tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN June 2, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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hello and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm max foster from buckingham palace, special coverage of the queen elizabeth platinum jubilee celebration. good weather thankfully, grab your party hats and get ready for the pageantry. in about an hour the royal family will attend the first event to celebrate a monumental anniversary. 70 years on the throne, a first for any british monarch. this new portrait of the queen was released. festivities will last four days. and she sat on the throne in 1952. royal watchers have been camped out for days just to be a part of this once in a lifetime event. and to get the best seats in the house. cnn reporters are standing by ahead of the celebrations. anna stewart live on the mile
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where the fans are waiting for the festivities to begin. and larry is at a watch party in kenya. and also joining us also a reporter from hello magazine. but we'll have a look back at the 70 years of service. final preparations are under way to celebrate a moment of history. queen elizabeth, the first british royal to celebrate a platinum jubilee, commemorating 70 years of service. the lineup includes a birthday parade with gun salutes and launching of beacons across the commonwealth, a thanksgiving service, a palace concert, a platinum pageant. 12 million people across the uk are set to attend street parties over the weekend. >> very hard working lady. that is why i'm here.
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show my respect and support her. >> same kind of feelings at weddings. everybody is happy and you want to make friends and say hi and smile. >> i just say thank you and god save the queen. >> events get started with the trooping of the color which has marked the official birthday of the british sovereign for more than 260 years. all the pomp and pageantry that 1200 members of the military, hundreds of army musicians, and around 240 horses can muster. the queen has reluctantly had to pull out of a day at the races on saturday to pace herself for the celebrations. but jockeys who have ridden for her over the years will do a lineup in her honor. >> so she can let her shoulders drop and relax, and talk about
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horses. and she knows what she's talking about too. >> on sunday the gold state coach will make its first appearance in decades leading a procession of performers an personalities. prince charles will step in when his mother feels unable to make an event, part of the transition plans preparing us for the next phase of the british monarchy. what is always most telling about these occasions is the balance ccony appearance. in 2002, we saw the entire extended family. in 2012, it was stripped right back to its core to reflect the more austere times. and this year it is working royals only. so that means that you won't see prince andrew or prince harry with meghan. they are all off the list. the sussexs are invited and will appear possibly with their two children during events. and the world will be looking closely at their body language as they interact with other
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members of the family following that rift. cnn understands harry and meghan won't be mixing it up with their own set of separate appearances. anna stewart has a prime spot for the celebrations along the mile. i was out there late last night, anna, i suspect that there are a few hangovers there this morning. >> reporter: a few hangovers and quite a few more people, max. thousands are expected to turn out here. and honestly the mood is electric, infectious. i've had a smile on my face all morning. people have huge dedication to this jubilee. this is the platinum jubilee, no one has ever experienced that. huge excitement. people i've spoken to so far are very much here for her majesty the queen. lots of royal fans of but also they think this may be the last jubilee celebration for the queens.
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so they have come out in droves and huge commitment to get a good spot on the mile. take a listen. you've been here for all night? >> since 11:00 we've been here. >> i confess that i haven't. since 4:00 in the morning. >> reporter: you're late. >> i only had three hours in bed. >> reporter: where are you from? >> denver, colorado. we came for the queen's jubilee. >> reporter: you came here especially for the jubilee. >> we worked our trip around this, to celebrate the great british monarchs. >> reporter: who is sis excited about the jubilee? [ cheers ] so much excitement. and it helps that we haven't really had a big celebration in terms of royal events since pre-pandemic. and anyone coming down the mile even cleaning vehicles and police then are getting a huge roaring cheer in anticipation and of course we haven't got
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much longer to go before we see the royal procession coming down the mile. >> anna, thank you. one of the key things is good weather. you don't always get it in the uk, but thankfully it is good today which means that there will be a full procession and a fly pass. joining me now bianca and our contributor from the magazine. not everyone is a royal fan. but it does feel as though this is as much about this post-covid post-brexit world as it about the queen. >> britain needs this. it is a challenging time for the country as it has been for many countries after the pandemic which hit britain very badly. brexit even though it was supported has ben a bumpy process and now we have a cost of living crisis in the uk which is set to only get worse. so everyone that i've spoken to, whether or not they are a huge supporter of the queen or republican, they are excited to have a holiday weekend and four
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day party. >> and how many people can command two days of public holidays. >> only the queen. exactly. >> what are you looking forward to today, emily? i was talking in the piece about the balcony moment, so central in how they project themselves. will we see harry and meghan at all? >> we are hoping to see them. they will be we understand overseeing the parade along with other members of the parade and the queen's grandchildren will all be there with their spouses. they remain much loved members of the family, so it is right that they will be there. but we're not quite sure whether we will actually see them having a moment perhaps to watch over proceedings as that goes on. >> it will be extraordinary to see them, won't it, in the royal fold. it does feel as though some sort of progress is being made. >> i think absolutely. perhaps on this occasion all
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family members have to be there, but i think the queen will be delighted that they have come back and the wider family. this is the first time they have all been together since march 2020. it is a really significant moment. and whatever happens this weekend, it is all about the queen, supporting her, and they will want to focus on that. >> everyone on message, this is about celebrating the positives of the monarchy. we won't see prince andrew at all as we understand it, so they have drawn some sort of distinction between the sussexs and andrew. why do you think that might be? >> obviously the scandals surrounding andrew have created more challenges for the quaeen. this moment has not been without trouble for the last year. and obviously everything that happened to andrew throughout the trial, the settlement that was made, has put him at the very lowest popularity for any royal. harry and meghan are the next most unpopular after him. so i think that it is just wanting to make sure that the celebration is focused squarely
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on the positives of the queen, her dedication to service, duty, her 70 years on the throne. and not to have any distractions which were polarizing -- not even polarizing because andrew doesn't have popularity across the uk. >> people in the palace kind of relieved that this day even came. not only the challenges of lockdown, but frankly the queen's health. >> absolutely. we know that she's been suffering from the episodic mobility issues. she is 96 years old, you know, but i think that we need to look at this the right way around. this is not someone who is doing less because she's incredibly frail. she's just out there at 96. that is incredible in itself. and she's very much been looking forward to this. i wonder if she's almost been pacing herself deliberately so she can be here today. >> will she catch the races tomorrow do you think? >> this is a big question. she's a huge racing fan and we were all looking forward to seeing her there, but unfortunately none of her runners will be in the darby itself, so maybe this was a good
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one to drop. >> and we'll see part of the transition as it is playing out, charles will step in whenever the queen can't make an event. you're from new zealand originally. how is this being received around the world? >> it is muted. new zealand, even though it is one of the remaining countries where the queen is head of state, typically considered one of the countries more supportive of retaining the monarchy. but there aren't widespread enthusiastic celebrations planned. and if you look at australia, even yesterday there was a minister appointed for the republic and they spoke out and said that these are the twilight years of queen elizabeth ii reign and monarchy down under essentially. and so it is inevitable most experts think that only more countries will follow in removing the queen as head of state. so it is an interesting moment. at once a high point and celebration of queen elizabeth
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ii reign but almost the feeling of the beginning of the end in other respects. >> all right. don't go anywhere, we have much more coming up including some of the other stories happening around the world. plus some lovely music. ♪ >> historic. i think that it is a once in a generation type of event. and to be able to be here is just amazing. and i can tell you the appetite back in the u.s. for not only this celebration, but the royal family, is through the roof. so people are very excited. >> oh, i love it. this is what -- i mean, this is what i love when i come to england. i love the pageantry, the queen and everything. it is kind of what i live for. it is just -- i just love the whole thing. y formulated to protect your clothing from damage in the wash.
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united states just days after the deadly rampage at an elementary school in uvalde, te texas. a gunman killed four people at a hospital complex in tulsa, oklahoma before killing himself. police know the shooter's name but are not releasing it. police say they arrived on the scene very quickly and that fast response may have kept the death toll from rising. >> it is one of those things that you train constantly on and you hope you never have to use it. but i'm very proud of the men and women who ran up those stairs and used it. while it is absolutely tragic that anybody lost their life, i feel strongly that the rapid response by our officers prevented the loss of further life. >> according to the gun violence archive, the blood shed in tulsa marks their 233rd mass shooting in the u.s. just since the start of this year. dozens of these tragedies happened this schools. june 1 was the 152nd day of the
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year, meaning that there are more mass shootings than days in 2022. gary tuchman has further details from tulsa. >> reporter: there is still a robust police presence here at the st. francis hospital campus in tulsa, oklahoma after the latest mass shooting in the united states. a man walked in to one of the doctor's office buildings behind me, called the natalie building, there are orthopedics and oncologists who work inside there, and shot and killed four people all on the second floor. police are telling us that this was not a random shooting, that he targeted that particular office on the second floor, they are not telling us specifically though what he targeted. we're also being told something very critical, that within three minutes after they got the report, the police were inside the building. super important because we know what happened in texas inside that school, the delay in getting inside the school. here when the police walked in the building, they are saying that they heard the gunshot, then they stopped, they opened a door, they saw a person lying there dead and then they saw the
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gunman with a pistol and rifle lying dead. it is very possible if they didn't get in there as soon as they did he would have kept shooting. the man's name is not being released. his name is in the 30s. one of the reasons they are not releasing his name is earlier in the day there was a bomb threat and police say they are related, the bomb threat and the man who went inside the hospital. they are still investigating that. either way it is very important to us not to get desensitized to this. once again a mass shooting in the united states. four people who came in here either to get medical treatment, escort somebody to get medical treatment or people who worked here are dead. this is gary tuchman, cnn, it you will a tulsa, oklahoma. grieving families in uvalde, texas are seeking answers as they say their final good-byes to the 21 victims of last week's horrific school shooting. and the governor is calling for immediate school safety reviews
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to ensure schools across texas are following the appropriate procedures. this as more details are emerging from the day of the massacre. the mayor of uvalde describes how a negotiator was trying to frantically -- trying fra frantically to reach the gunman by phone. and still more questions than answers remain over the police response to the shooting. shimon prokupecz caught up with the school district police chief who led that response and has largely stayed out of the public eye ever since. >> i just want your reaction to -- >> we're going to be -- >> them saying that you were responsible for the decision for not going into that room. how do you explain smurs. >> we'll be very respectful to the families and we'll do that obviously. whenever the families quit grieving, then we'll do that obviously. >> on wednesday visitations were held for three young victims, two funerals also took place for
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a teacher and student. more services are planned in the days ahead. russia is another step closer to taking full control of severdonetsk. they now occupy about 80% of the city, captures all of severdonetsk is a principal goal of vladimir putin. there has been intense street fighting. food, water and other essentials are running out for the up to 15,000 people who remain. meanwhile ukraine reports two people hurt after russian cruise missiles struck a railway in the western part of the country near the border with slovakia. and kyiv's regional police confirm more than 1300 people have been killed in villages near the capital since russia invaded in late february. the uk now joining the u.s. in sending advanced longer range
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rocket systems to ukraine. the british defense secretary says launches will be able to hit targets up to 15 miles away. and germany is sending a battery to help protect them. and secretary of state antony blinken is defending the system to send those rocket systems. kremlin says it adds fuel to the fire but blinken says it is for defense. >> specifically with regard to weapon systems being provided, the ukrainians have given us assurances that they will not use these systems against targets on russian territory. >> nato secretary-general will meet with u.s. president joe biden today. antony blinken says he wants a diplomatic solution but western
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allies wants to make sure russia feels as much pressure as possible to end its aggression. i'm max foster and we have much more coverage of the platinum jubilee celebrations ahead. before we go, we leave you with some history about her majesty. in her 70 years on the throne, a total of 14 u.s. presidents have been in office during her reign. harry truman was president of the united states when the queen ascended to the throne in 1952. she has personally met with all of them except one and that was president lyndon b. johnson. do you have a life insurance policy you no longer need? now you can sell your policy - even a term policy - for an immediate cash payment. we thought we had planned carefully for our retirement. but we quickly realized we neededed a way to supplementnt our income. if yu have $100,000 or more of life insurance, you may qualify to sell your policy. don't cancel or let your policy lapse without finding out what it's worth. visit coventrydirect.com to find out if your policy qualifies. or
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♪ welcome back to our special coverage of queen elizabeth's platinum jubilee celebrations. i'm max foster live from london. right now we're just about half an hour away from the start of the four days of festivities to honor britain's longest reigning monarch. uk is pulling out all the stops. today is the big birthday parade known as trouping of the color oig. and many have camped out to get a front row seat to this once in a lifetime event. >> i just love the queen. she served so selflessly for the last 70 years, dedicated her life to the country. i'm so grateful for her for that. i'm so proud of her. you know, just wanted to come over and say thank you really. so this is me saying thank you to her for her service. >> first time something like
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this in our lifetime. and the last no doubt. >> i think she's kept people going and given them hope. >> the queen's seven decades of service to the british crown has been filled with both triumphs of and hardships. here is a look back at her time on the throne. ♪ after the death of her father king george vi, 25-year-old elizabeth known as lilibet to friends assumed the throne. crowned at westminster abbey on june 2, 1953. this was the first time the public was able to witness this sacrosanct event. elizabeth allowed live television cameras into capture the ceremony. in a powerful signal that hers
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was a new open and relevant monarchy. >> i can stand before you all, whether my life long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong. >> that was an example which i very much felt that that is what it was about. you dedicate your life to your country. >> it was with her marriage to the duke of edinburgh that we first realized her penalty. >> iin 1947, she had wed her sweetheart. following year their marriage bore prince charles, her heir. her first prime minister was winston churchill and during her rule, she has met every acting u.s. president bar one, meetings
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she always prioritized. still upper lipped in public, there is little footage to show the sense of humor this wife, mother and grand other is reputed to show behind closed doors. on occasion there has been little to laugh about however. >> it has turned out to be a horribleness. >> reporter: during the 1990s, three of her four children were divorced, charles most famously and then that crash. >> getting word that the french government has informed all of us that princess diana has died. >> the royal family's restrained response collided with a british public convulsing in heartache. elizabeth learned she's never merely a mother or grandmother, but a queen to her people no matter what. over more than a decade, public faith in the royals gradually rebuilt, the queen was advisably thrilled by the show of support for the wedding between her
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grandson william and partner kate in 2011. the family soon welcomed several additions, including prince george, future heir to the throne, born in 2013. [ gun salute ] in 2021 at the age of 99, prince philip passed away. senior royals attended the funeral scaled back due to coronavirus. elizabeth was forced to stand alone as she watched his cough again coffin lower into the royal vault at windsor castle, fitting farewell to her husband of 73 years, the man she described as her strength and stay. for more than half a century, elizabeth had led an empire before overseeing its managed decline. >> royal pair stopped first at this soon to be independent colony before touring their
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dominions. >> and an association of now independent countries, 15 of which had kept the queen as a symbolic head of state. after 17 momentous years, her majesty celebrates her platinum jubilee, the longest serving british monarch in history. it was in kenya when the queen learned that she would take the throne. the year was 1952. her majesty along with prince philip have been part of the commonwealth on behalf of her father when she learned of his passing and she of course returned immediately to the uk. larry madowo is joining us now from a watch party in kenya, hopefully watching cnn, larry. >> reporter: absolutely, max. and she was here just a few miles away from where that happened, the queen and prince philip were here and then she was princess elizabeth when she learned that her dad had died and she had to cancel the rest of her commonwealth tour. she was supposed to go to new
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zealand and australia and she had to hurry back to the uk to become the new queen. so this is a place that has special connection to her majesty and this platinum jubilee. and i have someone with me who has met the queen in 2018. you are originally from here. what was it like that moment to meet somebody who became queen in your hometown? >> it was one of the best moments i'll never forget in my life. i mean, the queen her majesty, it met a lot for me and our organization. it gave us a lot of credibility which we normally need especially for young social entrepreneurs. >> and your work is in nairobi. you work around tech. but you are doing something special here in the area. >> yes, yes, to mark jubilee platinum, we are doing something really exciting. so we'll have virtual experience, veirtual experience
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for how buckingham looks like. and as well as windsor castle. we're doing that at 3:00 p.m. kenya time. >> and you are allowing the people of this community to get a chance to see what buckingham palace and windsor palace look like. and you are lighting a beacon? >> exactly. our beacon is a bit different. we're doing a beacon that is voice activated. so you give it a command and it lights up. and as well as showing the part of technology to these people in a rural area. >> thank you so much. we're looking forward to seeing that. we'll be here to watch that and see how the local community is marking 70 years of the queen who became queen when she was right here about three hours out of nairobi. >> larry in that area with amazing connection to the queen here in the uk. thank you. we have much more coverage of queen elizabeth's platinum jubilee celebrations ahead plus our top stories coming up after a short break.
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enormous amount of time and resources towards this case. >> the verdict is in in the legal battle between actors johnny depp and amber heard. the defamation trial has made the u.s. headlines for nearly two months where the jury finding them both at fault. jean casarez reports. >> reporter: a jury ruling in favor of johnny depp in his defamation trial against ex-wife amber heard finding her libel on all three counts. the jury also ruling in favor of heard on just one claim of her counter suit. >> do you find that ms. heard has proven all the elements of defamation? answer, yes. >> reporter: this decision coming after six weeks of dramatic testimony with the former couple facing off. >> nothing i did made him stop hitting me. nothing. >> i have never in my life
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committed sexual battery, physical abuse. >> reporter: at the center of the trial, abuse allegations heard made in a 2018 "washington post" op-ed, though she never named depp in the article, he sued her ex-wife for defamation claiming in a $50 million suit that his career suffered as a result. heard countersued depp for $100 million. the former couple met in 2009 while filming the movie rum diary. both testified their relationship became violent and abusive over time including two incidents which took place in australia where the actor was filming the fifth pirates of the caribbean movie. le leading her to file a temporary restraining order against depp in 2016. >> she threw the large bottle and it made contact and
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shattered everywhere. and then i looked down and realized that the tip of my finger had been severed. >> i felt this pressure, i felt this pressure. [ crying ] he was punching me. >> reporter: the testimony was not all he said/she said with recordings of fights and photos of alleged injuries introduced as evidence. >> by this point in our relat relationship, we're both saying awful things at each other, screaming at each other. >> reporter: on the stand depp denied abusing heard. >> they ever did i myself reach the point of striking ms. heard
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in any way nor have i ever struck any woman in my life. >> reporter: witnesses for both depp and heard gave sometimes emotional testimony about what they saw and the former couple's counselor testified about their relationship. >> they engaged in what i saw as mutual abuse. >> reporter: depp was not in court to hear the verdict. instead he was seen performing in london monday night. jean casarez, cnn, new york. still ahead, we're counting down the minutes until queen elizabeth's platinum jubilee kicks off here in london. we're hearing horses in the background. there will be 240 eventually. the latest on the celebrations after the break. ♪ ♪ god save the queen ♪
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welcome back to our special coverage of the jubilee celebrations. the royal family has invited people around the world to plant a tree for the jubilee. and outside the gates of buckingham palace, the sculpture known as tree of trees stands as a message of hope, regeneration and sustainability. ♪ >> thrrees have always been important to the queen. she's planted over 1500 across the world during her reign. >> those trees that she planted are right across the world. the commonwealth countries from the caribbean to africa to asia are all involved in celebrations. there have been forests and canopies all linked together right around the world in her majesty's name. >> the platinum jubilee is an
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excuse to bring a country together and make a focal point that celebrates environment and also literally changes the landscape of this country. >> there are 350 different species of trees. they are all native to the isle distributed around the country. >> it will be 70-foot high and which happens to be the length of her reign. i wish that i could say that was deliberately done, but i was also told that somebody in the palace described it as being three high. >> and the metal is from oil rigs, it has all been recycled. and at the end the metals will be recycled again. >> it is like a once in a lifetime opportunity. you can't just do this anytime.
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so it is really fun. >> there are not many children who can see this. we want to save the planet with climate change and things like that. >> and we wanted to really highlight the vital importance of what we already have in the form of our ancient trees and ancient forests. and really these are nature's crown jewels. so our call to action is plant a tree for the jubilee. >> does look pretty amazing once it is lit up. and we'll see that tonight. once again our team of cnn reporters standing by ahead of the celebrations. anna stewart is live at the mile where stands are waiting for the festivities to begin. and larry madowo is at the watch party in kenya. and bianca nobilo and also our magazine reporter is here. and first of all to the crowds because that is where it is at right now. >> reporter: the crowds are
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getting increasing by the second i should say, actually getting pretty hard to move around and even harder to hear you, max. but lots and lots of excitement here. everyone wants to get a good spot to see the procession going past. so some people were camping overnight. people have come from all sorts of places from as far as south africa and canada, i've met all sorts of people who come over specifically for this event. and it is really interesting when you ask people why they do come here in person because i imagine that they could see it better on television or watching of course cnn. but they are here very much to show their respect to the queen, they think this is the last jubilee celebration that there will be for the queen. and also they are here for the atmosphere. and it is absolutely electric. it is infectious, the excitement levels are so high right now. some people who have camped out have had practically no sleep. but they are so awake and i think that we're running off at this stage sort of emotional happy. max. >> larry, in kenya they are all tuning into watch from what we
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can tell. >> reporter: they are. the fact that there is a celebration and the watch party and this event happening in this rural part of kenya speaks to the enduring legacy of queen elizabeth and how far the reach of the commonwealth is. and an interesting story, i remember when my sister was born 1,000 years ago it feels and my parents thought she was so pretty and beautiful and they named her elizabeth after the queen. and when we got here this morning, we went to a small restaurant and what do you know, the server asked her what her name is, and elizabeth. an extremely common name here. and it is all because of the queen who even people who don't know she became queen while she was here in this part of the country still love that name and that is just one connection to the royal family and her even when people will be very critical of the colonization and legacy of that, but still a soft spot for the monarch. >> yeah, larry, so interesting, isn't it, bianca, because whether you are a monarchist or
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not, the queen has been around for so long, and these events do sort of punctuate our own lives and they create chapters in our own lives. so we remember this moment not necessary because of the queen but a moment in our own history. >> it is. and the queen herself is a through line through so many history. obviously she was alive during the second world war, she played a part as well in the later years. but she's seen the building and fall of the berlin wall. the beginning and end of britain's relationship with europe. she has been the consistent force throughout so much turbulent history. and i think that is why this is such an interesting moment as we see the shifts in the monarchy as queen elizabeth ii is taking a step back although the country celebrates her over the next few days. and we look ahead to what is next and that is why it is considered to be potentially problematic for monarchists and maybe an opportunity for republicans, but what comes after is a question mark. >> definitely part of the palace
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thinking. we don't want to talk about the inev inevitable, but they have got to plan for it because monarchies never die and they have to plan for the next and we'll see that today. >> absolutely. the prince of wales has been designated the task of taking the royal salute. and this is the first time that has happened in the queen's reign. so a significant moment for him and all eyes will be on him. i'm sure she'll be watching from somewhere inside the poalace. a lot of pressure from him, but he's taken part in the ceremony countless times. it is a special moment and time for us at well to get a glimpse into the future. >> when we go around the world, what we learn, isn't it, bianca, the queen actually transcends the monarchy in a way sort of what you are saying, that there is so much connection with her personally. would you describe her as sort of the one living historic figure that, you know, is on the world stage right now?
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>> well, i think that is accurate. and she is the longest reigning british monarch, third longest ever. if she continues another two years, it will be the longest in all of history. and of course even in a 70 year career on the throne, there will be things that were missteps. and a couple of famous years which were particularly grueling for her and the monarchy and the country indeed. but she really has managed to remain above the fray. she has appointed 14 prime ministers, but she isn't a political figure. she is a symbolic figure. she has a constitutional role, but she doesn't get involved. no one really knows that much about what she thinks about politics or indeed many things. and that is what has enabled her to maintain that level of respect and devotion across the world. obviously there are challenges to that now, but it is simply because she has been restrained, kept to herself, never complained. never explained.
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>> and the abiding image from today will be the balcony moment when we see the family come out. she always uses that to define the modern monarchy. so what will we see today? >> i think crucially we'll see her directors, we'll see charles and william and their families. we'll see her supporters. and we'll also see the cambridge children. so four generations of members of her family and three future kings lined up alongside her. i think that that is really her demonstrating that the monarchy has a future and it is in safe hands. >> thank you both and also larry and anna out there on the streets. she will be right in the middle of the party. and this doesn't reflect my writing but i'll read it nevertheless. if happiness is a warm puppy, here is probably the most adorable of the queen's jubilee celebrations. a pop-up korkie cam in london.
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according to the organizers the queen has owned korkies since she was 18. >> queen for about two hours and it was worth it, they brought the korkies out so we could pet them. >> yeah, didn't feel that long. this is really sweet. i loved it. i thought it was really nice. we're dog lovers, so it was a nice experience. >> the pop-up photo studio offers different backdrops even to choose from to cozy up to the queen's beloved breed. one thing the market advisers don't bring other dogs. they will not be welcome. there is a huge amount of snobbery in this area of the dog world. thanks for joining us. our coverage of the platinum jubilee celebrations continues. up next, early start ig.
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good morning, everyone. it is thursday, june 2, 5:00 a.m. here in new york. thanks for getting an early start with us. >> welcome to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. we begin with this, a grocery store, elementary school and now a hospital campus, at least four people killed in tulsa, oklahoma in what has become all-too familiar, another mass shooting. the shooter also dead apparent
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