Skip to main content

tv   Champions for Change  CNN  September 25, 2021 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

5:00 pm
are going to ask experts about boosters, vaccines for kids, and i will see you again tomorrow night starting at 6:00 eastern. champions for change is next. the following is a cnn special presentation. ♪ >> all the changes happening now in the world can really feel unsettling but lots of people are harnessing the power of change. >> 12 cnn anchors set out to find the changemakers, the oning smashes down barriers and lifting up society. those are their stories. these are the champions for change. ♪
5:01 pm
welcome to champions for change. i'm victor blackwell. >> and i'm alisyn camerota. we are spotlighting those who are not famous, not makings headlines. >> they are innovators and problem solvers with extraordinary ideas. let's start with kate baldwin. she cares passionately about the oceans and she met a woman trying to make seafood sustainable from boat to kitchen to plate. >> captain, how are you? may we board? >> yes, permission to board. >> thank you, sir. >> all right. >> that is what we're going to try to catch. >> i grew up fishing with my family and my dad and my mom, all through any childhood. i love seafood, i love fish.
5:02 pm
i did not understand how close to extinction some of my favorite fish were. >> target species. >> hey! how's the season been. has it been a good one? >> regulations they have p it in place has paid off. now, if you catch a 40 pounder, it has to be released. >> stronger than i expected it to be. holy smoke show. lunch. how big is the problem? of overfishing? >> it's big. there are 3 billion with a "b" people on this planet who rely on fish as their main source of protein and for their livelihoods. >> what is the main reason it's a problem? >> we are catching too many fish. we look at the impacts of health risks, sea grass, coastal mangroves. they are all ecosystems that
5:03 pm
fish, marine life and people need to surprise. >> reporter: jen has been fighting for fish for decades, not just to save them but to conserve the oceans is there is enough for all of us to share. >> the question here, how do we save -- >> it's opened my eyes to better alternative. the idea for seafood watch came out of an exhibit. we put the program together, we thought a lot about what is our goal here? to make consumers aware there is a problem, that individuals should change their purchasing habits in support of more ocean friendly seafood, so we created a little pocket guide and we put it in the cafe and they started disappearing, and we thought, we're on to something. >> that is what i love about seafood watch. it's not a you shouldn't. it's let's empower to you make a good choice. >> we wanted to get businesses like retailers, food service
5:04 pm
companies, restaurants to make a commitment they would source only from responsible fisheries. >> wow, that is really impressive. you can taste it. y yummy. be big name chefs have joined in, from catch to table. >> as chefs, we have an opportunity to spread that awareness, and once we can deliver something like this in this format, it's a lot more buy-in. >> what i care about it, i want the seafood that i know, love and eat today to be around for my kids, and without seafood watch and without conservation efforts like this, that's not guaranteed anymore. >> seafood watch is the most recognized seafood rating program, innovator and extremely effective solution to a
5:05 pm
worldwide problem. >> i not only love jen's passion for this. she grew up around the water. she's a diver. i'm a diver, and when you are in the water and you're in a magica magical yoan aquatic world, you realize how defenseless they are. >> from the open sea to the swimming pool. cnn anchor don lemon dives in with a synchronized swim team that keeps kids water safety and puts a spin on ageing gracefully. >> you're going to help me people them, right? coach inspires me to get back in touch with what i love. which is swimming and teaching people how to swim. the water is my happy place. if i don't have it, i would
5:06 pm
probably not be very healthy mentally and emotionally. tell me about harlem honeys and bears. >> it's a synchronized swim team. >> for seniors. >> for seniors. in 1975, there were only women on the team. and they said they could call themselves honeyses and after a few years, the men decided they wanted to join the team and they decided they wanted to be the bears. so now we have honey and bears. we do synchronized swimming and competitive swimming. some are on walkers and some are canes. but what they enjoy most, is once they get in the water, they feel free. i have been coach since 1975. it's a little better than 25 years. my oldest swimmer now is 99
5:07 pm
years old. >> wow. >> believe it or not, i have been swimming since '64. he is the best coach in the world. he has a lot of patience. because the seniors that we think we knew everything any way. >> you're taking too long. >> you have a reputation. >> yes. i have a reputation of being too hard but it's all in love. >> taking too long. >> some of my seniors, they say, coach, you know we're 80 years old. i said, you are as old as you feel. because one of the words that i never want to hear on my team is i can't. one of the things i like about the team is they motivate one another. >> now and for the next generation, the harlem honeys
5:08 pm
and bearses teach water skills through the youth swim program. >> one, two, three. >> coach, it's important for all kids to learn how to swim. but why is it important for black kids to learn how to swim. >> black kids drown twice as much as any other ethnic group. they didn't have an opportunity. >> they got rid of the community pool. they filled the pool with c concrete or dirt where i grew up. and that is one of the reasons a lot of black kids didn't learn how to swim. >> right, the only thing they were able to do is to play in the fire hydrants, and they could sneak in pools at night. >> when i hear people can't swim, it makes me sad and it also infuriates me. because i know along the way,
5:09 pm
they didn't have someone like coach who took them under their wing to teach them how to swim, and i immediately want to get in the pool with them and teach them. probably around 13 years old, i became a lifeguard. i helped my sisters who are older than me to swim. i helped them become better swimmers. i taught my nieces to swim in the backyard pool. get in. and both of my great nephews. >> all the things i do for my seniors and as well for the youth teams are things that were taught to me, and i enjoy giving back things. >> can you imagine doing anything else? >> i can't imagine doing anything else or being any where else than with my seniors. i just love them. i love them. those are my people. those are my peeps. >> okay, that was awesome.
5:10 pm
and synchronized swimming looks harder. >> and one participant, 99 years old. >> and don lemon is a lifeguard. >> the next champions for change, i will introduce my champion. it takes more than boot straps to pull yourself up. and my champion is helps men in need suit up for success. champions for change is presented by --
5:11 pm
eye
5:12 pm
5:13 pm
>>. welcome back. men just out of prison have to overcome a lot of challenges to fully rejoin society. my champion for change is giving them support they need. she is suiting them for success on the outside and the inside.
5:14 pm
>> you're the soup lady, right? it makes me smile. >> sara is my champion. she founded suited for success in florida. >> i founded suited for success in 2004. we provide professional business attire, suits, shirts, for men seeking employment. no one was meeting the career needs for men. >> i'm passionate about the efforts because the system is obviously broken. there needs to be a bridge to support the men who have being released and this charity is this bridge. >> i started with some of my friends. i asked them if they had extra cutes because i wanted to suit a couple of the guys in jail. they were going to their court appearances and they could wear jail scrubs so we got a couple guys dressed to go to court appearance, and we found out it
5:15 pm
made a huge change for the judge. >> some are homeless, veterans or young men who just need a suit. >> we work with any male who is in transition seeking employment. >> we will take simple, basic steps. >> we don't just provide a suit. we provide job resumes, mentoring. making sure they are ready for employment. if you tell a man to get out of jail, get a job, take care of your family, you have to give them career employment. if you can get one man to get in the role of the father, take care of his children and do what he really wants to do, then that's the success part for me. today, suited for success is hosting our first suit drive of 2021. one of our slogan is each one, reach one. because the guys we suit and help them, they get a job, they come back and reach back for a young man who is just coming out of what they went through. >> she is putting us around men
5:16 pm
that can pull us up, which is what we need in today's world. >> i met you 15 years ago. i lost a lot of weight. and my whole television wardrobe was too big. i started looking for places to bow nate, and i found suited for success, and once i met you and realized how personal this was for you and still is for you, and that's why i'm supporting you for all these years. >> i know for a fact we have given out more than a million items of clothing. >> a million items. >> are those mine? >> yes, sir. >> those are your faves. >> this is my fave. this is my go. >> i know, right? you know -- >> i know this is personal for you. i didn't always know why. now i know why. >> this is my son. >> when jamez got in trouble for
5:17 pm
unpaid speeding tickets, she you a how one mistake can derail a man's life. >> i commend this lady because she has never, ever, ever gave up on me. >> when you are helping men in their late 20s, early 30s, how ouf unare you thinking about james? >> always, going in the juvenile jail, i saw so many there. >> the norm is to dismiss them. she not only challenges that. she rejects it. she knows if these men, given the support and resources can build lives to rebuild their family, the status quo is not acceptable, and she knows it has to be challenged. >> i'm not giving them a suit. i'm giving them a dignity. i am giving them a spark. it's amazing what feeling the part in a suit can do. >> and there are so many success
5:18 pm
stories from the 15 years at least i have known about the program. >> i feel like your ties have become collector items. >> i hope so. i hope they get to the men who really, really need it. >> i'm so glad she is helping men break the cycle. all right, anderson cooper met another champion helping turning their lives around. before the pandemic, he traveled to kenya. reporting for 60 minutes, anderson alexander mcclean. >> it helps prisoners in africa with legal training. some earned law degrees behind bars and now his program is inspiring inmates in the u.s. >> we walk in prisons that filled with poor people, prisons that are filled with minors, that are filled with people who have not had the best education. that is the case in the united states as much as uganda or kenya.
5:19 pm
>> one on one, together -- >> jody polk was inspired by what alexander mcclean is doing in the prisons. she studied the law in prison and helped other inmates with their legal issues. she said learning the law behind bars transferred her life. j jody continues to help others learn their life and she continues to work to find out what justice defenders might be able to do. >> thank you for your role. >> alexander mcclean sees himself as a servant and believes that everyone, guilty or innocent, deserves a fair hearing enter an opportunity to serve others in need. >> for me, i feel really privileged to be a part of a subversive community and ask how we work together to bring our gifts and talents and how do we get transformed by each other in
5:20 pm
the process? >> as desperate crowds rushed kabul airport in afghanistan, changemak changemakers helped them get out. we have their stories up next on champions for change. to see that we're on track. like schwab intelligent income. schwab! introducing schwab intelligent income. a simple, modern way to pay yourself from your portfolio. oh, that's cool... i mean, we don't have that. schwab. a modern approach to wealth management.
5:21 pm
ok everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. whoo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, now introducing ensure complete! with 30 grams of protein.
5:22 pm
5:23 pm
if you watched our coverage last month from afghanistan, you you a the ugly horrors of war. beneath the headlines, heroes were hard at work. the champions were risking their lives while making huge impacts. cnn's chief international correspondent clarissa ward was on the ground. what was the desperation like in the air? >> it was horrifying. was a crush of humanity, pushing, shoving, biting, screaming, shouting, anything they can do to try to get in the
5:24 pm
airport, try to get their children in the airport. when we were able to get in, we were surrounded by babies. >> we watched some of the videos from back here in the u.s. and awesome of the kids being passed over. and there is always the stories of humanity. what did you see on the ground of people who were trying to help others? >> the situation around the airport was chaotic, i was dangerous and we have seen it again and again, alisyn. they don't appear on the evening news, and they want to remain anonymous. but i saw networks of former soldiers and civilians on the ground, afghan women helping others that were still stuck inside the country, trying to coordinate and help people on the ground with information about how they could get out with new real incentive.
5:25 pm
>> we are grateful to you, and personal risk and sacrifice. thanks so much. it's great talking to you. >> thank you, alisyn. the u.s. is a prime destination for refugees and some of them are cooking up new careers with their old country recipes. anna cabrera got a special taste at kammal. >> we focus on helping low income immigrant woman who want to start their own food businesses. >> sylvia came from mexico and saw more opportunity here in the u.s. she planted her two feet on the ground and tried to find out how to make ends meet. she found a family resource center. >> i found other ladies. we started talking about, what would you like to do here, or
5:26 pm
what do you do here? and everybody said, i would like to have a business and sell food. that idea started getting in my head. >> a lot of them have entrepreneurial background. but they needed a few more steps to put the skills together and really understand what was needed to have a have a culinary business. >> so you helped create this place? >> i think all the ladies including me -- kamal. >> as a girl, cnn anchor pamela brown looked up to her big brother lincoln. as an adult, she still does. a few years ago, her brother gave christmas gifts to a family and inspired friends to help the family too. >> suddenly this family that had to little, felt so displaced had a community rallying around them. >> let's go. >> about 52 people have
5:27 pm
contributed and have been a part of his life. >> they call me -- i need to take you and your sister. let hees go to the playground. let's go play soccer. >> they were total strangers. >> the decided to renovate a house. will pitched in, eager to help what he thought was another family in need. >> i was working as hard as i can. i knew to help someone -- >> really got his hands dirty. he learned a trade. >> this house is for you and your family. >> sometimes you just need someone to believe in you in life, to give you a chance to get you going, so you pick up and you're good, you can swim on your own. >> the. >>. ahead on champions for change, dr. sanjay gup ta has one woman's change against the
5:28 pm
opioid epidemic. >> go to cnn.com/champions to learn more about the stories of the individuals and the lasting impact of their actions.
5:29 pm
can you be free of hair breakage worries? we invited mahault to see for herself that new dove breakage remedy gives damaged hair the strength it needs. even with repeated combing hair treated with dove shows 97% less breakage. strong hair with new dove breakage remedy. usaa is made for the safe pilots. like mac. who can come to a stop with barely a bobble. with usaa safepilot, when you drive safe... ...you can save up to 30% on your auto insurance. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. get a quote today. if you're 55 and up, t-mobile has plans built just for you whether you need a single line or lines for family members, you'll get great value on america's most reliable 5g network. like 2 lines of unlimited for just $27.50 a line. that's our everyday price. plus, our plans always come with unlimited talk, text and data included. so, switch to t-mobile and get 2 lines of unlimited for only $27.50 a line.
5:30 pm
that's half the price of verizon or at&t. only at t-mobile. the leader in 5g. for people who could use a lift new neutrogena® rapid firming. a triple-lift serum with pure collagen. 92% saw visibly firmer skin in just 4 weeks. neutrogena® for people with skin. incomparable design makes it beautiful. state of the art technology makes it brilliant. the lexus nx. experience the crossover in its most visionary form. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
5:31 pm
5:32 pm
welcome back to champions for change. hundreds of thousands of families struggle with opioid addiction. >> it's a health crisis dr. sanjay gupta has reported on a lot. tonight, he shows us a fighter who turned her personal pain into a public crusade. >> it was always the opiates and they could turn to the heroin. >> overdose. >> the usual suspect is a painkiller. >> so many times we talk about the opioid crisis, we talk about doze dozen of people, and we talk about it from a policy perspective. but what it makes it
5:33 pm
distinctive, this is an individual who is dealing with substance abuse, but the whole family. >> i lost my niece a couple years ago, i lost my brother two years ago, and complications of his addiction. >> joann peterson's family is dealing with addiction. >> i have terrible gift because in the end, i really wasn't there for them in the end and it haunts me. it wasn't that i didn't want to be. i knew i couldn't fix her problem or change it. she just disappeared and i got a call she was in beth israel hospital on life support. so that haunts me. >> it was another part of the struggle with the stigma of
5:34 pm
substance abuse she dealt with most of her life, until she met others like her at a community meeting. >> i started to say, let's start meeting in. >> in 2004, learn to cope was born. >> we are there to help the family and remind the family that no matter what, you're going to be okay, and i had so many people say to me, they feel grateful that they were a member of a peer group like learn to cope because they understood the disease. i know a mom, her son had cancer, he had been prescribed oxycontin. he was in pain, and he turned to heroin. she said, she missed his cancer. she said, everyone loved him then. no one gives anything about him now. >> after 20 years of covering the stories, i still learn
5:35 pm
something every time i meet someone like joann peterson. the idea that the ultimate first responder in in opioid epidemic is usually a family member. >> we really want to educate families how to recognize an overdose and what puts them at risk and make sure they are more that cnarcan in their home. >> it gives families a chance to rescue someone they love. do have you any idea how many it's supported in. >> i know it's been over 200. >> the group is vital support has he wrestles with his son abuse. people walk away with a kit including narcan. how important is that?
5:36 pm
>> it is critically important. two people i trained have used it to save their loves ones, including my son's mother who saved his friend from an overtime six months ago. >> the stories that end up having the greatest impact are the ones that zstart off the wa the story goes. it's an individual that channels the group into something really meaningful and starts an arm. not just about accepting the status quo. it's doing everything you can cha to change it. >> i'm scrappy. not afraid to speak up. i never considered myself a champion. but i am a fighter. now, another woman who is a fighter. lieutenant general gwen bingeham, the arm's second black woman to become a three star general. >> she is on the board of blue star families a support network
5:37 pm
for service member love ones. she mentors spouses of color. for brianna keilar, whose husband is a green beret, it hits home. >> i'm the mother of two children of color, and because their dad is in the military, they are more likely to join the military when i get older. i want to make sure it's an inclusive place. >> i just feel a sense of wanting, a sense of desire to pay it forward or pay it back to the next generation that is up and coming. >> okay, up next, you will meet my champion for change, a mental health leader smashing stigmas and creates a new way to treat anxiety and depression in schools. this broker is your man. let's open your binders to page 188... uh carl, are there different planning options in here?
5:38 pm
options? plans we can build on our own, or with help from a financial consultant? like schwab does. uhhh... could we adjust our plan... ...yeah, like if we buy a new house? mmmm... and our son just started working. oh! do you offer a complimentary retirement plan for him? as in free? just like schwab. schwab! look forward to planning with schwab. visible is wireless that doesn't play games. no surprise fees, legit unlimited data, for as little as $25 a month. and the best part? it's powered by verizon. but it gets crazier. bring a friend every month, and get every month for $5. which is why i brought them. two $5-a-months right here. (both) hey. plus the players in my squad. hey. what's up? then finally, my whole livestream. boom! 12 months of $5 wireless. (announcer) visible. unlimited data as low as $25 a month. or bring a friend and you both get a month for $5. wireless that gets better with friends. ♪ ♪ charlotte! charl! every day can be extraordinary with rich,
5:39 pm
creamy, delicious fage total yogurt. (man) go on, girl, go on and get help! [heartwarming music] (man) ah! (burke) smart dog. with farmers crashassist, our signal app can tell when you've been in a crash and can send help, if you want it.
5:40 pm
get a whole lot of something with farmers policy perks. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
5:41 pm
5:42 pm
>>. >> with three stteenagers of my own, i know they navigate a mine field of health issues. a new approach to mental health. >> when i walk out the door and i'm headed to work, knowing that we are literally saving and changing lives, that's the most powerful thing. >> in a rural community tucked between vermont and new hampshire, the seeds of a mental health revolution are quietly being planted. shawn perry of we are hope are bringing mental health services to schools at no cost to the students. >> hello, everybody. >> i'm here to make sure that if you guys have a difficult day that you have someone to talk
5:43 pm
to. >> we are able to help kids that co would not normally have access to mental health support. >> when the pandemic hit, i didn't recognize my babies anymore. >> lindsay and jacob struggled with anxiety and depression. >> there was an icy ball in the back of my throat. i felt so hopeless. >> it felt like i was in a cage i couldn't escape from. >> i didn't know how to help them. if we don't have we are hope available, i could have walked my kids down a dangerous path. >> one of the top causes of death for teenagers is suicide. the sta stisices are really frightening. i'm a player to three teenagers
5:44 pm
and i remember being a teenager. between 15 to 17, i lived in six different houses. there was a lot of upheaval and it did end up affecting my mental health. did you have some of the same issues. >> i struggled significantly with anxiety. in my 20s, i was hopeless, alone. i made a deal with myself oi was going to go with the local park and just end everything, and i woke up and i was like, i'm still here. i'm still here. my purpose right now is to make sure that there's not another kid on this planet that has to feel the way i felt. >> how is it going? >> good. >> are you excited? >> yeah. >> i am too. >> how does it function in the school? >> we have a coach in the six for six hours. we reqcan see 12 students in a . when we see the kids, it's because of a behavior.
5:45 pm
throwi throwing a desk, blowing up in class. we impact their behavior. >> before it impacted the school two years ago, we had two school ko counselors for 300 kids. we are hope is what i consider a missing piece in the education. if students get the support to cope with anxiety, they can learn. >> we gathered at the heartland diner to hear from the kids themselves. >> how many people felt more anxiety or more depression during the pandemic? all of you. >> it was really big negative impact on my life. >> trying to get in fighting and stuff. >> i missed a lot. >> my depression hit me so hard. >> give me a technique that we are hope helped you. >> i learned a new technique,
5:46 pm
birthday cake. you smell the birthday cake and you blow out the candles. >> how do you smell the birthday cake? how many of you feel hopeful? even though there are tough thin things in the world, that is great. >> we listen to what they need and give them skills to work through it. >> at the end of the day when you're alone and driving home, what is in your head? >> how do we reach new kids. we want to be everywhere in the united states. i do not stop. i'm beyond relentless. >> we are talked about how much time my kids spend in algebra when they can talk about mental health. >> 60 to 90 days of support is so important. >> it is. if you or anyone you know is having suicidal thoughts, you can reach the national suicide
5:47 pm
prevention prevention lifetime at 1-800-273-8255. scuba driving for 30 years, and she got a glimpse at at future thanks to a group called driving for a purpose. >> i want to save the ocean. i want to save the ocean because i want my children to be able to see and experience the beauty after it. >> kramer's passion is coral reefs. they are home to a quarter of all see life. they are vital to global ecology, and they are dying. 18-year-old ohio state freshman greg hood gets it. he learned to dive and has committed to the organization's
5:48 pm
five-year program that teaches ocean conservation technique. this partnership is behind the magic of diving with a purpose. >> all of the youth in the program are not going to end up working in the field of marine biology or ecology. but they are learning the importance of it and what their place is. and what their responsibility is. for me, that's enough. >> you will want to see what's up next because our friend john berman shows us his moves. ♪ >> that's an innovative theater for young, rising stars. champions for change is brought to you by --
5:49 pm
helen knew exercise could help her diabetes...
5:50 pm
but she didn't know what was right for her. no. nope. no way. but then helen went from no to know with freestyle libre 14 day, now she knows what activity helps lower her glucose. and can see what works best for her. take the mystery out of your glucose levels, and lower your a1c. now you know. freestyle libre 14 day. now covered by medicare for those who qualify. (vo) how do you know when you've found your team? whether you're winning, or just doing your best. when you're on the lanes, they're right behind you. reunite with your team. go bowling. i wonder how the firm's doing without its fearless leader. you sure you want to leave that all behind? yeah. stay restless with the rx. crafted by lexus. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. can you be free of hair breakage worries?
5:51 pm
we invited mahault to see for herself that new dove breakage remedy gives damaged hair the strength it needs. even with repeated combing hair treated with dove shows 97% less breakage. strong hair with new dove breakage remedy. baaam. internet that doesn't miss a beat. that's cute, but my internet streams to my ride. adorable, but does yours block malware? nope. -it crushes it. pshh, mine's so fast, no one can catch me. big whoop! mine gives me
5:52 pm
a 4k streaming box. -for free! that's because you all have the same internet. xfinity xfi. so powerful, it keeps one-upping itself. can your internet do that? welcome back. when sherry moore first hit the road as a long haul trucker she reel realized how unique she was as a woman and put the pedal to the metal to change the industry. >> i knew nothing about this industry before i got in.
5:53 pm
everybody thought i was crazy. you don't drive a big truck. you're 5'3". can't reach the pedals. >> wait. actually how is it reaching the pedals when you're 5'3". >> i push my seat up, and i get on down like anybody else. i entered into this male-dominated industry, and i instantly saw a need to create a space for women, for more women to come in. she trucking is the largest platform for women in the trucking industry. we have over 20,000 professional women drivers. i felt a lot of women get the llc, ein, number, making sure they get their certification, getting registered in the different departments of government to haul
5:54 pm
transportation goods. >> she trucking is definitely a sisterhood. if you need a shower, just post it, girl. we got you. if you're stuck somewhere, that's really what it is, it's a sisterhood. even though we may have never met in person. >> there's trucking in your blood, right? >> it is. my dad is a truck driver. >> i'm excited. >> i am, too. >> but i do this because of my mom. my mom is one of the strongest people i know. she is a bus driver. i remember many days of opening up the gate and have my mom back up her bus in our yard, and i saw her training women. >> together we're helping others. >> together we're strong. building a legacy. >> nobody thought she could do it because she's 5'3". she walked into a room. she's the only woman. she was the only black person in the room. and nothing ever phased her. >> hey. welcome to she trucking. she trucking is a program for women drivers. it's here to encourage and
5:55 pm
support. i looked on youtube, learned how to build a website. learned how to make my t-shirt. it just grew and grew. >> you look at sharae now who has more than 20,000 women that she is getting supplies for, she is mentoring, that she's trying to change the trucking industry so that women can succeed and thrive and be safe in it. what do you think about your child? >> i'm proud. that's all i say, i am so proud of her. >> she's built this entire organization to helping other people. and that's what a champion does. >> the theater is a great place for young people to try on new roles and figure out who they are. >> our own john berman was quite the performer back in high school -- i've been waiting for this one. >> me, too. >> he recently cameo'd at a youth theater where diversity is
5:56 pm
the star. ♪ ♪ come on let's do this ♪ >> what does it feel like when you're on stage? >> you're always nervous at first. when you get on stage, it's exhilarating. >> i found my passion for performing here. >> i don't know where i would be without r2t. >> what do you want kids to get out of the refer dale children's theater? >> we want them to get a sense of belonging, and we want them to have that self-confidence to go into the world and take what they've learned with us, the kindness, their inclusivity, and take it out into their lives. ♪ >> ten years ago, derek woods and becky lillie woods created the riverdale children's theater. over time it has become a second home for hundreds of kids in the bronx. >> they're a great influence on me for life skills and performing skills and everything in between. >> i'm born and raised in the
5:57 pm
bronx, lived and worked here my whole life. and so a program like this was sorely lacking. >> rct offers everything from college prep to full-scale production, and no child is ever turned away for financial reasons. ♪ it's not just theater that they're working on, right? they're working on life. they're learning confidence, and they're learning courage and trust, learning how to trust each other. and it's wonderful to see it all come together. ♪ everything that's happened the last year, obviously we have questions about racial just all around the country. we've had all kinds of anti-semitic attacks, right. you have a huge number of jewish kids here, anti-asian attacks. how has that played into this here? >> we have, you know, kids from every walk of life, all ethnic groups, all religious groups,
5:58 pm
and we find that's really our success. >> want to get away from it all because it's just -- it's so dark to talk about, and to be in a place where i can wear my yarmulke and not have to worry about, you know, slurs at me is amazing. i can just be here, not the jewish kid here. that means a lot. >> you learn so much about other kids' cultures, and it makes you so much more aware about yourself. >> we get a high five -- >> i did theater sort of might have whole life. my first play was in first grade. i played a donkey. and the last show i did was a drag show my senior year of college. now i was never good enough to do anything with it, but that didn't matter because i just loved it. >> so i think he needs musical theater back into his life. you think we can get him into one of our numbers today? [ applause ] >> all right. all right. >> so use that after you hit your mark to just sing out and have fun with it.
5:59 pm
should we try it? >> sure. >> okay. [ applause ] ♪ that's what it's all about ♪ ♪ we're not the same we're different in a good way ♪ ♪ together where we belong we're all in this together ♪ >> when i was on stage with them, they -- they don't hold back. i mean, they're all in. >> i know. >> they're all in. >> aren't they awesome? they really are. they're so good to each other. they're supportive of each other. it's really beautiful. >> i stunk, and they made me feel great about it. >> good, yes. >> you were amazing. you are an honorary member. >> i could use a few more rehearsals. [ applause ] >> i really feel like john berman has missed his calling. >> his heart was in that. >> i also feel that he should incorporate more dancing into "new day." >> more musical numbers. that's what we need. all right, in the spotlight or behind the scenes, people have the capacity to accomplish
6:00 pm
great things. the champions that you saw tonight are just a fraction of the folks out there improving the lives of others. >> in big ways and in small ways, maybe you can be a champion for change, too. i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm alisyn camerota. thank you for watching. imagine what it was like when the rolling stones could shock people everywhere. >> you could take me out of the ghetto. >> it was a tough time. >> i learned how to write for myself. it's ironic that most people related to it. >> there it is, platinum record. >> country music has taken over the airwaves and the record charts. >> the honeymoon's over. now we're getting down to real commerce. aren't these girls just

115 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on