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tv   New Day Weekend  CNN  July 17, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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devices in and out of the home. i mean, can i have a bite? only from xfinity. nah. unbeatable internet. made to do anything so you can do anything. good morning and welcome to your "new day." we're expecting a new report out of uvalde, texas, today detailing the failed police response to a gunman storming an elementary school killing nearly two dozen people. what we're anticipating from that report and who may be held accountable. president biden is back home from the middle east amid criticism of the trip, and he's also facing some head winds on his domestic agenda.
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>> i get paid tomorrow, and already my whole paycheck is spoken for. plus, adjusting for inflations. how surging prices are forcing some to make very tough choices just to make ends meet. welcome to your "new day." we are thrilled to have you this sunday, july 17. the days just keep slipping away. >> boris, i am so sorry, i'm having a tough time hearing you but good morning to you, boris, and good morning to all of you at home. unfortunately, we begin with a very sad story this morning. that search for answers in the tragic shooting at robb elementary school in uvalde, texas. hours from now the families of the shooting victims are going to get that preliminary finding of the texas house committee
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investigation. >> 19 children and two teachers were killed in the massacre. the committee is also set to present the families with surveillance video of the school shooting which was leaked to a texas newspaper and published this week. let's take you now to uvalde, texas, and cnn's rosa flores. do we have any indication right now of what is going to be in the report? >> reporter: you know, boris, according to a source close to the committee, this source tells me this report is expected to be fact-finding in nature, is expected to have a chronological time line of events, a law enforcement manifest. it's supposed to quote directly from sworn testimony. it's supposed to clarify some of the previous accounts. but the bigger picture overall, according to this source, this report is expected to show that the law enforcement failure on
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that ill-fated day was much bigger than one person. it was much bigger than the school police chief. it's going to show, according to the source, that the law enforcement failure was vast, broad, and it covered multiple law enforcement agencies. now this is a texas house investigative committee. they've been interviewing witnesses for weeks, according to this source, they've interviewed about 40 witnesses. these witnesses included multiple law enforcement agencies, school administration officials, teachers, a pe coach among other staff. now according to the committee, the family members of the victims will be receiving this report today along with a copy of the surveillance video. now this source says the 77 minutes that was also leaked to the austin american statesmen last week except this will have no audio which is what the families had requested.
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when the families meet in private with this committee, that's when the press will then get a copy of this report. and, boris, i have to tell you, it's been almost eight weeks since this tragedy happened, and there are still so many questions unanswered, still so many documents, videos, angles of cameras we have not been able to obtain, and one of the big questions that still remains especially after watching those 77 minutes of surveillance video, is why the police officers waited, why they waited in that hallway and didn't go in to save these children. we're going to have to see if this report actually answers that question. >> a critical question and we have heard conflicting statements from officials on the ground and locally there in uvalde. rosa flores from texas, thank you so much. let's bring in chief ramsay, the former commissioner of philadelphia, a former police
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chief of the nation's capital in washington, d.c. thank you for being with us. let's start with this report. what questions are you most hoping are answered? >> well, i think there are still going to be unanswered questions, quite frankly, because, at least from what we've seen so far, it's been very difficult to get factual information from the department. but from their individual interviews they may begin to put together exactly what took place this is going to be a very negative report obviously. we've seen the video. there's nothing good coming out of the video. there's nothing good coming out of this entire incident. if it's accurate, and i believe it is accurate, it goes beyond just chief arradondo. the failure was at multiple levels. you don't wait for a supervisor. you don't wait for someone to tell you what to do. you take xhed action. the officers failed to do that and it's not just one
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department. it was a multijurisdictional response this is going to really, i think, answer some questions in terms of some of the people who are at fault but the entire event was one huge failure. >> so if the failures are multiagency and greater than any one individual's decision making, how do you then go about ensuring those who need to be held accountable are? >> that's going to be on a department by department basis. the mayors of these cities are going to face a terrible set of choices that they're going to have to make. uvalde, for example. how will they have any faith in that police department at all? i just don't see it. how do you change that? how do you fix that? do you just blow it up? i don't know the answer to that. that's going to be a local jurisdictional answer that's
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going to -- the mayor will have to come up with. these are some tough choices. this is so massive a failure it's shaken not just the people of uvalde but has shaken confidence in policing in general and people need to understand that's not how police are trained. that is not how police respond. police respond in a much different fashion than what you saw in uvalde across the country. >> that's what's so startling. as we see in that disturbing surveillance video, the law enforcement officers got to the scene fairly quickly but then they retreat in the hallway. if you haven't seen the video, this is mostly what it looks like. they're essentially just lingering there waiting for something. i keep going back to this question. what would lead these officers to just wait there in the hallway if, what you're suggesting, training has them
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immediately going in, not even waiting for an all clear or permission to advance from a superior. >> training can give you a lot of things. one thing it can't is give you the courage to do what is necessary in dangerous situations, and that's what facing there. there was a lack of leadership. there was no incident command, no tactical command. none of that was taking place. it was chaotic. i did see the entire video, all 77 painful minutes of the video. the first responders, the first couple of officers that got there did go toward the sound of the gunfire, which is what they're trained to do. they receive fire and they retreated, but rather than regroup and not just necessarily those officers but others in the hallway at the time, probably half a dozen or so, you have to regroup and you have to go back. you have to come up with a tactical plan, distract the shooter. you have to be able to take that shooter out. you have to be be able to
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neutralize the individual before they can kill more people and that did not happen. how many of those children and teachers were maybe killed instantly but how many of them just bled to death during that 77-minute period? it's just horrible all the way around. >> that is the painful question that lingers over all of this. how many could have been saved if they hadn't waited? chief ramsay, we hope you'll come back once the report is released. we enjoy getting your expertise. thanks so much. >> thank you. there are new revelations on former president trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election. a newly surfaced memo obtained by "the new york times" shows conservative lawyer william olson giving trump legal advice that even he admitted would draw comparisons to martial law. more on this and the extreme measures that former president trump was willing to go through
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to stay in power. >> reporter: "the new york times" made public a memo yesterday from a lawyer that now shows us a little bit more about the advice donald trump was getting after the election in 2020 in late december. so this memo that "the new york times" made public is from a lawyer named william olson. we haven't heard a lot about him in the past. he was among the fringe right-wing attorneys giving trump advice, and he discloses that he and donald trump spoke on christmas day and then in this memo he tells donald trump the lawyers trump had around him in the administration, in the justice department, in the white house counsel's office, that those people were not serving his interests well enough and that trump needed to take control and give some orders. some of the recommendations that olson made at that time, this was december 28, 2020, were -- he says this is what must be done. you should replace the white house counsel. he then tells trump that he should order the justice department to file a lawsuit
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that would challenge the election result, what voters had decided for the presidency. and then he says if trump can't get that through he should fire the doj leader ship, get other people in place to help him. and then he tells trump when we're also working on what else you can do, we can look into other powers of the presidency, and he writes the media will call this martial law, but that is fake news. and so that is the advice from william olson to donald trump and, of course, trump does follow up on some of these things just a few days later. we see trump again looking into potentially replacing his attorney general with someone who is sympathetic to these ideas. boris and kristin? >> thank you, katelyn. and the last scheduled hearing is planned for this coming thursday. the session will air in prime time and is expected to zero in on former president trump's sponsor lack thereof as rioters breached the capitol and forced
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lawmakers to flee their chambers. the panel has not yet said who will testify at the hearing but cnn has previously reported former trump white house deputy press secretary sarah matthews is expected to be a witness. well, president biden, he is back home following his trip to the middle east, and he's now facing a domestic agenda that's essentially been hamstrung by a senator from his own party. what he can do to salvage his plans ahead of the critical mid-term elections. plus, the navy hand down punishments for a fire that forced it to scrap a billion dollar warship. that's coming up when "new day" continues. lve together, anand find the answer that was right under their nose. or... his nose. vo: hi. we're e zerowater. and we believe everyone deserves the purest tasting water. that's why we strive for zero. you see, to some it means nothing. but to us, it means everything.
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president joe biden returned from his overseas trip to the middle east overnight to confront a slew of challenges at home. the president is facing criticism also about his meeting with saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman and the controversial
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fist bump they shared. >> do you regret the fist bump mr. president? >> why don't you talk about something that matters? i'll be happy to answer a question about something that matters. >> cnn white house reporter jasmine wright joins us live. good morning. the president has a lot of problems right now, but what does the administration believe is his most pressing problem, his most immediate problem? >> reporter: the president wakes up this morning in d.c., and he has a long to do list. i think we can really put it like that. he sent the last week outlining what he believes is the u.s.'s relationship with the middle east and this week back at home is expected to be trying to put out some of these fires that burn here in d.c. and across the country and that's after part of his domestic agenda was essentially torpedoed by senator joe manchin, once again really
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putting his foot down against this administration in a lot of different ways, and so he'll be expected to deal with that. also trying to say what he will do to protect access to abortion care, any fallout from his trip in saudi and, of course, the sky high inflation numbers, some of which got worse while he was abroad. so no shortage of problems here for the president as he wakes up in the u.s. this morning. now on the domestic agenda front he's really pushing congress to take up some of the provisions left on his agenda that joe manchin really hasn't said no to and that includes prescription drugs and, of course, trying to make solvent the affordable care act. now on climate specifically the president vowed once again to do what he could to try to continue to combat climate change. one of the things he outlined when he was campaigning was essential for him. and so folks are going to be
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looking to what executive orders he can do. but on the type of things he wants to see, he really gave congress a deadline of august. specifically on that prescription drug portion really wanting to see something passed by that time. of course well in advance of those november midterm elections when people go to the ballot to vote. boris, kristin? >> yes, so much for him to do. jasmine wright, thank you so much. for more on the challenges president biden is facing, let's bring in cnn political analyst margaret. >> good morning. >> let's talk about how his middle east trip is playing at home. president biden you heard him in the sound bite right before we went to jasmine hitting back at reporters and essentially saying, hey, ask me about something that matters. it's not just reporters. take a look at this tweet from democratic congressman adam schiff that said if we ever need a visual reminder of the continuing grip oil rich auto kratz have on foreign policy in
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the middle east we have it today. one fist bump is worth a thousand words. that's coming from a democrat. what do you make of this criticism around the fist bump and biden's reaction to it? >> i think this is like a classic example of how a picture is worth 1,000 words and you have seen the president tell americans that he confronted mohammed bin salman about jamal khashoggi's death. you will hear the white house talk about the broader u.s. interest, the saudis' impact on oil, but what people will remember is that visual. and i've done so many trips where u.s. presidents meet foreign leaders and these are almost very highly scripted moments. they're gamed out in advance by senior white house staff. they think, is there going to be a handshake? will it happen in front of the cameras? since covid, fist bumps have increased as an alternative to handshakes. the problem is they give a sense
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of familiarity and that is clearly not what the president wanted and is clearly now what he owns. and he is coming back to the u.s. without some of the really clear commitments he hoped he would get on increased oil output on regional security alliance around iran that involves the saudis and the israelis. this was not the messaging that he wanted. "the wall street journal" says biden is playing the long game. that's true. it's been a real unforced error as he comes back from this trip. >> yeah, you have to imagine that he's going to think twice before he gives anybody else a fist bump again. margaret, on the domestic front it's pretty clear the president's biggest problem is the high price of gasoline. as you mentioned he did not get explicit pledges by the saudis to increase oil production. the president says he does expect increases in the months ahead. do you think that's going to be enough to ease prices and to ease people's frustration
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heading into the midterms? >> i think he's going to use the levers that he has and hopes it makes a difference. you can also see the white house pressing on other fronts. and what jasmine just mentioned, this push on using whatever deal democrats can get with their own with joe manchin from west virginia to get a deal to allow medicare to negotiate lower drug prices, i think you'll see democrats leaning very, very heavily into that. it's hugely popular with the public, not just with democrats, with republicans and with independents, the ability to at least help seniors get lower drug prices. and it's not the price at the pump but for millions of americans who rely on regular subscription it is could make a real difference. i think you'll see biden using every lever he has at this point and leaning very hard along with democrats into the message of women's rights and abortion rights to this country between now and november. >> yes. so how much do you think that
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abortion rights are going to be able to rally democrats heading into these midterms which are now just, i mean, four months away. >> one early glimpse we have the second quarter fund-raising reporting figures. you're seeing the numbers for democrats very strong in the most recent wave of reporting. fedderman crushing odds in pennsylvania. time ryan in ohio outraising j.d. vance, the democratic incumbent in georgia, in nevada, colorado, arizona doing very well. abortion politics is driving a lot of this from the fund-raising perspective. people's nervousness, women's nervousness they'll see their rights restricted under stronger republican majority senate. the question is can that money, can those big donations translate into votes?
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that's a real question because inflation concerns around the economy still are bigger drivers, at least in the polling, of what voters say will turn them out in november. >> one of the other things that happened while president biden was overseas, you had west virginia senator joe manchin dealing that pretty devastating blow to what was left of president biden's domestic agenda. senator manchin says he is not going to support climate provisions or a tax hike on the wealthy in that package. what does it say biden is struggling to win over a member of his own party to support his agenda even if it is a senator like senator manchin? >> it feels like ground hog day, doesn't it? since biden first tried to roll out his build back better plan. you saw the number he was aiming forget cut in half and then shaved down further and further. on some level what manchin has said is no surprise and as the inflation numbers got worse it was baked in the cake that he
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would take this position. he softened it a little bit over the last couple of days saying he's not trying to kill anything. he wants to see what next month's numbers look like. democrats feel like they're running out of time. manchin is signaling he does want to make part of a deal but give democrats the ability to give medicare the ability to negotiate drug prices. again. even if that is all that is left of this, if democrats can clear their own infighting around this issue they would have a major deliverable for voters by the end of the year. >> yeah, absolutely. margaret, thank you so much for getting up early with us on a sunday. >> thanks so much. that economic outlook so important for midterm elections but it's hitting home for so many americans. rising prices are forcing some to make really tough financial decisions. up next we have the real impact of record inflation. followed m. so i consolidated it
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checking this morning's top stories, officials say that six people are dead in a 21 vehicle pileup on a montana highway. at least two of the victims were reportedly children. and a warning some of this video may be graphic here. highway patrol blames a massive dust storm for suddenly reducing visibility on the road on friday. witnesses say the dust storm was fast and fierce making it just impossible to see within seconds and you can see some cars were absolutely crushed. the road was closed for several hours but has since reopened. the u.s. navy has announced it is punishing more than 20 sailors in the july 2020 fire that destroyed the "uss bonnhomme richard." the fire response team is the focus. the ship's former captain
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received letters of reprimand. the fire forced the navy to scrap the billion dollar ship. and there was panic on the las vegas strip after false reports of an active shooter. according to police someone threw a rock at a glass gorge at the mgm grand and the sound of breaking glass caused people to think there was a shot. the person who broke the glass was taken into custody and charged. with inflation hitting a 40-year high soaring prices are forcing some americans to make really tough decisions. >> and for some folks that means digging into their savings just to get by. cnn's gabe cohen takes us inside the numbers. >> it's huge. it's every week. >> reporter: rosita searches for the cheapest options, an
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inflation adjustment as her husband battles parkinson's making the price hikes far more painful. >> we are using our savings. >> reporter: are you nervous about the future? >> yes, of course. >> reporter: inflation in america surged in june with some of the steepest price hikes in places like baltimore, miami, phoenix and the biggest driver, gasoline up 60% in a year and groceries up 12% plus the largest monthly rise in rent since 1986. all of those price hikes are straining karen martin, a 911 operator near tampa, florida, and a single mom raising two sons while making less than $20 an hour. >> i am not making ends meet. i'm not making it. i'm spending my savings. i get paid tomorrow and already my whole paycheck is spoken for, and it's the first time in my life i've had to apply for food stamps because i don't know how we'll continue eating groceries.
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>> reporter: consumer sentiment hit a record low as new polling shows 42% of americans are struggling to remain where they are financially. nearly double from a year ago. and 85% think the economy is getting worse. >> especially after covid nobody has money for anything and everything goes up higher and higher. >> reporter: it's forcing families to make brutal decisions. >> do you want to eat or drive? >> reporter: some foregoing bills or medication, others turning to assistance programs like food banks. >> we have seen skyrocketing numbers of people needing food and, unfortunately, we're not getting the same level in donations that we used to. >> i try not to let it going to me. i just go day by day. >> reporter: bonita wesley expects to face a sizable rent hike in the months ahead. would you be able to afford to stay? >> no. no. oh, no. no indeed. not at all. i probably will have to move in with my kids or whatever.
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but, no, not by myself. no. >> reporter: by one estimate the typical american household is spending nearly $500 more every month on the same goods and services so even as gas prices dip, families are eating a lot of surging costs with so many of them telling me their salaries just aren't keeping up. gabe cohen, cnn, falls church, virginia. >> gabe, thank you so much. and as families are forced to make tough decisions, it can be hard to figure out how to budget and where to find savings. next hour we're going to talk to an expert about how best to manage your money to help weather these sky high prices. and still ahead, despite a destructive weekend in ukraine, officials say they are holding off the russians from advancing in the eastern donetsk region. we'll take you live to the capital, kyiv, with the very latest after a quick break.
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russian forces are continuing missile attacks firing nearly a dozen rockets in the southern town of mykolaiv. so far no casualties have been reported, but ukraine's military says it is making progress after rebuffing russian efforts to advance in the eastern region of donetsk. >> cnn's scott mclean is live in the ukrainian capital of kyiv. good morning, scott. or good afternoon where you are. >> reporter: good morning, yes, it seems like -- that's right. it seems like the most active frontline or one of the most active front lines in this country right now is the southern part of ukraine. and you mentioned those missile strikes just early on this morning in mykolaiv, ten of them in total. some were shot down. but they destroyed two industrial facilities in the industrial part of the city. mykolaiv is used to these kind of missile strikes, these kind of attacks.
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the mayor has said in five months of war they've only had 21 days that have been quiet. 21 days without any kind of bombing. of course the strikes come as over the past couple of weeks the ukrainians have been working hard to retake territory outside mykolaiv and kherson. the ukrainians say russian attempts to use helicopters to attack their positions have not been very effective. as a result they are slowly but surely making progress. they won't say the progress they've made but there have been some signals that suggest they are actually moving forward on the ground. they want to gain a stronger foothold before they announce anything. the ukrainians also seem to be on the offensive in the eastern participate of the country as well where the russians continue to launch missile attacks. they continue to shell the towns and villages in the donetsk region as they try to move past
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toward luhansk. the ukrainians are very keen to show off new western supplied artillery systems and there have been strikes reported in donetsk. the ukrainians say they've been going after ammunition and weapons caches but the russians say these strikes are also killing civilians. the reality, though, any attempts that the russians have had to move the frontline formed the ukrainians say they have been pushing back and so for the moment it seems like the front lines are stuck exactly where they are. kristin? boris? >> scott mclean live in kyiv for us. thank you. president biden is facing growing pressure to slow the surge of migrants at the u.s./mexico border. how the crisis is changing in ways that officials have never even seen before next. bubbles there are bubbles everywhere! as an expedia memberer you earn points on top of your airline mililes. so you can go see even more of all the world's bubbles..
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president biden is facing pressure to slow the surge of migrants at the u.s./mexico border. >> and cnn is learning that these migrants aren't just coming from central america and mexico but from more than 100 different countries, which is unprecedented. cnn's priscilla alvarez takes us to the border. >> reporter: mass migration is landing at the u.s. doorstep. with conditions getting worse in their countries of origin, migrants are arriving in droves, relieved as they cross the border. sometimes the situation at home eliminates any possibilities, she says. in this part of the border, u.s. authorities arrest up to 1,000 migrants daily. the influx is an alarming trend made even more difficult by the nationalities of the people crossing the border. here past midnight in yuma hundreds of migrants have already crossed into the u.s.
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and turned themselves over to border patrol. they come from a range of countries including as far as russia, and they all, after speaking with them, have said the same thing. they are looking for a better life here in the united states. yuma border patrol sector chief described the situation as dynamic. >> we were having countries from mexico, central america, things we could process and take the b biometric data and return them back to mexico. the countries we're receiving now, those nationalities are flying in, arriving at the border and having to be processed. there are just so many of them it is posing a challenge to the workforce. >> reporter: authorities can turn back migrants at the southwest border back to mexico or their home countries under a trump-era pandemic rule known as title 42, but it doesn't apply to everyone. that, coupled with frosty relations with countries like venezuela and cuba keeps the u.s. from removing certain people, meaning they might be released while going through
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immigration proceedings. >> we continue to evolve with technology and resources not only for our agents but the overall mission and the former surveillance systems and then we continue to add to the processing and humane care. wraparound medical services, food contracts to make sure we have plenty of food to be able to take care of those in custody. >> reporter: the pace of people journeying north presents a team challenge for president biden and one he raised with the mexican president this week. >> one of those is migration. mexico has become a top destination of migrants and here is what we will do to address it together. >> reporter: an agreement obtained by cn n shows biden
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faces political pressure from republicans who say he's not doing enough. arizona governor signed legislation to shore up fund for border security and following the example set by texas has sent 25 buss with migrants to washington, d.c. even so people continue to come with hope of a new life on the horizon. the yuma sector chief anticipates they will reach 250,000 arrests and so far this would surpass all of the last fiscal year. priscilla alvarez, cnn, yuma, arizona. priscilla, thank you. we have a quick programming note for you. tonight the cnn original series "patagonia: life on the edge of the world" continues with a look along the coast of patagonia's deep and sheltered fjords. >> carved out by ice these
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nutrient rich watt remembers in high demand from both animals and people. ♪ ♪ >> patagonia is very special because there are secrets hidden there that as a marine biologist is really the dream to unravel. for me it's the most beautiful place on earth. >> reporter: in this remote fjord an amazing discovery. cold water corrals unlike tropical corrals which need sun
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light these depend on plankton for survival. >> you can catch an all new episode tonight at 9:00 right here on cnn. so tiger woods didn't make the cut for sunday at the 150th british open, but the guy once considered to be the next tiger is playing out of his mind. rory mcilroy putting on a show for the ages looking like a two-man race at historic st. andrews. your sports update minutes away. as a business owner, your bottom line is always top of mind. so start saving by switching to the mobile service designed for small business: comcast business mobile. flexible data plans mean you can get unlimited data or pay by the gig. all on the most reliable 5g network with no line activation fees or term contracts... saving you up to $500 a year. and it's only available to comcast business internet customers.
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it is sunday at the british open and it is setting up to be pretty special even without tiger woods, right, boris? >> yeah, carolyn manno joins us now. a two golfer show at st. andrews yesterday, likely similar story today? >> reporter: absolutely. good morning to you beau. you could not ask for better here, the 150th open championship in the home of golf, the old course at st. andrews in scotland, and you have two players with similar games who are at the top of their games right now. so it should be a fantastic day. rory mcilroy was superb yesterday. and here is the proof. out of the bunker on 10, so difficult. and he finds the cup for an eagle. there was a time that a lot of
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people thought rory mcilroy would be the next tiger woods. he had four major wins by the age of 25. that was eight years ago. since then he's had 16 top ten finishes but zero wins. so now looking like he is prime for another chance to capture number five. but right there with him is his third round playing partner viktor hovland, the ninth ranked golfer in the world. this is the first time he's truly been in contention at a major and he matched rory shot for shot. like i said, they have similar games, which makes it so exciting. both tallying a 66 on the day, both 16 under par for the tournament and they will be paired up again today. >> i think it's appreciating the moment as well and appreciating the fact that it's unbelievably cool to have a chance to win the open at st. andrews. it's what dreams are made of and i will try to make a dream come true tomorrow. >> i was thinking what the hell
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am i doing here? >> just to be here is very special but to have a chance to win one, i have to pinch myself. that doesn't mean i'm going to hold back tomorrow. >> in the meantime baseball's best team this season keeps pouring it on. the yankees beat the red sox by 13. matt carpenter continues to be a revelation for the pinstripes. the cardinals let him go after 11 years this off-season. in may he was cut by the rangers without ever playing. in 30 games in the bronx he has 13 home runs. and from the best team on the diamond to the one that is on a tear right now, the mariners pushing their win streak to 13 games. j.p. crawford driving in the game-winning run to beat the rangers in extras. seattle has won 21 of its last 24 catapulting them from a losing record into a wild card spot entering the all-star break. and lastly for you this morning,
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a.j. dillon is ready for training camp. nobody is safe. the 250-pound running back, not even the mascot at a celebrity softball game in kenosha. this is the oklahoma drill. i think somebody might need to get that king fish an ice bath. but it's really hard to believe. nfl teams start reporting to training camp tomorrow. the hall of fame game less than three weeks away. the regular season 53 days away and if that's any indication players are ready to go if they're taking mascots down. >> clearly itching to get back on the field. carolyn manno, thanks so much. the next hour of "new day" starts right now. good morning and welcome to your "new day." i'm boris sanchez. >> and i'm kristin fisher. we are expecting a new report out of uvalde, texas, detailing the failed police response to the gunman storming an elementary school killing nearly two dozen

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