tv New Day Sunday CNN August 12, 2018 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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dream more, dream faster, and above all... now, i'll dream gig. now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. 29-year-old verizon airline employ has been identified as richard russell. >> i don't know how he achieved the experience. >> it's going to disappoint them to hear i did this. i would like to apologize to each and every one of them. >> i was just shocked to see someone so nice, so helpful, and caring. >> >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. >> stunned and heart broken. that is what we are hearing from the family of a man who died when he crashed a stolen plane. we have more on that story in a
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moment. also ahead this hour, a year after violent racially charged protests in charlottesville, virginia, white supremacists and counterprotesters are expected to rally again. this time in the nation's capital. a cnn investigation forces twitter to finally admit info wars violated its rules with its twisted messages of hate and racism. >> nasa launches a probe that will travel closer to the sun than any spacecraft before it as science tries to unlock its newest mysteries. your "new day" starts right now. >> so grateful for your company at one minute past 6:00. as he was flying a stolen plane, richard russell calls himself a broken guy. >> richard russell took off from
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the seattle airport in the empty plane and crashed it an hour later. >> this is a complete shock to us. we are divested by these events. juic jesus is the only one holding this family together. the voice recording shows his attempt was not to harm anyone and he is right in saying so many people who loved him. >> we are learning about his training on the ground where he was authorized to tote planes to the gate but they do not believe he had a pilot's license. >> the criminal investigation begins, officials are working to recover the plane's data recordings and russell's remains. airport security "sportscenter" point out numerous flaws in the system revealed by this incident. cnn court dan simon is live with one of russell's former coworkers. the family is shocked and stunned and heartbroken. did this coworker see any
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potential signs? >> well, gm. we are getting a clearer sense of what richard russell was like as a friend, as an employee, as a coworker and some of what you're about to hear may surprise you. i can tell you that jeremy kaitlyn worked alongside russell to eight solid months. they primary handled the luggage there at the airport. he said this is somebody who had a lot of integrity, somebody who worked very hard and somebody who had great sense of humor. he is also not surprised that russell was able to learn a few things about aviation given certain aspects of his job. >> when you learn that it was your friend and former coworker richard russell who did this, what did you think? shock. he was really just super nice. always laid back but super nice and super funny. and he would always go out and help others with his flights that he wasn't even assigned to
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help out with, or -- when he was working with you on your flight he would work as hard as he could. >> you saw the home video of him doing those maneuvers. >> yes. >> reporter: he seemed like, to a certain degree, he knew what he was doing as a pilot or behind the controls. >> yeah. well, you can learn how to fly with flight simulators if you buy them. you can literally run them on your pc, mac, whatever. his part of the tow team was to operate some of the systems he was trained to do by horizon air which is part of the tow team. so, essentially, he took that knowledge and built off of it. >> reporter: now kaelin says so much information out there
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including youtube and instructional video teach people how to turn on airport and do certain maneuvers so he wasn't surprised that russell who had access to aircraft is able to do what he did. the key is access. he passed a security check, remember. all of this is being investigated by the fbi and they will be talking to friends and the coworkers, perhaps kaelin himself. the investigation is centered about ten minutes from where i'm standing at that island i can tell you dozens of investigators have been sifting through the debris. >> dan simon, live for us, thank you very much. marry schiavo is joining us. this may be per flexing to some people. the tower knew there was unauthorized departure. and let's put ourselves in the
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tower's position. you have a guy in a plane saying i'm taking off and going, what option did they have? >> once he's on the runway and rolling down the runway, none. we have seen hollywood block busterers where police cars or fuel trucks are racing to try to get in front of a plane to stop it, but in reality the controller didn't have time to do anything. from what we have learned, they knew that he was moving and he wasn't authorized to do that. but if he was heading straight to that runway and starting that takeoff role, that's it. you're going up at 134 miles an hour. that plane is lifting off. >> as i understand it, correct me if i'm wrong, he was towing but when you're towing there is supposed to be somebody in the plane by protocol. there was not. at that point, does the onus fall on the airport or the airline? >> it's the airline. the airline has the authority and ability to control their
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ground operations and they have their own dispatchers and own ground controllers. and so the tower might not have known. there would be no reason to tell the tower that they are moving and repositioning a plane on the ground. there was not someone in that aircraft. they -- two different functions. you have ground control and then you have the tower that controls the takeoffs so tower probably didn't know it was just one guy moving the plane around. >> now that somebody has seen this, is there concern, mary, that can happen again at another airport? >> well, sure. and it's been a concerned, literally, since september 11th, 2001. controlling the 900,000 airport workers at the 450 airports and commercial service airports across the country has been a big issue. congress addressed it again last year. the committee on homeland security department. there is a big question what to do as to keep the airports and the traveling public and
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citizens over whose heads we all fly safely when they have workers and they have to do their job so i assume it will come up again and one clue that leapt out at me and when this fellow was flying and he said to the controller, he said, can you tell me how to turn on the plane's pressurization so i don't feel so light-headed? well, he wasn't at 14,000 feet where you got light-headed or even over at 10 thousand where you need oxygen, to me that was a clue and i think they will focus in on that. something was wrong, physically, and mentally. >> so you're i want mating because he felt light-headed at an altitude you wouldn't normally be, perhaps something else was going on with him? >> yes, yes, to me, that was a clue. >> mary schiavo, thank you for sharing. we appreciate it.
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>> thank you. i've never terrorized a black person in my life. >> why not join the kiwanis club? >> i want the clan to be what it once was. >> asked if russian interme intermeddling had to do with the flames in charlottesville, i was told, yes, it did. >> am i guy that always brings hatred and anger to every conversation i'm in or bring peace and resolution by not degrading human beings? >> is there a state of emergency in charlottesville one year, exactly one year after the violent and deadly protests in that small virginia town. >> yesterday, hundreds of demonstrators marched through the streets of that city. police came forward for the worst but the protests were mostly peaceful. they are going to be -- there is going to be the same show of force today when white supremacists hold the unite the
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white rally in charlottesville but a second rally is planned at lafayette scare near the white house. and that is where sara sidner is right now. >> reporter: i think charlottesville, for anyone in this country, even outside of the united states, has scene that as a real example that this country is still struggling with deep racial divides. we went to a town in pennsylvania that is struggling with a question what to do about a neighbor who was outspoken and neonazi and fires off his guns at night. >> reporter: in the calm of this rural northern pennsylvania town, a sign that hate lives here. are you a neonazi? >> do i embrace it? i don't try to push away. >> reporter: well, you're wearing a swastika on your shirt and the flags. why the shirt and the flags and
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hateful symbols in this town? >> i don't think they are hateful. i think it's an idealology misinterrupted. >> reporter: i have to stop you. i'm not trying to sell you. it's reality, it's history, it cannot be denied. daniel lives in rural pennsylvania with population 690 and giving his town attention it does not want. >> rural america spoke up when they elected trump. >> reporter: and by rural america he means white america. >> the vast majority of them are in their 60s and seventh and in the ground the next 20 years and we have a possibility of becoming a minority in our country. >> reporter: sounds like you're afraid of being me and being me
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is. >> it's my country. >> reporter: is great. it's also my country. when he doesn't like our conversation, he explodes. >> get the [ bleep ] out of here! [ bleep ] now! >> reporter: we do. just down the street we are met by a dozen residents who say burnside does not speak to this town. families in this county blame politics for people like him that come out and be loud. is that fair? >> the president we have got right now has not helped the situation a whole hot. you know? he has done a lot of the same beliefs. you know? at least he won't speak against him, okay? this guy feeds off that. >> reporter: among the crowd, many with grandfathers or fathers who fought the nazis in world war ii. >> they are good people and he is stepping on us. he is stepping on all of us. you know, we are all -- we will all one tribe and who does he think he is? >> reporter: teacher debbie
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hamilton just returned from visiting camps in poonelland. on other tied this couple is convinced passive resistance is the wrong choice. >> i'm not saying you should go to their houses with pitchforks and guns, you know? i'm saying hold a protest against them. >> reporter: after seeing kkk flyers appearing in their neighborhood and burnside decorations in their county joe protested only to see a threat against one of the supremacist he stood against. >> i would give me the finger and gestures like they were going to shoot me. >> reporter: it intensified when his jamaican bride got lot. >> i got a lot of that [ bleep ]. >> reporter: the racist would be forced to leave and let love
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stand. now we are here in lafayette park. a lot of people who are standing against the unite the rally that is scheduled here on the very day that heather heyer was killed in charlottesville in the protests to the unite to right protests people see it spitting in the eye of the victims of that protest to yet have another one. in washington, d.c. across the street from the white house, by the way. there are counterprotests that are scheduled and more people expected to be at that protest than this one. the unite the right organizers got a permit for about 400 people and whether or not that number materializes we won't know until this evening. we are expected to start and end up here at about 5:30 in the evening. they will also be faced with those counterprotests wers who here and they are supposed to end up in this park right outside the white house, just giving you another example of the racial divide in this
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country. >> certainly. let's hope everything remains peaceful there. sara sidner, thank you. >> she mentioned heather heyer. people are remembering her today and they left messages for her on the walls of downtown charlottesville. one reads teach love, not hate. this is as you can imagine a tough weekend for her mother. but her mom says even though this was not her goal in life necessarily, she was a teacher, she was with her family. she says it is now her job to stop fighting for the social injustice that her doubt was fighting for. what do you think heather would say to you one year later, if she could? and what would you say to her? >> i would say, i need you. he hope she would say i'm proud of what you're doing. i'm helping from up here, mom. >> reporter: do you feel her helping you? >> i do.
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she makes things come together. >> reporter: what is your wish for charlottesville this year? >> don't be in such a rush to heal, that you don't fix the underlying problems. i know mayor walker is working hard to get some of those things done. i know some other people are working hard. if you rush to heal it over, if you rush to just spakle on top of the black mold on the wall, then it's only going to fester and grow and we are going to have this problem again in a short time. and i really don't want to see another mother, black, white, asian, latino, in my spot. >> by the way, susan says she is going to go to heather's -- the place where heather died on fourth street and lay some flowers there today. >> on this one-year anniversary, we are learning more about the
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russian interference after charlottesville. a gop lawmaker says russian trolls fueled that anger in the aftermath of the charlottesville rally last year. a security guard opens fire in a store in las vegas. new video to show you of frightening moments there as shoppers were hiding from that shooter. also, a multimillion dollar settlement for the man who says a popular weedkiller caused his cancer. coming up, what this landmark verdict could mean for the hundreds of patients suing the makers of roundup. belly fat:
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happy anniversary dinner, darlin'. can this much love be cleaned by a little bit of dawn ultra? oh yeah one bottle has the grease cleaning power of three bottles of this other liquid. a drop of dawn and grease is gone. trump is in bed minutestbedmini. >> it was said that russian trolls use the the internet to stir racial tensions even more
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after that 2017 in an effort to, this is a quote, hit americans against americans. >> i sat in a closed sessio briefing probably two months ago about charlottesville with the director of the fbi, amongst others, and asked if russian intermeddling had to do with the flames happened in charlottesville. i was told, yes, it did. i asked is this information classified? they said, no, it's not. >> cnn white house report sarah westwood is live from new jersey. any reaction from that from the president, sarah? >> reporter: president trump has not wait much beyond the tweet yesterday he sent condemning racism and perhaps in an attempt both to pay tribute to the pain the charlottesville inflicted on the nation last year and to make clear his position on the white nationalist gathering today before they get under way. ivanka trump, the president's daughter, is also speaking out to mark the one-year anniversary of charlottesville and she
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tweeted, in part. now beyond that tweet, president trump has been pretty much silent on this one-year anniversary of charlottesville and other lawmakers are speaking out more for ffu fuorcefully. he has no scheduled events today so may not hear more beyond his twitter feed. >> reporter: we know that president trump is reacting to omarosa's new room and tell us more. >> president trump is clearly unhappy with the claims his former employee made in her new book that is set to be released this week. president trump waited on the former "apprentice" contestant he hired at the white house yesterday. take a listen.
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>> i better not go any further. low life. she is a low life. >> reporter: trump has also been venting his frustration on the justice department and the origins of the russia investigation, which he and his allies have sought to discredit. trump, yesterday, accused attorney general jeff sessions as being a missing in action when it comes to an investigation of how the obama doj opened the russia investigation even though sessions has recused himself from all matters related to that russia probe. president trump clearly still fuming about his favorite foes the media and justice departent as he wraps up his 11-day working vacation here in new jersey. >> sarah westwood, thank you so much. joining me now is daniel
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lipmann. welcome back. >> thanks for having me. >> after the low life criticism of omarosa from the president, the natural follow-up is, the president wasn't taking them, if she is such a low life, why bring her into work in his white house? >> this is what happens when you hire apprentice stars as senior aides who are making over $100,000 on a public salary. omarosa kind of left a trail of damage in the white house. aides didn't think she did any work and she would leave shoes just lying around in the west wing. so this book seems to be an attempt to capitalize on her stint serving the public. >> so sarah sanders, the white house press secretary, responded through a statement. the president called her a low life. is this the extent until we learn mow about the book or any indication they are mobilizing
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for "fire and fury" style response? >> i think the white house may have learned a lesson which is don't respond every day to a new book out about the interworkings in the white house because you're just going to give it more attention. i think michael wolfe would be the first to admit the white house's severe attack on his credibility, that helped book sales because people were wondering what is this whole thing about? and so another problem is the white house has not seen a full copy of the book which comes out this week. so they don't really know what they are responding to when they are trying to fight back against omarosa. >> let's talk about the president's criticism of attorney general jeff sessions. he said he is scared stiff in this most recent tweet but in the past he has called him beleaguered and said he's in a peak position. sessions has not rescinded his
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recusal and he hasn't intervened with the russia investing and not pushed for a second counsel to look into the investigation against hillary clinton. the slams are ineffectual here. >> they also provide grift for robert mueller and his taegs. "the new york times" reported they are looking at trump's tweets constantly criticizing the doj to see if that is part of obstruction. sessions, when he did has recusal, he was looking way down the line, years ahead in terms of what history books would write about him. if he was going to be the attorney general who stopped a lawful inquiry into trump's behavior in the campaign, that would tar his place in history. he wanted to be seen as an ethical person and that is why he recused himself. he was a huge surrogate on the campaign and he probably views
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this as disloyalty by the president who actually has a good relationship now with rod rosenstein. trump told "the wall street journal" about a week ago that rosenstein is fantastic. so trump kind of goes hot and cold on his staffers. >> let's talk about this photo op because what it was billed as with the president yesterday and bikers for trump. jeff mason, with reuters, summed it up this way. this probably isn't the way they wanted it to go, but bring in the media to slam the media. >> i think this is kind of a -- that is a normal day in the white house. that is a slow news day when just that happens and not a million other crazy things.
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and so, you know, you're actually going to see a bunch of major newspapers, including "the boston globe," in the next couple of days, issue a -- denude -- they are coordinating to say we don't deserve that this type of treatment that we are valid part of democracy and we are just trying to do our jobs and hold power accountable whoever it is. >> daniel lippman, good to have you back. thanks so much. >> thanks, victor. later this morning, the president's attorney rudy giuliani is on ""state of the union" with jake tapper at 9:00 a.m. on cnn. cnn has exclusive reporting that twitter admitted the fringe media info wars violated its rules but did not remove the problematic tweets from their website. we will tell you what we have learned. who would have thought,
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now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. ♪ ♪ ♪ olly. we have terrifying video of people who hid in a store in las vegas. a little girl and her father are hiding underneath a clothing rack at a ross store. >> the alleged shooter was a security guard. they say he got into an argument with his manager and left and came back with a gun and thankfully nobody was shot. the suspect was shot by police
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when he left the store and he is still alive. you go to the outlet mall to shop and when you return to your car? this. six cars! swooled swallowed by a sinkhole and this is 60 miles outside of philadelphia in lancaster. >> one woman was in her car and said it felt like a earthquake. that is understandable. no one seriously hurt. good news there. officials cannot remove the cars until they are sure that area is stable. having worked in florida for seven years, these pop up occasionally and the worst thing you can do is approach one of these too soon and then another chip falls off and you're going down into the hole with it. exclusive reporting from cnn. cnn found that far right conspiracy theorist alex jones violated twitter ruled after the company defended keeping the
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accounts on their sites saying they did not violate the rules. twitter was forced to admit the violations but said it will let info wars stay on the site. >> with us is cnn money senior oliver reporting oliver darcy. tell us more about this. >> twitter continues to stand alone here. earlier this week we saw apple and facebook and youtube scrub their platforms related to alex jones and his info wars but twitter did not do that. at the time, the ceo jack dorsey said that alex jones had not violated the twitter rules and fthat if he did, twitter would enforce those rules. but we conducted an investigation here at cnn earlier this week and found there are repeated violations in twir's ter twitter's term of services and
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he had things that were harassing individuals. twitter came back the next day and said we see there were violations of our rules. however, twitter still not taking any what we see is meaningful action. twitter wars and alex jones are remaining online for now. i think people are confused and seeing individuals saying what is the purpose of having rules if you're not going to take a meaningful action to enforce those rules? the violations that alex jones and info wars, that they committed on the platform, they are not really very small violations. these are repeated violations over a long period of time and, like i said, doing things that degrade individuals based on their running or gender identity. so you have a lot of people wondering today what is the purpose of the rules if they are not going to be enforced?
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>> all right. oliver darcy, continue to watch. . thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you, sir. terminal cancer patient has won a landmark case against one of the most popular lawn care products. the multimillion dollar outcome here and here is the catch. whether there could be more cases to come. you might take something for your heart... or joints. but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally discovered in jellyfish, prevagen has been shown in clinical trials to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. that make it easy for your uber driver to find you,atures taking the stress out of pickups. because leaving an event shouldn't be one. uber is moving in a new direction. forward.
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yeah, i got some financialbody guidance a while ago. how'd that go? he kept spelling my name with an 'i' but it's bryan with a 'y.' yeah, since birth. that drives me crazy. yes. it's on all your email. yes. they should know this? yeah. the guy was my brother-in-law. that's ridiculous. well, i happen to know some people. do they listen? what? they're amazing listeners.
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body and has nonhodgkin's lifo ma. hundreds of lawsuits claim roundup causes cancer but monsanto says there is nothing between the product and cancer. joey jackson, legal analyst, is with us. this is a 46-year-old man, father of two. this was expedited his trial was because he is near death. how solid was the evidence against him and what precedent does it set? >> good morning. those are very significant questions so let's start with the solidness of the evidence. i think it was overwhelming. the reason i say that it's hard enough to convince a jury but in this particular case what we have to know is that about 250 million dollars was for punitive damages. punitive damages are damages that are designed to punish. they are dined to send a message to the company that what you did
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is wrong. and so, clearly, the evidence in their view was compelling because in order to find that you did wrong and it's punitive, you have to find that the company acted with malice. although there is a conflict, as it relates to the science as to whether whether there is causal connection, you know, between the disease that he developed and this actual ingredient that you spoke to, the reality is that those are questions of fact and you have a battle of the experts, one expert saying it doesn't, another expert saying it does. clearly, the jury sided with the experts who say it does. so this is resounding and i think the precedent is overwhelmi overwhelming. many suits, thousands across the country, and i think as a result of this lawsuit, certainly, it's beneficial to those causes that will be moving forward. >> yeah. this is a father, as i said, who is near death, they say. his wife is working two 40-hour a week job to make end's meet
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and he has two young children. monsanto has vowed to appeal this. i wanted to ask you about two things that stand out regarding that. first of all, if they appeal, from a pr standpoint and this man alone, the optics are pretty heartless. at the same time, because there are thousands of lawsuits out there or allegations against them, the president is frightening for the company if they let it go as is. is it too late for the company to settle? >> you know, it's never too late to settle and, oftentimes, what you see is after a verdict, there will be a settlement because of all the litigation that happens post-trial, right? the fact is that you can appeal, as they are, and in the event that you appeal and the verdict is overturned and you start again and incentives even with this victory for there to be some type of settlement. on the one hand you could see that the company would be dug in. this is ruinless liability. weigh mean is the overwhelming
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nature of the verdict, the number itself and the precedent it sets is horrific for the company. if they give in here, think about all the other lawsuits that will follow and buckle this company to its knees. as heartless as it is and tough optically i think the company to dig in and say no causal connection with this science. the jury found otherwise and i think other juries on the strength of the evidence could find the same thing. i think the day of reckoning certainly is here and as it relates to the other lawsuits, may be close at hand. so i think that people looking to use this particular, you know, ingredient and this particular pesticide are going to really think twice moving forward as to whether they should be doing it at the risk of getting cancer. >> joey jackson, always appreciate your expertise, sir. >> thank you. nasa probe is now using
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3-2-1-0. liftoff of the mighty delta 4 heavy rocket with nasa. >> this is really cool. nasa is now sending this probe where no spacecraft has gone before. the sun. now they tried to get this off the ground yesterday but there was a 24-hour delay. nasa has now launched its first unmanned probe toward the solar atmosphere. >> you heard the gentlemen saying the parker solo probe had the four-inch solar shield to protect it from extreme heat and cold and sensor will tend to get the samples of the sun's
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atmosphere. the first download of data is expected in early december after the probe reaches its first close approach of the sun in november. all righty. so maybe once the sun goes down tonight you'll have something else to look at in the sky. >> who? >> i don't know what you were thinking! ha ha! >> all right. >> i opened myself up to that. sorry, folks. >> it's sunday morning. the edge is passing through a comet's debris field and it's the perfect time to see shooting stars! here is cnn meteorologist allison chinchar with a closer look at what is happening. allison, you have to admit she served it up! >> i'm sorry. >> i do admit my heart was beating fast because i don't know where they are going to take this! tonight is the peak. this is going to be the pretty stunning. while this does happen every year in july, into august, this year is going to be even better because it's going to be rather moonless. meaning we don't have much of a moon out there which is going to
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make conditions much darker. meaning you'll actually be able to see much more of this than you have, say, perhaps the last couple of years. the really cool part about this is, again, when we talk about this peak viewing is tonight. for most people it's about 10:00 or 11:00 in the evening and carry until about 4:00 into the early morning hours. let's take a look at the finer details of this. this is actually a pretty interesting night to take a look at some of these conditions. now, we talked about the evening hours. the peak hours being about 11:00 p.m. to, say, about 4:00 a.m. you also want to keep in mind can't expect to look up and five minutes later see everything and be done with it. you need to allow your eyes 30 minutes or so to adjust to the dark sky. if you live in a big city with a lot of light pollution you may need to give yourself 45 minutes for that. the other thing is because it is peak viewing tonight for folks, say, in the countryside or rural locations you could see 120 to
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200 meteors per hour. some of them city and locations probably closer to 70 to a hundred me meteors per hour. the key is whether mother nature will cooperate to give you clear skies. unfortunately, rain showers for texas and oklahoma and mississippi and areas of the northeast including massachusetts, new york, even around connecticut. take, for example, "the new york times," y-- negotiate new york city. you may have to sit out there quite sometime and wait for a good clearing between some of those clouds. dallas also not looking like a very good city to see this. because you're not only going to have clouds but also the chance for thunderstorms. minneapolis, however, fantastic city. nice, clear skies. and since we won't have that moon out there, guys, that will
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really help for a lot of folks, even in city locations, to be able to see the meteor shower. >> i expect some parties will be happening tonight to watch this. oh, darn! i have to sit out here longer with my glass of wine and my friend so i can see these stars. bummer. allison, thank you. >> thanks so much, allison. listen. we are learning more about the man who stole that plane and crashed it near seattle yesterday. one of his coworkers is giving us some insight into how that man knew how to operate the plane. this is the ocean. just listen. (vo) there's so much we want to show her. we needed a car that would last long enough to see it all. (avo) subaru outback. 98% are still on the road after 10 years. come on mom, let's go! (avo) right now, get 0% apr financing on the 2018 subaru outback.
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>> are any of these people over 30? >> i'm on my way to mason city and sioux city and then council bluffs and then out and around. >> how many people are going canvassing today? it's a little brisk outside. it will be good for you. walk quick. talk fast. >> it's time that we moved from sound bites to sound solutions. >> we need to continue to press. keep the energy up. there is a huge momentum. >> iowa, you can make the difference. >> tomorrow night, the future of the free world is riding on your shoulders. don't feel any pressure. >> check out the new episode of "the 2000s" tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern on cnn.
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