tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN May 10, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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our viewers in the united states and all around the world. i'm bianca nobilo. >> and i'm max foster. just ahead -- >> how do you feel? >> feels like a verdict not only for e. jean but thousands of other women. >> the verdict is a disgrace and continuation of the greatest witch hunt of all-time. george santos does face criminal charges being brought by federal prosecutors. >> he built his whole persona on a pack of lies. >> rule of law is being violated. >> he was not arrested. he was abducted. >> live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it is wednesday, may 10th, 9:00 a.m. in london, 4:00 a.m.
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in new york where a federal jury has found u.s. republican presidential donald trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation and he is vowing to appeal. >> the jury awardeded $5 millio to carroll. trump lashed out on his social media site calling the trial very unfair. >> what else can you expect from a trump hating clinton appointed judge who went out of his way to make sure that the result of this trial was as negative as it could possibly be? i don't even know who this woman is. i have no idea who she is, where she came from. this is another scam, it is a political witch hunt. >> carroll released the statement i filed the lawsuit to clear my name and get my life back. today the world finally knows
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the truth. the victory is not just for me but every woman who suffered because she wasn't believed. >> it took just 2 1/2 hours for the jury to reach their unanimous decision as paula reid reports. >> reporter: the speed of the decision suggests there was not a lot of disagreement or deliberation in the jury room. i was in the court tuesday morning and it took about 90 minutes for the judge to give the jury instructions on how to make this decision and it took just a little bit longer than that for them to actually make this decision. while i was in court throughout the trial, it was clear that the jury was being very attentive not only to e. jean carroll but also other witnesses. and it is clear from this decision that they believe not only e. jean carroll, but they also believed her friends who heard her describe this e encounter shortly after it occurred and also women who allege other similar behavior. and they heard from the former president in his own words in the infamous "access hollywood"
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tape describe bing grabbing peo. we may never know exactly what the jury thought of specific pieces of evidence because they have been anonymous and the judge has encouraged them to remain anonymous even though they have a right to speak out. the former president's lawyers are trying to spin this as a victory for their client because the jury did not find that he raped e. jean. but they did find that he sexually abused her, that is still under the law a form of sexual assault, a form of battery. so if you have a day where your client has been found to sexually abuse someone and may be on the hook for around $5 million in damages, it is hard to spin that as a victory. paula reid, cnn, new york. during the trial trump's attorney cross-examined carroll about the alleged rape and repeatedly asked her why she didn't scream. carroll said she was in too much panic at the time. a clinical psychologist says it
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is common for victims to keep quiet about their trauma. >> that line of questioning is presented indicated on some of the oldest sexist myths and misunderstandings that we have. first of all, the overwhelming majority of women don't scream, don't report, they don't go back the next day to see if there is video footage. that is simply not what people do in general. i think that it is important to know that when people are terrorized and rendered helpless and stunned by a sudden assault as she was, we often don't to what we imagine we might do, you know, we often don't scream or run or do any of the things that in our fantasies we thought we might do. instead we fall back on things that are habitual often. for e. jean, it was fighting.
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she fought physically hard. but screaming was not a habit. >> and there was never any question of jail time because it was a civil trial. but he is facing other federal criminal investigations and we'll hear from donald trump later today, tune in for the town hall mod rated by kaitlan collins. it all starts at 8:00 p.m. eastern in new hampshire. that is thursday, 8:00 a.m. in hong kong. first major in-person meeting in months between u.s. president biden and top lawmakers over the debt ceiling standoff has come and gone with virtually nothing to show for it. both the white house and republican leaders still seem unwilling to budge from their positions. >> speaker mccarthy offered a very different way forward. he proposed deep cuts that i believe will hurt american family, millions rely on
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medicaid and would be at risk of losing that. >> the house has raised the debt ceiling and passed the bill. that is why we had a meeting today. everybody in this meeting reiterated their positions. i didn't see any new movement. the president said the staff should get back together. but i was very clear with the president, we have now just two weeks to go. dwl >> both sides will meet again friday with the clock ticking towards a potential catastrophic default. manu raju reports from capitol hill. >> reporter: highly anticipated tuesday meeting at the white house with kevin mccarthy and president biden along with democratic leaders chuck schumer and hakeem jeffries and senate gop leader mitch mcconnell did not yield any breakthrough. and kevin mccarthy said there was no progress at that meeting. going into the meeting the president and democratic leaders had pushed mccarthy to simply
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raise the debt limit, allow the united states to continue borrowing to help pay its bills but don't attach any spending cuts. mccarthy has rejected that position, has called for direct negotiations with the white house over this issue. the white house resisted those calls. the house gop pushed its own plan passing a bill that included a slew of spending cuts attached to raising the debt limit for one year, something that the democrats say is dead on arrival. so it is unclear whether they will be able to get an agreement to overt the first ever debt default in american history, something that could have drastic economic consequences. the leaders do plan to meet on friday and in the interim staff will continue to have discussions, but what will they entail and will they get to the point where they can agree to some sort of outline of what a deal to raise the national debt limit would look like. even if they would get that
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agreement, it would need support from both chambers of congress and getting that through in the matter of a few weeks would be no easy task given how limited time congress is actually in session between now and then, but also the parliamentary procedure for getting this through the finish line, particularly in the senate which is difficult to move legislation quickly, all major questions about how this could potentially get resolved. but at the moment this is the only game in town, the only forum in which they are actually discussing how to raise the debt limit. other members of congress are looking to the white house and speaker mccarthy to cut a deal, but a deal is a far ways off as both sides are concerned that the u.s. could be very close to falling off this cliff unless something changes dramatically in the coming days. manu raju, cnn, capitol hill. report on u.s. inflation set to be released in the coming hours and they expect it to
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remain high. the consumer price index forecast to raise 5% year over year. that is the same pace as in march. housing costs are rising and that will likely be a key item that economists will be looking at. if it is higher than expected, it could complicate the federal reserve interest rate plans. here is a look at the stock futures. cnn has learned federal prosecutors have filed criminal charges against embattled new york congressman george santos. he could appear in a federal court as soon as today, but so far no one knows the exact charges. >> since being elected to orange, santos is accused of lying about his background and resume, leading a credit card fraud scheme and a few things more. evan perez has the latest from washington. >> reporter: the justice department has filed criminal charges against congressman george santos.
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a republican who has been under scrutiny for a stunning number of lies and fabrications during his runs for office. santos is expected to appear in federal court in new york where the charges are under seal. we don't know yet the exact nature of the charges but the fbi and justice department's public integrity prosecutors in new york and washington have been examining allegations of false statements in santos' campaign finance filings among other claims. the congressman took office only in january and as faced callsow resign. large chunks of his official biography are believed to be false including his claims to have worked for goldman sachs and citigroup, claims that he has jewish heritage have turned out to be not true. he allegedly stole money from a clarity set up to help a military veteran's dog. he even falsely claimed that he was a producer on a spiderman
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broadway flop. it is not a crime to lie to voters about your resume. instead, federal prosecutors have honed in on allegations that santos lied on federal election filings that are intended to document campaign expenditures and fundraising. we're expecting to see santos appear before a judge in the coming hours. evan perez, cnn, washington. right now supporters of former pakistani minister are gathering outside where he is being held after corruption charges connected to his time in office sparking protests. >> a special hearing will be held in the coming hours. kahn's legal team are filing a petition for it to be held at a different location. >> and there is a big reaction and curfews in place as well? >> reporter: yes, max.
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i mean, at the moment we still have a complete blackout. no twitter, no whatsapp, normal broadcast services are turned off at the orders of interior ministry. i'm in front of the police compound where kahn has been held since the early hours of this morning. we're waiting for the special court hearing to take place. we've been here since about 8:30 in the morning. we're now coming into 1:00 in the afternoon and the special hearing has not happened. most recent information we've received here on the ground is that three members of his legal team have been allowed inside the compound. everyone that we've spoken to from kahn's legal time have told us that they have had no access to their client after he was apprehended yesterday by paramilitary troops. there is a sense of unease, protests have eased out a bit, but there are road blocks across
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major cities in the country. we do know that the secretary-general of kahn's party has just been arrested when he was accompanying the legal team that had gone into get the petition filed to dismiss the fact that this special hearing is happening inside a police compound and not at the judicial complex. it is not a public hearing. media is not being allowed inside. there is a lot of uncertainty. kahn is incredibly popular here. and so we're still waiting to see how it pans out. >> we'll get back to you when you have updates. coming up, a controversial u.s. border policy is poised to expire tomorrow raising concerns about the already challenging humanitarian crisis at the southern border. and health officials are proposing that women should start screening for breast cancer regularly after they turn 40. and an 8-year-old boy found unharmed after missing for two
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. severe storms are expected to impact the central u.s. and southeastern plains today including parts of texas, montana, colorado and wyoming. main threats are isolated tornadoes, hail and wind gusts. and more than 7 million people are under flood watches with more thunderstorms expected today. flash flood warning remains in parts of missouri as well. in el paso, migrants are being urged to turn themselves into immigration authorities ahead of the expiration of title 42, the covid era power can which empowered border agents to swiftly expel migrants. >> it is estimated more than 150,000 are waiting in shelters and on the trstreets of norther mexico. the two companies are trying to manage the crisis. >> we've gotten overwhelming
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corporation from mexico. we also are in the process of setting up offices in alcohol b -- colombia and other places. but it remains to be seen. it will be chaotic for a while. >> rosa flores is in el paso where hundreds are heeding the war warning. >> reporter: the scene here in el paso, texas has changed. if you take a look around me, you will see that the streets are empty. they used to be packed, but now they are empty. here is what happened. take a look at this video. there was a federal enforcement action very early this morning. our cameras were rolling when all of this was unfolding. federal agents in the dark were handing migrants who were sleeping on the streets flyers encouraging them to turn themselves into immigration
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authorities. at first there was confusion because migrants didn't know what was going on. and then the fear sank in once they realized they had to make a critical decision. a few hours later we started seeing migrants line up at a processing center that is a few minutes walk away. and we saw that line grow by the hundreds. a few hours later, a second enforcement action, this time officers, agents, federal agents with flak jackets telling people verbally that they should turn themselves into immigration authorities. if you take a look around me, there is a mix of people, some have completely left, and if you look at these blankets, these are the blankets that lot of the migrants were using to protect themselves from the sun. and the blankets are here. but if you look under, migrants are gone. a lot have turned themselves into, but i've talked to multiple, and some say that they turned themselves into
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immigration authorities and they were released so they are back in the camp waiting for a bus or waiting for a plane ticket so that they can meet their families somewhere in the united states. all of this is happening as the end of title 42 looms may 11 at 11:59 p.m. about what is going on the northern border and the flow we're expecting as title 42 expires, according to a source the federal government estimates that there are more than 150,000 migrants in northern mexican cities waiting to turn themselves into immigration authorities or waiting to cross into the united states. now, that is important because the detention facilities, the holding facilities, are already maxed out at capacity. and so that is what the administration is grappling with and no one really knows what will happen once title 42 ends. rosa flores, cnn, el paso.
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islamic jihad is vowing a response to the airstrikes on gaza calling it a massacre. three brigade leaders were among the 13 killed in the operation. gaza hospital says the strikes also killed five women and four children who were said to be members of the men's families. >> and a send gaza strike claimed that they were moving anti-tank missiles to a launching pad. this is in response to the missiles filed from israel. >> elliott gotkine is joining us with the latest. the nature of this response is going to depend on hamas? >> reporter: israel is braced for a response. i think that it is inevitable that one will come and everyone is expecting it. islamic jihad itself telling cnn
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that the occupation into israel will be surprised by the response which will be unified and from all factions. in other words, not just from islamic jihad but from all militant groups. and i can tell you that outside of southern israel the communities around the gaza strip, life is continuing as normal. but in those communities, schools are closed, they were closed yesterday because of a school holiday anyway. and trains are not stopping at the cities close to the gaza strip. and benjamin netanyahu addressed the nation last night. he had this warning for the militants. >> translator: our principle is clear. whoever harms us, we will strike at them and with great force. our long arm will reach every terrorist at a time and place of our choosing. we are in the midst of a campaign. we are prepared for all
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possibilities. i suggest that our enemies not test us. >> netanyahu adding that -- addressing to the militants, you can run, you can hide, but in the end israel will get you. so for now, an uneasy calm pervades the country but i think the response from islamic jihad and other groups such as hamas, the response is a question of when rather than if. >> elliott gotkine, thank you. u.s. marshals are leading the manhunt for two inmates who escaped sunday from a philadelphia jail under astonishing circumstances. the 18-year-old who is accused of killing four people and shooting two others and two robberies and a 24-year-old who was being held on drug and gun charges. >> they apparently escaped through a hole cut in the fence and climbeded over two barbed wire fences to get away. no one seems to know how the hole got cut and nobody
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liable of sexual abuse and defamation. e. jean carroll was awarded $5 million in damages. and former pakistani president is expected to appear in a special hearing after being arrested. there are demands for his release. independent advisers with the food and drug administration are expected to vote wednesday on whether they will recommend the fda make a birth control pill available over the counter for the first time ever in the u.s. that pill uses only the hormone progesterone. independent experts heard from the company that manufactures the medication as it made its case for why the pill should be more easily available. butt scientists have expressed concerns including about its effectiveness in women overweight or obese. the vote by the panel is nonbinding and a final decision by the fda is expected this summer. new draft recommendation
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says women should start getting regular mammograms after they turn 40 instead of 50. the task force says breast cancer is treatable when caught early and screening would reduce the risk of dying from the disease. jacqueline howard has more. >> reporter: for women at average risk, the task force sees more benefits than risks for them to start mammograms at age 40. now, this is a draft update, it is available for public comment from now through june 5, but based on current incidence rates, it is estimated that 12.9% of women born in the united states today will develop breast cancer at some time during their lives. and it is important to catch these cancers early. that gives a better chance of survival. now, meanwhile this update does not change recommendations for women at high risk of getting breast cancer, those women should still keep in contact with their doctors for what is best for them. but for all of us, for all women, it is important to discuss with our doctors our
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family history of cancer, whether you have dense breasts. ask for a breast exam at your next appointment and talk to your doctors about when to start screening for you based on your own risk factors and how often. back to you. psychologists in the u.s. are calling for teens to undergo training before they enter the world of cdc. the american psychological association released ten recommendations tuesday to guide parents, teachers, policymakers and tech companies. >> and they include limitations on content over self harm and also limiting screen time. more than 4 million will soon be getting checks from turbotax as part of a settlement with parent company intuit. >> the new york attorney general says that it pushed americans away from free services by making them harder to find in
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web searches. >> impacted customers will get an email and checks will be around $30 we're told. still to come, sounds of gunfire and explosions now part of everyday life. nic robertson speaks to people in eastern ukraine seemingly numb to the fighting around them. >> reporter: sirens are such a background part of people's lives here living through the war. they don't even respond, take notice, flinch even. war is just ever-present.
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>> meanwhile eastern ukrainians living near the frontlines are waiting for the expected co counter counteroffensive. clare sebastian is here in london and nic robertson is in eastern ukraine. >> nic, expectations don't seem to be particularly high for this expected counteroffensive, the idea that the war of attrition will continue and there won't be a definitive result from it, however ukraine has surprised time and time again in the morale and resolve and you are seeing that where you are. >> reporter: and this i think is perhaps part of expectations being played down by western leader, allies of ukraine, but obviously the support that they have from their populations to continue to spend so much money and support ukraine is dependent on how those expectations are set. ukrainian commanders very well aware of that particular
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dynamic. when we talk to them, they are cau cautious, and that this is a counter offensive that will be potentially very bloody. it is not like a war game, not like hollywood some say to us. so i think that there is a real understanding of that dynamic. there is a real hope here that they can break through. they have had a success over the weekend not far away in bakhmut in east of ukraine able to take several kilometers of ground there. one officer involved in that told us that they intercepted russian communications and that the russians were surprised that they lost ground, other reports saying that significant numbers of russian soldiers and mercenaries killed in that particular offensive. but i think when you step back from that sort of immediacy of the frontline and we're able to get insights often about how it looks and feels close to frontlines, we step back 12 miles or so perhaps from the
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front lines to take a look at people's lives there who are so close to the frontline in reality because shells and missiles can hit them and how they are getting on with their lives. a few miles from ukraine's eastern front live is, well, sort of normal. although it is not. outside of war, who needs this m much. thank you very much. thank you. should be a nice woolly hat to keep me warm. people are friendly, not frozen in fear, even though they feel it. we don't know what is happening 30 minutes from now, she says, let alone an hour. no worries shown in the town park either. workers trim the grass as artillery shells tear up not so distant fields. showing fear it seems is an
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abandoned indulgence. air raid warnings now. sirens have become such a background part of people's lives here living through the war that they don't even respond, take notice, flinch even. war is just ever-present, pervaded through people's lives. outside of town, even closer to the front, this elderly couple nonchalantly tell us their home was shelled last month. he even jokes, it is boring when there is no shooting. both though hopeful ukraine's coming counteroffensive will end their suffering. we believe ukraine will go in there and beat them well, his wife says. further on, this man is more worried about his weeds than the war. we don't understand anything about the counteroffensive, he
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says. we just hope for our ukraine, for our defense. where and when the counteroffensive may begin is one of the war's best kept secrets so far. the mis-friday is exactly what ukraine wants. keep russia guessing, stretch their supply lines. zap troop morale. ukraine's victory rides on surprise. driving around here, you can see some shelling in the distance. and you can see plenty of soldiers around. but what you don't get a sense of is any big buildup for a counteroffensive. farmers here are counting on their troop's success, sowing crops in fields they want to harvest in fall. and this man hopes the counteroffensive will secure his land. but says that he knows some of the soldiers around here, knows how hard the fight will be.
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knows it will be a bloody battle. and i think that that echo what is we heard from that commanding officer about it is not hollywood, it is a real battle and i think it gets to the point of expectations being made realistic in western capitals. it is not going to be easy. but ukrainians are absolutely determined to do it. >> nic robertson for us in eastern ukraine, thank you. >> and clare, this lack of grain leaving the ports in ukraine, effectively that grain deal appears to be dead. >> it is on the brink. it expires in eight days time. russia only extended it in march for 60 days even though the agreement was that every extension would be for 120 days. and there are no inspections of ships, but they have restarted it on outbound ships leaving ooubian ports for the global markets.
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but russia is making this hard. there were expert level talks last week that did not end well and they are now moving to senior level talks expected to start today with deputy foreign ministers from ukraine, from russia and turkey and u.n. representatives as well to try to revive this deal. i think that the problem for russia is that they are saying that separate agreement that was agreed last july which was supposed to help smooth the path to exports to global markets is not being met. sanctions they say are getting in the way. but i think that this is also russia at a time when it is clearly on the battlefield struggling to defend as well as attack, trying to show ukraine and the world that this is where there is still leverage. >> and i want to ask about zaporizhzhia and the concern about the pnuclear plant there. >> they are evacuating the families of the nuclear staff
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from a feeder town into that plant. but we're hearing this morning that they are not actually hearing the staff to leave. a number of the staff have remained in the plant throughout the ckconflict after it was occupied by russia. they need them to keep running it. russia doesn't have people that they can just bring into keep running the plant. so i think that is what is going on here. but it is extremely nerve-racking. we know the plant is vulnerable and there are weapons on the site. but i think the most important thing is what we don't know. we don't have a lot of visibility about what russia has been doing there, how they have been running it. and that is worrying on the ukrainian side. >> clare, thank you very much. japan is in talks to open a nato liaison office in asia. in an interview with cnn, the country's foreign minister says russia's invasion of ukraine has made the world less stable. >> and potentially contentious
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move if you talk to diplomats of course. >> reporter: indeed. good morning to you. let me first make it clear japan is not looking to join nato, but it does realize just how fragile the global landscape can be and how quickly things can change. obviously ukraine is serving as a reminder. but it does want to strengthen an already established relationship with nato by helping it open an office, an office here in japan. especially as a time when japan faces its own threats closer to home here in asia. take a listen to part of our exclusive interview we conducted just hours ago here in tokyo with japan's foreign minister. >> north korea intensifying activities of missiles. maybe further provocation such as another nuke test might be possible. and also china is a great
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challenge for us. so that is why including all those things are security become severe and complex. >> reporter: no time table has been established and nato is being pretty low key about all of this other than to say that it has had a cooperative relationship with gentljapan. when word of this became public, china issued a statement showing its disapproval toward a relationship like this or any further alliance with nato, but these themes of security, especially in the asia pacific region, will be one of the many discussion points coming up at the g7 summit in hiroshima, that of course begins next week here in japan. >> marc, thank you very much for that. still ahead, an 8-year-old boy's resourceful thinking helped him survive two days being lost in the woods.
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an 8-year-old boy has been rescued after getting lost for two days in a michigan state park. police say the second grader went missing saturday while camping with his family. >> search party volunteers found him monday about two miles from the family's campsite. the boy surveyed by sheltering under a log, using branchs and leaves for warmth and eating snow for hydration. >> who do you think would survive longer, you or i? >> you. >> really? i was going to say you. >> yeah, why? >> you are very proactive and positive. i think that you'd get on with things. >> i think that i'd lie under a log and probably be soaking. >> a lot to learn from that 8-year-old. a big shock for a family in new jersey when what is believed to have been a meteorite crashed in their house. police are still trying to confirm exactly what kind of rock it is but suspect that it is linked to a meteor shower
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going on right now. >> the object broke through the roof and bounced around a bedroom. fortunately no would not was in the room at the time. >> it hit the floor here because that is completely damaged. it ricocheted up to this part of the ceiling. and then finally coming down and resting just on the floor there. >> you might not know space rocks do strike quite regularly but don't normally hit a home. >> this is like a bad movie. and now to the nba playoffs where two series have clear frontrunners. the nuggets secured a big win over the suns. final score 118-102. 29 points for joekic.
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>> and embiid sunk 33 leading the philadelphia to the victory on the road. all four teams play again thursday. in the nhl playoffs, dallas stars beat the seattle kraken on tuesday leveling their western conference semifinals series at two game as piece. game five ha heads back to dall on thursday. and the carolinas stormed past the devils beating them 6-1. carolina just now one win away from advancing to the eastern conference finals for the first time since 2019. there is a new top dog at westminster. buddy holly owned title best in show, first time a dog of his breed, petite bassett griffin has taken the top prize. >> more than 3,000 dogs representing 210 breeds competed this year. winston was the crowd favorite going into the final round of
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judging but ultimately it was buddy holly who won the big ribbon. >> i know what his name means. petite is small. bassett is low. griffin is shaggy. nasa will use lasers to send high definition video of the moon back to earth during the artemis 2 lunar mission. it will launch in november next year carrying four astronauts on a roughly ten day journey. >> traditionally nasa has relied on radio waves to communicate to return data to earth. now they will use laser beams to send terabytes of data in a single transmission. >> what do you think of that, does that change the way you view space? >> it certainly does. mind blown. >> many years of speculation about a possible return from the dead as ghost with the most is ready for more mischief.
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>> beetlejuice. beetlejuice. beetl beetlejuice. >> it's show time. >> gist say his name three times and he shall appear. beetlejuice is coming back to the big screen with a long awaited sequel. warner brothers part of our parent company say that it will feature original stars and welcome wednesdays star. it is set for release in september of next year. and saving the best stories for last -- ♪ >> this is what i imagine you listen to. >> pretty amazing. always reinventing herself. >> and today marks first day of beyonce's world tour in support
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of her seventh album. and it will continue around europe which is mostly sold out and then back to the u.s. >> and forbes reports that beyonce could make more than $2 billion from the tour in ticket sales alone. that is more than the projected earnings from taylor swift's eras tour that has been in the u.s. only so far and could earn swift more than $1.6 billion. >> i think that we're in the wrong industry. we should be doing live tours. which do you think we'd earn as much as beyonce? i have the fashion but i worry about your dancing. >> i also worry about your dancing. but i have been a rapper. >> we'll have to bring that back to the show. it is on youtube? >> no, it is pre-youtube thank goodness. >> we'll find a wave getting it on here. thanks for joining us.
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