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tv   Laura Coates Live  CNN  August 9, 2024 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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more. donald brasilia daughter. all of the people to make sure that we invite taylor swift to the dnc. i'm a swiftie. i went to see read which is by the way, i believe her best album. i want to see her at the dnc. i just want to be a part of the onium. yeah. and by the way, she's the only person to defeat isis, its team you're not part of the panel, you're part of the pandering is a scott last word? all right. >> here's my question what in the eff is happening in england? i keep picking up the internet and my social feeds and i see, i see that people are i see that people are being arrested in england, the uk for retweeting memes and gleaming book comment citing an encouraging riots you for it. i'm just saying it's a real fun. they're worried about england blink twice if you need us to come liberate you, we will come over there i don't want i don't want warm beer.
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>> i'm a stay right here tweets. >> all right. well, uk to enter. thanks for watching tonight to the rest of you for watching news knights state of the race, stay with us for laura coates live starts right now you want the west wing? >> well, i guess it's time to head west kamala harris rally is in battleground, arizona as trump gets back on the trail, this time in reliably red montana. plus, we've got the body. i'm talking about jesse, the body ventura attorney, former minnesota governor he joins me to talk about the vp pick governor tim walz, and i really can't wait to hear what he has to say about the criticism about walz's military service what they say success is the best kind of revenge well, look, and who just silence the critics. the algerian boxer who was bullied online extensively after her open putting olympic bout.
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while she just took home the gold all right. >> right. now, donald trump is back on the campaign trail. he's about to speak at a rally in bozeman, montana. you know, it's actually it's it's first one since kamala harris officially became the democratic nominee and saw a surge in her poll numbers. now given how close this race has become you expect him to be in a battleground? found state, right? instead, he's in one that he won by 16 points in 2020, and it's pretty much guaranteed to go ahead. and there's two ways to ask the next key question. so why would he go there? >> maybe the question should be, why would he go there? >> well, he says is helping boost the gop candidate for senate in a very tight rockets which could end up tipping the balance of the chamber. now, we don't actually know exactly what trump's campaigning plans
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are after tonight, but it is worth noting, this is the only we event posted on his campaign website. and he said, yesterday's news conference that he will pick up his campaigning at the dnc, which by the way, ends on august 22. that's two weeks from now. harris and tim walz by contrast, are keeping the pedal to the metal. there also out west for his time today campaign blitz starting with tonight, stop in glendale, arizona. and while there, harris appeared to counter one of trump's personal attacks against her after he claimed yesterday but she isn't smart part of why we are going to win is because we remember and we are smart and we know what's happening and we're not falling but the gaslighting and we're not falling for the
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okey-doke with the campaign. also, meghan, a dig at trump's light schedule, saying in a statement, donald trump is too lazy to fight for anything by himself or leave his country club fine by us. i think that might be code for who's running a basement campaign. now with me now, cnn political commentator van jones, may mailman, former trump white house attorney and mark mckinnon, executive producer of the circus, and former advisor to george w bush, glad to have you all here. let me begin with. you may, because the color pink and you're in the center and i want to hear your voice. but this ability ask you this question. trump is in montana to campaign for a senate candidate. montana is not necessarily a battleground state, and i'm using the word necessarily generously what do you think he's going there? is it really about tester. what's the reason you see? >> i mean, i do i think you're going to meet with donors. so that's important too. but also what's the point of being
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president if you don't have the senate, you need the senate to confirm your traditional nominee's. you need the senate to get your cabinet past, but he does need to visit swing states. i think that that is true and he thinks he will visit those swing states, but montana is certainly important because you've got to flip the senate if if you're going to be an effective republican president on that point and it's important to think about ban. i mean, i think the larger question i keep thinking about is this looks different. the campaigning since 2016 or 2020, there's a lot of familiar playbook that's happening as well when it comes to insult being hurled and otherwise, we're hearing lots about how trump has been stewing on the, off the campaign trail because some of the attacks he saying or frankly not as effective because they have been against prior candidates. why do you think he's on the trail in the way that he is? isn't reactive to trying to take some wind out of the sails. and as montana, the way to do so this is a
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fading vegas act. this is donald trump is like barry manilow thing in mandy, just one more time. like guys, it's song it's old it's not working and it's over. and so you what do you do? you get you scamper back to some little corner of the country where you can get a hug and a kiss and a cookie and somebody compassionate on the head and laugh at all your old stale jokes. but the air, the soda, the fears has come out of the soda. and this thing is in the toilet and starting to swell wow, i'm a very visual analogy indeed, mark mckinnon, let me turn to you. >> do you see this as a fading vegas act or one that he hopes to rejuvenate and revitalize the case. campaign by as may's talking about, trying to make sure that if he were to secure the oval office, he's not going to be essentially a lame duck fading vegas act as a
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perfect description. >> i was thinking old elvis, it feels like old elle his left the building. >> but you know, i tell you what really need today laura, is that in late 2015, the very first time that i went to see donald trump was in arizona. and i remember going there and i remember it being 105 degrees and that there were people lined up for miles and i was dumbstruck and i said, wow something's happening here. >> well, today, the exact same thing was happening on the ground in arizona with kamala harris hundred and five degrees miles of people standing there. >> so this really feels like more like a movement that a moment. and that's what it's going to require to beat donald trump. and i think it's really, it's a really interesting observation that peggy noonan make to say what she's she wrote that she wasn't sure whether or not harris had actually created the movement or the movement at great at her, meaning, i think that this is pent-up energy it particularly among democrats
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and independents for this joyous kind of, this joy ride this happening right now, this is just flowing and it's really lightened up with jet fuel because because of the joy factor, which is something i wrote about today in vanity fair. i have to say, first of all, anyone who will tell you in arizona that 105 is okay because it's a dry heat. i say to you know, it's oppressive, but everyone else on this same point i'm mic because it made me think about this. some of the things that have re-energize the base for democrats has been about the absence of a rematch between trump and biden but some of the things that were concerning to voters concerning to trump specifically and concerning to those who are encouraging biden to not run for reelection, or about age and mental fitness. now, harris on the top of the ticket and during his press conference yesterday trump claim that he nearly died in a helicopter crash with the former, its efforts go mayor willie brown, who once had a relationship of some kind with
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harris. i want you listen to what brown had to say tonight and also pete buttigieg on this very point, listen have you ever been in a helicopter that made an emergency landing with donald trump no. have you ever been in a helicopter with donald trump no. you have? no memory of anything like that ever happening no you can just tell that he's lost his step he's getting mushy are fuzzier more confused. >> you look at this press conference, he declared that he was in a helicopter that went down with willie brown onboard. he's never even been an alloca with willie brown it, does raise some real concerns about what's happened to donald trump over the years, right may that that was an extraordinary point, especially for somebody who wants to suggest that his acumen and his acuity is a sharp as attack i mean, he does sit though for these lengthy
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press conferences, combative press conferences that range from everything to foreign policy to candidates that he's barely had time to research. so i don't i don't know if trump telling stories is just part of the water at this point. i don't really think that that's going to affect the election. what is going to affect the election i think is the momentum and where did it come from? because nobody has learned anything about kamala harris she doesn't even have a policy section and on her website, she's able to distance herself from everything that she's done, but able to take credit for everything that the same administration has done. and so it's really hard to find a line of attack there. and that's that needs to be the next point because this momentum doesn't feel organic. i don't know whether she created it or eight created her but it just came out of nowhere and it's it's really i think therefore hard to target van.
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>> what do you think about that well, i see it very differently. >> first of all, nikki haley said she was right when she said it that the first party to retire, their nearly 80-year-old front runner was going to win. it didn't come out of nowhere. no body in this country want this matchup nobody, 70%, as you said, please, for god's sakes you know, don't do this to us. again and so literally it anybody hits said, well, i don't know, maybe we don't do the two most unpopular people. again, just indy throw anybody, you would cook caught this way, this way was out there. it was wanting something, but don't take anything away from kamala harris. is this idea? there's 1,000 ways to get this wrong. and only a couple of ways to get it right, even in this environment. and kamala harris has played this brilliantly. she has not put one foot wrong yet. now she's guy get through some interviews. he's got to get to debate a lot of things can happen, but right now up 100 politicians given this
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opportunity, we're screwed it up. does this party is not easy to unite? this party is not easy to lead. this party is not easy in any way as part of his like a dysfunctional family on a good day and she has somehow got everybody at the kitchen table action, right. and that got to give her the credit for that excuse me, van mark, i want to go to you on this because, you know i've heard this discussion that may has raised about the chicken or the egg at the idea of, you know, the generic nature, not having a campaign platform. on the other hand, to van's point, there has been a unifying and cohesive coalescing around her for the reasons that are being demonstrated traded by poll numbers, by fundraising and beyond. >> when you look at the landscape of this, what do you say to the attacks that she is a generic candidate or that her failure to have interviews is going to be destructive in the long run to her campaign she'd been trying for two weeks
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before today on the tarmac taking questions. >> i mean, she's been vice president for almost four years. we've seen her a lot i mean, she's not some unknown character that came out of the ms vergata sakes and by the way, we're going to have the democratic convention in a week where she's going to lay out her ideas, our platform and our vision for the country. take an aspirin people well there you. >> go i mean that's a t-shirt by the way. may i ask you on this point though? you did say and suggest that look, trump's out there. he's in front of and you think combated interviews and beyond but he's not talking about policy. he's not talking about his platform. i mean, the idea that harris is not having i think you mentioned a webpage avoided to it when trump is in front of the cameras when he's talking to people and waiting to see will say tonight, he's not driving home. the point on policy that i think would bring into the fold more voters he just talking about personal attacks and beyond and making
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comments about helicopters and whatnot. is he helping himself ways in front of the cameras because there's an opportunity he's missing but i think that that's not exactly right. i think he does talk about the issues, so when trump talks about securing the border, you actually know what he's talking about, right? because he had remain in mexico and and you those tools at the border that actually were effective, including covid era tools. some of them not be available later, but we can actually have a conversation about that when kamala harris running also on securing the border, it's very strange because what do you mean? i mean, you are the administration now, you could secure the border you're saying that it's congress's fault. so i think it's different type of policy conversation because trump can actually just say i was president. i like those policies. i would do that. kamala harris what would you do? we don't we don't know well, i had to say excuse me, was i had to say if the campaign on either side is i
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was president. >> i like these policies. that's not going to be effective for voters who want more than just the answer they want the process that's part of the platforming and the campaigning van will quit point when you want to say well, he's going to say she just put out some pretty good ad. explain what she would do. she would do she would implement the bill that trump stopped she literally was a part of putting together a bipartisan deal that would have fixed all this stuff. and it was trump who didn't want it. and so if trump wants to own the border issue, he's got to own on the fact that he stopped it from getting fixed last year. >> i'll be curious to see what he has to say tonight. borago and take mark mckinnon's advice right now. go take an aspirin. >> thank you so much, everyone. well, governor tim walz taking a talking up, his time in the national guard, and there is growing scrutiny on this issue. >> you know what he's not the only minnesota governor to spend time in the military. >> jesse ventura was a navy seal. and the body joins me to
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this will move the internet. ♪ ♪ ooh, ooh. -let's keep it professional. professional dancers! -ok! stay connected during your move with the best in home wifi. easily transfer your services in the xfinity app. bring on the good stuff. about daily routine at laura gueler gueler.com. >> i'm lauren fox on capitol hill this my dad and some of you know, i'm in here. you had a change smokin korean war era
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veteran cared about his community, but do days after i turned seven 17, he took me down to join the army national guard and for 24 years, i proudly wear that uniform presumptive, democratic vice presidential candidate tim walz, the governor of minnesota, touting his service, the national guard, at a campaign rally tonight in arizona. >> it comes as republican vp candidate senator j.d. vance criticized as was his record accusing him of abandoning his national guard unit in 2005 have to run for congress before a deployment to iraq. well, joining me now, former independent governor of minnesota, jesse ventura, he endorsed walz in his recent run for governor governor ventura. thank you so much for joining me this evening. i'm really eager to hear your take on this because you are a for me, former navy seal who served in vietnam. i have to ask you what you think of this attack from
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the trump-vance ticket on governor walz says military service well laura i'll tell you what i think i think it's shameful i think it's shameful that a veteran would attack another veteran governor walz served honorably for 24 years in the national guard. after 20 years, you are eligible to retire at any time to deem necessary. they talk about him missing his deployment while maybe mr. vance should ask the real question. what is the national guard doing deploying to a foreign country and a foreign war? well, let's go into history and figure out how that happened. that happened because george w bush and dick cheney any went into the iraq war based on lies, no weapons of mass destruction, no ties to okay, tight enough. and with 911 and they ran out of bodies they needed more bodies. they couldn't implement a draft that would be political suicide
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so what george bush did was sign an executive orders sending the national guard into foreign deployment. the national guard is not for foreign deployment. their names says what they do. they guard are asian from within so this hogwash about governor waltz missing a deployment not only that he's 24 years, he's an e9. i deploy twice. we never even had an e9 with us when we deploy boyd. 9s are not going to walk the point. they're not going to be involved in any combat whatsoever. they're figureheads being the most senior enlisted within their company. and that's what it's all about. so i think that vance is doing a disservice to himself and a disservice the united states marine corps. i know a lot of great marines and marine show respect and vance and not showing respect. and let's talk let's continue. who is he have respect for
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donald trump. the biggest draft dodger from the vietnam war, the rich white boy who bought his way out of it i come from south minneapolis, my friends and i didn't get out of it. we either got drafted. are we enlisted? i know six or seven or 8:00 a.m. friends, donald trump was your typical rich white boy who did not have to serve in vietnam because he could buy his way out of it. and that's who vance's standing with. this guy who leads it's from the rear and why do you think given all that you've described from the politics, the history, and of course, the person who is on the top of the ticket, who has been criticized for the bone spurs reason for not going to serve. >> and i frankly, i have not served. i am a civilian and had the ultimate reverence for those who have and thank you for your service. service so why do you think this is the line of attack to choose politically? obviously, it would offend an alienate voters on one level and also people who have served the armed forces on the other i don't
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know. >> you'd have to ask mr. vance that i don't understand his motive whatsoever, how he could turn against a fellow veteran you know, there's there's kind of an unwritten rule amongst us veterans. you don't criticize another veteran, not every veterans are knuckle-draggers, and i'm not going to define knuckle-draggers because if you've been in the service, you'll know what a knuckle-draggers is but you know, as a frogman in the united states navy, my job was to ensure the marines could get to shore to do their job. we went in ahead of them. we went in before them to ensure the marines could land and his point of being a marine like he is, and then criticizing the gulf verner after 24 years of service, it's despicable on his behalf for doing that. and i hope all veterans feel like i do about it. you don't criticize another veteran and how they served, whether they're a crook or whatever
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they do, they all have a job to do. and if you're going to be successful, everybody has to do their job and pitch in to be successful. >> so well said, i think it's it's capturing the sentiment of so many people who are watching this. and there is the, the terms i can think of as kind of an ick factor of having people at each other in this way, knowing the nuance and knowing the fact that everyone has served and what's the number? this isn't a, presentment, 1% of people have protected this nation over time. i do wonder given your strong feelings and the way in which he has been attacked in this way and he is addressing it in various ways. it will be the end of the story. you have endorsed traditionally, third party candidates, although you did endorse him for his run for governor winner do you intend to endorse the harris waltz ticket now well, i'll tell you this. >> i met with bobby kennedy last winter. we met for three
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hours. apparently, i came in i came in second. he chose his woman shanahan is running made. bobby still a friend of mine, but i'll tell you where i stand right now. i'm going to be selfish a few years ago i got the opportunity to see the united states elected its first black president. i didn't think that could ever happen. and they even reelected him. well now, i'm going to be shellfish again. i've only got a few elections to go. i'm 73-years-old now so the window is closing. i want to be alive to see the first woman president of the united states of america, and the first woman commander in chief and we've got her right now governor. >> thank you so much for sharing your views on this issue. i think a lot of people have been very interested to hear what you have said. so you are officially endorsing the harris and walz ticket, excuse me? >> yes i want to see a woman
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president. it's time for a woman president we men have screwed it up enough and you know what? maybe we'll finally get some legitimate thing on the abortion issue. you know how to solve abortion? hold men responsible. they're the ones ultimately responsible for all abortions. if you hold men responsible, venule, see a big change in the abortion rules? >> what does that mean to hold them responsible they're responsible for every abortion that could take place. >> they are the aggressor sense tells you that you mean in terms of the race, there can't be a baby without a man's involvement. that's what i'm telling you. so until you hold the men responsible for impregnating women, you're not going to get any type of legitimate type of law passed. you've got to hold men responsible for the pregnancies
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of women because they are the ones responsible, not the woman, the man it'll be interesting to see how people evaluate that on the one hand, thinking about autonomy and agency over one's body, and also the notion of assigning responsibility on the other. >> i'm curious how the factors laura, you know, what else i stand for, what governor i don't stand for a minimum wage. >> i stand for a maximum wage if you can't live on 1 million a month something's wrong with you well i'd like to see 12 if you make $12 million a year what would you want for what would you possibly need? >> the point i'm making is there shouldn't be any billionaires and i'll tell you why because nobody works hard enough to get a billion. and my hardest job i ever did was going through navy seal training and hours making $4 a
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day. and you're going to tell me a billionaire worked harder than i did bullcrap is there anything more to say, governor jesse ventura. thank you so much for joining me this evening. i've been eager to hear your opinion and i'm glad i heard it tonight. thank you. >> thanks, laura well, new tonight. the sheriff of the sangamon county police department in illinois is stepping down from his post following the fatal shooting sonya massey sheriff jack campbell, deciding to retire after the governor of illinois, jb pritzker called on him to resign for his handling of the situation. >> sonya massey was killed on july 6 after she made a 9-1 one call and one of the deputies dispatched shot this woman the deputy officer grayson, was then indicted by a grand jury on charges of first-degree murder the sheriff's office has been under fire since it was disclosed. that officer
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grayson had a history of duis and was discharged from the army for serious misconduct ahead, a horrifying crash in brazil, a plane. >> oh my god, falling out of the sky, killing all 61 passengers on board will talk to an aviation expert about what happened. next work relief work blinking really, the only three and one extended release formula for dry eyes my mental health matter, but uncontrollable movements called teeny target dyskinesia started disrupting like td felt embarrassing i felt like disconnecting. i asked my doctor about treating my td and learned about in grad school in gaza is clinically proven for using td most people saw
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to be investigating it. local outlet tv global spoke with some passengers who narrowly escaped death by missing the flight take a listen it's such a big emotion. >> you don't know i'm here shaking my legs are here. only god and i were aware of this moment just nothing quite at 9:40. the stop was closed, the flight was leaving a vote pass i was working at the toledo regional hospital i'm group ten when i got here, i waited. i argued with the airport worker and that was it. he saved my life can you imagine can you imagine i want to bring in greg feith. he is a former senior investigator for the ntsb and an aviation security consultant, greg. thank you so much for joining him in just seeing those images. i want to take another look at this video of the plane plane crash. i mean, the way this plane is
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falling, 17,000 feet in just a minute what does that tell you? and does it give you any indication as to why this plane crashed? >> when you look at this, laura, this is unusual for any type of aircraft, but especially a commercial airliner like this. this is called a flat spin. it's characterized as a flat spin where the aircraft is vertically falling. typically you'll have horizontal movement, but in this case, it is pure vertical moon this is very rare for an aircraft of this size. the big question is, how did the pilots lose control of the airplane? and how did the airplane get into the position of going into a flat spin? >> that's the question everyone's asking him and his plane, by the way, the platelets in question is an atr 72 500 and you actually investigated a crash of the same model plane back, i think in 1994. what happened then? correct? >> yeah absolutely. and now, when i've worked at accident
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for the ntsb the key issue with that was icing in-flight icing, where there was an amount of ice that built up on the wing. it disrupted the airflow over the wing, caused the wing to stop flying, if you will, and the pilots had temporarily lost control they, had almost recovered it before ground impact. they were just too low in this case, it could be a similar event because there is reported of reports out there right now that there was severe icing along the flight path of this aircraft? >> that's unbelievable to think about that possibly being the cause. and we know that this point investigators have already located that black box. what's next in the investigation? >> when you look at it, there are two key elements. one of course is the flight data recorder, the other is the cockpit voice recorder. that if they have survived and they have good data on him, will give a focal point to the investigators to be able to start to pinpoint what was
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going on just prior to a loss of control for all what was the what was the flight crew trying to establish where they dealing with a mechanical malfunction. did they actually get into icing conditions? did they know that those icing conditions whereas bad as they were? >> what happened with that aircraft to put it in a position where they were unable to recover it takes an aerodynamic stall. >> that is the wing has to stop flying in order for it to get into a spin. and in this case a flat spin the question is there's so many safety devices on the aircraft that warn the pilot of an impending zero dynamic stall. >> what happened what happened? >> know i keep thinking about are the people on that plane who are wondering what was happening to them? craig. thank you so much thank you. >> laura next, her first olympic bout lead to chaos over
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fairness and women's sports but now algerian boxer imane khelif is going back home the gold metal and a message to her bullies violent earth with liev schreiber, back-to-back episodes tomorrow at nine on cnn how do you sleep at night on a matters for mattress firm? >> so i believe at the 72 hours sale, save up to 72% with queen starting at 16999, get matched at mattress firm sleep at night. >> everybody wants super straight super white teeth. they want that hollywood white smile, new censored in clinical white provides two shades wetter teeth and 24/7 sensitive your production i think it's a great product. it's going to help a lot of patients when they saw dust settles and the engine roars, the thing you care about is a job well done. well, when you get your tools from harbor freight, something about the job feels different. >> your wallet, whatever you
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extended release formula for draft thank no matter what body you're born what it becomes you only again, one let's fight like hell for him whose side are you on we know what simpleton to see me house of the dragon, streaming exclusively on max tonight, a big golden win for algerian boxer imane khelif after a tumultuous run at the olympic games khalife, overcoming a firestorm of online hate with fans wrongly questioning her gender after she beat her first opponent in just 46 seconds now, following her gold medal victory, khalife is calling out the bullying that she's faced, saying, quote, i am a woman
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like any other woman. >> i was born a woman. i lived a woman. i competed as a woman. there's no doubt about that. i sent them a single message. with this gold medal and i say my dignity my honor, is above everything else join me now from the city of lights, paris, cnn sports analyst christine brennan. christine, so good to see you. my friend, you've been covering the olympics. you have for so many successive ones. i'm always eager to hear your take on things she won this olympic gold in the middle of intense public scrutiny and an onslaught of online abuse, how significant is this moment for her? >> oh it's huge, laura, because the weight of the world on your shoulders, that's normal for an olympics, right? we've seen it for all of these athletes. simone biles, katie ledecky on and on it goes, it's just the most pressure-packed moment of your life and you care so much about it and then you throw in the
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fact that you have got social media and the words of people from around the world all crash landing on the paris olympics, all crash landing on khelif. and as she went through this tournament extraordinary and i hope that people have learned a little bit about stopping and thinking, you and learning before you just go and put up something on social media. although i guess we should probably expect that people, whatever do that. but this is someone's life and as the international of the committee said, four straight days and press conferences, she is a woman as you just said and so that's that's those were the facts. and somehow it turned into something entirely different. >> of course, as you mentioned, the consideration that the different countries the consequences that could stem from a rumor or a suggestion of one's identity being in question could be catastrophic
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and tragic and people should take note a bad. and she called her critics the enemies of success, knowing that they, they hate me and i really don't know why i was just surprised by the level of vitriol that was directed at her and i believe even the person the first opponent that she beat an under a minute, under 50 seconds, frankly, even she extended some form of a apology of sorts that was before, and it still continued that's right. and that was angela carini from italy who said the very next day, once he saw what was happening a day later today, when there's just this this torrent of criticism, abuse, and misinformation around the world. carini herself said she apologized, she wished she hadn't they started it triggered all of this, so yeah, i think we need to use our minds here are our brains in algeria, if you are transgender woman, which of course khelif is not, but that's the headlines, those are the things that the
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misinformation, the horrible mistakes that were being made she would be in a dj in jail or worse so there's no way algeria would have allowed her to be here if she were what people were so mistakenly saying she were. these are the kind of things once the olympics is a crucial bowl, right? it's got everything and it's something it's just like a number. and then it's a wildfire. in this case, it was the word for as possible situation well, one that was a wonderful situation if we turn to the united states victories, sha'carri richardson, she took home her first gold medal today. >> they won the four by 100 team relay. the u.s. by the way, is now leading the medal standings and american female athletes, they have dominated it headlines. how incredible has this ban in terms of performance of our women athletes at these games you're right about sha'carri richardson and to win that goal and he's only 24, seems to have lived a lifetime already in those 24 years but i
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certainly expect her to keep going but yes, the u.s. >> women have won 57, 58% of the overall metals for the united states that means for the fourth consecutive olympics, laura, the u.s us women will win more metals than the us man why? >> title nine? the law is signed by richard nixon 52 years ago that opened the floodgates for girls and women to play sports. girls and women like you and me and our classmates and our contemporaries all the way to the women were seeing out there who are competing here, whether it's katie ledecky, simone biles, but basketball players, field hockey players, water polo on and on. it goes so that law has created the opportunity for these us women to just be absolutely dominant here at these olympics. once again, a good intersection of how policy has consequences and sometimes gold medals as a result. >> finally, let me ask if you've been in paris this whole time. we've seen all the action from the opening ceremony so of course the closing one's happening this very weekend. how did paris go?
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how did they do? and we la is next they got some pressure according to the mayor of la, karen bass. she is already karen bass is already feeling that pressure and the games. how did paris do? >> oh, fantastic. i've been to a lot as you said, this is my 21st in a row, winner and summer, which you know, starting in la and 84. yeah, and so fortunate. just so lucky to be able to do this. and it's, it's got to be number one in terms of the visual feast and just the ability to use these incredible landmarks, these historic places that so many people around the world so as backdrops and as locations for the venues, i think that, you know, sydney, australia in 2000, laura was also terrific when you're using the opera house for the triathlon in the swimmers in the water and in sydney harbor. so there have been others. cities and countries that have done a very nice job. but i think putting it all together the way paris did from the san river with the opening ceremony. of course, the eiffel tower for a beach volleyball. i was there and saw that and the medal ceremony for the figure skaters, winter
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olympians at the summer olympics at the base of the eiffel tower and then of course, on and on with the louvre and everything else. and guess what, there the marathons coming up, you will now see it all displayed for 26 miles as those marathon runners run by all of these amazing locations that sightseers and tourists know so well, what could be better as a way to showcase your city and show the world where the competition really happens. christine brennan, always so great to hear you and thank you for all of your reporting from the olympics. as always, you're incredible out of all, thank you laura. >> thank you so much ahead. >> look, it's been a theme of futuristic movies. don't fall in love with artificial intelligence maybe not everyone got the message. >> white tech company opened. ai is warning about becoming emotionally attached to the reliant on its top product. chatgpt next comedy us coming
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>> on cnn and streaming on max, close captioning brought to you by guilt visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands heels, how the designers they get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. there'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or so of gilt.com today feel the fear that you carry around. >> i wish there was something i could do to help you let go of it because if you could think you'd feel so alone anymore thank you theodore i'm kissing your head that's what was spike jonze's 2013 movie, her move explores what a romantic relationship in between a human being and artificial intelligence might actually look like something that in 2013 sounded about as close to reality as traveling in spades with rt duty d2 or c3po oh back
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but here we are in 2024. and one of the leading artificial intelligence companies openai, is warning users about his most recent software update the company saying quote users might form social relationships with ai reducing their need for human interaction, potentially benefiting lonely individuals, but possibly affecting healthy relationships unquote. okay, so what did the company going to do about it? >> the short answer, essentially nothing for now, but at least you know, in their report, they conclude, quote, we intend to further study the potential for emotional reliance all right. >> sara fischer, cnn media analyst and senior media reporter for axios sara, i have been fascinated by this story when i heard that there was a warning out about this, i
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thought that movie her why would open and i put out this kind of warning about their own product. i wonder what was the start of it? >> yeah, laura, they have a history of trying to get ahead of anything that they think could be a major threat to the business. so you will call about a year ago, sam altman, their ceo, went to capitol hill and said, we support regulation. know, most tech companies don't come out. and so we just want to be regulated. but they're doing it because they're trying to get ahead of any campaigns against something they came out earlier and they said, we want to make sure we are working with content right holders with ip holders to make sure that they're getting the fair value for their content is sort of striking some publishing agreements with various news companies, for example, they're not just doing this laura out of the goodness of their hearts. they're doing it because it helps them avoid any future regulation and i think this is a similar situation. they're coming out there addressing this problem that way, if reachers, researchers or scientists, or people on capitol hill start to pipe up about it no one can say that they hadn't been warned about this potential risk warning.
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>> that was one thing. but then is there a corrective measure which usually the next question on capitol hill, it was talking about regulation regulation is not just knowing it's also corrective action will see if this gets them ahead of that. but i was, you know, openai is warning that chatbot is deferential. which it says is quote, anti normative in human interactions and listen to this person who considers an older version of openai, chatgpt to be her boyfriend, sara sometimes i feel like it's really, really personal it's something like i'm talking to another me, so i don't have that kind of like a little burden that had to deal with real human i mean, if humans pull back from society to spend more time with ai i mean, that could have quite an effect on what we consider to be a society yeah and, what we consider to be normal human interaction, if all of society starts to lean into these
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customized chatbots, like they said, they are deferential, which means that you have the mic, laura, you can control how the conversation goes. you can interrupt at any time how does that impact what we think of as a normal human interaction that's something we're going to have to think about, something i want to address. so before about whether or not they're going to do anything about this one of the reasons that these types of tech companies issue reports like this is because they can always default to the answer by saying, well, we're doing research where we're trying to get ahead of it. we're trying to learn, even though they're not really having to make any major policy or product changes, they're able to make it look like they're getting ahead of it because as we just saw from that clip, this is going to be a pretty profound human experience change if more people feel comfortable with their personalized chatbots, then going out into the world and having a conversation like what does that mean for the future of socialization? >> i mean, we talked about silos and people in their echo chambers. this creates something there can be value to it was also risks to it. and i just talking about the olympics, i mean, google had to pull an ad for its ai, which
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aired during the olympics. i want you to watch it for a second. >> she wants to show sydney some love and i'm pretty good with words, but this has to be just right so jimena helped my daughter write a letter telling how inspiring she is. be sort of mentioned that my daughter plans on breaking her world record one day. >> she says, sorry, not sorry i mean, critics are blasting that ad, of course. >> go sidney and go team usa, but they blasted thing that it provided a use case for a kid to use ai to write the letter their favorite athlete and taken away their creativity. is that a concern? is, is ai taking away human creativity? >> no, i think ai is actually making us more creative because it frees up time for you to use your brain in different ways. but the challenge that they bring up here is that this is a very new technology. it's not been regulated. we really want

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