tv New Day Sunday CNN March 25, 2018 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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dreaming! definitely dreaming. then again, dreaming is how i got this far. now more businesses in more places can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. ♪ ♪ good sunday morning, everyone. i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm christi paul. >> so grateful to have you here with us today. had he marched and rallied and chanted and cheered and told lawmakers it's time to change. >> hundreds of thousands of people joined in across the country, around the world. now the big question is where does this movement go from here? >> stop it now! stop it now! >> their message is clear. vote out any politician who does
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not support new gun control laws. cnn's ryan nobles has more on the momentum of this movement and what comes next. >> reporter: organizers were expecting a good turnout at these rallies. not just here in washington but all across the country. but what ended up happening on saturday defied their wild expectations. on a day filled with loud cries. >> we want action! >> reporter: powerful songs. ♪ >> reporter: and energizing speeches. >> we are not here for bread crumbs. we are here for real change. >> reporter: it may have been the sound of silence that best captured the moment. emma gonzalez, a young woman what become one of the most recognized faces out of the movement born out of the massacre that took place in the halls of her school stood
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stone-faced and silent. >> six minutes and 20 seconds. in a little over six minutes, 17 of our friends were taken from us. >> reporter: gonzalez and a cadre of her friends from marjory stoneman douglas student took part in marchs and rally from all over the world. from boston. to chicago. >> the violence that they experience every day! >> reporter: denver. to los angeles. and back to parkland, florida, where the shooting took place. >> enough is enough! >> reporter: while any may only had each other when the shots rang out they had the supports of hundreds of thousands, including celebrities. >> one of my best friends was killed in gun violence right around here. so it's important to me. >> reporter: pop stars. and even the granddaughter of a
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civil rights icon. >> i have the dream that enough is enough! and that this should be a gun-free world, period! >> reporter: their hope is to do much more than march. they want action. specifically stricter gun laws. something the federal government has been reluctant to do. >> stand for us or be aware. the voters are coming! >> reporter: counterraerls held in boston and salt lake city but these students hope this movement is different, that common ground will be reached and they are warning their leaders they won't be giving up until they get the change they are looking for. the message from many students they don't want these rallies to be the end of their work but the beginning instead. many of them say their prepared to become politically active and prepared to vote what is the first election for many of this fall. in fact, many students said before they were a part of this tragedy, politics was something
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they never thought about. now it's become one of their biggest priorities. christi and victor? >> ryan, thank you so much. >> student organizers never expected the response they have gone. look at the crowd in this aerial photo from washington yesterday. that is massive. >> president trump was not in d.c. to hear this message firsthand. the white house is praising the marchers and the student leaders. kristen holmes joins us live from washington. >> reporter: that is exactly right. hundreds of thousands of people were marching on washington. president trump was in mar-a-lago visiting one of his golf properties about 35 miles away from where that parkland massacre occurred several weeks ago. we didn't hear from president trump all on this march and not on twitter and no statement. the white house did issue a statement in support of the protesters saying, i think we can pull this up for you here.
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which is why he urged congress to pass the fix nics and stop school violence acts and sign them into law. on friday they followed through on the president's commitment to ban legal weapons that turn illegal machine guns. the students are three specific requests they talked about yesterday. they were banning assault style weapons which is used in the mass shooting and banning high capacity magazines and not having anybody buy a gun with magazines. they haven't been acting on that for years so as we move forward, as we get closer to 2018, as this movement crows and continues to as well, again, looking at those pictures yesterday, it seemed as though this was just the beginning.
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we will likely hear more from the white house and they will be pressed for more direct answers on those demands. >> kristen holmes, appreciate it. >> joining us is sirage hashme and brian stelter and julian zeleny. julian, you have a piece in the atlantic this weekend that compares this march and movement to the march on washington in the early '60s. you say there are specific elements that these student activists do not have that they will need if they want the similar legislative changes that the civil rights marchers had. at the top of the list, savvy advocate in washington and members of congress who are willing to spend some political capital. >> they had found some voices
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with capitol hill and president kennedy ekennedy who were willing to spend their political capital on the issue the marchers wanted. the marchers need to find those voices. they don't really yet have them. they also need to organize beyond the march and that will be essential to turn this energy into legislation and that includes a line with other well-organized groups on other issues that are willing to support this important push for gun control legislation. >> a lot of politicians were reacting to all of this yesterday on twitter. marco rubio released a statement saying the following. much to what you were just saying, julian, about, okay, the march does one thing.
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there has somebody something afterwards that enacts change. when you listen to this statement, sirage, rubio, it sounds as though is trying to find a balancing act, so i don't agree with you, but we have to come to an agreement somehow and i respect your views. do you expect we will see more statements like this from other republicans? >> possibly. i think one of the interesting things that we saw, at least with the omnibus spending bill that no one read that president trump signed, considering the fact that nobody read it, it's actually amazing that no democrats actually had the nerve to fit any of those solutions that they proposed with respect to gun control and fit it in the bill to try to get something passed, considering that this has been a hot button issue for the last several years. and what i think is interesting is that republicans think that we are pro-second amendment.
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we idolize and fantasyize about guns so often people think it's cool to own a gun and the people mentally disturbed are willing to use it. we have the ability to use guns that many i'm sure saw coming. republicans in tight spot here and with respect to to the 2018 mid terms should they be out of control of the house and the senate? they are probably looking at more gun control and reforms on the way. >> brian, let's look at video that was produced by the nra for their tv across several platforms and this is how they framed the weekend heading into this march. >> take the millions of dollars going to this carnival of a march and hire armed guards and schools all over this country but then these kids would have to shrink from the spotlight and go being to their homework and the forces funding them? would lose the opportunity to further an agenda that is million times bigger than the
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guns. what are you really marching for? because from where it looks like a march to burn the constitution and rewrite the parks that you all like in kraon. >> is the message from the fnra. he says his act is willing challenged by those who support gun control. >> he seems a tad worry. the council was quiet yesterday and didn't weigh in on the march. all of the research shows an intensity gap between gun rights proponents who have the intensity and gun control advocates on the other side who didn't have nearly as much intensity. a problem the gun rights proponents have taken vag of a long time.
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oer you look at saturday and you think something might be changing. that that intensity gap may be shrinking, that the intensity was clearly on the side of the gun control advocates on saturday all across the country. i think that is why -- remember, victor, after parkland, all of us on tv were very skeptical. we said something different this time and i think journalists were afraid to say it because we have been here before where the country suffered a catastrophic loss at a mass shooting and people moved on to the next thing. this time it really is different. i saw it in new york and you all saw it in washington. i think the most striking where actually in the smaller towns from spokane to springfield and toledo to tucson, the smaller communities there were voter registration drives and calls for action at the ballot box where we could actually see something happen in november. that might be good, that might
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be bad. but this time is definitely different. >> sirage, with what brian is saying, is there a sense, a g j gauge of the lingering effects of what we saw yesterday, a real change? >> that's possible. it's march and we have to wait until november to see the ramifications of this march and as it translates into electoral results. marco rubio is not up for re-election until 2022 and he is blocking whatever reforms the children want with respect to gun control. several members of congress more fixated on this issue and i think democrats as a whole are focusing on gun control as a means of getting people out to the polls. i also think that with president trump being in office, considering the fact that now he has signed this omnibus spending
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bill, that was a stab in the back to a lot of his base. democrats actually have more of an advantage now with just that signing than they do with just gun control. so, yes, i think it's actually going to translate into actual results. they just have to keep the momentum up and actually turn a rally into action. >> there are some elements in that omnibus bill that those who support gun control would appreciate, making some progress from their standpoint on studying gun vils as a health issue and other elements as well. stay with us. we have a lot more to talk about. stay with us for our "state of the union" today with jake tapper. democrat senator tim kaine joins us to talk about president trump's national security adviser with a controversial past. that is 9:00 a.m. eastern on cnn. of course, the stormy daniel saga continues tonight with potential new details about her
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alleged affair with the president and the efforts to silence her. what can we expect to learn from this tell-all? >> president trump might ask russian diplomats to leave the united states over a former spy in britain. we will talk about that. i'm not a bigwig. or a c-anything-o. but i've got an idea sir. get domo. it'll connect us to everything that's going on in the company. get it for jean who's always cold. for the sales team, it and the warehouse crew. give us the data we need. in one place, anywhere we need it.
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a new interview with "the washington post," porn star stormy daniels says has prepared her for a life of public scrutiny and could identify new details about her alleged affair with the president and the alleged effort to silence her. our panel is back here now. thank you for sticking around, gentlemen. i want you listen to this with this interview with stormy daniels as they start the interview. i guess i'm not 100% sure why you're doing this. >> so, obviously, it's one of the questions everybody wants to
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know. she did speak, we should point out, with "the washington post" and they printed that out this morning. and in this, you know, we learned some things we didn't know. she is a wife. she's a mother. michael cohen claims that she has breached this contract and may own $20 million. when you look at that, you know, brian, she is a wife, she's a mom. $20 million. what is the end game is it for her and is it important for us to know what her intention is? >> i think partly the end game is to be freed of this contract. seems like she has regrets taking this payment in the weeks before the election. you think about the election versus today. what has changed in america? one of the things has changed is the me too movement. the idea that women should be free to speak and speak their truth, so i think in this me too environment, she is saying she should be able to speak and maybe regrets the payment and maybe the way it happened was inappropriate and she should be
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able to talk about her experiences with now president trump. i think that is one of the parts of this and there are campaign finance law questions that are real questions beyond the salacious headlines that may come out tonight. this interview was taped a couple of weeks ago. our colleague anderson cooper has been working on it and preparing to broadcast it on "60 minutes." they haven't released any of her clips of speaking which to me is a sign they something very interesting to show. they are not trying to tease ahead of time. they are just going to let the interview speak for itself tonight and what i wonder, was i'd like to know personally and why i'm going to tune in tonight is whether she has text messages or other evidence of the affair because one of the issues here with president trump and women who either accused him of consensual or nonconsensual encounters is there has been denials of those encounters, denials of those alleged affairs. so if she has evidence to bring forward that could make a difference in this story. >> this is really about alleged
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intimidation and possible violation of campaign finance laws and not necessarily about an affair. julian, the white house, they have dismissed these allegations and spoken up about it. are you surprised, however, that it seems, from the outside looking in, because we have not heard one iota from the president, himself, that stormy daniels and these women seem to be the only ones who can silence this president. >> yeah. it's been remarkable not to hear from the president because we hear from him on almost every issue and every time there is an adversary out there, whether it's in politics or the culture of marc, he attacks and he has been pretty silent, so we don't know if he is being convinced by his counsel, this is not an issue to speak out about, or he personally understands that the more he enters into this fray, the more damaging it might be. and i think this touches on a number of issues beyond the
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salacious scandal. from campaign finance to intimidation to the big problem he has with the gender gap going into the midterm elections that might really hurt republicans. there is actually a lot at stake with the story that might seem simply like a scandal story. i think it's much bigger. >> sirage, we know her important tweeted out a picture of a dvd, as he said, a warning at the time president that they have proof to dispute what the white house has said about this. the again, the president has not said anything. do you get a point the attorney is winning the pr store? >> absolutely. they certainly have a leg up in terms of getting their message out there. i think what is interesting president trump has not tweeted about two people during the entirety of his presidency. stormy daniels and eminem.
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if he tweeted about them it only gives them more attention. what is interesting with stormy daniels there is a lot of pressure on anderson cooper and "oef minutes" and stormy daniels to deliver on something they can translate into something that indicts the president and not so much in the legal sense but in the personal sense i think could probably bring up legal proceedings such as defamation and with respect to campaign finance law and even stormy daniels being threatened. i think there are avenues that i think they can go that would make this a real problem for the white house. >> if i can just add to that, stormy and her lawyer want to keep this going and seems to be their interest to keep this in the news so that will be interesting to see what they do after this interview airs. what is their next step or goal beyond this lawsuit. there is big basketball games on today before "60 minutes." so this will get a huge audience
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and a lot of curiosity in it and a very personal story. one thing to hear a porn star had an affair with someone. when you hear that headline and read the story and another woman to speak in her own words and the power of television. we saw that when cnn interviewed karen mcdougal the other day. she was relatable and i'm wondering if that is true for stormy daniels tonight and for the trump family, melania trump who will be at mar-a-lago watching this. there have been so many times i think what is melania thinking? don't the country feel pain for her whether the "access hollywood" tape coming out or this issue. what can polarize a country, can we have a moment for the first lady? >> julian, we all remember that
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moment with bill and hillary clinton during monica lewinsky and she stood by him. i remember walking out to -- on the white house lawn holding the hand of her daughter who was between the two of them. what does it say or how effective or how much power does melania trump, as first lady, have here in any response she either does or does not put out after this? >> i think she could have a very powerful response. i don't know what she will say, but the story of their relationship is, in some ways, one of the great mysteries of this white house, given all of the news that has come out about him and his alleged relationships before the campaign, during the campaign, and after the campaign, watching her sit through some of this can almost be painful. obviously, if she comes out and is very forceful in supporting her husband and denying the story, it could help move the
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story to something else. but if she indicates any kind of anger or pleasure or simply silent, i think it will continue to fuel the interest and what happened and what president trump's personal troubles are about and what effect it's having on this white house. >> at the end of the day, there are a lot of women and men who know the humiliation of infidelity and being the victory of it. yeah, i think brian was right in the sense that there is a possibility here of some unity in some regard or certainly some empathy and understanding. >> empathy, yes. >> we appreciate all of you. thank you. >> thank you. hundreds of thousands of people marched across the country andrea the world to stop gun violence. the students leading this movement say this is only the beginning. >> the finish line at the end of the march hero today in parkland and all of the marches around the country is our beginning
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the obsession with guns. even posting on instagram about shooting up the school. i mean, no one said anything. i'm sure tomorrow somebody will wish they had said something. it wi called usaarst and the first thing they asked i'm sure tomorrow somebody will wish was 'are you ok?' they always thank you for your service, which is nice because as a spouse you serve too. we're the hayles and we're usaa members for life. ...with its high-tech cameras and radar... ...contemporary cockpit... ...three hundred and sixty degree network of driver-assist technologies... ...and sporty performance... ...what's most impressive about the glc? all depends on your point of view. lease the glc300 for just $449 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.
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took the stage. >> she oechoed the same message our grandfather said in that particular city. >> i'm the granddaughter of martin luther king and coretta scott king. my grandfather had that dream that his four little children will not be judged by the color of their skin but their character. i have a dream that enough is enough! and that this should be gun-free world, period! will you please repeat these words after me? spread the word! >> spread the word! >> have you heard? >> have you heard? >> all across the in addition! >> all across the nation!
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>> we. >> we! >> are going to be! >> are going to be! >> a gun-free generation. i'd like to you say and i'd like you to really, really, mean it! spread the word! >> spreaded word! >> have you heard? >> have you heard? >> all across the nation. >> all across the nation! >> we. >> we! >> are going to be! >> are going to be! >> a gun-free generation! i'd like you to say it like it really mean it in the whole entire world, so they can hear you! spread the word! >> spread the word! >> have you heard? >> all across the nation. >> all across the nation. >> we. >> we. >> are going to be! >> a gun-free generation. now give yourself a hand! >> yolanda renee king.
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is one of the many young voices at yesterday's marches who were doing the same. >> here is cnn's correspondent. >> reporter: honestly, it's incredible. the kids are have not stopped. >> reporter: around the world demand for change on saturday. led by the students of marjory stoneman douglas high school. >> we will continue to fight for our dead friends. there will be no faltering, no pauses in our cause. every moment will be dedicated to those pieces of legislation. every march. every meeting. every moment. all for that assault weapons ban to keep the weapons out of the hands of civilians who do not need them. >> reporter: here in parkland, florida, home to the stoneman douglas students turned out in mass to support one another. >> i was tag notes in my math
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class. and on 14th of february i was shot in the knee in my fourth period classroom. >> enough is enough! >> reporter: as we have seen them do in the weeks following february 14th, this community continued to channel their grief into passion. >> i can stand here today and tell you all that the 17 victims' families will not stop fighting until we make this world a better and safer place! >> it's because of our loss that the group here today has a voice that is resounding throughout the nation. >> reporter: as marchers approached the school campus, they were asked to observe a moment of silence and keep on walking. a sign of their determination to keep moving forward in their fight for change. >> the finish line at the end of the march here today in parkland and all of the marches around the country is our beginning line. we are just getting started!
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>> reporter: with the march now behind them, the next date circled on many of these students' calendars, their first opportunity to vote. sarah could haveman kaufman is won't be voting until 2020. >> there is no spring break for us. we are working and trying to make a change here. president trump could force russian diplomats to go back to moscow after a former russian spy was poisoned in britain. what this means for the u.s./russia relations. we will ask an expert next. that's confident. but it's not kayak confident. kayak searches hundreds of travel sites to help me plan the best trip. so i'm more than confident. forgot me goggles. kayak. search one and done. liberty mutual saved us almost $800 when we switched our auto and home insurance. liberty did what? yeah, they saved us a ton,
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some in russia. the president's decision could come as early at tomorrow. the poisoning happened earlier in russia this month but russia denies it had anything to do with this comment. let's bring julian zeleny and sirage. several countries, let's put them up here. ten and possibly more, including germany, france, will likely we are told by a foreign diplomat, expel russian diplomats. >> there is a saying growing up don't start none, don't be noon and what the expelling of these russians is going to be. if russia had not gauged in this
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type of behavior. former president barack obama expelled russian officials when there was wrongdoing and they essentially with respect to the sanctions that he imposed on russia that the senate had basically voted for, you know, this is just another -- it could either be symbolic or it could be genuine in the sense that president trump is trying to get tough on russia and that is simply, if this actually goes through, then he can actually say go back to his critics and say i'm being tough on russia. >> let's point out. we have these conversations about the national security council and let's point out, i think we have got a full screen here we can show the members, some of the members and this is the wrong full screen. the faces -- yes, trump security council team, these are some of the people included there, including the vice president and secretary of defense, general kelly there as well and dunford, mnuchin and mcgahn.
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julian, if past is prologue, which is the greater influence here of what the president may do, the better setup here? the recent sanctions that were imposed on russia or the president, you know, congratulatory call and reluctance to speak out about this with president putin. >> let's remember with the sanctions the president was not particularly enthused about that legislation, nor has he moved forward very aggressively in implementing them, so they both might indicate where he is, meaning at some level he is still sympathetic for whatever reason to different or better kinds of relations with putin and hesitant to take action. yet he might also feel pressed to do something, at least symbolically to show some support for punitive action and a response to this kind of russian behavior. so both might actually indicate exactly why he is going to do this and why this might be a
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bare minimum that he has to do something to show he is listening to many allies in the world. >> let's put that tweet back up we had a moment ago. the president sent this out a few days criticizing his predecessors. sirage, expelling russian diplomats i guess counter to the president's hope or plan to have a better relationship where he classified it get along with russia? >> as we have seen with some of president trump's actions with respect to signing the omnibus spending deal, 1.3 trillion dollar budget deal, you know, he is falling in line with a lot of his predecessors and his stance russia. i think what we are seeing right now from president trump, he is trying to catch up in the respect to show that he is being
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tough on russia as julian pointed out, he was reluctant in posing those sanctions when he imposed sanctions on north korea from the same senate proposal that was passed 98 opini-2 by t voting margin. president trump has a lot more work to do if he is going to achieve that goal of getting a friendlier relationship where russia and saying we can't tolerate this bad behavior. >> john bolton as of late has advocated for retaliation against russia and cyber attacks. he has been more adversarial, bolton has, recently than in the past. what influence could he, coming into the job in a couple of weeks have on the decision that could come as early as tomorrow? >> bolton is much more traditional when it comes to republican policy and attitudes towards russia. he supports a more aggressive
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response. he has been very vocal on saying that there needs to be some kind of retaliatory action. so question is can bolton be the person who finally changes how president trump thinks of policy? my guess is, i doubt it. i think bolton will only be influential if president trump wants to go in his direction. we have seen again and again and every adviser who is brought in, no matter how strong, no matter how smart, can't really tame or control the president. president trump will do what he wants to do and the advisers who are influential match up with where the president is moving. >> all right. julian zeleny and sirage hashme, thank you both. breast cancer diagnosis is not keeping a basketball player and an official on the court. coy wire has information on one incredible story. >> good morning to you. the whole life is basketball and
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been a part of her life and her love of the game introduced her to the love of her life, robert. when crystal was diagnosed with breast cancer she watched her family and friends and community rally around here. >> i attempt to get fouled a lot so i can make some free throws. i started playing basketball when i was in first grade and i continued through elementary and junior high, played high school basketball. i got involved in officiating when i was in college. that's where i met my husband so i had to retire from being an official. my husband's team will be playing in the state championship at the same location that we are actually having the hardwood heroes. >> i was removed back in the day. >> and it's awesome because i'll be there to support. i was diagnosed with cancer in 2010. it was a typically breast cancer but the difficult thing i was 27
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when i was diagnosed. it was hard to see my family, you know, they have no control of it so i think it was harder to see them because i could only control what i could control. my mom probably cried more in doctor's appointments than what i did. what i want to become from being a part of hardwood heroes is getting the word and let people know you can still be an athlete and a cancer survivor and still love a sport and be a part of it. my name is krystal lucero. >> good stuff crystal. a lot of stars on the court for the final four in san antonio and a lot of these are people who inspire so many. did you see yesterday? this man is dancing. >> give him some more love! >> rightfully so! he is leading the cnn bracket challenge, of all people! it's the guy!
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>> of all people! >> just focus near the top! there you go right there at the top! >> yesterday, my man victor quoted beyonce, what did he say? top two? >> top two and i ain't number two! >> i tell christi. this is my dream when i come on the weekend to find a sports story that gets victor blackwell intrigued by sports and he is dancing now! >> winning excites me! >> there we go. some of these i chose just like, oh, that makes sense. or 5 versus 1? let's give 5 a shot. but michigan, i'm expecting will go all the way. >> looking good. >> what place are you in? >> i have no clue. >> let's put the brackets back up. >> i will be honest with you, somebody else picked them for me. i can't even own. even if i was winning i would say i can't own it because i didn't have time to do it. >> keep controlling. keep controlling. >> roll to the bottom! >> there she is. does it go down that far? but i'm down there with you!
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misery loves company! >> i get one shot at this a year! one shot! >> soak it up! soak it up! >> absorb it all. thank you, coy, so much. next hour of "new day" is coming up after a quick break. the closer you get to home, the more you know the commute is worth it. you and that john deere tractor... you can keep dreaming up projects all the way home. it's a longer drive. but just like a john deere, it's worth it. when this bell rings... ...it starts a chain reaction... ...that's heard throughout the connected business world. at&t network security helps protect business, from the largest financial markets to the smallest transactions, by sensing cyber-attacks in near real time and automatically deploying countermeasures. keeping the world of business connected and protected.
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good morning. as we head into the 7:00 hurry on a sunday you're up early. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. they marched and chanted and told lawmakers it's time for change. >> hundreds of thousands of people, not just in this country but around the world. the big question this morning is where does this movement go from
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here? the message is clear from these folks. vote out any politician who does not support new gun control laws. cnn's ryan nobles has more on the momentum behind the movement and what comes next. >> reporter: organizers were expecting a good turnout at these rallies. not just here in washington but all across the country. but what ended up happening on saturday defied their wild expectations. on a day filled with loud cries. >> we want action! >> reporter: powerful songs. ♪ >> reporter: and energizing speeches. >> we are not here for bread crumbs. we are here for real change. >> reporter: it may have been the sound of silence that best captured the moment.
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