he called them. they got together. lured the people out to remote area of bucks county. then under the guise of selling marijuana to them, killed them. first one individual and two others at a later time. put them in a metal container that mr. dinardo kefreferred to pig roaster and doused them in gasoline and set on fire and dug up with a backhoe and buried them all. the prosecutors will not seek the death penalty because dinardo helped them and led them to where the boerdies are locat.
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here is what the prosecutor said about that. >> in my career, something of this magnitude, this is unprecedented. for the families who are grieving, the process they had to go through this week. same reply losing a loved one is overwhelming. what they had to do sitting through 96 hours at a site where weather conditions were awful at times to see if their loved ones were in the ground there has been an overwhelming experience for the families, first and foremost and all of us involved. our hope is to minimize their pain going forward through successful prosecution. >> did the families consult on the decision not to seek the death penalty for mr. dinardo? >> yes. they consulted. >> reporter: so dinardo and sean
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kratz are being held without bail. during the hearing for both individuals, it was disturbing in that it sounded like they were asking for time off from work. they were so straight forward and uninterested in what they were hearing from prosecutors and the judge. it is a very disturbing case that has shaken this entire community. miguel marquez, cnn, bucks county, pennsylvania. >> it is disturbing. miguel marquez, thank you. i want to tell you about the dry, hot windy conditions in the western u.s. they fueled wildfires as dust storm. derek van dam is here. >> we have images of the dust storm and fires. you can see in santa barbara county with the areas of the whittier fire. this is visible for miles. just blanketing the horizon with thick smoke and flames. new evacuation orders in place
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across the region. over 1,500 firefighters battling the blaze. 14 helicopters as well trying to take care of this fire from the sky. now we have few fires here highlighted on the particular map. one is the whittier fire. there is 52% containment. the other side of the story, fire conditions are still quite difficult across the area with changing wind patterns and low relative humidity and heat. one of the larger fires burning across the western u.s. roosters comb fire. 200,000 acres. that is 80% containment. currently, over 50 active large wildfire. we define that by 100 acres or more. several ongoing wildfires over the western u.s. here is why. we still have the extremely dry conditions across the area. there is the elevated risk of
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fire across santa barbara. a critical fire risk across washington and oregon and montana. dry storms across the u.s. could spark additional flames. why have we had the high fire risk? because of triple digit heat we have ongoing across the southwest. that continues to build through the rest of the weekend and into the early parts of next week. we have the dry relative humidity across the area. lightning strikes easily form these intense wildfires that continue to burn across the region. just to put it in perspective in california, we have seen two times as many wildfires burn this year to date than a year ago. two and a half times the five-year average. to phoenix, arizona, quickly. you have to see this, george. that is a dust storm that blanketed phoenix yesterday. you can imagine no one is flying in or out of that city when that is coming your way. that was captured by our
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affiliate chopper cam. it is also known as a haboob if you did not know that. >> thank you so much, derek. a quick programming note to tell you about on monday. a cnn exclusive with the duchess of cornwall. the different sides of camilla. she has a cordial relationship with the press and in a rare interview, she talks to max foster how she is helping victims of domestic violence. >> i think we can talk about a taboo subject. i can talk about it and bang on the drum a bit and so can a lot of other people. that's what i'm trying to do to help. >> often seen, but rarely heard. more of our chat with the duchess of cornwall. that is monday. a cnn exclusive. a lot of people are
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following the big fight when it comes to the mayweather versus mcgregor fight. you may think the promotion is bigger than the actual fight. we will have more on the story ahead. y. my ancestry dna results are that i am 26% nigerian. i am just trying to learn as much as i can about my culture. i put the gele on my head and i looked into the mirror and i was trying not to cry. because it's a hat, but it's like the most important hat i've ever owned. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com.
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depending on who you ask, this is either the biggest boxing match in years or a total farce. whatever you think of the fight, floyd mayweather against conor mccgregor is dripping with swagger. we have the report. >> reporter: they have been jabbering away like parrots all week. the face-off is what they like to call it. now to four venues and it seemed represent ti repetitious. mayweather got higher heels to get eye-to-tie with mcgregor. >> i don't give a [ bleep ] if it is a octagon. i will kick ass.
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>> his little core. his little head. i'm going to knock him out inside four rounds. mark my words. >> reporter: some of the time, we could not hear what they were saying precisely which is probably as well. this is sport as show biz. fighters strutting their stuff. choreographed if not scripted. conor mcgregor strutted in his simian way. he never boxed in his life, but he knows how to show himself. for his first appearance, he wore a suit with expletive with the "f" and the "u" down the pinstripe. >> it is fun and mass market. i think you know when we get into the ring, there will be no
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doubt. >> reporter: simply, this is all about the benjamins as they say. mainly the money. mcgregor seemed like the kid who won the willy wonka golden ticket. >> that's what i like. you are putting money in my account. >> reporter: did you enjoy the promotional round? >> it's grueling. it's rough. different countries. different cities. it's rough. >> reporter: tougher than the fight? >> no, no. >> reporter: more interesting than the fight? >> this is what i signed up for. >> reporter: the bookmakers make mayweather the heavy favorite. the fight is on his terms. boxing ring and with boxing gloves rather than the four ounce martial arts gloves that mcgregor usually fights with. >> the foregone conclusion? >> on paper, floyd mayweather is
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alarmingly favorites. one of the greatest mismatches we will ever see in a fight. yet, there is an x-factor of the irishman. he has something about him where he seems to make the impossible possible. >> i'm 40, but i look 20. >> and you act 10. >> yeah. >> reporter: if nothing else, mcgregor was the clear winner of the promotional circus. both men are expecting to make fortunes from the fight. mayweather is talking a nice round $300 million for himself. >> david fought goliath all those centuries ago. that would have been on pay-per-view and it would have had big numbers. >> reporter: on the road with floyd mayweather and conor mcgregor. >> thanks for joining us. i'm cyril vanier in paris.
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from action, to comedy, to drama. this summer hbo and xfinity have you covered. and catch the game of thrones season 7 premiere on july 16th. winter is coming to xfinity. after two days in the french capital, u.s. president donald trump returns home to a political fire storm that just has had more fuel added to it. thanks for joining us, everyone. i'm cyril vanier. it's 11:00 a.m. in paris. >> and i'm george howell. plus, a nation of turkey marking a major an varies, with reports of another massive purge ahead. we welcome our viewers here in the united
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