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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 19, 2021 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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. ♪ winning by a landslide. state tv reports alabama raissi is iran's new president. we are live in tehran with the latest. a look at the shocking events of january 6th. u.s. gulf coast seeing heavy
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rains and tropical storm winds. we will have the latest. welcome to all of those watching around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is "cnn newsroom." it's now 1:30 afternoon in tehran. iran's state media is reporting that ibrahim raisi has won by a landslide. an estimated 62% of the got he received with 90% of the ballots counted. landslide victory for the hand-picked favorite candidate. no surprise. take us what this means for iran, first of all, in the direction of the country, frederik pleitgen. >> reporter: if you look what has been going on on this morning is the iranians are
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starting a transition of power and quite interesting. a couple of minutes ago, the outgoing president rouhani met at the judiciary where raisi has been the head of that until he will take over the office of president. rouhani graduated raisi and said important for the transition of power take place in a clear and also in a peaceful way as well. for iran, itself, of course, it means that much of society will move further towards a more further trajectory. some of the things won't necessarily change that much. one of the things we have to keep in mind a lot of the things decided here in this country, not just internally but externally as well they run through a lot of echelons and
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e one of the folks i spoke to as this election was going on bumped into him at one of the polling stations is the head of iran's national security council and he told me that, for instance the iran nuclear agreement is something that will remain on track or getting the iran nuclear agreement is something important to get on track and he said the supreme leader supports the negotiations to get ithe u.s. back in the deal. certainly there are -- this was a pivotal election. there are changes that most probably will be coming on the way. but some of the iran state will certainly stay the same. >> this was a real victory for hard liners. what does this mean for moderates and the reform movement such as it is?
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>> reporter: i think they have certainly been weakened. i think it's something where the writing was on the wall before the election even took place. one of the things, of course, we did see before the election happened was that the guardian council, the body that vets the candidates to let them take part infant election, they disqualified a lot of candidates and they thought it was disproportionately a lot of candidates were disqufed. you really doesn't have a strong candidate on the moderate side. you had one that got 2.5 million votes that is very, very little. i think what that showed is essentially in this election turnout is less than 50% but what we are seeing is that the conservatives certainly showed up to this election bu t
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sanctions that were put in place by president trump when he was still in office. certainly a lot of people, ultimately, thought the economy was not necessarily managed very rely by the prior administration. >> thank you for that, frederik pleitgen. former u.s. vice president pence was heckled friday what you thought would have been a friendly crowd. he was addressing a religious conference in florida when he was shouted down and called a traitor. >> i want to thank my friend for those overly generous words an d
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i'm deeply humbled by them. ralph reed knows me well enough to know the introduction i prefer is a little bit short. i'm a christian, a conservative, a republican in that order and i am honored to stand before you p. but on friday he praised trump in his speech. many republicans have been trying to whitewash what happened at the capitol on january 6th. never mind, that hundreds of suspected rioters have been arrested and face prosecutions and many can be seen on video and social media. more footage of the riots are being released. now we have to give you a word of warning here. the videos are very graphic and
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also contain profanity. paula reed reports. >> reporter: newly released footage showing an up-close look at what officers protecting the capitol went through during the january 6th attack. these new videos revealed after cnn and other media outlets sued for them in court, showing scott fairlamb, a gym owner from new jersey, taunting, then shoving an officer and punching him in the face. >> no, they work for us. fuck them! >> a former marine and retired nypd officer is seen here wearing a red coat threatening police with a flag pole before tackling one officer to the ground. both men have pleaded not guilty to all charges. >> it's a rude awakening for
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everyone but hopefully people see the former life of the president. >> it's shameful but some of my republican colleagues do not feel shamed. >> reporter: some members are congress are attempting to rewrite history and downplaying the events of that day and latching on to conspiracy theories. >> dojo intel community what kind of role were they playing. >> reporter: they were not trump supporters they claim but the fbi but claim stemming from reference from a right wing website claims without any evidence that the phrase is a reference to fbi informants or undercover agents infiltrating pro-trump groups. but legal experts say the term is not used to describe fbi agents and, instead, refers to people who participated in the
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conspiracy but haven't been charged. in one example, touted by fox news, the unnamed coconspirator was likely the defendant's wife, according to court filings. fox news host tucker carlson doubling down on the theory. >> we should shut up but we won't. it is a fact that the government is hiding something, probably a few things. >> reporter: marjorie taylor greene tweeting the theory. some republicans are pushing back. representative peter meyer tweeting, quote. and representative adam kinzinger renewing calls for a january 6th commission. >> tell your constituents the truth. tell the american people the truth. let's get to the bottom of the truth and then we can move on. >> reporter: cnn and other media
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outlets have spent months fighting get access to the video clips you just saw. those clips have been used as evidence in dozens of cases against the rioters but they were not available publicly. now media outlets continue to fight for access to additional clips to help show exactly what happened on that day. paula reid, cnn, washington. in new york, police are looking for two gunman in a brazen shooting that was caught on camera. the man was shot and wounded near to two children who were miraculously were not shot or injured. the video you're about to see is graphic. it shows a man trying to get away from a gunman. the attacker shoots the victims multiple times and his back and legs. the victim was hospitalized after the incident. the attacker whose face was covered got away on a scooter that was operated by another
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man. police say the children you saw in the video are a 10-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy. we will have a live report on this and other recent examples of gun violence that will start in about an hour on cnn. heavy rains and winds are pummeling the u.s. gulf coast. when we come back, the storm official becomes tropical storm claudette. we will go live to the cnn weather center for the latest. and then we will cover the california heat wave. hey lily, i need a new wireless plan for my business, but all my employees need something different. oh, we can help with that. okay, imagine this... your mover, rob, he's on the scene and needs a plan with a mobile hotspot.
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salonpas. it's good medicine. u.s. gulf coast are under weather warnings right now and being hammered by heavy rain and tropical storm force winds. in just the past few minutes, the national weather service has announced that storm is now a tropical storm named claudette. our meteorologist tyler mauldin is track the latest. >> the national hurricane center finally named it so we now have our third named system of the 2021 hurricane season and first one of the year to directly impact the u.s.
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with the 5:00 a.m. update, the national hurricane center has given us tropical storm claudette because they found a close slayings and you can see the burst of thunderstorms near that closed circulation. here is the thing, though. this is kinds of what makes it complicated. that closed low is actually inb inland and made landfall 45 mouls southwest of new orleans. it will not change the impacts for us. even though it's just getting named, we will deal with the exact same impacts we have dealing with the last 24 hours. a tropical storm warning continues from ft. walton beach. a tornado watch in effect as well for the area shaded in red until 11:00 this morning. it's because all of these storms that these bands that roll on shore, as soon as they hit the
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land, there is a lot of friction there and that ka can cause theo rotating up. we have had tornado warnings in effect but none at the moment. any one of these could quickly spin up for sure. where does claudette go from here? into the tennessee valley and goes off the outer banks of the carolinas where it could potentially restrengthen. once it gets to the tennessee valley it weakens considerably but when it hits the western atlantic, it would restrengthen into a named storm. notice as it takes this journey, it's going to slowly drop a lot of rainfall across the deep south. for this reason, we could see up to 6 inches of rain from new orleans all the way up to about charlotte, north carolina. much of this area has a flood watch in effect. more than 30 million people are in there. we have already picked up about
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9 inches of rainfall in some parts of louisiana and mississippi. we are going to add to those tog totals and that warranted that flood watch. in addition to this system, there is another headline we are watching in the world of weather and that would be that record heat continuing out west and the drought continuing to worsen. >> we will have more on that right now. thanks so, meteorologist tyler mauldin. californians were asked to conserve power for a second straight day on friday as high temperatures bake the entire region. the state's governor has declared a heat wave emergency. he promised assistance for the agricultural system. >> working on grants for farms and farm workers and unprecedented amount of money in the budget to support our agriculture community this year. we are working on the final language of the budget this weekend. we are going to land it with
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legislature. trust me, we are mindful of acuity of this crisis. >> they stay 11 of the 12 state reservoirs at record low levels. that produces a third of the u.s. vegetables and two-thirds of hits fruits and nuts. david feldman is joining me professor at the university of california in irvine. we spoke a couple of years ago when i was in california reporting on the last big drought. here we are again that many experts predicted. your colleague at uci, paleontologist said this, quote. that is terrifying if true. do you agree? >> i do agree.
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the evidence is very strong that in the last several decades, droughts, particularly here in the west, have become longer, more intense, and with many damaging consequences. so it definitely seems to be the trend. >> one of the most dramatic examples of the effects this is having is on our reservoirs like lake mead. i had been out there years ago and it was hitting then what was record lows. now the deficit is about the size of the statue of liberty. you study the colorado river, which feeds that reservoir. what are you seeing? >> we are seeing the same thing. basically, there is less snow pack in the winter in the rockies, which means that there is less snow melt in the spring and the summer. and so that is diminishing the inflow into lake mead and to lake powell. and our demands for water from the colorado river are not diminishing. so you put those two things together ten a means you're
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going to have a deficit. >> and then, you know, we are seeing the other effects of this hot weather leading to huge energy consumption. people across the west being asked to cut usage or face power cuts. the hot, dry weather leading to more fires and crews are facing water shortages as they try to face those fires and forcing the state of california to cut off water supply to farmers and it's not officially summer yet. what worries you the most when we are looking at the chain reaction of the effects this is having on our daily lives? >> i think there are two things that worry me the most. one is from an environmental standpoint. the intense droughts that we are having or leading to greater wildfires and, of course, less water available locally to put out these wildfires so that is a huge problem. also environmentally less stream flow, which means more threats to fisheries.
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then from a social standpoint, what worries me is the fact that our water demands are not really following water supply. >> that was david feldman, professor at uc irvine speaking with me earlier. u.s. president joe biden marked a pandemic achievement on friday. 300 million covid shots in 1506 d -- 150 days and encouraged more americans to get vaccinated. he is trying to get a passable version of infrastructure legislature through an evenly divided congress. here is kaitlan collins. >> reporter: president biden with another covid milestone. >> thanks to this war time response, we have gotten 300 million shots in the arms of americans in 150 days. >> reporter: the president touting the number of shots
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administered since he took office while at least 315 million shots have been given overall. >> it's an important milestone. this just doesn't happen on its own or by chance. >> reporter: but while celebrating the achievement biden is acknowledging the long road still ahead. >> unfortunately, cases and hospitalizations are not going down in many places and the lower vaccination rate stays. they are actually going up in some places. >> reporter: biden turned his focus to a new milestone now that he is unlikely to meet this one. >> our goal by july fourth is to have 70% of adult americans with at least one shot. >> reporter: 65% of u.s. adults have had one dose but the pace of vaccinations is slowing and the pool of those willing to get vaccinated is shrinking. >> we are going to get to 70% and we are going to continue across the summer months to push beyond 70%. >> reporter: the administration is making a last-minute push.
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dispatching vice president kamala harris to a historically black college in atlanta where she talked about her own vaccine experience. >> now, i can stand here with my mask off and talk with all of you and that tradeoff, well, it was 100% worth it. >> reporter: meanwhile, biden is also keeping the focus on his domestic agenda. >> bipartisan plan giving you th [ inaudible ]? >> i'll tell you monday when i get a copy of it. >> reporter: gaining steam on capitol hill. but there could be trouble ahead. after senator joe manchin outlined demands on voting rights legislation that could create an opening for compromise, senator mitch mcconnell is making clear there won't be un. >> equally unacceptable and totally inappropriate. all republicans, i think, will oppose that, as well, if that
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were to be surfaced on the floor. >> reporter: so president biden said he would review that final bipartisan proposal on monday. of course, it has not been final yet. instead, we have just essentially seen these rough blueprints but those blueprints have included raising the gas tax to pay for part of this plan. that is something the white house and top democrats have said they are not in favor of. kaitlan collins, cnn, the white house. the eu is lifting travel restrictions for more than a dozen countries, including the united states. just ahead, we will tell you about the patch work of rules and regulations you'll need to know before packing your bags. stay with us. spray, lift, skip, step. swipe, lift, spin, dry. slam, , pan, still...fresh move, move, move, move aaaaand still fresh. degree. ultimate freshness
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[ "me and you" by barry louis polisar ] ♪ me and you just singing on the train ♪ ♪ me and you listening to the rain ♪ ♪ me and you we are the same ♪ ♪ me and you have all the fame we need ♪ ♪ indeed, you and me are we ♪ ♪ me and you singing in the park ♪ ♪ me and you, we're waiting for the dark ♪
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here in the u.s., there is cause for celebration and concern. officials say more than 300 million doses of covid vaccine have been given across the country. but top health officials are worried about the spread of the delta variant. they explain why the strain of the virus is so dangerous. >> the delta variant is well on its way to becoming the dominant variant globally because of its significantlily increased transmissibility. >> we know the delta variant is even more transmissible than the uk variant and predict that will be the dominant variant in the future. >> they say it could cause gegs
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in devastation until the u.s. >> we have seen increased in hospitalized patients in less than four weeks. our doctors are describing them as younger, sicker. they are often coming to us later in the disease process, so we have less therapy options for them. and it's turned from probably about 10% of our cases look to be delta variant and our healthy department is coming back with 90% of delta variants, so that's turned very quickly. the delta variant is fueling this because we have low v vaccination rates throughout the south. it's a reminder that much of the places with low vaccination rates, if confronted with the delta variant will see a similar surge of patients as we are beginning to see right now. >> u.s. travelers soon may be enjoying their favorite european destinations once again. the eu's governing body is
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recommending lifting restrictions for the u.s. and many other countries. but travel there may not be quite like it was before the pandemic. cnn explains why. >> reporter: the european union is moving a step closer to opening its doors to international holiday go-ers. the eu council recommends rolling back travel restrictions put in place at the beginning of the pandemic for at least 14 countries. on that list, australia, israeli, new zealand, japan, the united states, and others. there is a major caveat, though. this should be read as a general statement of intent, not a detailed rule book. because, ultimately, border controls and travel policy depend on individual member states and what that means is that check the rules that apply to your specific european destination because even though the eu wants to harmonize travel policies, it varies.
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the french aeriviera is also possible. in greece unvaccinated can go island hopping and all they have to show is a negative test. these rules can stop on a dime especially on the emergence of possible variance of concern. >> for more on this let's bring in simon collar, the travel editor for "the independent" and he is joining me from england. thank you for joining us. first, is this a surprise that all americans will be allowed, vaccinated or not, especially since the u.s. hasn't lifted its ban on nonessential travel by europeans? i guess it all comes down to money? >> it does, yes. it's every country for itself. every country in europe as around the world is balancing public health with public finances and certainly if you
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are looking at tourism dependent countries such as france, greece, and italy and spain, they are desperate for visitors as they are in the united kingdom, although the united kingdom is keeping the barriers up for americans for a while longer. anybody from the u.s. who wanted to come here would need to self-isolate. so europe is getting ahead. france, as we heard in cyril's report is easing its restrictions and things will get even easier from tomorrow. the curfew is over. it's really important to say that it isn't a europe wide policy and, furthermore, when you get to europe, every country has different rules. >> yeah. absolutely. but so you have this patch work there. the eu has been urging countries to coordinator with coordinate with their countries around them so you don't have this patch
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work. is there any change this harmony will happen but as you said, will it be every country for itself? >> i can't see any harmonization happening this year. it's a difficult situation in terms of the uk where we have, for the moment, unfortunately, pretty much the highest infection rates in europe, even though we had the most advanced vaccination program. a country like spain just says, yep, you're absolutely essential. the uk for tourism here so you can all come in, regardless of tests and regardless of having been vaccinated or not. whereas, other countries like the netherlands, like germany are putting up the barriers to british tourists saying you can't come in except for essential reasons or you have to self-isolate when you get here. >> that was the independence travel editor simon calder.
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the plan was to have at least 1 million doses of the pfizer vaccine transferred to the west bank in gaza but the palestinian health minister says the first delivery of 90,000 doses did not confirm to the technical specifications and they were close to expiring. palestinian authorities are now calling on pfizer to speed up an agreed-upon shipment that was slated for delivery later this year. india's covid numbers are some of the worst in the world and taxing their hospital system. black fungus is caused by a type of mold and in people's immune systems that are compromised and can affect the sinuses and brain and lungs and skin. here is a report on the devastation it's reaching on india's hospitals.
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>> reporter: a covid-19 survivor here. his doctors telling him he is facing another life-threatening illness. black fungus. it has infaded his face. he is being prepared for a third round of surgery to remove it before it spreads to his brain. 71 other patients have battled this rare infection since april in this hospital. a surge of the disease has been seen across patients in india who are diabetic already or when the coronavirus triggered diabetes. they normally treat 30 black fungus patients a year. this year, 12 have already died. and the survival of others will often depend on access to a rare and expensive drug.
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this man became exposed to fungus and may lose his eye. >> the disease has progressed and the eye is looking very bad. >> reporter: his ct scan reveals the fungus has already spread. >> the key is for the surgeons to try to save the eye but to clear the area around the eye of the dead flesh. this is a fungus that feeds on dead flesh and sugar and they are trying to prevent it from getting into his brain. it's already cost around $6,000 just for his drugs and medical during the time will be devastating to this driver. he has two small kids to support. >> it goes through the blood vessels. it erodes the bones and has entered the sinus of the cheek. >> if he doesn't get the drug, what will happen? >> the fungus will continue to
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spread and enter the brain and start affecting the blood vessels within the brain. >> reporter: the delta variant of covid has spread from india fast. british experts say it may be 60% more infectious than others. india's second wave may be past its peak but icus are still busy with covid patients who now may face black fungus as a secondary ill illness. >> what is blatantly staring us in the face after the second wave, which was a huge surge compared to the first wave was muca. >> reporter: shortages of the drug have forced doctors into deciding who gets it and may live, and who may not. i but it's not just adults short of life saving drugs. dozens of children at the rainbow hospital in banglaor
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have been finfected with a miss which is an illness when the immune system turns on itself. a expensive drug is used to treat it, ivig. this boy is 9 and he had covid and recovered and then his antibodies attacked his own organs, including his heart, causing misk. he's on the mend now. >> really scary. really scary. >> reporter: the hospital has seen 32 mis-c cases in two weeks and the ends of this month they expect to pass a hundred and keeping these kids alive will be depending on sourcing the drug. >> if you think that it won't
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have a lot of cases [ inaudible ]. >> reporter: black fungus and mis-c are rare in india but 1.6 billion people adds up to thousands who may discover that covid isn't the end but the start of renewed suffering when survival depends on access to scarce and expensive drugs. sam kylie, cnn, bangalor. joe biden has often put his faith front and center as the first catholic president in decades. the church may be taking issues with him on his views over a controversial subject. we will explain next. stay with us. what makes new salonpas arthritis gel
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com communian on those who sup support -- the pressure is controversial. the vatican is even reportedly against it. here is the reaction from joe biden, the first catholic president of the u.s. in six decades. listen to this. >> reporter: are you concerned about the rift in the catholic church and how do you feel personally about that? >> that is a private matter and i don't think that is going to happen. thank you. >> cnn how big of a deal would this punishment be? >> hi there, kim. i think the first thing to understand is that this is the catholic church which means that things aren't always as they seem. in this case, it's important to remember what the bishops were told they were actually voting
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on, which was not whether u.s. president joe biden should or should not get communion. instead it was whether to move ahead on the eucharist in which the sacrament that the church teachers that is the literal body and blood of jesus christ. it comes when a strong majority, one recent poll shows two-thirds of american catholics don't believe church teaching on this point. they think the eucharist is just a symbol. lots of bishops are concerned about that. this vote was more a referendum how concerned bishops are on the eucharist than on the status of joe biden. we won't get a gauge on that until november when an actual draft of this document is put before the bishops. in the meantime, what we do know that the vatican has made it clear, pope francis and his team
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are against the weaponization of eucharist. presumably, all that will be taken into account over the next several months as the bishops work on the draft of this document they will consider in the fall. >> you talked about the unity of the church. there is many divisions in many driven dominations between conservatives who want the church between conservatives and then the people who want the church to become more progressive. how likely is this to expose those cracks further? is there a danger here that what is happening there with the catholic church could further alienate catholics and with declining mass attendance is already a huge worry with them? >> yeah.
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in fact, declining mass attendance is the motive for this document. that was a long-term trend, which was exacerbated by the covid crisis when lots of people chose not to go to mass or unable to go to mass because public celebrations were suspended. look. the divisions between conservatives and liberals as you say exist on all of the christian denominations and certainly exist in the catholic and this debate highlights them. there is another catholic would would be ticked off by that. i think what they are going try to do here is thread the needle between a pastoral concern for revivaling faith in the eucharist without seeming excessive political. >> interesting story to follow. john allen in rome, thank you so
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much for that. appreciate. coming up, life in the u.s. is getting back to normal and, for many people, that means going out to eat. but some restaurants don't want everything to go back to the way it was. we will explain just ahead. stay with us. can you be free of hair breakage worries? we invited mahault to see for herself that new dove breakage remedy gives damaged hair the strength it needs. even with h repeated combing hair treated with dove shows 97% less breakage. this... is what freedom sounds like. strong hair with new dove breakage remedy. and this. this is what freedom smells like. shows 97% less breakage. ahhh, enjoy 30 days of open-road freshness. febreze car. real progress? when you're affected by schizophrenia, you see it differently. it's in the small, everyday moments. and in the places, you'd never expect. a little sign of hope. the feeling of freedom. and once these little moments start adding up, that's when it feels like so much more.
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hello lenny28. wait a minute, i know a lenny28. ooo...lenny is cute! can i get some privacy, please? ♪ i'm chi lan, i am a mom, and a real estate agent. after having a kid, everything that you used to do for yourself goes out the window. the lines that i was seeing in my forehead were getting deeper than i was used to them being. and i realized, you know, what i can focus again on myself. so, what do you see when you look at yourself? i see someone who is growing and changing, who loves and is loved. botox® cosmetic is fda approved to temporarily make frown lines, crow's feet and forehead lines look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow,
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eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. see for yourself at botoxcosmetic.com
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the capitol police officer hailed as a hero for keeping lawmakers safe during the insurrection riot had a rare honor. he threw out the ceremonial first pitch at friday's baseball game between the washington nationals and the new york mets. watch this. >> officer goodman, when you're ready, it's your pitch. >> all right. so that pitch wasn't perfect. but officer eugene goodman's actions on january 6th sure were. go onman was seen in the video on january 6th leading rioters away from the senate chamber and directing senator mitch romney to safety. the army veteran was later given the service distinguished award.
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in the olympics they haven't decided whether to keep spectators out of the stands. here is what else they are saying. >> reporter: japan's top covid adviser said, quote, desirable to host the olympics without any spec spectators. are they going to take that advice? they said they would allow 10,000 people at large-scale venues where no state emergency is in place but medical experts are concerned the olympics will lead to a major rebound of cases in japan. olympic organizers have acknowledged that the delta variant poses a major risk and announcing additional restrictions for athletes coming from india. among other measures, they will be required to be tested daily and quarantine seven days before arriving in japan. for spectators that can come to the olympics it won't be the usual festivities and celebrations. they are asked to socially distancing with no partying or drinking in the streets.
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>> that fou that selina wang in tokyo. some restaurants able to stay open with outdoor dining space. things are returning to normal. they are hoping to keep that prime real estate for themselves but not everyone is happy about it. tom foreman has the story. >> reporter: like land rushes seen in old movies and restaurants have spread out their menus and tables. across the country, countless public streets were taken over by restaurants at the height of the pandemic with the blessing of city governments. but now an industry poll says 90% of restaurant operators surveyed want to keep their outside access, including much of that land. >> to now finally be able to be completely open, at least outside, and have a full patio, that's all we wanted for the last year. >> reporter: while others are saying hold on! >> now when we get back open inside again, then we don't need
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that space. >> reporter: the national restaurant association's case for holding the land is based like the nightly special on market prices. 90,000 restaurants have been closed permanently or long-term basis by the pandemic. millions of jobs, billions of dollars lost. >> a lot of restaurants are alive today because of outdoor dining and expanded outdoor dining during the pandemic. >> reporter: you're saying all this economic danger is not over yet? >> right. at least for right now they have to have it. >> reporter: the counter? in many places like new york city, where miles of streets have been closed, though not all for restaurants, that public space is immensely valuable and others would like it too. think about all of the traffic that might flow on those streets, private cars, public transit. what about all of the parking and maybe plans for bike lanes? some disabled americans say those expansions have
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dangerously cluttered sidewalks and others ask couldn't more people benefit if that public land was reclaimed for all of the public? >> once you get started with a celebrations on the street and activities, then it's going to bring foot traffic in and then these businesses are going to flourish. >> reporter: one idea. let me privately owned restaurants pay a fee for this use of public land. industry experts say that might work because they know even for restaurant owners, there is no free lunch. tom foreman, cnn, washington. that wraps this hour of "cnn newsroom." i'm kim brunhuber. for our viewers in the united states and canada, "new day" is ahead. for everyone else, it's marketplace asia."
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verzenio + fulvestrant is for hr+, her2- metastatic breast cancer that has progressed after hormone therapy. diarrhea is common, may be severe, or cause dehydration or infection. at the first sign, call your doctor, start an anti-diarrheal, and drink fluids. before taking verzenio, tell your doctor about any fever, chills, or other signs of infection. verzenio may cause low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infection that can lead to death. life-threatening lung inflammation can occur. tell your doctor about any new or worsening trouble breathing, cough, or chest pain. serious liver problems can happen. symptoms include fatigue, appetite loss, stomach pain, and bleeding or bruising. blood clots that can lead to death have occurred. tell your doctor if you have pain or swelling in your arms or legs, shortness of breath, chest pain and rapid breathing or heart rate, or if you are nursing, pregnant, or plan to be. every day matters. and i want more of them. ask your doctor about verzenio. you love rich, delicious ice cream. but your stomach doesn't. that disagreement ends right now. lactaid ice cream is the creamy, real ice cream you love that will never mess with your stomach. lactaid ice cream.
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it's moving day. and while her friends are doing the heavy lifting, that will never mess with your stomach. jess is busy moving her xfinity internet and tv services. it only takes about a minute. wait, a minute? but what have you been doing for the last two hours? ...delegating? oh, good one.
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move your xfinity services without breaking a sweat. xfinity makes moving easy. go online to transfer your services in about a minute. get started today. ♪ good morning. and welcome to "new day." i'm boris sanchez. amara walker? and that's amara walker, seems like we're having technical difficulties, but we are getting a new look at the january 6th capitol attack. officers being taunted and attacked on the steps of america's democratic institution. plus, gun violence soaring against the nation. out of control and getting worse. a man in new york shooting a person close to two children. s

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