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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  October 7, 2024 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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rules saturday at nine on cnn close captioning brought to you by rula law, iconic brands up to 70% off retail at rula law.com rubella you never faithful sees
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the deal on happened before their car. >> south today year since the devastating october 7 attacks by hamas, a somber day of commemoration morning, those lost in the assault, even and as the country braces for the next phase in a conflict, that's reportedly killed more than 41,000 people in gaza and has now spread into lebanon. >> plus, milton is morphing into a monster. now a category five hurricane, the highest category possible with landfall in florida just two days away as tampa lies directly in the storm's path and going where the voters are vice president kamala harris sitting down for an interview interview with a podcast better known for conversations about sex and relationships. but won with a humungous following, will the
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gamble pay off? we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central today is a day of mourning marking the deadliest massacre of jews since the holocaust one year ago today, israel holding a national ceremony in the last hour, october 7, will live forever in infamy, hamas is horrific invasion into israel killed more than 1,200 people. >> hundreds more were then taken hostage. and a year later, more than 100 are believed to still be held captive. according, real people are gathering to come commiserate and reflect holding memorials at the nova music festival and the kibbutz nir oz sites where so many people were slaughtered the survivors, reliving their shared trauma on this solemn day cut out. >> i monday.
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>> cooler name been on the entire country is in mourning. we've all lost someone close to us and we are all left with a huge hole in our hearts i still don't know where to start picking up the pieces, how to find hope, and how to look forward i'm still asking why why this happened why it happened to our loved ones, to those tears to us but there are also protests. israeli families frustrated with their government's response, and their inability to bring all the hostages home, making their voices heard by the officials that they hold responsible. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's home. protesters sounding a two minutes, iran urging him to bring back their loved ones the pain, the frustration the exhaustion, also evident cnn's erin
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burnett is live in tel aviv. aaron, tell us what it's been like today. >> an incredibly somber day and right now, boris and brianna weren't hostage square. >> and you can see the memorial service yes. >> in the screen behind me. >> right now. >> we're david as our photojournalist is showing you just some of the people who work here we've got definitely more than 2000 people who have gathered here over these past. a couple of hours on the ceremony began about an hour ago with one of the most painful moment of silence is what i have ever experienced and as americans, we all understand the pain and emotion a moment like that on 911. and here it is so raw with so many tiers and so much pain. i will say the only time that there was an applause in this crowd tonight boris and brianna was when there was a call for national investigation into what happened. and when you said that just a moment ago, brianna, the frustration and the outrage, the anger at the
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fact that this happened, and that there they'll 97 hostages who were taken hostage on october set up a year ago today, who are not holding any even now, we are learning that israeli intelligence seems to have less and less hello jake every day about where those hostages are. >> and that is a huge problem for so many people. >> a third to a half of them may not be alive if your families do not no it is a desperation and an anger and a moment ago when you played that siren, which they played outside behind minister's home today, there were also sirens across israel here in tel aviv. incoming ballistic missiles, which seemed to that, which were intercepted would seem to a been coming from yemen. and even now, the israeli idf saying in 20 projectiles that they have fired. it lebanon, that they are now trying to clear more areas and evacuate areas that just south of where we are we're two thirds of the buildings have been leveled in these past 365 days of four. and this war mass evacuations
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continue with an idea operation with gaza so boris and brianna, that is the reality. even hostage families that i've spent time with and gotten to know over this past year that have had a happier ending now with people coming home, they say we will never be the same. >> and that is certainly the collective reality here of a country that will never be the same from what happened going year ago and a very raw hey your 97 people who are not here tonight who are in gaza alive and suffering and struggling, or perhaps dead. and at worst here in you see on the screen behind us is actually where jeremy diamond is live. that's where all the family members and friends of the hostage families are very near to where we are in tel aviv jeremy, is there with them, so jeremy, let me send it over to you. and what you're seeing there october 7, when we were on the ground, we were talking about the fact that he israel is such a tight-knit country that there was no one in israel who did not experience the horrors of
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that day either themselves directly or through someone they knew. >> and tonight that sentiment is palpable. once again, as we you're hearing the testimonials of so many of those who have lost loved ones on october 7. and we have been witnessing extremely emotional scenes in this crowd as people i've been breaking down as they are continuing to grieve one year later. in addition to that of force, we have also heard directly from former hostages and the families of hostages i spoke today with aviva siegel, a former hostage herself, whose husband, an american israeli names keith, is still being held hostage today. one year later, she told me that when they were in gaza, he had told her not to cry when hamas wanted to fill me hostage video. and then in april, she saw video of her husband i, mean april the window came after it gets strike means just means that is in really bad shape. >> and you can see attorneys is
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bound to act and not that he's going to come home like a skeleton but i'm just so badly come back i'm finished up wearing a bad thing and knowing exactly where he is and worrying about all the hostages. a year, it's too much. it's just too much it's cruel. it's the first thing and sadness about october 7 and concern for the life of her husband. >> but there is also a sense her purpose and a sense of needing to advocate even on this day of commemoration and a sense of frustration, of course, with the israeli government, the israeli prime minister, she told me that she has i'm really lost faith in the leaders of the world's who have failed to bring the hostages home. but she has continuing to fight it tonight. we heard on this stage a call for a commission of inquiry as well into the the events of october 7, something that the israeli prime minister has refused to agree to. until now, briana all right.
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>> jeremy diamond, thank you so much for that report into erin burnett as well there live for us in tel aviv. we're joined now by eylon because shut his cousin yarden bibas and yarden's wife and two young children were taken hostage by for hamas terrorists last october 7. you probably recognize their faces here. the couple's ninth, nine month-old son, kaffir, was the youngest hostage taken during the attack eylon, i wonder, a year later, how are you reflecting on how this day has changed your family? and changed israel about with my partner a lot that i'm not sure night minute ever be normal again will we ever be able to just not be on the verge of crime like every day of the time. it's like a
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whole new light and what you want your cousin to know positive person that he's absence is really felt in the family he him and end he and his wife and his kids are just very numerous people and, you know, you feel their presence when they're, when they are there and when there is a family gathering and you know that they are coming, you're glad about it, right? >> because, you know i mean, it's going to be fine with them around and
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them very loving father. >> he used to talk to me when we met, like about arielle and the t is just a meat very funny little boy, that he really likes trucks so any many likes. the fact that he likes trucks and he liked any likes like to show, like videos on him and wanting to the family, they are very private people my last memory of them being with them and shiri and rem around their family, table for the holiday and just be played with and we talked and you're going and i watch youtube together and you show me like
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metal artists. i felt like he's a welder and metal are that he wished he could make sunday and he talked to me about his spheres because they know it's not safe and they were actually looking to move out of this area it. >> meantime and you know, on 7 october happened and they didn't make it in time eagle already afraid that will not that i will not seeing them again. and i really i'm really afraid
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that the next time macey them will be a very big funeral for all of them this is what i dread the most it all the time it's hard for me not imagine lights even if they are even if they're coming back i still wish they do they lost so much. >> shiri's parents had been murdered the dog has been murdered. that the house was destroyed the trends were murdered as well, which and i know that even them coming back is only the beginning for them to heal. and for them to maybe someday be able to move on from everything that's happened. shiri probably doesn't even know that her parents of a mother
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>> it will never be the same. it will never be the same before and after the 7 october people ask me today like today's 7 october. how do you feel i reply. >> i say every day since october 7 in october 7 it it's not changed. >> like i don't need a reminder today. that this event has happened. i feel it every day in their absence and every day in the grief of my family over. we want them to be back. we are so hard that we're not we're not feeling heard notes from our government not not from the united nations and not
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what i mean let me ask you about that before i let you go. >> because we spoke in december last year. so long ago almost ten months ago. and you said time is running out and you don't feel heard by your government. you don't feel heard by so many global entities who you would look to for help. what do you want them to know? what do you need? >> i need them to understand that empathy is not enough no amount of hudson said faces will bring back our families we need real action from real people that has the authority to make such actions and we don't need to fight its wasted that we have to fight for normal civilians and for again, a baby, child and two very innocent mother and father and all the others why do we need
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to fight for their right to return? >> why, why is it politicized why? why would we talking about people say yes, but gaza, no, he doesn't have to do with anything this is a humanitarian issue. these are civilians that were targeted by terrorists with the brutal act of violence and they kidnap them from their home in the butcher, the dog, and they destroyed the home on purpose. they didn't defend any infrastructure. they didn't defend fielded and defend any anyone, right here is not is not an oppressor. is not is not idf is not the israeli government clearly is just maybe you don't kidnap babies. like, why do i need to spend a year going around the world, meeting with all of these important figures telling them the very basic moral
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what's the very basic model that we all leave by? know, you never kidnapped babies. it's that simple. why, why so many people are silent about it? why do i need to see posters of being grieved apart and they say and then they say free palestine. i saw it when i was in ireland. fear foster it apart and he say, if a free palestine, what the hell does it have to do with anything? fear is a baby that was kidnapped. he needs to go back home. that there is no context for this and this is what we've been going to be like. it's not just that we want our families back. we are fighting for our right to speak et about this topic. the families not the government, not officials, not politicians why do i have to defend my right to want my family to be back home so we
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are fighting so many fights then i never thought i never imagined that in a western modern world, i would have to do and it's really tiring. it's really tiring. i can believe that from the last time we talked ten months ago, know things changed nothing nothing changed, only more hostages got rotten in captivity, more hostages died how, how could it be? >> i don't understand the government and they don't understand the united nations and they don't understand all the people that actually have real power to do anything how can you be so ignorant how can you be though indifferent? >> kidnapped civilians. i don't understand it. and it drives me mad it really drives me mad eylon that it's completely understandable and they deserve to be home eylon.
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orders in place for five counties along the state's west coast. >> you see them there in red and milton will be the second major hurricane to hit florida here in less than two weeks we have meteorologist elisa raffa tracking the storm in the cnn weather center. elisa tell us the areas that are expected to be impacted most here we are really worried about that west coast of florida, no matter what the intensity is, the storm will be wide, will find impacts across the entire peninsula. but look at this it's been hard to find words to describe the eye, the symmetry, look, it is just incredibly strong right now, a category five hurricane with 160 mile per hour winds, gusting up towards 200 miles per hour. the rapid intensification this morning has been mind-blowing. we have seen an increase in the center wins almost 100 miles per hour in just 24 hours, it has just exploded in those incredibly warm ocean temperatures it scrapes the yucatan peninsula as this massive category five storms weaken some as it gets towards the florida peninsula
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here. but we're still dealing with a major hurricane category three or four in that hurricane watch area, there in the pink we'll start to find those impacts again going into wednesday, that's when we'll start to find some of those outer bands coming in that landfall somewhere on the west coast of florida. sometime late on wednesday, we are incredibly worried about this storm surge. the current forecast is for eight to 12 feet of per parts of tampa bay. they have never seen storm surge that high. they just hit records didn't helene and this could surpass that for us elisa raffa. >> thank you so much for the update will keep an eye on that storm as it approaches the land. the mainland united states, i should say, let's discuss the massive storm and its potential impact with former fema administrator craig few gate. craig, thank you so much for being with us before well, we get to milton. i want to ask you about the recovery from hurricane helene because there's still some hundred 50,000 customers without power in western north carolina. how much longer do you expect it's going to take to restore that?
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>> it's not going to go quick. remember these roads were washed out as you get up into the mountain, areas they've got the power back on the things that can reach. now the rebuilding power lines in the areas that have no road. so it's going to take more time but those numbers will continue to come down as they're able to get they're not even trying to repair roads as much as just make them so they can get equipment in there yeah so as at elisa mentioned it's been fewer than two weeks since the western coast of florida was hit with hurricane helene. >> now they're looking at a potential category three or four storm shortly after how does that sort of weaken infrastructure having one storm come so close to another? >> well, probably the biggest problem is some of the debris that occurred in pinellas county. the st. pete area from helene still has a lot of debris that could be complicated, but i think we really want to focus on the
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evacuations as, was pointed out, this is not a storm that's just aiming at the tampa bay region is from tampa bay all the way down the fort myers those counties are ordering evacuations and i think right now the most important message is get people to move out of those evacuation zones to higher grounds, take their pets and don't delay craig. >> what is the 12 foot storm surge mean for an area like tampa bay was never seen that again, we want to focus on life safety as we saw with hurricane ian unfortunately, we've seen too many of these storms even if analysts and some of those counties thanks for her lane is if people are in those evacuation zones and that water comes in, we unfortunately see an increased loss of life, both to drowning and blunt trauma, crush injuries. >> that's why it's so critical that people move. and then i'll have to go hundreds of miles. they just need to get out of those evacuation zones. good to higher ground. we can
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rebuild from the devastation which i will not be surprised of. astronomical numbers. we can't get people back if we lose. and that's why as much as every is talking about what's going to be happening after the storm. i think we got to stay focused on a evacuation, move to higher ground if we hope to keep the loss of life as low as we can yeah on the question of recovery with these two storms. first to lean and now milton looming there's this disagreement between the white house and congressional leaders. president biden wants congress to return early to help select disaster funding to put disaster funding in place to allocate it before it runs out before election day. house speaker mike johnson, essentially said that is not happening. what happens if congress waits to approve additional funding? >> well, for the initial response probably not a lot. and again, we'll get a better sense as fema starts projecting the cost of the initial response to melted. but you got
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to remember when they did the continuing resolution, they allocated about a quarter of the funding for disaster relief fund going into next year so initially it looks as though they have funding for the response. they definitely don't have money for recovery and there's a lot of federal programs besides fema. they're going to need additional funds. so if the again, fema is watching that balanced are talking to white house omb there talking to the congressional appropriators. and they're all watching that level in the disaster relief fund. and if it gets down to low where it would start impacting response, i would expect congress to come back and work on something immediately. as long as that funding level continues to allow them to continue response on been coming back and going into this in deciding are they going to do this in a regular order, a budget? are they going to pass a special supplemental? and again, i i've been i've lived this in previous disasters the one thing i'm tell you as congress has yet to
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let fema run out of money in response that is a good precedent, one that we hope does not get shaken up anytime soon. craig fugate. appreciate you joining us thanks for having me of course from a popular podcast to late night shows to a tv town hall vice president kamala harris as launching a messaging bonanza. we're going to talk about the strategy behind it when we come back hotels in the hotels.com app. my little miracle is beckett. i
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day without st. jude. and in turn, we wouldn't be where we are without those people that have dodonated i know what not really which is hell, i'm the one that really needs the break, not the people that already rich and have the money. the 1% don't serve anybody but themselves for them to get a tax break. no, that's not cool. kamala harris will make billionaires pay their fair share and she's gonna cut taxes for working people like me. i'm buddy and i'm not rich as hell. and i'm voting for kamala kamalaharris. >> ff pac is responsible for the content of this add maybe i'm maybe i'm blind been cannot concede through this sinwar's behind i'm one you know, wrong one
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you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial, will send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and will come to you 808 to 14000 just a short time ago at the white house, president biden and first lady jill biden commemorated the victims of october 7, exactly one year since hamas launched the attack in southern israel, the bidens to lighting a candle, holding a moment of silence as they remembered 1,200 people killed that day in
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israel. >> and the more than 250 others who were taken hostage, both presidential candidates are also honoring the victims of the hamas massacre. former president donald trump is scheduled to participate in a memorial ceremony next hour. and in the next few hours, vice president kamala harris and the second gentleman will plan a memorial tree on the grounds of the vice president's home and deliver remarks we're joined now by cnn's kristen holmes, who's live for us in miami. kristen on top of this memorial in new york, trump plans to deliver remarks tonight at a remembrance event at his doral golf club, what can you tell us? >> yeah, this is leaders. he is going to speak for some time and we are told that these remarks are likely to echo what we've heard from him before they're just keep in mind one of the things we hear from donald trump, time and time again, he's actually made it part of his campaign speech is saying without evidence that october 7 would have never happened if he was in office instead of president joe biden, he has touted his
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relationship with netanyahu. he has worked to try and court jewish voters, particularly at this point, his team, and he believed that there's an opening among jewish voters. do you generally a democratic voting bloc particularly given the conflict in israel and gaza? but as he has tried to court these voters, he is often faced with outrage at controversy over some of his remarks, including one point, essentially saying that jews would be to blame if he didn't win the election on november 5. now, he also spoke about this today in an interview saying that jewish people should be voting for him. he talked about the fact that he moved the embassy in israel. here's what he said nobody has done more for the jewish people than i have. >> nobody's and more for asia as a president, maybe beyond being a president to be on golan heights, i moved the capital and did the iran nuclear deal. i should get 100%
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of the jewish vote and i doubts it's amazing. october 7, never would have happened if i was there rhetoric that is very insulting to a lot of jewish americans as he is trying to court these jewish american voters. >> again any vote at this point helps with this selection. both sides believed that this election is going to be determined in the margins. so that's why you're seeing him make such an effort on jewish american voters. but again, a lot of the time he seems to go off script and be rather offensive to these voters that he is trying to court will obviously have our ear listening to today as he takes the stage here at doral all right. >> kristen holmes, live for us in miami. thank you for the report and minutes from now we're expecting an update from the national hurricane center is milton has strengthened in to a category five. this is a monster. major cities along florida's west coast, or in the storm's path. so stay with cnn for the latest
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in there i'm going to pay them back four anyways. so this appearance made headlines as she spoke with host alex cooper about everything from abortion rights to one republicans idea that she doesn't have anything to keep her her humble because she doesn't have biological children they are my children. >> and i love those kids to death. and family comes in many forms and i think that increasingly you know, all of us understand that this is not the 1950s anymore. families come in all kinds of shapes and forms. and their family nonetheless joining us now to media analyst brian stelter, and we're also joined by deja fox. she's a content creator in a digital strategist. she was also a surrogate strategist for the harris 2020 campaign, and she spoke at this year's dnc deja, how important? did
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you think it was for harris to utilize nontraditional media like going on call her daddy in order to reach young people's specifically young women here yeah i mean as someone who got their start as an organizer, i know the importance of meeting people where they're at. it's a lesson that i've carried with me as a digital strategist on kamala harris's 2020 run, as a content creator now and i think this is a really smart move, especially ahead of these voter registration deadlines that are rolling in with lead to beat people who may otherwise not have been talking about politics, right? these young women in swing states like arizona, and the truth of the matter is that one in three women in this country lived under abortion bans. and so we can't have conversations about dating and sex and future building and career without talking politics though, i'm excited to see her in these new spaces in front of these new voters brian harris has been criticized for not giving
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enough interviews. >> do you think that this new media blitz satisfies some of that criticism? >> well, she's on 60 minutes tonight. that's the most newsmagazine in the united states. donald trump initially agreed to be on 60 minutes, then he backed out. i feel like he's getting off pretty easy. imagine of harris had agreed to businessy minutes and then backed out. thanks. you would have been vigorously criticized. trump choosing not to do 60 minutes. harris is on there. that will certainly be an example of tough questioning of the vice president. she's also on the view tomorrow. it's not going to producers of the view last night they have some sharp questions for her as well. and let's remember, sometimes it's these nontraditional format that's, they actually real a lot about candidates. remember when kamala harris was sitting down with oprah winfrey a couple of weeks ago, and that's when harris said, if somebody breaks into my house, they are getting shot. that was a very revealing soundbite, even though it was a friendly interview for harris. and that's my thought, call her daddy was really interesting as well. the interview actually
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revealed a lot about the candidate and ultimately, that's what the harris campaign is trying to do in the same way that the trump campaign is going on. influencer podcast, really trying to appeal to young men doing youtube shows and things like that. harris is trying to do these nontraditional formats like stephen colbert tomorrow night or howard stern tomorrow afternoon but i just i think it's notable that sometimes we hear a lot and it actually a lot of newsworthy comments in these interviews days, i wonder how important you think online content creators are to this election, including taking these snippets that we see of these appearances may again something of them repackaging them to your own audience. >> how integral do you think this is? is it just something that's kinda nice and kind of font or do you think it actually makes a big difference? >> let's be clear young people, especially young folks in swing states like my home state of arizona, have the opportunity to decide this
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election, but we are not getting our news behind paywalls, or even through cable, right? a lot of us don't have access to that, but instead are building political opinions that will inform our decision at the ballot box. and i'm just leave for the rest of our lives on platforms like tiktok and instagram, where our news is being created by trusted messengers, content creators, influencers, right? serve do us through story reshared by article breakdowns and even by interviews like when i was lucky to do the vice president, when she visited tucson, arizona, my hometown, and i was able to talk to her about abortion bans here and the effects of them on the ground. and so when i think about the role of content creators in this election, it is not only about bridging the gap between traditional media and young people, but also about creating new pieces of media that are first-person that are personal experience forward and that really connect with the communities that they've curated over time. those followers that they've
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built a relationship with and share values with. and it allows a candidate to really dig into those specifics of that community. and i think we saw that on call her daddy with a real focus on women's rights, women's futures bodily autonomy and abortion. >> run it seems like both campaigns are aware of this, right? like with harris on call her daddy a few weeks ago, trump did feel von the comedians podcast what does it tell you more broadly about sort of the car? content creator driven stuff that's published about politics more broadly about i guess, the meme if occasion, if you will, of the discourse harris said it best in that pockets and yesterday she said it's not the 1950s anymore. and what we see these campaigns doing is reacting to that in some ways, this is the podcast election and the great thing about podcasts is these, these candidates can talk at more length. they can go in more depth. here's what i think is really striking somebody nontraditional interviewers feel a lot of pressure alex
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cooper acknowledged that in her interview in her in her introduction yesterday saying i didn't know if i should do this interview. i hesitated, but i think it's important so even though these are not necessarily journalistic interviews all the time they are still being taken very seriously by the interviewers. and i think that's something to note, whether it's call her daddy call me daddy briana, you can call us whatever you i thought maybe i did. i followed the whole back-and-forth over is now one host i thought did they change the name? i thought it was call her daddy, but that was actually just a typo. although if she does want to change the name since it's just one person now, call me daddy would work makes sense brian stelter days you're fox. appreciate you both. thanks for joining us. >> thank you. thanks for having me still ahead. >> bronny james making nba history even before he gets his hands on a basketball, him in his dad lebron cutting no. up on an nba court details next on cnn news central
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preseason, so it's very early days. he played for 30 minutes. he didn't score any points. he did grab two rebounds, but think about what a momentous occasions was. obviously historic. the first time a father and son had played for an nba team together. it just so happens to be bronny's 20th birthday on sunday. how cool is that? what a way to celebrate when you think about what this means to lebron. remember, this is a guy who didn't nd now to be at this stage experiencing this with his child is just incredible. have a listen father. >> i mean, it means everything for someone who did have that you know, growing up to be able to be able to have that influence on your kid? now they influence on your side to be able to have moments which was signed and it ultimately to be able to work with your son. i think that's one of the greatest things. got a father to ever hold for wished for. >> i'm always thinking about, you know, that's my dad because it's literally my dad go out there and i use when
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i'm playing you just my teammates that's all i'm thinking. that point. >> it is going to be so been following this story with the father, a son, and the lakers guys, the regular season starts in a few games time october 22, let's see if i can make history again because that's literally my dad no pressure on bronny, but lebron's first game and we he was actually a few years younger than bronny 25.6 rebounds, nine nine assists, and four steals wow, that's why they call him the goat. that's some pressure from dad, dawn. thank you so much for the report. we do appreciate it any minute now we're expecting an update on hurricane milton. it is a cat five now now, and it keeps strengthening at a rapid pace. winds are now at 175 miles per hour. there are concerns growing about storm surge. these powerful winds talked about also flooding along the west coast of florida. so we'll have a live update for you ahead
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