tv CNN Newsroom CNN July 16, 2020 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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very troubling story for twitter. john? >> we'll circle back when you know more. thanks for spending your time with us today. busy news day. brianna keilar picks up the news coverage right now. have a great day. i'm brianna keilar and welcome viewers here in the united states and around the world. as the u.s. nears 3.5 million covid-19 cases, new troubling signs. two states show declines in new infections. hospitalizations are hitting records in 16 states and 14 states are showing an increase this deaths. some officials in texas and arizona two of the states with the most new cases on wednesday are now bringing in refridge rated trucks in hard-hit counties as local morgues hit capacity. in florida, there are no icu beds to be found. in miami-dade county and the
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state set a grim new daily record for deaths. just in to cnn, the cdc says that a travel ban for a city the epicenter of the u.s. outbreak too little, too late. more on that in a moment and what that means going forward but there's one thing increasingly clear and that is cities and states taking action on their own in the absence of a plan of president trump and the white house. republican governor hogan of maryland writhing about the state's struggle to obtain test kits in "fighting alone" writing in part quote it was clear that waiting around for the president to run the nation's response was hopeless. so every governor went their own way which is how the united states ended up with such a patchwork response. hogan also questioned president trump's dismissal of public health experts, the target of a coordinated attack by the white house and its allies. cnn has learned that fauci and the president spoke yesterday for the first time in a month.
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and a growing number of retailers are also not waiting for washington. today tar get and cvs joining other big-name stores like walmart and sam's club requiring customers to wear masks and now the breaking news of the cdc, there's a study finding the travel ban came too late for new york city. i want to bring in cnn health reporter jaclyn mowahoward to t about this and emergency room dr. jack deutsch. break this down. >> here's the research for this analysis. number one, they looked at cases out of new york city specifically for the month of march and then what they also did is used genetic sequencing. they took specimens of new york city and looked at the sequences of those to examine how similar they were to sequences from other parts of the world like europe and other parts of the
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u.s. and by doing that there were two takeaways out of this research. number one, the researchers found that on march 1st, 26 cases in new york. by march 13th, 117 and then travel restrictions timeline, you will see that february 2nd, the u.s. restricted travel from china, by march 13, restricted travel from europe. by march 15th, the cdc study says that there was evidence already of community transmission of the virus. so the main takeaway is that the virus was already it seems to be already spreading way before some of those travel restrictions nut place. >> saying the genetic sequence, they look at the fingerprint of the virus to tell as we see changes over time, right? they can tell exactly which
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sequence it was and they can map it together. >> that's right. and the genetic sequencing showed that that fingerprint like you said was similar to specimens already circulating in europe and what that suggests here is it's some evidence that suggests the outbreak in new york city can be connected to europe and also other parts of the u.s. so such as washington state or other parts of new york state. >> yeah. some people's ears might perk up at that. this is a virus that is mutating regularly. doctor, to you, you are an emergency room physician in new york. tell us what you take away from the cdc's findings about what could have perhaps changed what you saw there in new york. >> back in early march, end of february we received people with flu-like symptoms, tested negative for flu and patients said do you think it could be the covid virus?
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this is an indication of what we were dealing with. i got sick early in march and probably was a factor from undetected cases within the new york city area. and what we have learned from doing antibody testing is patients that reported back in february who didn't even travel. they may have been exposed from somebody that they knew that was in asia or more often europe and tested positive for antibodies putting the timeline earlier and is really scary. it is just one more factor to realize that we are not ahead of the curve with this pandemic. >> jaclyn, explain this to us. a new cdc study with information about symptoms that most covid patients are experiencing. >> that's right. this other cdc study looked at a group of patients, 164 patients who were showing symptoms. and those patients completed questionnaires about the symptoms they were experiencing and the questionnaire showed almost all of the patients, 96%
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reported fever, cough or shortness of breath so that really tells us the most common symptoms according to the study. the patients also reported other symptoms, as well. at least half of them also said they experienced chills, muscle pain, and also gastrointestinal symptoms and this study gives us a pretty solid symptom profile of what covid patiences are experiencing and two things to keep in mind. most of the patients were adults. a small few were childrener and interesting to see a study done on mostly or all children to see whether the symptom profile among children compared to that seen in adults and especially while we are all talking about or discussing going back to school and then number two keep in mind every day we are learning more about covid. we are learning more about this
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illness and just this week and the medical journal jama dermatology there was new research looking at skin rash and even lesions in the mouth and might identify more symptoms as new research emerges. >> doctor, i wonder what you think about that especially as there's a discussion about schools reopening. doctors in hospitals like you could start seeing different things as you have children who display symptoms in different wa ways around each other. >> this study's information, so yes, the most common symptoms of people that presented first treating patients and what we are seeing now is a big change in what the presentation looks like. in new york i could say from treating thousands of patients most people are mildly sympt symptomatic. many have no symptoms. though that's early on, most people are going to have milder
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symptoms and concerned people are saying, i don't have a cough, i don't have a fever. i don't feel short of breath, this can't be covid. we need to everybody is potentially sick and exposed, kids like adults and test people. if we rely on indications clear directions of whether people have covid we won't be able to contain this. we have to be smart about this and use science and testing and that's where the inadequacies of testing is so discouraging. you are not getting testing in states with severe outbreaks and we have to understand that the virus can look like many things and evolving so test, identify, use the things that work, the mask, the isolation. i implore people in states to take actions into your own hands. take care of your own health. be your own advocate. >> thank you so much, doctor. thank you, jaclyn, for breaking down these new studies for us.
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it is so important for us to understand. while governors playing politics with masks, big businesses are weighing in. cvs and tar get announcing they're joining other major retailers in mandating masks in their stores. cvs says it will be in place on monday. for tar get, the date is august 1st. this is coming a kroger and koh they will be requiring all kuts hers to wear masks. cnn's acristina alecia is joinig us. >> reporter: there's been a force of retailers to do something that they were initially reluctant to do. masks are unnecessarily political and enforcing these
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policies is tricky for these retailers when confronted with customers who do not want to comply and employees have to try to convince them to wear them. cvs is addressing that in its statement today saying to be clear we're not asking our store employees to play the role of enforcer. we are asking that customers help protect themselves and those around them by listening to experts and heeding the call to wear face coverings. target is making it easier on customers. they are employing different measures, including having masks available for free at the store for people who are walking in. adding signage and additional reminders on the audio systems in the store. but this really underscores the fact that retailers wanted the government to take action. they didn't want to have to be the ones making the call here
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but they were forced to given the amount of cases that were happening and the lack of a cohesive national strategy around masks and they had even written to the national governor's association pleading with them, the companies issued a letter, saying, listen. without a government mandate we're being forced to do this. we're the bad guys and it would help if the government steps in and provides more leadership on this. that didn't come and now the retailers are taking it upon themselves, bring and in. >> the liability issue is real especially as the science on mastings is so much more apparent. a republican governor blasting the president's response to the pandemic. he called it hopeless. hear his message. the governor of georgia bans local cities from man dating masks. i'll be speaking live with a mayor whose mandate was reversed. a bar owner in texas protesting the governor's restrictions. why he says it is safe to open. if you're 55 and up,
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today maryland's republican governor larry hogan is slamming president trump's response to the coronavirus pandemic. he calls it hopeless. hogan also chronicles the efforts to secure testing supplies for his state in the absence of federal guidance. and it isn't the first time that he's publicly pushed back against the president's response to the pandemic. it is notable though given his position as the chairman of the national governors association. we have cnn's tom foreman joining us now to talk about this. this is a very interesting right by the governor about what he kind of went through, almost an
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island unto himself with his wife to get testing supplies for maryland. what else is he saying? >> reporter: this is a remarkable thing that's happening here because he's not hesitated to say when he thought that president trump was wrong about things i think he really has gone out of his way for quite sometime not just directly confront the president or go after the president with a broad brush. that seems to be done. he says he and the other governors waiting for the white house to come out with a comprehensive testing plan, a comprehensive strategic plan for dealing with the virus and it just didn't come and he writes in this editorial eventually it was clear that waiting around for the president to run the nation's response was hopeless. if we delayed longer we would condemn more citizens to suffering and death. he goes on to say that he was really astonished to find the degree to which the president was dismissing the science of this, living in sort of a land
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of denial every time the subject came up and one meeting with the governors barely even talking about the pandemic as if that wasn't the number one business. he said instead of listening to his own public health experts the president was talking and tweeting like a man more concerned about boosting the stock market or his re-election plans. and in another part of the editorial, he notes that the national institutes of health talking to them about the state trying to do they were asking him for help and he was simply astonished saying this is an undertaking as large as the national testing program required washington's help. we expected something more than constant heckling from the man who's supposed to be our leader. this is in every way a real broadside at the white house from a republican governor who enjoys enormous support among republicans in his state, democrats in his state, independents in his state. he is exactly the kind of person
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that donald trump probably would like to have at his side heading into re-election and yet somebody who now seems to have been clearly pushed to the end of it through the president's lack of response to the pandemic and see where it goes moving forward but larry hogan stayed sort of in a semi-neutral spot and now saying flat-out he thinks that the president has done very, very poorly in the response to the pandemic. >> yeah. it is such an interesting read talking about what the appreciating what the president's advisers telling him about the coronavirus and then that one detail that just sort of floored me is calling nih looking for testing help and they implored him to try to put in a good word with johns hopkins to get them help because they could do like 72 tests. >> reporter: underscores what we heard all along at the state and local level, there are people who are heroically trying to take on the pandemic and they have looked to the white house
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month after month after month and said, what is the plan? and they have had no response. >> yeah. kudos to his wife mrs. hogan. >> reporter: made the deal for the tests out of south korea. absolutely. >> thank you so much. growing backlash today after a move by georgia's republican governor kemp. kemp issued an expectative order banning cities and counties in the state from mandating mask wearing. all of this is happening as georgia seeing a spike in new cases and hospitalizations. the state reported almost 4,000 new cases on wednesday and the mayor of athens, clark county, the mayor is joining me live to talk about this. you were one of the first to issue an executive order that was mandating mask wearing. tell us what's your reaction to the governor saying, nope, those won't stand? >> thank you for having me. i'm deeply frustrated today. not only do we issue a mask order early but a first
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community in the state for shem shelter in place in march because we are concerned about public health and public safety. i had retailers from very large grocers to very small locally owned coffee shops saying to me we would like a local mask order so we have a level playing field. in an earlier segment we heard about the challenges of retailers when they feel like they have to be quote the bad guy. we didn't want that to be the case. we wanted science to lead us. we know very mituch that drople and aerosol transmission is dangerous and can be made less dangerous with use of mask. i'm in constant contact and we believe the local orders will stand and we can fight this. >> when you hear from retailers, what are they saying about if they put a sign up before you had the mandate? if they put a sign up saying masks are required, do they get blowback? what are they encountering?
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>> they get concerned patrons to say the guy next door doesn't require a mask, the shop across the state doesn't require a mask and for a single platform to go anywhere in the community to have the same experience and the same healthy experience is what we want to provide. here we are in athens, the host of the flagship state university, the university of georgia and just a couple of weeks ago the board of regents elected that all system of georgia university systems require masks indoors so for us in athens we want to provide the same environment on campus and off campus. >> cases are surging in georgia. yesterday 3,000 new cases. so what options do you have left at your disposal? >> we'll exhort everyone to wear a mask and trying to challenge the latest order. you look around the country.
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in texas, in alabama, you've got republican governors understanding that the science has got to lead the way. even if there were some reluctance earlier in this bizarre national environment we have been in. at the end of the day we need to protect the health of the people who live here. >> mayor, thank you so much. we appreciate you being with us. >> thank you, brianna. a day after the governor of oklahoma announced he tested positive, pictures of him recently not wearing a mask at public places like walmart. also, a bar owner in texas protesting the governor's restrictions and will join us live to talk about that and what is going on with his business. florida governor desantis said that people grew complacent because the media ignored the pandemic in may. well, that is flat-out not true and we'll show it to you. hey there people eligible for medicare.
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back to talk about this. tell us about the findings. >> reporter: these findings just came in and what it found, this trial was done in more than 400 patients with mild symptoms so these patients not hospitalized and half of the patients treated with hydroxychloroquine. the other half were given a placebo. the ones treated with hydroxychloroquine over the course of about four days and then all of the patients were monitored for their symptoms. the trial showed that the hydroxychloroquine treatment did not benefit or help the severity of the symptoms seen in the patients who were treated so in other words it really did not show any benefit treating the symptoms compared with those not given a placebo or given a placebo and this is just adding more understanding and evidence around the use of hydroxychloroquine here. >> it is worth noting, just to
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remind people, this is the drug that the president took and he and many in his administration touted. >> reporter: that's correct. it's also important, currently there is no approved treatment yet. we are still learning more and more about covid and there are several studies and trials under way to really find what is the best treatment here but again this study in patients with mild symptoms shows no benefit with hydroxychloroquine. >> no. thank you for that, jacq ueline howard. texas bars fight back rally, governor abbott paused reopening in texas as cases surge ordering bars with more than 51% of the gross receipts from alcohol sales to close again after a brief period of reopening. we need to be clear here.
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this is an outbreak that is real and deadly and going on right now. currently there are nearly 300,000 cases and more than 3,500 deaths in the state. hard hit texas counties bring in refrigerator trucks because the morgues are filling up and hospitals are straining under the surge. i'm joined by james kopech, the coowner of the pasadena bar and the bar has not reopened for regular business. james, tell us if you have any concerns that your event could lead to coronavirus cases and maybe even deaths and tell us why, you know, tell us your position on this. >> yes. our position on this is we had a rally on sunday. in support of the bars in texas that the governor closed down that sold 51% alcohol. we don't serve food and the bars that serve 51% food he allowed
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them to stay open so our fight on this is the discrimination of the ones that sell the alcohol. there's no difference between us and the ones that sell the food in their bars. >> so you feel that it's a fairness issue and that the gathering in bars poses no higher of a risk than gathering in restaurants. >> that's correct. that's correct. because when he opened us up back on may 22 he gave us the guidelines. distance. so we had the tables set up, groups of six or ten. we had every other, tables separated out. people came in with masks and not wearing them at the table. we didn't make them wear masks. if they wanted to they could. as far as the dance floor, our dance floor is 1,000 square feet
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so there's plenty of room and distance in between and the people danced with who they came with and didn't look at strangers so our distancing was there. everything was there. we had all the safety precautions in effect. we sanitize and clean our bars and the bars around do the same thing. >> and so, what's your set-up at the actual bar? >> our set-up at the bar, we have our tables separated there. with the groups. because everybody comes in in groups. >> yeah, no. i mean the physical -- the physical bar part, not the table part of the restaurant bar. >> the bar is 10,000 square feet. we have a 10,000 square feet of venue and so we have plenty of room for social distancing. our dance floor is almost -- >> okay. sorry. i think i was trying to make a distinction of where people sit at the bar. you are referring to the bar at
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the entire establishment but i want to ask you because, look, we have seen -- you have probably seen this, too. there are a lot of bars and we have heard from governor abbott wishing that he shut down bars sooner and a lot of bars and establishments primarily drinking where people have not distanced. where there's been clear violations of recommendations behavior. do you feel like that has negatively impacted you? are you feeling like you do everything as correctly as you can? and keeping conditions just like restaurants that maybe aren't being affected the way you are? >> yes. we are doing everything we can. yes, there are a few bars. i wouldn't say a lot of bars that are not going by the guideline that is -- guidelines but that's the ones maybe he should go after and shut them
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down but as far as all the other bars, the bars i know around me in our area have followed the guidelines and the guidelines that he set out we followed. if he was to open us up, give the guidelines we can follow the guidelines but don't discriminate because we sell more alcohol than food. >> thank you for coming on. so many business owners are facing these difficult situations like you are. we know that it is a huge economic struggle for your establishment and employees and we certainly appreciate your perspective. thank you. >> we just want to open up to pay our bills and our employees can pay their bills. >> james, thank you. as more and more americans are heading to beaches one state hitting a new record with infections in the middle of vacation season. california warns it duds not have enough contact tracers to handle the cases they see and
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is planning to warn 25,000 employees about potential furloughs because of the economic downturn. the possible furloughs are set for october 1st and this would include 10,000 flight attendants and 2,500 pilots. according to a memo they hope to reduce the furloughs significantly through enhanced leave and early retirement programs and now more from cnn colleagues across the country. >> reporter: i'm stephanie elam in los angeles. while california did meet the goal of a contact tracing army of 10,000 people it's become evident that the state still needs more. one epidemiologist said we don't need the same number in each county but rather need to have more contact tracers where we are seeing larger surges in cases. that said, he also said it would help if there's more done throughout the state around skilled nursing facilities which
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account for about half of the deaths in the state so far. >> reporter: i'm evan mcmorris-santoro in arizona. two figures show that the pandemic is too big for the state to handle. in mare copa county, the morgue is at capacity so officials are calling in four refrigerator trucks to add capacity for 60 more bodies. the hospitals statewide are struggling. that's why the state health department called in 600 nurses from around the country to help to alleviate the pressure. >> reporter: i'm natasha chen in south carolina where the state reported more than 1,800 new covid cases on thursday. the governor called for school districts to submit plans for an option to send children back into the classroom setting this fall. this is garnered strong criticism from educators across
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the state and others who say the last thing to do is overrule teachers and health professionals. >> our thanks to the reporters across the nation. every day thousands of families are learning that their loved ones either have contracted coronavirus or that they have succumbed to this deadly pandemic. cases are exploding across the u.s. as the debate rages over whether or not wearing a mask saves lives. actress, author and advocate holly robinson-pette is speaking out about this. he lost a relative and the mother of the relative is hospitalized. she is joining me now. thank you so much for being with us and putting a face to this. a lot of people know your face so i think it helps when they see that you are going through this even though i know this is so terrible. tell us first about your cousin-in-law and her mother. >> her name was porsche
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livingston, she was 35 so her mother is currently in the hospital in arizona. i just heard on your reporting things are not looking good there and it broke my heart and i think just that the fact that we are not all on the same page about the basic idea and concept of masking, it breaks my heart and the other day i ran out and after i heard the terrible news i ran out to the drugstore to get something and a woman walked past me, no mask, got too close to me and looked at me sideways like, you know, because i was wearing a mask that that was somehow a bad thing and i just can't understand why we all can't get on the same page about this. these numbers are real people and real actual families like my husband's and it's just really breaks my heart. >> and so right now you're looking at arizona because you're looking to see about your husband's cousin's mom and you have serious concerns there and you have four children and this
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includes two teenagers, right? both in high school in the l.a. unified school district and a daughter that just graduated from nyu last month and an adult son, as well. l.a. says it will continue online instruction in the fall. how do you feel about schools and colleges that plan to reopen classrooms? >> as a mom of four and having been a lockdown with these four kids for the last five months, i definitely want them to be in school but not if they're not safe so i was very proud that they came out, set the tone and said, all right, we are not having classes in the fall and we can plan around that. what frustrated me is to see orange county recommending that kids go back to school with no distancing, no masking, i don't think they'll do that but just the fact to say that that was frustrating to me. i don't again understand why as a mom who wants to keep their
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kids safe we are not doing what we are supposed to do, listening to the professionals, the scientists. we would be further along. i have a lot of friends in british columbia where i do a lot of shooting for television and there's a doctor up there and when in march when they had like 85 cases, they just turned to her and said, what do we do? you are the expert. now, of course, here we are in july. they flattened the curve, smashed it, and guess who can't get into canada? we can't. >> that's right. >> it is real frustrating and we have to get on the same page. >> yeah. it is like two different worlds. holly, thank you so much for coming on. we appreciate seeing you. >> thank you. great to see you. we have more on our breaking news. a new study showing the u.s. travel bans they actually came too late for new york city. as the virus was spreading much
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florida is the new epicenter of the coronavirus, despite the governor calling the surge a blip. but he's also playing a new blame game when it comes to the state's response. he says the media stopped covering the pandemic in may, that he was never asked about the coronavirus. and because of that, the public grew complacent. >> now i think this is back in
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the news, people understand. look t was natural. i would do press events in may. i would never be asked about coronavirus. >> well, that is not even remotely true. while protests calling for social justice were majorly focussed on by america in late may, the virus never went away and neither did the questions about the virus to the governor. after comprehensive research by politifacts, these are just some of the questions he was asked by reporters in, yes, may. >> the doe addressing thousands of apliccents who say they meet all the requirements but still being deemed ineligible?
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>> first off, is is it state wide restrictions will be lifted and will there be protocols in place? are you going to required organized sports players to wear masks? >> i've heard from hundreds who say their unemployment claims are still pending. you said 97.6% of people have been paid. but that's people with complete applications. how many of those people's claims are still pending? >> so, yes, he was asked the questions because it's 2020 and the video there exists to show that he was. and by the way, if the governor thinks the public grew complacent, perhaps it was because they were listening to him. this is governor dos santos also in may. >> you got a lot of people in your profession who wax poetically for weeks and weeks about how florida was going to be just like new york.
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wait two weeks, just like italy. well, we're eight weeks away and it hasn't happened. not only do we have a lower death rate, we have way leer death generally. d.c., everyone up there. we have a lower death rate than the midwest, illinois, michigan, indiana, ohio. but even in our region, louisiana, mississippi, alabama, georgia. and i was the number one landing spot from tens of thousands of people leaving the number one hot zone in the world to come to my state. so, we succeeded and i think people don't want to recognize it because it challenges their narrative, challenges their assumption. so, they have to find a boogie man. >> it's the epicenter of the global pandemic and i mentioned they were invited on the network to address what's gripping his state and so far he's all of --
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