tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN November 18, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PST
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our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. i'm max foster. buy aianca is off for the day. ahead on "cnn newsroom." >> this is not your normal snowfall in the city of buffalo. >> we're looking at over 4 inches coming down per hour. that could present some significant challenges. >> the people that i've been speaking to just are not amped about staying at twitter. some of them feel they were cursed with not being laid off. >> another russian terrorist attack has occurred. civilians are the main target. >> announcer: live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it's friday, november 18th. 9 a.m. in london, 4 a.m. in new york where a potentially historic winter storm is bearing down on part of the state,
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namely the buffalo area. authorities have banned driving in an effort to keep people off the roads. the governor's declared a state of emergency for 11 counties. buffalo's mayor is improrg residents to take caution. >> but i want to be very clear, this is not your normal snowfall in the city of buffalo or in the region, this is a snowstorm with potentially deadly consequences if people do not do the right thing. >> new york is one of the five states around the great lakes with snow alerts and impacting thousands of people. derek van dam is tracking all of this with the latest advice. >> max, any other given day snow in buffalo new york would not be making headlines.
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this is different. this has the potential to paralyze the city, paralyze the infrastructure. if we go back to 2014, there was a similar lake effect snow in buffalo. there were fatalities associated with that. just by buildings collapsing under the sheer weight of the snow. we're not going to mesh ire this in inches. you see the snow that's going to blanket the great lakes, michigan to western new york. i'm going to focus on this. that's where we have the lake-effect erie county is here. that's where the driving ban is and the snow emergency. the this is the current radar. this is happening now. there's the most intense lake-effect snow band over 200 miles long, 10 miles in diameter. that's why this forecast is so important. where that wind direction takes
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the band of snow will determine who sees the heaviest amount of owfall. currently it's located south of the downtown buffalo region. this is the south towns region. they're getting 2 to 3 inches per hour. you'll see the snowfall totals in just one moment. we've already clocked in two feet of snow. unofficial report in the williamstown region. it is the direction of the wind that i'm going to continue to harp on. that is what matters. it is a game of miles with this particular forecast because at the moment we have a west/southwesterly wind i'll tell you why that is taking that band of heavy snow south of the downtown buffalo region. you can see we've drawn on that diagram. that is a west southwesterly wind. as the wind changes direction from more of a southwesterly wind it creates a fetch, longer duration so more moisture means more snow accumulating with the southwesterly wind over the
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buffalo area. let me take you to the outer edges of lake erie and show you what it looks like. this is the overnight period in the town in the suburbs of northern buffalo. the snow flying, waves whipping. that gives you an indication of how intense the snow bands are. max, by y y e time we get done could be seeing 4 to 5 feet. >> wait to see what happens at sunrise. derek, thank you very much, indeed. u.s. house speaker nancy pelosi says it's time for a new generation to lead the democratic party in congress. the 82-year-old said she'll not run for a leadership post although she will stay in congress. pelosi will be giving up the speaker's gavel in january when republicans take control of the chamber. pelosi made history in 2000 seven be when she took over.
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hakeem jefferies is expected to be the new leader. >> i have enjoyed working with three presidents achieving historic investments in clean energy with president george bush. transforming health care reform with president barack obama and forging the future from infrastructure to health care to climate action with president joe biden. >> more now from cnn's chief congressional correspond department manu raju. >> after two decades atop the party in congress, ushering through legislation. >> the bill is passed. >> winning the majority twice, becoming the first woman to lead the house, now losing the majority for the second time as speaker. >> the house will be in orpd. >> reporter: nancy pelosi announced she will step aside. >> i will not seek re-election to democratic leadership in the next congress. for me the hours come for a new
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generation to lead the democratic caucus that i so deeply respect and i'm grateful that so many are ready and willing to shoulder this awesome responsibility. >> reporter: at 82 the democrat has represented san francisco in the house for 35 years saying she would continue serving in a congress whose makeup has markedly changed. >> when i came to the congress in 1987 there were 12 democratic women. now there are over 90 and we want more. the news prompting an immediate shakeup. pelosi's current number two steny hoyer announcing that at the age of 83 he would not run for leadership. current number 3, 82-year-old jim clyburn signaling he also will let a new team skend paving the way for hakeem jefferies, a 52-year-old brooklyn democrat as the likely next democratic leader. >> i'm very comfortable saying i
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believe every member of the congress namm black caucus would vote for hakeem jefferies. it could be katheryn clark and pete aguilar all expected to are you be in the november 30th leadership elections. it's a generational change some have long sought. >> i think she's a historic speaker. she's accomplished an incredible amount but i also think there are a lot of democrats ready for a new chapter. >> the focus group is the november th election. i think people are looking for that generational change. >> reporter: the daughter of a baltimore mayor first became speaker in 2007 leading the opposition against george w. bush over the iraq war. three years later shepherding through the affordable care act under barack obama. she became speaker.
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including after january 6th when pro trump rioters stormed the capitol he targeted the speaker. >> can you imagine a caucus not run by nancy pelosi? >> well, i hope that we don't have to see that. >> reporter: and there are still questions about the next house speaker in a republican majority come january. kevin mccarthy still moving behind the scenes to lock down the 218 votes he needs in order to get the gavel. two members told me thursday that mccarthy is not there yet. he said he does not have 218 votes and he has a way to go smmpt they say there should be a consensus skman zpaft tonight unite the warring ways. u.s. president joe biden said he's willing to work with the new republican majority but
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gop hard liners are apparently in no mood to reciprocate. on thursday they made clear they intend to open numerous investigations into the biden administration and the president's family. republicans are expected to use their new subpoena power to investigate the private finance's of the president's son hunter, look into the various government probes into donald trump and other issues. the white house is slamming the proposed agenda as political revenge based on discredited conspiracy theories. now that the u.s. house is headed for republican control, former u.s. president barack obama has delivered some of his most forceful comments yet. here's what he had to say on thursday. >> what's being challenged are the foundational principles of democracy itself. the notion that all citizens have a right to freely participate in selecting who
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governs them. the notion that votes will be counted and the party that gets more votes wins, that losers concede, that power is transferred peacefully, that the winners don't abuse the machinery of government to punish losers. we're going to have to figure out how to live together or we will destroy each other. >> in an interview on "the daily show", the former president praised voters for running down election deniers. four years after the murder of the journalist jamal khashoggi, they say the leader should be given immunity. khashoggi's fiancee called dawn alleged that a team of assassins kidnapped, tortured and
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assassinated the journalist and dismembered his body. a 2021 u.s. intelligence investigation said the lead jeer approved. >> the biden administration had a choice not to make a recommendation but at the 11th hour interest decided to weigh in delivering ritz opinion to weigh in. they said mbs should be given immunity for his role in killing khashoggi. we heard from khashoggi's fiance. she tweeted her response. she said, the united states state department has granted immunity to mbs. it wasn't a decision everyone expected. we thought maybe there would be a light to justice from the u.s.a. but, again, money came first. this is a world that jamal
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doesn't know about. she went on to tweet, biden saved the murderer by granting immunity. he saved the criminal and got involved. she feeted ja tweeted jamal die today. as you said, max, u.s. intelligence concluded the crown prince ordered the murder of khashoggi. he was a washington post journalist and outspoken critic of mbs. the state department just before midnight issued this court filing saying that mbs now has, quote, sovereign immunity after his father, king salman made him a min necessary stir. its recommendation is purely a
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legal consideration. it did condemn the murder as heinous. the crown prince is currently attending the apec summit in thailand. he was warmly welcomed. max, i think it's important to note. president biden was in saudi arabia back in july trying to convince mbs and the kingdom tomorrow undo oil production cuts. saudi arabia has refused to do that, nor has it improved its human rights record leaving everyone confused. >> anna in hong kong, thank you. #riptwitter was trending on thursday. they are reacting to what appears to be another mass exodus of twitter workers. many decided to leave the
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company at close of business on thursday after new twitter boss elon musk gave them an ultimatum. one employee gat a letter. explain why some are urging the ftc to investigate twitter and how some feel about the chaos of the company. >> reporter: some feel cursed they weren't laid off with the initial layoff a couple of weeks ago when elon executed mass cuts at the company. they're seemingly ready to take the three months of severance and find a job elsewhere. one person told me they will tai because change comes from the inside, they explained, not the outside. a number of other senators are asking the full-time tc to look
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at twitter to make sure they're not in violation of consumer protection laws right now. they point to the twit ter boar. we urge the commission to vigorously oversee the consent decree with twitter and bring further actions for breaches and business practices that are unfair and deceptive. the ftc said earlier last week, i believe, they were deeply concerned with some of the changes twitter has made. we'll see what happens here. >> cnn will have more coverage of twitter in the coming hour on "early start." still ahead on this program, world leaders are meeting in thailand for the apac summit. it's turned to kim jong-un. the host country qatar is
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the list of coaches condemning north korea where they are launching ballistic missiles. it's the second icbm test this month. pyongyang fired a short-range missile thursday. kamala harris convened an emergency meeting of world leaders at the apac summit. she called it a brazen violation and urged north korea to engage in serious and sustained diplomacy. chinese president xi jinping is
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also attending that summit. he took a few shots at the u.s. and the asian pacific region is no one's backyard and should not become an arena for big power contests. cnn's will ripley is following it live. also some discoordination around the response. >> reporter: because this test is happening as this is happening in bangkok. u.s. vice president kamala harris, president un of south korea. the prime minister of new zealand, they're all hear. they had an opportunity within the last couple of hours to hold an emergency meeting and discuss what needs to be done here but the reality is, max, there's very little that actually they can do because north korea is flagrantly defying the u.n. security resolutions.
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they've launched around 50 and they don't care because they're not engaged with diplomacy. china and russia's response is muted and neutral at best so they're not really concerned about any sort of harsh blowback from this even though the u u.s. vp, kamala harris, along with the other world leaders they met with, six in total, they did issue a statement strongly condemning this. at the end china and russia have veto power. they can't get a joint statement because china and russia won't sign it. kim is insulated so he's been launching missiles at a truly unprecedented pace. when you talk about 34 missile launches that is a huge number but when you consider on some of those days there were literally
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dozens of missiles launched. you had 80 missiles launched over a period of days, a matter of weeks ago. so we expect really, frankly, to just see more of the same. the same kind of cycle repeating. with this icbm launch that could hit the mainland of the united states, the game, the stakes have gotten higher with this test, max. >> will, back with you for updates. thank you. we are two days away from the world cup. just two days, away, would you believe from the world cup in qatar. the tournament will kick off sunday when the host nation will kick off against ecuador.
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we have a story about the controversies. >> reporter: here we are two days out from the big kickoff, qatar 2022. dara and i are here on a busy night. this is your first trip to doe hare. >> yes, it is. >> how is reality compared to what you were expecting so far? >> reporter: it's not been so far. you cannot and we must not forget all of what's going on. you get a sense of the excitement. culture, charisma that surrounds this world cup. >> reporter: there is no doubt there is huge controversy. the migrant workers, the lgbtq+
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community. what do you think will happen when the football starts in terms of those conversations? >> reporter: i don't think those conversations will stop. they shouldn't stop. they should continue. they should be at the forefront. i expect a lot of the protests that we've seen so far to continue. i expect to hear a lot of the voices getting lowereder because we know what has happened in the past, all of the other issues have moved to one side. this is too important. it's been too much on which this whole thing has been built and that has to that i it's based on. the it's one of the most open world cups in a very, very long time. is it going to be the established names looking for that final had a ra, the likes of messi, reinaldo.
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>> messi obviously arrives with 22 goals in 23 games. his argentina side undefeated in the last 35 matches but the brazil ons have -- >> speaking of argentina. >> speaking of argentina, absolutely. really crafted a fabulous squad in which messi is able to express himself. world cups are about big names. >> a lot of the teams, not many people know too much about, the host. they kick the tournament off on sunday against ecuador. their third ever match at world cup finals with the eyes of the world watching. >> amanda joins us live from doha, qatar. what's the vibe like.
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do you expect the crowds to be there? >> reporter: i have to say from what we saw last night, max, there are a large number of fans here already. we saw representatives from morocco, a very vocal tunesian crowd, a few england fans. what we don't know as of yet still a couple of days out from the tournament. how many are large bans and a large african diaspora. the the number that is being touted about is 1.2 million meme mesquite pekted to deed skend on doha. this is a country with a population of 2.3 million. so half of the population arriving again and that is one of the big question marks for
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the organizers, the stress testing ahead of this tournament hasn't been able to take place up to this point because of the impact of covid-19. a lot of the usual events have been canceled. it is a friday to the weekend's here. the soup behind us is very, very quiet but the atmosphere was fantastic. has to say though, max, it feels from where i'm sitting as a journalist a very different feeling two days ago compared to the likes of journalists. we're sitting outside. it has been there since that now infamous day in december in 2010. in zurich they pull out qatar's name so con throw verse ly givig
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them their first world cup. the discussions around human rights, lgbtq+ communities, workers rights. women in qatar are not going to end any time soon despite what fifa were hoping when they sent that controversial letter to the 32 participating nations just a week or so ago saying now is the time to stick to football, max. >> that's the interesting thing. controversy starts are later. now poland is moving ahead with its investigation into a deadly missile that flew over from ukraine. now officials are tilling cnn when. plus, russia pummels ukraine in
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm max foster. millions of people in the u.s. are bracing for severe winter storms. five states around the great lakes are under snow alerts. almost the entire country is had a looking at freezing temperatures. an era at the u.s. capitol has come to an end with house speaker nancy pelosi announced she's stepping down after serving 20 years in the role of the leader of the house caucus. cnn will have more on the stories in the coming hour. pole lapped said its
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investigators are moving quickly to get to the bottom of a missile blast that left two people dead. a government spokesperson tells cnn the investigation is expocketed to be done in days. it was a stray ukrainian missile that flew over the border and hit a polish village on tuesday. president zelenskyy says the facts of the incident should be established first. in ukraine officials are scrambling to contain the damage from the latest wave of russian strikes but some miss sites -- missiles were caught on video. that's a missile that hit the city of dnipro thursday morning. ukraine says at least 23 people were wounded there. the capitol of kyiv is receiving about half of its usual power supply after russia rained missiles on electricity infra
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tur tur. president zelenskyy says millions of ukrainians have to ride that out without pow er. >> translator: the consequences have happened all day. there are planned power outages. as of now more than 10 million ukrainians are without electricity. >> our reporters are standing by to cover all of the latest developments. fred pleitgen be is in moscow. first over to melissa. she's in paris. an update on the investigation in poland. still, nothing inclusive. when do you expect to hear? >> they say within days. they were moving as quickly as they could, of course.
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they will get access to the site. we begin to hear poland, english, nato officials saying this was the result of ukrainian air defense systems rather than a direct attack from russia. again, repeated by a spokesman for the pole fleisch government yesterday. that is what the preliminary evidence is suggesting to them. what they've concerned is ukrainian investigators, however, will be able to observe those velgss even if then remain. this is something president zelenskyy has been asking for. his call is that the allies step up to the plate and ensure the protection of ukrainian skies and using what we've seen over the course, again, of the last 24 hours. not just continued exchanges of
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rocket and artillery fire along the front ryan. it's doing such damage but even as ukrainian sz that are trying to get the extra strikes from yesterday evening. there were the planned outages as well. there are efforts underway to try to get power back to ukrainians. a reminder those temperatures are dropping fast, freezing or below in many parts. crucial that they can get that up and running quickly, max. >> know lis is a in paris. thank you. let's go to fred then in moscow. fred, the russians are indicating they'll keep hitting ukraine's infrastructure. >> reporter: yeah, that's exactly the case. dmitry peskov said, look, the temperatures are going down to
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minus 10. does cha had cha it does not reset. the special military operation continues its continuation. does not depend, as he put it, on the weather and climate conditions on the ground. the russians are saying the strikes will continue and blaming the ukrainians for that. the they need to enter into negotiations and so far the russians don't see that happening at all. there is the expectation or the believed looking at the media. the more they hit the infrastructure, at some point the ukrainians might cave and succumb to moscow's demand. the opposite seems to be the
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case. when you look at the media there does seem to believe it is having a certain pop pewpopulat. they also hit some military infrastructure in ukraine. we know from the ukrainian official sources on the ground they say a lot of civilians were killed and wounded in those strikes that took place. right now from the russian perspective it certainly seems as though the campaign they've been conducting and accelerating this week specifically, it does look as though that is something that will continue and that the russians will continue. things svery much with difficulty. now a dutch court on thursday convicted three men for
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their roles in the downing of malaysia airlines flight 17 eight years ago. two former russian shan and they were were handed down. a fourmt suspect was acquitted. a plane shot down by russian miss sields. all 298 million people were killed. u. sumpt senator an tow any bl blinken were her the mention. what her agent is telling cnn kep tifs are brainstorming solutions to.
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iran's harsh crackdown on antigovernment demonstrations has led to five alleged protesters being sentenced to death in recent days. at least a thousand people have been arrested but the death toll keeps climbing. now well over 300. that includes seven people reportedly shot to death in the southern city of izay. it's not known who was doing the shooting. one of the victims was a 9-year-old boy who was killed. brittney griner is said to be doing as well as she could be expected to after she was moved to a russian penal colony. her attorneys saw her there. she serves her 9-year prison steps. she was convicted in august of smuggling drugs into russia and her appeal was rejected last mo month.
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>> reporter: brittney griner's lawyers says she has been moved to a penal colony hundreds of miles southeast of moscow and they said she is trying to stay strong. she's trying to adjust to the environment not saying anything specific about the environment she is in. what we know about penal colonies, they have very harsh treatment of their prisoners. they all vary. in some instances there can be harsh labor. there can be torture according to the state department of human rights and sometimes death. bull kbri -- the state department said they have not received official confirmation from russian authorities that brittney griner has been moved. they strongly protest the fact
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that russia hasn't given them an uptate and this all comes after president biden said he was hopeful after the mid-term elections in the united states that there could be some forward progress on trying to get brittney griner home. that russia may engage more seriously in discussions about a prisoner swap. for brittney griner and paul whalen, who's another american wrongfully detained in russia. so far we haven't heard any updates on that front. kiley atwood, cnn, the state department juror there's still no agreement on how to help poor countries that are most affected. a live report after the break. my father didn't know his dad. she knew that i always want to know more about my family history. with ancestry i dug and dug until i found some information. i was able to find outut more than just a name. and then you add it to thehe tree. i found ship manifests. birth certificate. wow.
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emissions and poor countries are most negatively impacted. the u.n. is urging them to work things out quickly. there's such a wide variety of topics. what's the corrode block here to reach an agreement. >> reporter: max, the world leaders have left and the inspirational speeches are over. now it's the business end of the climate conference. the stakes are incredibly high. at this point as we've been reporting, the globe is nowhere close to cutting emissions to get to the proposed 1.5 degrees warming that was agreed at the paris agreement. here are three of the things that we really need to look after in the statement, max. one would be does the world still commit to meeting the 1.5
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degrees warming because at this stage we're nowhere even close. is there going to be specific details on the loss and damage. that is where rich nations will pledge to give the other nations information that they didn't cause. one issue surprising in a way this isn't already in these statements is will there be a full confirmation that the world needs to transition away from fossil fuels towards renewables. the surprising it's not in there yet. the u.n. secretary general went back to schaar mel sheik in egypt. they said rich and developing nations need to work together. >> there has been clearly in the past times a break joup be in trust between north and south and between developed and
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emerging economies, but this is no time for finger pointing. the blame game is a recipe for destruction. i'm here to appeal to rise to the moment and to the greatest challenge that humanity is facing. >> reporter: the climate conference will officially end in the coming hours, max, but we do expect the negotiations to happen and to continue well into friday and possibly late into saturday. where there can be concrete actions in those statements, well, that remains to be seen. that is what is needed not just on paper but in practice to avoid catastrophe. the. >> dave, back to you if you get any results. wall street looking to rebound where trading begins in just a few hours.
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thursday's session took a turn for the worst after the federal reserve bank said inflation was far too high and interest rates could rise. the dow was too high and the nasdaq and s&p 500 both lost 1/3 of 1%. a restructuring specialist is taking over ftx. he has a scathing assessment of the company. john ray says ftx was colossally mismanaged and potentially fraudulent. never in my career have i seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as has occurred here. the company has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. billions of dollars are simply wiped out. about 2,000 starbucks workers staged a one-day strike in the u.s. to protest against what they call a retaliation of
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union supporters. 234 stores have voted for a union. they denied retaliating against any employees and blames the union. it comes on red cup day when starbucks gives out red holiday cups. before we go, attention swifties. ticket master has canceled sales for the upcoming tour. the demand is overwhelming. the website has been heavily criticized over the sale including from u.s. lawmakers. ticketmaster said it sold more than 2 million tickets on tuesday, the most ever for an artist in a sing bel day. their website crashed several times. some fans reported waiting up to 8 hours only to find they were too late. swift's tour is set to begin on march 17th in glechb dale,
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