tv New Day Sunday CNN July 29, 2018 4:00am-5:01am PDT
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500 people and now a hundred thousand people so who knows where we are going next. >> mark zuckerering started this company when he was 19 and facebook was growing and people in the facebook offices doing tech stands and mark zuckerberg doing an interview in his bare feet. >> put the beer down. >> what are we celebrating? >> 3 million users. >> 3 million users? >> on yeah. >> how long has facebook been around? >> not that long. a little more than a year. >> this is a 19-year-old kid who had dropped out of school and basically trying to build something that college students would use. >> wow. >> it's an all-new episode of "the 2000s" only tonight on cnn at 9:00 p.m. tonight. ♪ get out of here as quick as you can. >> the fire ran with such thrust.
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>> whole neighborhoods have disappeared as a result of this fire. >> leave when we ask you to leave. >> this is almost apocalyptic. >> we have determined the fact tampered with the tape. >> michael cohen, himself, is not a reliable narrator in this story. >> it would be better if michael cohen raise his hand and come back to our committee or the house judiciary committee or even talk to bob mueller. you are up early at 7:01 to be exact on a sunday. good morning to you. we are so grateful to have you here early on a sunday. i'm christi paul. >> i'm martin savidge in for victor blackwell. we begin with a path of destruction cut across northern california. firefighters struggling to contain that car fire which is now doubled in size covering more than 80,000 acres. >> we know a state of emergency is in place here. a disaster declaration in
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effect. federal help is on the way for thousands of people who are out of their homes right now and we have learned a woman and her two great grandchildren are the most recent victims of this fire. we told you yesterday they were missing. relative now say melody bledsoe and her two great grandchildren were inside their home when it was engulfed by flames. >> my sympathy goes out to the family. this is an ongoing investigation. >> the death toll is up to five. cnn's paul vercammen joins us for what is an extremely dangerous fire still. good morning. >> good morning. you can see behind me, one of those houses that parished and 536 houses in all. you move over here. this fire just absolutely roared through here. it's now burning to the west about 30 miles to the west of redding in the hills.
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and we now understand it's burned 83,000 acres. something at play for firefighters, you can almost not get your head around what it's like to battle a blaze like this burning so hot here. you can see that firefighters, some of them working 24-hour shifts have been grabbing sleep any way they can. that's what they are up against. not only are they fighting it in terms of fatigue, but in these conditions, there is a problem with equipment as well. >> we are used to hot but, you know, 116, 117 degrees on the fire line, humidity is hovering around 10% or less during the day, which is critical fuel moisture for us, which means that we have 100% probability of ignition. so we are just battling those two things right there, just the fatigue on the firefighters putting out fires is horrendous, let alone the equipment fatigue because the fire is causing the
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equipment to overheat and helicopters are put down to cool off and a dramatic step back as far as fighting the fire. >> reporter: they also say some of the bulldozers are breaking down and that is critical to cutting fire breaks or fire lines. the smoke. it's something. go ahead, that is the mood. it is not supposed to look like that right now. so much smoke throughout this area that now that orange color and makes it very difficult, as you can imagine, for these firefighters on a daily base to reckon with all of this. fires throughout northern california and this having burned more than 83,000 acres. it's killed five people. you have a matter of 536 homes completely destroyed. back to you, martin and christi. >> paul, thank you very much.
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e r these firefighters are laying on the ground and have it for you here, they are just sleeping but this is what we have to do because the fatigue is just so intense amidst the battle that they are fighting in that deadly -- it's car the carr fire. it's called the carr fire. other frightening scenes. >> we want to show you one of them now. flames whipping and whirling and forming what is called a firenado. yes, a fire tornado. you can see the funnel of fire and ash. it's raining hot embers on emergency vehicles. >> you look at the cars that are just driving almost right up to it to try to get through it and past it to get to people and fight these fires. cnn meteorologist allison chinchar is with us. it is just -- i don't even think there are words for what -- to think of what these people are going through as they try to help other people. the pictures are so riveting. >> scary is probably about the only word i can come up. the video is that.
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it's incredible. but it's also scary. i want to point out it also teaches us something about how fire can spread. here is what you have. you have your fire that is in place. we all know heat rises so as that air goes up, new air is actually going to come in and replace it but it's coming from multiple different directions. so you're starting to get that swirling rotating motion as that column of air is going up. when it does, it ends up looking like a tornado, except being made out of fire. well, very similar to what a traditional tornado would do, it has debris in it. the problem is we are not talking cars or pieces of homes. you're talking embers and fire, basically. that fire can potentially spread to places where it did not exist before. now that is a concern that firefighters are dealing with but there is also other concerns at play here and that is the topography of california. it's very mountainous. so when you have, say, a 20-degree slope of a hill, fire will travel up that hill at
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about 20 miles per hour. if you make even a 10-degree slope of difference, you're now talking that fire speeds up to double its speed. now 40 miles per hour. and we know california is very mountainous. it's very hilly. that makes it much harder for those firefighters to fight those fires than it would, say, if that ground was flat like in kansas or even florida. the other thing you have to note with all of that smoke, people are breathing that in. as they are trying to evacuate their homes and get whatever last-minute supplies they can out of those homes, they are breathing in that smoke. you have very poor air quality, not just in california, but some of the surrounding states as well. we have also talked about the forecast and the fact that it's just not going to be good for days on end. guys, take a look at this. triple-digit temperature expected the next three to five days and absolutely zero percent chance of rain in the forecast. >> my goodness. allison, thank you so much.
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we will keep you posted on the fires. president trump is returning to washington after meeting with the prime minister of italy tomorrow. >> the president has been pretty much quiet throughout this weekend. surprisingly so. but not necessarily stopped his lawyer, rudy giuliani from firing back at trump's former lawyer, michael cohen. giuliani says that cohen tampered with his tape of present candidate trump talking about a payment to a "playboy" model. >> i used to hear rumors about michael cohen's character and what he did. now i find he does things like records his client, doesn't even tell them. >> president trump is staying at his golf resort in bedminister, new jersey. cnn white house report er, sarah westwood is standing
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nearby. is the president saying anything about what rudy giuliani is talking about? >> reporter: well, president trump is staying quiet on this weekend here in bedminister, new jersey, as his lawyer is out defending him against these bombshell new allegations about the trump campaign's contacts with russia. rudy giuliani had already accused michael cohen, trump's former attorney, of being a liar after cohen signaled his willingness to tell investigators that that trump had advanced knowledge of that trump tower meeting involving his son donald trump jr. and a russian offering dirt on hillary clinton. but last night, giuliani accused cohen of tampering with a recording of a 2016 conversation with then candidate trump. now we should note there is no evidence that the tape was actually altered but this is what giuliani had to say about it. >> we have to hope it exists. this could be a recording of a recording. we are not sure yet. that, they can probably determine.
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and then you're right, we may never be able to determine that, but we have determined the fact that he tampered with the tape in the sense that he abruptly, mid conversation, turned it off. >> reporter: now the cohen camp is responding by mocking giuliani. a source close to michael cohen said this to our colleague jake tapper. you mean rudy is floating wild speculation as if he were unhinged? obviously, it's a lie. shocking. trump has largely invoicing speaking out on the cohen controversy and instead he is touting academic growth figures and unveiling his plans to campaign extensively for republicans in the fall. then he have to answer the questions about his lawyer when he meets face-to-face with the italian prime minister tomorrow at the white house and perhaps see him address this controversy
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before then, but so far, the president has been uncharacteristically quiet on social media this weekend. >> sarah westwood, appreciate it so much. that. how is this going to affect the president? joining me now to talk about it all is siraj hashmi of the washington examiner and daniel lipman who is a author of "the political playbook." the president has a meeting with the italian prime minister tomorrow and what he is willing to say about the mueller investigation is going to come forward in questions. how do you think the president is going to handle it? some expect him to confront it face on. others expect he won't even acknowledge it. siraj, what do you think? >> president trump has sort of backed himself into a corner by
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tweeting out a response to the cohen tapes this week, saying he was about to say something positive. you know, he could have gone with the excuse that was not him, concerning the fact that in previous times, he's used different aliases to say a recording that sounding like him was someone like john barren who is an alleged alias of donald trump when he was back before he was president. with respect to confronting it head-on, i do expect president trump to be tweeting about it probably pretty actively. this weekend might be an outlieer and may not see something from him because his attorneys probably advised him not to tweet about it. trump will do what he wants to do and a time he'll have his phone and no advisers around him. >> daniel, why not ignore it? he had good academic news to deliver on friday and looking and meeting with the italian prime minister and then on the campaign trail.
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why not ignore it? >> once in a blue moon, i think trump listens to his advisers and his lawyers. i think that he thinks it would just add fuel to the fire. but it's really hard to hold trump back from defending himself. for the last three years, we always hear, owner trump is going to be be more presidential or turn a corner and that never happens. i guarantee you by next weekend you will have a number of other tweets slamming michael cohen and you kind of see this public breakup in real-time which is just quite amazing to watch because cohen was just praised by rudy giuliani a few weeks ago as an honorable lawyer who might cooperate and now rudy giuliani is claiming he doctored tapes, which sarah pointed out, there is no evidence and that is also a crime if he is going to present that as evidence. >> right. when you look at those sound bites back-to-back of rudy giuliani, when he is praising michael cohen, then, all of a sudden, you know, he is doing
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exactly the opposite. as much as it criticizes cohen, it really seems toy giuliani wh any person. has his credibility as representing the president now really been tarnished in all of this? >> that is the thing. you know? in the trump white house, his attorneys, their credibility is constantly questioned and i think they don't really care so much about their credibility. what they are really trying to do right now is question the authenticity of the tapes because they are now being presented to basically incriminate president trump. but the allegations that cohen later made about, you know, trump knowing about his son's meetings with the russian attorney, you know, is a pretty huge indictment to make against donald trump as a candidate running for president saying he knew about this alleged collusion. the only problem this is the one
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thing that he doesn't have a tape for. there is no way corroborate it unless he presents some sort of evidence and, right now, we simply don't have that. >> daniel, the president is going out on the campaign trail this week. i'm wondering, is there a strategy to this? he is going out there to simply get away from all of what we are talking about? >> i think as the midterms approach, it's not a surprise that the sitting president wants to rally support for his party and try to save the house. although you have david notable political strategist who looked at the map and it's gone, the house, in terms of republican control. so it might be a fool's err rand. trump says he wants to campaign six or seven days a week, but a lot of republicans in moderate or blue states that just don't want the president's help. it would only hurt them to be seen with trump.
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so i think the white house political shop has to figure out how to make sure -- how to leverage the president's, you know, good campaigning style without just shooting yourself in the foot. >> right. i think also the president apologize getting in front of a crowd that is supportive of him. siran and daniel, thank you both for joining us this morning. >> thank you. >> don't miss "state of the union" with jake tapper today at 9:00 a.m. he is be joined by trump's economic adviser larry kudlow and then mitch landrieu and anthony scaramucci. >> could there be life on mars? people will ask that question forever. the possibility of it just might have gotten a little clearer since scientists discovered a large body of liquid on the red planet. we have more on that. plus, civil rights icon and georgia congressman john lewis is in the hospital. we will have an update on how he is doing next.
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a manhunt underway in new orleans after gunfire near the french quarter. three people are set and semple othe -- several others are injured. . >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there. >> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ wells fargo has supported community organizations from the beginning, like united way, non-profits like the american red cross, and our nation's veterans. we knew helping our communities was important then.
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did you say you saved 120 dollars a night on a room? 120 a night on a hotel room... that's a lot of savings! i saved even more on my flight. save up to 60% on hotels with priceline. . a moon man did tanhunt is u new orleans this morning. one is in the hospital and one in critical condition. civil rights icon and georgia congressman john lewis is in the hospital. he is expected to be released today. >> cnn's local affiliate wsb-tv is saying lewis game ill on a
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flight to atlanta and his spokeswoman says lewis is under routine observation. the 78-year-old lewis has represented georgia since 1986 and in 2011 he was presented the presidential medal of freedom. there is supposed to be development experts with technical expertise, but, instead, according to "the washington post," the report is that the trump white house is giving jobs to political allies and loyalists instead. this is happening at the millennial channel organization that is promoting economic growth in poor countries. walter schaub is with us now. when we look at the background of someone who is typically hired, how do you compare that to what we are seeing in terms of the people who are now in those positions? >> yeah, well, this is quite an incredibly story. when you think you've seen the layers of the swamp in this administration, it just gets
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deeper. this agency has an 800 million dollar budget, so it may be small, but it's, you know, using a lot of tax dollars. in 2003, george w. bush had emphasize as that agency was set up it was going to be more technical and accountable than a lot of other foreign relations and other type agencies. so they have always filled those positions with highly technical experts. now they are filling them with college graduates and the grandson of one of the members of the presidential personnel office. they have got an acting leader who sort of politicized things by telling his career staff that they should be reading breitbart and put campaign parafer nail office.
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>> you would characterize it as unprecedented? >> yeah. . this is an agency that we dealt with when i was at the office of government ethics and it's always highly technical and focuses on development in foreign countries that are in dire need. the -- this is part of a trend. the office of presidential personnel has always been headed by somebody who is very senior and very experienced and respected in washington and any administration, republican or democratic, they have put a 28-year-old in charge of this agency and there was an article in "the washington post" recently about how he has been using that office to throw drinking parties and people sit around there, the youngest staff members in the white house vaping and smoking electronic cigarettes. it's apparently become the social hub of the white house. he is now using this office to fill jobs for people like -- he filled the millennium challenge corporation with an individual who is a friend of his who he
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had worked with at a prior federal contractor job that he had filled. he went on a vacation with one of his senior officials and a bunch of other people and when he came back, a few months late, he filled the job with her grandson who had just graduated from college about a year before. that individual who also works in the presidential personnel office has become something of a one-woman employment agency for her family and counting her, there are five members of her family working for the trump administration and, after all, if our president is going to engage in nepotism, why wouldn't his personnel office follow suit? >> all right. walter schwab, we appreciate your insight on this. thank you so much. i do want to make a note here. the white house and mcc did decline comment when contacted by "the washington post." russian president vladimir putin showing off russia's new war i'ms in its annual navy day
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naval mite. >> it is featuring russia's newest warship and experts say could have features that are an advantage over u.s. navy ships. cnn's senior international correspondent frederik pleitgen is live in st. petersburg for us this morning. the weather looks lovely for a boat parade today. fred, president putin has promised there was not an arms race between the u.s. and russia. yet, we see all of of this hardware. >> reporter: it is a nice day here and for the naval day parade. you're right. both president trump and president putin want to prevent an arms race but the russians didn't tone it down here at this naval day parade we saw today. i was only a couple of feet away from vladimir putin when he was giving his speech when the parade started. he said two things that were interesting. he said russia's he believes their navy was strong and had to russia help fight terrorism but also to achieve parody and also
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something, of course, where he specifically is talking about the united states. the russians are saying, look. we are spending less money on arms but, at the same time, we are still very dangerous to the americans and they believe that some of the ships they have shown here today is a part of that equation. a new stealth ship you were talking about the russians pushed out for the first time and only went into service yesterday. so a stealth vessel could bring big problems they say to any american vessels. they also had a big submarine they call the aircraft carrier killer which launches long-range missiles designed to attack especially the united states aircraft carriers and a new shyship they unveiled here today as well that is directly aimed at targeting nato facilities and one the united states has in the baltic area as well. the russians put a lot of their fire paower on display. a well crafted and managed show today we saw today and aimed at
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russian audience but international audience as well to show the americans especially that the russians will negotiate with them and prus putin wanres putin wants to talk to president trump but their army and navy are as strong as they have been since the end of the cold war. >> frederik pleitgen, thank you for the update. joining me now is david priest, a former cia intelligence officer and author of the president's book of secrets. good morning to you, david. thanks for joining us. >> good morning. good to be with you again. >> let's talk about what frederik pleitgen was showing us with president putin giving a kind of show and tell, i guess, of his military mite on the water. clearly, he is sending a message. >> yeah. let me hit this from two sides. first of all, from the intelligence side looking at this. these photographs and videos are going to be pored over to get anything we can about these different vessels, but don't fool yourself. the parade is not going to be
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the be all and end all of what we learn about russian military mite, the signal such it is that putin is sending. he will not reveal things he doesn't want us to see. oerds, w on the other side, why is putin doing this? the showoff effect but about putin himself. an ego trip to a large military parade. and there is the domestic audience showing the russian people we are a strong country, we can stand up to others. that's the main audience for this kind of sgra. >> all right. there is so many things i want to ask you so we will pivot here and may seem extreme but to robert mueller. this is a person you know because of your capacity in the past as an intelligence officer having to brief officials, you briefed him. and as a result, i imagine you have a pretty good read of the man, himself. i'd just be interested in your professional observations. >> sure. yeah. i got to know him pretty well by briefing him his president's
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daily brief and other intelligence every working more than for more than a year so we spent a lot of quality time together early in the morning. the mueller that i got to know had several characteristics which relate to this investigation. first of all, he is deliberate and exhaustive. there was no information he did not want from me and very often he would ask question after question to get to issues that i thought was sending him down a rabbit hole and only at the end of that questioning did i determine, ah, that's what the purpose is. there was a reason why he was going for that. secondly, he doesn't forget or give up. that is if there is something that seems to be an objestructi he will not let it go and continue to put out what he needs to collect more information and tells us whole lot about this investigation. he is going to be persistent and exhaustive and he is not going to give up. as he gets information from the manafort trial and cohen
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proceedings, that is all going to feed into the larger investigation that he is doing. >> and i'm wondering. is there anything, as you sort of listen to it or follow this investigation now, that you know of the man that indicates to you he may be getting close to wrapping up or revealing everything knows about this investigation? in other words, some conclusion? >> yeah, he was never big back in the day about publicizing what he was doing and he certainly is that way now. the quietest person in all of washington is the spokes man for the special counsel's investigative office and we don't hear anything. bob mueller is not speaking through leaks or revealing anything about the investigation but he is speaking out in one way and that is slew tthrough t indictments. he is revealing a lot of information when ske does that at the right time. i've often told people my experience with mueller he could be wrapping up the investigation in the next week and we wouldn't know about it or this could be
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going on the next year and we wouldn't know about it. anybody who says they have a high degree of confidence in where this investigation is fooling you, because he keeps his cards close to his vest and always known more than we do at any given point. >> let's try toreadintomaybe some of his work. the manafort trial begins this week. >> right. >> and do you think that is going to have any surprises, any big reveals for us? >> i think it will have some surprises for us. that is, because you will have people testifying. i think gates is scheduled to testify and he is already cooperating with the special counsel. i think we are going to learn a lot about just how many things paul manafort was involved in and especially about the financial movements that were a core part of this. i don't think bob mueller is going to learn much, but the fact of people getting on the stand and talking about things and giving evidence, that is just going to give some additional information for us to put the pieces together that bob mueller has probably already been putting together for months. >> david priess, thank you so
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suicide rates often climb in the months after high profile deaths according to the national institutes of health. but they say there are ways to get help and in today's impact your world, there are also ways to help others who are struggling. >> at the end of the day, you know, there is swoomeone who is
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supposed to be in your life and they are not. >> i'm an actor and director and creator on youtube. i lost my little sister to suicide when i was 17. when is i first started talking about it, i was very afraid of how it was going to be received. but, at the same time, i knew that my main demographic was young girls and that no one had ever talked to me about mental illness. i'm a huge advocate for crisis text line because suicide is the leading cause of death in teens and i believe they have the capability to really connect with kids who want that help. >> you text us when you're in pain and we are there for you. so we can help you right in the heat of the moment. you text 741741, you can also reach us inside facebook meve g messenger and kick. we are handling about a hundred thousand conversations a month and we expect that to double by the end of this year. we need more crisis counselors, so, america, you are needed.
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i want to share you the views we are getting of that blood moon lunar eclipse that happened this weekend. look at these! million of star gazers around the world were treated to this. we missed it here in the united states because it happened during daylight hours in the united states but the pictures are gorgeous. the thing is the moon was in totals eclipse for 103 minutes! the longest lunar eclipse of the century. beautiful pictures there. for the first time, scientists have discovered a lake full of water on the planet mars. for decades, scientists have
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been hunting for any sign of water on the planet. there was evidence that water existed there in the past but, now, to find this pool suggests the possibility of life on mars, of course. retired nasa astronaut leroy choi is here with us. i have to wonder as a former astronaut, what was your initial reaction they found there? it's a significant amount of water comparatively to what they found before, yes? >> that's correct. these are data obtained over a number of years from a european space agency and spacecraft and using radar imaging. they have determined what looks to be like a large body of liquid water kind of sandwiched between two ice layers in the south pole of the ice impact down there on the south pole and that is really exciting because, as you know, water is one of the requirements for life as we know it. it doesn't prove it's there but it shows that the conditions could be possible for it to
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exist. >> what are the implications for future human missions to mars? i would think this would be a real focal point. >> right. of course, any future human mission to mars is one of the things the astronauts will be looking for is water, number one, for, you know, determine if it's there, if it's subterranean and what clues it might offer as past and even currently some kind of microbial or other life on mars. also, the water is something, if you're staying for long-term, you're looking at what is called resource utilization and look how can you use that water and how easy to get to the surface and can you pourive it so you can drink it and can you crack it using elect electrolysis. so pretty significant. >> beyond what we might learn about life forms, anything else significant about this to you? anything else that can be
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learned? >> this is very exciting because, just a month ago, a little bit over a month ago, nasa made announcement that the rover drilled down into rock of what is a laked years ago and found the presence of methane in the rock because that is methane how did it get down in that rock? you can imagine that lake, billions of years ago at the bottom, there is mud and silt. if there was some kind of life going on there producing that methane and over the ions and more creating the rock would trap the methane. it's mot proof life on mars but exciting possibility. that coupled with this recent announcement of what appears to be a large liquid lake, that is pretty exciting because that implies that the conditions, at least perhaps billions of years ago, was conducive to some kind of life on mars and, who knows. there could be some kind of
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microbial life today. >> i want to see your face, leroy, if it ever comes to fruition and it ever comes out, my goodness, we found life on mars. i want a camera on you then and there shr there! >> absolutely. thank you, leroy. >> thank you. coca-cola says it needs to raise its prices and blaming in part president trump's tariffs on aluminum but that hasn't put the brakes on the president's obsession. >> they don't have a legitimate purpose. people would stare.
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that may not stop trump from slugging down on dozens a day. >> reporter: talking about grasping at straws? have you heard the juiciest part of a trump-cohen tape. >> get me a coke, please. >> reporter: incontrovertible evidence of a thirsty president living up to his reputation for daily consumption of -- >> 12 diet cokes. >> that's 144 ounces of president fuel. >> reporter: you'd be surprised how many tweeted my favorite part is when he yells get me a coke, please. others ranked it up there with, mom, the meatloaf, from "wedding crashers". >> reporter: there were comparisons to jfk. my fellow americans -- >> ask not what your country can do for you, ask -- >> get me a coke, please. >> reporter: one thing got the most comments that even critics found pleasing.
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wow, he said please. he said please. must be fake. trump saying please to the help. that's my president. he has president always been complimentary about his favorite beverage tweeting i have never seen a thin person drinking diet coke and i'll still keep drinking that garbage. jimmy fallon once chronicled the president's behavior as he downed his daily dozen. >> the american dream is dead. >> hello and god bless the united states. >> reporter: now he has a red button on his oval office desk to push when he wants a coke. when he was a candidate, he actually had to speak. >> get me a coke, please. >> reporter: as one commenter noted things including hush money go better with coke. ♪ things go better with coca-cola. >> reporter: jeanne moos. >> get me a coke, please. >> reporter: cnn, new york.
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>> jeanne moos -- >> very human side. >> yes, it is. he did say please. >> we hope you make good memories today. thank you for spending time with us. still ahead, president trump's inner circle is under increasing scrutiny. is one of his most valued traits, loyalty, at stake? ""inside politics"" starts after this break. have a wonderful day. >> tech: at safelite autoglass,
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the president's fixer changes his tune. >> what else is on the rest of the tapes? >> team trump saying michael cohen cannot be trusted. >> the man is a liar, a proven liar. >> plus the economy kicks into higher gear. >> we've accomplished an economic turnaround of historic proportion. >> and 100 days out, brand new cnn race rankings. democrats have reason to be bullish. >> every turn house republicans are selling out the
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