The amanpour. Hour. Heres where were headed this week it took a sickening video of violence for Sean Diddy Combs to finally admitted it and apologize for abusing his then girlfriend. I think a lot of assets, survivors will recognize our perpetrators in him, but a week later, we redirect the spotlight squarely onto survivors with an incredible panel of women on both sides of the pond and there are so many women, men, and children who are watching this and i just want them i want them to know that they are not alone, then the dean of columbia Journalism School, jelani cobb, on balancing Freedom Of Speech and security and fighting disinformation in a critical Election Year we havent come to any real conclusions about what should be done with disinformation, plus, how the sudden death of irans president could reboot its relationship with them america, moving towards the more middle gives more room for the United States to engage your on. Also, this our israeli author and public intellectua
it s like forensic digging. reporter: crews comb through twisted piles of debris and thick mud. it s just mud, trees. underneath there there may be a house. some look like they ve been put in a blender and dropped on the ground. reporter: officials say that terrain has made it difficult to dig the victims out, even when they find the bodies. things kind of get somber out there. it gets really quiet for a few minutes. you can almost hear a pin drop out there. reporter: still, they continue the aggressive search like they have for nearly a week, knowing there are 90 families still waiting for loved ones to come home. east of the landslide in darrington, volunteers now mobilize to help those search cruise. cindy and her mother-in-law shoulder biscuits for those shouldering the grief. her husband delivers it. we have people under the mud they can t get to. it s hard to the people. it s hard on their loved ones. reporter: in a small
areas where we may collapse something where we could have a survivor. the sheer amount of mud in the search area is just overwhelming. it s enough to fill the empire state building 11 times over. and the weight of the mud is equal to 50 empire state buildings. moving all of that mud is an enormous undertaking. the search organizers will give another update to reporters about three hours from now. nbc s jennifer bourqueland joins us live near the search area in arlington. what is the latest there? reporter: the latest here, kristen, is exactly what you ve said a very tedious search. it is almost cubic foot by cubic foot that they have to go through and do what they re calling forensic digging, where they are in they ll dig a little bit, make sure there s nothing that will collapse, and then they sift through it almost like an archaeological site, to see what clues there might be to who might have been there, and if there might be victims nearby.