tv New Day Sunday CNN January 6, 2019 3:00am-4:00am PST
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xfinity home. simple. easy. awesome. call, go online or demo in an xfinity store today. >> good morning. so glad to have with us. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. the breaking news this morning out of the houston area, sheriff's deputies have arrested a suspect in the deadly shooting of 7-year-old jasmine barnes. let's get straight now to kaylee hartong straight from houston. >> overnight the harris county sheriff's deputies filing captain murders against eric black jr. and identified him based on a tip and brought him in for questioning without incident and say he later
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admitted to participating in the shooting. authorities not explaining his participation specifically. let's note they have not named hip himt him as the gunman and pursuing other information that could lead to the others charged in the murder of 7-year-old jasmine barnes. from a state, the sheriff ed gonzalez says i am grateful to our investigators and who provided information from across the nation to support our work to get justice for jazmine. i think the important line there, our work is not finished. victor and christa, authorities say all evidence they have gathered to this point supports their strong belief that jazmine and her family were innocent victims. they do not believe they were the intended targets of this shooting. they say it possibly could have been a case of mistaken
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identity. >> wow. kaylee hartong, thank you. janet, i want to go to you first. thank you for being here. the statement says he has admitted to taking part. they are not characterizing this man they have in custody as a shooter. if he is not the shooter, would he still be eligible for capital punishment? >> that's a great question. he's as guilty as the person who pulled the trigger so no distinction between the actual gunman or anyone who participated in any way in that process. so he would be, but he also is probably the most valuable witness they have at this point because he is already talking. whether he had a lawyer or not, we don't know. but he has already admitted to is his participation. you can get that law enforcement are telling him, it will go better for you, maybe we don't even seek capital punishment, if you give up the other people. >> so, tom, what do you make of
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the admission of involvement at this point? >> well, i think that is, you know, a great break for the police officers that he agreed to talk about this case and make any kind of a statement. certainly, once he was arrested, had he no requirement to speak. you don't have to answer questions. he could have remained silent so that is a great assistance to the investigators he made a comment in this case. i think also that he has made comments that indicated that this family was not the intended victim, well, in this case, who was? was he already out on a mission to murder somebody in particular when this happened? and he just happened to pick the wrong car to shoot at, you know, that remains to be announced, i guess by the police also. >> janet, if this man turns out not to be the actual shooter and he is helpful, you anticipate that capital murder charge might change? >> i do. as a defense attorney, i would certainly say, you know, he'll
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get a court-appointed attorney general or maybe a family member securing an attorney to defend him and any way the capital part of those charges in exchange for his information, which i think they are already indicating is probably pretty valuable. >> tom, the sketch that was released before the arrest was based on a description by jazmine's mother and also a few sisters. the police said that this sketch was of a white male in his 40s. now, they are still looking for people, the sketch is on the screen right now. but the person they arrested is 20 years old. how reliable typically are those descriptions from victims of crimes like this? >> victor, they vary a great deal and, in some cases, they might be pretty exact, depending on how good of a look the person or the witness got of the person and how accurate the person drawing the sketch is, how skilled they are.
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so, you know, in this particular case, it may have been more helpful that they had an enhanced picture of the red pickup truck and i know that, you know, that is not a scarce item in the houston, texas, area, to see pickup trucks, but that particular color, the fact it was an extended cab, the fact that it was in that particular area at that specific time could have led additionally for whoever called in the tip to think, okay, i think it's, you know, this guy because his truck matches the description and even if the drawing of him personally is a little bit off, you know, we will find out. on the other hand, we don't know if somebody else was driving a truck and that is the person who was sketched. you know, he was a participant with another individual or group of individuals, so we don't know that yet. >> tom, i want to ask you real lee merritt is an attorney
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general and says this could be in a similar incident in 2017 in terms of somebody innocent being shot, same kind of truck he alleges, and there has been nobody found in that case back in 2017. will authorities -- help us understand what authorities are doing now as they look into the the backgrounds of the people they do -- this man they have in custody and any other people they may have been talking to. >> particularly with the individual in custody or other suspects that have been identified is they will be trying to trace back to previous unsolved cases of where these individuals were at that time. you know, do they have an alibi where they were at that time and how closely do the descriptions and other details of the shootings match. in other cases, you'll have the bull let, what caliber gun was fired, was it a handgun, rifle?
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they will have some of that evidence to work with and compare to other unsolved or even solved cases. >> janet, how long do you expect this suspect to continue to communicate, considering that as tom highlighted, i think most people watching know, he is under no obligation to continue to speak with investigators. >> victor, that's a great question because, initially, he did cooperate. whether he lawyers up, which is an expression everyone knows remains to be seen. as a defense attorney, it wouldn't be against my advice to say, look. you've already cooperated. let's keep negotiating, you know -- tom made a great point. if we know about other murders, we know about other unsolved crimes, your value goes up and they may have you on this case, so you need to keep talking in order to make your situation better. >> tom fuentes and janet johnson, we appreciate you both being here. thank you. >> thank you. this morning, the president
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will go to to camp david to meet with senior white house officials about border security. >> in washington another shutdown meeting is being planned this afternoon between white house officials and congressional leadership staffers. >> yesterday's meeting brought another round of demand from both sides, very little progress, though. as the shutdown gets closer to being the third longest in history, a white house official says the president may decide to declare a national emergency to get border wall funding. >> from the white house now, cnn white house sarah westestwood. when we hear the president is considering claiming a national emergency, do we know? have they indicated any sort of time line, how much time he is willing to give all of the people involved here as they try to come up with a remedy? >> good morning. president trump said earlier this week on friday in the rose garden he would have hoped to get funding for the wall
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legislatively but that national emergency declaration is on the table as he tries to get funding for the border wall. now, that meeting that vice president mike pence led on behalf of the administration yesterday didn't produce much progress, that's what representatives on both sides of the aisle are saying. an aide to the vice president said no dollar figures were even discussed when it comes to the wall. only border security priorities. acting white house chief of staff/budget director milk mulvaney emerged from that meeting saying very little progress was made and that he got the sense democrats were there simply to stall. take a listen what he told cnn's jake tapper. >> i think the president said it's 5.of billion for securing the border wall. we recognize that border crossings are important but certainly a barrier is important. we didn't make much progress at the meeting which was surprising to me. i thought we had come in to talk about terms that we could agree
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on. in my mind, they are there to stall and we did not make much progress. >> reporter: now, president trump tweeted after he was briefed by mulvaney and pence and others in the room that he learned there hadn't been much headway made in that meeting. the president remains dug in behind his demand for 5. billion to fund the wall even though he signaled previously he would be willing to come down and perhaps accept much less money for the wall. now it appears his hard line number is $5.16 billion. the democrats expressing their belief it would have been an ineffective way to secure the southern border. both sides are deeply enfren entrenched. >> sarah westwood, thank you. appreciate. the question is can the president declare national emergency here?
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government shutdown day 16 now with no end in sight. white house officials now say the president is considering declaring a national emergency to secure funding for the border wall. that is sure to be one of the topics discussed at that meeting at camp david today. soon, the president will be headed there for a treat and he will join senior staff for meetings on border security and many other topics. i want to bring in political analyst julian zeleny, the author of "fault lines a history of the united states since 1974." julian, welcome back. let's start with the basic question here. there is some disagreement.
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a write-up in "the new york times" this weekend saying the president kcannot use the national emergency act to build a wall. what do you think? >> i think it's ambiguous and why it's a political problem. they say it's a misuse of political power for allow him to do what congress has not allowed him to do on funding issue. since the 1970s we have seen emergency power used by presidents often and without much pushback. certainly after 911 george w. bush used emergency power frequently. my guesses this will be settled in the end whether the senate will tolerate it and so far republicans have been willing to sit tight when the president flexes his muscle. >> the president at camp dated today he says to talk about border security and many other things. this initially was planned by the now acting chief of staff mick mulvaney to talk about
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authorities for 2019. what is realistic some each side has talked about infrastructure as a possibility. >> yeah. i don't think there a lot of room, frankly, for compromise unless the president concedes. i don't think the democrats are really willing to give on this issue reveven if there is an inference planned unless the president drastically purr occur tails what he is asking. democrats are giving him what he wants, other than this, quote/unquote, wall. the real question do senate republicans start to put pressure on the president to move back and threaten to override the entire deal and they can override the president and what we are looking for at this point. >> for legislative priorities beyond the wall and that disagreement, that stalemate we should call it, if you consider ramping up toward 2020 and the investigations that will come as part of the democrats taking
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control of the house and the continuing mueller investigation, was there anyplace that was fertile even before the stalemate on the wall? >> no. i mean, infrastructure is always the illusive dream where there is going to be some kind of bipartisan compromise in a new era of president trump but i don't think any room for common ground. i think the democrats are not willing to concede to many of the the president's demands but the president doesn't want to compromise. he has shown he runs a partisan strategy, he plays to a partisan base, and there is not many issues where that partisan base agrees with what the rest of the country wants. so maybe a small infrastructure plan can pop up between now and 2020, but given the atmosphere you're talking about, i don't think we should hope for much legislation. >> the government shutdown is day 16 and tying for the third longest will soon head toward
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the second longest shutdown. what typically moves one way or another when there is a stalemate of what we are seeing? >> political pressure. the most famous case of was '95 and '96 when republicans forced a shutdown when president clinton was in office over spending disputes and, ultimately, newt gingrich backed away because the public outcry of what a government shutdown means in practice was so severe, republicans realized this was a disaster politically. so they conceded. and this is usually what happens. this happened under obama's presidency as well. but we don't know how this is going to unfold. president trump acts in very different ways than most politicians and it's not the traditional rules of the game in effect any more. >> so help us understand what is happening potentially inside this room. "the washington post" is citing two trump aides saying when vice
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president mepence went to the meeting yesterday with democratic aides, that he was not given permission to float any new numbers or any new figures, but to hold to the $5.6 billion. if that is the line and there is no permission to negotiate, to move and for the same thing for democrats, what is the point of meeting? i guess it's good theoretically that they are meeting but if nobody is willing to move, why are they doing it? >> well, look. the political theater of it and the administration, as well as congress wants to show they are trying to the public, so that matters politically. that they are not literally signature in silos and not talking to each other. but i think for someone like speaker pelosi who is a very shrewd politician if you have lines of communication it's always better than if you don't, especially with a president who is pretty isolated and pretty
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moved from the political process, it's important simply to be in the room, simply to create potential points of contact and breakthrough. the government shutdown is not norm and not good for the country and this is in some ways a national crisis. so i think it's still better to have these conversations even if they are fruitless and nothing is happening than to totally shut down any kind of talk. >> julian zeleny, we will see if today's talks are fruitful at all. watch "state of the union" with jake tapper on the show. mick mulvaney and adam schiff and alabama senator doug jones will be his guests. a major break in the shooting death of jazmine barns. police arrested a man who admits he was part of the shooting. a live update from outside of that department in texas is next. a dramatic rescue after this
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fiery crash in texas. people who were dropping by helped police flip over a car to save a driver trapped in that vehicle. at royal canin, we developed over 200 precise formulas to transform every cat and dog into a magnificent animal. royal canin still fresh... ♪ unstopables in-wash scent booster ♪ downy unstopables
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i guess we're sleeping here tonight. xfinity home. simple. easy. awesome. call, go online or demo in an xfinity store today. shooting dem of jazmine barnes. black was arrested based on a tip and he later admitted to taking part in the shooting. authorities say they don't believe the family was the intended target of the shooting but, rather, a casualty of mistaken identity. investigators are still gathering evidence that could
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possibly lead to other suspects. >> cnn correspondent kaylee hartung is outside of the harris county's sheriff's deputies. we understand a tip came in to them that led them to this suspect? >> reporter: that's right. authorities have been begging for the public's help through this investigation. that sketch was released and they knew this case could be broken with the help of the public and it appears that is what happened. the harris county sheriff's department saying this man was identified with the help of a tip and they took him into custody without an incident in east harris county where the shooting occurred and through the course of questioning, they say he admitted to taking part in the shooting. that is the interesting line we are hearing from authorities, that he took part in this shooting. they are not outlining specifically the role he played. they haven't specifically named
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him the gunman, but he is in custody and he is being charged with capital murder. they say they are pursuing evidence that could lead to additional people being charged in relation to this case and when we were first made aware that something could be coming overnight, it was actually late yesterday where the harris county's sheriff's department tweeted that this investigation has taken a new direction. they said they were interviewing persons of interest. this story is still developing and we will be here to follow it for you. >> i know it's only a few hours and we understand that these answers have not yet come from investigators. but there was that sketch that was released described to be a white male in his 40s. obviously, the suspect who was arrested is 20 years old. are they still looking for this person? do they believe that this sketch is of the suspect they have in custody? what do we know, if anything, about those other persons of
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interest? >> reporter: truthfully, at this time, very little. in a statement from the sheriff, he said, i am grateful to our dedicated investigators, the partner law enforcement agencies that provided vital assist and tipsters from across the nation who pulled together to pull our work to get justice for jazmine. our work is not finished he said but i think people in harris county can take comfort we have made great progress. there is the sheriff saying our work is not finished. we do not have any other details on the persons of interest who they were interviewing, you recognize that this situation is evolving. as they say, they are pursuing additional evidence that could lead to the arrest of other suspects. >> thank you, kaylee. we appreciate the update. we know it's a developing situation. corpus christi, texas, police officers and people who were just driving by, nearby, flipped over a burning car on
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the freeway to try to help save a man who was trapped in that car. watch. >> fire extinguisher. >> they are getting out of their car and running to help this guy. >> so glad they did. the drivers were out of the vehicle trying to push the car when the police arrived. the officers jumped out to help. you see him there in the yellow vest. once they flipped over that burning car, police were able to pull the 70-year-old driver out of the wreckage. officials say the car was hit by a wrong way driver who died at the scene. the man who was rescued from the burning car survived and he is expected to be okay. >> thank goodness. thanks to those people. take a look at this video out of new zealand. look at that fireball streaking across the sky and it was visible for several minutes.
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astronomy experts and they say the fireball was the remains of a russian missile. early warning satellite falling back to earth. senator elizabeth warren hitting the campaign trail across iowa this weekend, pushing for the democratic presidential nomination for 2020. in speeches across the state, the massachusetts senator pushed for, quote, structural change in washingt washington. >> first piece of bad news is i picked up a cold. >> oh! >> too much time with little people. so i will do my best to talk through this. second piece of bad news, not enough room for everybody to get inside. but the good news is that we got a lot of folks here in des moines who are fired up and ready to make change. >> she faced some tough questions yesterday. one voter confronted warren about her decision to try to prove her claims of american
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native ancestry. m.j. lee has the part of that story. >> reporter: senator warren has a busy 24 hours in iowa and first trip since flouncing her explore tocommittee over the io. making clear what her important issues are going to be in her eventual 2020 campaign. now, one question that she got from an audience in sioux city on saturday was about her decision to release the dna test about her native american ancestry and a person in the audience asking her why she decided to release the results of that test and give president trump more fodder to bully her. here is what she had to say. >> tribal citizenship is very different from an restry. tribes and only tribes determine
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tribal citizenship and i expect that difference. my decision wise, i'll just put it all out there. took a while but just put it all out there. all of my hiring record, including a dna test is out there and online and anybody can look at it. it's there. >> reporter: even though senator warren has been drawing big crowds, all of sat, doesn't mean that everyone who is coming to her events are necessarily supporting her. in fact, a lot of the voters that we spoke to here over the weekend telling us they are simply undecided and they are looking forward to getting to know many of the other potential democratic candidates who are sure to come by iowa over the next couple of months and this is just going to be a first impression that senator warren makes to the people of iowa. back to you. >> m.j., thank you so much. we will have more on elizabeth warren the next hour. actor kevin spacey is going to be in court tomorrow on charges of indecent assault. he plans to plead not guilty. authorities say, though, they have video of the alleged assault. we are going to talk to our legal expert about how this could play out.
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in a massachusetts court tomorrow and arraigned on charges that he groped a young man at a nantucket bar in 2016. according to a criminal complaint obtained by cnn, authorities have video of the incident involving spacey and a bus boy. the accuser was 18 at the time and told police he told spacey he was 23 years old. criminal defense attorney janet johnson with us now. a couple of things to address to and the first one is what is going to happen tomorrow in court if he intends to plead not guilty? >> good morning. arraignment is normally a very, you know -- court date. you plead not guilty and get out and it takes a few minutes and a little unusual in this case because spacey's lawyers tried to get his appearance waived. they didn't want media attention and the judge denied it. i think it might take a little bit longer because the judge appears to be telling him you're not going to be treated differently because you're a celebrity. >> i want to talk about the
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alleged victim in this case. he admittedly lied to spacey about his age. he didn't come forward with the allegation for quite sometime. how detrimental might that be to his case? >> it is. if you're defending kevin spacey, those are really big points you make in a trial or in negotiating with the prosecutor to say you should reduce this to a simple battery because this kid has some issues. but i think the answer on the other side, you know, remember in the bill cosby trial, there was a delay in reporter. in this case, we actually have contemporaneous reporting to his friends and his mother and people knew this happened. this may even be video of this happening. so i think that will counterbalance it. why he lied about his age he is going to have to explain that at some point. >> as i understand it, the video is only one second long. can anything really be gleaned from that? >> it certainly shows that they had contact. whether it shows the actual
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alleged crippme, it probably doesn't. but if spacey comes out and said i don't know this kid and never met this kid and this certainly puts him at the scene and in contact with the alleged victim. >> how do you anticipate spacey is going to address this or his team? >> if you're his attorney, you would say, this kid lies. you can't trust him. is he lying now? was he lying then? he admitted he is not telling the truth. spacey either didn't grope him or it was consensual. probably the latter. probably saying he was trying to have contact with kevin spacey. he admitted he was a fan. he said he was old enough to drink. is he trying to basically have his cake and eat it too? he wanted to have some contact with the celebrity and maybe it didn't go the way he wanted it to go. >> this isn't the only case that is highlighting possible criminal behavior against spacey. >> right. >> how possible is it that that is going to lead any of those other cases or any of those
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other allegations are going to come up in this one in particular? they have to be isolated, don't they? >> they sometimes do and sometimes don't. if they are similar enough, if there are other allegations you can say this is his modus operandi, he gropes underaged boys and this is what he does or young men, if they can come forward with enough allegations that are similar, they would be admitted, i think n a trial against him and that would, of course be devastating. >> janet johnson, thank you very much for your expertise. >> thank you. >> it's hard to forget the cries of children separated from their families at the u.s./mexico border from last summer.
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that girl's name is allison. she is a migrant from el salvador and held in a detention center in arizona and begging with someone to call her aunt who would reunite with her mother. her mom was a detention center more than 1,200 miles away after their story went viral. gary tuchman reports, a lot has happened since then. >> reporter: 7-year-old allison jimenez madrid is enjoying the day in houston. are you happy today? [ speaking in foreign language ] >> reporter: a very different story from when she and her mother first came to this country. and now almost six months later, they are getting ready for their first asylum hearing. the start of a process which will determine whether or not
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they can stay in the u.s. as they have waited for the hearing, allison jimenez has been going to a public school in houston. when she arrived in the u.s., she did not speak a word of english. so allison jimenez, you have something you want to read? >> yeah. >> reporter: okay. let's hear in english. >> why i love america. i love my school. i love my church. i love to smile. i love -- and america dream. happy new year america. >> reporter: happy new year, america, to you too. >> happy new year, america. >> reporter: her mother cindy is doing her best to learn english at her church. >> one, two, three. four. >> reporter: she cannot legally get a job at the point of the asylum process but says she wants to work. >> yes. >> reporter: she says she would like to have a job cleaning or at a restaurant or whatever job
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she can get, as long as she can do it with dignity. >> work together. the mix. they mix. they craft apples. >> reporter: so what is the likelihood that doubt and mother will be granted asylum? their lawyer says she is hopeful but -- >> a good chance it may not be granted. >> reporter: attorney garcia says cindy madrid left to protect allison, her only child from gang violence. allison tells us her understanding of what is that threat. the gang, she says, they wanted to steal me. the attorney says if cindy madrid loses her case and is sent back to el salvador, that is not an overstatement. >> could be death. they have very serious problems with gang violence. they have no protection by the police as well. so we are not expecting anything good if she is returned back
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home. >> reporter: allison says houston is now her home. >> it is a solid day when friends stick together. >> reporter: el theme. the end! >> finish! okay. >> reporter: but this legal battle is far from finished. gary tuchman, cnn, houston. >> good to get that update on her. are you ready for the glitter and the glam of the golden globes? they are tonight. hollywood stars on the big screen. we will talk about it. there goes our first big order. ♪ 44, 45, 46... how many of these did they order? ooh, that's hot. ♪ you know, we could sell these. nah. ♪ we don't bake. ♪
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>> let's go. >> reporter: "black panther," "a star is born," "crazy rich asians" big movies getting big nominations for this year's golden globe awards picked by the who will wood foreign press association." >> they go for big star-driven stories. ♪ >> like "bohemian rhapsody," up for best movie. the return of freddie mercury. >> i always knew like you were going to do something. >> but the front runner is "a star is born." >> it's got a nice narrative behind it with bradley cooper, this is his first movie as director, and it's a big populous movie that did really well at the box office. >> i just don't feel comfortable. >> both lady gaga and cooper scored acting nods as well. the film will face off with "black panther." if beale street could talk and spike lee's "black klansman" which also earned an acting nod for john david washington, denzel's son.
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a-list stars taking big creative turns also snagged nominations from nicole kidman's gritty destroyer to melissa mccarthy's dramatic "can you ever forgive me?" >> i want you. >> in the musical or comedy category "vice" is the one to beat with more nominations than any other film. it faces off against "mary poppins returns", "green book," the favourite: and ground breaking "crazy rich asians." >> it was a movie that was all about inclusion, it was an all asian cast, had a nice narrative behind t i wouldn't be surprised if the globes backed that narrative. >> as for the actors, eyes are on christian bale to win for his stunning transformation into dick cheney in "vice." >> i can handle the more mundane jobs. >> hosting the golden globes this year. >> seriously, there is an elephant in that room. >> to television stars. >> sandra oh and andy samberg.
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oh is nominated for chilly e, but faces stiff competition from "homecoming" which earned julia roberts a best actress nomination. >> i think there is good will around her for trying tv for the first time and hitting it out of the park. >> yes, there is shrimp in the egg rolls. >> rabbi, she's kidding. >> the marvelous mrs. mazel looks to compete for best tv comedy. but a new show like jim carrey's "kidding" could be a contender. while the globes have a habit of making news. >> a new day is on the horizon! >> it may be hard to top the presidential rumors sparked last year by oprah winfrey's spirited speech. stephanie elam, cnn, hollywood. let's talk more about it. with us now to talk about tonight's show is pop culture editor for "the washington post" zachary pink roth. welcome. >> good to be here. >> let's tick through the categories and get to the award. best picture drama, who are the nominees and who do you like? >> best picture drama i think "a
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star is born." it's their year, i think. the movie was very well reviewed and it did very well at the box office and bradley cooper's first movie as a director. i think also the front-runner going into the best picture at the oscar. >> hum. >> what about the best picture comedy? >> for best picture comedy, "vice" has the most nominations at the golden globes but i think it's going to be "green book." the story of a black musician going through the south in the 1960s jim crowe era. i think it has the comedy and dram that t drama that the voters like. >> how could that be funny? >> i've seen the movie and think it balances the comedy with the sympathetic character very wall. >> all righty. all righty. let's go to best actor drama. >> in best actor drama i think it's going to be bradley cooper in "a star is born."
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but watch out for "bohemian rhapsody." >> i watched that movie. i did love the movie but i thought his performance was great. i thought as freddie mercury, he did a great job but the story was a little small for freddie mercury's huge permit. let's go to best actress drama. >> i think it's lady gaga. she got really nice reviews and her breakout in a movie role, but i think she is going to take it. >> all righty. you know, there were just so many -- i know great moments here. but we have to move to television, because, obviously, lots of stuff going on there. best tv drama. your pick. >> i think it's "killing eve" which is the spy thriller starri starring sandra oh but don't rule out jewel roberts for her first big tv role. >> isn't it interesting it's
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amazon? >> yes, amazon. let's talk about comedy. >> i think it's "the marvelous mrs. ma maisel." but don't count out others. another show about the after-life starring kristen bell. >> i just binged both seasons of maisel and it is great. >> it is good. we want to ask quickly because last year in the middle of the me too movement and dominated the awards show. do you think we will see anything similar this year? >> yeah. i think we might. usually in these awards show you see political moments sprinkled in. last year was oprah's big speech when she got an award and the year before that merle streep's big speech when she called out trump and some of his policies. i think this year it's jeff bridges winning an award and you'll see moments sprinkled in.
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i remember natalie portman called out some all male nominees in that category and this year, the same for the fourth year in a row. >> thank you for joining us, zachary pincus-roth. >> thank you. going from city-to-city to play is hard for a pro athlete. this new york knicks player says there is one place he is not going because he thinks it could get him killed. coy wire is up next with this story.
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going to be assassinated. >> coy wire, let's talk about this first. this has to be with turkey's president erdogan. how? >> reporter: good morning. knicks center enes kanter is from turkey and he has been critical of their president and the knicks say he will not travel for their game in london overseas next week because of visa effort but kanter thinks he could be killed. here is what he had to say on friday. >> i spoke to the front office and said i'm not going because of that friggin' lunatic of the turkey president. a chance i could get killed out there. pretty sad all of this stuff affects my career in basketball because i want to be out there help my team to win but just because of that one lunatic guy, one maniac, i can't go and do my job. >> reporter: now kanter's twitter page is filled with posts about the turkish
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president and he has even called him in twit the hitler in hitter. his pass poured was cancelled and a month later, kanter's father was detained by the turkish government because of his political views. kanter has reached out to the minister of foreign affairs for comment and the nicks play in london. on january 16th. wildcard weekend in the nfl. dallas cowboys moving on! they won in the playoffs? oh, no! dak prescott and the cowboys hosting the seahawks. a rematch from week three. prescott said earlier in the week he thinks quarterback's checks are written by what happens in the playoffs. he got the boys a win last night. a touchdown pass in the final seconds of the first half. when they were down in the fourth, they leaned on zeke. elliott fueling that run game and he gashed the seahawks.
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137 yards and a touchdown. prescott adding a rushing td of his own. cowboys moving on. 24-22 win and would you believe this was just dallas third playoff win since 1996? let's go to colts and texans who duked it out in the early game and andrew luck's incredible comeback continues. luck missed the colts season last year with a shoulder injury but he led indy to three touchdowns on their first four drives. touchdown tosses to eric ebron and colts win 21-7, facing the chiefs next weekend in kansas city. two more wildcard games today. chargers and ravens. eagles and bears. it is on. football is in the air. let's go to the reason i'm here. the defending champs bama taking on clemson if the national championship game three times in
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four years. the clemson has a 19-year-old quarterback turning plays on the field and also with an incredible head of hair! the talk of the town at media day yesterday. >> i love to give him a hard time about, you know, actually getting a mohawk but i seriously doubt he is cutting that luscious flow out. >> i got to cut that off. >> i put myself. i love my locks. >> luke price. he doesn't get all of the love because he is a red-head and tough sledding out there for red-heads but he has just as much flow as trevor does. >> i already knew that. >> he is probably spending 30 minutes in the shower on his hair alone. i'm usually out in five. >> my hair does my talking for me. >> i don't know what i was doing. i grew it out. wanted to grow my hair out and turned out with this. people confuse me with luke and i don't see the similarities but i think k.d. has a shot at best hair for sure. >> the kid is 6'4" and looks could kill. he is has a beautiful head of
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hair and has his own twitter page, would you believe it or not? victor, that is not you or me, buddy. >> no. those days are long gun. >> the trash talk from those guys apparently have no limits. hair is not off limits. coy, thank you so much. >> reporter: you're welcome. >> announcer: this is cnn breaking news! >> 7:00 on this saturday. so grateful to have with us. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. the breaking news this morning is out of the houston area. a suspect has been charged in the murder of 7-year-old jazmine barnes. her family has been waiting for some movement on this case. investigators say more suspects could be charged. >> cnn correspondent kaylee hartung is outside of the sheriff's deputies the sheriff's department there in houston. we understand a tip helped lead them to this suspect. is that correct? >> reporter: that is right. over the past week, we heard authorities begging the public for any help and
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