tv New Day Sunday CNN September 30, 2018 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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i'm trying to do some homework here. so they're ready for anything. ♪ there is never been anybody that has been looked at like judge kavanaugh. the fbi, i believe, is doing a really great job and they have been all over it. they have free rein and they can do whatever they have to do and having them do a thorough investigation i actually think will be a blessing in disguise. he wrote me beautiful letters and they are great letters. we fell in love. >> what? >> judge kavanaugh, are you ready to begin? >> oh, hell yeah. this is my speech.
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i wrote it last night while screaming into an empty bag of doritos! ♪ >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. >> good morning to you. we will get to the supreme court battle in a moment. first, the very latest on the escalating situation in indonesia. >> you're looking at some of the first aerial footage of just the devastation this earthquake and tsunami have brought. we now know more than 800 people have died. this hour, rescue workers are digging through that rubble and the debris. take a look at the pictures coming in to us overnight. this is a hotel where dozens are trapped and we will talk live to asia this morning later for more. we begin with the latest on the battle over supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh. a sexual assault allegations against him. >> there is a new fbi background investigations happening right now. president trump says nothing will be off limits.
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>> there has never been anybody that has been looked at like judge kavanaugh. i think that it's going to work out very well. but the fbi, i believe, is doing a really great job. they have been all over it. they have free rein. they will do whatever they have to do and whatever it is they do, they will be doing things we never thought of. hopefully at the conclusion, everything will be fine. >> now, of course this week's heated hearings provide plenty of material for the return of "saturday night live" guest star is as brett kavanaugh, an angry matt damon. >> now, i am usually an optimist! i'm a keg is half full kind of guy. but what i've seen from the monsters on this committee makes me want to puke and not from beer! dr. ford has no evidence. none!
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mene meanwhile, i've got these. i've got these calendars! these beautiful creepy calendars! >> we will show you mow from the show later. but jokes aside, we are learning more about who could be interviewed by the fbi in their investigation of kavanaugh. >> joining us live from the white house now, cnn correspondent ryan nobles. good to see you. what are you learning about the scope of this? >> reporter: good morning from the north lawn of the white house where president trump was busy talking about this investigation yesterday on his way to west virginia, he basically said that the fbi can talk to whomever they need to to learn as much information as they can about brett kavanaugh and what is now a condensed fbi investigation that can only go until friday of next week, with the hopes that republicans will have will clear kavanaugh of another additional background check and that will be enough for him to win confirmation to
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the united states supreme court. listen to what the president told supporters last night in west virginia about this next round of fbi investigation. >> for ten years they have been talking about him. longer than that. i didn't know him. but i've heard about him a lot, because they were all saying he should be on the united states supreme court. that's why i put him up. and i will tell you, i will tell you, i will tell you he has suffered the meanness, the anger, but a vote for judge kavanaugh is also a vote to reject the ruthless and outrageous tactics of the democrat party. >> you can see there what the president believes is that kavanaugh has been thoroughly vetted by the fbi on numerous occasions and that is one of the reasons that he believes this additional background check is not going to deliver any new information but we know the fbi are busy at work. a number of people they plan to talk to. among them is mark judge, the
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friend of brett calf kavanaugh dr. ford believes was in the room at the time of the assault and deborah ramirez has accused kavanaugh of exposing himself to her while they were classmates as yale. and party snell could be there at that party and leland kaiser will be an important person for the fbi to talk to, the friend of dr. ford who was at the party with her that day. important to point out all of these people have put out statements on one level or another talking about their experience as it relates to the ford case, none of these people have been able to specifically corroborate her story. but, at the same time, none of them have been able to say definitive that will did not happen. this next week will be crucial. the big question is will any new information that could come forward that could change the minds of the senators that will ultimately have the final decision about brett kavanaugh's
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future. >> ryan nobles, we appreciate it so much. thank you. joining us to discuss is julian zeleny, a historian and professor at princeton university and kelly jane torrance. let's start, first, the president and this 180 on the fbi and their ability to be useful in this investigation. do we have the sound bite? all right. let's play it. >> i don't think the fbi really should be involved because they don't want to be involved. if they wanted to be, i would certainly do that, but as you know, they say this is not really their thing. >> actually, this could ab blessing in disguise because having the fbi go out and do a thorough investigation, whether it's three days or seven days, i think it's going to be less than a week. >> if not what they do, it's not their thing to, they are going to do things we never thought of. it's going to be a blessing in
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disguise. julian, was his hand forced here? what do you make of this new confidence from the president of the fbi. >> well, look. it's the power of one vote in the senator and senator flake was able to essentially pressure him into this position. it's not an open investigation. it's really a background check. i think the president, in some ways, is having it both ways. now he can say i'm going to have a full investigation unlimited, but, in reality, it is limited. it's not clear it will produce anything which would still allow for the confirmation to go through. today is best of both worlds in some ways. >> an important point. let me bring thaw to you, kelly jane. the president says free rain but there is a limited time period. there is a limited scope and without sharing those details, maybe even publicly or even with senate judiciary democrats, are we going to be at the end of this week where we were at the end of last week fighting over as julian said this full fair
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investigation? >> it's a great question, victor. i've seen people, you know, especially a few democrats and people aligned with them that are already casting doubt on the, you know, what is going to happen with this investigation before it's season practically begun. yeah, i think that we are going to be about at the same place. let's face it. i think they are unlikely to find any new information and i think that hardly anybody is going to have their mind changed. now, of course, they are focusing on those three or four senators who seem to be undecided and i guess those are the people whose minds might be changed but, on the whole, everybody has the evidence or lack thereof that we have seen and no one is going to change their mind. yeah, it is disturbing to hear conflicting reports about what the president and what the white house has said to the fbi, what direction it's given them. so far, i've only seen one outlet publishing anonymous sources saying the white house has given them a specific list of names they are to talk to and
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nobody else is reporting that. i know the fbi, once they talk to someone, if that person leads them to someone else, they are supposed to go and talk to that new person. i expect the fbi are being the professionals they are and i'm glad to see president trump no longer talking about the fbi being a partisan deep state organization. i think they are going to do their job. >> yeah. and you point out who they will and will not talk to. let's put up michael april vena tweet. he says the following. avenatti tweeted this. julian, is it plausible to think
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that that will conduct this investigation and not speak with julie swetnick? and michael avenatti will not sit quietly by if this gets to wednesday and thursday and not make his position known. >> well, first, yes, it is possible that they ultimately limit the scope of who they talk to and which issues they investigate. and that would be problematic for many people after what they saw at those hearings and the inconsistencies they have heard from judge kavanaugh, because they will ask why not look at a full range of credible allegations that have been made. but, at the same time, there will be almost a second tier of investigation going on, whether it's avenatti and whatever he tweets out about his own client, or whether it's journalists who are going to be asking questions of all the same people who the fbi is going after and reporting on it. we don't know what impact that
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might have over the coming weeks. so there is multiple tracks of investigations that i think might have some kind of effect on the final vote, although i still predict the republicans are going to fall in line by the end of the week and vote to confirm. >> the president hosted another rally in west virginia last night, a re-election rally. he talked about the midterms. do we have that sound bite from the president? if not, i can read it. okay. here is what the president said. a lot of what we have done is at stake in november with just five weeks away, this is one of the big, big, in other words, that is true, i'm not running but i'm really running, fighting for great candidates. saying that he is not on the ballot, but he is. kelly, we know that historically this is set up to potentially be a rough time for republicans in november. the latest generic ballot has republicans 12 points behind
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democrats here. is this a danger for the president? >> yeah, it is, victor. in some races, you know, the president getting out there, making his face known, talking about how much he supports the candidate, that might help him but there are an awful lot of races in which it's going to be the complete opposite and i hope that people in the white house are figuring out which races are which and getting the president -- i mean, if they want to win that is what they have got to do. i wonder if it's a wise move for our president with such a low approval rating to make the midterms about him. republicans do seem to support the president. they haven't really moved a lot. his support. but independents really have moved and they are moving against the president. and so i'm not sure this is the best strategy but i don't know what other strategy donald trump would choose because, of course, everything has to be about him. >> we have seen the president give a full throat endorsement to a candidate and after they lose, create as much distance as
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possible. luther strange, roy moore, rick secone in pennsylvania, the list goes on. thank you both. >> thanks. have a great day. >> you too. actress milano was in the hearing last week of brett kavanaugh. she spoke to cnn's ana cabrera and she says there was a double standard in that hearing room. >> and there was a sense of hope. there was a since of hope in that room beforehand. th there was a sense of hope for so many of us who have gone through that and such an empowering and intimidating way and i can't imagine how difficult that was and my stomach was in knots for her. then he got up there and it was -- it was enraging, you know? i felt like if a woman acted like that during a line of questioning, she would have been considered totally unhinged or
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like she was having a meltdown, which i think proved that he doesn't have the temperament to be on the supreme court. i feel like with this investigation, this he said/she said will get more due process and i think that that is the most important thing. >> one of the senators noted for her questioning of judge kavanaugh on thursday's hearing, join jake tapper live this morning. a a amy clobuchar live on "state of the union" at 9:00 p.m. indonesia is rocking after a earthquake. we will have a live report. a diver thought a young boy was excited he caught a lobster. he was actually screaming for help. the latest on a shark attack. this time off the california coast. when you rent from national... it's kind of like playing your own version of best ball. because here, you can choose any car in the aisle, even if it's a better car class than the one you reserved.
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that deadly earthquake and tsunami hit overnight. the death toll has skyrocketed. more than 800 people have died they can confirm now. authorities say they believe more bodies are going to be recovered. >> rescue workers right now are working to get at least 50 people who are trapped under all of this at a hotel. cnn's will ripley is live from hong kong. what are you learning about the hotel rescue specifically? >> reporter: we know a number of tourists were caught not only in the earthquake but in the tsunami that followed. as a result, people are trapped under debris and with each passing hour the chances of finding people alive are dim. really the worst possibly development in the overnight hours to see the death toll 485 to 823 and rescuer workers believe the numbers will be worse in the coming hours and days. no communication and no power and the roads are destroyed to
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get in. the earthquake, itself, 7.5 a devastating event certainly in indonesia where a lot of buildings collapsed and thousands of homes destroyed, upwards of 17,000 people homeless and more expected. people sleeping outside because the structures are so unsafe. but even more devastating and deadly event was the tsunami that followed. a 10-foot wave that came crashing onto shore and videos posted on social media i want to play to you because it takes you to the terrifying moment as this huge wave approached the shore. watch this. [ speaking in foreign language ] >> tsunami! tsunami! tsunami! >> reporter: hard to watch. you don't know fountain people on the street, in their cars even knew what was coming. moments later the waves arrive and that man who was screaming
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had that panic in his voice the tone almost changed to a sign of sadness as he watched the devastating around him. of the 832 killed, 821 were in that coastal city of palu and goes to show how deadly the tsunami waves are and reminds of me when i was living and working in japan and touring those areas that were hit by the tsunami in 2011. the waves come through and they just destroy everything which is why they expect to find more bodies, sadly, just through all of the debris that is scattered throughout the area. >> i think i heard you earlier say that both the current and former mayors of palu were killed as well. what do we know about the rescue operations? have they interrupted them overnight or working through the night? >> so the indonesian president was there on the ground in palu and he has ordered rescue personnel to work around the clock day and night. the problem is getting people into this area is proving exceptionally difficult. the airport in palu was shut
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down and air traffic controller died after helping a passenger plane take off and he was in the air tower and he was killed. they are only bringing in humanitarian supplies and military personnel. for the actual aid workers coming in from other areas are not able to get on commercial flights because those are suspended so they are having to drive from airports 7 to 12 hours away and getting the people in there to distribute food and water and supplies, hygiene, toiletries and medications, tents for people to sleep in is taking a long time and the much-needed help is trickling in. indonesia was just hit by an earthquake in august that killed 405 people. so they are already stretched thin in terms of the resources and now have yet another disaster they are having to deal with. >> thank you, will, for bringing us the latest from there. it is so hard to believe with these poor people. >> the numbers, unfortunately, are going to get worse.
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a 13-year-old boy is in critical condition. he was attacked by a shark. he was diving for lobsters near san diego. witnesses heard the boy shouting but thought he was just excited. then they realized he was yelling, i got bit. >> you can see some people there who are diving nearby. they helped get him into a kayak and back to shore. one witness said he was conscious but he did sustain serious injuries to his chest and back. the beaches in that area are closed another 24 hours now. still to come, "saturday night live" returning for its 44th season. and you know they took on the supreme court ballots. battle. >> judge kavanaugh is about to appear so let's go live to the senate hearing room where two of the oldest white people i've ever seen are about to run a circus.
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both kavanaugh's expense and at racial mitchell's expense. bryant played rachel mitchell. the woman who was doing some of the questioning on behalf of the republican senators. it was damon. erased its progressive beliefs especially in the trump era and so in the weekend update portion i can show you a clip of, we heard from him talking about the stakes of the kavanaugh hearing and what might happen next. here is what they say. >> typically when you ask about a sexual assault and you're drinking problem at a job
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interview? you're don't get the damn job! i don't know if mr. kavanaugh has a history of assault or a drinking problem but i know he might. you shouldn't be on the supreme court if you might! you shouldn't be on the people's court if you might! sometimes "might" is enough. i don't thi i don't want to pet your dog if he might bite me. >> there is the update. if there was a conservative version of "snl" which there is not and conservative issue of "snl" they would be saying the opposite might not enough and you are innocent until proven guilty. think what is unique about the debate on the supreme court a lot of energy on both sides about supporting kavanaugh and opposing kavanaugh and it's hard to measure what side has more energy and more intensity right now. certainly on "snl," you're hearing a progressive point of view, a lot of concern about kavanaugh. but there are lots of folks
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fired up who are represented by voices on fox news as well. we know what the polling says. we know most americans opposing kavanaugh in the polling but the energy levels, the intensity, the motivation to vote in the midterms, a lot of that is, i think, hard to measure at this point in time. >> i'm waiting to see who is going to come up with a conservative version now, now that you've said it. i mean, it's out there. two, the timing really at the end of the day could not have been better and it shows how quickly, how expeditiously "snl" is happening in the news cycle. it happened thursday and this is saturday. they got damon. >> they keep doing hyperexaggerations of human life and doing humorous versions as opposed to come up with an entirely different reality. i think people think it's cheap on "snl's" part just to do an
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exaggerated version of real life but i think hard-core fans love it. they have to react to the news cycle and re-writing in real-time. even "60 minutes" have an interview with jeff flake and it has had to what is happening in the news and entertainment. >> have to keep up. brian stelter, thanks. >> thanks. >> do not miss brian on "reliable sources" at 11:00 a.m. here on cnn. elon musk got away with smoking marijuana live on the radio but now single tweet could cost him his job as chair of tesla. cal: we saved our money and now, we get to spend it - our way. ♪ valerie: but we worry if we have enough to last. ♪ cal: ellen, our certified financial planner™ professional, helps us manage our cash flow and plan for the unexpected. valerie: her experience and training gave us the courage to go for it. it's our "confident forever plan"... cal: ...and it's all possible with a cfp® professional. find your certified financial planner™ professional
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million's seat at tesla. part of a settlement agreements with the u.s. securities and exchange commission. in august musk tweeted he was taking the electric car company private and had the funding to do it and sent tesla stocks soaring but turns out he didn't. the s.e.c. says that misled investors. now the court still has to approve this deal. if it goes through he will stay on as ceo have to pay the $20 million and have to play another $20 for not policing musk's tweet. this is part of a statement. musk said -- this week, the senate is waiting for the fbi investigation before they vote on judge kavanaugh's supreme court nomination. at the senate judiciary hearing committee, christine blasey ford and brett kavanaugh defended
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decades old memory but dr. ford was not able to remember the date and exact location of the assault, she did remember other moments very clearly. listen to this. >> how are you so sure that it was he? >> the same way that i'm sure that i'm talking to you right now. i just basically memory functions. and also just the level of nor he epinephrine in the brain that encodes mist into the campus so the trauma-related experience then is kind of locked there where it's other details kind of drift. >> what are you telling us is this could not be a case of mistaken identity? >> absolutely not. >> jim hopper is with us, a psychology teaching associate at harvard medical school and expert on sexual assault and the brain.
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thank you so much, professor hopper, for being with us. i want to ask you, first of all, how reliable are memories of someone who has experienced a sexual assault? why would they be fragmented as we saw there with dr. ford? >> so a key issue memories have different components and some aspects of memory are more reliable than others. so a really important distinction we make between what we call the central details and the peripheral details. central details are the things while the person is having the experience that their attention is focused on and they have emotional significance to them. those are things that we tend to take in very strongly and things we are not paying attention to or don't have much significant emotional are not getting in our brain and not coded as they say. the next is storage. are things getting retained in the brain and what gets attention, what got emotional significance. that is what gets retained. then, finally -- oh, god.
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>> that's all right. i know. there is so much to this particular topic that we don't understand. let me ask you this. how can you determine what fragmented memories are reality and what might be -- what might not be? >> here is what i wanted to add when i got a little nervous there. >> sure. that's okay. >> after things -- the other thing is what is your emotional state when you're having the experience and this is what dr. ford was talking about. so if you're really activated and you're nervous or you're stressed out or you're afraid, then that can really burn in those central details. and that is what she was talking about the norihe epineve ren and what just happened to me will burn in my brain for the rest of
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my life. that gets in and when we are really stressed that gets super burned in. that may not be what other people would expect us to have. that may not be what an investigator would think. here is what would be central to the person. it's what for the person as they are having the experience moment-by-moment, what central is to them. that is really the key issue here. and that what tends to be burned into people's brains for the rest of their lives. >> so i just wanted to ask you about what you mentioned in terms of investigators. you recently wrote for an article. you said ignorance of how memory works is a major reason why sexual assault is the easiest violent crime to get away. ignorance where? is this with us we don't understand it if we haven't been through it? is it with investigators? >> well, i think the ignorance is partly just -- a lot of these things are intuitive. probably the things i just said will make sense to people but, on the other hand, we can have these expectations about what would the person have focused on, what would be the central part.
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and one of the things i always talk about, and i write about, too, is how if we look to the experiences of soldiers and police, these are the same kinds of things, these are the realities that soldiers and police deal with. in a combat situation, certain things that grab their attention and they really get burned in. other things they weren't noticing that tunnel vision that don't get in. we have these expectations we put on people who have been sexually assaulted. that we might not put on a police officer if they were involved in a shooting. or we might not put on a soldier if he just came back from a firefight in an alley in rahmadi. the expectations what they remember and could be at totally odds what the person's brain was focused on and taking in. >> wow. that is really informative. professor hopper, forget whatever happened in that little moment because we learned a lot from you today! it was great. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you. bye-bye. >> two games, four football
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heavyweights. vince is here. >> top ten matchups and dramatic comebacks all under the lights saturday night, including an early candidate for play of the year. but was this going to be enough for the penn state nittany lions hosting ohio state? what's critical thinking like? a basketball costs $14. what's team spirit worth? (cheers) what's it worth to talk to your mom?
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♪ ♪ ♪ olly. huge college football games. two top matchups and number three team nearly upset. >> vince is here and starting with the biggest game in the big ten, maybe from what i hear, i don't know, all year. >> no. it's a tone setter for sure and what an opening month for college football and what a september send-off with ohio state visiting penn state. key early matchup of unbeatens. it was an electric atmosphere. few scenes in college football like the whiteout night game in
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happy valley. 100,000 plus make for the largest crowd in beaver stadium history and gave us perhaps the play of the year -- early on. look at johnson going up with an acrobatic stumbling one-handed grab over a defender. just pulled that out of the air. that would lead to a field goal for the penn state nittany lions. 2:00 left in the fourth quarter, ohio state is down by five after scoring a touchdown. dwayne haskins drives the buckeyes 96 yards and 47-yard strike strike to k.j. hill and he has two touchdown passes the final 7:00 gives hils tes team the lead. number 7 notre dame hosting number 8 stanford. the irish bottled up heisman candidate bryce love on the ground and torched the cardinal through the air. a little defense, a little offense. ian book tossed four touchdown passes in a rout.
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the legends trophy will reside in notre dame for the first time since 2014. the irish are 5-0. frightening moment during the clemson and syracuse game. fresh off named the starter true freshman quarterback trevor lawrence lowers his shoulder and takes a nasty hit diving for a first down and shaken up and left the game and woozy. he didn't return. so clemson rallies behind another freshman chase bryce who a was most recently third team. tiger fans love it at memorial stadi stadium. clemson holding off the orange. to baseball. all ten playoff teams are set. the dodgers scored four in the ninth to hold off the giants for a 10-6 win. after that, out comes the champagne. we know which teams are getting in but still a matter who plays where and when. at least on the national league
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side. entering the final day of the regular season today, both the n.l. central and n.l. west are up for grabs. the cubs and brewers and the dodgers and rockies all have a chance to win their divisions and that is big. the two teams that don't face off in a winner take all wildcard game! final day at the ryder cup started within the last hour. tiger woods 0-3 so far. just took the course and said in paris for his match. americans need to win 8 of the 12 singles matches today against their european counterparts if they want to retain the cup. it was just a blood bath for the european team the first two days against the americans. euros winning eight matches. a row at one point between friday and saturday so they are 4 1/2 points from takie ining t ryder cup and the united states has not won on foreign soil since 1993 so unless they get a big rally going, it's going to be 25 years. >> a bit of a tradition.
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>> i have one more thing -- but i can't remember it! i'm sorry. i'm sorry! >> vince, i can't believe! man! >> that's a shot. >> they are coming after you. >> i've been there too. >> we have all done it. we have all done it. >> i have a teleprompter and i've been there! vince is speaking off of his own expertise. >> sometimes the teleprompter is not our friend. >> that's the truth. >> i have to go now. >> no! i was not! listen. everybody -- okay, you know what? this will make our producer happy. taking a look behind the palace gates. a sneak peek at the new hbo documentary "queen of the world." he can't wait for it! ♪ we the people, defined by the moments we share with our families and our friends.
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for 53 countries but a new documentary looks to show the human side of queen elizabeth ii. >> queen of all the world looks how the 92-year-old queen is preparing the younger royals for their role representing the british commonwealth. nations that were once part of the british empire and includes the duchess meghan markle and include traveling the world but reinforcing the commonwealth bond in more subtle ways like the flowers on her dress. >> it was important for me, especially now being a part of the royal family, to have all the 53 of the commonwealth countries incorporated and i knew that it would be a fun surprise as well for my now husband who didn't know and he was really over the moon to find out that i would make this choice for our day together. >> joining us is cnn royal commentator victoria. good to see you. quinn of 53 countries worldwide.
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2.4 billion people, what is this documentary show us about her relationship with these countries? >> reporter: well, as really what comes across is the commonwealth is something that the queen is passionate about. it's arguably the great success of her reign. she has been to 173 countries and the miles she has traveled owe the course of her reign over a million and could go across the planet 42 times. commentary from harry and princess anne and william and this is a role of the queen that is something she is president proud of. >> indicate middkate middleton, if i should call her middleton. teach me, victoria, teach me! she he has not been in the public eye much since giving birth and we are talking a lot more about the duchess of sussex. is there a chance she could be upstaged?
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>> no. i don't think so. kate is married to the future king. so they have very different roles. the duchess of sussex is front and center at the moment because the wedding was a tremendous success and she is exciting to watch and brings lots of newness. cambridge fans are celebrating that kate will be on the royal beat and we will see lots of her between now and christmas. >> i want to ask you about samantha markle. she says she wants to confront the dutchess of sussex. how much do you think we will seen? >> i don't think we are going to see anything. it's a lovely idea that samantha thinks she can arrive in england and knock on harry and meghan's door. i think police are keeping a close eye. yes, public relations reps
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saying she is there and wants to confront meghan but lucky if she gets win arm's length of meghan. >> good to have you here, victoria. >> thank you. >> "queen of the world" debuts tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. eastern. there is never been anybody that has been looked at like judge kavanaugh. the fbi, i believe, is doing a really great job and they have been all over it. they have free rein and they can do whatever they have to do and whatever they do. having them do a thorough investigation i actually think will be a blessing in disguise. he wrote me beautiful letters and they are great letters. we fell in love. >> what? >> judge kavanaugh, are you ready to begin? >> oh, hell, yeah. this is my speech. there are others like it, but this is mine! i wrote it last night while screaming into an empty bag of doritos!
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