tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN September 16, 2023 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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i'm kim brunhuber. ahead on cnn newsroom -- >> it is a fight to take on corporate greed. u.s. senator bernie sanders joined the uaw rally in detroit. coming up, how this strike is already impacting the auto industry. plus the special counsel investigating donald trump wants to limit what the former president can publicly say. we'll hear how trump is responding. and in libya, the search continues as thousands are missing after flooding. we begin with the showdown uaw and the big three car makers. negotiations are expected to resume in a matter of hours, but we're into the second day of a targeted strike that has some 13,000 uaw members walking the
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picket lines in three u.s. c cities. they are getting some reenforcements from washington. the acting labor secretary awe long with a top white house adviser headed to detroit friday in the hopes to help the sides reach a deal. president biden said no one wanted a strike, but auto companies should go further to make a deal. here he is. >> auto companies have seen record profits including the last few years including the skill and sacrifices of the workers. those record profits have not been shared fairly, in my view. the bottom line is that auto workers help create can the middle class. they deserve a contract that sustains them in the middle s. >> contracts between the uaw and the auto makers expired thursday and covered all of the union's 145,000 members. the strike has affected all
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three. it's the first time there's been a union strike at the sate saim time. fordnd gm are offering a 20% pay raise over theerm of potential new contract. ste lance has offered a 17.5 increase. the uaws a 20% raise and 4 subsequents of 5% each. there's a lot at stake, according to one analysis. a ten-day strike costs $5 billion. there's already been some fallout. gm says its fairfax, kx, assembly line, you would soon r out of parts. ford told 600 workers on the truck line in michigan not to report to work friday because of the department there is on strike. the uaw president says 80% of the demands have been left off proposals from the auto makers. ford's ceo says the wage demands would put his company out of business. we have details now from gabe
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cohen. >> reporter: the sides are headed back to the bargaining table today with the them saying they have sent counteroffers to the big three and is awading their response. it's not clear at this point what's in those offers, but it is going to take quite a bit to bridge the divide that we have seen between these sides. and until a deal is met, until a deal is reached, we're going to continue it see picket lines like this operating 24 hours a day like the one here in toledo outside this stellantis factory. there are 13,000 auto workers currently on strike between here and ohio. a ford facility in michigan and a general motors factory in missouri. the auto workers i spoke with today said despite only making $100 a day in strike pay, they are ready for to strike for as
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long as they need to. >> our members are willing to stay in for the long haul. our starting pay was $15.78. 14 years later it's $15.78. there's something whrong with that. >> reporter: the head of the union said it's possible that additional factories will strike in the coming days if they feel that it is necessary. but either way, you can expect we're going to start to see more of a ripple effect of additional manufacturing facilities and factories that may have to shut down operations, even layoff workers because they can't get the parts they need to operate. gabe cohen, cnn, toledo, ohio. donald trump is lashing out at the special counsel investigating his 2020 federal election interference. he says jack smith is trying to rob him of his right to free speech. smith's office has asked a district court judge to um pose a court order limiting what the former president can say in public ab the case against him and trump pleased.
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listen to this. >> see today that deranged jack smith, he's the prosecutor, he's a deranged person, wants to take away my rights under the first amendment. he wants to take away my right of speaking freely and openly. >> trump has already been ordered not to intimidate potential witnesses or talk to them about the facts of the case. senior justice correspondent evan perez has more. >> here's what prosecutors are specifically asking for. they are asking for trump basically to be limited from making statements regarding the identity, testimony or credibility of prospective witnesses and statements about any party witness court personnel or potential jurors that are disparaging, inflammatory or intimidating. that's the focus on what they are trying to do. one of the things that the judge is going to have to keep in mind is the fact that a defendant has a right to speak.
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and judges are often reluctant to try to limit some of that because they could create problems for an appeal. and they also have the unusual situation where the defendant is running for president. part of his the platform is his sort of beef with what happened in 2020. that's really what he's litigating as part of his campaign. so it's not clear what the judge is going to do. it is true she has already warned him about some of his comments and statements and anything that could intimidate witnesses, but you can bet what she's going to do, if she tries to limit it, is going to start small and see what donald trump does to try to abide by those. one of the things that is possible is to take a look at what he does on social media. we have seen that happen in previous cases. >> so if trump continues to try to undermine the judicial system by attacking prosecutors, judges and witness, he may find himself in serious legal trouble. former deputy director andrew
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mccabe roaeacted to the news earlierier on cnn. >> this is an important next step. it is by no means a gag order. this is not what's under consideration here, but this is elevating the warning citing a specific local court rule and presenting it to him. if she passes this, he's going to be officially on notice. then the next instances, which i'm sure will come, will result in some real consequences. the they are starting to blast the new england area. it's bringing 80 mile per hour winds along the northeastern coast. lee is expected to move through maine and into canada bringing clothes tall flooding and high winds. the worse conditions are forecasted for later today with widespread power outages across parts of new brunswick.
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it's expected to weaken before it moves across the atlantic coast of dcanada by sunday morning. in hawaii the official death toll has fallen from the devastating wildfire on maui. the state's governor told cnn fewer than 100 people have died and nearly 3 dozen people unaccounted for. he expects those numbers to continue to fall. >> the number of fatal tas has actually dropped from what was projected to be 115. it's now 97. we have about 23 people who have passed away who we have not been able to identify yet. a lot of the 31 reports of missing people will cover the 23 with who have not been identified. >> emergency teams in eastern libya are still searching for thousands of people who disappeared after catastrophic floods hit the region. their work has been exhausting and at times mentally distressing as he will see in
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this graphic. here on the northern coastline, workers have been retrieving bodies from the water days after they were swept out to see. crews have been searching for the missing by combing through the rubble of collapsed bu buildings. first responders from around the world have been helping out. >> hours before the floods came, a situation seemed manageable with local authorities keeping the flooding under control. however, the rupture of the dam caused a huge problem and resulted in a flooding kill ing many people. it's a tragedy. >> the scope of the defation has made it difficult to determine the exact death toll, but between 5 and 6,000 even though the extent of the tragedy remains unclear, the u.n. says there's no doubt about what caused it. >> this is a tragedy in which climate and capacity has collided to cause this terrible, terrible tragedy.
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>> cnn shows us how residents are coping with the disaster. >> reporter: it was a storm like no other. but it's in the only mother nature's wrath that's to blame for these scenes. right up there is where the dams where when they burst, it unleashed all that water. the floods that swept entire neighborhoods like this into the sea. and you can see the force of the water when you look at buildings like this. you can see how high the waves were. >> waves as high as 22 feet submerged buildings and currents so strong destroyed almost everything in path and washed it all into the sea. the mediterranean turned into a graveyard for the people. how many lives lost, no one knows, but it's in the
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thousands. the clear blue waters are now brown. it tells the story of a city that once was of those gone, young and old. children a few months old, elderly people, pregnant women, they are in the sea. with nothing but a rope tied around his waist, he pulled 14 bodies on the first day. there are other bodies. we don't know how to get them out. we just don't have any equipment, he says. they have gotten some help since. international support has been slowly trickle ing in, but nowhe near enough to deal with the disaster on this scale. it's mostly libyan who is volunteer from every corner of this country. those who fought each other for years, united in grief, doing what they can to & the wound of this broken city. most are here to try to give the dead a dignified end. it's not the time to lay blame
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for what happened, but the dams have not been maintained for decades, residents say. had they been, its people still be standing. nearly a week on, emotions here still so raw. families climbed on top of the water tanks. they all survived, but most of his neighbors did not. there are 12 to 15 homes on our street. we lost 33 people, he tells us. he then starts to name the dead. entire families gone. it's all just too much. libyans know loss and death all too well, but nothing could have prepared them for this. cnn, libya. kim jong-un is forging ahead with his visit to russia's far
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east. a look at who the leader has been meeting with and what he's expected to do next. and one year after dying in the custody of morality police, the world remembers her and the protest movement her death inspired. that story and much more, ahead on "cnn newsroom." flex any style... with hairspray thatat flexes with you. new tresememmé hairspray.
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. north korea's leader is in russia for what's expected to be the last leg of his strip to the country's far east. he toured russia's pacific legal defense minister a short time ago. they headed to the ship after visiting an airfield near the port city earlier. we are following developments in beijing. for north korea's leader, these types of photo-ops are nothing new, right? >> as we have seen over the last few months, ub u.n. really does see value in these photo-ops, personally when it involves military hardware and world leaders. to guf you more details, he saw
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military fighter jets, an attack aircraft, a long range passenger plane and a hypersonic missile system. again, being accompanied by the defense minister. also as far as that visit to the port, he was touring a warship, but with a key russian leader, that being the commander of the russian navy. a lot of symbolism behind this visit, but the alliance between the two nation, we saw kim jong-un in an armored train make this journey from north korea to russia. we know on wednesday, according to state media, he did meet with vladimir putin. it is interesting to see this alliance building that we are seeing. these are two nations that have isolated themselves. and perhaps have needs that each
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nation can perhaps provide. north korea certainly would perhaps like to take advantage of some of russia's military technology, even simply demands for food. russia, on the other hand, needs munitions because of the stress from the war in ukraine. it is important to point out, though, that these nations are also being watched very closely. there are united nations resolutions strictly prohibiting this kind of military cooperation and weapons exchange. the kremlin has said that it is fully complied with these restrictions, but it's certainly drawing attention from observes ertz around the world and the united states, south korea as well as japan. >> while china as well. how is china viewing this relationship? >> it is interesting. north korea really has two allies around the world. russia and china. in fact, it was just in july
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that we saw the leadership of both china as well as from russia in pyongyang. they saw a very similar military display as kim jong-un saw well in russia. it goes to emphasize the isolated trifecta of nations. china has not directly condemned the war from russia in ukraine. so these three nations have really ice nated themselves. we have seen them form this kind of alliance, especially since the war in ukraine. >> interesting. thank you so much. we we really appreciate it. china has announced its plans for next weeks general assembly. their vice president will lead the delegation. xi jinping isn't expected to attend the gathering. he also skipped the g-20 summit in india. meanwhile, president biden and the israeli prime minister will be at the u.n. ga.
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they will hold talks on the the side looips in their first face to face meeting since benjamin netanyahu came back into office. vladimir putin is looking westward for another ally. the russian leader invited the belarus president after that summit. it was the seventh time they have met this year. russia has been suffering losses in crimea. the commander said the devastated village has been retake open whag he said was a bridge for ukraine's coun counterorvesive to advance. it gave troops control of a vital railroad. we have more onnen cukraines offenseive. >> reporter: ukrainian forces on the attack at the crack of down. troops ousted the russians from two villages on the eastern
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front in the past days. one of the units involved releasing this video reportedly showing one of the drones hitting a russian vehicle carrying an officer. ukraine attacking not just on land, but from the sea and the air as well. this video reporting to show unmanned sea drones trying to ramp a warship just hours after the ukrainians say they hit a russian sub in the key port as one of sophisticated surface to air missile systems in crimea. thank you for today's triumph, the president said. the air defense system was destroyed very significant, well done. in crimea, some residents seem increasingly concerned attacks that link it is to the mainland. when it was attacked for the first time, i was worried so much, this man says. nevertheless, russia is still
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strong. and he says times are turbulent now. but in general, driving over the bridge is okay. under pressure, vladimir putin continues to court north korean strong man kim jong-un. kim vuting a plant that makeing fighter jets during his ongoing trip to russia. and while the russians claim no deals have been signed to provide ammo to moscow, it looks like he wants to deepen ties with pyongyang. you have never violated anything, and in this instance, we're not going to violate anything, he says. but we will look for opportunities to develop relations. the russians also touting their own military industry. the defense minister on a visit to a shipyard for nuclear submarines saying russia will develop underwater drones as well.
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while russians showcase their weapons manufacturing, ukrainians say forces are the ones with the initiative on the battle front. fred pleitgen, cnn, kyiv. a group of u.s. senators is pushing the defense department to provide information about reports that earth lob musk restricted the use of his starling satellites used by ukrainian armed forces in 2022. three members of the senate armed services committee sent a letter to defense secretary lloyd austin. it asked for a detailed accounts where the services were disabled in ukraine. senators also raised concerns about musk's decision not to turn it on or disrupt an attack on star ships. survivors of the definite stating earthquake in monke roc coare struggling to recover. one week on, there's some hope. we'll have a live report ahead on cnn newsroom. stay with us. but your stomach doesn't. that disagreement ends right now.
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sign up for xfinity rewards now. welcome back to all of you watching here in the united states and all around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is "cnn newsroom yes, it is. one week after a devastating earthquake hit morocco, scores of people are living without shelter and struggling to get by. international aid has been pouring into the country since the 6.8 quake struck on september 8th. it's blocked roads and made some areas unreachable. we have been talking to survivors. first, what is the latest on the ror recovery effort there is.
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>> reporter: a week on and although there are still attempts to pull people out from the rubble, there's no hope there are any survivors. it has taken days for rescue teams to reach some of the areas that are up in the atlas. that's been a real struggle for these rescue teams. the narrow roads were damaged during the earthquake or obstructed by falling rocks and boulders. we experienced this ourselves trying to make this to the town in the atlas. it took hours long because of the blockages in the road. when we finally reached, many of the are leaf workers on the ground including medical teams there who have not only been supporting with their physical injuries, but something that they are deeply concerned about is the emotional turmoil, the emotional health of those affected by the earthquake. so we spoke to one doctor in this town. >> some of these people have
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lost their entire families. children come tell us their parents have died. sometimes the emotion and trauma is even worse than the physical injuries. there's also a big focus on housing situation. we have seen these tent villages being set up across the affected areas. we have seen blankets, food, water being distributed. but this is a process that is going to take months, if not years. there's continued need for support not only for these organizations who are pitching in, but also for the international community. >> so many people affected, so many harrowing stories there, but despite all the tragedy all around you, there are stories of hope and survival. what have people been telling you? >> reporter: there are countless stories of strtragedy. we visited villages that have been almost flattened. few people we have spoken to
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have been untouched by death. many of them have lost loved ones, lost friends. we have spoken to people who have those stories of survival. we met with one gentleman, he is the head nurse in this local remote town. he spoke to us about his attempt to rescue his colleague. she's a midwife. he heard her voice beneath the rubble of a collapsed residence for local mid-wives. he began pulling her out. despite all the odds, she was in perfect health. the next morning, she went on to deliver twins in the middle of the devastated road. so there are these stories of hope. many people are trying to push ahead with their lives, but there was so much they need. the government has committed to providing support for these families. they say they are prioritizing buildings and 50,000 homes
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across the region, but there's concern of the situation because the winter months are coming. many villages impacted are higher in the mountains. it's going to get desperate lu cold. those that have lost homes are living in these temporary tents. those won't suffice in the winter months. >> the need so great there. en excellent to have you there bringing us those stories. thank you so much. it's been one year since the death of a 22-year-old in custody of the morality police. rallies to honor her are planned for today in several international cities, but tighted security measures ahead of the anniversary. on friday the u.s. and other countries announced new sanctions bringing individuals and entities. she was allegedly detained for an improperly worn hijab. the morality police enforce strict death codes.
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it sparked monthof protest, whs suppressed with hundreds killed and thousands tainted. one french said the demonstrations will continue to change the country. here she is. >> the fact that women are not wearing their veil anymore, this is something that she died for not wearing her veil properly. the fact that these girls are going on the streets in the airport everywhere without wearing it, they are actually with their lives. but they are doing it so shh is how this revolution is continuing. it changed forms, but it has not finished. >> last hour i spoke with a publisher with the pro reform news outlet. we discussed the situation inside iran in recent months. he described the mood on the ground. here he is. >> the root causes of the protests, which started last september have not gone away.
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people are still disenchanted with the economic policies and the mismanagement, with corruption, with its draconian dress codes in the country, with the islamic republic as a whole. the government has been in power since 199. so it's very difficult to know what can people do in terms of organizing protests despite the government's difference to stop them. but we know that many businesses around the premise, especially in the city, and we can foresee more protests in the other cities in the next few hours as well. >> given what happened last year, do you fear that these might become violent? do you think there will be widespread violence and repression by the government? >> the government likes the protest to be violent because that's what they are good at.
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they know to protest, we have talked to hundreds of people who have been shot in the eye and not accidentally been shot in the eye in close range. the government wanted last year tried to teach people a lesson. and knows that if the opposition becomes more violent, they can also become vie will not and suppress the protests. >> the colombian artist has died. he was known around the world for his full-size creations. his death was announced on friday. we have a look at his life and career. >> here we are in front of the area dedicate d to him. and hundred dollar the door, there are some of the most renowned paintings and sc
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sculptures, but also words from other artists that the master himself purchased. and the life here on exhibition for on the public display for everybody to come and see. he's a private collection as a way to honor his own legacy. here on friday, in the very early hours of the morning, thousands of colombians have come to pay their respect. and nobody is better than the curator of this museum to truly understand what makes it unique. >> two of the most important things that have made his work so important is the use of color and the way in which he experimented with volumes since the early years of his career. throughout that expermutation process and his prolific work, he found a style. and that's one of the reasons why when we see the painting we
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know it's his. >> the colombian president, members of the television and entertainment have, pressed their condo loans lens and paud their respects across friday. the city where he was born, on the seven days of public mourning. but there's truly a sense now of an entire nation coming together to say good-bye to one of its most renowned sons but also to one of the most famous ambassadors of what it means to be a colombian around the world. for cnn, bogota. with cold and flu season around the corner, there's word that many of the popular remedies you buy aren't really effective. we'll look at the fda's next move.
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if you have ever taken a pill for nee sal congestion but didn't get much relief, it's not you. experts at the fda have now c concluded the acti simply don't work when taken oral. pop already products have been on store shelves for years and generated $2 billion in sales last year, but the fda accepts the conclusions, they require drug makers to remove the ingredient from their products. >> jennifer lay is a member of the fda advisory committee at uk san diego. thank you so much for being here with us. i just want to get this straight, this drug doesn't work like not at all? >> let me first by thanking you for inviting me to share the
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information last week at the advisory committee meeting. now this is the oral formulation. and that is a drug in which we reached the data since 2007 that the fda provided and that the committee 16 of us unanimously voted that it does not appear the data to show that the drug is evident ifficacious. for nasal congestion. >> the nasal spray works, the pills that you'd normally take, those onesen don't seem to work. so can it be reformulated? or it gets dissolved in the stomach and there's no way to introduce it via pills? >> you brought that up. one of the convincing data that cooperated with the three clinical trials conducted of the
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oral formulation was looking into viability. it's a form that shows how the drug goes to the body and what the fda reported, this is updated information that once you take the pill, it goes into the stomach. but a lot of it is metabolized to an inactive form. and in fact, the drug itself only gets absorbed to about 1%. so 1% actually guess into the blood. and if it goes in the blood, you need it to go in blood to get to the nose where the site of action is. >> these products have been on the shelves for some 50 years. but for decades, there have been warnings that the drug didn't work. why do you think it took so lock to act? >> i think that we have come a long ways in terms of the requirements for a clinical trial. what we require for drug approval 50 years ago was really
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for safety. then efficacy. in 1972 when there was a cold and cough panel that reviewed this drug, even the fact that it was not strongly indicative of efficacy. the parameter that we used 50 years ago was different from the parameters we use now to assess efficacy. what we used in the recent clinical trials is largely symptom relief. that's what consumers want. they want symptoms relieved. >> i can't remember another drug being taken off the shelves not because it wasn't safe, but because did you want work. is this doesn't work. will we see more scrutiny of our medicine cabinet? >> i think that just to the lot you know this is not represent the fda belief or i i do not
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represent the fda at all. this is my own personal belief. i think that especially for drugs that over the counter where there's a huge public impact to users, i think there should be more robust clinical trials. that's what for drugs that we know we question whether or not it is evident fashs kashs, but yes, you are absolutely correct. this is one of theunique situats that a unanimous vote and the vote was because it wasn't efficacious. it's usually toxicity. >> we have cold and flu season upon us. we want to know what is efficacious? what does work? >> i'm not an allergist, just to the let you know. i'm a pharmacy clinical pharmacologist. and i believe that a lot of what consumers can use really depends on the consumer. there are nasal antihistamines,
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there are steroids and oral sooud fed rinse. so those are options, but i'm not in the position to make recommendations because it's based on the patient. for mer, this is just for nasal congestion. i can tolerate that. i have a high tolerance. and these medications are meant for systemic rerelief. so it's only if you have the symptoms. >> these drugs weren't working any way. so if you with wait and let nature take its kocourse, you'r no better off than before. we really appreciate your expertise. >> absolutely. thank you. still ahead this hour, nfl star aaron rodgers speaks out after a season-ending injury. why he says critics are helping fuel his recovery. that's coming up. stay with us. it not only cleans, it hydrates my skin. as a dermatologist, i want what's best for our skin.
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was really horrible. but it sounds like he's planning to play again. >> and not only play again, aaron rodgers did not rule out coming back to play this season, which is kind of unheard of. usually when you tear an achilles, that means you're out for at least a year. but rodgers said he didn't want to waste any time. he had his surgery on wednesday. when talking on the show on espn, rodgers said he would be back sooner than we all think. >> so give me your doubts, give me your prognostications, and then watch what i do. >> are you trying to say you're coming back this season? >> are you coming back for the playoffs this year? >> i'm not going to make any of those statements. i don't think that's fair to myself. >> is it a possibility? >> i think as kevin garnett said, anything is possible.
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>> wow. >> we'll have to certainly wait and see. to baseball, we had a really scary moment for anthony mesevich. you can see he took 100 miles per hour comebacker right off his head. he stayed on the ground for several minutes. he was able to stand up on his own power and then carted off the field. he was aware and alert before he was taken to the hospital, but his teammate was shake up talking about that incident. >> i was sick to my stomach about it. i have been hut oit in the head that mound. not quite like that, but i have seen some other guys get smoked. you just pray for him really. hoping he comes through all right. >> we all hope he's okay the yankees went on to score 4 runs to win their game, 7-5 and climb
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out of last place in the al east. else wrer it appears that the angels superstar season is over as his locker in the clubhouse has been mostly clear out. he's been out for 11 games with an oblique strain. an official update on his status for the rest of the season is expected later today. and another big day of college football on tap today. the colorado bucs looking for a 3-0 start to their season as they take on their rivals colorado state in a rocky mountain showdown. colorado state coach taking a shot at the their coach and the way he conducts his interviews. >> i don't care if they hear it in boulder. i took my hat after and glasses. when i talk to grown ups, i take my hat and glasses off. that's what my mother taught me. >> coach heard those comments and wondered why the rams coach
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would give his team bulletin board material. >> why would you want to talk about us when we don't talk about nobody? all we go out here and do our job on saturday. but when they give us ammunition, they made it personal it was just going to be a good game. they messed around and made it personal. it's going to be a great test. a battle of colorado, but they messed around and made it personal. >> they made it personal now. 23-point favorites over colorado state. deion sanders made this season a lot more fun. >> prime time inteed. thank you so much. appreciate it. we entered ignition. liftoff of falcon 9. go internet satellites. >> go elon musk has put 22 new
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satellites into orbit. its launched a couple hours ago from florida. spacex had 65 liftoffs so far this year. starlink is meant to provide internet services around the world. the company has more than 4,500 satellites in orbit. there are three new residents aboard the international space station. two russian astronauts arrived a few hours ago after traveling from earth aboard a russian spacecraft. that makes ten people on the space station right now. two of the new arrivals will stay at the station for a year. three current space sptation crw members will return to earth in about a month after a year in space. ikea created a special
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edition chair for sweden's 50th anniversary on the throne for their king. it's an updated version of the chair that originally hit stores in 1967. the new version is embossed with the royal warrant. it was on display in a park in centralst stockholm on friday. the chair will be presented to the king in recognition of his half century on the actual swedish throne. hopefully they will put it together for him. that wraps this you are who of cnn newsroom. "cnn this morning" is next. think hairspray's stuck in one dimension? think again. flex any style... withth hairspray that flexes with you. new tresemmé hairspray. trying vapes to quit smoking might feel like progress, but with 3x more nicotine than a pack of cigarettes - vapes increase cravings - trapping you in an endless cring loop. until they're gone for good.
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