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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 10, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

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about the advanced technology inside of it. >> something jake tapper said. >> what jake tapper said. >> what jake tapper said. >> and jake tapper said. >> who better to ask about senator rick scott's claims made during our show than jake tapper? he is going to join us to talk about the fight over social security and medicare playing out within the republican party. i would like to thank god for being here. [ cheers and applause ] >> and damar hamlin speaking out just a month after he was resuscitated on the field. honoring the people who saved his life. ♪ ♪ welcome, everyone. we begin in turkey and syria. we are witnessing death and humanitarian crisis there on an astonishing scale. more than 22,000 people now confirmed dead as the staggering death toll continues to soar.
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it has been 108 hours since the quake struck and hope is running out to find any more survivors in the rubble. but we just saw something remarkable just this morning. >> a family of six rescued in turkey after being buried alive for 102 hours. four children and two parents. they waved as they were brought out on stretchers. we are told they were in the first floor of a collapsed building. this is their son who wasn't inside the home when the quake struck, weeping with joy as he saw them emerge from the wreckage. the reality is that thousands are still missing and many could be dead or dying right now beneath piles of concrete. >> take a look at these before and after photos of the devastation. this is a mosque, a turkish mosque from the 19th century. it is in ruins. one of many historic sites
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destroyed by the earthquakes, some of which have stood for centuries. this is near the epicenter of the earthquake. apartment buildings and businesses completely flattened. this is a satellite view of kahramanmaras, building after building reduced to dust. take a look at at the stadium on the right-hand side of your screen. that's a soccer stadium that has become a tent city for survivors who are now homeless. we have our correspondents on the ground across the disaster known. nick paton walsh is live from the search and rescue operation near the turkish and syria border. good morning, nick. what can you tell us? >> reporter: yeah, poppy, behind me you can see that the excavations have moved into trying to reduce the rubble. we have soon glimmers of hope. some extraordinary images as helicopters now part of the machinery of the government that is quite palpable here.
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turkish naval helicopters coming and sometimes the frequency of 20 minutes and filling up with survivors brought in ambulances at a great rate here. one instance we saw a 3-year-old girl and 2-month-old sister of hers without their parents, according to the rescuers, whisked on to the helicopter. at times the helicopters trying to take off, being called back down again because another ambulance turned up to deliver yet more survivors. one instance, incredibly light load carried by rescuers. i wonder what could be on it. we looked and there were two infants on one stretcher, passed by hand inside that helicopter which then took off. about 15, i would say, people put on the helicopters that we saw. part of a persistent stream still of survivors being pulled from the rubble. startling after 100 hours we are seeing that, but make no mistake. the predominant story here is one of loss and one of struggle i think to comprehend the new
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reality dawning on antakya. so much has been devastated by this startling earthquake, the worse in a hundred years. here nearly every build something impacted, every building will have a question mark over the structural integrity. even the smallest tremor happening in the years ahead. vast amounts of reconstruction will be required. locals dealing with the nuances to find the basics of every day life, what am i going to eat, drink, sleep, how are we going to stay warm? the warmth provided by makeshift fires, choking smoke in the air, particularly at night. food, makeshift. dished out much more than we have seen before. the question of where they are going to live, a hard one to basically answer when nearly every building here and the towns around is heavily damaged. poppy. >> nick paton walsh reporting. thank you very much. >> new york city family visiting relatives in turkey are among the victims of this deadly
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earthquake. barack fariq, his wife kimberly and two sons, 2-year-old hans a, 1-year-old bilal were found. they had been staying near the epicenter of the second deadly earthquake. so joining us now to tell us about her sister, brother-in-law, two nephews, kimberly's younger sister, samba salazar. thank you. we know it's rough. what do you want people to know? >> first and foremost, i want people to know that this is a big problem right now in turkey and in syria, and although i lost my family, there are currently still people under there. there are children. the number of the death toll, it's rising, and the only thing
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i think that we ask is having the help, the awareness that this is still happening, and just getting as many people, all hands, all hands on deck. it's something that when i found out that my sister and the rest of my family was missing, there was no rescue team. this is something that the building collapsed and it was just three people on site and manpower being used just for one location because at that time everything was chaotic. everyone was a priority. so it's really difficult. this is really difficult to see this. so we're all very broken in my family. and me and my sister, our hearts are broken. >> can you tell us about them?
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>> so my sister was six years older than me. she was very graceful. she was very -- she as very lovable. she was very passionate about everything that she did and she certainly put everyone's needs above her own. and my brother-in-law was very, very, very helpful in the community. he was very selfless. he was extremely intelligent. and all he wanted to do was help. help the community. he was very -- he was donating to africa. he was donating -- he was very active with non-profit organizations. we're really broken. >> do you want to tell us about your nephews?
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>> my nephews. sorry. >> it's okay. we see them. they are beautiful. >> my first nephew, his name is hamsa, he is 2 years old. and my little one was a year old. and there are no words i can describe how my family is feeling, how they were taken away so soon. they were just children. and we're mourning. we're mourning, you know. we were just -- we had so much hope. our hope was to see him in programs and enroll him in school, and now we don't have that. we've lost all our hope. we don't have anything. my mom and dad, they are very broken. it's like starting over from
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nothing. it's really difficult. >> how can we help you? everyone is going to hear your story and be so touched by it. >> this is a huge -- again, this is very chaotic. this is a huge loss that we are experiencing in my family. and not only if my family, the whole country in turkey. my sister and the kids, they were u.s. american citizens. they were born here. they were raised here. and my parents and me, we have, you know, accept and made a huge great sacrifice in understanding and coming to terms that once we found out we were ready to go on the next flight to turkey, but we didn't have that option because the roads were cracked. there was a risk.
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our lives were at risk if we went. they weren't letting people inside the city where the epicenter was occurring. they were in kahramanmaras, a town, a small town where once the buildings collapsed, 80 to 95% of the town was completely demolished. it was very different to just get a machine in to help collect and pick up the cement, big blocks of cement, rocks. you know, so just we lost five family members. my two nephews, my brother-in-law, my sister. and my brother-in-law's mother and his dad. so my brother-in-law's father was the only survivor. >> and he just had open-heart surgery, you said? >> he had open-heart surgery. and he basically saw his building collapse before his own
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eyes and he couldn't do anything and he called my mom and he said, mom, he said, barak, madeleine, hamsa, they are gone. they left. and so he spent over 12 hours digging and just finding people to help him dig because the machines weren't able to go in. >> well, listen, we are -- there aren't words. and we know that this is tough for you, and there are many families here in america who have loved ones there and have lost. and so we are all thinking about you and our thoughts and prayers are with you. we really appreciate you coming in. we know this isn't easy to do. thank you for your strength and your courage and dignity and we are sorry for your loss.
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>> thank you so much. we also have a gofundme page because, again, my brother's father was left with no home. right now there is tents that are being built for people who have lost their homes. so we started a page for them. and this will go solely to him. >> we will share this and make sure that everyone who is watching can find that and help because we want to help you in any way we can. >> thanks so much. means a lot to me. thank you. we'll be right back.
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u.s. spy planes is revealing what china's spy balloons are capable of. cnn has learned that images captured by altitude reconnaissance aircraft offer details about the balloon before it was shot down. jim sciutto joins us to explain. what did china's spy balloon at least have the capability to do? >> the defense department said it had limited surveillance capability. we are learning more details now. it maybe had more capability than we realized. first of all, signals collection, in other words, it can intercept communications, et cetera, attempt to. also, the ability according to sources to geolocate those communications. in other words, where they are coming from and where they are going to. that's significant. other capabilities that are better than satellites. one, they could better photographs. 3d photographs, more so than satellites that are flying higher. that gives you more detail about the things thundershower taking photos of. and it also a greater ability to
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steer and hover over those targets for longer. the satellites are going at, well, 15,000 miles an hour or so as they circle the planet. this could move more slowly and gather more information as it does so. and this, of course, informed by where it traveled. what might it be looking at? in montana, icbm bases up there. in missouri, white man air force base, the b-2 bomber is based. in north carolina, you got fort bragg, camp ledge eun, other military installations. to have that capability more than we knew initially significant given where it flew over the u.s. >> no question. jim, thank you. that's fascinating. also this morning, president biden hammering florida senator rick scott and his proposal to sunset all federal legislation after give years, including medicare and social security unless congress decided to reauthorize it. scott defended the proposal he made yesterday comparing it to a 2017 republican health care plan
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that would have cut insurance from 24 million americans according to the cfo. he brought up an interview with my colleague jake tapper pressed a trump official on the cuts. >> let me read you something jake tapper said. this is back when republicans were proposing reducing the cost. what jake tapper said. what jake tapper said. and jake tapper said that is a cut. if you talk to jake tapper, why did he say it was a cut if republicans do it? did the same fact-checkers look at what jake tapper said? why didn't jake tapper say that $880 billion cut in medicaid is a cut. it's going to reduce life-saving drugs. >> i understand you say it has an impact on drugs. that is different though than saying that they cut medicare when they are saving money on the cost of what those drugs cost to americans. >> okay. but then what -- why did jake tapper say that $880 billion cut
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in medicaid is a cut. >> i don't think that's the defense that you think it is. >> here is what jake actually said. >> according to the congressional budget office, the health care bill that passed the house would cut $880 billion over ten years from medicaid. i know that the trump- administration is excited medicaid will go back to the states where they can have more control and be more efficient. without question 880 billion fewer dollars is a cut. >> joining us now to discuss is cnn's jake tapper. jake, what did you make of that, watching that interview, hearing your name be invoked so many times by senator scott? >> first of all, rough morning for anybody that was playing the jake tapper drinking game for eight times in five minutes. ten minutes. that's -- first, it was incomprehensible, to be honest. there are so many issues here. one is senator rick scott proposed sun setting all federal
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programs every five years and if they are worthwhile, congress can renew him. that's his proposal. just in the last day, the senate minority leader mitch mcconnell was saying that is the rick scott plan, not the republican plan. and how speaker mccarthy has been saying the same thing. that's not or plan. rick scott d propose it and he was the head of the national republican senatorial committee when he proposed it. that's a fact. for whatever reason, senator scott didn't want to stand by that plan. and there is a way to discuss it. you can say medicare and social security they are really issues with solvency and this is a way to have that conversation, et cetera. by all means, they should have that conversation. just the whatever that was, that word salad where he kept mentioning me was very strange to me. he was trying to compare medicare now being able to negotiate drug prices with drug
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companies, which is not a cut from medicare. it's a cut in pharmaceutical company profits, with me asking a question about the congressional budget office analysis of a medicate bill from self? it's nonsensical. >> you know what that is. he didn't say jake tapper says when he did his interview on fox. accident say jake tapper says when he did his interviews over places. someone gave him that talk point, they said it on cnn, jake tapper says it, whatever. he was using that as a talking point and kind of a gotcha to cnn during kaitlin's interview. she is right, it's not the defense you think it is. i think that's what it was. but i think, obviously, it fell flat. >> yeah, no, look, when he went on fox not this week but recently to try to defend this rescue america plan, he accused fox of reading democratic talking points. >> john roberts in the summer. >> yeah. and all john was doing was
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literally reading the rick scott plan. so, look, i'm not here -- and the as all of you. i am not here to take a position on his plan. this is his plan. i am not pro rick scott plan. i am not anti-rick scott plan. here is what he is proposing. obviously, he doesn't want to defend it. he wants to change the subject, which is odd, but that's also his prerogative. >> we need more of jake tapper in the morning on this program. i am not sure that's the way we wanted to get it. we are glad to got you here. i want your take on what mitch mcconnell said in the last 24 hours. here it is. >> this doesn't have anything to do with that. it's a bad idea. i think it will be a challenge for him to deal with this as all re-election in florida, more elderly people than any other state in america. >> that is really interesting to hear mcconnell say. obviously, no love lost between the two. to hear him say this is going to
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make his re-election in his state harder, what do you think? >> well, first of all, rick scott has been challenging mitch mcconnell for the leadership position in the senate. he has failed. he has not successfully challenged him. he has been trying to do it. second of all, i think that this is exactly why, the way that president biden is using this issue, is exactly why so many republicans did not embrace the rick scott plan because they thought it was electorally politically a real vulnerability. what president biden said at the state of the union that there are some republicans pro poing sun setting medicare and social security, it's accurate. rick scott proposed it. now, all the republicans that booed him and called him a liar, that's not accurate. rick scott did propose it. did the truth is what mcconnell said, rick scott proposed it but most republicans have distanced
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themselves from it quite a bit. >> mcconnell is like, owe're th leaders of the party in our representative chambers. we are against this. i think it's important to note that. we heard republicans say that. i will say, you know, to be fair to rick scott, his senior advisor to him in responding to mcconnell said rick scott knows how to win florida a hell of a lot better than mitch mcconnell does. they can keep parroting democratic lies. he won't stop fighting for democratic principles. he is standing by this plan. when i asked him if it was a mistake he said, no, he didn't think it was a mistake to propose it. more importantly, jake, you have a very important -- >> who knows how to win on sunday, right? >> who are you rooting for? >> the green tie. i don't know. we can't tell. >> so there is -- this is my eagles tie. and this is from the last time they won the super bowl. and we are looking forward to another victory this sunday.
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the beloved philadelphia eagles. i know we are underdogs against the kansas city chiefs for whom my wife roots. >> ooh! >> but it's going to be a good game. i will say it's much more fun to root against the villainous patriots than it is against the chiefs. they are just not as, you know, it's not like going against the death star. but i am looking forward to a good game and the eagles being victorious. jalen hurts is a phenom. >> how is it sleeping on the couch, jake? [ laughter ] >> it's good. we just got a new coach. it's very comfortable. >> don't root against jen tapper. all right, jake, thank you so much. >> my nimame for jake now is ja tapper says. >> don't do the drinking game when rick scott is on. >> thanks, jake. >> all right. good luck on sunday. experts are warning the great
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salt lake could disappear within the next five years because of the climate fueled mega drought in the west. we have a live report from utah next. r free. like the subway series menu. just buy any footlong in the app, and get one free. freeee monsters, free bosses, any footlong for free! this guy loves a great offer.. so let's see some hustle! i have moderate to severe crohn's disease. now, there's skyrizi. ♪ things are looking up ♪ ♪ i've got symptom relief ♪ ♪ control of my chn's means everything to me. ♪ ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪ feel significant symptom relief with skyrizi, including less abdominal pain and fewer bowel movements at 4 weeks. skyrizi is the first and only il-23 inhibitor for crohn's that can deliver both clinical remission and endoscopic improvement. the majority of people on skyrizi achieved long lasting remission at 1 year. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections
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eyes. scientists say it may disappear all together in five years but could be saved with emergency measures. many experts believe what is happening is a microcosm of what is expected to happen to the planet. bill weir is live in st. george, utah. bill, what's going on here? >> reporter: well, don, here in utah this megadrought is not just about the water they drink or use to water drops and animals. it's about the air they breathe. toxic dust. they are realizing if they don't spend billions to put more water in the great salt lake they could be paying much more forever. this is what is left of the great salt lake. they hit record lows in in
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recent months, exposing 800 square miles of lake bed. unchecked water use and climate change aren't just threatening the birds and sailboaters. and here the western megadrought threatens more than snow sports, agriculture and industry because this lake bed holds centuries of toxic runoff. mercury, selenium, arsenic, some of it natural, some of it man made mining waste. if it turns to dust and adds to some of the worst air pollution in the country, this is a threat to the lungs of over 2.5 million people. >> we have done this experiment in history before. we know about dust storms. we know about particulate pollution. we know about heavy metals and how they are bad for humans. >> this is an ecological disaster that will become a human health disaster. >> reporter: bonnie baxter is among the scientists who recently warned that the great salt lake as we know it could be gone in five years.
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shriveled into fingers of lifeless water before backing the great toxic dust bowl. >> you can see a person standing out there like the water would have been above their head a few years ago. >> reporter: this is known as a terminal lake with no rivers to take minerals to the sea. so they build up over time. just like owens lake in california, after developers notoriously drained it a century ago to build los angeles. it both inspired the movie "chinatown" and forced californians to spend in the billions to control the toxic dust that remains a threat 100 years later. . this lake is 12 to 15 times bigger than owens lake. it's right next to a metropolitan center, which that lake was not. so there are people who will breathe this dust immediately and we are really, really concerned about that happening here. so we have done that he can peer. . we shouldn't do it again. >> reporter: human choices that led to that catastrophic event,
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right? we are looking at the great salt lake in a position to where we can avoid that a catastrophe, we don't have to spend the billions of dollars in remediation in the future if we make choices today. brian steed and john lynn are from rival utah universities. >> the thing is it's bipartisan, right? we all want clean air. >> reporter: they are part of the great salt lake strike team. out to convince everyone that every drop counts. >> for a long time i don't think that people were sufficiently talking about the lake. now i think we have a lot of people interested. the governor of the state, the legislature who is all very interested in coming up with different scenarios and different solutions so we don't end up with that catastrophic outcome. >> reporter: it seems like the path of least resist eance is f the tate to pay farmers for water rights. is that going to happen? >> i don't know. a lot of things could go to that extreme. >> reporter: among the signs of
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change, when u.s. magnesium wanted to extend canals into lake, the state said no. the legislature started revising the water laws written in the days of the wild west. >> sometimes we take a step forward and sometimes back, but in general all those pieces of water legislation that passed in 2022 were bipartisan and unanimous. where does that happen anymore. >> reporter: fingers crossed it keeps happening. the only thing that can keep the salt lake great is lots of snow and even more cooperation. about two-thirds of utah's population is at risk of this dust. but they are finally coming around to this. they are getting water meters in the year 2023 to measure exactly how much the farmers are using and they hope knowledge is power to keep that lake alive. don, poppy. >> thank you. appreciate that. >> extraordinary to see. last month, an aed, automated external defibrillator, saved damar
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hamlin's life on the field. now we are going to talk about how accessible that life-saving equipment is at schools, around the country. dr. sanjay gupta has a report. >> what if it happened a few miles away from here? >> it would have been a totally different outcome. you can do cpr until you are blue in the face and it's never going to restart the heart. (vo) when it comes to safety, who has more iihs top safety pick plus awards,
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doctors said they were optimistic the buffalo bills damar hamlin would play again. professional football after having cardiac arrest on field last month. what if he had still been in high school, right? we asked this in the days after that happened, where are the resources? would he have gotten same treatment? our dr. sanjay gupta takes a look. >> we need everybody. >> reporter: when buffalo bills safety damar hamlin collapsed on the field in january, pete lake thought about his son, peter.
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>> it really brought back a lot of emotions, and still has. >> reporter: two years ago, then a high school freshman, peter lake was playing defense for the loyola dons against the mcdonald eagles. what you are about to watch is the exact moment his heart stopped beating. >> i went to the ball and stepped in front of it and i just got hit. i have done that many times before. and i kind of even winced thinking into my head, that's going to hurt. >> reporter: jeremy is the assistant athletic director and head athletic trainer at peter's school. he was watching diligently from the sidelines. >> this shot was pretty hard. i was watching peter instead of the course of the action of the game. >> i started looking for what was going to happen next and then just like that i got dizzy and i just blacked out.
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>> i could hear first. he had agonal breathing. gurgling for air. he is prone on the ground. i checked for a pulse and we didn't have one. >> reporter: the diagnosis, a rare phenomenon with fewer than 30 cases reported every year. let me show you what happened to peter. his heart here is contracting and relaxing. that's a normal rhythm. but at the exact millisecond the heart needs to recharge before the next beat, that is this little bump here, the lacrosse ball hit the left side of his chest. as a result, his heart never got a chance to relax. it starts fibrillating instead. peter goes into cardiac arrest and the clock starts ticking. what was that like for you? >> didn't have time to think. with no pulse, no breathing, we needed to get the aed and e.m.s. activated as soon as possible. >> reporter: and in peter's
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case, it all worked and fast. two to three minutes. but watching all this as a parent, i couldn't help but wonder, what if this were my kid's school? your kid's school? as part of a cnn investigation we learned that nowadays at least 20 states have laws requiring aeds and in reality about 70 to 80% of schools have at least one defibrillator on hand. but how accessible they are, that is the real issue we uncovered. what if it happened, you know, a few miles away from here? >> it would have been a totally different outcome. you can do cpr until you are blue in the face and it's never going to restart the heart. it is 100% access to an aed within a very timely period. >> reporter: turns out where you live makes a big difference. for example, in ohio, in michigan, more than 70% of public schools had aeds but in locations that simply couldn't be reached in time. in oregon, just half of schools
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had an aed accessible within four minutes of all sports venues. and in vermont, despite 81% of schools having an aed, just 16% had them located at fields or arenas and half the time they were in the school nurse's office or the lobby. >> this is an example of a portable -- >> reporter: we learned that athletic trainers are critical. in schools with athletic trainers, they were more likely to have aeds. the chance of survival from a cardiac arrest nearly doubled to over 80% if an athletic trainer or aed were used. but as things stand now, a third of the country's schools don't have anyone in that position. >> all athletes should be afforded the same resources that we have here, that division i athletes in college have and professional sports as well. >> reporter: that's the thing. it's availability and access. both are crucially important. it's one of the most important things you can do for your kids.
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make sure aeds are available and accessible in your kid's school. it saved peter lake's life and allowed for moments like this. [ applause ] >> our chief medical correspondent dr. sanjay gupta is us with. i am so glad you did this reporting. we were saying what if this happened to kids and teens. a lot of schools don't have enough funding. how expensive is an aed? >> they are about 1,000 to $2,000 depending on the model. they can last several years. that's not a yearly cost. what was striking is that in the late '90s no one was talking about this. over the last 20 years they have put a lot more aeds in schools and in other large venues, if it's a venue over 200 people, you are required to have an aed now. it could make a big difference. in schools there should be about one aed for every 500 students. they should be accessible. not just available, but accessible within two minutes.
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that ends up being key in terms of potentially saving lives like you saw with peter. >> i don't know if my kid's school has this. i think and i a lot of parents -- >> i asked at my own kid's school. everybody should do that. >> all right. doctor, thank you for doing this piece. you can read the essay about keeping high-schoolers safe on cnn.com. >> there was someone in the lobby a couple months ago that went into cardiac arrest. >> really? >> and we have one in the lobby. they came to borrow ours and saved the person. >> it's amazing versus cpr how much better it is. astronomically better do that than cpr. during the pandemic, mark marin wasn't sure if he would ever do stand-up comedy again. three years later he is back with his patented optimism and positivity. sarcasm. >> i don't want to be negative, but i don't think anything is ever going to get better ever
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again. don't misunderstand me. i don't have no hope. what are you, 7? >> see how cheery he is? he is live in the studio to spread joy. ealth, i choose airborne. unlike some others, airborne gives you vitamin c and so much more. it's an 8 in 1 immune suppoport formula. airborne. do more. nexium 24hr prevents heartburn acid for twice as long as pepcid. get all-day and all-night heartburn acid prevention with just one pill day. choose acid evention. choose nexium. the feeling of finding the psoriasis treatment she's been looking for. sotyktu is the first-of-its-kind,
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bring home incredible comfort with savings up to $800 on select adjustable mattresses sets. learn more at stearnsandfoster.com. man than me because you have human kids? like that makes you more responsible, more evolved, a better human? go [ bleep ] yourself. i have three cats that i love and in the best case scenario i'm going to have to have them all killed. i'm going to have to kill my friends, and i knew it going in. that's how big my heart is. >> that was comedian marc maron who is known for his dark but blunt humor. after the loss of his girlfriend in 2020 he wondered if he would
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ever perform standup again both because of my emotional state and the restrictions due to the pandemic, but three years later the comedian, actor, podcaster extraordinaire is back on stage laughing again and exploring the state of the world in a new hbo special "from bleak to dark." joining us now is marc maron, also the host of the wtf podcast. premieres tomorrow. did you think that you would be here, you would be in this position and you would have this premiere? >> sitting on a cnn show in the morning? >> in the morning. >> i never could have dreamed that i would be on cnn at 7:00 in the morning. >> i love you. i so relate to you. >> it's 8:50? >> it's 8:50? i just got up. how but guys? >> i wish. >> did any of us know what was going to happen? i didn't know where we would be. i have a hard time thinking about tomorrow let alone the future, but i didn't know -- not doing comedy thing was real because during the pandemic -- the weird thing was i didn't miss t i've been doing it all my
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life, but the only thing i thought was maybe i don't need it anymore, maybe i'm all better. so that was a weird framing of it. >> but you're not clearly since you're doing it still. >> not better, but as soon as other people started doing comedy i was like, all right, here we go, the race is back on. it just started again and i started at it a couple years ago building new material. >> that's what i do, i was telling you i watch mark norman, their podcast "we might be drunk." we need humor in this time. >> sure. >> i think the more sort of irreverent it is the better because i'm sick of people -- we can't say this, we can't say that -- >> you can say whatever you want really, but i do like -- i think i'm just naturally a dark comic and i need to do that to feel better. i'm not saying i'm for everybody, but, you know, i can get it through. >> let's listen to some of it. >> all right. >> the politically correct culture, you talk about that. >> i don't always know that i'm getting older, i don't always
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feel it. a few reasons, i don't have kids, if you have kids you can see you're dying in your kids. i mean, maybe that's cynical and i don't really know but i have to imagine at some point you're like happy birthday, son. how old are you today? 17? [ bleep ] i'm dying. i'm sorry, i meant to say have fun today. i don't know, i guess i was thinking out loud a little bit. >> no kids. are you checking your phone, don? >> no, i was just checking to make sure that i had the comedians that i love right because i don't want to get people's names right. >> mark norman, he's great. >> comedians in this moment they're helping us and i want to make sure that i give you guys some love, that's what i'm doing. >> we all need help to get through whatever is happening because it's not going to end well, don. >> spoil the ending? >> none of us know what's going to happen but we can kind of feel that it might not be great. >> poppy is the most optimistic
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and upbeat person and i come in and i am like -- >> he growls at me some mornings. >> are you like annoyingly optimistic? >> no. >> thanks, kaitlan. >> no not at all. >> yes, no. >> it's like ambitious and lovely. >> i feel like i'm starting something. i'm glad i'm here -- >> can we talk about lynn, though snoof course. >> i know this is all fun but a part of the reason you didn't know you could come back to comedy you lost the love of your life. lynn was 39? >> no, 54. >> she looked 39. >> she looked great. >> you lost her so young. >> yeah. >> and i was reading something you said about grief and you say grief is a strange thing, you hear about it all the time, but then all of a sudden you are in it. >> yeah. >> you talk about coming from that to here. >> yeah, i mean, it was -- it happened very quickly and it was very tragic and it was not expected and she had some underlying condition that we didn't know about. it was middle of covid and because of the nature of just that, you know, people couldn't
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really come over. it was kind of isolating and when you hear about grief no one really talks about it, but when you have it kind of -- it never goes away and it's sort of -- when you are in it at the beginning it's like a ptsd quality and you can't really stop the emotions, even though you want to stop them. you want relief, but ultimately what happens, i think, because, you know, we're people and i think people are designed to sort of deal with loss because we do, everyone is going to, it kind of grows with you and it's always there. you can kind of tap into it, you can experience the feelings, but i just never heard it talked about. comedically or any other way. i don't think there is a cultural dialogue. it was important for me to honor her and also to get the discussion out into the world about it and have some humor about it. i hope she likes the jokes. this is in the special. >> yeah. >> weird things started happening when i was talking about her, i was in ireland where we spent one vacation
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together and i was doing the stuff about her passing and the light started going on and off in the theater and i was sort of like, all right, hi, lynn. >> crazy. i talk about it in the special. >> i think you feel people. >> i definitely address it in the special. >> a shout out to her foundation of a certain age. >> of course. >> there's that. i can't wait to watch. >> premieres tomorrow, right? >> it does, i believe so. this is friday, yeah. >> it's friday, it's 8:00 a.m. >> i have to ask people what day it is. the date as well. >> premieres tomorrow night 10:00 a.m. eastern on hbo streaming available as well tomorrow on hbo max. congratulations. >> thank you. >> thanks for previewing it with us. >> good to see. >> you thanks for coming in. thank you all for joining us. we hope you have a lovely weekend, "cnn newsroom" starts right after this break.
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