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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  March 8, 2019 11:00pm-12:00am PST

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disappearance of mh370. 239 passengers and crew remain a mystery. the satellite images show new satellite image rary in north korea. is he setting up for a launch? i feel very bad aly for paul manafort. i think it's been a tough time for him. donald trump offers sympathy for paul manafort and doesn't rule out pardoning his jailed former campaign manager. and the president's new attack on democrats, he calls them antiisrael, antijewish as they address the rising tide of anti-semitism in america. it's great to have you with us.
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so the fallout from the failed it north korea summit may have begun. satellite images show that pyongyang is in the final stages of preparing for a launch. it's not clear if it's military in nature or a satellite ready for orbit. the u.s. would are eguard any type of launch as a betrayal following the meeting in hanoi as the north is changing its tune on that hanoi summit. will ripley has the details. >> reporter: it looks like north korea may be preparing to launch something in the future. looking at these new commercial satellite images that seem to indicate north korea may have
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assembled something and it could be on rail cars, possibly the sohay satellite launch facility we're told is fully operational. touting what it called kim jong-un's triumphant a successf summit full of handshake smiles. north korea state media admitting for the first time that no deal was reached and unloading on the u.s. over the failure, saying in a news story quote the public at home and abroad are feeling regretful, blaming the u.s. for the summit that ended without an agreement. >> they are definitely trying to make it though they were ready to kwut the deal, that they had a tremendous offer on the deal and that it was president trump who decided to walk away from what they saw as a very good deal. >> reporter: initially both
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sides kept up with good face with kim telling reporters he would discuss getting rid of the nuclear weapons. . >> translator: if i wasn't willing do do that, i wouldn't be here right now. >> reporter: but kim's offer to only shut down his main nuclear fuel factory and president trump walked away. >> sometimes you have to walk and this was just one of those times. >> reporter: north korea says they only requested a partial lifting of sanctions. kim was left feeling bewildered a source tells cnn. president trump held out hope the relationship he once described as falling in love won't now fall apart. >> i would be surprised in a negative way if he did anything that was not per our understanding. but we'll see what happens. >> reporter: analysts say what happening -- at this north
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korean facility where rockets are tested satellite photos show new activity. kim had been dismantling it last year after tensions began to thaw but by saturday the walls had been rebuilt and by wednesday the roof was restored. a state department official says the u.s. has not yet determined whether the site is operational again but is watching it closely and will ask north korea for an explanation. thaw say the big question now is whether the two leaders' relationship is broken or if they'll try to patch things up and reach a deal again. >> what comes next is the hanoi summiten summit, end of chapter one of diplomacy or the end beginning of something much worse? >> reporter: it's unclear if they're doing this as show or if indeed a launch could be imminent.
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we know kim jong-un could push the button at any time. the question is will he and what will the response be from the u.s. president, donald trump. joining me now is an expert on north korea's nuclear program. you've seen the same pictures we've just shown. >> based on what i've seen is what other stories have reported is there's new activity at both the rocket engine construction facility outside of pyongyang and new activity to restore some of the infrastructure where north korea has launched its satellite rockets. so they're sort of taking the gloves off. they're back in business. it doesn't mean they've put a missal or a rocket on a launch pad just yet but preparations seem to be underway. >> can there be preparations
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underway andiate no launch or is that just unrealistic expectation? >> no. absolutely. it depends on what they're intending to do. they can absolutely reconstruction, rebuild launch pads and so on and cool their heels for months and months much like we have kennedy space station and so on. if more than a schedule, something in mind that they plan to put another satellite in orbit or test a rocket, then that's going to be quite a different matter. so from technical point of view if they had something on the calendar, they're working towards that. from a geopolitical point of view, they may be trying to show they're not happy with the failed summit in hanoi a couple of weeks ago. >> so you're say figure the
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north koreans were planning to launch something be it a rocket or a missile, but if they were planning to launch something or if they were just wanting to send a message to the u.s., one way or another this is what it would look like. >> exactly. and they can do both at the same time. they can rebuild their launch infrastructure and if weeks unfold and there's rhetorical conflict between the u.s. and north korea, they may say forget it. we're going to launch something. they could also undertake preparations and different suginals may be sent from washington. there may be reengagement and they might say that's great, that we're encouraged by that. we're not going to launch anything right now. >> and at least according to donald trump had promised the u.s. president he would refrain
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from launch anything fall oing their latest meeting. tell me the difference in terms of the message that north korea would be sending. >> well, let me take the optics of it first. to most people there's no difference. you see a rocket being launched and it goes to the atmosphere and penetrates the outer atmosphere, that tells you something about the capability off a nation. tells you the north koreans can get a rocket out of the atmosphere and therefore they're like lato have the capability to send a bomb of some type, a nuclear weapon and hit a target somewhere. and they've said this for decades now that they want to be a space fairing nation. they have postage stamps showing their satellite asperations.
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and the real reasons to the do with the length of the burn of the rocket motor. missiles, you want to get them up really fast and fairly steep trajectory. out into the atmosphere quickly. you're launching a satellite, you're not in a hurry to get your pay load into space. you have the rocket engine burn for longer and it goes almost straight up whereas a missile has a but morof an arc. that's going to be lost on the media, on washington, on the diplomats and frankly i think it should be eif the north koreans launch something and they say this is a satellite launch, that technical distinction, while true, is going to be lost in the negotiating space. >> paul, thank you somuch for joining us. >> my pleasure. >> president trump has been speaking out about the legal troubles fossing two people who had once been part of his innercircle and his comments couldn't be more different.
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take mr. cohen who spent a decade by his side and once bragged he would take a bull for his boss, he's basically been thrown under bus. take paul manafort who just spent a few months as his campaign manager. for him, sympathy. >> michael cohen lied about the pardon. >> reporter: in a battle with the truth. >> when he lied about the pardons, that was really a lie and he knew there all about pardons. his lawyer said they went to my lawyers and asked about pardons. >> and saying he directly asked me for a pardon plp. i said no. he lied again. he testified last week that trump lieued about his business dealings with russia and hush money paumts to women.
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>> and i have never asked for nor would i accept a pardon from president trump. >> reporter: cohen firing it back, calling it just another set of lies. going after cohen after being asked about manafort who was snenlsed to almost four years in prison for cheating on his tax committing bank fraud. >> i think it's been a tough time for him. >> reporter: the president twisting the words of the judge who sentenced manafort. >> but if you notice both his lawyer, a high ly respected man and the judge, the judge said there was no collusion with russia. >> reporter: during manafort's hearing, ellis drew a distinction between his crime and noting manafort was not before this court for having to
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do with collusion with the russian government to influence the election. and the president and his staff refusing to close the door on a pardon for manafort. >> i haven't discussed that with the president. i haven't heard him say that. >> reporter: sources tell cnn he's become increasingly preo e preoccupied with michael cohen. he brings up even during strategy sessions. sources say he is this figure that looms over the white house right now. kaitlan collins, cnn, the white house. cnn political analyst molly ball jouns moo. you're also a political correspondent with "the times." he's trueing to say it has nothing to do with collusion and
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goes as far as to say the judge says it has nothing to do with collusion. >> the judge did not absolve hum of collusion. president has done this repeatedly. if it doesn't include the collusion or come to a conclusion, he says see they found i didn't. when all they found was that they didn't find anything. this is another case of that and in this case, as you said, that's actually just wasn't at issue here. but it is also the case that the manafort trial was about things that paul manafort did long before the trump campaign ever happened. and does not involve the president directly or indirectly. and that has been the white house line about many of these investigations is even when they have involved people in his inner circle and still many of
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these accusation do not touch the president, do not implicate him. >> would you agree that could be -- might end up being a profound political win for donald trump? the fact that he can say and rightly say well, paul manafort was investigated by mueller and there are hundreds of pages in the sentencing memo and none of it concerns collusions. and who's going to jail yes, but it's all to do with financial crimes. >> this isn't over and the manafort investigation is one aspect of this sprawling investigation that has yet to come to a conclusion. we dont know what manafort is going to find in his entire report. and we've already seen dozens of indictments and guilty pleas and various very complicated web of different alleged criminal activities.
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so to the extent one of the crimes isn't about the president, sure, i guess that's a win for him. i dont know that it's every political win when the person who ran your campaign is going to prison for whatever length of time. >> i suppose it says something about where the bar has been set and how low it's bun set. do you think there's potentially a presidential pardon on the horizon for manafort? that was raised with what manafort's lawyer said and more importantly what donald trump himself said or didn't say. this was his reply. >> will you pardon paul manafort? >> i don't discuss it. the only one discussing it is you. >> all right. so ivent discussed it. that's not a yes or a no. >> the pardon power is something
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that we saw trump enjoying for some period of time where he was pardoning people at random. but he has repeatedly tip toed up to that line when it comes to people like manafort, cohen, people who are potentially implicating him and he hasn't used it. so whether that's because there are people in his inner circle concerned about the constitutional implications of that type of use of the pardon power, which probably would wind up in court as the sheriff joe arpaio has wound up in court. break glass in case of emergency. we dont know that, as with many things with trump, particularly when he has the ability to act unilaterally. the innerworkings of his mind can be mysterious. an advisor sitting round
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debating the pros and cons. so there's nothing that says he couldn't wake up and decide to do it. that's the notcher of the pardon power. he has so far not done it despite all of the investigations and indeed criminal convictions of members of his innercircle. >> thank you so much for joining us on the show. thanks. the trump white house is losing yet another high profile personality. top white house communications advisor is leaving to join the trump reelection campaign. he's been on the job less than a year after nearly two decades on fox news. the president was paurntly unhappy that he didn't generate better news coverage for the white house. and shine all but eliminated the daily press briefing. he's the sixth person to hold the communications position. that's an extraordinarily high turnover.
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his departure makes him the 39th person in the administration to resign or be fired since inauguration day. jussie smollett, the u.s. actor is now facing major legal trouble of his own. the grand jury indicted him on multiple felony charges. >> reporter: 16 counts against jussie smollett. basically every crime he claimed he was a victim of ois a crime against him. prosecutors say he told the story twice, first to a police officer and later to a detective, roughly the same story. he also went on "good morning america" and told the story as he saw it, believed it, and wanted it to be heard and what he told police is he was attacked by two men, one of them white who threw a chemical over him, shouted racist and
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homophobic epitaphs him. those two people who turned out to be african-american men told police and a grand jury that in fact jussie smollett had hired them to carry out this attack and cut them a check for $3500. and the superintendent of chicago police says he thunks the reason is he wasn't getting paid enough money to appear on the "empire" tv show. he has since been written out of the show for the final two episodes of the current season. even if he's convicted on all 16 counts, the sentencing guidelines are for the class four felony. two and a half years in jail or up to three years in probe augz. he maintains his innocence and we've heard his lawyers who call this prosecutorial over kill and
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in a few hours rival protests are wujs with again expected in vens wallau, as venezuela recovers from a power outage. a u.s. cyber attack took out a major power plant but opposition says an ear mark was stolen from the government. >> reporter: at first they can be forgiven for thinking it was one more power outage. but then it went on and on, before long power was out in most of the country. one of the most widespread outages taking place at the same moment they battle with u.s.-back
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u.s.-backed opposition. they say the power would be back on soon and caused by sabotage. >> translator: we're working to reestablish service and fight this new effect to fight kawhi osand destabilization. and remind you this is an attack to the government, an attack to the people. >> reporter: through the long night venezuelans did the best they cou with what they had. when we went to the hospital, no one wanted to speak with us. opposition leader says they needed to make their anger known over the blackout at an antigovernment protest planned for saturday. >> translator: the whole nation is coming out to the streets. we will go back that streets and we will not leave until we reach our goal. >> reporter: they took to the streets but mainly to hunt down the bear necessities.
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this is the only station we've seen so far that has its own generator. so people have lined up all the way down the street and around the corner to pump gas in the country that has the world's greatest oil reserves. >> translator: this is madness. we live daily in the psalm circumstances. there's services, medicine, this is a crazy nation. >> reporter: with the lights out, it's clear to see vens wallau is falling apart. and a disturbing trend among american teenagers. anti-semitic images are appearing more and more recently. that there's a lobster i in our hot tub?t. lobster: oh, you guys. there's a jet! oh...i needed this. no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars on our car insurance with geico. we could have been doing this a long time ago.
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welcome back to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. two experts tell cnn it appeared that north korea is preparing to some kind of launch. that's their assessment after studying satellite photos of a rocket assembly facility. it's not clear if it's military in notcher or a satellite to be launched into orbit. the president trump is lashing out as his former attorney. mr. trump says he feels very badly for his former campaign manager, paul manafort. manafort was sentenced to almost four years in pruzon for financial crimes. a grand jury has charged jussie smollett with 16 felony counts.
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he gave a false report and paid two brugters to stage the attack. but he denies he lied and denies orchestrating the assault. condemned hotred and intul rance. it included anti-semitism as well as antiisrael -- >> if you get an honest answer from politicians, they thought it was a disgrace. the democrats have become an antiisrael party, they've become an antijewish party and that's too bad. >> the resolution was written in response to what some called anti-semitic remarks. it was then revoozed to include other forms of bigotry. 23 voted against it, arguing that it didn't condemn omar by name.
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she's been under far, even from fellow democrats for criticizing israeli government actions. now the debates around her comments isn't entirely happening in a vacuum. anti-semitism does appear to be on the rise in the united states. we've seen it recently unhigh schools where students make light of nazi symbols. >> reporter: experts are telling us they're seeing a disturbing trend among amarerica's youth. their attraction to naziism. you're going to meet one woman who survived the death camps and she's trying to steer them away from hate. people enjoying every minute of it. then posting it on social media. >> without the holocaust, what would the world be like?
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we would have white people still. jews would run the world right now. think about that. >> the girl you hear repeatedly sawing the n-word sent out a statement on her father's car dealership facebook page. the horrible, horrible things i said were an attempt to be funny. i will do everything in my power to be better each and every day. but this is just one example of a rising tide of hate among youth. the same week thousands of mules away in upscale newport beach, california, high school students do a nazi salute above a swastika they created. this seems to be popular with
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some teenagers these days. >> i saw the combination of ignorance, evil can come together as a time when the social political landscape is about polarization and what happens is there's a race to the bottom because we don't have civic moral leadership in this country that sets a standard as to whautst's acceptable. >> reporter: he runs a center for the city of hate and extremism. he and other experts on the subject say there's been hvy are kruting by white nationalist groups in college campuses and grade schools. they found anti-semitic incidents in k-through 12 increased by an astounding 94% after doubling the year prior and between 2016 and 2017 reports of hate crimes against jews up 37%. overall hate crimes reported up 17%.
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while several white nationests, kkk and neo-nazi groups are trying to make the look attractive to youth -- the behavior isn't just appearing parties. last month in new york it appeared on a playground. it eva hopes she's an antidote among the youth. she is a holocaust survivor, the step suster of anne frank whose story has haunted and inspired the world for more than 70 years. she travelled to a newport beach high school just days avr some of its students took part in the incident. she sit down privately with them. >> i told them that the nazis did really horrible things.
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gassing jewish people and their own disabled people. that was the first experimenting was gassing children or people. >> reporter: she survived auschwitz at 16 but most of her family were annihilated by the nazis along with 6 million jews and now more than 70 years after the attempt to exterminate so many human beings, she's faced with young people who think nazi symbolism is all the rage. >> how hurtful it was for so many survivors of the holocaust who have lost millions of their families all over the world, really. it was an insult to those people. >> reporter: insult to you? >> yes, insult to me as well. >> reporter: are you afraid now that you've seen young people doing this over and over again here in america, are you afraid for the next generations of people?
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>> there's so much education going on now and it's going to be improved, more and more and i hope oeventually they can see the light, that is not -- i'm still an optimist. i thunk it can't go on that people do such eevrl acts. it must not happen and it will not happen. >> reporter: she says she was indeed shocked in 2019 in a town with highly educated students that incidents like this still occur. experts say it will continue unless there is a strong push for edge caution not just by the scho school system but by parents themselves and politicians as well. back to you. reporting there. the connection between gender equality and climate change, a
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young activist says she's ready to make a difference. >> i told myself there's so much to live for, i can do so much good for my life. >> campaigners take to streets across the world. tremfya® canh moderate to severe plaque psoriasis get clearer. and stay clearer. most patients who saw 90% clearer skin at 28 weeks stayed clearer through 48 weeks. tremfya® may lower your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections. before treatment, your doctor should check you for infections and tuberculosis. tell your doctor if you have an infection or have symptoms such as: fever, sweats, chills, muscle aches or cough. before starting tremfya® tell your doctor if you plan to or have recently received a vaccine. tremfya®. stay clearer. janssen can help you explore cost support options.
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but what's the fun in that? switch to cvs pharmacy. okay. here in the u.s. they have severe weather heading for the southern part of the country. and some states are digging through the rubble of last week's storms. the storms aren't expected to be as severe. tornados are still a possibility. meteorologist derrick van dam joins us now. >> last weekends's storm, last sunday was the one tornado that caused 23 fatalities. that was the worst storm since 1932 and particularly concerning about the storm is how long it was on the ground for.
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100 kilometers or longer. this is unprecedented, real a. we have another chance at severe weather today and a snow storm from the north. i want to recap what happened to show you the difference between what we're expecting today and the geographical location at this time. cold front swept through sunday and that caused the deadly tornados across southeast portions of alabama, bordering along georgia. there were 47 tornados across four states the average tornado is in the month of march for each of the individual states. so we surpassed that quite dramatically uno dramatically in one day's time. they've seen the focus more shifted to the north and west of alabama. parts of kentucky and northern mississippi, that's where we have a moderate risk in the
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storm prediction center. oncy with get the sun, we'll see those heat up. during the month of march, throughout the united states, the bulk across texas and the south. latest radar not showing too much activity because it's night time. the sun isn't up yet. when we see the sunrise and get the heating and you can see our future high res forecast imagery lighting up and the thunderstorms become rather severe later today, the only limiting factor is what happened and we have snow storm that will give osfoot of snow in places like minneapolis and green bay, wisconsin. a lot of snow there. 15 million americans under winter storm warnings as we speak. lots to talk about. >> thank you, derek. and this year international
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women's day has come and gone but the fight gender equality has come gone. they called for an end to domestic violence and pay discrimination. droughts and floods have been tied >> one of the biggest parts of my depression is the climate crisis because i thought everything is so wrong and i became so depressed. there's no meaning to live and like that. so i became very it depressed and i -- how i got out of that can depression is i thought to myself there is so much to live for, i can do so ghuch with my life and i'm going to try to use my life to make a difference and
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i try to do that. >> nex friday students around the world are set to hold what's called the global strike for the future in the name of climate change and angela merkel is supporti supporting the protest. why it's high time to turn the page on sexism. >> it's a rare and korean book store, about women. the reason i started the second shelf is to highlight women writers. i was looking for a name and then i remembered this essay i reads in the back of the "new york times" book review that talked about women's books being relegated to lower shelves where they get dusty and forgotten and the name was the second shelf. i want people to know there's something for them here, they can find a book that's collectible and can build a
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collection from six quid which is our first printings by women all the way up to a $20,000 copy of jane auszen's "sense and sensibility" owned by her best friend who knew she was writing before anyone else did unsecret. >> i think coming to a place like this is incred empowering. it's great to see yourself reflected in the things you love so much. >> there's been many males in the store and because thavl rr been asked to bring their partne partners presents. what i like about this is the dedication she writes to a small girl child who may live to grab somewhat of which for us is yet sight, not touch. how much further we have to go and how sometimes it feels like not enough has changed.
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. britain's prime minister has a warning for parliament, if they don't pass her brexit deal, britain may not leave the european union at all. for people in the heart of leave country, that's -- let's just saw that's not what they voted for. >> reporter: in the shadow of past, prime minister teresa may promised a better future. she sold her deal as the only sure option. >> everyone now wants to get it done. move beyond the arguments, pass the bitterness of the debate and out of the eu. >> may offered few new ideas, instead painting a no vote as a vote for an uncertain future. >> we may not leave formany months, we may leave without the proection its the deal provides, we may never leave at all.
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>> reporter: she speaks of the promise brexit offers for hope. this town voted overwhelmingly to leave, perhaps seeing in brexit a chance to change the fortunes despite the uncertainty. once this was home to the largest fishing fleet in the world. those day as nustaulgic memory as best. they've moved on to erenewable energy and manufacturing. it was a chance for the uk to write its own rules and spend its own money. >> coming up with deals, we don't want any deals. we don't want to pay anything to europe for any way, shape, or form. >> reporter: may has shifted some of the responsibility and a blame on to the eu leader.
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>> banks have gone and decided they're not going to stay. it's just pointless. >> reporter: he has little time left to built support for her plan. it's unclear if this visit shifted the harsh reality that one of the most certain things now is the future of it reeceau mau's deal. and up next on "cnn newsroom" the whole world knows this image but there's plenty we haven't seen yet on the apollo 11 moon landing. the way they subscribe to movies. we don't follow the naysayers. ♪ ♪ itso chantix can help you quit "slow turkey." along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting
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to save 30% on all the medications we carry. so go directly to petmeds.com now. . it may be nearly half a century since a human being first walked on the moon, but there is so much about that epic space mission most of us have never seen until now. the documentary "apollo 11" just opened in u.s. movie theaters and the film's director and producer told us how they gave new life to the decades-old moon landing. >> that's one small step for man. one giant leap for mankind. >> it was a moment seen by millions, man's first steps on
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the moon. the "apollo 11" mission remains one of humanity's greatest achievements and yet there is much we never heard, never saw and never knew until now. >> countdown for "apollo 11," now 5:52 and countdowning. >> 502 years after the historic launch, a new documentary tells the mission's story with new accuracy pieced together with films and recording unearthed by the for the film makers. >> what really was the amazing part was several months in when this discovery of the collection of 65 milammeters, it was all large format, and, you know, needless to say our jaws were on the ground when we saw the first images off the film scanner. >> reporter: among the discovery where thousands of hours of footage that only existed on old reels, much of it uncataloged, lacking labels or transcriptions. >> nasa 50 years ago had shot this, developed it, sent it out
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to the different centers and then ultimately ended up at the national archives in college park outside of d.c. and sitting in cold storage all these years. >> reporter: working with the team, the film makers sifted through, restored and digitized troves of material. >> once we, you know, spent the time researching all of that, and then actually made an entire timeline that was nine days long of the mission, so there really is a nine-day version of this film, we quickly realized that we had, you know, something special, and that we could do it all with archival materials and not rely on current talking heads or other, you know, kind of movie trickery to tell the story. >> i think that the all archival approach really adds to the immediacy of everything. you know, that was really what we set out to do, was just, you know, make you feel as if you were actually there. >> reporter: without narration, recreation or commentary, the film uses only original footage to condense the nine-day mission
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into 90 minutes. it begins with launch preparations and ends with the astronauts' return to earth. layering new perspectives of all those involved in the undertaking. >> i'd like to know what you feel as far as responsibilities of representing mankind on this trip. >> that's relatively difficult to answer. it's a job that we collectively said that was possible and we could do, and, of course, the nation itself is backing us. >> all right. thank you for joining us. i'm cyril vanier. we'll be right back with another hour of news at the top of the hour. stay with us. only fidelity offers
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a provocative move. satellite imagery appears to show activity at a facility where north korea is known to assemble intercontinental ballistic missiles. a new claim by the u.s. president. mr. trump says michael cohen asked him directly for a pardon. so why did the president wait until now to reveal that? my husband is the longest-held hostage in american history. >> the wife of bob

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