tv CNN News Central CNN October 8, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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colleague, brianna keilar, who's live for us in the nation's capital. and brianna here in treasure island the concern over human life is enormous. it is extremely dangerous where i am right now in case in point officials are closing this barrier island on the gulf coast of florida at 7:00 p.m. tonight, in large part because this area was hit by hurricane helene about two weeks ago, a category four storm, the outer bands came through here and left a mask that two weeks later is still out on the ground. you see debris of all kinds. there's a plasterboard would i saw appliances earlier? there's glass. i spoke to a resident here who essentially said that when the storm comes, all this stuff will turn into a countless amount of missiles. keep in mind this is barrier island. and you've got a pile of trash that is about 20 feet high. and this is just one of so many scenes that we've seen throughout pinellas county where you're talking about piles and piles of trash that officials have not been able to
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clean out. and this is the specific part of the problem in this area. you've got a bay on one side, the war what are there already at level you're going to see about 15 foot storm surge at its highest point in this area on top of that a foot of rain and forecasted winds of up to 125 miles an hour. if you look right over there, that's where the beaches we want to give you a live look at our cnn air drone that captures just how how dangerous it would be to be standing in this area the neighbor who mentioned the dangerous aspect of this trash in these projectiles was a man named matt who said that he wrote out hurricane helene, hear he's not taking any chances. he is getting out, but i have spoken to some neighbors that are still considering staying actually want to go straight to the deputy director of the national hurricane center, jamie rhome, who joins us now, live sir. >> thank you so much for being with us. we just got an update on hurricane helene. i understand that as of right now, it's only two miles an hour shy of being a category
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five storm. i'm wondering what that means for residents that are still weighing whether to stay or not in a place like this on treasure island where i mean, i hope they're not making their decision based off that because we're going to see these fluctuations and intensity up and down what we want them to make the decision on is the impact they are going to experience when it ultimately moves across the florida peninsula as it's a powerful hurricane that's the bottom line message. it's going to move across the florida peninsula over a densely populated portion of the florida peninsula as a powerful hurricane in with it bring a wide swath of damaging and destructive winds that will cut across the florida peninsula. you're looking at widespread power outages, impassable roads, and just generally really unpleasant conditions, debts, just the wind now if we talk about the storm surge somewhere in this
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purple area, not everywhere somewhere in this purple area. he have the potential to get ten to 15 feet of storm surge to put that in perspective, some of the areas in here, i've got about six or seven feet of surge during helene that would be about double the surge they experienced in helene. >> that is extremely concerning. jamie. so in terms of this new update, what are the projections for the size and strength of this storm? once it makes landfall. because i understand that the consensus is it is going to weaken slightly, but it's actually going to grow. and that means that its effects will be felt further and further out yes. >> so it's going to weaken a little bit and that's deceiving because it's going to grow in size at the same time in this growth in size will more than compensate from this weakening. because it's all about the amount of power, right? the amount of force that these storms bring and saw this with helene because it was so
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big, it just brought so much power and brought it farther inland than people are used to seeing. so that's why we think and we're forecasting. it's going to retain its hurricane strength as it tracks across the entire florida peninsula. that's not something you hear me say often retain its strength across the entire fire hurricane peninsula spreading these damaging and destructive winds over you densely populated portions in here near into the south of the i4 corridor? >> yeah you're talking about, some of the most populated areas of central florida. it's tampa bay, its orlando and daytona beach on the east coast jamie rhome. thank you so much for the update. we appreciate you keeping us posted. >> thank you now, we want to get you an up-close look at hurricane milton. >> this is powerful video coming from hurricane hunters who flew in to the storm it is
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nervous laughter. very powerful video there. imagine the force of those winds and all that rain hitting a community that's already been weathered by the storm we actually want to get you a perspective from someone who is going to be not close to treasure island, roughly about two hours away in sarasota, but he's still concerned about the effects of hurricane milton. we have with us eric commissioner. eric, thank you so much for being with us first and foremost. what is your chief concern about hurricane milton as you're hearing that it is flirting with category five wins yeah. >> thank you for having me on the show. >> we are in a state of emergency and my biggest concern right now is that individuals living in a zone a's z, a, b, or c of the city are not going to evacuate. that is my concern. >> and they need to heed this
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warning because this is a hundred year storm. this is, this is unprecedented if you made it through debbie, if you made it through ii and this is unlike anything we've ever faced before, and it is heading right through us say to residents like some of the folks in the building adjacent to where we're standing, these folks, i spoke to them a short while ago. >> they didn't want to go on camera, but they were weighing the idea of potentially riding out the storm here what would you say to them at this moment now, we're at about 2:00 p.m. a. day before the storm is supposed to head what's your message to them i'll tell them exactly what i told the close family friend who's riding it out in their home in his own right in the waterfront as this comes, i said, if you're going to ignore all the experts virgin every single evacuation order, get a sharpie and write your name on your arm, at least so that we can identify your body after
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>> i do wonder, sir we've seen piles of trash across pinellas county. certainly. i know there are other parts of the west coast of the gulf coast of florida that have seen this issue, debris leftover from hurricane helene. can you give us an update on the status what that looks like in sarasota, you weren't directly hit by hurricane helene, but i know that there were problems there because i have relatives in that area yeah, many problems and there's still some debris. i just i was checking my email just two seconds ago and heard it now, here is the problem. >> are our peru our team at the city is working around the clock and working with the county. we have less and less contractors willing to go out the barrier island which are going to be the most impacted to pick up this debris. >> so it's only basically government workers now, when at
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some point we have to withdraw to because we're taking into account the safety of our employees. so as of right now, it's just us. there's almost there's virtually no contractors willing to center in. there workers out into the barrier islands. we sought the help of as much help as we can the national guard has sent us some so some troops that are going to help and be on standby but it's a difficult situation with limited resources. have right now all we can do is hope for the best but prepare for the worse. >> absolutely and we so appreciate the work that those emergency teams do. and the last thing you would want to do is unnecessarily put them at risk, erica, i do have one more question before we go because i've been speaking to people around the community today about the significance of not only having to hurricanes hit two weeks apart. but the way
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that milton transformed, you had a hurricane. it wasn't even a hurricane. it was a tropical storm at one point. and then 24 hours later in the warm waters of the gulf transforms into one of the top ten most powerful hurricanes. we've ever seen in the atlantic does this sort of thing raise concerns for you about climate change? whether we're going to see more storms intensify this way in the future well, we've been speaking to the experts in what they tell us is that it's because of the warm water that creates the climate that creates these, these rapidly intensifying hurricanes. >> and you've heard of el nino, what we have right now on the gulf of mexico is lightning yards, the inverse of that, but it creates, it is warm waters that, that create this environment and we're monitoring it or seeing what we can do we don't have all the answers, but it's definitely something that's becoming more and more alarming especially in
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retirement state like florida, a tours state like florida and a place that many, many call home yeah, it is certainly alarming for the future. erich maria, we have to leave the conversation there. thank you so much for joining us and please keep us posted if there's anything we can do to get a message out for you. go back to brianna keeler, who is live for us in washington, dc. brianna aid is such a difficult position to be in for folks that are here in part because they just survived hurricane helene they obviously treasurer their homes and their belongings and it's difficult to leave them behind. but when you're faced with a situation like this, where the alternative is death and you're hearing officials say things like, if you're going to stay behind, you have to write your name and your date of birth on your arm so you're corpse can be identified. it's important to weigh that and make the decision as soon as possible, brianna yeah, that is a dire warning and let's hope that people heed it or us ahead this
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hour on cnn news central vice president harris going after former president trump's false claims about famous hurricane response. >> hear what she just said about trump in a brand-new interview. and legendary watergate journalist bob woodward describing candid behind the scenes conversations from the white house and mar-a-lago including criticism, president biden leveled against barack obama and the world leader that trump is secretly kept in touch with after he didn't office. plus, we are staying in florida as milton is barreling toward the coast, there mandatory evacuations are in effect will have a live update ahead. they'll go anywhere pizza everyday. >> unlimited topics, but does the budget even exist for that, ethan, why are we not talking about the fact that my opponent has coatings to provide complete balanced
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dream team when he did it fast does that too fast 44 out of five employers who post on ziprecruiter get a quality candidate within the first day, try for free at ziprecruiter.co m slash higher. >> have i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn? >> vice president harris ramping up per media blitz today, slamming former president trump during multiple interviews. today, she's going on howard stern satellite radio show and then this morning on the view, harris criticized trump for pushing disinformation about hurricane helene and politicizing the government's response to the storm i mean, we're talking about real human beings and their lives and then losing everything everything. the idea that somebody would be him playing political games for the sake of himself. but this is so consistent about donald trump he puts himself before the needs of other, i feared that he really lacks empathy and a very basic level to care about
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the suffering of other people and then understand the role of the leader it's not to beat people down, it's to lift people up so for background, just one example of the falsehoods that trump has spread about the federal response to helene here it is. so we're into almost $300 billion for ukraine. and yet they're offering people $750 for immediate need, or the worst, but for the worst hurricane that anybody seen, she should be i would say north carolina is a show bad and she was there today for three hours, i believe kamala kamala harris as fema, has explained, and also that factcheck there by laura ingraham for immediate needs, $750 is merely the immediate upfront aid that survivors can get to cover basic pressing needs. they're also eligible to apply for additional assistance potentially up to tens of thousands of dollars. but this
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is the state of the race, this very close race, just four weeks to election day, as many voters are already casting their votes early, a new poll from the new york times and siena college shows vice president harris with a slightly lead over donald trump nationally, 49 to 46% let's talk about this with maria cardona. she is a cnn political commentator and a democratic strategist. we're also joined by matt mowers. he's a former trump administration official and republican strategist. he's also the president of valcour global public strategies all right. matt, i wonder local officials say that this kind of disinformation, that it actually hurts aid efforts, which i think we can understand because there are a lot of people are hurting. they need to know the facts, they need to know where they can get the assistance that they need. why is trump doing it? do you even think it pays off politically? >> oh, i've got some first-hand experience in this. i worked for for governor christie and new jersey when hurricane sandy a man that was about two weeks before the election, even closer to election and part of the reason
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why this matters is that these moments you expect to see or leader show up. and if you go back to 2005 after hurricane katrina, george w bush was maligned and attack by the left and the media you and everyone else because he spent i think it was about three days or so until he went down to visit the hurricane damage, it took even longer for president biden and vice president harris to go down and actually visit and meet with those officials on the ground. and so what it did is it provided this opening for folks who are looking for guidance and leadership these times more than up because they've lost livelihoods, homes, fortunes family lives, looking for leaders to actually go down there. so i will say this, i will get president trump credit for being down there and actually visiting thinks immediately down in georgia, who's down there, his meeting with local officials, it shouldn't take him president biden, vice president harris, as long as they did because at those moments, it's really the leadership from our elected officials. it's were expecting and we haven't seen a daily press conference from president biden or vice president harris on this, the way that you would expect a moments like this. >> i'm sorry, matt, that is not leadership. that is actually putting people's lives
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and livelihoods in danger. >> been be there will lie to lie about fema, to lie about what is going on don't on the ground to lie about what is going on to these people who, like you said, are desperate for real leadership and facts that is not what donald trump is doing. and i also have personal experience with this as you know, brianna, i grew up in puerto rico. my family was there during hurricane maria donald trump did it exactly the same thing. he waited ages to go down there. and when he did go down there, he threw papal paper towels at the residence and you know why he ended up going down there in the first place, they had to convince him that rico was part of the united states when california was suffering from the water, there's know, when when when when california was dealing with the wildfires they had to sit down. olivia troye says this, somebody who worked for him show him a map of where the voters were that voted for him
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and that those voters were actually suffering and victims of the wildfires, if not, he was not going to send aid in i'm sorry. >> this it boils my blood because i personally felt this my family personally felt this for maria, so many others felt it as well. >> this is absolutely unequivocally disqualifying for donald trump and jd vance as they seek the highest offices in this land. here's the truth ministration. the biden-harris administration has not gone out and been unequivocal and clear about what the steps are they are working with the governor's on the ground. because remember, even though one moment because even though there's those who've been directly impacted by the storms, there's countless others who've lost power wondering when they're going get power back, there are wondering when they're going to get hot water back, they should be working and actually be visible there for being on the ground. i can tell you having lived through having not had electricity for two full weeks, haven't had a find a friend who might have had their warm water actually on. so you can take a shower because you haven't able shower for ten days during the storm, you're
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looking for your leaders to go out there and give you this information. we should provide. it will probably have gotten are doing that. and in fact, republican governors are the ones who are saying that they are getting more than what they need from this administration. >> so you have to start promulgating those lives now that is putting people's lives in danger. i'm sorry governor stockton. >> governor it doesn't look maybe they were caught off guard by helene. maybe they are now prepared for milton york c, but the administration but they seemed off far because they were respond friday. >> going i will say it does seem like and president biden and governor desantis are now talking why? >> and that's good. >> they've been talking from the beginning when you've had republican governors who made it clear and democratic governors that they were in touch with the biden administration. i mean, that's just the case in the emergency declarations came in early, came as needed. i will say i think the big problem for george w bush was the heck of a job brownie. and that visual of looking, look, you do not want
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to get in the way of things. you don't want to pull the resources, but that moment for him, coupled with looking out of a plane window, gave a sense of detachment and that was just such an incredible catastrophe. >> but already he didn't visit because he didn't want to pool resources away to your point and that's why he was flying over not landing at the time. >> yeah. he had been don't give him credit for that. of course, apples and oranges. katrina, and now apples and oranges yeah okay. >> so this poll that we're seeing here, harris with a narrow lead over trump nationally, nationally, we have to emphasize that that's important. it also shows harris gaining ground with republicans. do you think the trump campaign should be worried, matt? >> no, i wouldn't be too worried because i think he's still see a margin of error race. i still i think if you look at actually the subset of the actual battleground states are looking at most polling shows a one to two point race in either direction, depending on the poll for trump or for harris. this is really tight. and those are the voters, by the way, who are seeing a different type of information.
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they're not just getting their information from the media, they are also getting paid paid campaign muted there's watching tv ads, they're getting text messages on their phones. they're getting people to knock on their doors. so the viewpoint of a voter and pennsylvania's can be wildly different from the viewpoint of a voter and non battleground state. so i pay a lot more attention to the battleground state polls, which we didn't see in the new york times sienna poll today. >> here's why this really matters and why donald trump and the trump trump campaign are worried. and in fact, you see, and donald trump's demented approaches to his rallies now, in his speeches with upping the lies and completely going off script is because they are worried about what they are seeing the, i think the critical piece in this new york times poll is that voters are now seeing the vice president as the agent for change voters are now seeing her. and i think donald trump is helping her do this. and her underscoring this every chance she gets is really important. voters see her as the one who actually worries about issues
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that are important to them. they see her as the one representing their needs and that is something that she's going to talk to every single day between now and the election, and she's been talking about him multiple times. >> so she's maria matt thank you so much. >> both the earlier appreciate it and we will head back to florida. we're hundreds of thousands are fleeing hurricane milton's path. next, new fears that the storm could regain strength just before making landfall black people better or worse, a lot of people came away from that bag. you it's my turn to talk. i must say tv on the edge, moments that shaped our culture. >> sunday at nine on cnn if you know, luxury, it's not just award-winning, its viewpoint sad for mattresses support all types of sleepers, luxury is handcrafted and assembled in american factories and brought
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heart-healthy, rushed to walmart and find total bees. >> i'm erin burnett in israel, and this is cnn incredible hurricane. >> it has dropped ten hours i apologize. >> this is just horrific john morales. >> he is with nbc6 in miami. he's actually someone that i grew up watching as a kid and an advocate for policy change when it comes to climate change for years, he's been warning that hurricanes are becoming much stronger, much quicker, and far more common. that's his reaction to watching how hurricane milton in the span of hours went from being a tropical storm to now flirting
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with category five wins. the latest update from federal officials, having it just two miles an hour shy of sustained winds that are the highest category of hurricane that are on record this storm is one of the most powerful ever recorded in the atlantic ocean. and over the weekend, it was essentially just a tropical storm. we want to get some perspective on the science behind what we're watching unfold in the gulf right now joining us is dr. marshall shepherd. he's the director of atmospheric sciences at the university of georgia. he's an international expert on weather and climate, doctor. thank you so much for being with us first. i just want to get your reaction because i am certain that you've been tracking the storm throughout its evolution what stands out to you about the way that this is rapidly intensified well, first of all, i know john very well as former colleague at the american meteorological society i feel
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what he feels i have a pit in my stomach and talking to my family and friends, i've had it for days because this storm, as i wrote in forbes, a couple of days ago, is a worst-case scenario for the western peninsula, florida, including the tampa bay. >> i mean, we have not seen this type of storm impact that region in over 100 years. and it's not just the intensity, it's the way it's approaching the coast. and also after going through something it has grown in size. so continue to grow in size even though it may weaken with wind speed, you're going to see that storm gets bigger as it approaches the gulf coast of florida. >> what does that mean for people on the ground that are deciding to ride out the storm in areas like tampa bay yeah, i am i am encouraging people listening to us right now. >> don't focus on these new
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want changes in intensity. it will likely be a major hurricane at landfall, and that encompasses wind, storm surge, rainfall, and even the potential for tornadoes. so though, in the meteorological world, we're talking about cat four cat five, cat three, the bottom line, a major hurricane is impacting a region 3 million people with potentially catastrophic storm surge and wind, particularly on what we call the dirty side of the eye that region to the right of center. that's where we'll see the strongest winds and storm surge point out that it's not just the gulf coast that's going to be impacted or hurricane warnings and watches through the i4 corridor. >> so essentially, it is going to t-bone the state of florida is one of cnn's meteorologist, put it dr. shepherd. i am curious about how this hurricane compares to hurricane helene, which came through the
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big bend region of florida just two weeks ago. >> it is rare for hurricanes to approach this way, but it seems like it's becoming more common. >> is it? >> so hurricane helene was a much larger footprint storm and we certainly know about it here in georgia, we still have cities. they're not in georgia recovering from helene as well. what concerned me from the start and when i saw what was happening with milton is it was going to traverse the entire gulf of mexico so in that gulf of mexico is warmer than average in and we know that there are some climate warming that's likely contributing to that. and that's the fuel supply for these storms. so i was increasingly nervous when i saw the model tracks and candidly and unfortunately, exactly what we expected is playing out with the storm question that is completely out of left field but i think it is
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worth asking because i was at a dump site earlier today and pinellas county very similar to the one that is behind me now, we're folks who have debris from hurricane helene are being asked to bring their debris so that it's not scattered in their neighborhood. >> and i approached an elderly woman who was dumping out some branches and large pieces of a tree that was in her yard. and i was asking her what she thought of the fact that there were two storms within two weeks, both hitting the same area of florida. again, one that is not used to seeing storms of this magnitude. and dr. shepherd, she suggested to me that these storms that this one in particular hurricane milton was geoengineering, that somehow it was designed by man to hit florida at this specific point. doctor, i cannot i believed that i'm asking you this on tv because it sounds absurd. but for folks who believe that listening to an expert might actually dissuade them is it even possible for
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man to produce something like hurricane milton? >> yeah. >> if it if i wasn't cute in on it when i went to graduate school and i've been the president of the american media or logical society. i'm a member of the national academy of sciences. i'm not in on that secret, but what i will say is human beings through greenhouse gas emissions have affected our climate that there's no argument there and that is leading to a warmer waters and a warmer atmospheric conditions. >> and so we see rapid intensification in the peer reviewed literature our currency in science suggests the intensity would certainly respond to that type of water. >> so that's, that's all i can say about that. >> dr. marshall shepherd, i know it sounds out of left field, but that's the world that we're living in and we appreciate you offering your expertise. thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you for having me we're going to continue monitoring hurricane milton as it approaches florida we've got
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officials to speak to her in residents to hear from, as well as this area is barreling down for what will be a massive storm, stay with cnn. we're back in just moments week and asked questions like, what does a comedy show doing on cnn too much i, want donald now, can you slice that i got news for you saturday at nine on your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire a new indeed. indeed, you do. our advanced matching helps find talented candidates. so you can connect with them fast visit india dot com slash higher. we just signed the lease on our third shop, my assistant went to customers.com to get new uniforms with all the locations. >> he found great products, uploaded new art, and had boxes sent to all the shops. customer makes it so easy. get started today at customers.com i'm
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>> okay, here's a question i get. >> all the time what makes renewal by anderson different? >> well, we do offer something that a lot of other window companies and contractors don't. and that's amazing financing option a lot of times you can upgrade your windows and doors and not pay anything for an entire year and do a lot of people finance. it makes the job even more affordable. so most of our customers findings how does your window material compared to biden savannah windows are really low end, which means they don't always last. our composite fiber material is two times stronger than vinyl. so warren of the last decades okay, let's shift gears. >> let's talk about doors. >> sure. this customer wanted a door with a lot more style. our doors beautiful provides enhanced security he and designed to be whether tight, wow, it really changes the whole look. how does somebody get a price i'll just call them, make an appointment where the replacement window division of anderson so we don't have to be high pressure. >> you'll get an exact price that's locked in for a year. that's great. >> before october 31st by one
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window, patio door or entry door, and get the next one 40% off. that's 40 40% off with a minimum purchase of four plus save an extra $35 on every window and door you buy with no money down, no monthly payments and no interest for 12 months this offer in october 31, for a free appointment with renewal by anderson called 1,400 closed captioning brought to you by one have mesothelial, will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 the new book is giving a stunning behind the scenes look at what president joe biden apparently really thinks about america's enemies and allies, legendary investigative journalist bob woodward reveals the biden privately said about
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the israeli prime minister last spring, quote that son of a b bibi netanyahu, he's a bad guy. >> he's a bad effing guy. he doesn't give a blank about hamas. he gives a blank only about himself. woodward also writes the biden told advisers not long after russia's invasion of ukraine, quote, that effing putin. putin is evil. we are dealing with the epitome of evil. cnn special correspondent jamie gangel obtained the not yet released copy of the book titled war, and she is here with us now. and woodward's book also reveals some new details about trump's relationship with putin, including since leaving the white house. >> absolutely. so, first of all, it reveals for the first time that trump and putin, according to a top trump aide who told woodward that they have had as many as seven phone calls since trump left the white house. we don't know what the substance of those calls
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are, but there is a notable call while trump is president that woodward reports on for the first time. and this is a verbatim conversation it is a conversation between trump and putin where we find out that trump secretly sent a shipment of covid test machines, the avid covid test machines at the height of the covid pandemic when these were very rare and here is the conversation between the two men putin, please don't tell anybody you sent these to me. trump. i don't care. fine putin no, no, i don't want you to tell anybody because people will get mad at you, not me. >> they don't care about me verbatim that is fascinating. >> there are some personal moments of biden's as well,
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including with his son, hunter? >> correct. so there are scenes in the book and the, you woodward's reporting is based on documents, transcripts firsthand conversations, and there is a scene in the book in which hunter talks to his father about his legal troubles, thinks they're never going to go away. but i think the thing that will get most attention is notably there is a moment where president biden says, he regrets picking merrick garland as his attorney general he says, quote, should never have picked garland. this is never going to f-ing go away. so whereas biden has really kept hands off publicly from the justice department as we've seen with all of the cases this is how he really feels behind the scenes. >> wow, that that also is fascinating. and in the book as
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well there is vice president harris talking about her relationship with biden. what did you learn? >> so this is a lighter moment and let's just put this in perspective. like a lot of people we know, it turns out that both president biden, i don't think this is a big secret. and vice president harris, to swear they use the f bomb. and this is a scene or vice president harris has reached out actually to a friend of president biden's and said, he, you know, he's isolated. you should call him more. they talk about the relationship. and then vice president harris says to the friend that might be the only reason that he's still really is comfortable with me to a point because he knows that i'm the only person around who knows how to properly pronounce the word i don't even know how to shorten that, but mother f-er effort there we go. there we go fairly. >> she says it better than i do. >> look, i was helpful in some regard. thank you jami, it is
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so interesting. >> it really is just to pull back the curtain. thank you so much for that. >> thank you. >> this just in president biden speaking moments ago about the preparations ahead of hurricane milton here he is speaking at an event in milwaukee i want to say horrible hurricane hit florida i've directed my team to do everything it can to save lives up communities before, during and after this hurricane most important message today for all those who may be listening to this and impacted areas listen to the local authorities follow safety instruction, including an evacuation orders this is serious. you got to be safe because people are dying people have died so far not from this hurricane, but from the last one tonight at ten eastern on cnn
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jays really knows how to put the heart and your local community. see what i did there hi jackie evan, my guy. >> he yellows. >> dave is right i started somebody, has, got, the first, debit card as primo, you that goes owe me money? >> your money is a party, a community, so you're bench should be to light chase there's nothing you can do about it. world expects to hear that their child has cancer it's always one of those things that happens to somebody else but it's definitely feels like your soul was sucked out of your body when they tell you that it's your baby
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hl back, you may want to mcdonald's and other fast-food chains. and it's having a bit of a trickle-down effect. the biggest french fry supplier in north america sounding an alarm, the company lamb weston and who's largest customers mcdonald's says it is forced to make significant cutbacks in response to slowing demand. cnn consumer reporter nathaniel meyersohn here with the details on this wire, customers turning away from fast-food nathaniel very simple, brianna, it's because prices have increased so high fast food just isn't cheap anymore. take a look at mcdonald's prices. 2024 compared to 2019, you've got fries are up, big mac meals are up. prices overall up 40% so
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that's clearly taking a toll on mcdonald's sales down 0.7% last quarter, more people switching from fast food and buying at grocery stores yeah, we do burger friday in my house and i'll be honest, my kids love mcdonald's and it is not cheap. it is not the way it was when we were kids. it's kind of wild how is this impacting? how does this trickle down then to lamb weston? >> so brad lamm lesson is highly exposed to the fast food industry as a fry producer, look at this stat, 80% of all fries consumed in the united states are eating that fast food restaurants and as mcdonald's largest customer, lamb weston is also really exposed to mcdonald's. and look, brianna, the way that fast food chains are trying to learn people back into restaurants is through these value deals, mcdonald's has the five-dollar meal deal. the
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problem though, is it comes with a small fries and not a medium fries. so the small fries brianna is hurting limb weston who wants a small fry do you want to small fry, nathaniel? >> i'm going for the medium. >> i'm going to go to the large probably daniel meyersohn. thank you so much, really interesting stuff we're going to take you back to florida as the state braces for hurricane milton, the storm intensifying to near category five strength will be looking at what's ahead here. stay was seen culture over the edge. >> people are watching and then our world chain he had an explosive reverberation tv on the edge sunday at nine on cnn let's go walking
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renovations shows is always a transformation. they show you what the end i'm brian gary here with brian price from renewal by anderson, and he's going to show us some of their transformations. >> hey, brian, let me ask you if you remodeled your kitchen, would you choose the same styles you had? >> no same can go for your windows and doors. >> for example, you're standing here doing the dishes and these girls totally block your view with our window style. you can easily see the whole backyard, the black is really nice to okay, here's a question i get all the time. >> what makes renewal by anderson different? >> well, we do offer something that a lot of other window companies and contractors
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don't and that's amazing financing options. a lot of times you can upgrade your windows and doors and not pay anything for an entire year. >> and do a lot of people finance. >> it makes the job even more affordable. so most of our customers findings. >> how did your window material compared to biden some on a windows are really low end, which means they don't always last. our composite fiber material is two times stronger than vinyl so it's warranted the last decades. >> okay, let's shift gears a talk about doors. >> sure. this customer wanted a door with a lot more style our doors beautiful provides enhanced security and is designed to be whether tight wow, it really changes the whole look how does someone get a price i'll just call them, make an appointment where the replacement window division of anderson so we don't have to be high pressure. >> you'll get an exact price that's locked in for a year. >> that's great. >> before october 31st by one window patio door or entry door, and get the next one, 40% off. that's 40% off with a minimum purchase, a four plus
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save an extra $35 on every window and door you buy with no money down, no monthly payments, and no interest for 12 months. this offer in october 31st, for a free appointment with renewal by anderson called 1800 1805011400. that's 1800 bible won 1,400 they may have allergic apa quell is the number one treatment for allergic edge that veterinarians have trusted for over 15 million dogs. >> and it starts working in just four hours. >> do not use him dogs with serious infections may cause worsening existing parasitic skin infestations are pre-existing cancers and serious infections. new neoplasia happen been observed, do not use in dogs less than 12 months old, ask your vet forts.
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