2020: The Year Of Climate Extremes | Nightly News Films

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the catastrophic situation is playing out in australia smoke visible from space a new year's eve crisis going into 2020 people are telling us this is the worst they've ever seen if fires have burned more intensely more ferociously they seem to have a mind of their own satellite imagery is showing that arctic sea ice is at its lowest levels on record in northern siberia it hit 100.4 degrees we are looking right now at the all-time record heat for the month of june a catastrophic category 4 hurricane bearing down in the u.s we could be looking at a majority of the surrounding communities flooded with upwards of 9 to 20 feet of water the two largest wildfires in colorado history are burning dangerously close just miles apart on the heels of what has been a historic and deadly wildfire season the winds standing these flames are expected to last another 24 hours friends homes are on fire and you're watching it with your eyes and it is officially the busiest hurricane season ever on record and the few people we met who chose to stay behind here they stayed behind because they're simply overwhelmed they're tired of running just no rest in this record year for the hurricane battered gulf coast more storms heavier rain our climate is changing [Music] this is new york harbor it's the southern tip of manhattan and you can see behind me the statue of liberty the verrazano narrows bridge and just beyond that the atlantic ocean change is underway here in fact just beneath my feet battery park city is undergoing a massive resiliency project when construction is done in 2024 the park in front of me just here will sit eight to nine feet higher than it is right now that's nearly a full story that project and others stretching all along this harbor hope to guard against a certain future there will be conditions that rival what new york experienced during super storm sandy in 2012 when a record storm tide of 14 feet breached the sea wall and inundated lower manhattan what we do know is that the atlantic ocean out there is rising and the water level here in the harbor is rising right along with it all around us are signs that our climate is changing and perhaps that was never clearer than in 2020 records were shattered again and again a reminder that we are now in uncharted territory the atlantic unleashed more major storms this year than ever before five of the six largest wildfires in california's history happened just this year alone and for planet earth the past six years are the warmest years ever measured by humans the reporters here at nbc news and nbc's climate unit spent the past year documenting these extreme events this crisis of our changing climate will be and already is the story of our time we want to show you from our view what it's like to cover that story we're going to introduce you to the people we've met on this journey including the immediate victims and the first responders you'll meet scientists on the front lines battling extreme conditions to understand the earth's future and the communities navigating through a new greener course it is hard to wrap your head around the magnitude of wildfires that burned in 2020 here in america alone fires consumed more than 5 million acres of land that's larger than the entire state of new jersey now whether it's wildfires here in north and south america or australia or the arctic we are seeing the effects of climate change hotter temperatures combined with less rain and snowfall are turning forests into prime tinder as a result fires are starting more frequently burning more intensely and over a much larger area the fire season in australia was unprecedented millions of acres left blackened bare homes destroyed an area roughly the size of iowa just incinerated everything looks so parched and dry we traveled along the coast when inland drove hours out of the way to find roads that didn't cross into high-risk fire zones the direction of the wind steers the fire we talked with firefighters working the front lines farmers struggling to survive the drought that had turned parched land into fire fuel there were fire tornadoes and sometimes the sky would turn this blood red color and the sun would disappear ash would fall from the sky becoming very hard to breathe it was dark were you scared um yeah it was a little bit scary and everyone told us the same thing that it was unlike anything they had seen before is it climate change yes i think there's no doubt if we don't act this is what other parts of the world beyond australia might expect to see in the future hello little one bird it's a little girl hello hi smoke inhalation must be a huge concern yes it is like the rest of the world i was really struck and saddened by how it was impacting wildlife the fires didn't discriminate kangaroos wombats wallabies species of birds other marsupials and of course koalas i couldn't wrap my head around this idea that maybe kids were going to grow up in a world without koalas that so much wildlife a billion animals was one estimate and it was considered conservative a billion animals just erased is there any way to describe for people the kind of toll that this is taking on habitats on animals is there any way to describe it if you walk into a into a forest environment anywhere in eastern australia usually it's it's full of sound and color movement if you walk into one after a fire it's like walking into uh into a silent dark room we were hearing a lot about the devastation on kangaroo island it's off the southern coast and it's famous for being this noah's ark of creatures some of them i hadn't heard of before like the glossy black cockatoo the dunnert and a booming population of healthy koalas until this so they found an injured one yes receiving just after we arrived on the island we happened to meet jim gettys he owns a wildlife sanctuary at hanson's bay and he invited us out when volunteers were helping him the army was there and veterinarians from other parts of australia and their priority was literally to find koalas so we went treat a tree right hang on i'll help okay all right let go little one all right they were burned and in shock and because so much of their habitat was destroyed they were just lost it's on such a big scale like this um it means that these these poor animals you know you look around you where can they go where's the nearest green tree there isn't anything so there's there's no food this way and there's no food this way there's no food this way what are they gonna do you know i think there's only one jim told me at the time he had about a hundred koalas on the property a third didn't make it all of the leaves on this tree are dead so he has no food he has a limited very very limited amount of food in that tree we took a drive around he has about 5 000 acres and the concern was that the fires could drive some species on the island into extinction what are your worries first worry is rain second worry is biodiversity the island is about seventeen hundred square miles more than half of it was a smoldering wasteland it's hard to grasp the scale of the destruction here now a year later it seems the island species are surviving and the koala population at jim's place is actually thriving how are you doing it's been a while since i've seen you well look it's been a really uh uh interesting year in australia they talk about koala diplomacy where everyone from taylor swift of vladimir putin has when they visit they get to hold a koala and have their photo taken me too when uh um the fire impacted them then um that's really what um got the world's attention so what lessons do you think were learned if any going forward the fires are going to be more like this one and it's not going to be a one in 200 year event it's going to be a one in 20 or something like that that that's what keeps me awake at night about 25 000 koalas were killed on kangaroo island alone so you can see how painful it is doesn't like that he's been heavily sedated and he's still flinching some of the koalas that were treated for burns are being released into the wild again and because australia's borders are closed during the pandemic the island is getting a lot of domestic tourism so that's a good thing more water wow but recovery is still slow surviving the fires was never a guarantee that any of the wildlife was in the clear they say that last year was australia's hottest year on record a long drought is hitting farmers hard if that trend continues wildfires really intense ones may be the new norm the devastation in australia was seen as this big warning sign to the rest of the world so for me it felt important to see it and to smell it and to show it and then three days after i left australia i was in wuhan china to report on a mystery virus so for me it's been a long year of realizing how nature can strike back when i look back at 2020 it's been a year of enormous disaster a year of unprecedented wildfires out west that seem to only be getting worse right now we're in the town of igo i've spent the majority of my career covering fires and know firsthand how devastating they can be this is what firefighters are facing right now incredibly hot temperatures and so they have to bring in an aerial assault to try to take out the plane what used to happen only a few times a year is now happening year round home after home all gone i'll go i wanted to go back to a place that experienced the worst loss from a fire i had ever seen you can still see the burn scars everywhere you can see the trees burned everywhere the town of paradise california nearly wiped off the map by 2018's campfire [Music] you can't drive through here and not feel it this whole town was gone so this is ridgewood which was a trailer park that was almost as if you're standing in a war zone this is so much of what california now looks like in the wake of one of these devastating fires a blank slate rows of empty plots that once held generations of memories now all gone every year since i've been a correspondent somebody has told me this has to be the worst year ever for fire every single year it started my first year on the job so what we have right now is a hot spot a flare up just over this ridge line it was uh my first time just seeing like rows of burn grass but really that's all it was i have no frame of reference for how bad fires could get uh but i would soon find out so 2017 is when these fires started taking a life of their own the level of destruction that they started to bring was unlike things that people had seen in a normal fire season this is what firefighters are dealing with these heavy winds as firefighters stay actively engaged trying to protect homes in areas just like this one i've got hell on earth behind me later that year when the tubbs fire ripped through santa rosa a major city in northern california i couldn't believe the speed in which it traveled that's the first time i really remember setting foot on a place that was completely blackened and looking around where there should be homes and there's nothing but piles of rubble and i remember the smoke in the air i remember just the way i felt that you know it's just unlike anything i'd ever experienced we left two hours before the house burned down we met jennifer and paul roger who scrambled their family to a nearby shelter and watched as the flames consumed their family home oh look they've since rebuilt but continue to worry that with every new fire they could lose their home again what's it like to have a suitcase packed because you are every year more than once a year you are afraid that this fire could blow up at any time it's horrible i can't believe that we're living like this it makes us feel very trapped it makes you feel like there's nowhere to go and that is not a good feeling and just a year later in paradise the unimaginable a town of 27 000 destroyed in just a matter of minutes it's big it is moving he said rapid radar spread we have got to get out of here 85 dead this is what's left in the wake of terrified residents trying to escape a site we've seen all over town cars discarded along the side of the road as so many became trapped and some were burned alive for weeks people were desperate to find their loved ones and i remember specifically that one story there's a woman named tammy kanicki and she drove i think it was from ohio to find her mother so these names are names of your family that you found and up here as well and the only one that's not is the one that's circled which is your mother sheila santos we want to say that name yes um what is your hope at this point where do you think she is i don't know we hope she's safe days later we learned that tammy's mom had died so this is the elementary school i remember there was a woman standing just overlooking everything with this look in a ride that was paradise school superintendent michelle john standing over what was left of the town's elementary school there's no way i would be able to talk to her if i hadn't comforted her in some way and we just we just had this incredible hug and i felt like she needed that at that point but that was true of the whole town it's like a whole town needed a hug [Music] hi guys i recently reconnected with tiffany and leif cornwell and their three kids when we first met they were living in a trailer after their home was destroyed today like so many they've become what some have called climate refugees moving away now enjoying their new life in texas what's the best part about taxes a lot more peaceful i think we made the right choice coming out here and moving forward with our lives joining us now is nbc news correspondent steve patterson in sydney valley steve that's crazy but then in 2019 the march of flames kept pace again spilling into a major city visibility is extremely poor and one thing that does not translate again are these extreme red flag winds a strong wind-driven fire threatened reagan national library outside los angeles i remember the moment a giant tanker dumped retarding directly on top of us another sign that the wildfires were now everywhere you can see from the air they're dropping right now i'm covered after a giant tanker dropped on us earlier trying to douse these flames 2019 was bad 2020 i mean you think you've seen the worst fires of all time and then 2020 happens tonight much of the west coast is smothered in a blanket of smoke and misery 4.2 million acres have burned in california this year alone colorado and oregon also saw record fires burning unlike anything we've ever seen before in these incredibly wide areas burning into urban areas burning into rural areas burning up side hillside areas i think this was the first year where people really woke up to the fact that fire can happen to anyone and not just the flames burning down your home but the choking smoke can envelop your entire city i remember those amber pictures of san francisco so i think what that did is that exposed a lot of people to the fact that these fires are fueled mostly by climate change if the fires are this bad now what does it look like uh in five ten years yeah climate change is moving fast and we need to move faster so instead of smoky bear in the middle of the woods you need a smoky bear in the middle of suburbia i mean if there is one truth about covering a fire is that something always grows back after there always is something to come of that hope always sprouts from the ashes it sounds corny but it's true [Music] climate change does not cause more hurricanes the correlation just isn't that simple but what we do know is that the changes to our climate makes these storms more powerful and more devastating for the communities they target warming ocean waters play a central role in that and the damage is compounded by rising sea levels we're seeing storms with higher wind speeds packing greater amounts of rainfall intensifying rapidly and moving more slowly in some cases seeming to actually park over a coastal city these factors all played a role in a storm season this year that was unlike any before it [Music] [Music] [Applause] here we are lake charles louisiana hard to believe that i'd never been here for any story for anything uh until 2020. now i feel like we can't leave for like all the wrong reasons we came back because not everyone here has the luxury of leaving we came back to find out what comes next after a hurricane season that rewrote the rules tonight the catastrophic category 4 hurricane bearing down in the u.s as we come on the air here about one hour to landfall gonna take a peek outside here stand by in just 24 hours hurricane laura swelled from a modest category one to a platform monster even worse the storm was getting stronger right as it hit i'm told by my nbc team the eyewall is almost on it's going to take a very careful peek outside here laura didn't let up till daybreak the strongest hurricane to hit louisiana and more than 150 years a lot of folks we met convinced it couldn't get worse till it did and here we go again it was six weeks ago we stood on this exact balcony as laura tore through this area tonight it's delta if laurel was painful delta felt personal both hurricanes are nearly the exact same path the storm sequel beating up and already battered lake charles i used to have a washer and dryer right here a bathroom crystal fogelman used to have her dream home now she her husband and four kids are all living out of the rv crystal bought after cashing in her 401k as a native louisianan you're used to hurricanes but but this year this year has been really really tough back-to-back hurricanes you know and just you know and we're still looks like day one people are leaving lake charles now because of what happened this year right did you ever think that it'd be mother nature forcing you to reconsider it's happened to us before we lost our home for hurricane rita immediately you know after rita i knew we wanted to move further inland found this house you know it was a beautiful home it was perfect it wasn't in a flood zone and then um a year after we bought this house we had hurricane ike and that that changed and put us in a flood zone and then now and now this again where do you go honestly i don't know on the louisiana coast cameron parish became ground zero for two powerful hurricanes those who call it home appreciate the peace and quiet but these days it's just quiet so the folks who would have lived here in this community would have been one of the first ones to get hit by either laura or delta we're just a few miles from the gulf and in every single direction you look nothing left every gap that you see is a house that's already been wiped clean the owner i guess hasn't yet decided if they're even going to stay and rebuild pat campbell is one of the lucky ones we met over a campfire outside his house turned construction site 75 years on the louisiana coast and he has seen plenty but nothing quite like 20 20. two of them hit within a month month and a half time and how close well the eye passed almost right about six miles from here pat plans to fix the place back up but says this hurricane season the most active in history sure doesn't feel like an accident well with global warming it seems to be the storms a lot stronger i don't know if you know but there's five storms that hit south louisiana this year alone five storms that's right 2020 brought cristobal laura marco delta and zeta five of the record 30 named storms hit the bayou state this season and this has never happened before in your lifetime yeah that's 75 years and i don't know with all the fires in california i mean there's something to it i think next year there might be more storms than five so we're thinking seriously of of uh maybe get moving out we headed east following the coastline till the literal end of the louisiana road a place that still lives up to the state nickname of a sportsman's paradise grand isle this is not a town where tourism is necessarily the big thing but fishing is king and if there's one guy who knows something about that it is mr dean blanchard you don't become the owner of one of the country's largest shrimp operations without at least a little cajun street cred when the storms roll in dean's the guy who stays behind to ride it all the out there you go hurricane zeta was the only direct hit on grand isle this year but that doesn't tell the whole story see for dean and other gold fisherman even the threat of a passing hurricane kills business big time boats get sent up river to avoid damage from storm surge every time there's a storm that the the boat's got to see barbara now you're looking at two weeks before the gates open and the boats come back out so i mean we lost three months of work that's a lot of money tough times not exactly new for those choosing to still live here year after year dean says his neighbors are disappearing people get tired of you know losing stuff and having to rebuild and having to pack up and leave and having to come back and start all over again and just aggravate when you got a season that's just bringing one storm after another right on your doorstep i mean that's that's not normal no no no it's a very abnormal yeah we opened it that way we're hoping it don't become the norm you know if it does become the norm then we're gonna have to reevaluate it and you know probably have to get out of here you know for just a few weeks left in trump's season dean's doing his best to make up for lost time but he admits it may just be a matter of time before something's gotta give dean you're the guy that's always still behind and yet you're thinking about maybe leaving we ain't got no other choice i mean we can't make a living no more i mean you're gonna have to go somewhere there how bad does it look now it looked bad i wait he he they said that the lord never puts more on you than you can handle so he got a lot of confidence in us rising seas hotter temperatures more intense hurricanes and conditions ripe for wildfires while these events are shocking they're not surprising we know the changes to our climate are driven by humans continuing to emit unsustainable amounts of greenhouse gases we have pumped carbon into our atmosphere at enormous rates since the industrial revolution and now we're approaching the point of no return as i've seen firsthand it's these fragile locations at the top of the world that are melting the fastest creating climate refugees in northern alaska and eating away at the massive ice sheet in greenland we're off the coast of greenland right now we're in an iceberg field heading toward a fjord and a giant glacier where we'll be taking measurements as far as ocean temperatures salinity and current look like floating cities it's crazy when we look out on the ocean here it's very cold water and that's the top several hundred feet are all coming from the arctic ocean pouring southward but surprisingly water from the tropics the gulf stream is lying underneath all of this and it's flowing towards that glacier and others and when it hits them it melts them like crazy when i started this 20 years ago that wasn't an obvious connection the atmosphere changes changes the ocean changes the glaciers changes sea level what does that mean for us it means glaciers are very sensitive systems to warm waters in a sense are the glaciers in a way canaries in the coal mine yeah they're they're saying how sensitive our planet is to change [Music] well david it is good to see you outside of a parka kind of on solid ground yeah as opposed to the last time we saw each other what is the state of our climate at this point it seems to be kicking it up another notch if you will the glaciers continue to accelerate they're melting the surface of greenland and the arctic sea ice continues to have another low things are not calming down has the rate of change been changing yes so we've certainly seen that with regard to global sea level so like the sea level here in the harbor has been accelerating the last few decades so we're definitely seeing that signal and it's largely coming out of the polar regions from greenland and antarctica when we were last together you were dropping buoys into the ocean ah there it is what's up what happened to those and what data have you gleaned from it one of the ones we tried to retrieve when we were with you we could not get back and that buoy had been dislodged we didn't know it a year before by an iceberg my wife who runs the logistics she received a phone call from a guy in ireland and said on our beach is your yellow buoy the actual float is out in the hallway there and this is the ctd that was found in ireland but the data from it last week it came back to new york the temperature sensor miraculously worked beautifully it was a year of fewer data in greenland which is really valuable for our record and so we're getting this record in greenland of each year being slightly different so it's just painting a picture of the natural variability and the whatever else is going on david you just published a paper looking at the three glaciers one of them helmheim we were supposed to be out there with you and we couldn't get on because of the weather what's the gist of the paper the last four decades we studied because that's really the modern satellite era and from satellites and space you can see with cameras great detail however before that it's kind of blank and so what we recognized is a lot of expeditions and whatnot over the last century in the polar regions have taken enormous numbers of photographs and from those photographs when glaciers advance and retreat they leave marks trim lines and from that you can see the change of the last century or more and what we saw was quite amazing it's these decadal periods of intense retreat and decadal periods of less retreat but it was always retreat it's always losing just sometimes more and less what does that tell you about the natural ebb and flow as opposed to what is caused by humankind what's really striking is given that last century of behavior the coming century uh offers unfortunately probably much greater warming it's actually accelerating so david worst case scenario we lose greenland in antarctica right what are we talking about sea level rise in feet like say where we are right here in new york harbor right so which which is not going to happen anytime soon right but greenland is 20 feet so you can imagine 20 feet is probably above our heads sure there abouts and then antarctica is of scale 300 feet so you're looking well up on top of those buildings david we were just in brooklyn looking at that area but down here superstorm sandy devastated this area we were without electricity for like a month when you look at this area new york harbor and we we talk about sea level rise what are we talking about as we look in the not so distant future one of the world famous tide gauges is just located around the corner here at battery park and it's recorded something like a foot over the last century almost so the future could hold much more something of scale 10 feet which would be an enormous impact and we've talked about greenland places like that what we don't talk about is antarctica a lot how much impact should we be concerned about antarctica antarctica is the size of the united states it's an enormous amount of ice and in particular one part of it is very unstable because it effectively is already in the ocean and if that chunk breaks off and starts melting what kind of impact does that have here right so that's globally of scale 10 feet and you saw from sandy where the water level came up the buildings in ellis island 10 to 15 feet so you add another 10 feet above that those buildings are covered over there yeah absolutely right that's an enormous problem to try to defend against as we wrapped up our time together i asked david about the toll the pandemic has taken on his research science and thoughts moving forward when do you think you're going to be able to get down there to do more research so that's the plan was to be there right now getting back to the instruments we left because the snow is accumulating rapidly in antarctica where we work but we can't get there so we've sent in the skeleton crew of four people i don't know if they're going to make it or not and if we're going to get any data back or not it may be a lost cause in 2020 both the coronavirus and climate change have wreaked havoc in our country and all across the planet but both of these have also showed us what we can accomplish when we attack a crisis together new yorkers may have noticed this climate clock ticking over union square this year that clock counts down the years days and seconds to when there's so much carbon in our atmosphere that the worst effects of climate change become irreversible the current trajectory is just over seven years but we as a society can extend the time on that clock with large-scale shifts away from greenhouse gas pollution we could actually reduce the rate of carbon we're putting into the atmosphere that is a future we know is possible but will take leadership on the international and local stage if there's a place that brings me back to my childhood it's the duomo milan's cathedral i used to hang around here a lot as a kid and decades later this place hasn't changed a bit sure in the last 20 years skyscrapers popped up all over the city and the skyline is now a mix of ancient and modern buildings but there is one big change that took only a few months to become noticeable and the best way to see it is from the top of the cathedral it's one of the best and highest panoramic viewpoints in the whole of milan and yet my memory is that in the past most of the time there was no view at all that's because milan has long been one of the most polluted cities in europe it still is and the smog and the fog were so thick it was difficult to see beyond the buildings across the road so when in june i went up there for the first time in decades during the lockdown the difference was astonishing the view of the skyline is crystal clear not only i could see the city's skyline in the distance i could see as far as the alps more than 100 miles away but to understand how we got here first you must understand what happened in italy over the past year by the end of february italy and the area around milan here became the epicenter of the pandemic in europe and as many other colleagues i started reporting every single day on the growth in the contagion the death toll the overwhelm hospitals the lockdowns every day for many weeks so by april when the situation started to look like it was getting under control by the authorities and also the contingent was slowing down i decided to look beyond the cold number of dead and infected and more on the long-term impact this pandemic was having on this country [Music] more and more i started seeing footage of places like florence venice milan usually overcrowded and chaotic cities turned into ghost towns by the pandemic what was even more mesmerizing was the impact the sudden disappearance of millions of tourists and residents alike head on the environment and how quickly nature regained the city's spaces milan was already planning a greener future even before the pandemic but what happened here during coronavirus really pushed that plan it accelerated that process and now the city is building miles and miles of bicycle lanes and pedestrian areas and it's planning to turn all public transport electric within 10 years and it's not only people who are becoming more environmentally friendly even buildings are blending in with nature in some cases quite literally this drive to create green spaces and buildings are not only making cities like milan more livable lives can be saved because of it while we were in milan we spoke to an environmental scientist who told us that more people die in italy every year because of health problems linked to pollution than those who have died so far from coronavirus so while milan is one of the cities in the world which has been hit the hardest by the pandemic this city's drive to go green in the future has the potential to save countless lives my next stop was venice as a journalist i have been to venice countless times reporting on climate change the devastating impact of rising seas high tides and flooding year after year but the pandemic showed us there is another problem the impact that decades of overcrowding has been having on the city and its fragile ecosystem venice is one of the most beautiful and popular cities in the world but it has been paying a big price for it i've never seen it without crowds both the small streets and the canals have always been bustling with people boats and gondolas tourists and locals have been throwing all kind of rubbish in the canals for decades countless engine boats have been polluting its waters 24 7. and giant cruise liners have been sailing through it leaving behind big waves and a shaken seabed then in march all that was gone all of a sudden overnight when people practically disappeared nature came back when i saw the footage of a jellyfish swimming in the usually murky canals in venice filmed by a local zoologist i thought that's it i need to go see myself what's happening the first thing i did was meeting with roberto nardin a gondolier whom i've known for many years gondolas were forbidden from getting on the water for weeks but we got special dispensation from the mayor so cameraman joel lawrence and i sailed in the only gondola in the whole of venice it was surreal there was silence but for the ore hitting the water it was a moving experience for all of us for the gondolier because he was allowed back on his gondola for the first time in weeks and because he never sailed in an empty venice for us because we lived through an experience that we knew was unreputable and it wasn't just the silence the canals were so calm and clean the usually murky water was emerald green and so still how quickly nature recovers when people suddenly stop messing with it if there is a silver lining in this pandemic italy is making a big push to become more environmentally friendly now this country will soon receive more than 200 billion dollars from the european union as part of a big recovery plan and 90 billion dollars of that will be invested in the environment and the green economy so this is a chance for italy and the rest of europe to turn this tragedy into opportunity and leave a safer cleaner world to future generations the climate crisis will not end with 2020. our team will continue to cover every angle of what i consider the most consequential story of our lifetime the next year is sure to bring new records and more extreme climate events our planet's alarms are sounding and they will only grow louder but the window of opportunity is still open the ability to chart a new course is still possible the next chapter of this story is how we as humans respond [Music] hey nbc news fans thanks for checking out our youtube channel subscribe by clicking on that button down here and click on any of the videos over here to watch the latest interviews show highlights and digital exclusives thanks for watching
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Channel: NBC News
Views: 1,343,256
Rating: 4.6854014 out of 5
Keywords: Nightly Films, NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt
Id: g6H9Q8wB4h8
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Length: 45min 54sec (2754 seconds)
Published: Thu Dec 31 2020
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