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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  October 22, 2022 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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good morning, everyone. it is saturday, october 22. i'm amara walker. >> i'm boris sanchez. you are live in the cnn newsroom. we are grateful you are starting your weekend with us. there is a growing health concern this morning for parents of young children as cases of a common respiratory virus known as rsv are surging across the country. listen to this. 74% of u.s. pediatric hospital beds are currently in use with capacity filling up faster than at any other point in the last two years of the coronavirus pandemic. >> cases are rising fast. during the first week of october, more than 4,400 rsv infections were detected by pcr tests, more than triple the levels were just two months ago, and some states are already in
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crisis mode. illinois only has 6% of pediatric icu beds left, and space is running out so fast at the connecticut children's hospital that they have had to treat patients in the hallway and in the play rooms. cnn's brian todd has more. >> the drive to the emergency room was really scary and really intense. >> reporter: this mother of a 5-year-old who was hospitalized with difficulty breathing told us of an anxious drive to the emergency room. >> things eventually got worse since we were admitted. i have seen starting last night that he is progressively having a harder time breathing. >> rsv is one of the scariest infections in a child, especially when it's in your baby. so you will see your baby breathing really, really fast and you feel like there is nothing that you can do. >> reporter: around the country doctors are reporting a spike in cases of rsv, respiratory
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syncytial virus, a common respiratory illness that is occasionally severe in babies and young children. pediatric hospital beds are more full now than they have been in the last two years. some children's hospitals are overwhelmed, scrambling to make space, using tents, and it's only october. why is it spiking this year? experts say one key reason is because kids are back in school after the pandemic. many children haven't build up their immune systems and masks and social distancing are a thing of the past. >> for these kids, this is the first time they are seeing a lot of three viruses. >> reporter: rsv symptoms seem similar to cold and flu, runny nose, coughing, sneezing, wheezing, fever. >> bring your child to the emergency room when you notice that your child is having what we call respiratory distress or increased work of breathing. that's characterized by breathing really fast and a difficulty catching their breath. >> that should be an alarm for any parent. we can see this disease rapidly progress that children need
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attention quickly. >> reporter: there is no vaccine and no specific remedy, but severe cases can be treated it in a hospital with fluids, oxygen or a ventilator and icepacks to bring down the fever. >> i don't know how but she slept with the icepacks on top of her. >> reporter: 4-month-old lindy was taken to cook hospital in houston. >> running a significant fever, not eating as much. >> reporter: to avoid rsv, doctors say clean surfaces in your home, have kids wash hands, cover their mouths when coughing or sneezing, don't share toys and cups and avoid close contact like kissing or cuddling. for cases that don't require hospitalization, give tie ylenor motrin if they have a fever. >> day five is the peak of symptoms. then their symptoms resolve and they get better. >> reporter: she says what worries her about this uptick in rsv cases is unlike previous years when the virus was seasonal and predictable, this time she says it has the
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potential to circulate beyond next spring when it might normally subside and extend into next summer or possibly beyond. brian todd, cnn, washington. this morning we are just over two weeks from the midterm elections when control of the house and senate is up for grabs. millions of people have already turned out to vote in crucial races across the u.s. new numbers show nearly 6 million ballots have been cast in 39 states, potentially pointing another election cycle with high voter turnout. >> with americans facing high inflation and gas prices, the economy is the top issue heading into november 8th. republicans and democrats are now working overtime to drive their message home to voters to mobilize their respective bases. yesterday a key portion though of president biden's economic message took a road -- hit a roadblock. age an appeals court pausing his
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student debt relief plan. that decision coming the same day president biden hit the campaign trail touting democratic wins on the economy and slamming republicans who oppose the loan forgiveness plan. >> i don't want to hear it from maga republicans, officials who had hundreds of thousands of dollars of debts even millions of dollars in pandemic relief loans forgiven. who now are attacking me for helping working class and middle class americans. >> all right. cnn's nadia romero joining us live from atlanta where a senate race could determine the balance of power in washington. i voted early just the other day and you really can feel the enthusiasm amongst the people. what are you seeing? >> reporter: yeah, it is so many people who want to come out and vote early. we saw record turnout here in the state of georgia because the national spotlight is back on georgia and that senate race
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could flip the senate back to republican control. that's why it's so important for many people, i spoke with voters out today and the last couple of days who want to vote early to make sure they don't have any interruptions and nothing comes up in their personal lives to prevent them from voting. we are here in fulton county. you have the majority of your population here in the state of georgia and you already have seen the most ballots cast so far in fulton county as well. you can see signs here letting people know this is an early voting site. now, your regular polling location for the election is not the same potentially as an early voting site. make sure you come to the right place. you walk right inside these doors. on the other side you can drop off your absentee ballot or vote in person. this has been such an important election cycle. take a look at the numbers. we have 7 million registered voters in the state of georgia already active voters. about 3.6 million of them are
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white, 2 million are black. and the first day of early voting was on monday and we saw record turnout. more than 131,000 people voted early in person on monday. if you compare that to 2018, our last midterm election, you are talking about 71,000. so that's an increase of 85%. that just speaks to how many people know that it's important to participate in our elections. there have been efforts over the past two years to decrease early voting, to take away ballot boxes in certain locations. if you talk to republicans, they say it's about voter security. if you talk to democrats, they say it's about limiting that right to vote because early voting tends to favor democrats. people who lean more left on the political spectrum. we spoke to people who said they are concerned about the governor's race, governor kemp is the incumbent against stacey plaskett stacey abrams. then the senate race of course,
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reverend raphael warnock and herschel walker. that has gotten a lot of attention because of the scanned youles out of that race as well. >> all eyes will be on georgia. big races there on election night. thank you so much. so as we mentioned earlier, one component of the president's midterm message has been put on hold. a federal appeals court pausing the president's plan for student debt relief. >> jasmine wright joining us now. that forgiveness program was a key point the white house hoped would motivate voters. what's the white house saying now? >> yeah, well, it's a tough blow to the president's agenda and leaving folks to question it. the white house had identified sunday as the first day where borrowers could see potentially some of that debt being canceled. of course that will be pushed back. the appeals court gave the white house to monday to respond to the administrative hold and then those who brought the challenge have to tuesday to respond to
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the white house, pushing some days along. that comes at a precarious time here for the white house as we're just under three weeks to the midterm election. and as you can see on the screen here, president biden on friday finally started to lean into this controversial executive order, touting the benefits of who would benefit from this student debt cancellation. he said 22 million people had signed up in the first week that that website was live and as the white house is trying to galvanize voters with their -- particularly young voters and young black voters. so president biden also in that speech slammed republicans for those who do not want him to continue with the response. in response, the white house press secretary karine jean-pierre encouraged applicants to continue applying online and said we will continue to move full speed ahead in preparations and compliance with
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the order and the administration will continue it to fight republican officials suing to block our efforts to provide relief to working families. so the white house, obviously, is not backing down and wants to go full steam ahead with trying to cancel debt. >> all right. so a short timeframe to rectify that. thank you. let's expand the conversation now on the midterm elections with the director of the university of virginia's center for politics, larry. great to have you. appreciate you joining us this weekend. how big of a factor do you think this legal challenge of the student debt plan might play in the midterms? >> well, it could play a big role because if you look at the democratic electorate, young people are the most pro-diplomatic of any age cohort, and they are also least likely to vote in the midterm election. now, they have shown more interesting this year because of the overturning of roe v. wade.
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but this issue relates very much to them and also to older people who are still paying off their debts. so if democrats' positioned this well, use the combination of the republican opposition to the loan forgiveness program together with the republican opposition to roe v. wade, they might be able to stimulate a larger turnout among the youth age cohort. >> speaking of turnout, new numbers show voters have really poured some enthusiasm ahead of election day into the ballot box, including in georgia. a midterm record on the first day of early voting. do you have any indication as to which party this kind of turnout is benefiting right now? >> well, generally speaking, especially with early turnout, democrats do better than republicans, in part because republicans prefer to vote on election day. so to the extent that you have a
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robust turnout in georgia and elsewhere prior to the election, that's certainly a good sign for democrats. of course, you never know what the turnout on election day is going to be. probably will be strong. the indicators are that enthusiasm levels are up for both sides. so it might be a wash in the end, or this early indication could be a good sign for democrats in certain states like georgia. >> yeah. i'm curious about what races specifically you are watching as we talk about those in georgia, very competitive senate races there. where else in the map is your focus going to be on election night? >> certainly arizona. you rarely have a contrast in tickets the way you have in arizona on a wide range of issues, but certainly on election denialism and democracy. so that is a key race, not just for arizona are, not just for the 2024 presidential election,
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but for american democracy. but there are loads of states that have very competi battles that will determine the composition of the senate and the house. nevada would be another choice. a whole bunch of them in the midwest and like ohio and wisconsin as well as north carolina. iowa now has come on the board. so there are a lot of races that we're watching. and any single race for the senate could really determine the makeup of the senate for the next two years. >> it's a 50/50 split right now. it could go either direction. there is a new poll from "the new york times" that finds 49% of likely voters support republican congressional nominees. 45% back democrats. what are the chances do you think that the democrats can buck history and keep control of congress in these midterms? >> elections are crazy.
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unpredictable things happen ever two years. having said that, it will be a real shoif the democrats hold t house. the republicans only need net five seats. i would be surprised if they didn't pick up multiples of the number that they need. so even 49, 46 seems close and the overall polling average has democrats and republicans tied around 46% for the house. but that isn't good enough for democrats. they need a lead, a substantial lead of at least several points, maybe more than that, in the generic ballot and they don't have it. now, you know, there are two weeks remaining. president biden was right the other day when he said there is still enough time for another shift. we have had a roller coaster election. democrats ahead, republicans ahead, the democrats ahead, now republicans ahead. so the final two weeks are absolutely critical for early voting and for the election day vote. too early to call things definitively, but i think the republicans are clear favorites
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for the house. >> and which house races are you watching most closely? we talked about the senate. are there any house races that you think could be a bellwether on that tuesday night that will give you an indication of where congress is going to lean? >> you have to look at the east coast, obviously. you will have the results at least in races that are separated by a few points between the candidates. i am in virginia. i would pick virginia second district in the virginia beach area. the incumbent, elaine luria, as a member of the january 6th committee, received a lot of national attention because of that. she is opposed by a republican with jim kiggins with a military background, a nurse in the state senate. it's a very evenly matched contest. and if that flips from democratic to republican, to me it's an early indication, again not definitive, but early indication that the house will
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probably go republican. >> larry, always appreciate the expertise. thank you. >> thank you. still ahead, relentless attacks and rolling blackouts. russia unleashes a new round of strikes on ukraine pushing the country's power grid to the brink. we will have the latest from ukraine next. and a demand for documents and an order to testify. the january 6th committee hits former president trump with a formal subpoena. will you comply? what does it mean for his looming legal troubles? plus, a significant move in the effort to relocate and process migrants. the city of el paso stopped sending them to new york city. we're live at one of the encampments near the city to handle the surge. ♪ ♪ ♪ can you hear me calling ♪ ♪ out your name? ♪ ♪ you knonow that i've falling♪ ♪ and i don't know what to say ♪ ♪ oh, i ♪
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energy infrastructure was the main target once again. the strikes come as ukraine sounds the alarm over an alleged russian plot to blow up a major river dam. if it's destroyed, that would cause not only major flooding downstream, but possible safety risks at ukraine's zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. >> let's go to cnn editor knick robertson who is live in kyiv. how is ukraine responding to the latest attacks? >> reporter: ukraine has responded to these attacks by focusing its air defenses on the major, major cities, kyiv, odesa in you south, lviv and the far west of the country. when the strikes came in today, the intercepts here in kyiv, the intercepts were in lviv and there were intercepts in odesa, a couple of missiles in odesa got through. what the russians have been doing is sort of probing to see where the air defenses are
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weakest. so they hit a whole kwlclurser towns, five in the west of the country, a number of towns south of here and in the central of the country. russia is finding out where the weaknesses are in the air defenses and it's taking a toll. 1.5 million internet subscribers weren't use internet today. 11 regions of the country have had rolling blackouts. some hospitals are without water now. that has been taken in in some cases by bus. some places the air defense warning system, that's also taken down by these electricity outages. so now the police have to drive around and warn the citizens by a loud speaker when airstrikes are coming in. all of this is a trishl al and the region strategic trying to take out power supply network across the smaller towns and cities the country. >> the russian-backed authority
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in kherson is telling residents to leave immediately because shelling is intensifying. where are they expected to go? >> well, russia is trying to force them to go east towards russia across the river. it's telling them to cross the river, cross a big strategic dnipro deliver and get out. cnn has been talking about a resident in the town and person says there is barely anyone here. there are very few lights on in the town because most people have gone. she said the residents who are there don't want to leave. those that did leave, she said, did it under duress. russia is telling residents they have to get out. ukrainian officials that they are turning the elevators off in some of the apartment blocks to force people out of there. and ukraine is worried because they believe russia is going to blow up this dam, which would flood the area nearby and upstream. the nuclear power plant of the cooling water from the river that's needed to keep it safe. >> nic robertson reporting live
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from kyiv in ukraine. thank you. new this morning, cnn has learned that the white house is engaged in talks with elon musk about the possibility of setting up spacex's starlink the previously unreported conversations come as the biden administration searches for ways to support the ongoing protests in iran over the death of 22-year-old mahsa amini who died while being detained by tehran's so-called morality police. cnn's natasha bertrand has the latest. >> reporter: the biden administration officials tell me and my colleague that the white house has been in talks with elon musk about the possibility the of setting up spacex's satellite internet service starlink inside iran as a way to potentially support the protests across the country. now, the iranian regime has been restricting the protesters' access to the internet and ability to communicate and the
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white house sees starlink as a compact, easy to use technology that could provide the activists with a work around. some u.s. officials hope the terminals will become as prevalent in iran as satellite tv dishes. but there are still some major hurdles that the government and musk have to overcome. the biggest is that starlink satellites require the physical terminals on the ground to connect to and smuggling the units across the border into iran undetected would be extremely difficult. additionally, the signals that the terminals emit could be detected by iran security services who have been waging a brutal crackdown on the protesters. a senior administration official acknowledged those concerns and said when it comes to more active u.s. government involvement, quote, without getting into specific technologies we are considering whether a technology would put those who use it at risk identified and harmed by their government in some way. we should note that some critics
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have raised questions about whether the u.s. government should partner at all with elon musk on a sensitive operation given his volatility in dealings with the u.s. government. as cnn reported last week, musk's company, spacex, had been asking the pentagon to foot the bill for starlink services in ukraine. after that report musk withdrew that request by twitter saying he would continue funding the technology himself and creating even more uncertainty as one source put it us to, quote, ukraine needs musk's technology but don't know if he will continue to support them. >> thank you so much. the supreme court is responding this morning to lindsey graham's request to stop his testimony in the special grand jury investigation in fulton county, georgia. now it's up to investigators in atlanta to respond. we have details when "newsroom" returns. new science shows it gets in between teeth to destroy 5x momore plaque above the gumline than floss. for a cleaner, healthier mouout.
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for investigators looking into the interference in the 2020 election in georgia. the fulton county special grand jury now has until thursday evening to respond to senator lindsey graham's request that the supreme court halt a subpoena for his testimony. >> graham filed the emergency request with the supreme court on friday. this came after the 11th u.s. circuit court of appeals agreed with the lower court ruling that the grand jury could seek his testimony. the latest version of the subpoena issued to graham by the grand jury demanded his testimony by november 17th. the house committee investigating the january 6th insurrection made good on its
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promise to subpoena former putt, serving him on friday. it's part of an effort to get him to testify and hand over a litany of documents and communications by early november. trump's testimony, though rare for a former president, they say is necessary to close the investigation. >> joining us live with the latest. hi, there. walk us through what's in the subpoena. >> so amara and boris, the january 6th committee subpoena to donald trump outlines the committee's abbelief trump was the center of a multifaceted plot to jooverturn the 2020 presidential election and this subpoena relies on evidence that the committee has presented throughout its hearings to make that point. the subpoena shows that trump was at the center of a wide ranging pressure campaign across our government from the justice
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department to state officials to even former vice president mike pence to try to get help in this scheme. it paints trump as orchestrating the fake elector plot where states submitted fake electors to congress on trump's behalf, and it says that donald trump summoned the violent mob to the capitol op january 6th because trump knew some of the protesters that day were armed and trump yet did nothing to stop the violence that unfolded for hours as he watched it on tv. so in addition to laying all of this out, the committee also is requesting a wide range of documents from trump, including everyone who he spoke to on january 6th and the committee is also targeting a specific group of individuals for trump communications, all of whom have previously not cooperated with the committee. as you can see from this list
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here. the documents that the committee is requesting trump to provide by november 4th and the committee is asking trump to sit for an under oath deposition either in person or virtually on november 14th. >> seems like a long shot that will actually happen. we will wait for it and watch it closely. thank you. >> just days after new york city opened a facility to accept migrants from el paso, the mayor now saying they plan to stop sending buses. we have a live report where things stand next.
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gloria is there now. what are you learning? >> reporter: good morning, boris, amara. part of the question is whether this tent city is actually going to be ever fully filled to capacity. there is space here for at least 500 single men. but over the last couple of days, the city has seen a marked decrease in the number of migrant arrivals here to the city, and as you said, el paso has told the city they plan on no longer sending buses here to new york. now, america ericmayor eric ada credited a change in the biden policy, the biden administration announced a change in policy several days ago and now venezuelan migrants are being turned back at the border and mayor adams is crediting that change in policy for the decrease in migrants. now, el paso alone has sent more than 10,000 migrants to the city of new york, but now, as the policy changes and the numbers
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decrease, the mayor says the city still has its work cut out for it. there will still be a need for resources here on the ground. >> we must sit down at the table and have a clear pathway for those seeking to experience the american dream. and i think we have failed to do that for generations. and i'm hoping with the decompressing strategy and a real strategy that the white house put in place we are finally going to deal with, number one, allowing those who are here to work, to give the financial resources to those who are really carrying the responsibility of those who are coming here to our country. >> reporter: so that was mayor eric adams speaking to cnn's chris wallace. and noting that even as migrants may decrease in numbers in their arrivals, there are still thousands of people that are here in the city of new york who will need resources, everything from legal help to housing connecting families to public school and health care.
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so the mayor trying to emphasize there that even while the biden policy may help decrease the numbers, the city is going to need a lot of help this order to help those who are already here. boris, amara. >> thank you. as another busload of migrants from the southern border arrives in new york city this weekend, roughly 21,000 in total since the spring, the issue of immigration is likely going to play a major role in the upcoming midterm elections, and so could latino voters. the fastest growing voting block in the country, latinos make up about one-fifth of registered voters in key battleground states n recent elections there has been a shift in communities all over the country with more latinos voting republican. as i heard directly from some voters, immigration policy is part of the reason why. >> america is so bad, if america is so -- such a terrible country
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to live in, why did 50 migrants die, suffocate inside a trailer to come seek a better life in this country? >> reporter: the grandson of mexican migrants says democrats are losing support among latino voters because their rhetoric is out of touch and that their policies allow for what he calls unrestricted immigration. he says hard-line policies like those pursued by former president trump resonate with many voters like him. >> i think latinos, we don't care what you say. it's what are you going to do, ri right? so many people are tired of politicians that just speak but don't act. for the first time we had this political outsider that came in and spoke a lot, but acted even more. >> reporter: do you feel like either party is addressing that issue well? >> no. neither party is addressing the issue. >> reporter: an immigration attorney stays a sensible balanced approach so sorely needed but missing. >> either they talk to their
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base, talk to the right or talk to the left, but they don't talk us to. they don't see what we are doing on a daily basis. >> reporter: justin stubbs, an independent who supports bernie sanders in 2016, says it's the gop that seems to be paying most attention to the border crisis. >> it seems like the republicans care and talk about more, they talk about the border issue a lot more. >> reporter: the im immediate impact of immigration may be felt most strongly by voters in texas at the southern border, it's an issue that resonates all over the map. including here in florida where there is also a large hispanic population and a republican governor that has taken a hard-line stance thrjts is not a policy. that's a stunt. i am sorry. that is a stunt. >> reporter: local pro-immigration advocate says leaders like ron desantis and greg abbott try to win votes by demonizing outsiders. >> that's what populists do effectively. >> reporter: the venezuelan
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american warns the long-term costs could be devastating. >> i never thought i would see that in this country. i saw that in my country. it tore my country apart. and it doesn't matter if it comes from the right or from the left. it's anti-democratic. >> reporter: for cuban-born entrepreneur julio, it's tied to the economy. >> this country because moves because of the immigrants and latinos. >> reporter: 16 years ago he was robbed at gunpoint by criminals in mexico while trying to seek asylum at the southern border with his daughter. today he is a successful restaurateur in miami. the american dream, he says, would be impossible without immigrants. so he has turned off what he called incendiary rhetoric. >> we have done something remarkable for the community. >> reporter: younger voters like marvin, a colombian american who lives in little havana, argued
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that demographic change is a blessing, that more politicians should embrace. >> we are sharing a country built on immigrants and we should kind of be proud of that, that we evolve and grow and change. things can't stay the same forever. i believe that growth is pivotal to the growth of a country-especially like the u.s. >> reporter: should learn from instead of run from it. >> with early voting underway in many states, turnout in the hispanic community could prove pivotal. in florida, nearly a million ballots have already been cast. the question remains whether that recent uptick in support for republicans among latinos will continue. >> very interesting piece. thank you. protecting your personal information online. we have a look at just how easy it is for hackers to get your password and how to protect yourself. that is next. up for united healthcare medicare advantage. ♪wow, uh-huhh♪ now she's got a whwhole team to help her get the most out ofof her plan.
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get kardia mobile card at kardia.com or amazon. think he's posting about all that ancient roman coinage? no, he's seizing the moment with merrill. moving his money into his investment account in real time and that's... how you collect coins. your money never stops working for you with merrill, a bank of america company. kids getting hooked on flavored tobacco, including e-cigarettes. big tobacco lures them in with flavors like lemon drop and bubble gum, candy flavors that get them addicted to tobacco products, and can lead to serious health consequences, even harming their brain development. that's why pediatricians urge you to vote yes on prop 31. it stops the sale of dangerous flavored tobacco and helps protect kids from nicotine addiction.
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please vote yes on 31. vote yes on prop 31.
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having your personal information online stolen and why would you not be, you are going to want to pay attention to this next report. >> how easy it is for hackers to get their hands on your personal data and what you can do to protect yourself. ♪ >> reporter: it's been three years since you hacked me in vegas, rachel. >> you have stolen about $2,500 worth of hotel points. >> there has been a pandemic. there is a new president. i am still wearing the same shirt. you have put me in a i hadal
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seat. >> a five-hour flight. >> as far as i know, you haven't broken into any of my accounts? >> no, i'm about to do that right now. most people, when they log into their accounts, they reuse their passwords or change it just ever so slightly. and when you do that, if you have been in a breach, which all of us have, that means i can take that password and shove that into all the other sites that you log into. >> reporter: i have been using quite a few of the same passwords over the years. i have gotten a bit better with some accounts. >> we'll find out. i am going to go to a data breach repository site and put in your email address. you are involved in 13 breaches just with this email address alone. >> reporter: online there are sites that collect all that breached information like email addresses and passwords and it's likely some of your data is in there, too. >> we have our first password
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that i found. does that look familiar? >> reporter: yeah, that's a password i still used to occasionally. >> okay. you are using that? >>. >> reporter: many times. tip number one, don't use the same password for different services. your password for gmail should be different for your password for your instagram. if your password is leaked hackers can use it to get into a different site if you are using the same password. >> the hackers got a lot of information, some included a hash. we were able to crack one of your passwords. the other half is evan, and i want to bring you in here and show you what it looked like when he cracked your password. >> reporter: evan emerges from the darkness. >> i could take all the passwords we know about you, put it in a word list and try 10,000 tweaks you will probably try. add a number, a special character, and we did that for your password list and we cracked one of your new passwords.
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is this a password that you use now? >> reporter: yeah. >> how do you feel about that? >> reporter: tip number two, don't use similar passwords across different websites if you don't want people like evan being able to figure out your password. i should probably change my passwords? that's not great. >> it's not. >> reporter: so what are the tips for people not to be like me? >> first and foremost, it is on the companies to avoid getting hacked and prevent breaches like this. many companies do not use mfa internally, that second step when they are logging in. we need them to use that. >> reporter: multifactor all authentication, when they text you a code after you put in the password? >> text you a code, you look at an app, a prompt on the phone. if i get your password i can't log into your count because i
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don't have that code. if you reuse your passwords on multiple sites, even sites you deem silly, i can take that password and use it against you. use long, random and unique passwords for every single site. i recommend storing it in a password manager which keeps all of your passwords safe and encrypted and can generate good passwords for you. >> okay. i have a password manager. who in the world is imaginative enough to come up with like 70 different passwords that are like 20 characters long? >> and remembering them all. that's the hard part. >> password manager. get the app. come on, boris. they are encrypted. i'm hacking into your accounts. just watch. >> who knows what you are going to find? pictures of my dog. i am trying to figure out why they did that in vegas. i am going to pitch all my interviews to be from a balcony in vegas. our producers are yelling we have to go. >> make sure to catch "stanley
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tucci: searching for italy" tomorrow night at 9:00 right here on cnn. come on, get the app, pboris. thanks for watching. >> much more ahead. with nelson, a volunteer who puts care into everything he does. it's a deodorant that really protecects my skin. it's comfortablele and lasts a long time. doveve men. goes on dry. clean feel all day. it's the subway series menu. 12 irresistible subs. the most epic sandwich roster ever created. ♪ it's subway's biggest refresh yet! they say you eat with your eyes fir, so here's a good look at our new thick n fluffy french toas artisan challah dipped in vanilla cinnamon batter. french toast the way it's meant to be. try all three flavors. only at ihop. download the app and earn free food with every purchase. i remember when i first started flying, and we would experience turbulence. i would watch the flight attendants.
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