tv New Day Weekend CNN September 10, 2022 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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privy council and representatives of the realms and territories, aldermen and citizens of london and others do now hereby with one voice and consent of tongue and heart publish and proclaim that the prince charles philip arthur george is now by the death of our late sovereign of happy memory become our only lawful and rightfully leige lord, charles iii. by the grace of god, of united kingdom and great britain and northern ireland and other remember. s and territories, king of the commonwealth deerks fender of the faith. do with humble oh bead dense and humble affection beseeching god by whom kings and queens do reign to bless his majesty with long and happy years to reign
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>> three cheers for his majesty the king. hip hip. >> hooray. >> hip hip. >> hooray. >> hip hip. >> hooray! [ cheers and applause ] >> and that is the second proclamation now being read, and you saw the trumpeters. that's at the royal exchange in london. the first was at st. james palace this morning. and so there it is. and now we have more to come. >> you see, don, you got yourself around all these -- >> constitutional experts. >> absolutely. >> there will be some chants of "god save the king." this now moves around the nation, so edinburgh, cardiff,
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and elsewhere. the proclamation is being sent around to ambassadors and anyone, high lieutenants, lord lieutenants. >> it will be sent to realms and red to parliaments around the world. governor generals will read it, and this is the transfer of sovereignty. >> but the same proclamation read at every point. >> what we heard an hour ago at sir james palace, what they all went through, that they all then signed is now being transmitted to the different venues to as max put it, you know, to tell them there's a new king. they're not approving anything. they're not agreeing to anything. they're being told this has happened by the people who made it happen. >> noblemen would traditionally do it. they're showing that the guy in charge in oyour area is
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supporting the king by reading it out. >> as i was so educated yesterday by max foster. st. james is the american version. but the british version is sir james. >> st. paul. >> what is it? >> it's st. paul rather than sst. paul. >> we take it as the aabbreviation. >> st. james, st. paul. >> there's not an air of levity. >> gravity? >> gravity and expectation because this is a new era. that's something someone has to understand, yet the funeral will be sad, somber, and all of this, but this is about the future. this southbound what will charles be like, what will the country be like, how will the
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issues of republicanism be done amongst the various realms, so very much forward looking what we're seeing today, the new monarch prince -- you can still call him prince william because he's prince william of wales. >> so when he got called on the death of the queen, that was automatic and senior to cambridge. duke of the commonwealth of cambridge. >> remember we never used to use duke of cambridge. >> you're being very traditional. >> camilla never took princess of wales. >> it hasn't really been used. >> we got used to the idea the prince of wales and the duchess of cornwall. now it's kate.
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katherine. it will be prince william prince of wales, katherine, princess of wales. >> taking on that title, that's a real responsibility considering. >> i spoke to someone about that close to kate. she said she's aware of it, but she's going to try to make it her own. >> what do you think that means? >> i think it means don't expect me to be diana. >> what did you think of meghan and harry's children now with titles. >> don't go there. >> you keep going there. >> okay. so my understanding is that lilibet and archie automatically become prince and princess because their grandfather is king. it's unclear whether or not that's correct or whether they're going to use it and this is because of the oprah
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interview where meghan suggested that the family were changing the rules to mean that archie wouldn't have a title. >> so that will be huge if they do bearing in mind. >> let me ask you, not to be inappropriate. i think it's an important question. this moment that is happening as you've been saying, prince william and king charles, as they met, the two houses so to speak, they've been working together. is this sort of the moment that they're going to look at the palace of windsor or something that propels them into the future as a more modern monarchy? >> i think it was the sussex crisis that brought them together. i had to respond to thinks, so they came together to get advice from the queen. the queen good the final sign-off. my impression is nothing got
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signed off unless all three signs off. it's a different world, different households. you know, at the moment, you have the -- you did have the queen's household, bubbing ham palace, charles and camilla, william and katherine. and they appoint their private secretaries and there's a whole tranche underneath that. the structures beneath them are independent, ings tintentioned to be billed. particularly if one wants to do an engagement of a particular day and somebody else has something else to do, that's where the tension comes if there. there's a built-in tension. >> you called it feudalism. >> you have the princes and princesses yochl view the seniors, the private secretaries, ujds secretaries, the treasurers, and the krucruc
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part about those, they're power brokers. they're aiming for power. which household are you with, and are you up or down in the power structure of the royal family, and it can become bitter and quite vile. >> it's happened. di in diana's day, they completely broke down. what happens now, the queen is gone and harry's gone, so you've gone from four households to two, so hopefully they find it easier to coordinate. >> when diana passed, that was a whole -- the royal family realized they needed to pivot, come into the future. there was obviously some explaining to do as well, what took them so long to put the flags at half-staff. >> notice how the queen did it,
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ev even to the point -- i was there. i was standing ontown streets at the time of the funeral. she came outside the gates, she stood outside, diana's coffin came by, and she bowed her head. she gave that speech up at the window at buckingham palace. she says, what say to you today is as your queen and as a grand mother. it's groundbreaking stuff. >> as we talk about the phoenix real, that wasn't a funeral. that was something they created for her. haven't had a state funeral. the last one would have been mountbatten. >> yeah. i can't imagine what it would look like. >> i think the week when it happened, the moment it happened, i believe the family -- correct me if i'm wrong -- were they at balmoral when it happened? >> yeah. >> they stayed for a week. the flags had not been lowered. i remember prince william and the queen coming back to buckingham palace, the car stopped in front of the gates, the queen got out, and i think both of them were surprised by
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the number of people who were here at buckingham palace and the flowers. i think they were surprised. she addressed the crowd a bit, looked around, nodded her head, and walked into those gates. and i think they realized, oh, something needs to change >> i spoke with the private secretary who informed the queen, charlesing and the boys that their mother, that diana had died, and his thought was she was head of state, but she prioritized the boys and the family, and the backlash from that, you know, was polling numbers sinking and the modern monarchy falling to its lowest points a we know. it's not that she made a decision to do that. call it a mistake in the sense that she shouldn't prioritize, and we would expect her to prioritize the public.
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i think the jury's out on that. i think she was aware of what she was doing. and also tony blair was giving her so much grief on coming down, and she didn't want to be told what to do. >> and here we are, more than two decades past, and so we're in this moment now, and we have a new king, and we have a queen who had reigned for 70 years now passed. >> and we're still using muskets. >> and we're still using muskets at buckingham palace where people have been camped out, waiting to see the new king, and we may get a glimpse of the new king shortly. >> it's a reminder how far this goes back and how ingrained it is in our psyche. >> what a beautiful confluence between this very traditional, ancient things that we're seeing today, that a king who is absolutely, don, at the forefront of modern thinking on
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things like the environmental a and climate change. >> we've had this discussion yesterday, max, with christiane amanpour, also when it comes to race and ethnicity and inclusion and diversity. >> it's a priority for him. as they were meeting t whole meeting was a buildup to his speech where he expressed sorrow for slavery. he had done it previously in barbados, and prince william has spoken about it as well. this is going to be, i think, one of his -- it could be a defining -- he could use to choose that as a defining element of his kingship where he accepts -- there's the king. >> they turned right, so they could be coming past us any time now. we will see the king coming down behind us, i believe. >> we can hear the crowd in the distance roaring, so they're
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getting closer to buckingham palace. >> this is the king preparing for his buckingham palace audience today. >> he'll be to our right just behind us in moments, but you're looking at pictures now of the new king. >> bigger crowds. it will be interesting to see what the reception will be and how he feels about that. >> the crowd is excited about that. >> this is the most important moment today for the crowd. the most important moment was obviously the signing of the proclamation. >> the car has the royal standard on the roof. >> meaning? >> it's the monarch. i mean, he's not only using the -- >> there it is. >> there it is, just over our shoulder.
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>> king charles iii returning to the buckingham palace with a series of audiences, the government, seniors at the church as he gets to know the job, the longest of any heir to the throne. he's had time to get ready. one of the key differences between he and his mother, she didn't have any apprenticeship at all. she had to learn on the job. >> what does this mean for the people in the car. >> i don't think they know what they're feeling. they're confused by the death of the queen. they're sort of wondering what happens next. they come down here to try to be a part of it and try to understand it. >> a great tweet said, i'm feeling something, but i don't know what it is. >> i think a lot of people feel that way. >> you're expression what i said earlier when i said, i don't want to read anything into this, but this somehow feels --
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because there are two things happening here, right? it's a funeral, it's a death, but we have a new king. so that's the sentiment i was trying to portray. >> absolutely. i don't know whether they should be excited about him. >> that's the whole point. this juxtaposition between the somber and sad of saying good-bye to the previous and the excitement and intrigue for what will come with the new reign. remember, when elizabeth took over, there was a new eliz elizabethen reign. >> she was young and burl and an excitement as well. >> there's a new issue weather t -- >> most people his age are retired obviously, and he just got his job. >> he said yesterday he plans to do it as long as god will keep him on this earth, which means there's no abdication. as long as he's alive, william
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will be -- >> one last question. will he skip -- can he skip charles to william? neither of them want that, so no. >> it might be inopportune and inappropriate to talk about today, but how he decides how long he decides. had a very good life before. he loves his wife and home at high grove and all the causes. so does he do t10, 15 years as modern monarch will. >> let's not get ahead of ourselves and remain in the moment. this is important to the people of the country and the people standing here and really for the folks of the commonwealth. the folks want to get a glimpse. i think this is an indicator of -- that they have this sort of anticipation of what it's going to be hoping he becomes -- that he leans into the job, that he grows into the job, and he becomes the king that they want,
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the king in a modern era. >> i think there's an argument to be said that he is -- young people can relate to him because the issues that he cares about, young people also care about. can he connect with them through that, that would be really important because younger people matter more than older people arguably because they're the ones that define the tone of the nation. you can't change the mind of a lot of people who are anti-charles in his early days, anti-camilla because of the affair. but you can convince younger people you're a good guy, and that's what he should do. >> that was the thrust of the conversation i was having when we talked about diversity and race, and also, richard, when i asked you the whole idea of being political and climate change, i don't think young people see this as a political issue. they see it as necessary. this king will have to take on those issues. >> he will take on those issues and he's not going to shift his position on them, but he's not going to be able to come out and say the sort of things he's done
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with regard to climate change because what -- let's just say the government doesn't agree with a particular limit that's been agreed on or whatever at some international conference. he's going to have to back the government. he can't come out and say i don't agree. >> does he have to? >> yes. >> you said there's been intention between the prime minister and he before. why can't there be -- >> there will be and it exclusively blows up and when it blows up, the person usually loses, ultimately the monarch. >> i think the problem with thatcher is show thought a lot of things were a waste of time. >> there was the apartheid and sanctions in south africa. there was the counsel tax, and the monarch strike. there were a lot of issues between her and the monarch. we know at one point she made
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thatcher stand in front of the audience. >> two proclamations today. the people outside of buckingham palace got what they wanted, a glimpse of the king. will there be more to come? we'll see. stay with us.. ♪ this... is the planning effect. this is how it feels to know you have a wealth pl that covers everything that's imptant to you. this is what it's ke to have a dedicated fidelity advisor looking at your full financial picture.
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try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health. versus 16 grams in ensure high protein. boost® high protein also has key nutrients for immune support. boost® high protein. we're following the pomp and pageantry of king charles. all of this is happening as the uk is looking to begin a new era with king charles iii. joining us now is the author of "elizabeth the queen." sally, thanks so much for joining us. >> you're welcome. good morning. >> good morning to you. the significance of what we're seeing really cannot be overrated. your thoughts watching this all
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play out. >> well, it's such a traditional ceremony and series of ceremonies really. i couldn't help but they back to the history and when the now late queen had her own council. first of all, they were all men in the room and she was in a very emotional state. she had arrived home from kenya. the duke of edinburgh met her. they had been greeted by prime minister winston churchill and others and two days later she had her succession council and they did the proclamation. she mostly wanted to see her late father, so she and the duke of edinburgh almost immediately
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went. we didn't see any of this. it was february, very cold. all the soldiers were wearing gray gray coats, and going further back to her own father e's eck session and probclamation, she was in bed and couldn't be there. little elizabeth and her sister margaret and her father king george vi and queen mary, their grandmother, 84-year-old grandmother, they all watched from across the way and then going back even further 11
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months earlier, the controversial king edward viii was seen through a window watching the proclamation with his notorious mistress, and a few people in the crowd below said this is not -- this is an development. people began to talk. little did they know that particular king would abdicate in shame. so, you know, in the recent history of this, really, impressive and beautiful ceremony had some rather dark overtones, and so i think it's worth noting the queen who just died, she was actually -- after
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she read her oath and the duke of edinburg led her out, she was in tears. so it was a highly emotional moment for her. she had obviously not been with her father when he died in the middle of the night. she arrived home in the middle of the night. all of this took place on the following day. she was mostly interested in getting back to norfolk. >> yeah. listen. always drama when it comes to the royal family, as i said last night to one of my colleagues here on cnn, that america didn't really, you know, have the mark -- or we weren't the only place where there's reality tv drama playing out. i think the royal family is the
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first reality tv that we saw happening, especially when you look at the diana era. but you're taking us back into history here. the first time we're looking inside st. james's palace and looking at my colleagues as max foster and richard quest pointed out, you don't often get to see that particular throne. it hasn't really been in the spotlight since queen elizabeth was crowned. this is the first time all of this is being televised. how has this opened up the monarchy to an entirely new generation of people. >> i think it was very important to televise it. as you say, the technology didn't really exist, but, you know, it is a very vital part of the early days of the new monarch, and i think it was -- it was fascinating to see what has always been done behind closed doors, you know. there were images of -- i mean
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not images, but, you know, there was reality that the new queen had been weeping, and there was the reality that when her father did the excession ceremony, he looked stricken. he was pale, he was drawn. he was -- he was shocked by what has just happened. his older brother had been abdicated. he had the weight of responsibility thrown on his shoulders. that had never been seen by the pu public, but they were exceedingly dramatic. >> as king charles iii takes his place on the throne, what do you think he does to set the tone of his reign and really make his own legacy? >> i think what we're seeing now is an image of dignity,
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appropriate solemnity. this is really his day, but it's not a day that he would be expected to celebrate. i think it was important as had been the case with his mother when the duke of edinburgh was there to have camilla there, the new queen, to have the prince of wales right there. i think the emphasis there was on continuity. he is -- william is the next king, and i think you're going to see, you know, a great deal of emphasis on his role. so i think it remains to be seen how charles marks out his role, but he's adhering on this day and in the days to come, you know, to a great deal of
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tradition that's ingrained and intwined in the whole principle and of the monarchy. >> yeah. king charles iii talked about and thanked his mother queen elizabeth for preparing him for this role. listen, all of the hours are sort of melding together here. nighttime sure if i spoke to you about this yesterday, sally, so forgive me. >> you may have. >> what stood out to you as you have been watching him, you know, make his announcement yesterday and just over the past couple of days? what stood out to you? >> well, i think his speech yesterday really hit all the right notes. he paid emotional tribute to his moe mother. people who saw him make speeches before, knew he would perform very well.
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he knows how to give a dramatic speech, which is not to say it was insincere in any way. he was clearly feeling a lot of emotion at the loss of his mother. he later told liz truss that it was a day he had been dreading. you know, we saw in him -- we saw a willingness to show his emotions. we know that when his mother -- you know, when his mother took over, she felt emotions, and people around her saw them. but in this case, the whole world saw him in a really emotional state. >> sally bedell smith, as always, thank you very much. we'll be seeing you in the coming days on cnn. we really appreciate it. we'll be right back. >> you're welcome. my pleasure. ues of a wandering mind. conflict and climate change. a new black dream.
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back. we've been following all of the developments out of the uk as prince charles becomes the new king of the monarch. >> we also want to get you caught up on stories here at home. lawyers for former president trump are facing off again. there are odds over who's going to conduct the third-party review of the documents seized from the mar-a-lago estate. >> each side has submied two names of possible special masters. the two legal teams are at odds over how the review process will unfold. details from cnn's justice correspondent evan perez. >> reporter: the justice department and donald trump's lawyers provided dueling proposals to the federal judge outlining a third-party review of more than 1,100 pages of
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documents seized from the fbi search of the trump home last month. the two sides provided two names each of who they want the judge to appoint special master, a third-party lawyer who will help determine the items sized by the fbi. they supplied two judges, thomas griffeth and jones. they investigated two high-profile cases including case of rudy july ya in and the case of michael cohen. trump's two choices are paul huck jr., a deputy in florida who served alongside him. and deary. hehe pfizer court and he approved the case of
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carter page which the justice department was later forced to withdraw because of series omis. the two sides agree on nothing. i want five weeks and trump wants three months. the government wants to block the special master from reviewing classified documents and wants no consideration of trump's claim of executive privilege and trump wants all the documents to be reviewed for privilege, and prosecutors say trump should pay the cost of the special master. trump says the two sides should split the costs. judge aileen cannon said she will review quickly after receiving the phiing from the two sighs. also in the coming days the judge is weighing the decision of the justice department to restore the fbi's access to classified documents which she blocked in an earlier order. if she doesn't, federal
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prosecutors say they plan to appeal to the 11th circuit court of appeals next thursday. evan perez, cnn, washington. let's expand the conversation now with former federal prosecutor and defense attorney shan wu. shan, always great seeing you bright and early. let's start with the special nominees, the justice department putting forward two retired federal judges, thomas griffeth and barbara jones. do those names stand out to you? >> they're both respected judges. jones ahh oversaw the giuliani law firm, possibly the cohen one too. that would make a lot of sense. of course, that is very much in line with the doj wanting to limit whatever the special master does, if one is appointed. they don't even think you need one just to the attorney/client issues and really is continuing to fight back against society of
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expanding it to having a special master look at executive privilege as well. griffeth was well known in dc and is a respected jurist. >> and separately trump's team proposing two names of their own. attorney tom deary, paul huck jr. curious to get your thoughts on those names and ultimately how you think whoever gets picked will influence the case. >> i would say those picks by the trump team are more obviously partisan picks. there's been reporting of what their ties are. obviously as evan was reporting to the trump team. i think the question for the judge here is in many ways less who they pick. i think if they pick one of the trump people, doj has to push back even harder on the choice there and could cause some complications in that when they can't decide, the judge has to decide, and whether that itself becomes the basis for the appeal. i think the really -- the bigger
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question underlying all of this, all of these filings about the special master has become like a proxy war really for the question of the expansion of what i term to be the imperialism of the president. interesting as we watch a new monarch being installed, here in florida there's a fight to imbue trump with imperial-like powers. even after leaving the presidency, he should still be holding this ability to use executive privilege, to help define it, and it's hard to really get across how unprecedented it is for a court even to be considering this kind of issue with executive privilege to disagreerks much less subcontracting it out to a third party to make it momentously legal decisions. >> i want to and panhandle on that. we had a moment of disagreements between the doj and the trooump
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team. we'll get into those in a moment. first there's the possibility that the special master decision may be overturned. you outlined some of the reasons why, their arguments. how do you determine the process of appeal is going to play out? >> i think the first step is they've actually asked judge cannon to stay herself and allow this review to continue for the narrow universe of the classified documents, pointing out it's a fallacy that she allowed the intelligence review to go along while stopping the investigative team the access to these documents because they need to work with the documents to help in the intelligence review and to help find out what has happened to the documents. so assuming that she does not agree with them and stay that, then they'll be asking the 11th circuit court of appeals to stay that decision as part of the overall appeal. a little hard to say.
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it's a very clever well targeted following by the doj. i think the court of appeals might agree with the stay on the classified issue. on the bigger question of whether a special master should be appointed altogether, i'm not so sure they'll find a receptive audience with that conservative court of appeals and may certainly yet be headed to the supreme court. >> and quickly, shan, on the disagreements about who's going to pay for this, doj wants all the expenses to be paid by the trump team. trump says, we should go dutch on it. how do you think that plays out? >> i suspect the judge will split the baby on that one and have them go dutch. i certainly understand the doj's point, hey, we weren't asking for this, you ought to pay for it. it's important to note this is more in the context of a civil suit where it should make sense about the fee sharing and cost bearing. you wouldn't see that coming out in a purely criminal
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investigation. so there's a lot about this that's looking more like a civil dispute. >> fascinating. shan wu, always appreciate your insight. thanks. >> good to see you. with fall and the winter months just around the corner, president biden is urging americans to get their updated covid-19 vaccination shots. estimations show only a third of the country has received a booster shot. the white house says its goal is to get everyone protected. for more now, joining us is cnn medical analyst dr. lina wynn. it's always good to see you. let's get right to it. who should get the booster now versus those who should wait? >> will, individuals who are older with chronic medical conditions, if it's been at least two months since your last vaccine, you are eligible to
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receive the updated booster now, and i would urge those individuals to get the booster as soon as possible for enhanced protection. in addition, if you've in 2022 and you're an adult of any age, i would also encourage you to get the new booster sooner rather than later. those who can wait are individuals who are just recovering from the coronavirus. you have a period of about three months, maybe even a little bit longer, where reinfection is very unlikely and there may actually be some advantage to letting your body produce antibodies after infection. so those individuals, if you just had covid, could wait three months prior to getting the updated booster. >> what would you say to people who are kind of, you know, not over covid-19 but are kind of more relaxed act it and say, well, you know, omicron, i've been sickened by omicron. it hasn't caused severe disease, why do i need a booster, what would you say to them? >> well, what i would say is
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that both things can be true at once. it is definitely true that we're in a different point of the pandemic than we were prior to vaccines becoming widely available. also, many people, most people, have had covid at this point and so are well protected from severe illness by virtue of having had covid and being vaccinated. it is true that covid is a very different illness compared to what it was before. that said, we want to reduce the chance of being out of work, being able to care for our children, having that updated booster will give us enhanced protection especially coming into the winter. so i think both things can be true at once. we can go about our daily lives much so than we were able to before, but we should also get the booster. i think switching to a cay dance similar to the flu has some advantages because people are used to getting the flu vaccine every year. knowing the covid vaccine is something most americans will get every year, that helps to reset the expectation for how we
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think about the coronavirus going forward. >> and living with it, right, because dr. fauci said it is possible we will need an annual covid-19 vaccination. in your latest washington post op-ed, dr. wen, the latest cdc recommendations is them simplifying the booster terminology? what do you mean by that and why is that so important? >> previously you were considered to be up to date with your vaccine if there were a certain number of boosters. what if you got the johnson & johnson one dose vaccine, we were counting the number of shots which isn't is way this is done for the flu vaccine. every year for the flu vaccine you're told to get the updated flu vaccine, whether first or 50th, we're not counting the number whether you got the vaccine. that is how we should look at covid going forward. simplifying that terminology is important and having eventually we don't have this yet but eventually i hope there will be
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a combined flu covid shot because that would also help to simply by the administration and make use of flu clinics and things that exist to increase uptake of both the covid vaccine and flu vaccine. >> i definitely prefer one shot over two jabs. that's for sure. good take on that. dr. leana wen, great to see you. thank you. >> thank you. so we're going to take you back to london in just a moment as king charles iii is formally announced as queen elizabeth's successor. cnn is live in scotland just moments away. stay with us. wow, we're crunching tons of polygons here! what's going on? where's regina? hi, i'm ladonna. i invest in invesco qqq, a fund that gives me access to the nasdaq-100 innovations, like real time cgi. okay... yeah... oh. don't worry i got it! become an agent of innovation with invesco qqq
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mourners are placing flowers, leaving messages of thanks to the queen and condolences to the royal family. want to go to isa soares joining me now from balmoral. it was the queen's beloved home. what are people there telling you as they gather to mourn? >> reporter: hello, don. well, it's a beautiful, sunny day here in balmoral in scotland. as you can see behind me, there's a long line of people waiting to pay tribute and pay their respects, of course, to the late queen. a woman, of course, held in such high esteem in scotland, as indeed all around the world. i'm joined here by one lady, lilian who is in line. i took her out of line. i'm hoping she won't get too mad for losing her spot. lilian, what was your -- why is it so important for you to be here today? >> because she came here so often that she became a part of the scottish history.
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and obviously i'm scottish and we looked upon her as mostly our queen, sorry, england. my son lives in england. we looked upon her. when we come up the road, beautiful. it's just beautiful, lovely area. >> she did enjoy and felt very much herself, very much at home here. you were telling me earlier that she heard that you had the king's speech. what did you make of it? >> very good. very good for charles. no, i didn't expect it. but he did a very good job. >> and you think he'll be a good king? >> i think so. i think so. i a wee bit, like most people, you have reservations because they're new to the job, but i think having a mother like he had, i think he'll be all right. >> lilian, really appreciate you taking the time to speak to us and thank you for giving up your
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place in the queue. >> that's all right. thank you very much indeed. >> don, of course, we're expecting this to be the last day that really the late queen will be in residence will be here in balmoral. we're expecting her coffin to be moved from balmoral to edinburgh. that's expected to take place tomorrow, don. >> isa, thank you very much. i appreciate that. much, much more of our special coverage from buckingham palace right after this. ♪ shannon feels so good about t her plan, she can enjoy momore of right now. thatat's the planning effect, from fidelity. age is just a number. and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health. versus 16 grams in ense high protein. boost® hh protein also has key nutrients for immune support. boost® hig.
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