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tv   The Chris Wallace Show  CNN  October 5, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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waiting for payday anymore. and you join me. i can.com and get paid when you say i'm bill, we're on the california coast and this is cnn time to break down the big stories with some smart people. today, we're asking as the middle east teeters on the brink of all out, war, does president biden have any influence left to limit the conflict? then saying washington, trump we'll discuss claims. the media is sanitizing some of the former president's outlandish comments and gift wrap goat. the chance to give a piece of tom brady as a christmas gift. but it could cost you a lot of money. the panel is here and ready to go. so sit back, relax and let's talk about it knife's edge as fighting in the middle east headed towards an all-out war israel now
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fighting on two fronts and gaza and lebanon could soon open up a third front with a wrong and the u.s. >> seemingly powerless to contain the crisis the response will be painful. israel wearing a retaliatory strike against iran. >> okay. okay, guys, we got to get off the roof after that regime launched almost 200 missiles across israel, had military and intelligence installation. >> united states is fully, fully, fully supportive of israel, but president biden urging israel not to go too far in its response >> they have a right to respond but look at the past year when us warnings of mostly been ignored biden drew this red line and may they go into rafah? i'm not supplying the weapons that have been used historically to deal with rafah less than a week later, israeli
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forces raiding that city in gaza then by many proposals for ceasefires in gaza and lebanon to roadmap to an enduring ceasefire and the release of all hostages. we can the basis for a ceasefire statement 21 day ceasefire, but two days after that last us initiative is three bomb beirut, killed hezbollah's leader, hassan nasrallah here with me today, podcaster journalist and author kara swisher reihan salam, president of the manhattan institute and national review, contributing editor new york times journalist and the interview podcast host lulu garcia navarro and conservative pollster and new york times opinion writer kristen soltis anderson. welcome back everyone. riha, can a wider regional war still be avoided? >> the wider regional war has been going on for about a year
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now, and israel is now forcefully engaging in that wider regional war. iran has been deeply involved, deeply implicated, both in the october 7 attack itself, that it, has been pounding of communities in the north of israel. and now israel is doing what it needs it's to do in order to ensure its security. so this wider regional war has been going on, but it was through the proxies of iran. now it's directly between tehran and jerusalem that is different. >> well, iran did launch a missile attack back in april, as will recall, and now look there on the backfoot and now israel is pressing its advantage exactly as it should israel is doing things today that they were looking to do in october, way back a year ago, and they were restrained because the biden administration said then, guys, look, slow it down 95% plus of israelis are strongly in favor of taking action against hezbollah because of the incredibly deadly threat it
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represents to israel. and now they've demonstrated that they penetrated hezbollah thoroughly, and they have greatly degraded its ability to harm israelis and others in the well, as we wait now to see how israel is going to respond to that, bharat of missiles this past week iran's new president has warned they will fight back. take a look but how a multi-township us if the zionist regime does not stop its crimes, it will face harsher reactions. and i guess if they want to respond, they will face a more severe response. lulu, how big could a direct conflict between iran and israel, not through proxies, but a direct conflict. how bad could that get? >> it could get very bad. i think we're in a very dangerous period what kept the middle east? >> sort of not nominally controlled is that there was the sense that there were red lines that neither side was going to cross.
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>> so on the one hand, israel wasn't going to actually launch a direct attack in iran, which they did with the killing of the leader of hamas. and on the other hand iran it wasn't going to launch missiles directly on a place like tel aviv. so what we have here is that all the red lines have been blown through and a very combustible situation. i think at this point, president biden has been urging calm, but those days of calm or well-over, and we're now seeing a very, very volatile period and it's not really clear what's going to happen because the real problem here is that yes israel has launched these attacks, but there is no plan for what happens after, as we showed in the set-up piece, president biden says the israeli response, which we expect in the next few days should be proportionate. and a ruled out an attack on iran's nuclear program. former president but and trump didn't think much of that i mean, to make a statement, please leave their nuclear alone i would tell you
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that that's not the right answer. >> there was the craziest answer. because you know what soon they're going to have nuclear weapons. and then you're going to have problems kristen how much should the u.s. get involved and in walkway, to reaffirm that israel is our number one ally in that region, that we have their back. and i think it's the sense that we have been undercutting them either privately or publicly, that has led to this erosion. of trust. the relationship between bibi netanyahu and the biden administration is not great, right now. there's a lot of finger-pointing about why that is, but my sense is that joe biden does not have a ton of influence over what bibi netanyahu does. and so we've all along, you've thought bibi is bad and he's handling this incorrectly. i think biden's actions since i've made it less easy for the u.s. at least for the next few months until we get a new president really on to help restrain he's been the biden administration has been giving exactly where it counts, which is enormous
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amounts of aid military and otherwise, the fact that they are urging restraint is the traditional role of the united states, not just with bibi netanyahu, but throughout the history of the state of israel, but i think there have been things like, for instance, saying, we you all, please, you shouldn't go into rafah and then they say, you know what, we're going to go in and we're going to find hostages that hamas has been holding that have not been turned over. >> i do think the hostages have been killed. and not only that, how many palestinians have been killed. and not only that what is the endgame here? you now have the state of israel fighting in gaza. you don't have the state of israel fighting in the north against hezbollah in the south of lebanon. and now you have maybe potentially direct conflict with always telling israel that they have to be the ones that are restrained when it is them who is getting rockets out into there. >> i want to bring kara in because it seems to me that what you're describing, lulu has actually put the u.s. and kind of the worst of both worlds on the one hand we're saying, hey, go slow, don't do this. on the other hand, we're
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continuing to give them billions of dollars tons of armaments. i mean, you tick off everybody. >> well, i think it's sort of biden who he doesn't have influence at all. and no one's going to be listening to them because they're waiting for whoever the next president is. so it doesn't hardly matter because nothing is going to happen in that time period. and therefore, they're not going to take any kind of advice from the u.s. probably what they should be doing is working behind the scenes with other arab countries to help bring something together. but there's no influence here. >> ronnie on this gets to the bigger question. can an it goes beyond the middle east. can our allies, and can our adversaries ignore what the american president says? without any consequence, while there's a perception that president biden at them oh man, is incredibly in constant. there was a little moment at a press conference not long ago where he was asked a question, but whether or not israel would be striking iranian oil fields. and he gave his usual kind of slapdash answer of what we're talking about that anyway, let's move
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on. and then immediately oil prices surged by close to 6% on that news. and it caused an enormous amount of panic and the region that's the kind of thing you don't casually in artless lee share as an aside, during a press conference, there was a time when the united states and the biden administration did have more leverage with respect to the conflict in the middle east that leverage has steadily diminished, not just because he's a lame duck president, but all so because of that same inconstancy that kristen was describing before, the sense that you're going to be a backseat driver, you're going to undermine your partner, but then you're actually not going to do anything especially effective, right now, israel is taking actions that benefit not just the israeli people, but it's actually doing things to undermine enemies of the united states. whereas the biden admin ministration has been utterly confused and confusing. >> huge humanitarian cost. i mean, i understand that we can put a g over, we can talk geopolitically but there is a cost in lives and there is a cost and safety. and we are
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seeing that in lebanon, we are seeing that in gaza and we are seeing that in is what we are seeing that gray with what reihan said, that weather because of inconstancy or in competence or whatever it is that people just don't pay that much attention to this president. >> i don't i don't think it's just the lame duck thing that they don't pay that much attention to. joe biden anymore on the world stage, on the world stage? >> sure. israel in particular on the world stage, i would say on the world stage, i don't think that that's true. certainly that isn't true. if you think of the ukraine conflict, i do think it's true when it has to do with israel, but i don't think it's unique to this particular conflict. we've seen that over and over again because the state of israel, as any country does, does what's in its best interests and in this case this, this particular president thanks. that this particular leader of things, what's in his best interests is to go forth and try and attack hezbollah on the and swing states this weekend, as donald trump says, no to two big chances to reach tens of millions of voters. what's that
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about? >> ben, beyond the damage, the serious impact hurricane helene could have on the november election. >> and lighter bolen at the box office, the big changes coming to your local movie theater? i could see you can bet. you're a good bowler. is there anything in your bad >> i've been saying publicly, what people say and turns out i have enough money. i could just shut up and back i can't tonight at seven on cnn my moderate to severe crohn's symptoms kept me out of the picture now, i have sky risen. >> i've got >> feels significant symptom relief at four weeks with guirassy including less
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from election day and up this week is any guide. >> it will be a sprint to the finish. we started with the vice presidential debate. the last scheduled face off for the campaign, and ended with a candidates and a battleground blitz dealing with a new political storm. and a real life disaster it looks like a war happens. the destruction of hurricane helene on full display for the presidential hopefuls, the devastation wrought by this storm is incredible so extensive, including in the critical swing states of georgia john, and north carolina. we are at our best when we work together and coordinate resources off the trail. >> donald trump facing new legal headwinds following this week's filing from special counsel, jack smith in the 2020 election interference case, which argues trump acted in a private capacity resorting to crimes to try to stay in
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office. >> it's pure election interference in the 2020 election also taking center stage at a political event. >> no one saw coming four years ago former republican congresswoman liz cheney campaigning for democratic nominee kamala harris. he praised the rioters. i asked you to reject the depraved cruelty of donald trump. >> trump was quick to attack liz cheney is a stupid warhawk sprung note to follow kristin, where is this presidential race right now? it's very close and anybody who tells you they are confident that they know how this is going to go. don't listen to them. nobody should feel confident. >> do you see any advantage jia and the geographic swing states, you see any advantage in terms of the issues right now? >> i think i'd rather be harris than trump, if only because she is doing so well in these national polls, when you ask voters, what are you hearing about the race? she is a better kind of information
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flow right now. but in the battleground states it's very interesting if you live in somewhere like colorado or ohio, some of it's not considered a presidential swing state. your tv he has plenty of ads for other races, but nothing about trump and harris. but if you live in arizona where you live in pennsylvania, you cannot turn on the tv without hearing about kamala harris is weak on the border are kamala harris supports this saturday. other thing that's liberal or conversely, i'm kamala harris and i approve this message and it's her talking about how actually she's really moderate and so on and so forth. i think in the battleground, state's voters are getting more negative messaging about kamala harris than voters elsewhere for sure, that's where all the money is going. to defining her these national polls that show her up. i do take them with a bit of a grain of salt, pennsylvania states like that or all that matters. and right the now, the polling averages show it neck and neck. >> there is so much happening just in last week, the special counsel filing by jack smith, the vice presidential debate, the liz cheney endorsement of a democratic candidate talk about mind-blowing where is this race
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now also springsteen, if you saw that, you know, i think it's difficult. >> i think she says, we don't know. i think it's very hard. i think again, it's all about turnout and who there might be people responding to polls aren't really going to go to vote. they may be just talk about it and so i do think people actually don't know. i have a feeling a lot of people aren't saying what they're going to do like that. it feels like the lough mouse are talking, but maybe not everybody and we'll see, i think it's going to be a ground game. and whoever collects the most money has the best ground game is going to win here and getting people to the polls, then there is trump's unusual media strategy, 60 minutes is doing a special this monday featuring interviews with the presidential candidates that will draw millions of viewers. trump has turned that down he's also getting pressure from some of his biggest borders to do another debate. but so far, he's taking a pass there to take a look please why why let that be less worried. because because number one,
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we're winning. number two, it's very late in the process. she said, i'm i'm the goat of debates lulu why is trump a guy who loves attention, who loves crowds? >> why is he ducking the bigger stages? >> there's three reasons. the first one is that they talked about factchecking and we've seen that republican candidates are adverse to fact-checking. they like to discredit the entire process. they say it's bias the second reason is that he is in decline. i mean, we have seen him in the debates. we have seen him when he is faced more substantial interviews that are not with friendly people like his former, the former head of his campaign. and those actual scenarios do not show him in a great light. and frankly, third, i think he's not wrong in that. it doesn't benefit him the more people see of donald trump, the less they tend to like him ryan is trump afraid to be seen to appear in one way or another with kamala harris,
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whether it's on a debate stage or back-to-back on 60 minutes. well, as i understand it he has said that he would be open to a debate on fox. you've had a number of other major networks with big audiences that have had debates. it seems not entirely unreasonable for him to want what he takes to be a friendlier venue. that's one thing. another is that when you think about the two months following harris's elevation as the democratic presidential nominee, the trump and vance kim has had 70 media interviews with print and television reporters, harris and walz had seddon. so i think in terms of being open to scrutiny, being able to engaging with the press was they're also they're also quite a few with trump as well. but just to be clear, i think that it's reasonable to say that, hey cnns at a shot abc has had a shot cbs had a shocker the opportunity to kamala harris to say, i don't think i got a fair shot on fox. and since trump has phrased cnn, i'm not doing a special pleading here and saying how
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fair it was, why on earth would they go out and do another debate? >> well i think that again, i mean, looking at the fact is presidential candidates go on networks and do debate sure. why is trump ducking a debate with dokin? 60 minutes. what he's going to happen interview by himself respectfully, if you think about 60 minutes track record of covering donald trump, i think he has reason to believe that that is not necessarily going to be a venue that will be entirely fair and reasonable. justice harris has objections to appearing on fox. >> yes. but look, this last week, there's been several appearances where his cognitive challenges are clear. >> and so when he had these pushed in any ways or when it when that when that debate happened with kamala here, he has issues. we talked about it with biden. it's so clear from so many of the speeches this week that he loses words. he mixed up, mixes up people. he doesn't want that contrast because she doesn't do that. and so he's not going to appear near her. >> there's a new word being used in this campaign are released new to me, saying
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washing. and that's the notion that the media actually contrary to what brian's said, the media is cleaning up some of trump's more outlandish remarks. for instance, here's trump this week talking about a person in this country illegally who killed someone she murdered him. >> in my opinion, commonly murdered him just like she did just like she had a gun in her hand but he bet here was the ap headline about the speech trump rallies and wisconsin's critical democratic stronghold ahead of the vice presidential debate, no mention of trump accusing his opponent, vice president harris, in effect, birder, kristen is the media saying washing some of trump's comments. i think it is the role of the media to report on what happens. i do not think it is the role of the media to tell people how they should feel about it. i think right now there's a lot of befuddlement on the part of people who don't like donald trump at anybody could possibly want to see donald trump back
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in the white house and so they're looking for reasons to say well, gosh, maybe it's just that the 47% of america that likes donald trump and wants to vote for him again is just, they've become immune to the idea that he's crazy and it's the media's fault, but it has really been a lot of americans have justice biden you know what i'm willing to take the good with the bad and for them, they think no amount of craziest too much. >> so you're saying it's not the media saying watching >> voters have just decided we know who donald trump is and we don't care. we're in for it. we're in for the ride. >> we showed you harris and trump visiting with hurricane helene victims will up next, playing politics in the strike storm's aftermath, trump's claim, which could help or hurt him in two key swing states plus a goat for christmas. how you can own a piece of tom brady just-in time for the holiday coming to cnn this fall pros and cons less pro hosted by roy wood jr. row with amber ruffin would likely in black?
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poland is right under your nose. what's your name again eva mckend on the road with the harris-walz. >> can cnn close captioning brought to you by guilt, visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands house the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices you every day currie, they'll be gone in flash designer sales at up to 70% or so of gilt.com today hurricane helene ravaged the southeast the storm's aftermath is turning political. >> it's the deadliest hurricanes since katrina, with more than 200 people dead and hundreds more still unaccounted for and tens of thousands across six states still don't have water or power the damage is estimated to cost tens of billions of dollars in this week, the secretary of homeland security warned fema, is running out of money we are
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meeting the immediate needs with the money that we have. fema does not have the funds to make it through this season as both kamala harris and donald trump surveyed the damage this week trump pounced on females funding problem to make a case about immigration money, billions of dollars on housing for illegal migrants they saw the fema money just like they stole it from a bank but that's not true. female users grants to house migrants, that it has a separate budget approved by congress for disaster relief. >> kristen is trump politicizing helene a smart political strategy i think that by talking about how people are feeling in the sense that people don't think that they're getting relief fast enough. >> i think that's a completely legitimate criticism. i think whether it resonates will have
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to do with is you people actually perceive that the responses in effectual? i think about two different hurricanes that came through caused devastation and affected elections subsequently, you made katrina obviously in 2005 george w bush was held responsible for that terrible response and paid, he and the gop him and air force one looking down he paid a political price for it. but then conversely, think about 20:12, you had obama and superstorm sandy, chris christie still has not been forgiven by a lot of republicans for giving him a hug and saying thanks for your good response. so i think it will be interesting to see how do these republican governors who thus far have been pretty restrained and nonpartisan and said no, we're working well with the administration. does that persist? >> there is some irony in trump's claim about fema taking disaster relief money to deal with migrants because it turns out in 2019, trump's administration did john let's start diverting 271 million from dhs programs, including $155 million from the disaster
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relief fund to pay for more detention space and hearing sites for asylum seekers. but lulu, to be clear, fema did not divert me money from the disaster relief fund from migrants this year. your reaction to trump's trying to link the problems with the with relief to the immigrants. >> i mean, he's lying about it and he's lying about it because this is his best issue. he wants people to think that the reason that they're not i'm satisfied with the response is because of some, problem with migrants, the crisis with migrants, et cetera, et cetera i think it's absolutely horrific to capitalize on the pain, the destruction the horrible situation that people are finding themselves in and blaming a group that act actually has nothing to do with this. and in fact, are victims themselves there or migrant communities in florida in north carolina, and elsewhere. so
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yeah, i think i don't i don't think i don't know if it's a smart political strategy, but it said morally reprehensible. one is his instinct is to vividness its on-brand, it's throwing a lie in there. >> this is something he's going to do. >> reihan will the response to helene, do you think play a role and especially with these two swing states that are dramatically affected, georgia, north carolina, will it play a role in the election i do think it could play a role. >> these regions that have been primarily impacted by the hurricane or rural regions these are places where people were going to take a very long time to put their lives back together. and it could absolutely depress turnout, among other things so much the question of how the government acts done just the physical fact that some of these folks may not be able to vote in november because of the way their lives have been disrupted. >> it's not so much a matter of candy. i think that this is something that's going to be incredibly demoralizing. and as to the public policy failure, i'll just say that this is a big long-term bipartisan
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failure. this is something that involves several different levels of government. just when you look at hurricane katrina response, there were failures that state and local level as well as the federal level. and i think you see that here too. we are building homes in flood-prone areas. we are doing a lot of things that are politically easy in the moment that are creating cascading failures down the road here. >> and hard about know, we normally think of hurricanes at landfall where it hits the gulf coast, where it hits in florida on the big bend. but one of the most devastated areas where asheville and western north carolina, which is hundreds of miles from the coast, because of these huge flooding the storm's to does the government need to change its approach in response to the climate haven? actually people move there because they thought they were safe. nowhere is safe. and i think it's interesting because businesses are responding in california and florida,
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insurance companies aren't ensuring they just start so they're responding to it. and i think we have to come up with more creative including technical solutions. there's a great story about japan and all this all these cathedrals under the city that collect rainwater. we have to be thinking as answer is in a bipartisan way to deal with this because we don't know where it's going to hit, going forward, vermont, vermont and other good but it starts with really republicans and the republican leadership actually accepting in the climate change is real. you can't actually deal with the effects of climate change if you don't fundamentally accept i don't have really good about climate change. >> i have studied this a lot in the best way that you can bring together a bipartisan group of people around these issues is not actually to make it about climate change or about climate change is part of the best way to do it. to talk about the practicality, the values of things like responsibility and resilience. if you try, as soon as you talk about climate change to a lot of republicans that immediately signals, oh, you're not actually interested in helping the year interested in scoring a political, it's about, it shuts people down,
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but there's a way to have this conversation >> and the fact is that the warmer water creates a bigger storms with more moisture. so that 500 miles away from where helene hit, you get an asheville, north carolina devastating floods, climate change, and global warming, creating the superstore arms is a fact that is absolutely true. i would agree with that. however, it's also the case that china is accountable for over twice the emissions as the united states, we cannot control that. what we can control is our ability to deploy infrastructure to cost-effective way we can work on a resilience? yes, we should address the climate issue, but this is really an issue about zoning laws. this is an issue about insurance. we can address this and we're not well movie theaters are trying to do something to get people to go back to them. >> they're hoping to bowl a strike was some big changes and we'll show you what they are
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are planning to spend more than 2 billion to upgrade the movie going experience as they try to compete with streaming platforms some of the improvements include immersive sound systems, more comfortable seats family and our tainment like arcades and bolt. i'm trying to make this sounds very good ryan with all the upgrades, are you yea or nay on going out to the movies? >> i am a passionate, passionate yay. i love going to the movie is my little kids love going to the movies. i remember the first time i went to see gremlins and i spilled all of my eminem and now i can do that in surround now i can do it with a giant dinosaur spitting fire at me and bowling at the same time, i love it. >> no, to the file. don't sit next to you, ryan your hands moon. >> i want to go to the movies with reihan. >> yes. is that the question? yeah, absolutely. >> i would not the question i
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used to go to the movies all the time. i'll bet i haven't been five times since the pandemic and two of those were to see tom cruise movies. where are you on the idea whether without ri going out? to go to the movies rather than sitting at home and watching on. >> sorry for you, is what i feel. >> you're not the first time. >> well, that you're sitting at home watching tv on your device and i'm sure you do, but this is a communal experience. this is about gathering with people and being able to have the lights go down and enjoy it. now let me sell it. i love going to the movies next. >> thank you. nicole kidman, have you ever wondered where new emojis come from? well, it turns out the unicode consortium as a non-profit that oversees global emoji standards and approves new releases. and they recently revealed eight new ones from a root vegetable to a heart our even the flag for an island and the english channel. but the standout is this exhausted face emoji, which comes with bags under its
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size kara as the queen of texting, are you yea or nay, on new emojis? >> i don't care because it's going to be generative emojis going forward where you decide what you want to have, like chris wallace and the tango dress, for example, which i would like to see. and then you just make them so it doesn't matter what she feel sorry for me and you and what you mean up as me ai is going to change you're going to have whatever emoji you want. kristen, as a newborn who may have occasionally bags under the eyes? i say not today. how do you feel about these new emoji? >> i'm going to use that particular emoji all the time. the ones that i use the most star the eye roll, the cringe. so we will just put that one right in there. i also have to say though beats is an odd choice, i'm very anti beats and you're not quite sure why that. you're wrong. >> beach are delicious. finally, giving the gift of tom brady for christmas in december, the seven times super bowl champion is putting up for auction some of his memorabilia and high-end watches featured
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items include the jersey from his final college game at the university of michigan estimated to go forward, guess what? about 300,000 a wristband, a risk? fan from his epic comeback super bowl win against the atlanta falcons and 2017. and the biggest ticket items from his watch collection, 27 watches at all, which could bring in as much as six million bucks. brian yea or nay, about bidding on brady? >> i would never spend that kind of money on new clothing, let alone on some random guy's us clothing. so no, thank you. lulu, i have seen you fan girl about olivia rodrigo. how do you feel about buying some brady memorabilia? >> absolutely not. i'm with right-hand on many things today. and this included i would net, first of all, it's probably stinky. second of all, i wouldn't pay that amount of money for anything just because it had touched the body of some celebrity and finally, i mean, it's madness. is this all going in his pocket? he is rich
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enough it's tom brady sweat. don't talk about oder. >> a panel is back with their takes on hot stories or what will be in the news before its news. >> that's right after the break really, tom brady's sweat doesn't do a dozen do well on the beat exactly the tv moments that took culture over the edge. people are watching and then our world change an explosive reverberation tv on the edge tomorrow at nine on cnn remember when they said you've got your whole life ahead of you at united unitedhealthcare. we say you still do focus on what matters with
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reliable medicare coverage from united health care wreck sv, a wreck sv is a vaccine used to prevent lower respiratory disease from rsv. >> and people 60 years and older, a wreck sv does not protect everyone, is not for those because with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients, those with weakened immune systems may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects are injection site pain, fatigue, muscle pain, headache and joint pain. >> a wreck sv is number one, an rsv vaccine shots rsv make it a wrexham and at home. right now, say $50
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on the bta, 57 battery blower, real still find yours built for places you'll probably never be who where where you need it most news sports, a little family, gaza, maybe now, you don't do that, right? >> here's another topic for you. as they get older, their risk of getting really sick from a respiratory virus, lake flu, covid-19 are rsv goes up a lot. so talk to them about getting the season's vaccines because you've still gets so
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much to talk about. >> okay everyone mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition. or strengthened energy ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals transfer immune health, and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein attempts to fix my teeth. every touched all my wedding photos, and he was even affecting my health i trusted you because his specialized in dental implants, you created a permanent solution and customize my teeth so it still felt like me my new teeth. i change my future. ife and >> thank you you're so welcome.
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for location nearest us, see llf fbi k.com i'm erin burnett in israel, and this is cnn
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special takes on what's happening or predictions of what we should be looking out for why it me with your best shot i want to start with a bipartisan scandal over the last week-and-a-half, you had former president trump and vice president kamala harris cheering on the international longshoremen's association. this is a union that's riddled with corruption. that's been accused of links with organized crime. and they were trying to hold the nation's economy hostage. so now the biden white house intern veined and basically leaned on management in order to make big concessions to this union temporarily until january 15. and now that union wants to prevent us from automating ports, this is a scandal. trump and harris should be ashamed of themselves on this one. >> okay, lulu, you are focused on presidential politics south of the border. >> well, you kind of gave it away already because we have the first female president in north america and in aid and canada. and at eight here, yet, but it is in mexico. mexico has actually beaten us all. her
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name is claudia sheinbaum. and what she wants what's and what she thinks is actually going to be very influential for the next president because of course, mexico really has a lot of influence on our migration and on trade. and there is already a lot of consternation with this administration on about her, but we'll see she is at least a woman and that is something christian best shot. >> there's an article in politico in january that i believe we discussed on the show going over unpredictable, predictable things that could shake up the presidential race. it included a climate related disaster that could affect swing states violence at a trump rally that results in someone's death, an attempt on a candidates life. it included things like biden having the health issue that might require him to step away from the race, global events heating up in the middle east. this article effectively predicted not just one, but all of those things that have occurred. the only one left from that article is that the aliens have not yet made contact. so that's my next shot. that's the only one we have left to check off the list
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before the presidential election, right? you heard it? pure first, i'm not sure if the aliens see what the nature of politics is in this country. >> they're going to want to come down. i think they'll go to another salvo says okay, kara, bring us. oh, my lord, speaking of hail hands. yes. >> these are the new snapchat spectacles meta is also coming out with new ones called a ryan, which is pretty cool. what they are doing, it it's a version of vision pro. they're going to get smaller and smaller. you'll do things in front of you, mapping space in front of you. can singer pray that do legos music and generative ai where we can just you and i could describe things together and imagine together it's pretty cool. i'm, i'm still throw this stuff i can't even tell you what i'm seeing right now. >> i think are you saying are you saying anything? >> i'm seeing you in like an emoji in your butt. >> but here's the question. we went through this whole thing with you about vision pro. apple. and you had these big goggles looked a little full
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lotion. >> okay are they collecting dust in a closet somewhere? >> this way? it's going it doesn't matter what you think matters with the three biggest tech companies. think they're headed this direction. so i'm going with them on it. >> when's the last time you actually use your vision told you this the other day i watched a movie on it, it was great and i love these. they're interesting. we'll see what happens. we'll see, and it's okay to go around looking like forgive me. like what? >> lulu what's right now? >> it looks phantom. >> i have my own best shot and it's about my latest book, which comes out this week, hot off the press. here it is countdown 1960. it's a real book the behind the scenes story of the 312 days that changed america's politics forever. it's the inside account of the fascinating race between john kennedy and richard nixon, including the first televised presidential debate. but it's also relevant to current politics because the 1960 election may have really been stolen canada has had to decide whether to contested or
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go along with a peaceful transfer of power note to the file. he decided the transition was more important, caught on 1960 is out on tuesday, and it was available for pre-order right now. gang. thank you all for being here and thank you for spending part of your day with us. and we'll see you right back here next week he is the smartest somebody is ever done this for a living james was famous for winning races. teams believes that change width it's the economy stupid is it to fisted catcher, i am saying publicly what people are saying things out. i have enough money. i could just shut up. >> carbon. >> winning is everything stupid tonight at seven on cnn? >> i was stuck unresolved depression symptoms were in my way. >> i needed more for my antidepressant real or helped
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>> how do you figure that out? >> and i saw an app that shows you all the monthly subscriptions you have and how much you're paying. >> so do then just like cohen cancel, i have a phobia of making calls, so absolutely i did not do that the app you can can move what is called the rocket money >> seemed kind of sluggish today. things really moving. you could use some meta musa, madam useful cilium fiber helps keep your digestive system moving so you can feel lighter in more energetic meta me. so keep she couldn't move in and try fizzing fiber plus vitamins were you worried the wedding would be too much now, another destination wedding my backyard within empower, we can all are financial questions t
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healthier and reduced his stress. so why wouldn't we be this suis, but kaitlan collins, weeknights at

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