tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN February 4, 2015 8:00pm-9:01pm PST
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it is 11:00 p.m. on the east coast where the ntsb is trying to solve a mystery of why a suv stoped on the tracks to trigger a fiery crash in a new york city suburb that killed six people. i will talk to a man who jumped from the burning train. meanwhile in taiwan, time is running out to rescue anymore victims from a shocking plane crash that killed at least 61 people. and our aviation expert ss are going to the tell us what might have gone wrong sploochlt and the real life american sniper.
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i will talk othe former navy s.e.a.l. who trained chris kyle. >> and the former body man speaks out of the former chief of stuff. and as moregan spurlock stops by and it is always interest g interesting. and he brought out a few friends, and it is going the be interesting here on set. i want to start with a dramatic survival story, the commuter who barely escaped with his life when he jumped from a burning train. he joins us via skype from his home. how are you doing? >> well i feel very blessed today, don, and i'm glad to be here. >> we are glad that you are here and sorry that you had to witness this, and obviously, that people died on the train, and the car driver as well. you had been commuting by train for almost 15 years, and last night you were a passenger on the train, and i want you to
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take us through what happened. >> well, i was seated in the second car back. i felt what i thought that was the train jamming on the brakes all of the sudden. we were traveling very fast. it is an express train up to a certain point, and it felt that we jammed on the brake, and slammed hard. there was quite a lot of rumbling and a lot of scraping feeling underneath the wheels. so i felt that we had perhaps gotten off of the track, and maybe one of the wheels on the train had gone off of the track, and bumping along on the railroad ties. the train then came to a complete stop and number of us tried to the assess whether we were still on the track or not. >> were you thrown? were people -- how was the impact how far were people thrown or thrown at all? >> well, you know, i didn't see anyone thrown. i happened to be seated, and my back was to the direction of the force
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force, so i didn't, you know, experience many any of that. i didn't see anybody else thrown either. >> and the conductor gets on the loud speaker, and say thass that we just hitt a car, standby. any other instruction after that? >> no. we actually didn't receive any further instruction. i don't know if the loud speaker went out as part of the explosion in the front car or not, but many of us were you know, just sort of making it up as we went. we had to. >> yes. how quickly did you get off of the train? did you try to help other people before getting off of the train? >> yes, i was somehow able to remain calm and i tried to help others to remain calm. there was the beginning of the some people running, and almost barreling into the stampede when flames in the front car started to appear. i was able to get thet the attention of one of the people in lead and remind them to stay calm,
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and that is the only way that we would be all right. able to make eye contact, and emotional contact, and letting them know that if we stayed calm we'd be all right. >> were you worried about yourself, your life or mostly concerned about the people in the first car? >> you know, i have to say that i was not concerned for myself. we did not seem to be any immediate danger in the second car, and there was some of us look forg looking for the fire extinguisher which we now know wouldn't have done a lot of good but we found it and tried to pass it forward. we tried to get into the first car and saw shapes of people moving around in the smoke, and we knew it had to be absolutely hell in there, and we were worrying about the people
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expiring because of the smoke inhalation inhalation, and we tried to get the door can open, and it was locked. there was a man ahead of me trying to kick the glass open and it was to no avail. and werwere trying to use the fire extinguisher to knock out the glass, but we couldn't. >> are you going to continue to commute? >> well i got back on the horse today, and commuted. the train is no more dangerous today than yesterday, and it just happened to be a terrible tragedy yesterday. >> jamie wallace, thank you. six people killed on that train after an suv stalled on those track s tracks. and look at that plane crash in taiwan and joining us to talk about that is mary schiavo and she is an attorney for aviation
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accidents, and also david soucie author of malaysian flight 5180 and so we just heard pr that horrible story, and many of those perished were from smoke inhalation, a ndnd why is so difficult to escape are from a train? >> well, because they haven't had the evolution as aircraft. and the aircraft fleets change much more quickly han the train cars do. many of the train cars we travel are not years old, but decades' old, and we haven't had the emphasis on the roll inging stock as we have on aviation for upgrading and updating and the crash surviveabilitysurvivability, and it is a push in the aviation world and mot the rail world, and that is why the ntsb made passenger survivalability one of the ten things on the ten most wanted list list. >> i have a couple of things in front of me, and i remember in the old, and we did the survival
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stories, and they said to carry this ning like a bb in the wallet so if you are in water, you can break the window, and jamie wallace said that if if you had this fire extinguisher, and you were beating the glass, and that it would break the glass, and this and something metal or something like a commuter would have a umbrella or coffee mug or something that would open up the door? >> most likely not, because not only thick and tempered, but it is reinforced and those things that you talk about, i have them and it is like a ball peen hammer, and probably not, because the train glass is so very thick and plus reinforced. >> and does it have to be that way? >> well, it does for safety reason, but what they should have are more windows that can be taken out and more breakaway
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windows, and windows with the emergency escape mechanisms on them, and also one of the things that the ntsb has recommended from the prior crashes is that you are able to open up the escape windows from the outside and not just inside and two ways to get the people in and out, and this is one of the recommendations that the ntsb has made before. >> david, i see the people all of the time p the air conditioner goes out or the heater goes out, i see the people on the trains and the subway trying to figure out how the open the windows, and they don't know how the do it. on the planes, you gate man -- you get a mandatory ip struck shun of the safety procedures and why don't you get it on the trains? >> well, as mary said the ten most wanted list of the many ntsb and more access but they have to provide the training and the ability to know when something is happening on the train and in addition to that
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when something is on the track in front of the train ahead of it so that there is a greater warning for what might be on the track, and neither of the things were in place yet, but there are things that the ntsb has recommended, but it is up to the railway to enact it. >> and what about the seat belts? because we have heard about it on the school buses -- marey, go ahead. >> absolutely. the seat belts are something that have evolved. on the aircraft, they are going to invent new ones that provide much more support, and a gentleman who has his back seated to the back of the train, and with plane crashes i have worked both where the people who has the backs to the point of impact have survived, and that is going to make a difference, but the people don't like to ride backwards, but it does increase the survivability. >> and what this is safer? i will ask david first, what is safer do you think, the considering that you will get the safety instructions on the planes -- the plane or the
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train? >> well, with the statistics you can do whatever you want to. and the rail companies are go ging to say they are, or the plane companies will h say they are. if if you measure it by fatalities the trains are, because of the rash of accidents e recently but if you ask the airlines again, they can to that and it is how you measure it and it is not about fatalities, but the potential for the fatalities and that is where we dial in safety. >> and that is where we saw the video of the plane crash yesterday and the aftermath of the plane incident in new york yesterday. mary, what is safer, trains or planes? >> put together trains are safer, but commercial scheduled major careriers, then of course, they will rival the safety of the trains. if you take out general aviation and motorcycles, and those all in there in the same group together, and much lez safe than trains and major scheduled carriers. >> we have talked about this with the airplane stories that
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we have discussed, mary, do you believe that the trains need to be modernized? >> absolute lyly. it is going to be taking some doing, because the federal rail transportation and the mass transit administrations, they can ask and try to improve, but we don't buy the rolling stock in the country is not e replenished very often, and there are about 750 rail roads and so there is a lot of constituents to deal with. >> and so thank you, mary and david. when we come back, the death of a real american sniper and the death of chris kyle and the man who killed him and the trial of the man that kill ded him. and now, more on reggie love and the life behind the man at the white house and ob the basketball court. we will have more. when tomorrow becomes real. transamerica.
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the jury selection is set to begin in the trial of the former marine who killed chris kyle. there is however questions of whether eddie ray ralph can get a fair trial. >> reporter: it sis an intense movie that fills the screen with inpalpable and unforgettable horrors of war. it is entered around a lethal sharp shooter chris kyle many who are calling a hero and a hit at moviehouses, and it is
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now the highest gross inging war film ever earning $240 million so far and it is also nominated for six academy awards including best picture, and best actor. >> hopefully this movie can educate those of us who are not familiar with the plight of the soldier, and the soldier's family family. >> reporter: but the ending was not a happy ending. at a shooting range, he was shot by a soldier suffering from ptsd. >> i am a broken woman, and i am now and always will be the wife of a man who was and is a warrior on and off of the battlefield. >> reporter: the jury selection begins for trial of the man accused of killing kyle. but with the popularity growing, the man accused of shooting him, he says that the trial should be moved out of the small texas county where kyle was killed but some say that the recent
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publicity of the movie, and of itself may not be enough to jeopardize the case. >> those called for jury duty this week they had their opinions and they have been living with this for two years. >> reporter: chris kyle's life and the movie are not without controversy. >> it is a propaganda film that is as awe this then tick as "dirty harry." >> reporter: one of the proponents is jesse ventura including winning a lawsuit in the book over a passage where kyle claimed to have punched him in a bar in 2006. >> a hero should have honor and a hero is not how many people you have killed. you know he was obviously, a great sniper, and he is obviously a great shot, and the obviously, he did his job correctly, and let me fire this one at you, do you think that the nazis had heroes? >> and for a s.e.a.l. that is a
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sure shot on the battlefield, chris kyle is not only the target of glory, but also controversy. >> joining me is brandon young who is a former navy s.e.a.l. and also the author of "american sniper." and this movie, has grossed $250 million and nominated for six oscars and the autothe biography "say it ain't so" is sell ging more than 6 million copies, and do you believe it is going to be possible to find a impartial jur jury? >> i believe i have faith in the people in texas, and they will have justice there. it is not an easy job, and it is not an e easy job when you have a trial, but i believe that you can separate the pub lislicity and a lot of the, you know, the fanfare around the case and finally come to a just decision. >> but two day ss ago, texas,
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declared chris kyle day in texas. i mean, that is tough though. >> i think that when you are, i have been on the jury, and when you walk into the courtroom, and when you go into the jury room, you kind of put everything out of your head and you vtry to come to the just and fair decision. i would not want to be a juror in the case but i think that the people in texas will do a good job. >> brandon he made it his mission to help the veterans suffering from the ptsd and then he was gunned down by a veteran named eddie ray routh that he was trying to help and of the factors that will come up is the 911 call that eddie ray routh's sister made. >> my brother came by her, and
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he said that he committed a murder and i am afraid for my life. my husband is going to talk to you, because i am so nervous. >> he was recently diagnosed with the p.t.s.d., and he has been acting real weird. >> and the attorneys are going to be saying that he has suffered with mental issues and will plead insanity and should ptsd should be taken into consideration in the trial? >> from everything that i know, he was hospitalized in a mental institution, prescribed drugs for a mental condition, and from what i know as well this is a guy that didn't actually serve in combat. so i don't know, i don't see the ptsd diagnosis, and he had a serious mental condition, and if chris had known the true nature of the mental health and i
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don't think that chris would have ever entertained taking thoim the shooting range. >> so he did not know, because if you ask some people if people are suffering from ptsd the last thing i would do is to take them to a gun range or anywhere near. >> it is a lot of misconceptions of what ptsd does and there are a lot of the veterans who have been in combat and unfortunately, they have come home with the trauma, and whether it is diagnosed or not, and they are not running around shooting people. >> and the shooting range is a very common ground for veterans, and especially the combat veterans and so i think that chris kyle was sold a story tahat he believed in, and he went to the range, and he said that this is a common place, and we will go to the range and have a few beers afterwards and talk about thing s things, and i think that chris, and people need to remember that chris is a hero and this is a guy who had made millions of
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dollars sell ing theing the life rights to the movie, and he could have bought a ranch in texas and sailed off into the sunset but he chose to help the fellow veterans. >> what should happen to the eddie ray routh? they are asking for life without parole but they are asking for the death penalty? >> i honestly believe that the people of texas will make the right decision. again, i do truly believe that the guy was mentally disturbed. >> what would you say? >> i would say the death penalty, but it is not my decision to make. >> and i say, what is going won the former minnesota governor jesse ventura and his beef with chris kyle? >> i say that the governor ventura had a disagreement with chris, and took it to court, and the bigger part of the claim was that people only bought the book because of a bar fight in california. >> here is what he said on allen comb's show yesterday.
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he said okay we can listen to it. go ahead. >> a hero should have honor. a hero is not how many people you have killed. you know he was obviously a great sniper. he is obviously a great shot. he obviously did his job correctly. allan, let me fire this one at you, do you think that the nazis have heroes? >> and so he -- >> that is so absurd. that is just -- give me a break. >> was that a low blow? >> i will tell you one thing about chris. whenever people come up to him when the case had been started and they had been trash talking jesse ventura's military record, chris would stop them right in their tracks, and say, you know what don't question whether the guy was a s.e.a.l. and did his job, because he gave the country a blank check when he signed up. >> and four combatt tours, and four bronze stars and two silver
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stars, and if that is not a hero, i don't know what is. and if that is not a hero, then read the book. and he downplayed a lot of that. >> and you said that is so absurd. what were you going to say? >> just the accusations, and any of the accusations that chris, you know that chris put the bar fight into sell books is just that is silly. >> last word. >> i think that jesse ventura has made a career out of, you know, turning his life into to a circus, and just to see him discredit the honor of chris kyle and the s.e.a.l. community is disappointing as a member of the brotherhood. >> yeah, thank you, jim. >> thank you very much for your service. >> and from american snipe er tor to the american president, the man who knows president obama better than just about anybody, the body man rejggie love joins me next. what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome;
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knows president obama more than most, reggie love is a former body man of the president and author of "power forward, my presidential education." i like the picture and the book. it is very good. talk about the president, and harrowing moments, and important moments, and you were there for a lot of them, and when the presidency is focused on what is going on now, and when it comes to isis and what is it like as far as what happens as far as the president goes? >> well his decision-making process is pretty unique. >> do you feel the moments in the white house? >> yes, i do. i think that when you are there you know, one, you are representing your country, a ndnd you are representing that administration, and there is a lot of pressure to want to get it right. >> you know when it is serious, and you can feel it? >> you can feel it. >> and you were there when for the killing of osama bin laden and what was that like? >> you know it is a powerful day. when 2001 and when the towers
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fell, i had never been to new york as like an adult. and so when i remember when i walked outside of the white house that day, and tlhere were people lined up there must have been 10,000 people walk and standing in front of the white house that night, and it was almost sunday night almost 12:30 or 12:45 that morning, and people were crying and you really could see that you were making a difference and there was an impact being had right then right there like that. >> and you are the body man and you have been called by reporters the chief of stuff. what does a body man do? the chief of stuff? >> well, it is a good question. for every principled body person, it is a different -- well when i ook the job in 2007 no real job description, and a lot of it is that you are figuring it out, and problem solving, and trying to
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anticipate anything that may be happening to him or during the day and trying to make sure that he is as comfortable, and prepared as he can to go out to campaign and work and -- >> so you carry the stuff, and music, and, right? >> ipods, and hand sanitizer and nicorette and power bar ss, and you name it. >> and you have to anticipate what he want ss or might need. >> yes. >> and that would be a really great job. and you said 2007, and you took the job before he even ended up in the white house. did you think that you and him would end up in the white house? >> well, if you told me that when i moved to the d.c. in 2006 that a guy named barack hussein obama could have been president in 2006, i don't know if i could have said that would have been a high probability. >> and a guy named reggie love would have been the right-hand
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man. >> right. i will tell you that for me like the idea of being involved and being engage and working for the guy like then senator obama it was such a powerful thing that even if he had not won, i would have felt like i was winning by having been a part and working for a guy like that. >> and go through the things in the book. you write about learning that he would win the democratic election over hillary clinton. share that moment. >> that is a powerful day. and one of those, you know, historical moments. >> where were you? >> we we were at dca at the signature aviation and not a lot of plane ss there, because you have to have the air marshals there, and the president and then the senator pulling up to the plane, and senator clinton and her team are sitting there and on the plane to the take off -- >> you are all right there? >> and not only right there, and we are the only people there. and i get a call prfrom the houma
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who is a dear friend of mine now, and she says that senator clinton wants to speak to senator obama. and senator obama car pulls up, and i say, hey, senator clinton wants to talk to you, and they meet halfway in the middle between the plane, and they have a very animated exchange over what at the time were some pretty tough comment ss about the president had about the senator then that had been made and i think that someone from her team had, you know accused him of being a drug dealer. >> and they talked about that, and animated out there on the tarmac? oh wow. >> and i think that i know that he was very i think that he was composed about it and she had a -- and she had a stronger e reaction than he did, and it was surprising to me, right. and he you know, he kept his cool. i was surprised how cool he was able to be, because i meenan i
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would have been pissed off, and drug dealer. >> so the outcome was ha he had ak actually found out that he would be the nominee. >> and that is the day that we had an inclination that he had the composure and the ability to compete with her. >> do you think that she should be a nominee in the 2016? >> she is a capable person and she would be very formidable democratic candidate for president, and i if she decides to run, you know you couldn't and i don't know that you could go wrong with her. >> and so when we come back we will talk about the book, and some personal things about the president. >> okay. >> the commander in chief on the basketball court. i just ad libbed that but we will. >> okay. we will see how it goes. if you're taking multiple medications does your mouth often feel dry? a dry mouth can be a side effect of many medications. but it can also lead to tooth decay
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forward, my presidential education." the president's body man and your name is the only name that i have ever been jealous of. don lemon, and reggie love is a lot coolerr than don lemon. because people think that they know you. does it happen because of your name? >> it sometimes has that effect of people, and then when they get to know you, for a guy named love, you could be more loving. >> and so you called the book "power forward" and in the championship of the duke blue devils, what did you learn from the president on the court? >> well, i think they people always ask what the president's game is like, and the people are saying, can he really play, and he is a great player in the sense that he is not a guy that is going to be be going out to be the leading scorer and he is not going to be filling up the stat columns, but when you play with him, he is going to be making everybody better. >> i am terrible at basketball.
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i played in junior high, and i scored a point i think. >> can did you tell your buddies though that you could hoop. >> and so this is black history month, and you say that you struggled with the cliche that you acted white because you were educated and acted that way? >> well, in the circle of guys that i was close with i spent more time with folks who didn't look like me, and didn't look like my group of friends, and i got ridiculed for it a little bit. >> and did the president talk to you about that? you learned from him about that. >> and yeah, we talked about it a bit about race and race in this country, and what it means to be an african-american man. and i think that he has a really good understanding of it. people always say, you know, is the president black enough or done enough for black people specifically but i think that you know his whole mantra has been that i am going to do
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things that are good for the country, and that are going to bring along everyone in the kun country, and him being there alone and one, it gives the people the vision and the hope that, you know, through the hard work and persistence and like regard regardless of what you look like and where you are from and what the last name is that you can achieve and do anything, and it is a powerful thing to be able to say. >> and people don't believe that -- i believe that -- >> i'm sitting here on cnn with you right now. are you kidding me? you and i. it is amazing. i h mefr thought that a kid from north carolina who, you know i grew up doing this thing about the maybe one day i will play some basketball one day and have a chance to, you know, pull my family out out of the of our circumstances, and anything is possible. >> i believe that regardless of the circumstances, wherever you came from, that you can end up in the white house. i know that some people think that is idealistic or, you know polly annaish, but i actually
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believe it. i wish that every person in the country, regardless of the ethnicity and the race could believe that. >> i am right there with you, don. i feel the same way. >> you think that we will e ever have another black president in our lifetime? >> well, there is a chance, because there are some really good folks out there doing great work. you have the deval patricks, and the cory book erers out there who are doing things and having an impact. >> okay. now, let's do the lightning round, because you handled the kend l ken dal,dall and the alarm clock and everything. >> go-to snack bar? >> metrex peanut bar. >> and what kept you up at night? >> what didn't. everything. the fact of the idea of me forgetting something or him running into someone and being like i talked to reggie about this and he has not yet done it
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it. >> what color pen does he prefer? >> black. not that pen that you are using, but the uniball one. >> black. >> okay. >> that is joke there, and i know it. and best shot on the court? >> oh, he's got a little right-handed drive, but then it comes back to the left hand and shoots kind of in the middle of the paint. >> you still play the pickup games? >> we played on his birthday last year, but he is dropping a lot of the strokes off of the golf game, and he is playing more golf than hoops. >> and what do you want people to know about barack obama, the president, the man, that people don't know about? >> the guy really wants to make things better for people. he has a ton of empathy. i can remember back to days like in the campaign, before he was even and before people thought that he would be president, he would run into somebody at a round table, and they were like,
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down and out on the luck and he would be like reggie call harry, and get like a, you know get a certified check and send it anonymously to this young woman or guy who is their car is broken down and they can't get to work, and whatever, and he would, you know, just ha that is the guy he is. he is just a guy that wants people to have a chance. >> what are you going to do? be president? what are you going to do? >> am i president? no i'm going to be engage and involved the political process is important. >> all right. >> and i will always have an active role to try to shape what our kuncountry looks like. >> thank you, reggie love. i am very jealous of the love. >> i can license it to you. you know if you want. >> the book is called "power forward, my presidential education." >> thank you, don. you read that? >> yes. >> that is amazing. i can't believe it. >> dog eared and everything. >> good guy. buy the book.
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back here with me, reggie love. >> i'm the reggie love. >> hang on morgan spurlock. a what is better than a day at the zoo on the other side of the bars and it can be dangerous work as my next guest learned firsthand. i'm talk thing about tomorrow night morgan spurlock "inside man. take a look. >> i will let you operate the door if you'd like. >> and there he is. whoa. he is pursing the lip ss. >> that is called the threat face. they standridge jid and tall and then purse the lips, and really very tight.
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and then just because. when you give them things, you want to make sure that your fingers don't cross. >> yeah. >> and they can just take it from you. >> how about a banana? and then there is that? >> oh. no cuddling or smooching? >> no they are not smoochy. i want to make the threat face. >> and "inside morgan spurlock" and we saw a lot last week. >> no more of that. >> and so now you are seeing zoos. >> right. and we have all of the zoos inside of the united states and we talk about the animal conservationism, and we wonder if we should be supporting animal captivity and so we explored it. >> and you brought something with you. >> nature nick. >> that is what i look like before makeup and what did
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nature nick bring with you? >> oh you are nature nick. >> that sis abu the monkey. you can give him a treat. >> can he bite me? >> no, he is a good monkey. he is not like most monkeys. they come from brazil and central america, and he is nice. he is 5 years old, and they can live to be 20 years old. very long time. >> did he grow up in captivity? was he born many captivity? >> someone like him, is he happy? >> yes he is happy. if an animal is train and raised properly they can be happy. >> and are there certain animals that should not be in captivity? because we do things on the sharks and -- oh there we go. >> well, now, as time goes on there is ethical dilemmas to keep the larger animals with the whales and the elephants. >> yes. >> exactly. so there are more studies that
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we need to do and be cognizant of what we need to do to give them a more natural life and behavior. >> and whales. >> and we showed up at the detroit zoo and incredible group of people who have a beautiful zoo, and some phenomenal animals, but one of the things that happened is winky and wanda that were live manage the cold of detroit throughout the wint winters, and that decided nott to have them in the zoo anymore and send them out to the sanctuary in california and this is one of the konconversations that happens. >> and he is so cute. what is his name pooh? >> no abu like in "aladdin." >> who else did you bring? >> he likes morgan. and morgan is the same color. >> did he leave us a little present there. >> parting gift there. >> oh. look at that. >> it is looking like doggie
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treats there. and who next? >> this is coming from my hometown. >> reptiles. >> put him out there on the desk. >> absolutely. >> see if he comes out. i want to make sure that i know where the head is facing first. >> oh, my goodness. am i doing to be having fingers if i touch him? >> well, boots. because he won't be boots, any time soon so that is how we got the name. >> wow, that tail is strong. does this help with the conversation, because people like to hunt them and when you two to louisiana, you will see the heads in the shops and everything. >> well, those heads don't help, but what i do, i try to show that these guys are really, and he is really stretching out, and he is happy to be here. >> what did you learn about these these? >> well, the amazing thing about the alligators like this is that one of the animals that people take home as pets and so a lot of folks will get them when they are babies they are like six inches long and people take them
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home saying how cute it is, and then every year they grow another foot and so the next thing you know in the second year, they are 18 inches long and the next thing two feet long and then suddenly, you have a four-foot long alligator in the ap apartment, and storer ris in new york city where where they have six-foot alligators in the bathtub, and tigers there, and it is a a scary proposition to have something like this that grows into the full-grown al guy or the house, and then they are taken to zoos. so this is one of the things that nobody should like be raising one of these in the homes. >> so he is calming down now that he knows that we are not going to hurt him. >> well it is kind of cold here. >> and usually you break up with the cold blooded things. >> and morgan is coming back with a friend, and you will like it. so beautiful.
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>> but it is a small wallaby and looking at this and nick told me a disturbing story at commercial break which i will let him share but when you go to a with big place like australia, you should not buy a stuffed animal why? >> because they could have been made from a hugh jackman here like this and small wallabys are declining in numbers because of that. >> and one of the biggest threats to animals like this are us human beings and talking about why we should not have animals in captivity is because of us. we are ruining their habitats and en coachcroaching on them with building homes and buildings. >> and so one of the situations is that what you are describing it is here to stay. >> and you can see morgan
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spurlock inside man, right here at 9:00 p.m. right here on cnn, and say good-bye hugh jackman. good night. we have to get right back over here por more serious things. our coverage hello, everybody. we would like to welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. >> ahead at this hour survivor stories. a toddler is pulled from the wreckage of that downed plane in taiwan. jordan promises a relentless war on isis after a murder of one of its pilots. and how brothers in chicago brought down a notorious mexican drug cartel. the luxury car collection that's been raised from the dead. we begin in taipei where divers continue to search
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