tv [untitled] October 20, 2024 4:30pm-5:00pm PDT
4:30 pm
to see the body at the morgue, but he was not allowed inside of the room where his son was staying at. so what they did is they allowed him to go into the hotel, into another room, another floor similar to where his son had been staying there in argentina. and while he was there, air the father also greeting a lot of the fans that have been gathered outside of that hotel in argentina and thanking them for their support. you mentioned fans in indonesia and we just saw that there's many fans all over the world gathering in london in japan here in the u.s. in a number of places, just people coming together as you saw earlier, to sing together, to bring photos, to bring letters, candles balloons, so many things and so many fans expressing just how special one direction has been for them as they've been growing up with this band, you've seen an outpouring of port in person, but also on social media. so many people also expressing
4:31 pm
their grief on many social media platforms, including his sister, who said she was in disbelief, who said he was her best friend and expressing her love for him. now, i also want to point out that another member of one direction zayn malik, he postponed his us part of the tour that is happening right now and he thanked the fans for understanding again, this is just been very difficult for people that knew him and for his fans, jessica surely has camila bernal. thank you so much and we'll be right back collins, weeknights at night take a breath of fresh air with a stanley steamer air duct cleaning weekly, over 10 million feet of air ducts each year with our specialized trucks built by us removing the game contaminants from your whole your air ducts aren't
4:32 pm
clean until they're stanley steamer cleaning the edge and rash of moderate to severe eczema disrupts my skin in night and day despite treatment, it's still not under control. but now i have revoke a once-daily pill that reduces the edge and help it's clear the rash of eczema fast some taking invoke felt significant its relief as early as two days and some achieved dramatic skin clearances early as two weeks. >> many saw clear are almost clear skin plot many had clear skin and less itch, even at three years, run vote can lower your ability to fight infections, including tv series infections and blood clots. i'm fatal cancers including lymphomas, skin, heart attack, stroke, and gi tears occurred. people 50 and older with a heart disease risk factor haven't increased risk of death serious allergic reactions can occur tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant disrupt the edge and rash of eczema. >> talk to your dermatologist about rinvoq learn how abby can
4:33 pm
help you? save open door sell your home in any season for any reason start your move it open you are are.com after last month's massive solar flare, added a 24 hour to the day, businesses are wondering what should we do with them making the next 257? >> dr. brian response around 20% with any additional hours >> i'm picking up the white power now, let's put it this is going to wreak havoc on overtime approvals. >> anything can change the world of working from hr two payroll, adp designs, forward
4:34 pm
thinking solution biden's to take on the next. anything quince has been my best kept secret. i love luxury at a ford prices. i want to dress down, but still an amazing, they have it if you need joy, they have it. i get so many complements. the whole outfit, one-stop shop at $20 off your first purchase at when stuck. >> here's why you should switch from google to duckduckgo on all your devices. depth duck go comes with a built-in search engine like google, but it's private and doesn't spy on your searches. and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome but it blocks cookies and creepy ads that follow you around from google and other companies. andnd there's no catch. it's free. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you rounds, joined the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today here's to getting better with age. here's to beat needs to every thursday help fuel today with boost high protein complete nutrition, you need in the
4:35 pm
flavor you love so here's to now. >> now available, boost max. >> what do you talk about the news? sports a little family gaza, maybe. now, you don't do that right here's another topic for you. as they get older, there risk of getting really sick from a respiratory virus, lake flu, covid-19 and rsv goes up a lot so talk to them about getting the season scenes because you've still gets so much to talk about hard. i scraped to get by donald trump wants to give tax breaks to billionaires, but kamala harris has plans to help us she's going to crack down on price gouging and cut taxes for working people like me. i voted for donald trump before, but this time i'm voting for
4:36 pm
kamala ff pac is responsible for the content of this ad. >> hope for me. i promise pizza everyday, plus unlimited topics. >> but does the budget even exist for that, ethan, why are we not talking about the fact that my opponent has minutes is responding to recent claims from former president trump, who will accuse the program of deceitful billy editing. >> a recent interview with vice president kamala harris, that interview aired two weeks ago on october 7, and it all comes weeks after trump pulled out of his own scheduled interview with 60 minutes. this is where we bring in cnn's brian stelter to the conversation brian just first, what do you make of this statement from 60 minutes? >> it is very unusual and we should explain why it's a big deal in the first place. it's a big deal because donald trump has made it a very big deal. he has made this 60 minutes story
4:37 pm
a part of his campaign message. he has brought this up repeatedly at rallies and in interviews and the message that trump has delivered his audience the following. he is saying to his fans, this is the biggest scandal in broadcast history cbs should have its license is taken away by the government 60 minutes should be forced off the air, and it should be investigated for this behavior that is the message from trump. and let's get to what is really saying to his fans. he's saying they're all out to get us they're all out to get you. even the big news outlets. okay, so that's the message from donald trump. that's why this response from cbs is important. cbs saying in a statement tonight, quote, trump is accusing 60 minutes of deceitful editing of october 7 interview with harris, but that is false 60 minutes gave an excerpt of our interview to face the nation. they used a longer section of her answer than the one that was on 60 minutes. it was the same question, same answer, but a different portion of the response 60 minutes goes on to say, when we edit any interview, whether a politician, an athlete, a movie star, we strive to be clear,
4:38 pm
accurate point the portion of her answer on 60 minutes was more succinct, which allow time for more subjects in a wide ranging segment. then cbs reminds everybody that trump pulled out of his interview with 60 minutes while kamala harris did participate. and then cbs concludes our long-standing invitation to trump remains open if he would like to discuss the issues facing the nation the harris interview, we'd be happy to have them on 60 minutes on cbs really trying to clear things up here, trying to correct the record after two weeks of controversy proceed immediate critics like yours truly had said that this seems like a screw up by cbs to run one part of harris his answer on one show in a different part of her answer on a different show. but it seemed like an innocent mistake by two different shows. and that's exactly what cbs is saying tonight. donald trump is trying to portray this as a concern sphericity, as a scandal by news bruisers who are out to get him. we know that for him bullying the media tends to work. but in this
4:39 pm
case, cbs isn't taking it. they are standing up to him and saying he's wrong and brian, how often is it that media organizations like or even a specific show within an immediate organization in this case, take this step this is very rare for a network to try to come out and correct the record and it's happening because frankly, trump won't let this go. he's been bringing this up again as recently as today and not just complaining about it, he's making threats. he has threatened virtually every major media company in the united states in the past few months with when it comes to broadcast networks, he threatens their licenses local stations have to have licenses to broadcast on the public airwaves normally that's no big deal. media policy is not usually a part of a presidential campaign, but trump has threatened to cbs and nbc and abc. he also complains a lot about fox, but earlier today, in an interview on fox, i noticed there were some clear edits to the interview. of course, trump didn't complain about that because fox, he views as his home team. but
4:40 pm
once again today on fox, he complained about cbs. so i think 60 minutes tonight is trying to clear up the very muddy waters. whether any trump fans get the message though it remains to be seen sure. >> and look, this is what we see time and time again. it's just it's just putting enough questions and cracks into something that frankly is commonplace when you do a long interview with someone on you can't air all the whole thing. you have to. it's edited and that's pretty common but it's putting enough cracks into something that is i guess considered the establishment to make people really feel like it's a conspiracy that's the real context here. >> it's the playbook that worked really well for donald trump in 2016. it's a playbook that did not work quite as well. well for him in 2020, but he always goes back to that same idea, grievance and resentment against the people he portrays as elite in this case, cbs trying to squash that tonight we'll see if it works. >> all right. brian stelter. thank you. as always, we appreciate it thanks still
4:41 pm
ahead. a new way of treating cancer. how the new how a new immunity therapy is increasing some patients chances of survival. you're in the cnn newsroom use of american foreign policy going to be lonely, america first get here and all the lessons of history, america first the believe zakaria special next on cnn. how long have you been tracking the value of our car? should we sell it? we hold our low mileage is paying off. sold the karwan go to karwan and track your car's value today. >> cough, cough, sneeze, sneeze. 2k needs plop plop fizz. alka-seltzer plus cold and flu wind speed is what you need bounce back fast. >> alka-seltzer plus. also try the new chewable fizzy, choose, no water needed
4:42 pm
the number one pharmacist recommended vitamin and son plymouth brand you've got to pepto predicament as you overdid it on the loaded fries, can now your gut is in the gutter. >> i'm doing it with pepto fast mountains so you can keep on rolling when you overdo, undo it with pepto-bismol they need the lawn back fast, a union scott's visit rapid grass. it goes glass times fast that under see the lawn given you a stronger laws male breeder. may i look at my lawn app today for lawn care tips and customize plans feeding feeding, teeth. sensitivity is so common immediately feels like somebody's poking directly i recommend send today centered in toothpaste goes inside the tooth and calm center of down and my patients stay, you know, docket really works right now, pet dander
4:43 pm
and dirt are being sucked into your air ducts, get cleaner air in system efficiency. now with stanley steamer, your air ducts are clean until there stanley steamer clean. >> these days life has twist and kerl's. but you define them and make them bounce, trust law was hurled to finding moves. 24 hour hydrating, crow definitions, style your life, the way you want treadmill style, you well, psoriasis, all over. >> i couldn't get my hair done then sury arctic, what's right concentric swartz on both for people with psoriasis on the scalp, have four times higher risk for psoriatic arthritis serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema and an increased risk of infections, some fatal have occurred. >> tell your doctor if you have an infection, symptoms had a vaccine or plan to or have ibd symptoms, developer worsen still working for me
4:44 pm
mirror lacks whips naturally with the water in your body to help you go for your gut and your mood will follow for eight grams of fiber and trying mirror fiber gummies jordan store knows led out of fire recently ease. >> so dad grabbed puffs plus lotion to sue there with these puffs plus motion is gentle on sensitive skin and locks in sensitive skin and locks in moisture to provide soothing it is inevitable. chloe! hey dad. they will grow up. [cheering]
4:45 pm
silly face, ready? discover who they are. [playing music] what they want from this world. and how they will make it better. and while parenting has changed, how much you care has not. that's why instagram is introducing teen accounts. automatic protections for who can contact them and the content they can see. ♪♪ absolutely free text. love to three to 13. today. >> eva mckend on the road, but the harris-walz campaign is cnn closed captioning is brought to you by christian faith publishing, right? for a higher purpose published with us christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands it. your labor is more than just a book color scan for your free riders guide, 8045 i 518 to seven hitting three branches of a hezbollah linked financial institution in beirut. >> that is, according to lebanon non-state ron national news agency, the israeli military earlier saying it was
4:46 pm
planning to carry out targeted strikes on hezbollah's financial network, issuing evacuation warnings for parts of beirut as a result, it's just the latest in a series of back-and-forth strikes over the israel, lebanon border, the idf saying tonight about 200 projectiles were fired by bahous head locked into israel today. >> robert roberson, the texas man whose execution was halted late thursday and last-minute intervention by the texas supreme court ford is expected to appear in front of the state house tomorrow as of now, the texas attorney general has ordered he testified via zoom, but attorneys for robertson want him to testify in person. he fate remains uncertain. he was convicted of murdering his daughter in 2002 and a case that relied on shaken baby syndrome. but his attorneys and a bipartisan group of war i'll makers argue new evidence shows his daughter died from different causes, but did not involve abuse encouraging news for people living with hodgkin lymphoma well, a new treatment shows great promise and
4:47 pm
improving survival rates according to a study. in the new england journal of medicine, cnn's jacqueline howard has more details on this this is a new clinical trial where nearly 1,000 patients with stage three or stage for hodgkin lymphoma, they were divided into two groups. one group was treated with the immunotherapy approach. they were given the immunotherapy drug nivolumab plus three standard chemotherapies the other group was given an antibody drug plus those same chemotherapies, the researchers found that after two years 92% of the patients in the immunotherapy group did not relapse did not see the cancer progress, and they did not die from the disease that's compared with and the other group at 83% of patients experienced those same outcomes. here's how the lead researcher, dr. jonathan freed berg describes these salts were curing substantially more patients with this regimen and in addition, the regimen was
4:48 pm
less toxic than the previous regimen so this suggests that nivolumab, when it's paired with chemotherapy, it can become a standard treatment for hodgkin lymphoma. it's a drug that's already fda approved but for some other cancer types and we're hearing that some doctors already use it off label for their hodgkin lymphoma patients. and here the united states, it's estimated that more than 8,000 people may be diagnosed with hodgkin lymphoma this year. and sadly, about 900 people well, could die from the disease this year. so having more treatment options is so important, especially options with fewer side effects. and this is a cancer type that we know disproportionately affects younger patients. so again, there could be thousands of patients out there who could potentially benefit from this immunotherapy approach. back to you encouraging news. >> they're jacqueline howard. thank you game five of the wnba finals is about to tip off in a winner-takes-all matchup between the minnesota lynx and the new york liberty, the lynx
4:49 pm
chasing their fifth wnba title after narrow, narrowly hanging in on game for now, the liberty have a shot in their first championship right at home in brooklyn still ahead tonight, how the upcoming election could have a massive impact on american foreign policy fareed zakaria joins us live next. >> you're on the cnn newsroom before election day. vice president harris basis voters and take let's do pressing questions, lie. >> anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris, wednesday at nine eastern on cnn i didn't have to spend my life trying to find my carlin mine phone mean at an early age he was just a matter of how good i could get and how farro would go rahm are calling is to build trucks so when you find your call, nothing can stop you from answering right? >> now, during ram power days,
4:50 pm
get $4,000 cash allowance on the purchase of most 2025 ram 1,500 trucks. don't miss ramp hour days. hurrian today i've, got this hey, how are you who are you? >> a lump, susan toothbrush. i come through walls to help people make better decisions about their oral health care. >> oh, big interview her nice new suit, new haircut, ancient bristles, stick you want a plaque on your desk, not messing up your molars, make the sonic care switch two minutes of brushstrokes with phillips sana cares like a month of russian with this whole thing all right. >> knock them dead, boss can i get the wildfire? i'm a hang here. >> for over 45 years, has taken a toll on my body. i take kunal term wreck because it helps with healthy joints and inflammation support why kuno? it has superior absorption compared to regular term wreck kunal, the brand i trust >> thought she would live out
4:51 pm
her dream than one day. >> she did you were made to chase your passions? >> we were made to put them in a package. i am tony hawk and like many of you, i take a stab to reduce cholesterol, but statins can also deplete cookie ten levels does so my doctor recommended qn all koch uten kuno has the number one cardiologist recommended form of cocke you tim kunal, the brand i trust approach in, the possibilities all around you. how would the girls they're amazing that practitioner student, you'll learn the advanced skills you need to face the nursing challenges of today and tomorrow. >> a different future is closer than you think with capella university to my son. >> i've never been cool dad. i always want to know what he's up to online, but with tiktok privacy settings been on by
4:52 pm
default for teen under 16 the counselor said the private he cannot send or receive dmz and only friendly, calm so he can post the way i've got one less thing to worry about. >> so dan, how do you have to be to get attached to default adding this an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan from unitedhealthcare. >> medicare supplement plant plans helped by paying some of what medicare does and let you see any doctor, any specialist anywhere in the u.s. who accepts medicare patients. so if you have that's consider adding this call unitedhealthcare today for your free decision guy
4:53 pm
4:54 pm
have a massive impact i don american foreign policy and the world, while the u.s. >> maintain its decades old alliances with other countries, or will it turn inward? next on cnn fareed zakaria explores this consequential question and the history that brings us to this moment. and his latest cnn special, america first, here's a preview nonstop flight across the atlantic the greatest honor of all international sensation most idolized man in the world for time magazine's first ever met and of the year in 1928 he was the natural choice politics, becoming the spokesman for the largest anti-war organization in us
4:55 pm
history. the america first committee it included people from all walks of life from the architect frank lloyd wright the walt disney america first was the embodiment, the manifestation of this isolationist sentiment it was hugely important and popular of europe but americans wanted desperately to stay out of the war 93% of them, according to one poll the america first committee group do 800,000 members. >> and charles lindbergh was it's champion. >> we cannot win this war for england that is why the america first committee has been
4:56 pm
formed. >> his biggest opponent president franklin delano roosevelt who knew that if germany took over europe, america could be next fareed history, teaches us so much. >> this is history that many americans don't know how strongly charles lindbergh advocated isolationism as world war ii was dawning, walk us through why it is so relevant again, how it is so relevant again, as donald trump strongly criticizes us port for ukraine you know, it's, it's, it's well beyond ukraine really for 75 years, ever since 1945 americans have not had a debate on whether we should be engaged with world. it's been about what particular policy you know, what specific area, but never the issue two of should we have alliances with countries in europe? should we be providing foreign aid to the world's poorest countries?
4:57 pm
those fundamental questions we kind of answered in dean 45 and we said to build a more peaceful, more stable world, we are going to jump in and we're going to stay involved as the leading country in the world. we tried it the other way and that led to two who were wards a lot of what trump says, what jd vance says, and a lot of where the republican party is going is to ask for a kind of fundamental rethink of that seventy-five-year-old consensus so i think it's it was really important to remind people what the history was and it's an absolutely fascinating history that i found myself surprised by when i was researching it, what surprised you there was a wonderful story in there of what made the republic looking party finally internationalists in the 950s, because after world war ii, the leading republican, the guy who was running for president front runner robert taft wanted to
4:58 pm
take the party back to isolationism. and this will sound familiar. he hated nato. it had just been formed and guess who was running, who is going to run against him are thinking of running against tim general eisenhower, that the first head of nato and so there you had the clash between these two figures. and i discovered talk about a meeting that they had, which i don't want to give it all away, but it was absolutely fascinating. >> that's so incredible. and just widening it out. is it even possible to be an isolationist in the world we live in today, in 2024 it's a great question because the truth is, we are so intertwined we are so involved economically politically. i mean, just think about the trade and travel well, and all of that, that goes on all over the world so when you try to pull out, just on this one way politically, it's going to be much, much messier then it was when we
4:59 pm
pulled out in the 1920s and 30s because we weren't really engaged with the world. it was easy to draw up the drawbridge how do you do that now and what will it look like? it in a sense would suggest that it's going to be very messy to try to do something like that. and remember, nobody can fill the role the united states there's just no country big enough, no country that has the heft. we are still our military budget is still larger than next five countries put together. was still the law i just economy in the world by far yeah. >> and, as you're talking, i'm just writing myself a note just as we've gone through the last three hours, we do these shows it doesn't it seems like and i'm curious what your thoughts are that there's never been a moment where the foreign policy could, could go in such different directions depending on who is elected. >> that's it. that's why i thought they were so important to do this special because we are at a hinge moment. the united states has stabilized the war well, it really created
5:00 pm
a new world since 1945 and for the first time you have people who are saying this was fundamentally the wrong direction. and we're going to go in a different and one. >> that's what's at stake that is that is a lot at stake. >> fareed zakaria thank you so much. we'll be watching great to have you on to talk about it. >> what's. your pleasure? thank you. >> thank you. and be sure to tune in america first, a fareed zakaria special, it is airing next right here on cnn. and meantime, i want to thank you so much for joining me this evening. i'm jessica dean. we're going to see you right back here next weekend. have a great night, everyone
3 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on