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hello and welcome to our viewers joining us here in the united states and all around the world. you are watching cnn newsroom and i'm rosemary church. just ahead, aid groups around the world are rushing to help turkey and syria after monday's deadly earthquake. i'll speak with the head of the norwegian refugee council, about the efforts to help survivors. plus, parts of the southern u.s. are surveying damage after severe storms ripped through the area. we're live at the cnn weather center with the latest. and after surprise visits to the u.k. and france, the ukrainian president is headed to belgium where he's been invited to an e.u. summit. we're live in brussels and london, on zelensky's
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unannounced diplomatic tour of europe. >> live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom, with rosemary church. thanks for being with us. the death toll from the devastating earthquake in turkey and syria has nearly doubled in just the past 24 hours. now, more than 16,000. president erdogan visited towns near the epicenter, admitting short comings in the government's initial response. now, he says the situation is under control. the government restricted access to twitter and detained nearly two dozen people who posted critical tweets. but the service has been restored. the syrian government reports nearly 300,000 people have been forced from their homes by the quake. damascus is opening mosques to survivors out of the bitter cold. and rescuers are still finding
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survivors. two sisters were pulled from the debris in southern turkey on wednesday, 62 hours after the quake hit. crews went through a collapsed residential building. >> reporter: a 5-year-old emerges from underneath the rubble in turkey's hard-hit areas, one of thousands of lives saved. but for too many, it was too late. they mourn one of the many who did not make it out alive. with the death toll rising by the hour, this is a race against time. how many are barried in this massive quake zone. estimates in the tens of thousands. here, search and rescue crews work tirelessly around the clock, digging through what used to be a 14-story building, where families were asleep when the monstrous earthquake hit.
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survivors have gathered at the site of the rescue mission. there's shelter and hot meals. in the bitter cold, they huddle around the fires. the shock, the trauma, the pain visible on every face. parents doing what they can to try and make their little ones forget. many year are awaiting news of their loved ones and friends, buried under what's left of their homes. they're asking us to get down. we believe that's because they're scanning the building, the wreckage. this is a very, very careful and dark operation going on, to see if they can locate survivors. so far, they haven't been able to. no survivors yet. only lifeless bodies pulled. it's been three days. why can't they get my son out?
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they look for loved ones. they've been out here for three, long nights. >> all these nights, we're taking my family, mine is dead. he is praying so much. >> reporter: your cousin. we saw him earlier. he was crying. >> i hope to say, we should pray to god. >> reporter: and that is all countless others can do right now. joining me now from oslo, norway, the secondary general of the norwegian refugee council.
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appreciate you being with ugs. >> my pleasure. >> the big task is to get aid to those in need in the wake of this massive earthquake. talk about how difficult it is to get the aid to those in need, to syria, in particularly, given that's a complex political landscape. what do you have to deal with? >> it is incredibly difficult to get to the people in need in their hour of greatest need. first, you have the earthquake itself. when we needed possible roads, bridges, airports, passage points across borderlines, et cetera. they were gone because of the earthquake. it always happens in earthquakes that you get this incredible logistical bottlenecks. on top of that, in syria, this happens in the middle of a
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conflict zone. there's been war here for more than 11 years. the northwest is under arm ld possession groups but the conflict line goes in the middle of the earthquake area. large parts of the earthquake zone is under government control in syria. my organization is on both sides, among the few that can work from both sides. and we're now scaling up on all sides of the conflict lines, with what we can purchase locally, which is not much. but it's some. with what we can get across the border from all of the neighboring countries to syria. but we're also trying to go cross-line. conflict line at various points. >> exactly. last hour, i was talking to a person that was saying his organization, like yours, there are no borders.
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that's the thing. all you want to do is get help to those most in need. but you're working right in the middle of this complicated situation. plus the war. and we're dealing with crisis upon crisis, tragedy upon tragedy. in the midst of all this, we know that some of the aid is getting diverted away from those most in need. what are you able to tell us about that? >> all that we have and will get, we will be able with our personnel, to give straight to those in greatest need. the problem is there's too few border crossing points from turkey. the main point that was sanctioned by the u.n. security council after much back and forth, that point is not really possible because the roots are not in operation because of the earthquake.
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they are few to use other points. on both sides of this bitter conflict, there has been opposition to cross line, front line aid. i hope all of the ideas that make it difficult for the other side will be gone now. they have one common enemy, which is the earthquake. and the children on all sides should have the relief they need. hopefully, they could be now doing away with these horrific political obstacles, also to a peace agreement, for reconciliation, to open borders for front lines being possible. >> let's hope that does happen. in the meantime, your big operation, is to coordinate all of this aid, which must just be
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a gigantic massive challenge for you and others to get aid to those in need. and how long do you think this will be needed? how long will this go on for, do you think? we will have to be rebuilding for a year, at least. and the international donors have taken the place, with the assad government in place, they don't want to do reconstruction in syria, before there is a peace agreement and a constitutional agreement, as they call it. these children need to have the schools, the homes, the water works to be restored. what we hope is there is a doing away of the restrictions of the
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aid because indeed, this is an earthquake beyond belief. it came in the middle of the night, in the middle of the winter, in the middle of a conflict zone that is filled with people. half of them are displaced by the conflict. >> extraordinary what you and your organization are doing at this time. thank you for talking with us. appreciate it. for ways to help the victims of the earthquake, you can go to cnn.com/impact. ukraine president zelensky is set to attend the e.u. summit that's taking place in brussels. the german chancellor has called his attendance a strong signal of solidarity. just moments ago, he could be seen leaving france, alongside french president macron, after a
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surprise visit to paris on wednesday. the ukrainian leader met with mr. macron and the german chancellor. both leaders colleged military aid for ukraine. they pledge that will continue for as long as it's needed. and president zelensky says their support can make a huge difference in the war. take a listen. >> translator: france and germany have the potential to be game-changers. the sooner ukraine manages to get long-range weapons and modern planes, the stronger our coalition will be. >> mr. zelensky made that request during a stop in london on wednesday, while visiting a british military facility. he says ukraine's battlefield priorities are to obtain more armored vehicles, longer-range missiles and fighter jets. our correspondents are tracking all of the developments. we begin with nic robertson who
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is standing by in brussels. what can we expect to come out of this e.u. summit? certainly, in terms of support for ukraine and, of course, the reason why the president is there is he wants to get more weapons for his war to push russia out of his country. >> reporter: long-range specific rocket weapons. he wants the be able to reach deeper behind russian lines to target the ammunition depots, the xhcommand and control areas that have been pushed back a little by systems like the u.s. system. but he wants a longer range version of these rocket systems. very importantly, and he made this point very squarely and very firmly when he was in the u.k. fighter aircraft. what president zelensky says that he can do is help drive the
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conversation forward, about what ukraine requires next. ukraine has called for extra armaments in the war, and defense systems and those began to come. vehicles to take the advance through russian lines, armored fighting vehicles. those are coming on their way. now, the discussion is about the longer range weapons and the aircraft. it is significant. that france and germany can be game-changers. a similar message in the u.k. what underlines the point here and in european officials, if ukraine doesn't get these significant, game-changing weapons in short order, the
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conflict in ukraine can bog down into a years long french war fair of attrition, sort of like the wirs ford first world war. and that will undermine the support. president zelensky will address all of the leaders arriving for the summit. likely, will address the european parliament, as well. >> nic robertson, many thanks to you. let's bring in claire sebastian, live from london. let's go back. president zelensky was there in the united kingdom. he was well received there as he was in france. let's focus in on what was achieved and agreed upon when he was in the u.k. >> reporter: this came alongside an announcement from the u.k. that they were going to expand their training program to include pilots and marines.
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pilots are crucial given this was the trip as a whole, an unequivocal pitch for fighter planes. he didn't get that. but it's looking like the training may be a first step on that road. the prime minister saying the u.k. is looking at whether to send fighter jets. the defense minister is apparently investigating in it. listen to what the prime minister uhad to say about what the u.k. could do next. >> first of all, we've been clear for a long time, when it comes to military assistance to ukraine, nothing is off the table. that's because we're determined to ensure that the president and his people can be victorious. >> reporter: the u.k. has shown it is willing to trail blaze. it promised the main battle tanks to ukraine. it is the first of the western
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allies to promise to train ukrainian fighter pilots. all this coming at a crucial moment in the war. president zelensky believes they are running out of time as russia ramps up activities on the front line. the russian embassy in london make it clear they are not happy about this development. saying they are actively looking whether to send fighter jets. >> thanks to claire sebastian joining us live from london. coming off a high from his state of the union address, the u.s. president is hitting key swing states ahead of a possible announcement on whether he will run for re-election. plus, severe storms and possible concerned tornadoes lel of devastation in the southern u.s. we'll look at the damage and show you a suspected twist they're was caught on video.
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welcome back, everyone. the aftermath of the u.s. president's state of the yup onaddress looks a lot like the campaign trail. on wednesday, president biden was in the crucial swing state of wisconsin, where he spoke about jobs and the economy. and vice president kamala harris was in georgia, another key battleground state. later today, president biden heads to florida while harris visits minnesota. and the cabinet secretaries are fanning out across the country. phil mattingly has a closer look how biden is testing out his message ahead of an expected announcement about seeking re-election. >> folks, i hate to disappoint you but the biden economic plan is working.
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>> reporter: president biden on the road in wisconsin. the first stop, to sell the message he delivered to the nation last night at the state of the union. >> we've been sent here to finish the job, in my view. >> reporter: a primetime message of progress and more work to do. >> too many people have been treated like they're left behind. >> reporter: and highlight kitchen table issues. >> we're going to ban resort fees that hotels charge on your bill. some fees can charge $90 a night that aren't even resorts. >> reporter: but are critical to meeting americans where they are. at the same time, moving to draw a clear contrast with a new house republican majority. >> some republicans want medicare and social security sunset. >> reporter: drawing a visceral response from republicans in the chamber. >> look -- >> reporter: who steadfastly claimed entitlement reform is off the table.
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the president, naming names. >> rick scott from florida has a plan. i got his brochure right here. all federal legislation sunsets every five years. ron johnson, on social security and medicare, quote, we should transfer everything so we have to consider everything every year. there's a senator named make lee, a video of him saying, i'm here right now to tell you one thing you probably never heard from a politician. it will be my objective to phase out social security. get rid of it. >> reporter: republicanout rage only growing in the wake of biden's remarks. >> people are pissed off. for the president of the united states to come into the people's house and lie like he did about the economy. >> reporter: kevin mccarthy seated bemhind biden for the first time, holding nothing back. >> it was probably one of the most partisan state of the union
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speeches i've ever heard. >> reporter: even as in the moment, he attempted to calm members of his own conference. >> this is what the choices are. chaos or stability. >> reporter: a split screen that one biden adviser called a dream moment for the white house. coming at a critical moment for an 80-year-old president on the verge of one final campaign. >> i think tonight, he showed the energy, the empathy, the hopefulness that a presidential candidate would have. >> reporter: within 24 hours it became clear how much the white house and the president in particular wants to have that fight over social security and medicare. at least try and force republicans to put their own proposals on the table as they try to negotiate over increase of the debt ceiling. that's the case on thursday, as the president travels to florida. not a state they won in 2020. and not a state they think they can win in 2024. but it is home to rick scott who put one of the proposals on the table. and it's a state with a lot of
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seniors. seniors who care about those programs. certainly the president will be focused on them again. phil mattingly, cnn, the white house. and earlier, i spoke about president biden's state of the union address. and i asked her if the economy is as strong as he's indicated. >> by a lot of metrics it looks that way. the economy looks a lot stronger. you have strong job growth. it looks like the labor market may be heating up. there were fears of a recession that doesn't seem to have materialized yet. it doesn't mean it won't. things can go awry, particularly if there's some unwelcome shock like an escalation in the war in ukraine, for example. which you wouldn't want for
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other reasons, as well. we may not be out of the woods yet. but it looks like the economy is doing much better than consumers, voters, seem to be willing to give the president credit for. flash flood warnings are in effect for much of the area around new orleans, as strong storms and possible tornadoes pummel millions across the united states. storms ripped through an area near new orleans a short time ago. officials say they damaged homes and injured three people. it happened after this video captured what looks to be a tornado in the area. tornado warnings and watches were issued across the south on wednesday. all part of a storm system that stretches all the way to canada. let's bring in our meteorologist. what is the latest you have on all of the severe weather? >> the tornado watches have been allowed to expire but likely to
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rego as we move into the next 24 hours, as the system ramps back up. many tornado report, and hail. we can expect more with this line through the rest of the morning and the afternoon, as it pushes through the southeast. and the rain, not only dealing with severe weather, but causing a threat for flooding new orleans all the way to the ohio river valley. some of the areas in the lower mississippi valley have picked up four to six inches of rain. that's estimated. but one to two inches expected with the line as it moves through. not only flooding but the wind. we have wind advisories and high wind warnings from the tennessee to the ohio river valley. we can expect wind gusts over 60 miles per hour. and the colder side of things.
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dealing with snowfall, between winter weather advisories and winter storm warnings, we could pick up 3 to 6 inches of snowfall just today. that severe weather threat into today and tomorrow, as the front pushes eastward. you will see areas in green for your thursday. damaging winds and the isolated tornado threat. it pushes further east and will wind up with more of the damaging wind threat and isolated tornado threat through parts of the southeast and into florida. rolling into friday and holding on to the flooding threat. >> thank you so much. still to come, want to show you the live pictures from turkey where the mission to rescue survivors grows more urgent, three days after the disaster in turkey and syria. and she's back. kim jong-un is once again putting his child in the public eye. we will look at what message the
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plus, you can save up to 60% a year when you add comcast business mobile. or, ask how to get up to a $750 prepaid card. complete connectivity. one solution, for wherever business takes you. comcast business. powering possibilities. many in turkey and syria are still waiting for help to arrive, as the death toll from monday's powerful earthquake has now surpassed 16 n,000. the syrian government has set up 100 shelters with aid supplies and turned dozens of mosques into relief centers. state media reports 300,000
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people have been displaced by the quake. and that's only in the paths of syria under government control. amid despair there's joy and celebration. 62 hours after the region was rattled by the quake, two sisters were pulled to safety from under debris in southern turkey. still, anger is growing over the government's response to the disaster. on wednesday, turkey's president visited some of the hardist hit areas. he conceded there's been problems. but he said it's not om to be prepared for a disaster like this. >> translator: on the first day, we experienced some issues. but then, on the second day and today, the situation has been taken under control. in some areas, first, we had problems in the airports. we had troubles on the roads. but we're more comfortable today. we'll be more comfortable tomorrow. and later, i believe, we will be
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more comfortable. there's minor problems with fuel and so forth. but we're handling them step by step. want to head to istanbul turkey. talk to us about the latest on the search and rescue operations still under way in turkey and the desperate effort to find any survivors under the rubble. >> absolutely, rosemary. we're looking at the final hours where that glimmer of hope that we can find survivors. the conditions here, extremely cold weather. people crushed under their homes and few resources to go around. this is an unprecedented disaster for this generation of turks across this country, who have been prepared for earthquakes and expected
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earthquakes, sitting on a major fault line. you're looking at the biggest earthquake, the strongest this country has seen in nearly 100 years. just imagine the scope and scale of this. nearly 16,000 dead. nearly 60,000 wounded. tens of thousands of people who need medical care. and anger and grief is settling in in those areas. if you look at the disaster zone, help is coming but it's not enough. particularly in the remote areas, where we've seen images of families huddled around fires, with no access to food, shelter, sanitation. and there's the rescue operations that you mentioned. we're seeing families who have not received the expert teams. have not seen the teams.
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we've heard of relatives hearing in the rubble but not able to dig them out. and the reaction is playing out. president erdogan has admitted short comes when it comes to the response there's been limits on social media accounts. fears they are quieting dissent. but there is an unprecedented, such a huge disaster, it's hard to imagine that turkey could handle it alone. >> it's an extraordinary and tragic situation. many thanks. still to come, the u.s. house is set to vote on whether to condemn the incident of the chinese balloon flying in u.s. air space. more on washington's grievances with beijing just ahead. kills ms on more surfaces than l lysol disinfectant spray.
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♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ in the coming hours, the u.s. house is set to vote on a resolution, condemning china's use of a suspected spy balloon over u.s. territory. it is the latest in the dispute over the balloon, that was shot down on saturday, prompting nato to acknowledge there's been an increase of chinese surveillance activities globally. u.s. officials agree it's part of a program that violates international law. >> this is what we assess as a larger chinese surveillance balloon program.
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you heard us talk in the past about a fact this is a program that's been operated for several years. >> the united states was not the only target of this broader program, that's violated the sovereignty of countries across five continents. >> we go to hong kong for more. interestingly, president biden says u.s./china relations have not been damaged by the spy balloon incident. what is beijing's view on this? >> beijing has called the u.s. shooting down its balloon an overreaction. and in records to that pbs news hour interview, they said the shooting down the balloon department make the relationship worse. but a number of china watchers disagrow. i want to show you a quote we have that says this, the relationship is headed to a dark place. if the two sides don't find a way to put a floor underneath.
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u.s./china ties are under strain at the moment. there's no window of opportunity for a reset. they say china will be preoccupied in early march and china will be very angry when the u.s. house speaker, kevin mccarthy, will make a trip to taiwan. in that pbs interview, the u.s. president made a few comments about the chinese president. he said that xi jingping faces enormous problems and has great potential. but the ministry of foreign affairs in beijing is choosing to focus on the negative. in a briefing that wrapped up this afternoon, we heard this from its spokeswoman. this, quote, such remarks by the u.s. side are very irresponsible and contrary to basic diplomatic etiquette and china is unsatisfied. the spokeswoman insisted that the balloon is a civilian vessel
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that blew offcourse. the u.s. says it's spycraft that's part of an extensive chinese military surveillance program that spans multiple continents. the pentagon saying overnight it is 100% certain this balloon is not a civilian weather balloon. back to you, rosemary. >> all right. many thanks. to north korea, now, where speculation is growing over kim jong-un's second child. and whether she is being groomed as his successor. she was by his side at an event on wednesday. the first of his children to be seen attending a military parade. could she also become the first female dear leader? cnn's will ripley tells us what's known about this young girl. >> reporter: at this lavish banquet for the north korean army's 75th anniversary, kim
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jong-un, with his wife and a girl around 9 years old. a girl some say could be the chosen one, the one being groomed as the next north korean leader. by spending some quality time with his daughter, it looked like he was trying to showcase his family as a good and stable one and show himself as a leader for normal people. her life is anything but normal. at elementary school age, she already outranks a room full of senior military officers. north korean state media describing her as kim's respected daughter. getting a standing ovation. >> he's my friend. >> reporter: we learned her name from dennis rodman, the one-time b buddy of the basketball-loving kid, said he got to hold the pint-sized prison sense in 2013, when she was a baby. a few months ago, kim made her media reveal, for an icbm test,
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inspecting her father's prized arsenal, an arsenal she could someday command. acknowledgment of the deep leadership, put water on the notion this was a successor reveal. telling cnn it's too early to make assumptions or speak about a possible successor. it's a signal that kim is sending to the world. if chosen, she would be the first female and fourth generation of kim family leadership, like her father, grandfather, and great grandfather. the family formula, fear, control and a carefully crafted p.r. campaign. propaganda praising the future leader's power and prowess. the successor can be a boy or girl, young or old, doesn't matter. the only mission, carry on the kim family fortune. for a while, kim's younger sister was viewed as kim's
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possible eventual successor. she is known for her fiery speeches. she once famously directed the armed forces to blow up a joint liaison office near the border. now, the eyes of the world on kim's daughter. experts analyzing every picture, every article, for clues about the possible next north korean leader. all of it, likely before her 10th birthday. will ripley, cnn, taipei. still to come, weeks after a tragic health scare, u.s. football player damar hamlin is honored for his charity work. and we get new word on whether he will return to the field. back in just a moment. now what's going around is 12-hour couough relief. and the giggles. the fafamily that takes delsym together, feels betttter together.
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welcome back, everyone. a blockbuster trade is shaking up the nba. kevin durant is going to the phoenix suns. in exchange, the nets will reportedly receive three players from the suns, plus four first round draft picks. the 34-year-old durant is a two-time nba champion. he's been sidelined with a sprained knee since january. damar hamlin is this year's winner of the nfl players association community award, which recognizes an athlete's positive impact on his community. the buffalo bills safety received the most votes from other players in the league. it comes a month after he went to cardiac arrest in a game and was rushed from the field to the
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hospital on live tv. the bills say his toy drive foundation raised nearly $9 million in donations. here's what hamlin had to say as he accepted that award. >> one of my favorite quotes, it's a blessing to be a blessing. i never will take this position for granted and always have an urgent approach in making a difference in a community, where i come from and communities across the world. thank you. >> hamlin didn't talk about his future in football. but the medical director predicts it's a, quote, guarantee, hamlin will play professional football again. before we go, a pair of california woodpeckers stashed a huge amount of acorns in the walls of a home in sonoma county. >> this is crazy.
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>> look at that. the homeowners had no clue something was strange until they saw mealworms coming out of a bedroom wall. when a pest control employee cut a hole in a wall, about 700 pounds of acorns came out. the birds' stash collected over the past two to five years. thanks so much for your company. i'm rosemary church. have yourself a wonderful day. "cnn newsroom" continues next.
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i screwed up. mhm. i got us t-mobile home internet. now cell phone users have priority over us. and your marriage survived that? you can almost feel the drag when people walk by with their phones. oh i can't hear you... you're froze-- ladies, please! you put it on airplane mode when you pass our house. i was trying to work. we're workin' it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity.
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those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck. just look around. this digital age we're living in, it's pretty unbelievable. problem is, not everyone's fully living in it. nobody should have to take a class or fill out a medical form on public wifi with a screen the size of your hand. home internet shouldn't be a luxury. everyone should have it and now a lot more people can. so let's go. the digital age is waiting. - [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020.

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