tv CNN News Central CNN July 14, 2023 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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actors on strike. members of the screen actors guild are walking the picket lines after talks fell through. what is at stake? billions of dollars. as republican presidential candidates head to iowa, the governor is about to sign a six-week abortion ban. all of this and more on "cnn news central." hollywood pressing pause. 160,000 actors taking part in a history-making strike that will effectively freeze all film and television production in the u.s., and some fear the shutdowns could stretch through the summer or even the end of the year. the studios and unions are feuding over protections from artificial intelligence and how to accurately compensate in the
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era of streaming. natasha, where are the union members telling you? >> there's a lot of concern and high people are excited and motivated, yet they're also seeing their colleagues, who are writers, who have been on this very same picket line for more than 70 days. there's also that feeling of apprehension, how long will this go on for? we talked a lot about better compensation, about a.i., and a lot about streaming residuals. i want to show you something that actor britney garmes. her brother is also an actor, he was in a show 30 years ago. here's what she said about the two residual checks she and her brother get. >> my brother was an actor in the '90s worked a lot.
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we sometimes get residuals. he'll get checks from broadcast shows he did in 1995 worth more than films i did in 2020. i think that's a big part of the reason why we're out here. i understand that streaming is an uncharted territory. they're making money. all these millionaires are making money, but nobody else is seeing any of that money. >> now, the president of sag-aftra fran drescher addressed this. she compared it to moving furniture on the "titanic" but at the same time the studios have said in a statement they offered a historic pay race and groundbreaking protects against a.i., and they are disappointed
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sag-aft rawalked away. chloe, what are you seeing on the other coast, and also, who are you seeing? >> first of all, jason sudeikis, he's out here on the frontlines, holding a sign here in solidarity. what i'm hearing is apprehension, anxiety. people are worried about how to pay their bills. they believe this could be something that lasts for several months. i spoke to actors today, who told me they should not be the victims of the studios deciding to move forward with streaming. even though, like the head of disney, bob iger, coming out and saying maybe they overshot how lucrative streaming is, they say it's not their fault, they need to be paid more. i spoke to the local chapter who had this to say about how streaming can affect actors'
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pay. >> it's affected how we get paid residuals, which is what keep us going from job to job. there's no tail to streaming. once then own it, they own it, and we stop earning money. so, getting a bigger piece of the streaming pie, getting a success metric, they don't want to share their numbers how well a show is doing, so we don't share in the success if the show is a hit. >> reporter: these actors and some writers out here today picketing today, they are telling me they're worried about losing their homes. they're worried about paying their bills, not to mention they do have, you know -- understand it's not just actors and writers being affected. it's craft services, security, the crews who are putting these shows and movies together that are all affected right now.
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they hope they can come to terms on something soon, but they are prepared to see this last for several months. rahel? >> it's the entire industries that hollywood serves. chloe, thank you. brianna? a cnn exclusive, to more top state election officials have been interviewed by federal prosecutors. al schmidt and new mexico's secretary of state maggy toulouse oliver. that makes four secretaries of state who have been interviewed. a charging decision in the election interference in georgia, that could come as soon as next month. we are just learning that lawyers for former president trump are seeking a new court order, asking for evidence to be thrown out. for the district attorney will else to be disqualified. evan perez is here for us here.
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let's start with the latest on the secretaries of state being interviewed by the special counsel. >> al schmidt was at the center of a lot of 9 pressure of former president trump and his allies trying to claim that was fraud in philadelphia in the election results. he's now been interviewed by the special counsel as part of this. >> margaret toulouse olive has also been interviewed. schmidt has been very vocal about what he says were some of the pressures put on them during that period. what we know is that the special counsel has certainly focused on these seven states that were certainly at the center of what the former president was trying to do, which was to set aside the legal votes of citizens
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across this country and try to substitute his own, claiming he had won those states when he had not. we know this is an investigation that's intensified. we expect some time soon we'll see some charging decisions. >> then in this other case, in georgia, where we are learning that lawyers are seeking a new court order asked for evidence to be thrown out, didn't they try that before? no? yes? >> you have to keep trying. >> they can do that? >> you can try different courts. certainly the judge overseeing the special-purpose grand jury in fulton county has already rejected the claims, and now the former president's legal team is going to the fulton county superior court and the georgia supreme court, trying his luck there. these are hail mary passes, so to speak, but the legal team in
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the filing says this is a violation of his fundamental constitutional rights, pointing out the fact that he is running for president, and so that's one reason why the work of the special-purpose grand jury should be set aside, tossed out, saying it's not legitimate, it has no authority. as you pointed out, the real grand jury, the one that could bring an indictment, that has already begun sitting in fulling county. we expect the district attorney there, the democrat, saying a decision could come in the next few weeks which is why i think you see the former president making the last gasp. rahel? iowa is the center of the universe when it comes to republican politics. half a dozen candidates are
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trying to court evangelicals. and in minutes, iowa's governor will sign the ban, outlawing ought abortions at six weeks, before most women even know they're pregnant. >> we're standing here on an historic day where governor kim reynolds will take this stage and sign into law historic protections for the unborn. i think all the members of family leader here in iowa prayed and worked to bring us to this day, and it's an honor to be with you all. >> governor recomynolds set up special session for this to pass. joining me is state senator sherry lynn westridge. thank you for being on the program. you say you supported this ban, because your constituents wanted
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it. how do you square that with polling that most iowans believe abortion should be legal. >> thanks for having me on. i would say the polls quest were very unclear, and i don't think that that polling really reflected the views of iowans, given that we have a super-majority -- [ inaudible ] >> senator, i think we lost you. we're trying to get you back on. it's an important issue and important day in iowa. we'll try to get that back up. we'll speak to the senator hopefully. >> we'll try to reestablish it. this just into cnn, the suspect in the gilgo beach murders. we have details on his first court appearance, so stay with
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us. plus the pentagon and politics, the bill that authorizes how the pentagon spends money. we have much more information on the path of that through congress right now. later, record heat gripping the u.s. how a new type of paint, yes, paint, could fight global warming and help you stay cool. so you only pay for what you need. check it out, yoyou could save $700 dollars just by switching. ooooh, i'll look into that. let me put a reminder on my y phone. save $700 dollars. pick up dad from airport? ohhhhhh. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ you founded your kayak company because you love the ocean- not spreadsheets. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates tching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire
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brita i understand this involving a fake e-mail and burner phone. what can you tell us? >> last i saw, i was going through the bail application. there's so much detail in this, but his name is rex heuermann. he pled guilty. this is a man who is a family man, married, two kids, owns an architecture firm in new york city, but has a home on long island where these murders happened. he was arrested last night by authorities. back to 2010, that's when these murders were uncovered during a missing persons investigation. please found the body of one woman who he is charged with the killing of. subsequently, three days ago later, three more bodies are found where police are tying to heuermann, and they believe he's
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a prime suspect in the fourth death. like you said, the gilgo up for. melissa bar thiol muse, amber costello, emma waterman and -- barnes. this has haunted police, but a couple years ago there were new leadership, and the commissioner who used to be former knapp knapp, started a task force. they collected a slew of evidence against heuermann, including burner phones they say in this court paperwork he used to contact sex workers -- these women were believed to be sex workers, advertising on craigslist. it's also believed he contacted the family members of the victims to taunt them and ask them questions. it's believed that these murders happened while his wife was out of the country. some of the other information
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that we have uncovered in these documents is that they had e-mail addresses, where he was researching the crimes, you know, about serial killers, victims' names, looking up pornography sites, sadistic sites. how they eventually nabbed him, according to sources is not only the burner phones, but also a f physical description of a witness, and also a pickup truck related to heuermann's brother, but they nabbed him by dna. they quconnected a hair that wa in a burlap bag, and connected it to a pizza crust eaten by heuermann. so, again, this reads like a crime novel. so much detail in this court
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paperwork why heuermann is their prime suspect. i can't express enough, on long island, in new york city this is a case that's haunted law enforcement. it's very obvious everybody the -- there was a lot of investigation from the task force that energized this case. >> i think that's what's strike you about this, brynn. they worked hard, got creative, thinking about cell towers, the information they knew and didn't know. they just put one foot in front of the other and did a lot to figure this out. how are the families of some of these victims -- they believe he taunted some of them, and have been living, waiting for years
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and years for answers. >> reporter: we're still trying to get reaction from the family members of the four women, but there are other murders that were uncovered in those areas. there's huge speculation, who did those as well? are they all connected? are there two separate murderers acting and burying bodies in the same place? it's been a mystery for people who live on long island. we are hearing from some of those family members. we know the police are working on it. these murders happened. these are women who were sex workers. there was a lot of speculation that police weren't working hard enough because of these women's occupations, so there's a sigh of relief. we're still working on getting reaction from the family members who he's been now charged with
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murder for. >> brynn, thank you so much. rahel? coming up for us, as record heat batters, there's a new tool in the fight against climate warning. it's paint. online in seconds. and, gold has been a safe haven in times of turmoil! and gold has even kept its value through inflation! bro, i've been there, but gold saved my portfolio. a tip for you... visit invest.gold visit invest.gold to see why gold is everyone's asset.
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welcome back, a critical spending bill is in the balance. the defense authorization act narrowly passed the gop-led house, but it could be doomed in the senate. hard-line conservatives added some amendments that would gut some benefits. melanie zanono has more. >> reporter: rahel, there's a lot of concerns about how the house and senate will come to an agreement on a final product. this has been a bill traditionally bipartisan, but it's been thrust into the center of the republican-led culture wars. that's because speaker copy copy made the decision to caters to
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his right side. including amendments to ban the pentagon from displaying the pride flag, ban the pentagon from beingent to do diversity, equity and inclusion train and certainly medical care for transgender troops. we should point out that none of the at the amendments would survived in the senate, so it sets up a huge clash, especially because kevin mccarthy poppy marjorie taylor green to the negotiating team for later this year. hardline conservatives are warning mccarthy to hold the line. take a listen. >> we have established or position, right? now we ought to hold that line, right? that's how these things work. >> we don't have to pass legislation with more democrat
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votes than republican votes. it's a betrayal of republican voters when we do, so i think this is an important step in the right direction. >> when you have a man in a dress that's recruiting or promoting the military, that doesn't fly in east tennessee. it doesn't fly in most places in america. >> reporter: mccarthy hayes defended his decision to include the amendments in the defense bill, saying it's on democrats trying to force their social agenda on the pentagon and the republicans are just trying to rein that in, and the so-called woke--ism in the military. i pressed kevin mccarthy on the freedom caucus taking credit for shaping this bill, and asked him, are they the ones running the house? his responsible was he laughed and said, i don't think so. no doubt they've had a tremendous influence. rahel?
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>> melanie, to that point, talk about the state of u.s. politics. this previously would have been seen as must pass, and yet this time around it is quite contentious. >> reporter: yeah, it has gotten extremely contentious, again, because of all these amendments. you have democrats, including adam smith, the top democrat on the house affirmed services committee, who helped craft this initial bill. he voted for it in committee. it went out with a 59-1 vote out of committee, to now where you have a nearly party-line vote where just four democrats voted it, four republicans against it, so that is the dynamic we are confronting in the house. there's no signs it will be any better in the senate. they'll come up with their own product and have to come together on what, if anything, they can agree on. still to come, how miami
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how white do you think your teeth really are? let's try the tissue test. ooof, still yellow. whitening toothpaste can only do so much. there's toothpaste white, and there's crest 3d whitestrips white. so much whiter! crest. we are watching as more than a third of the country is bracing for triple digits. the priority for millions of
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americans is finding weighing to keep cool and stay safe. a jug of white paint, the world's whitest paint may actually be the answer. scientists have created a paint that can actually cool temperatures and in turn ease global warming. we have a professor of mechanical engineering at p purdue. thank you so much for talking about this invention. can you just explain how it works, first? >> sure. yeah, the paint works in a way that's very reflective, up to 98%, which means almost does not absorb any of the solar heat. just like a human body, it emits heat into the deep space. the heat from the sun is much
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less than the heat emitted by the surface. we lose more heat than gaining from the sun. it can low the ambient temperature. >> it can actually cool whatever it is on, right? so if you had it on a house or something. can you explain what you would paint in order to use those cooling properties inside of, saying, a building or whatnot? >> yeah, it can be applied to any surfaces outdoor that you can cool, for example, the first thing that comes to our mind is a build. if you paint a roof, it sends back the sun rays. of course we have other applications like automobiles. you have car companies that are interested in it. and infrastructures, even like curb sides of roads, you can reduce the heat.
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>> i want to ask, i saw one clip on pbs where it took 18 hours to make enough of this apparently to cover a 3 by 3-inch square, the issue that the main material so essentially to the paint, this has to be mined. is this a long-term solution, the time, mining, potential carbon footprint from the mining? >> actually i want to clarify, it's not all the time that humans need to spend the time. we need to mix the paint, let it settle. the human effort is similar with the other commercial paints. the mining right now, yeah, indeed it's like a commercial -- two base paints need to be mined, and -- i will say that this is a solution that we can use together with other solutions to help cool down our
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cities and our earth. it's not the only solution. it can be one of the long-term solution together with others. >> i also read there was one expert saying if you painted 1% to 2% of the earth with this pain you would see surface temperatures not rise. can you explain how that would work? >> sure. because our paint can reduce the heating by 100 watts per meter square, now the earth's temperature is going up, because the average heats up by one watt per meter square. so that's when we apply 1% to 2% of the earth's surface it could totally offset the experience we have now and bring the earth to stop warming up anymore. this is my colleague professor at the university of california
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davis. you can directly cool down the earth. that's the amazing part. and last question -- when can we buy it? >> well, you know we've been making good progress over the last few years, you know, doing further development to make the paints ready to markets. we are making good progress. i would say it probably will take at least another year before we can really push to market. it takes time for any product from the lab to market, so please be patient. thank you. thank you so much for being with us. it's interesting just to see the ingenuity you are applying to this problem we are certainly feeling right in and out. professor ruan, we appreciate your time. >> thank you very much.
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coming up a fashion icon, a movie star, and yes, a toy. barbie is ready to make her comeback after years of slumping sales. how one of the world's most iconic dolls is plananning to pl it out. that's next. need for recovery. and you are? i'm an investor...in invesco qqq, a fund t that gives me access to... nasdaq 100 innovations like... wearable training optimization tech. uh, how long are you... i'm done. i'm okay.
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being viewed within the democratic party? >> reporter: rahel, i think the best way to do it is that it will certainly quell from anxiety, but it's not the blockbuster number that will put those concerns to bed altogether. $72 million is certainly a substantial haul for president biden. it's more than any of the other 2024 contenders have raised. that being said, the republican contenders are vying for the same donor pool, so they aren't expected to match up exactly with president biden. but you look back to president obama when he launched his campaign, he raised $86 million. since then, of course, contribution limits have increased. that being said, the biden campaign officials point to the fact that the obama had a
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three-week head start, and day per bay the biden campaign raised more. and 400,000 individuals donated to biden's reelection campaign, and the democratic national convention joint fund-raising committee $39 average donation, 97% of those donations we are under th$200. obama had 550,000 donors to his campaign. there's certainly been some fatigue across the political spectrum, but nonetheless they point to some signs that the grassroots is getting off the ground. 30% of the donors to the president's election quarterly cycle are new donors. they certainly say that's a
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positive sign for how things will go going forward. >> the president may feel pretty positive going into the weekend, given everything that happened in lithuania, finland and sweden. the biden administration trying again when it comes to student lot debt relief. the new plan would cut payments to zero for some borrows. the white house estimates the new plan could affect more than 800,000 borrowers. extreme heat wave in greece has forced a close to some of the monuments in athens. and international legends
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are just like us. lionel messi has been captured doing all kinds of things, leaving restaurants, grocery shopping with his family. the 36-year-old world cup winner arrived in america on tuesday. messi is expected to make his deabu for interr miami. >> thank you, brianna. after decades, next week barbie steps into the big screen. on to the big screen. the movie hits theaters next week, bringing a big boost to the iconic brand. van vanessa yurkevich joins with us more.
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>> barbie has had her share of franchising. mattel is hoping this brings back the no stall jan for fans, and also brings some barbie haters. >> barbara millicent roberts, born next week she comes to life in a new movie with english director and actors. >> hi, ken. >> distributed by cnn's parent company warners be loved by girls and boys has had ups and downs. >> in 2014, 2015, we hit a low. it was a moment to reflect in the context of why -- why did barbie lose relevance? she didn't reflect the
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physicality, the look if you will of the world around us. >> reporter: now barbie, ken, and friends have many different skin tones, shapes, and special traits that make them look more like us. but this year's first-quarter sales of mattel slumped, down 22% from last year's. how is mattel and barbie viewed as a brand? >> there's been a lot of decline, and that differentiation and relevance that keep a brand fresh and top of mine from -- top of mind from a purchase perspective. fans go into fatigue. >> reporter: mattel hopes the move gives then the boost they're looking for. >> we have the opportunity to reach new ages and stages that ultimately thfrom a business perspective provides huge merchandising and monetization opportunities. >> reporter: we're standing in front of -- barbie. the owner can't keep movie barbie on the shelf. >> within a day they were gone. >> reporter: have you always had barbie and friends in the store?
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>> absolutely. absolutely. it's a staple. it's the moms and dad who are more nostalgic than the kids. >> reporter: that nostalgia isn't for everyone. >> i don't know how she's evolved, like does she have a college degree now? ♪ >> reporter: the movie has calculated for that. >> we haven't played with barbie since you were 5 years old. >> reporter: for others, you're never too old for barbie. >> i am 90 years old -- or i should say 90 years young. >> reporter: carol spencer didn't grow up playing with barbies -- >> this was my favorite project -- >> reporter: but barbie wouldn't be, well, barbie without her. >> i was a designer for the barbie doll starting in 1963 for over 35 years. and i loved every minute of it. >> reporter: while carol helped make barbie, barbie helped make mattel. as other toys have come and gone, barbie still strutting.
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>> barbie really carried mattel for a great many years. i thought if every child who played with a barbie doll as my child, so let me tell you, i have a big family. and i love it. >> reporter: and that is the magic and power of barbie. when barbie debuted in 1959, she was a teen fashion model. she then went on to be a flight attendant, you also had nurse barbie. but consumers started saying, wait a minute, why does barbie only get to have traditionally female careers at the time. and so then mattel started to evolve her in more male-dominated careers. we saw air force barbie, we saw surgeon barbie, and then eventually we saw reporter barbie. and then we saw camerawoman barbie. so barbie clearly evolving
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through the years. but mattel says, listen, barbie's a blank canvas. she can be whatever she wants to go. barbies have been controversial. people think maybe she's not great for body positivity for women. but you know, girls of all ages and, you know, maybe each me still have some nostalgia for her. >> you know, it was a great story. we can always count on you to bring out the props. vanessa yurkevich is going to have props in her story. >> because she's -- she's still -- barbie's still, no matter what career she has, she still has weird feet, vanessa. show us -- right? they are shaped -- that's not a normal foot. what, did they get normal? >> yeah. these are a little flatter here. little flatter. but these ones still have the traditional -- the heel. >> great stuff. >> i stand corrected. >> thank you, vanessa. great stuff. all right. "the lead" with jake tapper is going to start in a moment. first, a cnn hero.
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♪ limu emu & doug ♪ what do we always say, son? liberty mutual customizes your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need. that's my boy. now you get out there, and you make us proud, huh? ♪ bye, uncle limu. ♪ stay off the freeways! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ law enforcement says they have caught a serial killer. "the lead" starts right now.
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the suspect is a married father of two and an architect in new york city. and he just made his first court appearance after being charged with the deaths of three women whose bodies were found on a long island beach in 2010. we will tell you how a car, burner phones, fake email accounts, and dna from a piece of pizza led police to the suspect. any moment authorities are going to give all of us an update. then it's so hot in parts of the united states, temperatures could hit 130 degrees. >> it feels like if hot sauce could be felt without you having to taste it. like it got poured on my back. >> 1,000 heat records have already been shattered, and more will likely burn up this weekend. is this the new normal? and this summer's biggest hollywood drama is not taking place on the big screen but the sidewalks and streets. it's faces you know from tv and film walking the picket lines.
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