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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  September 9, 2022 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. hello and welcome back. i am becky anderson at buckingham palace for you. it's 6:00 a.m. here in london in a new era in yiddish royal history is now unfolding. with king charles iii to be normally proclaimed the new sovereign in the coming hours.
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on friday gun salutes echoed across the country to mark the death of queen elizabeth ii. she died thursday at the age of 96. on friday the new king briefly greeted mourners outside buckingham palace and then delivered his first address to the nation as monarch. have a listen. >> wherever you may live in the united kingdom or in the realms and territories across the world and whatever may be her background or beliefs, i shall endeavor to serve you with loyalty, respect, and love as i have throughout my life. >> meanwhile, mourners continue
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expressing their condolences throughout the commonwealth with growing volumes of flowers and personal messages. king charles iii may be a grieving son, but is the new british monarch there are duties that he must perform. our correspondent has more now on his first day as sovereign and what lays ahead in the coming hours. >> reporter: a kiss of approval for new king. king charles iii, arriving to applause at buckingham palace. flowers laid feet away just morning his mother queen elizabeth ii. the cheers reassuring for a king who has not always enjoyed the country's full support as prince of wales. commencing his reign, there was no time to show his personal grief. his first act, to greet and reassure his subjects an early hint of his sovereign style.
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>> and wherever you may live in the united kingdom or in the realms and territories across the world and whatever may be your background or beliefs, i shall endeavor to serve you with loyalty, respect, and love at his as i have throughout my life. >> reporter: a new era of the british crown begins as the world grieves the late queen. the first day of royal morning in the uk which will last until seven days after the funeral is one of deep remembrance. the other new leader, british prime minister liz truss just four days into her role met with the new king and led tributes in the house of commons. >> her late majesty, queen elizabeth ii was one of the greatest leaders the world has ever known. she was the rock on which modern britain was built. we need that courage now.
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in an instant yesterday, our lives changed forever. today we show the world that we do not fear what lies ahead. [ music ] >> reporter: liz truss also attended the first service for the british public in london. members of the royal family are back in england to prepare for king charles iii's a session ceremony on saturday. the burden is heavy. king charles iii faces rising republicanism, the task of consolidating the monarchy in the modern age and carving his own identity in the long shadow of his much beloved mother. cnn, london. >> cnn's nate robertson is that balmoral castle in scotland where the queen died peacefully on thursday. an awful lot of what could be
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described as pomp and circumstance i guess in the days to come following the death of queen elizabeth ii . as one newspaper headlines it today with an oath and a declaration at an ancient summit, charles will officially become king. just explain what we can expect next. >> reporter: there's a lot of if you will pomp and circumstance as you say, the firing of guns today as a salute to the queen happening in sort of all four corners of the kingdom, cardiff castle in wales and other castles. also high park in london. there is as well the constitutional buttoning up of the monarchy. king charles became king charles as soon as she died but today is the a session counsel that will meet to formally approve, appoint, anoint king charles as king charles and
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then an official proclamation, a verbal proclamation is made very much in keeping with history. something a formula of words that has been passed down for generations upon generations of monarchs. so that is a sort of constitutional buttoning up but the constitutional buttoning up as well in the monarchs relation with the church of england, he will be meeting with the art archbishop of canterbury today. these are all things that put in place the connections as he did yesterday meeting with the prime minister liz truss. the connections of the way the monarch connections with the realm. a lot of this to come as you say. of the funeral we know will
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be within the next 10 to 14 days. the details aren't recently having been made public yet. we do know know that joe biden the u.s. president will be attending he said as much yesterday. do you expect this to be a an event which will see people, leaders from around the world coming here to the uk to pay their respects? >> reporter: i think absolutely. those countries that have had long and historic questions with the united kingdom, the united states of course breaking a wave several centuries ago but those parts of the commonwealth we will expect to see their leaders here . australia and new zealand, canada. the european countries that have so much been in
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partnership with the united kingdom in that era that where the queen was monarch the post- world war ii era the sort of rebuilding of europe after the terrible world wars so those leaders i think will see here of course there are contentions and tensions released with russia and also china not clear and certainly no one would expect vladimir putin to show up at a funeral and it would seem, that's off the table. will the chinese send a representative certainly we heard warm words from president she about the queen and the queen was the first reddish monarch to visit china and that was back in 1986. these historic connections that she has with these different nations were in the queen visited as head of state over 100 different countries during her reign so many connections, so absolutely yes, this will
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perhaps it be a gathering of leaders the like of which we really haven't seen in many generations. she hosted here 112 different state visits. so the depth and strength of global connections exists and will be replicated to a large degree i think we can expect in who comes to the funeral. >> robinson is in balmoral castle in scotland. you, nick. all the grief and sorrow felt difficult by britain, many are leaving pictures and notes and flowers as they pay their last respects to the queen and looking ahead to what kind of leader king charles iii may become. >> i think stepping into the shoes of such a legacy will be incredibly difficult.
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he very clearly wants to be his own person and i think we need to give them the opportunity to do that as well because it's very easy for us to very quickly judge but actually just like anyone need to give him our time and support. >> many people have coming here to buckingham palace behind me to pay their respects. our correspondent is covering this as dawn breaks and warms up a little. it has been a bit chilly. we would expect to see people gather once again today. huge crowds here yesterday paying their respects. what will people think? >> we sought crowds streaming in from all directions once again to stand outside the gates of buckingham palace leaving flowers and letters and notes in memory of the queen. many people sharing their sadness and so it was the passing of someone who has been a symbol of continuity and stability. for many it was the only one they have ever seen on the throne here in the kingdom so it is a significant moment for
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so many sort of families coming with their children to mark the occasion, the historic occasion because this was the moment that they saw now king charles iii arriving back at buckingham palace for the first time. that was quite a poignant moment in itself. we saw queen charles and his queen concert camilla. the crowd gathered to welcome. we heard people chanting long live the king and it was quite a moment because there have been conversations around how now he would be received when his time came to ascend to the throne whether he would be seen as welcome or as warmly as his mother, late queen elizabeth ii so we did see that for the king and his queen concert yesterday and it really is a significant
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moment for him. >> now the hard work begins of course in the next stage which is what is his role going forward? how does he carve out a role in what is this new era? is it clear at this point how he is thinking? >> we did get a sense of how he does see his role going forward in his speech yesterday it was his first address to the nation as king charles iii and he gave that address from buckingham palace and he actually knowledge that his position will now change within the royal family. he has in the past taken a bit more of a activist role and that has seen him face some criticism in the past because the queen and members of the royal family are remembered to be apolitical and he took a stance on matters that may not they have been openly about in the past such as climate change, champing in the environment and other causes including agriculture and he has faced criticism for that in the past but he knows that his
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role will have to change and that he will be able to dedicate as much time into the causes that he is so passionate about but he said that these will be placed in the hands of people who could continue to deliver on those causes and of course as a sovereign that role will change but he also which i think is quite interesting noted that he is coming to a throne at a time of the country is in a very different state when it was when the queen first ascended the throne. he reiterated and reaffirmed the value that she gave to protect the country for the rest of his life he also noted that this is a country that encompasses many different backgrounds and faiths and while he committed to his duty as a branch of the church of england he noted that he will serve morally and with love to all of those from all different backgrounds and i think that is key because of course the royal family as a whole now is trying to carve out a space in a time when they are trying to modernize, they are trying to adapt and evolve with how society has evolved. scenic and the counter criticism, that the monarchy is sickly simply --.
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we will talk more about that in the days to come. thank you very much. nana basher with me outside buckingham palace. as the lights of the sunrise. i'm not sure the sun will rise necessarily in the next couple of hours because it's rather cloudy here but it is a lovely morning and buckingham palace there behind us. as many people around the world mourning the death of britain's queen elizabeth, but on the african continent feelings about the queen and the monarchy are much more implicated. ahead, the troublesome past that clouds the queen's legacy there. this is the planning effect. if rayna's thinking about retirement, she'll get some help from f fidelity to envision what's possible. fidelity can help her prioritize herer goals
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and supporters welcomed the king and one the loss of his mother and others have a more complicated view of the british monarchy. we have a correspondent in delhi and will most common role nations are officially morning the king many residents have a different perspective. not least many in india, a different perspective on her legacy. explain if you will. >> a combination of reasons for this. the first i would say is the disconnect because if you actually look at india's population over 50% of india's population are of people under the age of 30 and they don't rather connect or relate to william or harry then queen elizabeth ii and in this case becky, queen elizabeth ii, the last visit to india was 25 years back in 1997 so i would
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say the young population does file disconnect with the queen. another very important reason was the social and economic realities of india. over 60% of india's population lives in rural india. a lot of these people wouldn't even know who queen elizabeth ii was. they would be unaware of this fact and the third reason is this. >> she has so much power. she could have brought so many changes. correct the mistakes that the people before her did. but she did nothing about it. >> the historical blunders of the past. the british ruling there for 200 years and the 75th anniversary of india's independence of the bloody partition about 500 -- and chilean people lost their lives. historians, indians, politicians who blamed the british this for.
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as we know mountbatten was a second cousin of queen elizabeth ii so i say it has been a muted response despite india being the biggest colony of the british in terms of the past and the response has been muted when compared to australia or the other commonwealth nations. >> our correspondent is in new delhi. thank you. >> the royal family's relationship with africa is complicated to say the least. on the one hand there is a history of british colonial rule which often left a legacy of segregation and economic ruin on the other hand, royal family members had personal ties to the continent where they remained well-known and often times while loved figures. correspondent has reactions to
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the queen's passing. >> good evening. we interrupt the viewing from the events in parliament to bring you this breaking news tonight and that is of the death of queen elizabeth ii . >> the news of the queen's death reverberated across the african continent. >> is quite bad, but we are just saying that we are grateful that she has been on the throne for so long and she did whatever she had to do and we will just celebrate her life. >> the reign of queen elizabeth ii began in africa more than 70 years ago. on a visit to kenya she found out that her father, king george, had died. she was staying at the famous treetops hotel. it is said that she climbed up a tree, a princess and came down the queen. over the years elizabeth connection with the african continent was heightened by her involvement in the commonwealth . a group of nations largely made up of former british
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colonies. of the 56 members of the commonwealth 21 are african states including kenya, south africa, and nigeria. >> i felt sad because the gross of the situation whatever surrounds it she is still the head of the commonwealth which we belong to which has given us about. >> i feel like she's my mother or my grandmother. that's how i feel. >> many african leaders were quick to offer their condolences . the president of ghana announcing flags lowered to half staff for seven days. and nigerian president wrote on twitter about his immense sadness at the passing of the queen. but bihari and others who have praised the queen have faced public backlash. some africans argue the passing of the queen reminds them of the ugly business of colonialism and slavery. though the queen eventually helped usher independence to britain's african colonies she
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also presided over sometimes brutal repression during the early years of her reign. she never apologized for colonial crackdowns and the british government has not entertained demands for slavery reparations. >> the queen lived like she was never going to die. i never knew any other ruler last that long. so for this now to have happen, well, everyone has an end. >> the story of britain's african history now passes to the new king. a history filled with pride and pain. and africa ways to see what the chapter on charles iii will look like. cnn. >> people in the united kingdom and saying their goodbyes to the only monarch most have ever known. when we returned we will talk to ordinary britons and find out how they are remembering their beloved symbol of everything that is british.
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welcome back, i am becky anderson for you in london. king charles iii became the british monarch, the moment queen elizabeth passed away but he will be formerly named or proclaimed as sovereign in a ceremony in the coming hours at st. james's palace. on friday the gates of
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buckingham palace were covered in flowers left by mourners. king charles spent some time viewing the tributes since speaking with well-wishers gathered outside and he also delivered his first address as king and in it the longest serving heir apparent thanked his mother for her many years of service. >> and to my darling mama, you begin your last great journey to join my dear late papa i will simply to say this, thank you. >> the grief for many people in the uk has been somewhat overwhelming as they say goodbye to a monarch who has been a steadfast symbol of this country for decades. cnn's matthew chance takes a look at how britain's are reacting. >> it was a day of grief that
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these mourners started the day without their beloved queen. you see flowers outside buckingham palace. the affection and respect she inspired in people's hearts. >> she has just been a part of all of our lives. she has just and that constant strength. and a rock really throughout any bad times throughout our lives. >> for most here queen elizabeth was the only monarch they have ever known. some even comparing her death to losing a member of their own family. >> we can see there is this enormous outpouring of grief, sadness, i think overwhelming respect from people in britain towards queen elizabeth now that she has passed and the gates of buckingham palace are actually throng with thousands of people coming to lay flowers. outside the gates of buckingham
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palace and laying messages as well like this one that says thank you for all your have done for the people of the world and may he rest in peace. >> indeed a queen of many countries. the monarchy ruled over 50 nations as well as britain and touched the hearts of the millions of people who respected her. the same people now warning her loss across the globe. this was also a date of renew to celebrate a new sovereign. it was an apprehensive king charles iii who met his new suspect subjects for the first time as their monarch. and his welcome was encouraging and warm. he received an out of her to call kids from a member of the public. a memorable moment indeed as he became king. the succession may be automatic in britain's system of monarchy but what is not automatic is the transfer of respect his mother enjoyed as the head of state.
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king charles iii will have to work to achieve the same places his mother had in the hearts and minds of the british public. >> sorry, that has really got to me. i will never sing god save the queen again. she has just meant so much to this entire country for so long it's like the tectonic plates of our society have shifted and they will never be the same. never. >> from now on it's god save the king and for younger generation charles iii will have to become their symbol of the british crown. matthew chance, cnn, london. >> shoreline is a senior lecturer in history at the university and joins me now live from cambridge in england and it's good to have you with us. the events over the next 10 days also will be unfamiliar to
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all but a very very few royal watchers just explain the significance of what we are about to witness. >> we are going through two phases i suppose. first of all you have the period of mourning where the focus is on delete queen, so we haven't yet heard exactly when the funeral will be what we are expecting it to be in just over a week's time or so and then you think ahead towards the coronation of the new king so it is in those two phases and as you rightly say you have to go back to 1952 and 1953 four the previous example of this and there are relatively few people who can get there and think back that far so it's going to be quite a, not bewildering exactly but i think a lot of people will be feeling their way and looking back for president but it's also important not simply to follow the way things were done last time. so the funeral and actually the
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royal family has shown themselves good at shaping funerals. if you think the obvious one which has been in the memories have been triggered by the scenes of buckingham palace was a course buckingham palace funeral outlooks tradition was in fact sort of put together and pretty much at the last moment and certainly put together in a very very quick way because of the circumstances and the other one was prince philip. only last year. where again because of the covid regulations again things had to be somewhat improvised and certainly change so i think the queen's funeral will certainly be put together not simply following precedent and protocol but to reflect the mood and to reflect the very deep affection and you have been hearing in that package that people have for her. >> before that of course the proclamation of the ascension to the throne of king charles iii, that happened at st. james is alice which is just weird to say just a couple of palaces
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down from where i sit here outside buckingham palace and that will be unfamiliar even to those who are taking part of it and there is a new president of the privy council for example who only a couple of weeks ago was actually in the race to be prime minister here so we will watch for that and our viewers will see that here on cnn in the hours to come and there will be people who are listening to us speaking today who consider the monarchy an and aqua stick. is there value as one commentator argues today in the daily telegraph newspaper in having one sort of institution that transcends the divisions that have and frankly do continue to consume britain? >> yes i know the argument you are talking about but actually if you sort of think about it
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more deeply, monarchy is absolutely everywhere. you have the former monarchies like the british one we also have other forms of government were all powers placed in one person. that's a monarchy but it's not called one. you think of countries like russia and china where effectively you have a monarchy. you have other countries were at effectively dynastic, north korea comes to minor haiti and monarchy comes in many different shapes and forms but the constitutional monarchy are so limited and effectively in britain it's a monarchy yes but it's a sort of republic really in republic reality so when you say is an anachronism is only an anachronism if people don't want it and all the signs are that there is a huge level of support for the continuation of the monarchy but if that were to change and prince philip would say something along the lines of we will keep going as
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long as the people want us to and then he likens the paradox but also explains the reaction that we have had. this is a democratic monarchy in a very much reflects the wishes of the people but the wishes change that either the monarchy itself it's will change but as it stands it's a very strong wave of public support for it. >> you could certainly argue that the queen put to rest the argument for republicanism at least the political argument for republicanism and made that redundant during her reign over the last 70 years in the uk. perhaps that political argument continues. sean, in queue, sean is in cambridge in england and we will have more from london in a few moments. first let's bring in michael holmes who is at a cnn center in atlanta. michael?
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>> thank you, becky. we will check in with you in a few more minutes. will take a break and when we come back unprecedented monsoon rains have left a third of pakistan underwater forcing thousands to leave everything behind and we will have this story when we come back.
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and includes strict audits that ensure funds go directly to people off the streets and into there's only one choice. yes on 27. the u.s. justice department and former president trump legal team have adjusted a proposal to a federal judge about who should serve as the special master in the investigation into documents seized at trumps of florida state. as you might expect both sides are pretty far apart on what they are proposing. the doj says the special master should not review classified documents and of the trump team says a special master should review all the seas material. the doj says the former president should pay the expenses and the trump team because they should be split.
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the doj says the review should end by october 17th and trump says reviews should be given 90 days to complete its job. ukrainian troops pushing back against russian forces in the north east of the country and elsewhere as well and this is an image of ukrainian shoulders closing in on a key town in the car key region. they have recaptured an estimated 1000 square kilometers there in recent days and a pro-russian social media site says civilians at least two towns are now being evacuated as ukrainian troops get ever closer. president zelensky says the ukrainian counter offense is slow but it is steady. we are gradually taking control of the new settlements.
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we are returned to ukraine flag and protection for our citizens everywhere. ukraine also said there has been an increase in desertions among russian troops in the region. while there is no rain in the forecast for much of pakistan in the next several days but that is a small measure of release that's a country that has been battered by monsoon rains. cnn's -- reports where thousands of people had to leave everything behind. the city of sawant had been something of a sanctuary for some of the more than 6 million people displaced by the floods in this region. now, the main highway has become a waterway. smaller boats into the city are choked with traffic. can see there's just a steady stream of vehicles pouring into
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this area. there's are all people who are desperately trying to escape their villages which are now completely submerged under water. >> pakistan is responsible for less than 1% of the worlds omissions, but it is paying a stiff price for global warming. have a monsoon rains and melting glaciers have left nearly a third of this country underwater. this wiped out villages like feta. when the floods hit residents carried whatever they could save to a narrow strip of land by the roadside. >> this is how you are living now. >> she has been living in a makeshift shelter for over a week. there is no gas to cook what little food they have left outside aid has yet to arrive and the prospects of returning home anytime soon our . it's very painful to see but where can we go, he says.
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this is my ancestral village. >> a few miles down the road locals are racing to stay ahead of the relentless waters. the government left them to make sandbags but little other assistance overstretch by the unprecedented scale of the crisis. just so i understand you are building up these to try and stop that water from completely destroying your village? >> there is too much water coming in and we are afraid of it. >> are you sharing how deep it is? one man plunges into the floodwater to show how high the waters are. the flooding here has now reached its cruelest phase. the day no longer brings rain but nor do they bring relief. and for the many who have lost everything there is nothing to do but wait
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now in the u.s. flood warnings are in effect for parts of southern california including riverside and san diego county's. authorities say "life-threatening flash flooding of creeks and urban areas as possible. it is due to what used to be tropical storm k now weekend and started to pull away from the northern baja peninsula. close to five inches with rain have been reported in locations and more is on the way. and in our coverage of the new era in the british monarchy continues in a moment with becky anderson in london as of some celebrated reddish subjects pay tribute to the queen. and big bets on environmentally conscious s construction. cititi has committed 1 trillion dollars in sustainable financing to help build a better future. because to reach net zero, it's going to take everything.
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with leqvio, john can lower his cholesterol— and so can you. when taken with a statin, leqvio is proven to lower bad cholesterol by over 50% and keep it low with two doses a year. common side effects of leqvio were injection site reaction, joint pain, urinary tract infection, diarrhea, chest cold, pain in legs or arms, and shortness of breath. with leqvio, lowering cholesterol becomes just one more thing life throws your way. ask your doctor if leqvio is right for you. lower. longer. leqvio. we were told, super young, that you have to be tough, you have to be macho in a male perspective. you feel like, you know, you're not able to open up and, you know, be vulnerable with your feelings, you know what i mean. you have this idea of this machismo, right? like that you have to always be the toughest, the strongest. for me as a man, it's about opening up. not feeling too macho to tell someone how you're feeling when you're feeling down.
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opening up your heart and sharing with other people the way that you're feeling. i have a twin sister who, when i'm sad, i call her and talk to her and we normally have the same feelings. i face time, my grandchildren. that always seems to kind of give me a boost, even when you're having your darkest moments. kicking the stigma means talking about it. it's something that a lot of people go through. it's normal. nothing's wrong with you. and in fact, come join us because we all feel this way. it's okay to feel not okay. kicking the stigma. bath fitter doesn't just fit your bath. we fit your life. when you're tired of looking at your tired old bath, we fit your style, with hundreds of design options. when a normal day is anything but normal, we fit your schedule, with our unique tub over tub process, installed in as little as a day. when high quality is the only quality that matters, we fit your standards, with a lifetime guarantee.
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becky anderson outside of buckingham palace. expressions of grief and gratitude for a life dedicated to service. people continue to leave flowers, notes, and photographs in london -- and around the world. paying final respects to the late queen elizabeth. former prime minister, tony blair, told cnn "king charles iii will serve the uk like his mother, queen elizabeth did. he is a committed and caring person." blair spoke with us about his memories of the queen. >> i remember when i was just a child and i was brought up in the north of england and she visited the city. member watching her being driven through the streets. of course, the next time i was anywhere close to her was when i became prime minister. we used to have a weekly audience. she was immensely gracious and kind, sympathetic.
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would have good discussions. she was one person in whom you could have complete confidence. you could say whatever you needed, ask whatever you wanted. the thing about her that i think is the most important thing in understanding the intensity of grief in our country is that she was somebody who, during a period of extraordinary change -- you think back to the early 1950s, her coronation and forward to today. during that process of change, she managed to blend the tradition that she represented with the modernizing that was all around her. that is an enormous skill. she was someone who wasn't just there and respected because of
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her longevity. also because of what she represented. because of this character that she had. this huge attachment to duty and decency and dignity. >> tony blair speaking to chris young. tributes and farewells pouring in from celebrities around the world. among them, daniel craig. as james bond, faked jumping from a helicopter alongside the queen for the 2012 london olympics. he called the queen's legacy, incomparable. he said, she will be profoundly missed. and helen mirren, who won an oscar for pretraining queen elizabeth said "we mourn the women, who with or without the crown will see the epitome of nobility. ♪ ♪ >> t? >> oh, yes please.
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>> even pennington bear, who recently visited buckingham palace for tea with the queen, tweeted out, thank you for everything. i'm becky anderson. our live coverage, here come outside of buckingham palace continues after this short break. don'n't go away. ♪ ♪ rk to deliver your cacar as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing, with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer, because our customers love it. see for yourself at carvana.com
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your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire a is for awareness, because knowing that your chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes could progress to dialysis is important. b is for belief that there may be more you can do. just remember that k is for kidneys and kerendia. for adults living with ckd in type 2 diabetes, kerendia is proven to reduce the risk of kidney failure, which can lead to dialysis. kerendia is a once-daily tablet that treats ckd differently than type 2 diabetes medications
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to help slow the progression of kidney damage and reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, such as heart attacks. do not take kerendia if you have problems with your adrenal glands or take certain medications called cyp3a4 inhibitors. kerendia can cause hyperkalemia, which is high potassium levels in your blood. ask your doctor before taking products containing potassium. kerendia can also cause low blood pressure and low sodium levels. so now that you know your abcs, remember, k is for kidneys, and if you need help slowing kidney damage, ask your doctor about kerendia. bubbles bubbles bubbles bubbles there are bubbles everywhere! as an expedia member you earn points on top of your airline miles. so you can go see even more of all the world's bubbles.
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every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo:
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privacy, simplified. >> closed captioning brought to by flex seal. ♪ a good morning from just outside of buckingham palace, in london. i'm becky anderson. it is 7:00 a.m., here. in the coming hours, king charle

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