tv Early Start CNN September 27, 2013 5:00am-6:00am EDT
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>> mr. incredibeard, we salute you, sort of. always keeping your chin up, growing boldly where no man has gone before on the ridiclist. thanks for watching. "early start" begins right now. a major report released from the united nations. scientists find global warming has turned dangerous and it's being caused by us. i will not negotiate on anything when it comes to the credit of the united states of america. >> the president says i'm not going to negotiate. well, i'm sorry, but it just doesn't work that way. >> so will the government shut down and stop paying its bills? in no discussio-- no discussion
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negotiate. >> a lot of tough words there. a high-speed chase england with -- ending with crash. this is crazy and it was all caught on camera.-- ending with crash. this is crazy and it was all caught on camera.ending with crash. this is crazy and it was all caught on camera. news hot off the presses. latest word on climate change. united nations report just relieved in the past hour says it is extremely likely that humans are mostly to blame for temperatures that have been climbing now for decades. how sure are these scientists? they say about 95% certain and science 95% is pretty darn certain. our indra petersons is here to break this all down for us. it is a big deal. >> that is the huge takeaway what you just said. this is the intergovernment panel on climate change is saying they are 95% certain that
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humans have caused most of the warming since 1950. let's put this in perspective. where was the stance previous? there have been previous reports here. in 2007, it was 90% so we definitely made headway here but look at that jump when you talk about from just 2001 where they were only 66% sure. now, we always know, most people have that basic understanding a lot of carbon relieved in the environment and with that, temperatures are on the rise. what is so key in this particular report? we will hear a lot of talk about something called the pause. notice, since 1950, we .22. since '91 we have seen a slower rate in that rate. if we are the huge cause, people are saying why are we slowing that rate down? they are saying you need to look at this big picture here. previous times within this general trend we have seen a
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slow down and each a decrease but you have to pay attention to the big picture and what the ipcc wants to say to you. regardless that trend is still up that we are continuing to warm. now a lot of people are saying what is this going? what is going on? one of the biggest controversies is if you are taking this model and you're going for it and you're saying what is going to happen in the future? you should be able to take that same weather model and go backwards 15 years and say the result is what we have today. this is the conflict. we can't do that for the last 15 years. we are not getting that result currently. that is a big controversy. the skeptics on the other side of that are saying it was an el nino year. temperatures were warmer back in the day. with that the atmosphere wasn't able to hold the warmth. it was warm in 1998. since then, it is cooler so the ocean can absorb the heat and why we are slowing down. doesn't have to do can cachon emissions but we are absorbing some of that in the ocean. >> a long-term trend there pointing to one that is
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potentially dangerous and saying that humans are largely to blame for it. in theory, human action could slow it down. >> higher temperatures and higher temperatures during the day and overnight and sandy occurring more often is the big picture they want you to see. >> i thought interesting a group of 800 scientists are that are holed up trying to figure out the right wording on this before they actually relieved that. >> they are going to get slammed. it is very political, no matter what. >> thank you, indra. shutdown showdown in congress. three days from a government shutdown. today the senate will vote to end debate on a bill funding the government temporarily and then go back to the house with the clock continuing to tick and as cnn's jim acosta tells us, it's not the only looming deadline that threatens the nation's fragile economy. >> reporter: three days and counting and no controversy in sight that would avert a shutdown. behind, that the nation could
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go into default ruffoughly two weeks later unless congress raises the debt ceiling. republicans say they will proof an increase in the debt limit only if the president delays obamacare by a year. and more budget cuts. but president obama says he won't negotiate over the debt ceiling. >> to suggest america not pay its bills, just to try to blackmail a president into giving them some concessions on issues that have nothing to do with the budget. i mean, this is the united states of america. we are not a dead beat nation. >> reporter: the white house is ratcheting up the rhetoric and accusing some republicans acting like terrorists. >> we are for cutting spending and -- what we are not for is obama strapped to their chest. >> american people! this is the gop. we have your economy!
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>> reporter: the democratic party is echoing that message releasing this fake debt ceiling ransom call from the gop. >> clock is ticking. we hope you don't make us do this! >> reporter: republicans say that kind of talk is an outrage. >> it's completely unrealistic for the president to say that we are not going to negotiate over the debt ceiling, that he thinks somehow that we should just be giving him another blank check to continue these record deficits? >> reporter: gop leaders point to new polls showing americans want the president to negotiate trading budget cuts for an increase to the debt ceiling. >> the president says i'm not going to negotiate. well, i'm sorry, but it just doesn't work that way. >> we call on the president now to sit down with us! harry reid to sit down with us! let's solve the problem! >> reporter: jim acosta, cnn, the white house. >> of the got ficials say small and spanish language insurance enrollment services will not
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begin as planned on october 1st. these folks will not be able to enroll online until november. instead they have to use old-fashioned faxes or paper forms in the mail. this, of course, is designed to get as many on the health rolls as possible but it adds the delay of a clunky fallout. at the united nations, agreement among the major players on a security council resolution on syria. it would impose legally finding obligations on the syrian government to eliminate chemical weapons. a state department official called it breakthrough through hard-fought diplomacy. the official says the syrian resolution makes it clear there will be consequences if the assad regime fails to comply. secretary of state john kerry is expressive optimism.
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the secretary of state called the first productive, but said there is a lot of work to be done. he praised iran's new tone in discussing its nuclear program. they will meet again next month. surprising targets of a secret nsa surveillance program dating back to the vietnam war. the document shows the government had 1,600 war cricket on a watch list including martin luther king and muhammad ali. the program was created in 1967 at the request of them present lyndon johnson and it was shut down in 1973. the current head of the nsa is defending the agency at a instant intelligence committee hearing. this is the first public forum since edward snowden's revelations began. keith alexander said sensational headlines have fooled the public into believing the agency invades americans' privacy. he suggested the stone leaks
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have led the nsa to change the way it operates. stunning police dash cam video to show you out of florida. a crash during the a really high-speed chase. police were pursuing a fleeing dui suspect who was going over a hundred miles an hour when he crashed another into the car and went careening across the road right toward an oncoming police cruiser. the car caught fire with the passenger trapped inside. police sprung into action. >> over here! >> he's inside? >> yeah. >> try to get him out. get the fire extinguisher. >> four people were injured in that crash. the driver james maddox is facing a slew of felony charges as you might expect and police say he has also been involved in other similar crashes. >> it's crazy. >> yes, it is. we have a little programming note for you. do you like us?
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do you enjoy us in the morning? beginning monday, we will be working an extra hour! just for you right here on "early start" so you can join us from 4:00 a.m. to 6:00 a.m. >> change your plans! set the alarm earlier! hopefully, we will remember to do the same. a big issue right there. >> i have a really obnoxious annoying alarm that is going off on monday. >> it's going to be great. tweet us and tell us what you want to do. we have this whole extra hour. right now we will improv the whole thing so tell us what you want to see and we will deliver. promise. 10 minutes after the hour. coming up searching for the terrorists who massacred the mall in kenya. why a british woman has become the center of this investigation. i'm not going to let my son die in vain. i'm going to make sure the parents know, the kids know. >> oh, boy. a teenage boy dies playing a
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dangerous high thrilled game. the warning that his parents want you to hear. that is coming up next. mom, dad told me that cheerios is good for your heart, is that true? says here that cheerios has whole grain oats that can help remove some cholesterol, and that's heart healthy. ♪ [ dad ] jan? bjorn earns unlimited rewards for his small business. take these bags to room 12 please. [ garth ] bjorn's small business earns double miles on every purchase every day. produce delivery. [ bjorn ] just put it on my spark card. [ garth ] why settle for less? ahh, oh! [ garth ] great businesses deserve unlimited rewards. here's your wake up call. [ male announcer ] get the spark business card from capital one and earn unlimited rewards.
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and graduate at the speed of you. flexpath from capella university learn more at capella.edu welcome back to "early start." authorities in kenya have a man suspected of taking part in the mall massacre in custody. they say he was trying to take off with one of the shoppers evacuating that mall and found out when machine gun ammunition fell out of his pockets. in the meantime, the fbi in sin nairobi shifting with this ongoing investigation. there is growing concern that some of the perpetrators were able to escape alongside all of the fleeing victims. at least 67 people died in the attack by al shabaab terrorists and dozens more still unaccounted for at this hour and there is speculation one of the mall tackeattackers was a briti national dubbed the white widow.
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>> reporter: she is photographed as a british school school with a innocent smile and called the white widow is believed to be a committed jihadist and a red notice to track her down at the request of kenyan authorities who have presented no evidence she may have been involved in the nairobi mall attack. >> al shabaab, the twitter group on a twitter handle which appears to belong to them have denied that any women were involved in this attack. >> reporter: but a senior kenyan official says a woman was there. and kenyan leaders clearly believe samantha lewthwaite has bad intentions. she was born in england and had by all accounts a normal, even innocent upbringing. as a teenager she married germane lindsay and was married to him when he blew himself up in the london bus and train attacks that killed more than 50 people. it's not clear if that event radicalized her. she initially condemned those
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bonks. >> subsequently, she thought to travel to east africa and connected with militants linked to the group al shabaab. >> reporter: authorities say lewthwaite has raised money and run low gistics for terrorists cells. in 2011 kenyan authorities raided three homes in mum bass is a. they found similar bomb making materials to those used in the london bombings. they arrested people for plotting to bomb tourist areas but were too late to capture samantha lewthwaite. do those add up to the westgate mall massacre? pete bergen doesn't think so. >> they are real massagists. they believe that women should be at home in a body veil. >> reporter: but samantha lewthwaite wouldn't be the first western woman involved in a
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well-known terrorist plot. in 2005, a belgian blew herself up and injured a u.s. soldier in a suicide bombing in iraq. in 2011, colleen larose from pennsylvania who called herself jihad jane pleaded guilty for killing a cartoonist who drew an image of a jihadist. brian todd, cnn, reporting. 11 days since the former reservist aaron alexis opened fire inside building 197 in the washington naval yard. they are interacted with 6,000 workers at the site. a special trauma team from virginia has been deployed to the facility in case anyone needs to talk. guilty plea from the owners of a colorado cantaloupe farm that was linked to killing 3 people of outbreak of listeria.
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jensen brothers were charged get and charged with six counts of bringing adult rated food into the commerce. they are face up to 1 million dollars in fine and they go on trial in december. a florida family dealing with unimaginable grief after the death of their son eddie who was found hanging in his closet at home. his parents say he didn't commit suicide. he was playing a secret and dangerous game involving autoerotic asphyxiation. >> there is this thing called a thrill hanging where, you know, kids get, i guess a high off of not having enough oxygen. this is something that people don't want to talk about and when it happens to you, you know, you feel sad, you feel ashamed, you feel angry.
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>> his father says he is angry that he didn't know about this and he couldn't warn his son about the deadly risks. now you, obviously, wants to get that message out. >> that is very brave of him to talk about that. very brave. a government shutdown just days away. this will have a lot of effect on you and your wallet. christine romans will break down what it all means. "money time" is coming up next. brand is so effective... e so trusted... so clinically proven dermatologists recommend it twice as much as any other brand? neutrogena. recommended by dermatologists 2 times more than any other brand. now that's beautiful. neutrogena®. ♪ neutrogena®.
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yeah, dance money time! >> you know what? why doesn't christine dance? >> maybe tomorrow. oh, tomorrow is saturday! >> welcome back to "early start." >> monday, i'll hold you to it. we have to talk money. >> i'm going to go a shutdown dance on monday and debt ceiling dance and it's going to be ugly. >> slam dancing. >> preparations are under way. i hate to laugh about it because it is is so serious but this affects everyone. federal furlough notices going out the next 24 to 36 hours. if you're a federal employee you could get a furlough notice. the government must prepare for the shutdown next week. many offices and federal offices would be shut down if congress doesn't get its act together. national parks are closed. thousands of people could see their federal projects stalled. parts of the government that
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provide critical services remain open. air traffic control stays open and border protection and maintains of the power grid and disaster assistance and anything essential to the banking system stays open. the government would still issue bonds. yes, you still need to pay your taxes so all of that still goes out and that is critical, essential kinds of economic functioning in a shutdown. the postal service would deliver mail. the government would pay out medicare and social security. implementation of obamacare is going forward. if the government shuts down, the obamacare goes forward. the members of congress would get their paycheck but many staff members would not and furlough workers are paid after the government starts up again. it's not guaranteed. >> not something you budget for. >> and it's not guarantee. >> what is the bad news? >> it runs up against something
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called the exstate. the bank accounts of treasury run out of money. that is october 17th. unless we borrow more money and only congress can approve that the u.s. will not have enough money to pay its bills. >> this is coming earlier than thought? >> october 1st. here are the bills. we have to pay $42 to medicare and military and october 3rd, $25 billion for social security. october 31st, $6 billion on treasury securities. you have to pay your bankers. you have to pay your lenders. if we run out of money on october 17th, the x-state, a risk we won't be able to do that. no more money for medicaid and medicare and social security. that puts the full credit of the united states in jeopardy and send interest rates sharply higher and stocks sharply lower.
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super, super ugly. look. the treasury department does not want to be in that position. some republicans have said they are priorize their bills and pay some and don't pay others. what are you going to do? you say we are going to pay china and not pay seniors? we will pay the military, not seniors and pay china. you can't do that. that is ridiculous. it just causes all kind of unrest. so the white house says it's not even entertaining this idea. some people in congress say they can priorize the bills. the white house says in. >> what progress is being made? >> zero. >> one last point. if there is a shutdown, you will get your social security check. main street might not feel something right away, federal workers would. if we don't raise the debt ceiling you would not get a social security check and main street would feel it immediately but by then it's too late. by then you've defaulted on your obligations and sent a signal to the world that the u.s. is a big mess. >> it will have years of impact.
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breaking overnight. a new revealing troubling new findings go global warming. why scientists say you should be concerned. our indra petersons breaks it all down. five months of emotional testimony comes to a close. the case in the hands of the jury. the question -- who is responsible for michael jackson's death? sort of running for high
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office, ever thought of that? >> uh-huh. could there be another clinton with her eye on the white house? chelsea clinton on the record about her possible ambitions for political office. >> that is one smart cookie. i was watching her interview and her mannerisms are so much like her mom. >> she has been in the public eye now over 20 years. she knows how to handle it. >> that's right. welcome back to "early start." i'm zoraida sambolin. >> john berman. a new u.n. report on clim change came out overnight and it presents the strongest evidence yet that human activities are largely to blame for the warming of the planet. the panel scientists peg it to a 95% certainty. the report is a first issued in six years by the u.n.'s intergovernmental panel on climate change. our indra petersons is breaking it all down for us. what ask sd it say? >> the big find, the number right there. 95% sure. they are confident now that
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humans are playing a huge role in climate change. not to say it's occurring but that humans are plalg that role and that has gone up since 2007 where it was 90%. look at this jump from 2001 where it's only 66%. so that confidence is growing amongst this group. so who is this group? 250 authors from 39 countries and part of the u.n. here. have you a thousand experts in all of these different fields nominated by each other. scientists nominating each other and a big group of expert scientists and then you take this report and it's analyzed line by line from politicians around the world so they can understand that and make this information effective in their policy making going forward. that is the purpose behind the report. we know what to do with the information. now, the big thing, i think, most people know when we talk about climate change is carbon e me emissions that have steadily been going up.
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about 22 degrees since the 1950s, about a degree selsiocel. why does that matter? if it's warmer, then the ocean expands. think about sandy and the role this played. here is the spectrum. if you have carbon emissions continuing on this high spectrum, by 2100, you would be talking about an extra three feet of that water being higher. now people start to reduce their emissions we could see that below a foot. if we stopped emitti inting car right now, the emissions are already there. if it's warm and the greenland ice sheet melts you have more water in the first place. this number could go up to 20 feet. that makes a huge difference in planning going forward. >> three feet is devastating and 20 feet is unimageable. >> scary information. how do you affect the change is the question.
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thank you, indra. talking about scary and nothing to do about it. three days before a shutdown. it strips out language in the house passed version which would defund obamacare. that sends it back to the house where lawmakers might try to beat the shutdown deadline. that is not the only issue that congress and the white house are facing. there is also the potential for a default without raising the debt ceiling. it's a separate issue from the government shutdown. republicans say they will raise the debt ceiling under certain conditions. the president says he is not going to play that game. >> to suggest america not pay its bills, just to try to blackmail a president into giving them some concessions on issues that have nothing to do with the budget. i mean, this is the united states of america.
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we are not a deadbeat nation. >> the president says, "i'm not going to negotiate." i'm sorry, it doesn't work that way. >> we ask for the president to sit down with us, harry reid, sit down with us and let's solve the problem! >> republican leaders point to new polls suggesting they want the president to actually negotiate on the issue of the debt ceiling. >> after five months of testimony, jurors in the michael jackson wrongful death trial are now actually deliberating that case. singer's family is suing concert promoter aeg live for billions of dollars. they are claiming the company that promoted jackson's comeback concert is liable for h death as well. here is casey wian. ♪ >> reporter: michael jackson never got the chance to perform what was supposed to be his ultimate comeback tour in 2009. he died of an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol.
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dr. murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sent to prison. a different jury is deciding if aeg live must pay potentially billions of dollars to jackson's heirs because they claim the company negligently hired murray. >> michael jackson died because a physician, who had agreed to accept $150,000 a month, violated his ultimate hypocritic oath and he was placed in that conflict of interest by aeg and no question about that in this case. >> reporter: aeg live says murray qa never its imply and he was entirely controlled by mike jackson. >> they were worried about his propofol use in the 90s. this is in complete contradiction for plaintiffs have claimed which is this idea this was a sudden new thing in michael's life that happened for the first time with dr. conrad murray. >> reporter: for five months, the jury heard system from jackson's 83-year-old mother
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katherine, his ex-wife debbie rowe and paris jackson survived a suicide attempt during the trial and other dramatic moments was playing jackson home movies never seen before publicly and the testimony of a harvard doctor who said a physically deteriorating jackson did not get sleep for 60 straight days while receiving propofol in dr. murray. casey wian, cnn, los angeles. a fight between fans of rival baseball teams turns deadly in california. jonathan denver was wearing los angeles gear as he walked with family and friends near the san francisco giants ballpark. they encountered a group of giants fans leaving a nightclub. an argument ensued and it turned physical and denver was stabbed to death. one man has been arrested. police are looking for two more. >> just a tragedy and we have to
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stop! we have to stop and understand this is america's pastime. it's a great game. >> that is insane. sadly not the first time the dodgers/giants rivalry has turned brilliant. brian stowe a giants fan was attacked two years ago in los angeles after a game. he is still recovering from his injuries. >> unnecessary and unacceptable. 38 minutes after the hour. mother of a 14-year-old rape victim says the former montana teacher who served just 30 days for the crime is still skating justice. stacey rambold was relieved from jail thursday. he wanted no part of questions from cnn as he checked in with his parole officer. he later left. the mountain judge who issued the sentence is the target of protesters who want him removed from the bench and say they want to make sure something like this never happens again. >> i think -- i think as long as we know that it's happening, we can acknowledge it and we can do something to change it.
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>> prosecutors of appeal stacey rambold's sentence is now a registered sex offenderer. all passengers safe and sound after a flight from houston to seattle had to be diverted. why? the pilot had a heart attack. united flight 1603 landed in boise, idaho, last night. the pilot was taken to a local hospital. 161 passengers and six crew members were reboarded and flown to seattle. i hope that pilot is doing well this morning. >> yes. video out of boston. you have to see this. three people jumped into action to rescue a man who had tumbled onto the subway tracks. you can see -- you could have seen before the man walk off the edge of the platform and lying on the tracks before the people jump in there to help. really brave people. a spokesman for the mass transit authority say the trains were stopped at the time so the man was never in danger of being struck but who knows if those people knew that. >> the guy with the baseball cap came all the way from the other
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side in order to help. >> a lot of people there to go the right thing, helping out. as you said, from far away in that case. >> that is fantastic. nice to see that. the federal government investing in a motown comeback? top white officials are heading to detroit to propose 300 million dollars in combined federal and private aid. the first infusion would reportedly be used to clear and redevelop runned down properties and improve transportation and boost the police department. about two months ago, detroit came the largest city ever to file for bankruptcy. hillary clinton may be on the fence about running. maybe not. that may be an exaggeration. over time, he says his daughter would make an even better chief said president clinton. is chelsea independence in following had her parents'
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footsteps? she played a bit coy talking to piers morgan. >> are you thought about running for office? >> i've black and bleen asked t times. >> what is the truthful answer? >> the truthful answer is the truthful answer. i'm deeply grateful for my life. i love doing this work. >> some brilliant politicians out there. this is why you'd be so perfect. you talk an entire minute without referring to remotely yes or no. >> the answer is i don't know. and that is the honest answer because, right now, i am grateful for my life. >> that a cnn interview last month. chelsea said she was open to the idea someday if she didn't like how her city, state, or country was being run. talk about your catch of the day. check this out.
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a team of alligator hunters in lakeland, florida, are celebrating their giant catch. a 12-foot gator that was double the weight of them and the boat combined! >> two people, 565-pound alligator. no way we could get him in the boat. he sat on the bottom. 20 feet deep. it's a big time rush. i think that what is what keeps us going back every year. >> good gracious. every week we have a new record with a gator. good thing the gator is not alive. did you see the little baby touching the gator? you wouldn't even if it was dead, would you? look at you. >> i have wrestled an@alligator. >> four guys caught their own gator in lake seminole, georgia. 13 feet, 10 and three-quarter inches long and it took all four to hold it up. >> big alligator. we have been doing a lot of these alligator stories. a lot of people say this is not fun for the alligators.
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they point out. just sayin' okay. >> the big alligators don't like this one bit. >> thank you for sharing that perspective. >> that perspective is out there. coming up. >> might look a little bit different but they all want to do the same thing. they you will want to be accepted for who they are. >> controversy sparked when a high school tells a 16-year-old cheerleader with downs syndrome to take a seat. ♪ [ jen garner ] what skincare brand is so effective... so trusted... so clinically proven dermatologists recommend it twice as much as any other brand? neutrogena®. recommended by dermatologists 2 times more than any other brand. now that's beautiful. neutrogena®. ♪
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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. different but they all want to parents of a 15-year-old who have down syndrome say cheerleadering is her favorite thing to do. she was made an honorary member of her texas high school squad but now school administrators say brittany can no longer cheer because of a legal issue. >> she cheered last week at the volleyball games and yesterday we went and it was a different
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coach and she can't do it because it's a liability. if the volleyball is going to fly off of the court and hit somebody, it's just as likely to hit somebody else as it is to hit her. >> to hit her because she has down syndrome? brittany is still practicing with the squad while the texas school district and the family try to work out some sort of solution here. >> i think there was hob a way to work something out there. >> absolutely. >> the team likes having her and she likes doing it and it adds cheer into the stands which is what it's designed to do in the first place. >> it is inclusive when is the right thing to do. let's take a look what is coming up on "new day." kate bolduan and chris cuomo join us now. >> happy friday. >> global warming. >> yes. >> new report out from the u.n., no joke. and we are to blame. that is really the headline out of this. now, here is why it's even more interesting what we are going to talk about this morning because it also is looking at the consequences that could be coming. you may think, oh, yeah, for the west coast, right? no. the east coast. some really dire predictions.
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we will take you through it. we have a story about a woman sent to 20 years in prison. we talked about this before. she was sentenced for firing a warning shot to scare her allegedly abusive husband. she is getting a new trial now and she made headlines, of course, after the george zimmerman case because she had unsuccessfully tried to use a stand your ground defense. we are going to talk with her attorney live about this new chance that she has for freedom. her case has made a lot of headlines and a lot of people caring about the outcome. >> guys, can't wait to see your show coming up. those are for the late sleepers out there. for those who like to get up very early, do we have something special for you! >> more berman! >> whole extra hour of me! brace yourself, folks. zoraida will be here too. "early start" will be starting at 4:00 a.m. next week! >> do what i did already. set your alarm clock an hour earlier with a really annoying obnoxious buzzing sound and
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hopefully berman will to the same thing. >> i thought annoying and obnoxious and i thought you were going to say my voice. look, we are starting at 4:00. i encourage you to watch. it will be the best 4:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. hour you have ever spent awake. >> we may actually call you. >> yes. coming up, injuries, scandals, and poor performance on the field. the new york yankees, yeah, it's been a really rough season for them. they delivered another big blow that could send another player. andy scholes explains the more problems for the yankees. that is in "the bleacher report" that is coming up. maxwell is not. he's on geico.com setting up an appointment with an adjuster. ted is now on hold with his insurance company. maxwell is not and just confirmed a 5:30 time for tuesday. ted, is still waiting. yes! maxwell is out and about...
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with ted's now ex-girlfriend. wheeeee! whoo! later ted! online claims appointments. just a click away on geico.com. from capital one... boris earns unlimited rewards for his small business. can i get the smith contract, please? thank you. that's three new paper shredders. [ boris ] put 'em on my spark card. [ garth ] boris' small business earns 2% cash back on every purchase every day. great businesses deserve unlimited rewards. read back the chicken's testimony, please. "buk, buk, bukka!" [ male announcer ] get the spark business card from capital one and earn unlimited rewards. choose 2% cash back or double miles on every purchase every day. told you i'd get half. what's in your wallet? you work. and you want to get an mba. but going back to school is hard... because you work. now, capella university offers a revolutionary new way to get your degree. it's called flexpath and it's the most direct path, leveraging what you've learned on the job and focusing on what you need to know so you can get a degree at your pace.
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his was genuinely touching. andy scholes joins us now with the bleacher report. >> whether you're a yankees fan or not, watch rivera bid farewell to the bronx last night got the waterworks going. he entered the game in the eighth inning and after retiring four straight batters andy pettic and joe girardi came to get him one last time. rivera was falling after he embraced pettine and jeter. there wasn't a dry out in the house when he made his fenel walk towards the yankees dugout. bud selig will resign as the major league baseball commissioner. from the canceled world series to the steroids scandal but has things tho hang his hat on like the wild card play. selig will be 80 when he steps
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down in 2015. looks like the 49ers may have shaken off their super bowl hangover. colin kaepernick had two touchdown last night. frank gore racked up 150 yards on the ground. niners crushed the rams 35-11 and even their record at 2-2 on the season. on bleacherreport.com is what robinson cano is seeking this off-season in free agency. according to reports, cano wants a ten-year deal worth more than $300 million! >> that is ridiculous. >> guys, that would be the richest contract in sports and to put it in perspective, red sox dustin pedroia has the richest deal for $8 million in ten years and would be a bargain if cano gets $300 million. >> about, what? 150 million apart right now in negotiating? that is a big, big chasm right
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there. >> zoraida is going for a 300 million contract for something. >> i can't wrap my brain around that concept. >> three million in ten years! >> andy scholes, thanks very much. we will be right back. ...amelia... neil and buzz: 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. 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™.
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ahh, oh! [ garth ] great businesses deserve unlimited rewards. here's your wake up call. [ male announcer ] get the spark business card from capital one and earn unlimited rewards. choose double miles or 2% cash back on every purchase every day. what's in your wallet? [ crows ] now where's the snooze button?
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weekend, guys. >> you too. see you in a little bit. tgif. it's time for "new day" to begin. it's hot in here! a new report on climate change shows humans mostly to blame for global warming and the coming changes could be catastrophic. the details ahead. a breakthrough deal. the u.n. security council could vote today on a draft plan to secure and eliminate syria's chemical weapons but can syria be trusted to stand by it? high speed crash. a car going over a hundred miles per hour almost slams into a police cruiser. we will tell you what sparked that breakthrough chase and what happened next >> announcer: your "new day" starts right now. this isne
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