tv New Day Saturday CNN September 21, 2013 6:00am-9:30am EDT
6:00 am
>> fence or wall. oh, it's a big wall. it's ugly. really ugly. you can see it is not far away from here. ♪ on the vote, the ayes 230, the nays, 189. >> house republicans may have voted to defund obama care, but the colleagues set to strip the new language, a war in-s under way and it could shut down your government. here's a question, do you like a little taser with your text? there may not be an app for that. but there is a new accessory that could turn your phone into
6:01 am
a weapon. and did her wrecking ball wreck her romance? well, miley's engagement may be over. but it may have just made room for a new career achievement. good mornings everyone, i'm jessica yellin. >> i'm victor blackwell. 6:00 at cnn headquarters. this is "new day saturday." we are fortunate to have our chief domestic affairs correspondent jessica yellin with us. and good timing, because there's a lot to work out in d.c. >> there is a lot. i don't think i can explain all of it, you can help us through some of it with the audience this morning first on "new day," washington as you top drama. for the fifth time in two years, the federal government now faces the threat of a shutdown. >> yeah. and that's after house republicans pushed through a bill that stripped through obama care. >> reporter: a rare moment for
6:02 am
house speaker john bane are. the united republicans celebrating their vote to defund obama care. >> american people don't want the government shut down. and they don't want obama care. >> the ayes are 230, the nays, 189. the joint resolution has passed. without objection, the motion to reconsider is laying on the table. >> reporter: all but one republican vote on the measure, and two democrats joined them, prompting this response. >> today when we acted, it wasn't just a group of republicans but it was a bipartisan vote. >> reporter: it was a show of force from conservatives who insisted on defunding obama care as a condition for an improvement bill that keeps the government running. but their effort is dead on arrival in the senate. and democrats seized on potential consequences. >> what is brought to the floor today is without a doubt a measure designed to shut down government.
6:03 am
it could have no other intent. its purpose is clear. >> reporter: house republicans are working to shift blame for the threat of a government shutdown on to democrats who control the senate. >> now, it is up to senate democrats to show some responsibility. and follow the house's lead. >> reporter: they're putting the squeeze on vulnerable democratic senators, up for re-election in red states. >> i want to know where senator pryor stands on protecting the middle class. from the consequences of this horrific bill. >> reporter: cantor singled out arkansas senator mark pryor and three other democrats, kay hagen of north carolina, mary landrieu of louisiana and mark begich of alaska. but two of these senators have already told cnn they won't vote to strip money from held care. just ten days in the senate remain for the plan to defund the government without obama
6:04 am
care. house leadership announced earlier today that the house will be in session next weekend. and that means that both sides expect that this fight over government spending will go down to the wire jut before october 1st. erin mcpike, cnn, capitol hill. >> we'll be working long hours. erin mcpike, thanks. president obama has vowed to veto any bill that attempts to strip any money for his signature health care law. he spokes to autoworkers in the kansas city area, trying to rally support ahead of the showdown. >> what congress is doing right now is important. unfortunately, right now, the debate that's going on in congress is not meeting the test of helping middle class families. it's just -- they're not focused on you. they're focused on politics. they're focused on trying to mess with me.
6:05 am
they're not focused on you. they're not focused on you. >> well, you know who is focused on what's happening in d.c.? the folks on wall street, and they're getting a case of the shutdown jitters. now, the dow soared during the first half of the week, toughing really record territory, then it sank the end of the week when talk of a shutdown got louder and louder with the house vote. for the week, the dow gained 75 points cnn's alison kosik joins us. good morning. >> reporter: it was a record-setting week on wall street, victor and jessica. the dow and s&p 500 jumped to all time highs on wednesday immediately following the latest decision from the federal reserve. and policymakers-d -- well, nothing. analysts expected the fed to announce it would soon scale back its massive stimulus program but that didn't happen. instead, pole makers want to see more improvement in the economy before they take away the safety net that caused the september
6:06 am
surge to continue. the major averages are up around 4.5% to 5% this month. victor and jessica, back to you. >> alison kosik, thank you. ♪ now, to syria. a spokesman for the u.n.-backed chemical arms watchdog says the syrian government has handed over details of its chemical weapons stockpile. damascus is expected to provide more info in the coming days. now, the u.s. and russia have called on president bashar al assad rasheem to turn over and destroy all of its chemical weapons. but if damascus does not comply, it could face air strikes. officials say the regime is also moving some of its chemical weapons, but they're not sure whether that's to account for them. or actually to hide them. >> the mayor of chicago is now calling for an end to the violence there. rahm emanuel consoled the grieving families last night.
6:07 am
i'm sure you heard about that shooting in a public park. 13 people were occurred, including that 3-year-old boy. well, the mayor canceled a trip to washington to address the situation head on. >> we cannot allow children in the city of chicago, and we will not allow children in the city of chicago to have their youthfulness, their optimism, their hope taken from them. that's what gun violence does. that is wrong. >> that shooting was thursday night. no one has been arrested. but this is the latest reminder of the dangers facing some families in chicago. cnn's national correspondent deborah feyerick has more. >> reporter: it was a perfect night for a late game of basketball. perfect until the shattering sounds of gunfire. >> i just heard the shots, like 20 shots. >> reporter: panic and pandemonium spread quickly. >> it was just a lot of police, a lot of ambulances.
6:08 am
just a lot of wreck, a lot of people, everything. >> reporter: the basketball game was in full swing, about 10:15, a gunman walked on to the court and opened fire using a high-powered assault rifle. people simply fell where they were. others ran for cover. 13 were hit, including two teenagers and a 3-year-old boy. he was shot near the ear, the bullet exiting his cheek. miraculously he survived. his grandmother is still reeling from the fatal shooting of her son a couple months ago. >> it needs to stop. it needs to stop. y'all out here killing these innocent people. >> this is the south side of chicago, an area known as of the yard. there's a lot of gang activity. a lot of shooting and a lot of people simply don't come out after dark. >> based on witnesses and this appears to be a gang-related shooting. >> reporter: there are more than 100 gangs in chicago. turf wars are fierce.
6:09 am
violence is rampant and men have become desensitized. said pastor brooks. >> i'm sure if individuals don't turn themselves in, it could possibly mean more gunfire. it could possibly mean retaliation. >> reporter: retaliation, revenge, and a cycle of murder with noent in sight. within a 24 hour period the little boy had undergone two surgeries. the family pastor said there's no word what kind of long-term effects. as for the others, in stable or serious stable. the police chief said it's a miracle that no one was killed. deborah feyerick, cnn, chicago. >> heartbreaking when you see that boy's face. thank you. if you think colorado residents have it bad with the epic floods of the past two weeks, it just got a whole lot
6:10 am
worse. officials say e. coli has been detected in the water supply in lyons, forcing the water to be shut off. while most of the strains of the bacteria are harmless, e. coli can cause diarrhea, pneumonia and other illnesses. authorities are warning residents not to return to their homes until the water supply has been cleared and that could take months. >> wow, talking about water, a lot of people dealing with it because there's rain for a lot of communities this weekend. >> it is that time of year. >> let's bring in cnn's alexandra steele in the cnn weather center. where are we going to see the rain? >> everywhere. good morning, guys. happy saturday to you. you know, what we've got, we've got so much tropical moisture and a cold front crossing the country bringing rain as it makes its way to the east coast. let me show you where it is and why. we've been dealing with so many tropical features, we had
6:11 am
tropical storm manuel in gulf of mexico. that moisture there in the gulf of mexico feeding up and here's the line. clearly delineated. behind it cooler, dry air. ahead of it warm, moist air from canada down to the gulf of mexico. i'll show you the radar where we've got a wet go of it this morning, cleveland, heading towards buffalo, heading towards pittsburgh as well. farther south, huntsville, tupelo, birmingham, alabama in a few hours. jackson, mississippi, the farther south in the southeast, the later you'll see this in the day. but it's all coming. in texas you're already seeing the bulk of this rain, 5 to 7 inches. flash flooding as well. here's the movement of it. this is saturday at 10:00 a.m. tonight, not quite in boston, knock, washington. then it continues to push eastward through today, tonight, and into tomorrow as well, guys. >> alexandra, can i ask you about this huge typhoon. folks in china are prepared for this.
6:12 am
it's expected to hit hong kong's coastline. when is the hit? when is the big punch from the storm? >> the big hit is really on sunday. it was a super typhoon usagi when it gets to 150 miles per hour. it's down to a typhoon. in 33 hours it went from 50-mile-per-hour winds to 100-mile-per-hour winds. look at this. this is what happened in taiwan. the winds, the saturation of the ground, look at that destruction. incredibly scary. maximum winds sustained at 140. its gusts, 165. moving west, hong kong, a city of 7 million, a beeline towards hong kong making its way there. its winds will be down to 120 by then. meaning maybe a category 2, certainly, though, very substantial, no question about it. >> down to 120? >> yeah. >> alexandra steele, thank you
6:13 am
for that. >> sure. here's a question, you want to protect your new smartphone, 5s or c -- you have a blackberry. >> i do. >> you want to protect your phone, a phone case featured a stun gun and pepper spray. we're going to show you how this works and why the inventor's daughter inspired the idea. plus, a wild scene outside a new york courtroom. the families of a murder suspect, and victim meet in the hallway. things turn chaotic for the families and officers responding. okay, listen up! i'm re-workin' the menu. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, and 9 grams of protein. [ bottle ] ensure®. nutrition in charge™.
6:15 am
hey lady, that's diesel! i know. ♪ ♪ ♪ hooking up the country whelping business run ♪ ♪ trains! they haul everything, safely and on time. ♪ tracks! they connect the factories built along the lines. and that means jobs, lots of people, making lots and lots of things. let's get your business rolling now, everybody sing. ♪ norfolk southern what's your function? ♪ ♪ helping this big country move ahead as one ♪ ♪ norfolk southern how's that function? ♪ you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word... if you have yet to master the quiet sneeze... you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts... well muddlers, muddle no more.
6:16 am
try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour one on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour three. zyrtec®. love the air. once upon a time in a land far away, it was the must-have gadget. i'm joking. but blackberry has fallen unfortunately into really hard times recently. >> i know, it gets worse and everyone's laughing at me because i'm a blackberry devotee. blackberry will cut 45% of its
6:17 am
workforce. that's 4500 jobs lost. plus the company will report a $1 billion loss in the second quarter. that comes on news that its latest smartphone operating system, the blackberry 10 has weaker demands than expected. this is very sad news. >> and black bare it had been right at the time the rival of smartphone maker apple. launched new iphones, long lines of retailers around the world, including you see here in miami, a lot of people wanted to buy the newest high-end iphone, the 5s. supplies pretty tight. it doesn't matter if you want gold, the gray or silver, it's tough to get. if you order online right now, you won't get it until sometime in october. waiting in line was not peaceful in some places. look at this. they had to take this guy down. this is pasadena. police have to break up a fight outside the apple store. two men were led away in
6:18 am
handcuffs for a phone. >> let's go to houston. a group of people waiting to buy phones. they were robbed this happened outside of the at&t store. guys, it's a phone. >> they're going to push to get it sooner or later. >> why do you need it first? >> i don't know. >> iphone customers should get the protection for their prized gadgets. >> why not just buy a blackberry? >> because nobody's fighting for that, is that what you're saying? one company has a feature that could save your life, apparently. >> i want to hear this is one. jan simon shows us how iphones are being made into weapons. >> this is now being issued as standard equipment. strap it on your wrist >> reporter: gadget weaponry. a staple of james bond. but this is real. an iphone with a big secret. a stun gun. it's called the yellow jacket. snap on the case, and you got a
6:19 am
serious weapon capable of delivering 650,000 volts of electricity. you just lift this flap, expose these little electrodes, turn the unit on and press the button. >> it protects your phone, extends your battery life. and most importantly, it protects you. >> reporter: but that's not all. this case shoots pepper spray. it's from a company called pray tech. the inventor saying she came up with the idea from her college-bound daughter. >> she would never leave home without her phone. that's when i had the idea of combining phone and pepper spray. >> reporter: they're perfectly concealed. they look like any number of cell phone indications. since people carry their phones all the time, the weapons are always with you and ready. but self-defense experts stress the need for training. >> if you are formally trained, if you're taught the mind-set to defend yourself correctly, if
6:20 am
you go through repetitious training. it would probably be effective. if. >> reporter: also, it's important to note that stun guns aren't legal everywhere. but as this promotional video claims, many would-be victims now have a new high-tech tool to defend themselves. dan simon, cnn, san francisco. >> is that supposed to be fun? >> i don't know. i don't think it's supposed to be funny. >> i'm a notorious butt dialer. i call people with my hip all the time. if i'm just walking down the street all of a sudden, i just toss over, you know what happens. >> it would be really funny video. a courtroom brawl. this is something you have to see. look at this, police scrambling to get things under control. and arrest people. watch this. >> hey! >> chaos here.
6:21 am
6:22 am
that's how often a group of house republicans have voted against obamacare, just to prove their allegiance to their party's right wing. okay - they've said their piece. but now they've gone even further... threatening to shut down the government if obamacare isn't dismantled. it could disrupt social security and veterans benefits, hurt job growth and undermine our economic recovery - tell these house republicans - enough already! but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover. vo:remember to changew that oil is the it on schedule toy car. keep your car healthy. can your makeup remover do that? show your car a little love with an oil change starting at $19.95.
6:24 am
♪ i'm not really a great singer but i will sing along with this one. but not right now. a live look across the beautiful city of atlanta. you see centennial olympic park there. 69 degrees. going up into the low 70s. we're starting to feel fall this last weekend of summer. 24 minutes after the hour. >> feels like summer's over. >> it has gone away. six people, we showed you some video before the break, six people scheduled to be arraigned today for a heated brawl in a courthouse. watch.
6:25 am
>> the courthouse in hempstead, new york, was shut down after yesterday's fight. the fight broke out after families and friends of the victim and the murder suspect started arguing during the suspect's arraignment. >> four people were hurt here, including two of the officers trying to calm everything down. people arrested face charges for riot in the first degree and contempt of court. for nine years, deep impact roamed space. you know, that's that comet -- it's a satellite that hunted four comets. but now its mission has been cut short. nasa said the spacecraft suddenly fell silent last month. engineers tried to re-establish contact but they could not so now the spacecraft that provided 500,000 images of celestial objects is orbiting the sun as
6:26 am
space junk. college football's game of the week kicks off later today in baton rouge when sixth-ranked louisiana state takes their first big test of the season, s.e.c. rival auburn. still early in the season, yeah, but both schools are undefeated. and the tables seem stacked against the tigers. they're playing in death valley where lsu is, get this, 39-2 in night games. >> how did you say batten jug >> ba-ton rouge. >> love him or hate him, alex rodriguez set another big record becoming the mlb's all-time grand slam hitter. the historic hit was also the difference in the game, the yaevngs beat the giantses 5-1. >> the yankees' launch-time
6:27 am
rival the red sox clinching the american league title for the first time since 2007. as expected both boston players and fans went nuts. sox open the playoffs on october 4th. they are very excited. all right. well, coming up, she made national headlines a few weeks ago, and now, she's going -- she's in the news again. and an unique show of support for gay rights to shoe laces >> we've got that for you. stay with us. ♪ [ male announcer ] some things are designed to draw crowds. ♪ ♪ others are designed to leave them behind. ♪ the all-new 2014 lexus is. it's your move.
6:28 am
but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover. [knock] no one was at home, but on the kitchen table sat three insurance policies. the first had lots of coverage.
6:29 am
the second, only a little. but the third was... just right! bear: hi! yeah, we love visitors. that's why we moved to a secluded house in the middle of the wilderness. just the right coverage at just the right price. coverage checker from progressive. you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word... if you have yet to master the quiet sneeze... you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts... well muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour one on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour three. zyrtec®. love the air.
6:30 am
claritin® doesn't start working until hour three. "stubborn love" by the lumineers did you i did. email? so what did you think of the house? did you see the school ratings? oh, you're right. hey babe, i got to go. bye daddy! have a good day at school, ok? ...but what about when my parents visit? ok. i just love this one... and it's next to a park. i love it. i love it too. here's our new house... daddy! you're not just looking for a house. you're looking for a place for your life to happen. bottom of the hour. now, welcome back, everyone.
6:31 am
i'm jessica yellin. >> i'm victor blackwell. here are five things you need to know for your new day. first up, more violence erupting in syria. the government there is handing over details of its chemical weapons arsenal. president bashar al assad must account for the chemical weapons and destroy themselves under a u.s. proposal or face potential military strikes. number two, chicago mayor rahm emanuel spoke out last night, calling for an end to violence in the city. he consoled grieving families after a gunman shot and injured 13 people at a basketball court thursday. police say the gunman used an assault-style rifle and the shooting may be gang-related. among those recovering victims is a 3-year-old boy who was shot in the face. >> 3 now, remember the florida woman who made news everywhere for her nonstop hiccups? yeah, you remember her. her name is jennifer maid.
6:32 am
she's 22 years old she was found guilty for first degree murder friday for the death of a man in 2010. maid cried in court as the judge read the verdict. she's been sentenced to life in prison without parole, she's got 30 days to appeal the decision. number 4, damage from deadly floods that swept parts of colorado could keep some residents out of their homes for months. administrator for the town of lyons said e. coli bacteria has contaminated the town's drinking water and the tap water has been turned off. about 2,000 people live in lyons. number 5, everything from the upcoming flu season, they could all be part of the government shutdown. the government stripped out cash for obama case, and that sets the stage for this battle with the democratic-led senate.
6:33 am
>> american people don't want the government shut down. and they don't want obama care. the house has listened to the american people. now it's time for the united states senate to listen to them as well. >> right now, the debate that's going on in congress is not meeting the test of helping middle class families. it's just -- they're not focused on you. they're focused on politics. they're focused on trying to mess with me. >> all right. so let's put the politics aside for a moment. we'll get back to it, of course. but just how will your life and your family be impacted if the government actually shuts down? will you still get your mail? plan on traveling soon. how about that passport, is that going to come? cnn business anchor christine romans has a preview of what's likely to stay open and what will close. >> reporter: many of the congress members threatening a
6:34 am
government shutdown are hoping to delay or defund president obama's affordable care act. but a report from research shows even if the government shut down, obama care would go ahead. now based on the last shutdown in 1995, here's how you would likely be affected. hundreds of thousands of federal workers sent home without pay. many if not, federal offices and programs would be closed, shut down. during the last shutdown, 200,000 passport applications went unprocessed. some services to veterans were suspended. and the nih stopped accepting patients for research. national parks were closed. and paperwork, projects could be delayed. critical functions, critical services, think air traffic control, food inspections. national security. border security. the maintenance of the power grid. also open, anything essential to the banking system. that means the government would still issue funds and yes, you do need to pay your taxes. the postal service would
6:35 am
continue to deliver the mail and the government would pay out benefit, medicare, medicaid, social security, those are considered mandatory. they're not affected. however, government workers who process them could be affected, although that's unlikely. the president, its appointees, members of congress, everyone else will get paid. although their paychecks will be delayed, furloughed workers may get back pay, may get back pay, after it's settled. but not guaranteed. all of this means less economic growth. that's the big concern here about a government shutdown. christine romans, cnn, new york. >> and from christine romans to christina romer, i spoke to dr. romer, about the spending battle. i asked her trying to eliminate obama care is groundbreaking or harmless or dangerous. she said they think it's a big
6:36 am
deal and then warn of a more disastrous fight on capitol hill. here's what she said. >> here's certainly not harmless, that if the government, if we reach a budget impasse and the government does shut down, that obviously takes a toll on confidence. it's very hard to government workers and all the people who need government services. so it definitely is stupid and unnecessary and potentially damaging. i think that said, you know, part of what i keep looking forward to is the -- the second fight, the fight over the debt ceiling. that one would be truly at stro catastrophic if we don't make progress there. we've got a lot of fiscal turbulence in the month of october. it's certainly making me nervous. >> she reminded me that the u.s. were downgraded when we did not default for having a debt fight. two years ago, said it could be even worse if we do default this time.
6:37 am
it will take about six to eight weeks to repair all the damage inside building 197 at washington's navy yard. five days after aaron alexis gunned down 12 people, the building is under fbi control. it's still a crime scene. meanwhile, the navy sea systems command has set up shop in other areas so it can keep working on ship building and weapons contracts and all that they do. this week, the navy ordered reviews into security clearances in bases worldwide. you may remember the picture taken right after the first shots were fired at the navy yard on monday. the woman here in pink in the center of the screen, she's giving cpr to a victim. we didn't know if it was related to the navy yard shooting at the time that photo was taken. cnn's brian todd, he's tracked her down. >> reporter: bertiia laverne
6:38 am
vividly remembers her friend's face. moments after he got hit in the temple from a gunshot she thought she could save him. >> i felt him breathe. >> reporter: laverne said she was a few feet away from her friend and co-worker vishnu pandit when gunfire parade around the office. you almost got hit yourself, right? >> yes, the bullet missed me because we were already -- i was already moving, so the bullet missed me and it shattered the glass right next to where my head was. >> reporter: pandit was down but laverne said when she checked his pulse, it was strong. she and her co-workers ignored their own safety and what happened next, when the shooter was still in the rampage was right out of a movie. the security guards showed up, they helped me get him to a chair to wheel him to the stairs. we put him in the emergency evacuation chair and i was
6:39 am
talking to him and praying the whole entire time. >> reporter: what were you saying to him? >> that -- i prayed that god would protect him and that we need him here. and that his friends loved him. >> reporter: lavern, a former navy specialist said at that point, pandit's pulse was still strong but there was another problem trying to get her friend who had the nickname keson out of the building. did you know where the shooter was at this time? >> no, and i really didn't care. we had to get keson out. that was the important thing. >> reporter: as they were descending the stairs they heard over a guard's radio that the shooter was in the direction they were heading. she said she managed to sneak outside a door bought to a vehicle which sped out the base to this corner. that's where these images were captured, lavern, the woman in
6:40 am
pink, administering cpr desperately trying to save her friend. >> and then the ambulance showed up, they strapped him in. all of this happened within a few minutes of time but it felt like a lifetime. >> reporter: vishnu pandit died on the way to the hospital. a doctor later said his injuries were not survivable. lavern describes her feelings for a man she used to joke with every morning. >> that i miss him and i won't be able to say good morning to him. that i will not be able to say good morning to him, but i know that he's in my heart, and i know that his family loves him so much. >> reporter: lavern said vishnu pandit had recently welcomed a grandchild who she described as the light of his life. he was buried thursday.
6:41 am
cnn, washington. >> wow, i don't know how many people, i can't speak for myself even who could say they have the presence of mind in that chaos to start cpr. i imagine there are a lot of people just in shot. >> she said she was a medical specialist to have that training so it must haven't instink tiff f instinctive for her. what a heartbreaking emotional story. >> and just became a grandfather. we'll continue to follow the developments there. coming up, in other news, the pope says that he is a sinner. in a new interview, he talks about everything from homosexuality to divorce. plus, major flooding in mexico. rescue workers are finally able to reach the towns hardest hit and are now searching for more victims.
6:42 am
i got this. [thinking] is it that time? the son picks up the check? [thinking] i'm still working. he's retired. i hope he's saving. i hope he saved enough. who matters most to you says the most about you. at massmutual we're owned by our policyowners, and they matter most to us. whether you're just starting your 401(k) or you are ready for retirement, we'll help you get there.
6:43 am
♪ hooking up the country whelping business run ♪ ♪ build! we're investing big to keep our country in the lead. ♪ load! we keep moving to deliver what you need. and that means growth, lots of cargo going all around the globe. cars and parts, fuel and steel, peas and rice, hey that's nice! ♪ norfolk southern what's your function? ♪ ♪ helping this big country move ahead as one ♪ ♪ norfolk southern how's that function? ♪ make my mark i wawith pride.ork. create moments of value. build character through quality. and earn the right to be called a classic. the lands' end no iron dress shirt. starting at 49 dollars.
6:45 am
what'ses happening around the world. first to rome, catholics are reacting to the pope's shocking interview this week. cnn's international correspondent matthew chance is there. matthew? >> reporter: jessica, this is just another instance of how different pope francis is to his president defers. a woman says this, the feminine genius is needed anywhere we need important decisions. the priest saying woman should have an important role.
6:46 am
homosexual acts condemned by the church but says if you're gay, you can still be catholic. god looks at a gay person does if he endorse the existence of this person with love or reject and condemn this person. he says you simply don't have to talk about this things all the time. now to mexico where more than 100 people have died after both a hurricane and tropical storm hit the country. the resort town of acapulco was one of the hardest hid areas. dozens of people still missing. cnn's chaft that darlington is there are >> reporter: we've seen some of the most catastrophic images as rescue workers finally reach hard hit towns, dozens of people still missing there after a mud slide buried part of the town.
6:47 am
and it looks like the death toll will rise. >> thank you, shasta. >> and now to london where rainbow shoe laces are caution a controversy in soccer. >> reporter: a bit of a rile is fwlug england. the soccer most national championship the premier league was caught cold by an anti-homophobia campaign organized by a book maker and they send laces of 92 teams to soccer players here hoping players will wear them on their boots as a sign of support. critics have called it a pr stunt and manchester united said they won't take parts whereas, everton stars will. coming up, never too late to go back to school. up next, why actor mark wahlberg is stepping out of the spotlight and into the classroom.
6:48 am
gy muddl. you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word... if you have yet to master the quiet sneeze... you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts... well muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour one on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour three. zyrtec®. love the air. picasso painted one of his master works at 56. doris taerbaum finished her first marathon at 50. not everyone peaks in their twenties. throughout their lives. passion keeps them realizing possibilities. an ally for real possibilities. aarp. find tools and support at aarp.org/possibilities.
6:49 am
some kind of... this is... an alien species. reality check: a lot of 4g lte coverage maps don't really look like much at all. i see the aleutian islands. looks like a duck. it looks like... america... ish. that's a map. that's a map of the united states. check the map. verizon's 4g lte is the most reliable, and in more places than any other 4g network. trade in your old device and trade up to america's most reliable network. i've got the good one! i got verizon! that's powerful. verizon. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, and 9 grams of protein. [ bottle ] ensure®. nutrition in charge™. but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover.
6:51 am
nine minutes to the top of the hour now. actor mark wahlberg. he's heading back to school. that's first up in this week's "pop 4." >> that's the list of entertainment headlines coming up. hey victor, hey jessica. okay, it's "pop 4" time and i have the best and buzziest stories of the week, you ready? all right. number 4, mark wahlberg is having a little celebration. why, you ask? the actor just graduated from
6:52 am
high school and he's 42. wouldn't you know he dropped out in the ninth grade when he recently decided to take online classes and get his diploma. i guess the moral of that story, never too old to get yours. number 3, the controversy over the memorial awards cory monteith will be those honored. james gandolfini and jean stapleton. the controversy is that his young career does not equal the others so he shouldn't be included. >> number 2, it's officially over, reps for miley cyrus and liam hemsworth confirm that the engagement is off. and now, miley's free to twerk wherever she wants. >> the number 1 story popping on this news day, it's more miley.
6:53 am
she's number one on the heels of the twerkfest and swinging naked on a wrecking ball. the singer has scored her first number one song. wrecking ball is number one on the billboard charts. you thought there was such bad things as bad publicity. never. victor, jessica, that's what's popping this week. >> i think she looks fantastic. >> and it's a great song. it's a great song. again, i said it last week, i don't know why you have to lick a sledgehammer to sing to that. >> it's working for her. look at the attention she's getting. she's selling albums and she's doing great. >> i guess we pass out the sledgehammer. >> say hello to the nick everything. take a look at this. it's monstrous, it's everything. it's crazy. we'll tell you what is actually inside of it. and why this dude created it. that's coming up next on "new day." ♪ it's a new day it's a new day ♪
6:54 am
[ male announcer ] this one goes out to all the allergy muddlers. you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word... if you have yet to master the quiet sneeze... you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts... well muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour one on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour three.
6:55 am
zyrtec®. love the air. i don't miss out... you sat out most of our game yesterday! asthma doesn't affect my job... you were out sick last week. my asthma doesn't bother my family... you coughed all through our date night! i hardly use my rescue inhaler at all. what did you say? how about - every day? coping with asthma isn't controlling it. test your level of control at asthma.com, then talk to your doctor. there may be more you could do for your asthma.
6:56 am
especially today, as people are looking for more low, and no calorie options. that's why on vending machines, we're making it easy for people to know how many calories are in their favorite beverages, before they choose. and we're offering more low calorie options, including over 70 in our innovative coca-cola free-style dispensers. working with our beverage industry and restaurant partners, we're helping provide choices that make sense for everyone. because when people come together, good things happen. she took an early spring break thanks to her double miles from the capital one venture card. now what was mrs. davis teaching? spelling. that's not a subject, right? i mean, spell check. that's a program. algebra. okay. persons a and b are flying to the bahamas. how fast will they get there? don't you need distance, rate and... no, all it takes is double miles. [ all ] whoa. yeah. [ male announcer ] get away fast with unlimited double miles from the capital one venture card. you're the world's best teacher.
6:57 am
this is so unexpected. what's in your wallet? ♪ every now and then i get a little bit hungry ♪ ♪ and there's nothing good around ♪ ♪ turn around barry ♪ i finally found the right snack ♪ ♪ so what's for breakfast this morning? a little cereal, a little toast? >> how about scrapple? who knows what scrapple is? have you ever had it? >> corned beef hsash. >> no, it's scraps. >> how about a little bit of
6:58 am
everything, you can thank nick shipman for this colossal deal. he took all 43 sandwiches offered by mcdonald's, i didn't know they had 43 sandwiches and stacked them on top of each other. >> this is so gross. why you ask? apparently he wanted to. apparently he also wanted to shell out 140 bucks to make it happen. some of that went to the diet coke he ordered it with. >> got to have a diet coke. >> i wonder how many calories that is. >> looks like he's going to try to eat it. bad idea. all right, so we're near the top of the hour. you know it's time for the "must see moment" of the day. >> for that we go cecilia, louisiana. meet 16-year-old shea stelly. the wheelchair bound team is part of the cecilia high school football team, and never misses a practice not even in the summer. >> so his coach recently decided to go ahead and put him in the
6:59 am
game. >> watch what happens, he gets the ball, the whole team helps guide him in. everybody on the team loves this kid. we love him here. he heads straight for the end zone and it's good. his coach said his team inspires him like no one else. >> to say it's probably been one of the best things i've ever done as a head coach is a huge understatement. i haven't said a word, he inspires me more than anything. >> big dog's in the house! >> he says the whole thing is like a dream and he thought it was amazing. just to have that opportunity. he will remember that for the rest of his life. those guys guiding him in. >> i bet the whole team would, too. you can imagine having him on your team? >> imagine that moment for shea in the stands, the roaring round of applause for that kid. >> and to have him come in for practice obviously got that team
7:00 am
spirit. >> good for shae. >> the next hour of "new day" starts right now. if this legislation is not enacted and we embark on a government shutdown, the consequences are severe. >> closed for business. that will be the message from washington if congress doesn't pass a budget in the next nine days. we'll explain exactly how this is going to affect you. if uncle sam came in while you were getting a sensitive medical exam, would you find it kind of creepy? well opponents of obama care hope so. superman got his powers from planet krypton. spider-man got his from a spider bite. what the newest superhero is making waves from where his powers come from.
7:01 am
drugs and alcohol. hey, good morning, everyone, i'm jessica yellin. >> i'm victor blackwell. 7:00 here on the east coast. this is "new day saturday." well, first came the floods and the water. that was enough. but now an entire colorado town's drinking water is contaminated with e. coli. it could be months before the water in lyons is fit to drink. cnn's dan simon is following this for us out in boulder, colorado. dan, tell us what's happened in lyons. are people still there? and tell us kind of how this all happened? >> reporter: yeah, good morning, victor, as if these folks haven't had enough to deal with already. as we have seen with these floodwaters, they have the ability, victor, to take out infrastructure. they took out roads and bridges. and in the town of lyons, they
7:02 am
also took out septembic systemsd sewer lines and that caused the toxic, if you will, to get into the water supply. they've confirmed the e. coli. i want you to listen to how one official put it to the town. >> our 12-inch water transmission line has been compromised. we think it's been compromised in several locations. the water system does have e. coli in it now. which means that there has been a breach. and we don't want you using any of the water. so it was turned off. >> reporter: so here's the deal, they want residents to leave the area of town. they don't want people there, obviously. but if people are going to stay, they're obviously going to have to provide their own drinking water. so it is just a miserable situation for people living there. >> and there's been a loss of life. we know there are a lot of people who are unaccounted for as this has gone on.
7:03 am
let's talk about the property damage and the flood insurance. are we hearing that a lot of people had insurance and can rebuild? >> reporter: well, in fact, a lot of people did not have information. especially when you go into some of these areas that are not prone to flooding. say you live in an area where there might be a flood every 500 years, why would you get insurance? well, we talked to one such family who found themselves in this situation. >> so this was a finished basement. >> reporter: jessica beakam and her husband built and moved into his house only 18 months ago. what did it look like down here when you had the water? >> armageddon, total devastation. >> reporter: these pictures show part of the aftermath. they estimate the damage to be about $100,000. but she and her husband had opted against flood insurance. when you moved to this area did you ever think, if you had heavy rains that the home could flood. >> not a chance. >> reporter: that's because they live in what's call a 500-year
7:04 am
flood plan. that means the chance of this area flooding was less than 1% each year. >> we asked about it just to make sure we covered our bases when we moved in. they almost laughed. ton of money, you don't need that. >> we would have had it if we knew this would happen. or even if we had an inkling that this could happen. >> reporter: they represent a substantial portion of flood victims. authorities say it's still too early to know how many affected homes didn't have flood insurance. but the devastation was so widespread that it went beyond places prone to flooding. >> it's something kind of beyond our imagination, beyond something to fathom. it's understandable that people didn't sign up for flood insurance in most cases. >> reporter: but the beakoms are still trying to keep water from
7:05 am
getting into their house and hoping to find any precious belongings. i found it. i found it. >> reporter: a prices memento, one that won't be able to pay for all the repairs their home is going to need. the family does have private insurance, but private insurance doesn't cover floods. they like other families have applied for fema relief. it's limited in scope. it's only temporary. it's not going to begin to pay for repairs that they and other families are going to need. this is a tough situation. this is a wages where people legitimately thought they didn't need to spend a bunch of money on something they didn't truly believe they were going toed me. >> yeah, once every 500 years. dan simon in boulder, thank you the mayor of chicago is calling for an end to violence. rahm emanuel consoled grieving families after a shooting at a basketball court thursday night injured 13 people including a 3-year-old boy.
7:06 am
deonte howard was shot in the face near his ear. he's heavily sedated and he'll need plastic surgery. his grand mother pleaded for gang violence to stop. >> it need to stop. it need to stop. y'all out here killing these innocent people, kids, parents, grandparents, mothers, fathers, it got to stop. y'all need to stop. >> police say the suspect used an assault-style rifle. and the shooting areas to be gang-related. so far, no arrests have been made. let's talk about this possible government shutdown. maybe what, nine days away if it's going to happen. still, what, just more than a week. cancel your national park getaways, soldiers say good-bye to your paycheck possibly. if you need a passport, good luck with that. house republicans' distaste of obama care at the heart of the
7:07 am
threat. cnn's erin mcpike is there. explain for us and the viewers what is going on. walk us through this. >> well, victor, and as jessica knows, of course, the house of representatives has voted more than 40 times to try to stop obama care. in some ways. so it was first passed in 2010. but as jessica well knows, congress can tie a bunch of different issues into one bill. and this time, the house has tried to do this to this federal attached obama care defunding to the federal spending bill that will keep the government running through mid-december. but this time, they think this particular vote will matter more because they're forcing the senate to vote on it, too. >> reporter: in the coming week, the battle will shift to the senate. but on friday, it was a rare moment for house speaker john boehner, united republicans celebrated their vote to defund obama care. >> american people don't want
7:08 am
the government shutdown and they don't want obama care. >> the ayes are 230. the nays, 189. the joint resolution has passed. without objection, the motion to reconsider is laying on the table. >> reporter: all but one republican voted for the measure and two democrats joined them, prompting this exuberant response. >> today it wasn't just a group of republicans but a bipartisan vote. >> reporter: it was a show of partisanship by conservatives. but their effort is dead on arrival in the senate. and democrats seized on the potential consequences. >> what is brought to the floor today is without a doubt -- without a doubt, a measure designed to shut down government. it could have no other intent. its purpose is clear. >> reporter: house republicans are working to shift blame for the threat of a government
7:09 am
shutdown on to democrats who control the senate. >> now, it is up to senate democrats to show some responsibility and follow the house's lead. >> reporter: they're putting the squeeze on vulnerable democratic senators up for re-election in red states. >> i want to know where senator pryor stands on protecting the middle class. from the consequences of this horrific bill. >> reporter: cantor singled out arkansas senator mark pryor and three other democrats. kay haguingen of north carolina. mary landrieu of louisiana and mark begich of alaska. but two of these senators, landreau and begich said he will not vote. and pass the buck back to the house. so essentially yesterday's vote was just a symbolic vote. it was a political statement that house republicans were making. the senate will have to take up
7:10 am
this bill in the coming week. and just yesterday, the house announced that they will be in session next weekend, too. so it will be doing this sort of same vote all over again. victor and jessica. >> all right, erin, thanks for staying on top of it for us. that's cnn's erin mcpike. now, remember if congress and the president can agree on a bill, a second shutdown threat that's coming in mid-october because congress must raise the debt ceiling by then so the treasury can pay the bills. the president called house speaker john boehner last night that he will not negotiate. >> the united states of america is not a deadbeat nation. we are a compassionate nation. we are the world's bedrock investment. and doing anything that threatened that is the height of irresponsibility. that's why i will not negotiate over the full faith and credit of the united states. i will not allow anyone to harm this country's reputation or threaten to inflict economic pain on millions of our own people, just to make an ideological point.
7:11 am
so, we're running out of time to fix this. but we could fix it tomorrow. both houses of congress can take a simple vote to pay our bills on time. then work together to pass a budget on time. >> and the mere threat of a government shutdown is making some investors nervous. a lot of them. dow jones industrial tumbled 185 points friday. and just wednesday, stocks hit a record high. near that record, investors buckle up for a bumpy ride on wall street. it's coming next week possibly. >> yep, and it is just not wall street. the government shutdown could impact americans across the country. reporter margaret conley is following that part of the story for us. hi, margaret. >> reporter: good morning, from california to new york, a government shutdown could impact millions of americans. i'm margaret conley. and we'll be back with more after the break. chicken with ri.
7:12 am
7:13 am
for teaching us that you can't create the future... by clinging to the past. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand of us investing billions... in everything from the best experiences below... to the finest comforts above. we're not simply saluting history... we're making it. where their electricity comes from. they flip the switch-- and the light comes on. it's our job to make sure that it does. using natural gas this power plant can produce enough energy for about 600,000 homes. generating electricity that's cleaner and reliable, with fewer emissions-- it matters. ♪ you know who you are.
7:14 am
you can part a crowd, without saying a word... if you have yet to master the quiet sneeze... you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts... well muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour one on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour three. zyrtec®. love the air.
7:15 am
14 minutes after the hour now. according to my clock. your clock says it, too. you know where else that clock says 14 minutes after? d.c. every hour matters now. because in just nine days the u.s. government could be closed for business. it's more than just government offices, though. the national parks. the national zoo. a lot of places you typically visit would close. and if you think a government shutdown would actually save money, think again. margaret conley joins us now from new york. break this down for us, margaret. and what people will see every day as they go about their life for this possible shutdown? >> reporter: victor in 1995 and 1996, those shutdowns cost taxpayers well over $1 billion. here's a look at what could happen this time. a government shutdown threatens to close some america's greatest treasures. from the statue of liberty here
7:16 am
in new york to the liberty bell in philadelphia. to yosemite national park in california. museums and federal offices with visa and passport services across the country could close. just as they did in the mid-90s. >> anyone who lived through '95 and '96 remembers that, you know, there were certain services such as national parks, national zoo in washington, that when they shut down, they had big effects. not simply on people trying to get in. but on the tourist economy that depends on these parks throughout the country. >> reporter: chris heywood from new york's city's official tourism office says tourism here is a $55.3 billion industry. and it will stay on track at record levels, regardless of a shutdown. but -- >> if this expands to our airports, then of course that's a different story. we want to make sure the entry process is flawless moving forward. we need to welcome more visitors. this is an economic engine for the entire country.
7:17 am
>> reporter: the last shutdown cost taxpayers an estimated $1.4 billion. another possibility casting a shadow over the country's economic outlook. >> there's some evidence that some of the swings we've seen in the economy have been responses to the idea that there will be either government shutdowns. or failure to raise the debt limit, with the u.s. government going into default. >> okay, but, margaret, not every door will be locked. give us an idea of what will continue. what's going stay open? >> critical services, victor. those are going to stay open. things like air traffic control. national security, border protection. and at the parks, they're still going to have some government employees there to maintain the parks and as to protect them victor. >> all right, margaret conley there in new york. thank you so much. young kids in fancy dresses, heavy makeup, walk be the runway. it's too much for at least one country, and now backlash as
7:18 am
lawmakers in france look to ban child beauty pageants. could the u.s. be next? and also why a fast wood worker who did not serve a customer is being called a hero for his actions. la's known definitely for its traffic, congestion, for the smog. but there are a lot of people that do ride the bus. and now that the buses are running on natural gas, they don't throw out as much pollution into the air. so i feel good. i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup
7:19 am
with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover. it's hard to see opportunity in today's challenging environment. can your makeup remover do that? unless you have the right perspective. bny mellon wealth management has the vision and experience to look beyond the obvious. we'll uncover opportunities, find hidden risk, and make success a reality. bny mellon wealth management. make my mark i wawith pride.ork. create moments of value. build character through quality. and earn the right to be called a classic. the lands' end no iron dress shirt. starting at 49 dollars. jim, i adore the pool at your hotel.ver had to make. anna, your hotels have wondrous waffle bars.
7:20 am
ryan, your hotels' robes are fabulous. i have twelve of them. twelve? shhhh, i'm worth it& what i'm trying to say is, it's so hard to pick just one of you, so i'm choosing all of you with hotels.com. a loyalty program that requires no loyalty. plus members can win a free night every day only at hotels.com
7:22 am
don't want to pick on you too much this morning. but they're losing a lot. >> this is such bad news for blackberry owners. blackberry, you see it here, ted they lost $275 million this year. how blackberry is announcing that it will cut 40% of its global worker force. 4500 people will be out of a job and blackberry is going to reduce the number of smartphones it offers by just four. my goal for the end of today is to increase the number of blackberrys told. just a few. >> just by three or four. >> just three or four to increase market share. >> jessica is doing her part. a bad day for blackberry turned into a great day for apple. it's almost a guarantee whenever a new iphone comes out, die-hard fans i'm talkin about people who will not touch another phone, they're going to wait in line for hours. that's what you see here. no different from yesterday's release of the iphone 5s or 5c,
7:23 am
except some people turn to task rabbit to pay someone else to stand in line. $14 an hour. that's what the job hiring service recommended for line sitters to be paid. why not? >> i guess if you need to get it that much earlier than everyone else -- >> it's still a phone. it's a phone. i like mine, but it's a phone. >> they want it early. $14 isn't a bad rate for just standing in line. >> let's talk more business here. >> toddlers and tiaras is big business here in the u.s. ♪ >> even with the show by the same name on tlc, get this, child beauty pageants may soon become illegal in france. now the senate there just voted to make it illegal again. this is in france. made is illegal to enter any child under 16 into a beauty pageant. the fine here would be 30,000 uros. >> that's crazy. >> now, what the supporters,
7:24 am
they say, that children at thing age should be focusing on knowledge and schooling, instead of trying to be sexualized. that's what they say this is. >> right. that never happens in french g fashion magazines. totally different. >> touche. >> this is probably the most interesting in this block. you heard of the dollar shade club? watch. >> each razor has stainless steel blades and aloe vera lubricating head. >> they sell razor blades for a dollar a month. okay. but now they're getting into the business of, let's say, your business. >> hi, me again. people ask me, mike, when are you going to do video number two? you want to talk about number two? great, let's talk about number two. [ flush ]
7:25 am
>> oh, yeah. >> this is an ad for the new product one wipe charlie. yes. one wipe charlies. i went to the website because i'm just amazed that this is a product. and they are -- forgive me if you're in the middle of your cheerios -- butt wipes made for men. >> really? >> yes. that's what it is, four bucks a package. and they have nfl players who have lined up to be folks person. travis fredricks from the cowboys, john sullivan, eric wood, buffalo bills. nick harvin from the chargers. i want to hear the pitch from their agents for these guys to say do you want to endorse one wipe charlies? >> is it just for men? >> as opposed to babies? i don't want to get too grabbing, usually, one wipe really isn't -- i do want to say this, it has a gentle peppermint
7:26 am
smell and one of the ingredients marshmallow. >> i'm not touchinging that. okay. as it turns out from that to this. sex does not always sell. >> penthouse magazine is in big financial trouble they'll file for skankruptcy -- is that -- bankruptcy, i am sorry! >> the owner of "penthouse" magazine just filed for chapter 11. the company that owens several online dating sites billions of dollars. feels there's more online content online. not entirely shocking. >> you know the most interesting thing from this story was the owner of penthouse has a group called friend finder. so nice and friendly. >> warm, a companion. >> friendly. we'll leave it at friendly. here's what we got coming up.
7:27 am
the florida woman who contained national attention for her nonstop hiccups is back in the spotlight. this time it's for murder. and the verdict is in. plus, we're looking into these strange new obama care ads. you have seen these? they've been called creepy, sexist. some have called them deplorable. we'll have more after the break. [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover.
7:28 am
can your makeup remover do that? forty times. that's how often a group of house republicans have voted against obamacare, just to prove their allegiance to their party's right wing. okay - they've said their piece. but now they've gone even further... threatening to shut down the government if obamacare isn't dismantled. it could disrupt social security and veterans benefits, hurt job growth and undermine our economic recovery - tell these house republicans - enough already! i get out a lot... except when it's too cold. like the last three weekends. asthma doesn't affect my job... you missed the meeting again last week! it doesn't affect my family.
7:29 am
your coughing woke me up again. i wish you'd take me to the park. i don't use my rescue inhaler a lot... depends on what you mean by a lot. coping with asthma isn't controlling it. test your level of control at asthma.com, then talk to your doctor. there may be more you could do for your asthma. mortgage rates eased quite a bit this week. have a look. people don't have to think about
7:30 am
7:31 am
bottom of the hour now. welcome back, everyone. i'm jessica yellin. >> i'm victor blackwell. let's start off with five things you need to know for your new day. up first, more violence in syria, even as the government is handing over details of its chemical weapons arsenal. syrian president bashar al assad must account for his chemical weapons and destroy them under a u.s./russian proposal or face potential military strikes. >> number 2, chicago mayor rahm emanuel spoke out last night calling for an end to violence in the city. he consoled grieves families after a gunman shot and injured 13 people at a park thursday. police say the gunman used an assault-style rifle and the shooting could be gang related. among the recovering victims is a 3-year-old boy who was shot in the face. number 3 for you this morning. remember the woman in florida, they made news all over the country for those nonstop
7:32 am
hiccups? her name is jennifer mee. she's 22 years old now, and she was found guilty of first degree murder on friday. it was for the death of a man in 2010 she met online. now, she cried as the judge read the verdict in court. and she's been sentenced to life in prison without parole. she's got 30 days to appeal the decision. number 4, damage from deadly floods that wept through parts of colorado could keep some residents out of their homes for months. the administrator for the town of lyons said e. coli back tear dwra has contaminated the town's drinking water and the tap water has been turned off. about 2,000 people live in lyons. number 5 now, national parks, monuments, keeping track of the upcoming flu system they could all be victims of a government shutdown. that's because house republicans have pushed for a bill to fund the government starting october 1st but it's stripped out cash
7:33 am
for obama care. and that sets the stage for this battle with the democratic-led senate. >> and with just over a week before the affordable care act opens for enrollment, we're seeing a wave of advertisements trying to convince people to buy in or stay away. >> now, one new campaign aimed at turning young people against signing up is being called provocative. some people say it's shocking. other people call it downright creepy. cnn's rene marsh has the story. >> jessica and victor, the new rules are intended to cut carbon pollution generated from the power plants but it's getting major pushback. coal advocates say the new rules will mean job loss and industry price hikes and some expect the fight will land in court. roar dueling videos on both sides of the health care debate and on the opposing side the videos are pushing the level. >> but then look -- ♪
7:34 am
>> reporter: just days before americans begin to enroll for health care insurance under the affordable care act, self-described libertarian group generation opportunity released two web videos, hoping to convince people, not to enroll. ♪ lucas bianno helps conservative politicians to get the ads out. he said the advertisements targeting 18 to 29 year olds could change their minds. >> in the youtube society that we live in it's important to produce content that's going to be innovative. this is one aspect that does that. if you stay below the bar and put something out it won't fly and it won't resonate.
7:35 am
>> reporter: one ad agency said ads opposing health care outnumbered those 4 to 1. but as implementation of the law fast approaches, ads encouraging people tone roll are showing up on the airwaves. >> minnesota land of 10,000 reasons to get health insurance. >> reporter: health care, the policy issue that's created a war between two sides in washington has become a political cash cow for advertisers. one ad-tracking agency estimated by 2015 more than $1 billion will having spent on ads, most of them making the case it's a bad deal. >> it is a train wreck. it has to go. >> reporter: while existing plans -- >> rene marsh there for us. thank you. it's got people talking at least. >> certainly. still to come, the pope's latest change of tone has some conservative catholics pushing back. you're going see this heated debate. did you see this? you'll want to watch it if you
7:36 am
haven't. plus, miley cyrus still has us talking the "t" word. >> twerking. >> i was going to let you say. >> music legend cher is weighing and she is not pulling back. why cher had to backtrack on the twitter slam on the provocative performance from the vmas. ♪ no matter what it's always a good time doesn't matter it's always a good time ♪ you think you take off all your make-up before bed. but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, and 9 grams of protein. [ bottle ] ensure®. nutrition in charge™.
7:38 am
bob will retire when he's 153, which would be fine if bob were a vampire. but he's not. ♪ he's an architect with two kids and a mortgage. luckily, he found someone who gave him a fresh perspective on his portfolio. and with some planning and effort, hopefully bob can retire at a more appropriate age. it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade.
7:40 am
minutes until the top of the hour. and we are in the "e-block." "e" stands for entertainment. >> i learned something new. let's start with cher slamming miley cyrus after the provocative vmas. >> cher told "usa today," quote, she could have come out naked and if she just rocked the house i would have said you go girl. it just wasn't done well. her body looked like hell. the song wasn't great. one cheek was hanging out and chick don't stick your tongue out if it's coated. >> and the 67-year-old diva who is also known for outrageous outfits and performances was apologizing sorta. she went out a tweet that said, quote, what i should have said was i didn't like it that much
7:41 am
but she's pushing the envelope, being an artist, she's talented and didn't commitment the felony. >> to me is seems like the rolling eye "what i should have said was" joining us is jimmy. was sherr out of line. >> if you don't have anything nice to say about somebody, come sit by me. >> love her for that. >> once she said, she had one cheek hanging out. i think we saw cher performances where she. both hanging out. it shocked me. it's been a month, on the 25th will be a month since we saw miley twerking on stage. and that it's still being talked about, it's a genius. to me, if i was stephanie cutter and watched every night at 5:00, every night i would come out and twerk every night. it would be a huge hit. >> oh, my gosh. >> pre-twerk work and post.
7:42 am
>> the idea of newt gingrich -- >> is it punching down -- cher's an icon? >> cher is like, listen, i'm a legend in this business. i've been relevant since the '60s. that's a kid. and i think miley's been unfairly just hammered. she's still a kid. it's not like she was drunk or high on stage. she did a performance and some people don't like it. some people do. but we're still talking about it a month later. >> let's talk about her dad, billy ray cyrus was on piers morgan this week, and he defended his daughter and showed up wearing something unusual. less listen. >> she's an artist, she's real. i think what's happened over the years, miley has been reinventing her sound. she's evolving as an artist herself. i think that it's all of what everyone is calling controversy now, i'm still -- that's still my miley. >> there's a whole lot going on
7:43 am
there. let's talk what about he's saying gsay saying. >> yes. >> is this what you expected him to say? >> gravy train. he length had a hit since 1989. "achy breaky heart." >> are you saying he's living off of her? >> well, it was her show. obviously, he's proud of his daughter but he doesn't want to bite the hand that may feed him in the future. >> zac efron, according to reports, 20 years old, he successful completed a stint in rehab in the spring. >> who knew. >> no one knew. that's why question how he glided through? >> that shows celebrities if you have problems keep it on the downlow. >> good pr. >> this guy won the lottery of life, he's great looking, a great movie star and the sad thing he has a monkey houon his
7:44 am
back. the report was cocaine. that's severe. some of his problems were the people he hung out with. the first thing you do is get rid of all of those friends. my mom used to say the crumb bums. get rid of them. that's who you are. you don't want those people dragging you down. >> i don't how we're ever going to foregiven you of the image of newt gingrich twerking. >> he twerks hard for the money. >> jimmy alexander, thank you so much. we're both at the same time, time to end this. all right. a lot of -- you know what, i'm not going to read that. it's the wrong time to say it on television. we'll be right back. ♪
7:45 am
here we honor the proud thaccomplishmentsss. of our students and alumni. people like, maria salazar, an executive director at american red cross. or garlin smith, video account director at yahoo. and for every garlin, thousands more are hired by hundreds of top companies. each expanding the influence of our proud university of phoenix network. that's right, university of phoenix. enroll now. we've got a frame waiting for you. ♪ ♪ ♪
7:46 am
[ male announcer ] the all-new 2014 lexus is. this is your move. you're not linda. i'm filling in for officer owens. she used double miles from her capital one venture card to take an early vacation. buckle up. let's go do cop stuff. [ siren chirps ] license and venture card, ma'am. was i going too fast? oh, you'd be going twice as fast if you had double miles. [ male announcer ] get away fast with unlimited double miles from the capital one venture card. freeze! don't touch the face! can i drive? absolutely not. what's in your wallet? you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word... if you have yet to master the quiet sneeze... you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts... well muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour one
7:47 am
on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour three. zyrtec®. love the air. this week on "the next list." putting ideas to work. jim newton is a lifelong do-it-yourselfer who is passionate about making. >> jim is passionate of making things. we've gotten away from may going
7:48 am
so much. there's that instinctive drive for people to create. >> it's one of the reasons he started tech shop. it's an innovative workshop to bring ideas to life. >> they say i really can do this. this is stunning. they're stunned. >> and graham hill, the designer, entrepreneur who believes people would be a lot happier with less. >> i love things. and i love having great things but i don't want too many. i don't want to be overwhelmed. hill built his dream micro apartment by crowd-sourcing a design on the internet. he got an amazing ideas. >> but the best part of living like that, more freedom, i'm dr. sanjay gupta, join me saturday 2:30 on "the next list." a terrifying scene at an upscale shopping mall in kenya's capital today.
7:49 am
witnesses say gunmen started shooting inside the mall in nairobi. the mall is popular. the kenyan government says at least three people have been injured. video you see here. police have surrounded the mall. they're telling people to stay away, of course, and to stay off the nearby roads for their own safety. pope francis, he is sending shock waves through the catholic church. it's just amazing speaking out and seemingly softening his tone on everything from abortion to same-sex marriage to contraception. and even the role of women in the church. >> yeah. in his most extensive interview yet published in "america magazine." the pope says, and this is a quote. the church has sometimes locked itself up in small things and small-minded rules. the people of god want pastors. not clergy acting like bureaucrats or government officials. a lot of liberal catholics saw the comments as a big shift for the
7:50 am
watch this. cnn's chris cuomo sat down and got into a heated debate about the sexuality and the church's sex abuse scandals. >> we men have sex with young men, it is not pedophilia. it is not a conservative right-ring organization. i will never stop telling the truth. the pope never said. i'm against gay bashing to say because you are gay, you will be a molester. >> that is what it sounds like. >> if most of the molesters are gay, it is not true. that is a gay bashing comment. people have to make critical distinctions. i have nothing against gay people than i have anything against straight people. i will not lie about the figures. what i said about the figures is
7:51 am
absolutely true. it is not negotiable. >> that is the problem. there are some who will say it is irrational. >> explain it to john jay. do you think i made up those figures, chris? >> i think you are parsing them. i think you are cherry picking them. i think the issue is motivation. you heard who the pope said. why not move past this rhetoric. >> this is about the left. they are trying to take what he said and run with it like "the new york times." they are concerned about abortion and gay marriage. no, no, no. the obama administration is hoisting this on the bishops. the bishops are reacting. there is nothing that pope francis has said that would give relief to these people that all of a sudden the conservatives should shut up. we are in compliance with the
7:52 am
pope. >> he is saying the wording catholic is universal. the rule of religion is love. not to cherry pick and try to blame homosexuals for being pedophiles. >> who said that? >> here's what -- >> did i say that? >> the suggestion is all of this was consensual because of the age of the victims. >> consensual? people get raped. it is not consensual. the catholic church did not handle it. i would put them in the slammer a long time ago. instead, they thought they could reform them. they sent them to the psychologist. >> the way they handled the issue is the way the church handled the issue. the discussion is somehow predatory that is what -- the pope is telling you -- this is what your pope is telling you. >> most of the molesting priests are gay. i think people -- >> stop there. >> that's all i ever said. >> who says that the molesters
7:53 am
were gay? >> i'm telling you -- >> who says the molesters were gay? >> they were not girls. >> who says the molesters were gay? >> if a man has sex with a man, what would you call this? >> he could be a defiant pedophile or rapist. >> a rapist could be straight or gay. i'll give you that much. >> homosexual doesn't make you predatory. >> the catholic church with the homosexual scandal. this is absurd. >> i wonder how many more were around the country after that. >> it opened up a good conversati conversation. changing tones, a spectacular view of the world from the sky high perspective. a camera strapped to the back of an eagle, believe it or not. it is today's buxie moment
7:54 am
coming up. ♪ i want to get away ♪ ♪ i want to fly away for us ou can't create ture... by clinging to the past. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand of us investing billions... in everything from the best experiences below... to the finest comforts above. we're not simply saluting history... we're making it. nascar is about excitement. but tracking all the action and hearing everything from our marketing partners, the media and millions of fans on social media can be a challenge. that's why we partnered with hp to build the new nascar fan and media engagement center. hp's technology helps us turn millions of tweets, posts and stories into real-time business insights that help nascar win with our fans.
7:55 am
7:57 am
okay. so the fans of superman, they know where he gets his power. iron man gets it from that suit. but there's now a new character of the dark horse comic series that gets his power from drugs and alcohol. >> great. >> the writers of the comic "buzz kill" say the series is intended to show case the powers of addiction. it is not to show a superhero
7:58 am
who is an alcohol, but an alcohol who is a superhero and is trying to do some super things. >> we have to read it before we judge it. >> indeed. this is what i look forward to every week. >> the music? >> the music is good. the show. we feature stories about the good news out there. a dairy queen employee is being called a hero and his act of kindness has gone viral. >> joey prusak is the manager. one week ago, a customer came in and ordered a sundae. the customer is blind. he paid and pulled out a $20 and it dropped to the floor. >> the customer behind him picked it up and put it in her purse. prusak said give the money back or he would refuse to serve her.
7:59 am
prusak said she left and he gave the blind customer $20 from his own pocket. that is good customer service. and for the must-see moment. do you wonder what it is like to get a bird's eye view? >> someone, we're not sure who on how, strapped a camera on the back of an eagle. it captures views as the bird soars above the french alps. lush green hills. look how long this flight is. just kind of soaring up there. we don't know who or why or how they strapped this camera to the back of this eagle. it is great video. >> that cannot be easy itself. it is also a little bit causing
8:00 am
vertigo. >> we appreciate whomever did that. thank you for starting your morning with us. the next hour of your "new day" starts right now. >> on this vote, the aye is are 230 and the nays are 139. >> house republicans may have voted to defund obama care, but with the colleagues in the senate stripping the bill's language, it could cause war and shutdown your government. do you use yelp or angie's list? the information you are getting may not exactly be unbiased. it is sleek, colorful and hot off the shelf, but is it worth the price? we have a review of the brand new iphone.
8:01 am
good morning, everyone. i'm jessica yellin. >> i'm victor blackwell. >> it could happen in nine days. we begin with a growing likelihood of a government shutdown. >> the republicans stripped money from obama care in a spending bill. we have erin mcpike with us. here is the question most people have. republicans know the president will never sign a bill defunding his signature health care law. what is really going on here? what is the end game? >> victor and jessica, house republicans have voted more than 40 times to stop the implementation of obama care. this is the thing. this time they added it to the bill that keeps the government running for just a short amount of time through mid-december. it takes, of course, a lot of money to do that and congress has to approve that spending.
8:02 am
so republicans now think they have found a way to make another political statement about obama care by wrapping it into this spending bill. take a listen to what john boehner had to say about this. >> at a time when the economy is barely eeking along and wages are not increasing and new jobs are not available. what are we doing? we are putting more cost on the american people. it is time for us to say no. it is time to stop this before it causes anymore damage to american families and american businesses. >> democrats, though, say republicans are just playing politics and threatening to shutdown the government over a policy they don't like. here's what president obama had to say in his weekly address in response to the republicans. >> some are actually willing to plunge america into default if they can't defund the affordable care act. think about that. they would actually plunge this
8:03 am
country back in recession all to deny the basic security of health care to millions of americans. >> now, house republicans insist that they don't want to shutdown the government, but as you know, democrats are in control of the senate and this bill is very likely to change when the senate takes it up next week. >> so, erin, what do your sources tell you what will happen when it gets into the senate? >> we hear that senate republicans plan to move forward with debate on the bill as it is now. once that happens, ted cruz says he wants to force a filibuster, but the republicans don't have the votes to do that. at that point, it takes 51 senate democrats to restore funding for obama care and 51 democrats to pass the full bill and ping pong it back to the house. that is the plan, jessica, as you know, it could get heated
8:04 am
next week. >> the president resting his hopes on the senate. erin mcpike in washington. thank you. the potential government shutdown would see more than government workers staying home. >> the top parks and tourist attractions would be shutdown. same for places like the national zoo, statue of liberty. margaret conley joins us now from new york. good morning. tell us what else we could possibly see. we saw this 17 years ago. what will we see this time if it happens? >> reporter: good morning, victor. national parks like the statue of liberty behind me could be shutdown. that is a major tourist attraction here in new york city. this shutdown could impact more than tourism. in 1995 and 1996, the government shutdowns cost taxpayers over $1 billion. a government shutdown threatens to close some of america's greatest treasures.
8:05 am
from the statue of liberty in new york, to the liberty bell in philadelphia to yosemite national park in california. museums and federal offices with passport offices could close just like the mid '90s. >> anyone who lived through '95 and '96 remember services like national parks and national zoo in washington, when they shutdown, they had big effects on people trying to get in and on the tourist when that depends on these parks throughout the country. >> reporter: chris heywood from the tourism office says tourism here is a $55.3 billion industry. it will stay on track regardless of a shutdown. >> if it expands to the airports, it will be an impact. this is an economic engine. >> reporter: the last government
8:06 am
shutdowns cost taxpayers $1.4 billion. the possibility of another shutdown casting a shadow of the country's economic outlook. >> there is some evidence that some of the swings we have seen in the economy have been responses to the idea that there will be government shutdowns or failure to raise the debt limit with the u.s. government going into default. >> reporter: victor, we are hearing that some government agencies will stay open. the critical services like border protection and air traffic control and national security. >> margaret conley in new york. thank you. new this morning, a spokesman for the u.n. backed chemical arms watchdog says the syrian government has handed over details of the stockpile. the u.s. and russia have called on president bashar al assad's regime to turnover and destroy its chemical weapons.
8:07 am
if it damascus does not come pl ply, it could face air strikes. the government is moving chemical weapons, they are not sure if it is moving them to account for them or hide them. we have been seeing the devastation from the floods that ravage colorado. would you believe this? no residents in one colorado town have no drinkable water. >> the town of lyons has been contaminated by e. coli. we have dan simons with us. he is nearby. tell us what is happening in lyons next door and how this all happened. >> reporter: jessica and victor, imagine not having any tap water. that is what the people in lyons are having to go through just a
8:08 am
miserable situation. what we saw with the flood waters is it had the ability to take out infrastructure. we saw it take out roads and bridges. in the town of lyons, it took out septic tanks and sewer lines. it caused this toxic sludge to invade the town's water supply and tests have confirmed there is in fact e. coli in the water. >> our 12-inch water transmission line has been compromised. we think it has been compromised in several locations. the water system does have e. coli in it. there has been a breach. we don't want you using any of the water. it was turned off. >> reporter: so here is the thing. people can stay in their homes if they want to, but they will have to provide all of their own drinking water and all of the water to bathe with, et cetera. this is a tough situation for
8:09 am
lyons. a town of 2,000 people. obviously, with no water, you won't want to be there. a lot of people are staying in their homes. victor and jessica. >> what is the time frame to get the water back to where it is drinkable again? >> reporter: it could be months. that is really what has to be so frustrating for those people. they are working on temporary repairs and for a small town like lyons, they don't have a lot of money. we are talking about a price tag of upwards of $1 million. this is expensive for the town. it could have a situation where they don't have any tap water for months. victor. >> dan simon, thank you for your continued reporting from there. colorado is not the only place recovering from the deadly storm. more than 100 people were killed when two tropical storm systems pummeled mexico this past week. about 68 people are still missing after record rains caused mudslides and flooding in communities. thousands of tourists were left stranded in acapulco.
8:10 am
>> we know there are a lot of people that see these pictures and want to do something. to find out how to help the victims, go to our world page at cnn.com/impact. hong kong is bracing for the most powerful storm in the world so far this year. strong winds and heavy rain from typhoon ysagi could make landfall tomorrow. >> let's bring in alexandra steele. how strong is this typhoon expected to be? >> you know, it was a super typhoon at one point. for us, it is like a category five hurricane with 150--mile-an-hour winds. it went from 50-mile-an-hour winds to 150-mile-an-hour winds. now we are down back to a
8:11 am
typhoon. regardless, here is where it is. it is about 900 miles wide. the thing is massive in the pacific. the maximum sustained winds are 140. gusting to 165. it is southern taiwan and northern philippines and a b-line to hong kong, believe it or not, with 7 million people. here is what we can expect. sunday, that time frame will weaken in essence and not be as strong as it is. the winds are about 120 miles an hour. it is a category three and two. flooding rains like we have seen over and over again and strong winds. certainly keeping an eye on that. the time frame is sunday. we talked about mexico and showed some video of that. what happened in mexico was really two tropical storm entities. one on the east coast. that was a hurricane ingrid. one on the west which was manuel. both coming together and
8:12 am
bringing an onslaught of moisture between 5 and 10 inches. incredible moisture moving in. you can see the pictures. roads turned to rivers. especially in acapulco. we had mudslides and landslides. the airport was closed. it was also a holiday in mexico. independence day. there were 30,000 people being impacted and stranded, essentially. 1 million impacted with this. that tropical moisture will move into the u.s. in just a bit, we will talk about where that moisture is and who gets rain. a lot of us getting rain this weekend. >> we will check back. thank you. >> sure. we had more than 100 dead in mexico. five dead in colorado, plus the town of lyons doesn't have drinking water for months. if you want to help, you can help the victims in mexico and colorado as well. it is the impact your world page. if you did not have a pen a moment ago, it is
8:13 am
cnn.com/impact. still to come on "new day," review time. we will put the new iphones under the microscope. we have been hard on blackberrys. let's talk about the iphones. does this really live up to the hype? we will check out fun videos of the fans waiting in the long lines. >> it is the town everybody loves to hate, but washington may be a big player at the emmys tomorrow night. you are watching "new day saturday" on cnn. ♪ my mantra?
8:14 am
always go the extra mile. to treat my low testosterone, i did my research. my doctor and i went with axiron, the only underarm low t treatment. axiron can restore t levels to normal in about 2 weeks in most men. axiron is not for use in women or anyone younger than 18 or men with prostate or breast cancer. women, especially those who are or who may become pregnant and children should avoid contact where axiron is applied as unexpected signs of puberty in children or changes in body hair or increased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor. tell your doctor about all medical conditions and medications.
8:15 am
serious side effects could include increased risk of prostate cancer; worsening prostate symptoms; decreased sperm count; ankle, feet or body swelling; enlarged or painful breasts; problems breathing while sleeping; and blood clots in the legs. common side effects include skin redness or irritation where applied, increased red blood cell count, headache, diarrhea, vomiting, and increase in psa. ask your doctor about the only underarm low t treatment, axiron.
8:17 am
i wonder how many people watching are just kind of waking up because they stood in line for the new iphone. they stood out in these lines for hours and hours and hours. >> some people have to stick with the blackberry, but most people out in the chill did not stop from the iphones. some fans stood in line for hours. mark is the editor in chief at
8:18 am
"laptop" magazine. mark, you have a couple of phones you can flash us your fancy one, which i understand is gold. tell us a bit. what do you think of these models? >> there is a big buzz of the new colors. the gold model is going for $1,000 on e-bay. >> wow! >> apple says it is four weeks for availableability. the big news with the iphones is what is on the inside. that actually starts with the process processor. it is the fastest processor. developers will catch up with the 64 bit architecture to develop new apps to tap into the power. what we like is the fingerprint sensor that is built beneath the screen. i can tap in on the home button
8:19 am
and it logs in. see how it logged in? i did not have to put in a password. that is one way to protect your phone from falling into the wrong hands and also to protect you from your kids buying stuff on itunes. >> yes! >> without your noticing. there is a lot of potential inside the compact device. >> so, we are hearing the good stuff about it, but is it living up to the hype? are there any drawbacks that are in the phone that you hoped would be? >> certainly the screen size is a concern. especially for people who are looking at samsung phones. those are five inches or more. apple is sticking with the four inch screen size which is good for using with one hand, but there are a lot of people that want the extra real estate for a bigger keyboard or watching movies or for entertainment. i think apple will be under pressure with the iphone 6, obviously, we can talk about that now, for coming out with a
8:20 am
bigger screen. what i do like about the new interface is all the icons and the fonts are thinner. they are trying to provide the illusion that you are using a bigger display. >> how about the camera? you took photos to compare it to the 5s. >> it has the same mega pixel count. it has the dual flash. you will get better images. our subjects were a lot more bright. there is my dog right there. that is actually with the flash off. that is a dramatic difference between the two phones. >> so, let's talk more about the company because a lot of things have changed since steve jobs' death. do you think the company, although the phones are coming out, it will be as innovative
8:21 am
and dominant under jobs' leadership? >> based on what they announced so far, i would say they are staying the course that steve jobs set for them. i think what is really interesting is how apple responds to samsung and other markets. what will they do with tv and how will they handle the wearables market? we don't know what apple is doing yet in the wearable space to compete against that and google glass. i think the jury is still out on that. so far, i would give them a "b" to a "b" plus. i am wowed by categories, but not the versions they already have. >> you do not grade on a scale. mark, thank you for being with us. editor in chief at "laptop" magazine. >> my dad bought the samsung phone. it is hold it up to your face. it is huge. >> i had one. it is big. >> it is really big. >> it is big as a clutch.
8:22 am
tv's night to shine. the stars come out this weekend. a big weekend. emmys are tomorrow. will washington's fictional politicians come out to steal the show? we will see what they can pull off. i'm kind of seeing a... some kind of... this is... an alien species. reality check: a lot of 4g lte coverage maps don't really look like much at all. i see the aleutian islands. looks like a duck. it looks like... america... ish. that's a map. that's a map of the united states. check the map. verizon's 4g lte is the most reliable, and in more places than any other 4g network. trade in your old device and trade up to america's most reliable network. i've got the good one! i got verizon! that's powerful. verizon. congestion, for the smog. but there are a lot of people that do ride the bus.
8:23 am
and now that the buses are running on natural gas, they don't throw out as much pollution into the air. so i feel good. i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. make my mark i wawith pride.ork. create moments of value. build character through quality. and earn the right to be called a classic. the lands' end no iron dress shirt. starting at 49 dollars. ♪ unh ♪ ♪ hey! ♪ ♪ let's go! ♪ [ male announcer ] you can choose to blend in. ♪ ♪ yeah! yeah! yeah! or you can choose to blend out. ♪ oh, yeah-eah! ♪
8:59 am
fine. debbie, you're my new favorite. [ male announcer ] break with tradition, take pepcid® complete. it's been that way since the day you met. but your erectile dysfunction - it could be a question of blood flow. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain,
9:00 am
as this may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess with cialis. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than 4 hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or if you have any allergic reactions such as rash, hives, swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, or difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. and a 30-tablet free trial. make my mark i wawith pride.ork. create moments of value. build character through quality. and earn the right to be called a classic. the lands' end no iron dress shirt. starting at 49 dollars.
9:02 am
good luck getting your hands on apple's newest high-end smartphone. >> the lines were long across the world and including here in miami. supplies of the iphone 5s are tight. gold, gray, silver. if you order online now, you will not get it until next mont waiting in line was not peaceful in places. in pasadena, police had to break up a fight outside the apple store. it is a phone, guys. it's a phone. two men were led away in handcuffs. you see one here. >> so much more than a phone. iphone customers may need protection to keep their prized gadgets. one company has a feature that could arguably save your fe.
9:03 am
>> dan simon are showing us how iphones are made into weapons. >> this is now issued as standard equipment. >> reporter: gadget weaponry. a staple of james bond. but this is real. an iphone with a big secret. a stun gun. it is called the yellow jacket. snap on the case and you got a serious weapon capable of delivering 650,000 volts of electricity. you switch t mode and press the button. >> missouri it protests you. >> reporter: that's not all. this case shooting pepper spray. the inventor came up with the idea for his college-bound daughter. >> she would never leave home
9:04 am
without her phone. that ishen i had the idea of combining the phone and pepper spray. >> reporter: what makes these ique is they are perfectly concealed. they look like any number of cell phone cases. since people carry their phones all the time, the weapons are with you and ready. but self defense experts stress the need for training. >> if you are formally trained, if you are taught the mind set to defend yourself correctly, if you go through repetition training, it would be effective. >> reporter: it is important to note that stun guns are not legal everywhere. but as this promotional video claims many would-be victims now have a new high-tech tool to defend themselves. dan simon, cnn, san francisco. >> dan, thank you very much. >> i'm sure se folks will buy it. blackberry.
9:05 am
once a big name in smartphones is falling on hard times. the company will report a nearly $1 billion loss in the second quarter. 4,500 workers will lose their jobs. >> we need people to go out and buy more. i need to keep them in business. still ahead on "new day," it is more than a pocketful of pennies, but this guy knew it was better to give than receive and brought smiles to the entire police department. huh...fi minutes could save fifteen pernt or more on car insurance. yep, everybody knows that. well, did you know the ancient pyramids were actually a mistake? uh-oh.
9:06 am
geico. fifteen minutes could save you...well, you know. like carpools... polly wants to know if we can pick her up. yeah, we can make room. yeah. [ male announcer ] ...office space. yes, we're loving this. [ male announcer ] the best thing to share? a data plan. at&t mobile share for business. one bucket of data for everyone on the plan, unlimited talk and text on smart phones. now, everyone's in the spirit of sharing. hey, can i borrow your boat this weekend? no. [ male announcer ] share more. save more. at&t mobile share for business. ♪
9:07 am
at&t mobile share for business. wrong turns on the road to your know yofuture. afford that's why we build tools like our career guidance system. it's kind of like gps, you know, for your career. it walks you through different degree possibilities and even lets you explore local job market conditions, helping you map a clear course from theob you want, back to you. o phoenix.edu and get started today. hearty cheeseburger. creamy thai sle chicken with rice. mexican-style chicken tortilla. if you think campbell's 26 new soups sound good, imagine how they taste. m'm! m'm! good! but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that?
9:08 am
[ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover. britta olsen is my patient. i spend long hours with her checking her heart rate, administering her medication, and just making her comfortable. one night britta told me about a tradition in denmark, "when a person dies," she said, "someone must open the window so the soul can depart." i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you, from johnson & johnson. a former drug addict and
9:09 am
convict and absent father is reaching back to help other men facing the problems he has overcome. the mission to turn deadbeat dads into responsible and loving fathers. here is this week's "cnn hero." >> i sold drugs on and off throughout my life. the tattoos, when i first got them, was war paint. i did not think about my son. i did not think about my family. they not exist. >> i have not met one man who didn't want to be a good dad. what male who has helped shape. >> we had men with no fathers in their lives and the cycle repeated. we want to change that for their children. i'm joe jones. i work to help fathers and families be responsible for themselves and children and communities. >> i was 9 years old when my dad left the house. i began using drugs at 13. i spent time in jail
9:10 am
consistently. i had a son that i wasn't responsibility for. there is no reason you cannot get out of the hole regardless of your circumstances. >> there are not many spaces where men can go that are safe and constructive and healthy. >> we recruit on the street because you have to penetrate the community. >> responsible fatherhood. that is why we built the center. >> you can make mistakes, but you can cover those mistakes. joe has allowed me to restore my dignity. >> we have six classes. >> that is one of the greatest things you can offer anyone. when you see someone and they have that pride and that light in their eye, it is relit. their potential is unlimited. they are showing their boys and girls what it means to be a man and what it means to be a dad.
9:11 am
♪ the good life ♪ ♪ the good life >> that was good. we have more good stuff for you. normally we show you surveillance video that captured something bad, but watch this. >> check out this video coming up. you will see a little boy dropping by his police station in greenfield, wisconsin. he was there to donate his own life savings, which came in pennies, nickels and dimes to police. he quickly left. you see him leaving. he did not leave a name. the cops were so touched by his gesture, they tracked him down. so, why did he do it? >> in social studies class, we learned about 9/11 and all the great things the police and fire department did. >> that's 11-year-old max siepert. he has a special place in his heart for policemen because his grandfather was killed in the line of duty back in 1974. >> for the record, the amount he
9:12 am
donated? $10.03. the officers at the greenfield p.d. says max has lifted the morale of the whole department. great story. we'll be right back. ♪ going to be a good life ♪ ♪ good, good life [ male announcer ] pepcid® presents: the burns family bbq. guys, you took tums® a couple hours ago. why keep taking it if you know your heartburn keeps coming back? that's how it works. you take some tums®. if heartburn comes back, you take some more.
9:13 am
that doesn't make any sense. it makes plenty of sense if you don't think about it! really, honey, why can't you just deal with it like everybody else? because i took a pepcid®. fine. debbie, you're my new favorite. [ male announcer ] break with tradition, take pepcid® complete. it works fast and lasts. get relief from your heartburn relief with pepcid® complete. it's hard to see opportunity in today's challenging environment. unless you have the right perspective. bny mellon wealth management has the vision and experience to look beyond the obvious. we'll uncover opportunities, find hidden risk, and make success a reality. bny mellon wealth management.
9:14 am
hey, buddy? oh, hey, flo. you want to see something cool? snapshot, from progressive. my insurance company told me not to talk to people like you. you always do what they tell you? no... try it, and see what your good driving can save you. you don't even have to switch. unless you're scared. i'm not scared, it's... you know we can still see you. no, you can't. pretty sure we can... try snapshot today -- no pressure.
9:15 am
vo:remember to changew that oil is the it on schedule toy car. keep your car healthy. show your car a little love with an oil change starting at $19.95. we have an update to the breaking news. the horrific attack on a shopping mall in nairobi, kenya. we know there are 20 dead and 50 wounded at the west gate mall. >> a senior government source
9:16 am
tells cnn a gunman started shooting and taking people hostage. >> the gunmen are believed to be of somali origin. we are just now getting new video from inside the mall. as soon as we turn that around and verify it, we will bring it to you. and thanks for watching us today. we will see you at the top the hour. >> first, a government shutdown now possiblye
191 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CNNUploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1505463184)