tv New Day Sunday CNN May 6, 2018 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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yet. i'm getting there. they took their time and gunned them down one-by-one. boom. come over here. boom! come over here. >> angering not one but two of america's most closest allies. >> if one person in this room had been there with a gun, the terrorists would have fled or been shot. >> hello, donald. >> come on, stormy. stop making such a big deal about this. everyone know it's just an act. i solved north and south korea why can't i solve us? >> sorry, donald. it's too late for that. i know you don't believe in climate change but a storm is coming, baby. >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. >> good sunday morning. may 6th. these are the major headlines we are following right now. mr. president, grab your remote. rudy giuliani is on a media
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blitz this morning after the president says his new lawyer needs to get his facts straight. >> live from new york, it's stormy surprise. the porn straw draws some laughs during her "saturday night live" debut. the question is will the president react to it? a violent volcano erupts in hawaii and people are rushing to safety. a correspondent is with us live why he returned to afghanistan after hit in the face for a grenade. your "new day" starts right now. ♪ >> good morning. rather than backing down, rudy seems to be doubling down. he was on fox news to say president trump did not break any campaign finance laws by making a payment to stormy daniels. >> the president said his new attorney would get his facts straight. so has he? watch.
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>> he'll get his facts straight. >> the facts? i'm still learning. >> he started yesterday. >> i've on the case for two weeks. virtually one day in comparison to other people. >> was there no collusion with the russians. >> there is no evidence of collusion with the russians. >> there was no obstruct. >> is there no evidence of obstruction of justice. >> what they should do is look at the other side where terrible things have happened. >> poor little hillary. we will take that. no under oath. no q & a. just notes. >> he knows it's a witch hunt. >> the judge in sum and substance said this is a witch hunt. >> so hours later then you've got this. stormy daniels, the porn star, on "saturday night live," telling alec baldwin's version of trump that she will not stop until he resigns. joining us live from washington,
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sarah westwood and cnn white house reporter, how all of this being digested today? >> rudy giuliani has spent the past few days on cleanup duty since making a bombshell claim on wednesday night that trump reimbursed his lawyer michael cohen for the $130,000 that cohen paid to stormy daniels before the 2016 election in exchange of her silence about an alleged affair. president trump denies any involvement in that transaction and giuliani has had to walk back much what he said about the stormy daniels case and last night he had this to say about his knowledge of the issue. >> did you misspeciak or did people not interrupt what you were saying? you were talking about the facts or the law? >> i'm talking about the law and the conclusion. the facts, the facts, i am still learning. i'm not an expert on the facts yet. i am getting there and i am an
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expert on the particularlily the campaign finance law and i lived under it running to president. no way is this a violation of any xin nor wcampaign or nor wa alone. this expenditure would have been made whether he was or wasn't running for president. >> reporter: sources tell cnn that giuliani's comments about the case has thrown the president's legal team in disarray and other white house staffers say they weren't consulted on what giuliani planned to say in many of these interviews leaving much of the white house in the dark about what giuliani might say next. >> sarah westwood, we appreciate the reporting. thank you. >> thank you. joining me now is mark o'meara, criminal defense attorney and former prosecutor and brian stelter, cnn media correspondent and host of "reliable sources." good morning. we got to separate this conversation into halves. we have attorney and media guy. let's talk about the important first, mark. rudy giuliani said there --
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let's play it. let's play what rudy said about his understanding of the facts. >> the facts -- the facts, i'm still learning. this is 1.2 million documents. i've been on the case two weeks and virtually one day in comparison to other people. so i'm not an expert on the facts yet. i'm getting there. >> if you're still learning the facts, why are you on television every day trying to make the case? >> first i love rudy. i'm a new yorker in my heart so i get it. but to answer your question, he should not be. he literally should not be. the only thing you have as a good attorney, defense attorney of any sort, is you need to know the law. he says he does and you need to know the facts before you talk about it. the worse thing you can do is ever get on tv or anywhere and say something you to walk back from. the problem is it is that as you present your client, you have to know what you're talking about. you can only say that which you
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can defend forever more and everything that has been said in the past two weeks is so convoluted and self-contradicting that it's got to cause problems in the way he can be believed when he is talking about his client in the future. >> let's talk about giuliani as a media profile, a media person here. is he doing his job, which is to muddy the water but leave with the headline of no collusion, no obstru obstruction, all legal? >> i think he is sdog what tdoi president wants to do hims. the president called into fox and friends and what he wants to be doing. he wants to defend himself but he has rudy doing that. in some ways rudy is acting like a surrogate or talking head than an actual lawyer. i think it goes to the old saying you shouldn't hire your friends or your family. the president has hired a close friend of his who ends up
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getting him in trouble. one of our colleague said mechan america's mayor is the president's nightmare. rudy is back on television later today and twisting himself into a pretzel. as much as wants to spin in the court of public opinion, a court of law is just a very different matter. >> so while we have on the one side, mark, we have -- let me stay with brian for this, actually. we have on the one side, we have got the president's attorneys and the presidents with their three stories, sarah sanders has her own version and you mix them all up and maybe they come up with one. you got on the other side stormy daniels who was on "saturday night live" last night in front of the cameras and pop culture feature herself. let's watch a portion of that performance. >> just tell me what do you need for this to all go away? >> a resignation. >> yeah, right. ha. being president is like doing porn, what you do, it's hard to
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do anything else. >> so, brian, it appears that the american people are not punishing the president for the actual alleged affair. so what is the impact of stormy daniels being on television on "snl"? is she having some impact here? >> she has become one of the most effective thorns in his side. when you think about some of the top opponents to trump that get a lot of attention, there is some lawmakers, yeah, but it's actually people like stormy daniels and michael avenatti. go figure who thought we would be here. i think about the payment doesn't add up. he said this payment would have been made whether trump was running for president or not but we know the alleged affair happened more than a decade al and it was because stormy daniels was getting calls from media outlets and thinking about speaking out only a couple of weeks before the campaign ended that she was paid at that time. so the idea that this would have happened this payment would have been made regardless of the campaign it just doesn't make
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sense. if i can add one more point about rudy. stormy daniels, yeah, it's a sex scandal, a payment scandal, fine. rudy is out there on national television talking about the americans that are being held in north korea. he has said repeatedly they are about to be released and saying on thursday they are released today and they haven't been released yet according to the u.s. government. again, last night he said hopeful soon. why is the president's personal lawyer talking on national television talking about a really critical delicate national security matter? it just boggles the mind. >> this was a conversation we had in the last hour. what are his -- what is his job description? he was wrong obviously on thursday saying that the detainees would be released. >> today. hopefully, he'll be right this time butted for forbid this make the delicate situation even worse. >> mark, from the show last night, giuliani went on to say even if this was a campaign
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donation, the president reimbursed it fully with a payment of $35,000 a month to pay off that and other expenses. he says that wouldn't be a violation either. is that accurate? >> well, i think rudy just passed his prime, quite honestly. and taking on the massive amount of information had he to absorb. he should have hushed up. he had an opportunity to come on scene, maybe, and be a reasoned voice. what he said last night, to me, was more problematic. he came out and sort of doubled down and said, again, what he did, he would have done any way. incredibly untrue. i think coincidental if it was true. then it was for this reason it wasn't a campaign reason and it was a campaign reason but it was a retainer. i take retainers. you don't take retainers for other purposes and then come in afterwards and sweep them altogether and say now it makes sense. you don't have an opportunity to do that. and my god, you never go on national tv and discuss that type of information as a lawyer.
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>> giuliani will be back on this morning. we will see what he says today. mark o'mara and brian stelter, thanks so much. president trump's friend is on the special counsel's radar. a source tells cnn that tom barerick was interviewed and asked about his relationship withm manafort and rick gates. federal investigators did not ask him about money or relationship with the president and made it clear he was not a target of the probe. as president trump's legal battles in the stormy case continue, is his newly hired attorney rudy giuliani adding to the chaos as victor was just talking about? congressman adam schiff will join jake tarp this morning to discuss that issue on "state of the union" this morning at
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9:00 a.m. eastern. a hawaii volcano is spewing lava and forcing hundreds of people to leave their homes. we have details on what is happening new and what is ahead. angry allies. why some world leaders are criticizing president trump's rents comments about g recent comments about guns and what they want to happen next. >> conflict zones are huge. we will talk to one man hit by rpg in afghanistan but went back again and again and again to cover the horrors of war. every . these friends were on a trip when their windshield got chipped. so they scheduled at safelite.com. they didn't have to change their plans or worry about a thing. i'll see you all in a little bit. and i fixed it right away with a strong repair they can trust. plus, with most insurance a safelite repair is no cost to you. >> customer: really?! >> tech: being there whenever you need us that's another safelite advantage. >> singers: safelite repair, safelite replace.
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>> tears. a lot of tears. saying good-bye to my house. might have to start over at age 56. you know? that is concerning. >> officials in hawaii say the volcano is, quote, not done yet. two of the united states closest allies are expressing their anger and disappointment over recent comments made by president trump. france is upset over claims the president made about the november 2015 terrorist attacks in paris where 130 people killed and dozens injured and president trump had this to say at the nra convention on friday. they took their time and gunned them down one-by-one. boom. come over here. boom, come over here. if one employee or just one patron had a gun or if one person in this room had been
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there with a gun, aimed at the opposite direction, the terrorists would have fled. >> so the french president at france at the time of the attacks called the president's comments shameful and french foreign ministry is calling for respects for the country. at one point the president even compared a london hospital to a war zone with blood all over the floors. no secret arizona senator john mccain and president trump aren't the best of friends per se. sources close to mccain say that president trump is not expected to be invited to his funeral. mccain is 81 and he was diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer last year we are told that former presidents george w. bush and barack obama have been asked to deliver eulogies at that funeral
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when it happens. julian zeleny is with us, a historian and professor at princeton university. i want to get your reaction to some of the things the president has said about mccain. >> he is a war war hero because he was captured. i like people who weren't captured, i hate to tell you. except for one senator who came into a room at 3:00 in the morning and went like that, we would have had health care too. we would have had health care too. think of that. and, by the way, we are decimating obamacare. we got a bad vote the evening. we got a bad vote the evening that we were going to terminate obamacare. we got a bad vote. you know about that, right? that was not a nice thing. >> let's put it out there how unconventional this is to be having a conversation about a funeral for a man who is still bus and with his family and we
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hope will be for quite sometime but he is, obviously, himself, making some arrangements now and making his wishes known. first of all, do you think that the president, based on the delicate situation that is being dealt with, with senator mccain and his health, that it's time maybe for the president to just back off? >> well, we should hope this is the moment he can restrain himself. it's very hard for the president to do that. when attacked, the president likes to attack back and this is, obviously, a strong message from someone who is in this critical condition, that this is at the top of his agenda to make sure that the president won't be there at his funeral and indicates just how deep the anger runs for mccain. i don't know if president trump will be able to not say anything. that is often very difficult for him. but i don't think it would sit very well with many americans, including many republicans, if he doubles down on his attacks.
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>> i want to read something. a couple excerpts from mccain's book. he says i'm not sure what to make of president trump's convictions. he threatened to kill the spouses and children of terrorists. he went on to say, but i don't have a complaint, not one. it's been quite a ride, referring to his life, saying, i made a small place for myself in the store y of america and the history of my times. what do you make of mccain's thoughts at this delicate time, himself? >> well, look. looking back at his life, i think he is happy with what he has accomplished. this is a person for whom public service is the most important contribution that a citizen can make. i think everyone would agree he has done that, both in war and
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both in politics. he has devoted his whole life to this. toward the end of his life, though, he's in this situation where he is in bitter conflict with a republican, a member of his own party, both on policies, but also simply on the disposition of president trump toward public service. i'd say he also, i think, feels some form of guilt in that, look, when sarah palin was the vice presidential prescribing some think what we know as politics and i think senator mccain is dealing with this. >> george bush and barack obama didn't have strong relationships with mccain but how do you honor mccain's life in that moment without letting the absence of
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the current president from that moment? >> well, i think there is moments you don't have to talk about the present situation. >> right. but it will feel like it that. >> of course. i mean, you can't have a dispute like this between a president and a sitting senator and not have it hover over discussions of that senator. you know, when senator mccain did the thumb's down to the health care bill, that was a key moment in his career, for sure. and it made that conflict something that we will talk about in our discussions of the senator. so it will hover over, but he also has a very long record from the war through his service in the senate that i think, in many ways, if done well, will overwhelm our discussions of trump when that time comes. >> julian zeleny, we appreciate it so much. >> thank you.
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a journalist hit in the face by an rpg in afghanistan did not give up his passion for the profession. in fact, he went back to the war zone. we will talk with him in a moment. (vo) what if this didn't have to happen? i didn't see it. (vo) what if we could go back? what if our car... could stop itself? in iihs front-end crash prevention testing, nobody beats the subaru impreza. not toyota. not honda. not ford. the subaru impreza. more than a car, it's a subaru. welcome to holiday inn! thank you! ♪ ♪ wait, i have something for you!
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deal and a change for reducing the number of centinspections a crippling u.s. sanctions would be waved and more than 200 million frozen funds would be returned. the president has called it the worst deal in history and earlier this year, said he would withdraw unless what he calls major flaws are fixed. so what are those flaws? first, the president wants international inspectors to have immediate access to nuclear facilities. right now, the deal gives iran essentially weeks to allow inspectors in. the deal does not address iran's long-range missiles program. president trump wants to punish iran for continuing to develop these long-range missiles which could be, at some point, used to carry nuclear weapons. then there is the sunsetting of some of the provisions of this deal starting in 2025.
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>> in just a few years, as key restrictions disappear, iran can sprint towards a rapid nuclear weapons breakout. we got week inspections in exchange for no more than a purely short-term and temporary delay in iran's path to nuclear weapons. >> in seven years, iran will be able to enrich its uranium and most of the provisions will expire and the president thinks they should be permanent. there is iran's funding of terror. the deal does not address that either. supporters of the deal say that this deal was designed to deal with just one problem, preventing iran from getting a nuclear weapon and arguably its biggest supporter in the united states is former president barack obama says this deal puts the u.s. and the worand the u.s
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for the best position for this deal and beyond. >> if 99% of the world community and the majority of nuclear experts look at this thing and they say, this will prevent iran from getting a nuclear bomb, and you are arguing either that it does not or that even if it does, it's temporary, or that because they are going to get a windfall of their accounts being unfrozen that they will cause more problems, then you should have some alternative to present. and i haven't heard that. >> joining me now is cnn preliminary commentator and conservative talk show and radio host ben ferguson and darren johnson. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> ben, i have to start with you. after criticizing this so har
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harshly throughout the campaign and his administration, how would the president stay in the deal politically? do you expect he will leave? >> look. i think he is going to be able to leave on this and i think the president understands there are certain things you have to call out when they are not working. i also think you have to realize every time this comes up you need to look at do you have leverage and do you need something to change? if something is going to change, how do you change it? and is there the capital for things to change and i think one of the reasons why you've seen a lot of conversations about this back and forth with other leaders. and this president. and this is always a calculation that you have to change with. you have to be calculated and that i think is one of the reasons why you have so many people that have been looking at this saying, this is always negotiable. this is something that all americans should want us to be looking at and do we have the best deal to get our hands on and do we have the best deal for us and are we able to verify
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what they are doing is correct and accurate. i think this is constantly moving to this president and this administration because let's be clear. iran is not the most forthcoming country when it comes to what they are doing and the information that netanyahu put out there i think damaging to them and calls to the rest of the world they are not doing necessarily everything they claim they are doing in this deal. >> theron, former secretary of state condoleezza rice said this week, it's not the end of the world if the u.s. leaves the deal, and treasury secretary steve mnuchin said it's not the end of the deal with the president does not sign on the 12th of this month, the waiver of the sanctions. it doesn't equate leaving the deal. is that plausible? >> yeah, it is plausible and as ben just pointed out, this is a fluid process. one of the things that president trump has talked about is basically making sure that we protect our homeland, to make sure that iran continues to honor the deal in which they entered into, but i think that
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this is an ongoing process and understanding if he does not sign this extension or doesn't move forward on this, this is not the end of the world. one thing i can say about president trump trump i think in his heart he definitely wants to make sure that this deal is done right and if he lets go some of the rhetoric around who actually constructed the deal, his predecessor and president obama and take the politics out of i think he will put america first and i think we will continue to be feel very protected. >> this is a reporting from the boast globe saying former secretary of state john kerry who negotiated this deal is doing shadowing diplomatsy the globe is saying kerry spoke or met with the presidents of france and germany and eu foreign policy chief and one government at a time, right? this is what michael flynn got in trouble for. should the former secretary of state be working behind the scenes while there is a
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secretary of state? >> well, secretary kerry spent years working on this deal and it's something he is very proud of. it's a part of his legacy and president obama's legacy. now i'm not going to get into whether a secretary should be having meetings or having conversations when they are out of office. it's happened before. i do know that secretary kerry understands it is one government at a time, it's one president at a time and it's definitely one secretary at a time. so i think that his intentions are good but he definitely is not trying to interfere with this president's process and continue to protect the homeland. >> it seems like he is meeting with the right people to try to convince them to see if they can stay in this deal so we will see if we hear from the former secretary there. theron johnson and ben ferguson, thank you both. the waffle house hero says he is still waiting to hear from president trump despite sarah sanders saying the white house planned to invite him for a visit. james shaw jr. sat down with cnn
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van jones. >> reporter: have you heard yet from president trump? >> at this time, i haven't heard anything but it's not is a to say he didn't try to contact me or not but i want' heard anything. >> he hasn't successfully contacted you but he gave a shout-out to kanye today. no shout-out to you. how do you feel when the president of the united states misses an opportunity to hold up, you know, somebody who is trying to do good stuff like you? >> i know he has a busy agenda and a busy schedule. maybe he hasn't got around it me and maybe my time is coming. it's not for me to judge really what he does. it's just, you know, i did what i did and i didn't do it for recognition. i did it just to save my life, honestly. tennessee lawmakers recognized james last week with a resolution praising, quote, his brave actions. we are having reports of another bombing in afghanistan. we have a war reporter with us next who was once wounded by taliban fighters and he is talking with us why he still feels this drive to go back to
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i want to introduce you to somebody extraordinary. he was on assignment in afghanistan talking to a group of young afghans when he suddenly saw their eyes go wide. he turned to look and then he saw what they were seeing, a shoulder launched rocket propelled grenade heading straight for him. i want to forewarn you here, his video is tough to watch. >> that projectile hit him in
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the face and it did not explode but it was followed by a long process of recovery. several surgeries. believe it or not, several more trips to afghanistan. carmen genteel is with us right now. thank you for being with us and we appreciate having you here. >> thank you for having me here. i appreciate it. >> absolutely. i want to get your take on breaking news we have hearing out of afghanistan this hour. another bombing there. at least 13 people have been killed in a mosque that was also being used as a voter registration center, we understand. ho when you hear that and you've been there and have been in the mix of this, your first thoughts for the people there, for what happens from this point on. >> this devastation that the afghan people endure day after day is a modern day tragedy that continues to plague these people and as it has for generations
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now. coupled with what happened in kabul recently, the bombing that was followed up by a secondary attack when people had gathered to report on that bombing, the brast afghan men and women who work as journalists there, is monstrous and it breaks my heart. >> help us understand the people of afghanistan since we are not there, obviously, in the capacity you are. you have a lot of insight i'm sure you can give us. >> well, regarding the aforementioned atrocities they have to endure every single day, people i've met, particularly in rural afghanistan, who live lives of farming and other agriculture, who live in these very difficult places in the mountains or in the deserts in southern afghanistan, they are the hardiest people that i have ever met and have a courage of
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conviction that i will never come close to understanding fully as i would my own. >> do you consider them friends? >> absolutely. i have had a number of -- made some really good friends there. in fact, among the afghan journalists that i know working in kabul, i was very concerned about their well-being after that recent bombing and i was reaching out to them and making sure that they were okay. >> and they were? >> yes, they were. >> okay. i know that since you were hit, you've had a total of four surgeries, i think. >> correct. >> and that has left, is it 12 pins in your face? is that right? >> right. i have 12 pins and four plates on the side of my face and i have a correcti ivive lens stit on my eye that refocuses a little bit and i have difficulty seeing out of it and it's blew blurry and the pupil is fixed so everything out of this eye is
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bright. >> wow. after that experience of being hit and after everything you've seen there and after everything we have heard this morning what is happening there right now, what gives you the wherewithal to say, "i need to go back there"? >> i didn't want what happened to me to define the rest of my life and i knew that i didn't want to be the kind of -- the kind of reporter that i wanted to be. i wasn't going to be one i could sit behind a desk and work indoors. i'm an outside person. i felt as though if i wanted to get back some of what i had lost that i needed to go back and resume the work that i love doing. >> what do you love about that work? when you go back, what stories intentionally do you want us to know about? >> i'm always independence in talking to people one-on-one. i am not the kind of person that tells the story from 30,000 feet
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and i'm not interested in talking to leaders or generals. i like talking to young men and women, be they u.s. soldiers, afghan soldiers, civilians, and hearing their stories and telling their stories in a way that people can relate to them and hopefully from that, draw a bigger picture about what it is that the people of afghanistan and the u.s. men and women that are serving there are going through. >> i remember several years ago, many years ago, christiane amanpour has been in dicey situations and she had her child and she was asked about that. she said, once you have a chill, i think have you a responsibility to stay alive. you have a 2-year-old daughter. do you feel that same responsibility? and how do you balance fatherhood with this very dangerous job? >> it's difficult.
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i like to say that there are two kinds of risks. there are calculated risk and there are foolish risks. and never was one to take what i thought were foolish risks but now i'm extra careful not to take those kind of risks because she is always on my mind. and covering these types of stories where i see a lot of suffering by civilians and particularly when i see children, it hits me even harder now. >> carmen gentile, we are glad you're okay and thank you for talking to us. his book is "blindsided by the taliban." thank you for sharing your story. >> thanks very much. >> absolutely. take good care. a stormy scandal that the white house can't get out from under. she made a surprise appearance on "snl" last night. >> i solved north and south korea. why can't i solve us? >> sorry, donald.
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it's too late for that. i know you don't believe in climate change, but a stormy is a coming, baby. >> tech: so you think this chip is nothing to worry about? well at safelite, we know sooner or later every chip will crack. these friends were on a trip when their windshield got chipped. so they scheduled at safelite.com. they didn't have to change their plans or worry about a thing. i'll see you all in a little bit. and i fixed it right away with a strong repair they can trust. plus, with most insurance a safelite repair is no cost to you. >> customer: really?! >> tech: being there whenever you need us that's another safelite advantage. >> singers: safelite repair, safelite replace. no one burns heon my watch! try alka seltzer... ultra strength heartburn relief chews. with more acid-fighting power than tums chewy bites. mmmmm...amazing. i have heartburn. heartburn relief from alka-seltzer. enjoy the relief. the toothpaste that helps prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse.
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stormy daniels affair? >> that sounds like something i would do. >> i'm good to goy. see you monday. >> i'm back. >> can we hurry this up. i'm supposed to do 24 more talk show appearances today and i'm trying to make it like an advent calendar. >> call up stormy daniels and fix this once and for all and keep me on the phone, too. i'll just be quiet and listen. >> stormy, this is michael cohen. are you alone? >> yes. >> what are you wearing? >> excuse me. >> michael, i can take it from here. >> as your attorney i highly advise against you -- >> so what up, girl? >> hello, donald. >> come on, stormy.
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stop making such a big deal. >> i work in adult films. we are not really known for our acting. >> anyone else wondering when this is going to stop? >> everybody raise your hand. >> kate mckinnen can do anything. >> the talent. thank you so much for spending your sunday morning with us. we hope you make really good memories today. "inside politics" with john king comes up after a quick break. >> i fell in love with this place. >> you have to be out of your mind to not love this place. ♪
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are clear and straightforward so you can plan for retirement while saving for the things you want to do today. -whoo! while saving for the things this is the story of green mountain coffee roasters dark magic told in the time it takes to brew your cup. first, we head to vermont. and go to our coffee shop. and meet dave. hey. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good, he asks? let me show you. let's go. so we climb. hike. see a bear. woah. reach the top. dave says dark magic is a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness.
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if you'd have told me three years ago... that we'd be downloading in seconds, what used to take... minutes. that guests would compliment our wifi. that we could video conference... and do it like that. (snaps) if you'd have told me that i could afford... a gig-speed. a gig-speed network. it's like 20 times faster than what most people have. i'd of said... i'd of said you're dreaming. 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.
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the president among friends and defiant. >> we are all fighting battles but i love fighting these battles. >> blame rudy. shifting stories about paying a porn star. >> how is rudy doing, mr. president? >> he started yesterday. he will get his facts straight. he is a great guy. >> big primaries this week. the big test, the trump effect. >> for the first time in a long time to be the working man.
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