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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  November 5, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PDT

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the crucial midterm elections are coming down to the wire. candidates have four days to make their final pitch to voters
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before they head to the polls. trying times. >> and with control of the senate and the house both up for grabs, both parties are barnstorming the critical battleground states. let's check in with cnn's senior data reporter, harry enten. where are we on the battle for the senate? >> hey, alisyn. let's start off with an idea of what's at stake in this election. how close the balance of power in the united states senate was going into election night. look at this. we got a 50-50 senate right now between democrats and republicans with vice president kamala harris breaking that tie. so any one seat, any one seat shift could make all the difference in the world. so what are some key states that we're watching? here are some key senate races that we're watching. look, we've got wisconsin. we've got georgia. we've got pennsylvania. we've got nevada. we've got arizona. not on here, also my favorite state, the place where i went to college, new hampshire is another state that we're watching. but let's dive in, dive in and get an understanding of one of these key states.
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we're going be to be looking at the keystone case, pennsylvania, the common wwealth of pennsylvania. the polling is tight there right now. the choice for pennsylvania senate, it's within the margin of error. democrat john fetterman, 47%. mehmet oz at 47%. this race has been tightening this entire last few months. and to give you an understanding of how important the pennsylvania senate race is to democrats' chance of maintaining control, if mehmet oz wins, the republican, they have just an 18% chance of holding on to the chamber. if john fetterman, the democrat, wins, the democrats' chances jump all the way to 70%. so pennsylvania a really key state. back to you. >> i think that would be great for our dueling panel segment tonight. >> i like it. >> so i'll take pennsylvania. set the clock, please, for four minutes if you would. thank you very much. we're back with scott jennings, keith boykin, and also joining us is cnn presidential historian
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tim naftali. okay. spotlight on pennsylvania. this weekend, tomorrow, former president obama will be in pittsburgh. president biden will be in philly. former president trump will be in latrobe. what do you see happening in pennsylvania from your historical perspective, tim? >> well, i remember how oprah changed everything when she came out in support of barack obama in '08. and she's got magic, and she -- i think the fact that she chose fetterman over dr. oz, whose career frankly she created -- >> absolutely. >> -- is a big deal. whether that tips the balance, i don't know. but the oprah factor is important. >> let's hear what fetterman said today about that endorsement from oprah. >> we all know that oprah is the creator of dr. oz's tv career, and she went for you instead. what does this mean to you and
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your campaign? >> she's an icon. i mean it's unbelievable. it's an honor, and i'm so grateful. you know, she understands what's at stake here in this race. >> scott, do you think that tips the balance for fetterman? >> no. i mean not really. i think this race is incredibly close. the polling aggregators have it literally a dead heat. i would rather, i think, be oz than fetterman just because of the trim lines on this thing. i don't think oprah is going to be any more determinative than trump or obama or biden or any of these other surrogates that are going in. i think it's interesting. both campaigns have real deficiencies in some ways. oz has had a persistent image deficiency since the primary. fetterman also has candidate deficiencies as well. i think i'd rather be us than them, but we'll see. >> here was oz's closing argument today. let me play that for you. >> so i'm going to ask you to
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pose a question to ten friends. pick anyone you want. they can be conservative democrats, independents, republicans, but you've got to ask ten people. that's my pledge. can you all do that? all right. here's the question. are you happy with where the country's headed? now, if they say yes, you gently take their car keys away. they shouldn't be driving. >> it's funny, keith. charlotte alter has a piece in "time" magazine saying that pennsylvania is the vibes election. and the way she describes the vibes is basically if a character's candidate is revealed by their choices and their personality is observed through their public appearances, than the vibe is a vap rouse mixture of both those things. the general many press they make on a normal person who isn't paying close attention. she is arguing that fetterman is all about the vibes. you kind of know who he is at first blush. your thoughts about what's happening in pennsylvania. >> i think the vibes argument is
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dead-on with pennsylvania. this is the vibiest election of them all, in part because john fetterman is a candidate who just reeks of sort of middle america, middle class, working-class guy. and mehmet oz is this tv star doctor who doesn't even live in the state of pennsylvania, who had to move there from new jersey, has all these homes all over the place, this millionaire, and he just is notary latable. and every time he tries to be relatable and goes to a grocery store or does something, it never comes off as sincere. i think people can see right through that. >> tim, does history say that you need relatability or, as scott has pointed out, fetterman also has deficiencies, particularly as we saw in the debate after his stroke. >> one of the things we're seeing now is a pushback against elites around the country. you have to ask yourself which of these two candidates smacks of being part of the elite? >> sorry. the bell just rang, guys. we had a lot more to say. >> there's nothing more elite
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than never having to work a day in your life like john fetterman. >> that's over the top. >> what? what are you talking about? >> there's nothing more elite than trying to take our four-minute time away. this elitism will stop. give me my four minutes. maria, listen, you heard that question about ask ten of your friends. you didn't like that? >> i think it's a faulty question. hopefully that's what republicans are banking on because if you ask me if the country is going in the right direction, a dyed in the wool democrat progressive, i would say no. and by no means does that mean i will ever vote for a republican because i think republicans and especially the republican party today is part and parcel of the problem. they want to take away my rights. they want to destroy our democracy. they are absolutely all about election denial, and no one has the backbone to stand up to the leader of their party right now, which is donald trump, who is about to announce for president, god forbid.
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that is going to take us in a completely continuing wrong direction. so i think that is the wrong arbiter for people and for people to try to understand where this country is going. >> since maria has no passion at all -- >> what do you really think? i just can't understand how you feel. >> what is the arbiter in your mind? >> the partisans are going to get out. they're going to turn out the way they normally do. the question is the independents. in a referendum election, a midterm election that is going to be about the party in power and how they're feeling, i think that cuts differently. the questions are, what's going on with the economy? how do they feel about inflation? how do they feel about how far their paychecks are going? and that's not going to help the president. i think the fundamentals prevail. the question is can republicans take advantage in time with all this early vote that's in? i think they're catching up. the trajectory is right. >> is this the k tconversations
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that happening? >> marjorie taylor greene is considered intellectual, which she's not. i'm just saying this is how you do it. these sort of angry flash mob tweets and stuff like that are how people are talking in politics. now, i do think people are actually more reflective in real life, you know. i don't think everyone's on this thing just like all these political people are. i'm not -- i'm not a political tweeter a lot. people do care about abortion, but that is in front of it. i think that's normal. i think a lot of people do think -- if you press them, like, yeah, they seem a little extreme and crazy, but i have to deal with my house right now, or i have to deal with, you know, living in my car. i have to deal with jobs. >> from the theoretical to the tangible is the issue here. >> except for -- i would say yes, but i have talked to many women, and i kind of wish laura lopez was here because she talked about conversations,
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various conversations she has had with people in pennsylvania and in other battleground states, and a lot of the women are saying, people are saying the economy, and, yes, i care about the economy. but when i go into the booth, i think the economy's going to come back. my rights will not. she talked to several republican women who told her that they are going to vote for the democrat because of abortion, and they're not telling their husbands. i think this is an underlying current that is not being measured in the current polls. as you know, newly registered women, newly registered people of color will never show up in these polls because pollsters do not measure them. >> ticket splitting, is that what's going to happen? >> i think there should be some of that. we've shown a propensity to look at different matchups differently. it's not that it's not showing up in the polls. it's that it's baked in. this has been baked in since may and june. it's why the wheels haven't fallen off. it's why democrats are as competitive as they are. it's why even though we expect the house to go where it's going, they remain competitive
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across the senate map. it's not hidden. it's right there. >> they're republican, and they're going to vote for oz, but doug mass tree an know -- >> alisyn, chaka khan once sid to the limit, to the wire. >> we were all listening with rapt attention. that was a good panel. >> no elitism here. >> just chaka khan to end it. >> we want to know what you all think about this. you can tweet us. we'll be right back.
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new tonight, the january 6th committee giving former president trump more time to turn over subpoenaed documents after he missed the original deadline today, saying in a statement, trump, quote, must begin producing records no later than next week, and he remains under subpoena for deposition testimony starting on november 14th. that as sources tell cnn that trump is eyeing that date, november 14th, to maybe potentially launch his 2024 presidential campaign. joining me now, former rnc communications director doug high. i just want to put this in because it reminds me of that book, that no good, probably bad day, whatever it's called. here's what trump had to say last night in iowa when he was asked, having a dangling of a carrot on this moment. here it is. >> in order to make our country successful and safe and glorious, i will very, very, very probably do it again, okay?
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very, very, very probably. very, very, very probably. >> well, doug, will he very, very, very probably run, or is there some political aspect of why he might not be announcing? do you have a sense? >> let me say something about donald trump i've never said before. he was very consistent in his messaging right there. he said -- >> very, very, very. >> each time it was three veries. so he has some message discipline, which we don't always see with him. we know a few things about donald trump. one, he likes big pots of money he can try and move around. if he formally announces, that changes, so we have to think about that. we also know he likes playing the victim. all these things conflict. if he announces, he can play the victim better. they're coming after me because it's politics. the other is donald trump loves attention. we were talking over the summer that he might announce around july 4th. will he or won't he? this goes back to one of the key
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things about donald trump. everything he does is same bat time, same bat channel. we all tune in next week. that's a long i don't know. >> it was very, very, very probably a good i don't know. look at the screen for a second. here are the ways in terms of how it can move around, those pots of money. if he were to announce a 2024 campaign, everyone, the rnc, by their own policy, not a lawful one, not based on legislative or otherwise, or policy, they won't pay for his legal bills. if he announces, they're limited to raising $2,900 from individuals and 5,000 from pacs. you've got the pac not being able to underwrite campaign activities. no more personal fund-raising with corporations and trade associations. so, liam, there's a lot to just the announcement. it might be part of the idea of wanting to just get the attention of will he or won't he, but that's a quite hefty list of reasons that you don't have power over your purse any longer. >> it's a heavy lift. he likes to have his pots of money.
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i think that's striking fear in the hearts of republican operatives right now is that timing. you mentioned mid-november. we might very well have a climactic runoff in the state of georgia in early december, which has some deja vu to how republicans almost won, then lost the senate majority last time. i think that might be another factor depending on how things shake out on tuesday, is georgia going to runoff, and is herschel going to be affected by what he does. >> that's true. maria, i think mike pence's book comes out the 15th. there's something about the 14. i don't know. what do you think? >> i think he might look at this and say, this is going to be my opportunity to clear the field, right? if he saw ron desantis' ad, he's probably not going to like it, right? and then mike pence. he might just do it as an ego thing to clear the field and to tell everyone, i'm the god, not you, ron desantis. i'm god, and i'm doing this right now. in terms of the rnc policy, if it's not law, the rnc can say,
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oh, we changed our mind. even if you run, we're going to go ahead and pay your legal bills. they've done that before. that might not be something that keeps him from doing it. but one thing that could keep him on the track to doing is perhaps he thinks it's protection from prosecution because then he'll say, i'm a candidate and then, you know, maybe the doj will have to think twice about how they go about doing it. that's when they talk about the special counsel. >> that's a good point because there was a discussion about whether or not to have it to have the insulation of being able to say, look, we're not going after a political opponent. it's not a politicized department. then there's almost the exhaustion factor in a way. y if you're going into an announcement knowing, i'm going to have to pay legal bills for you that are probably going to be one of many, does that count against the enthusiasm, you think, or is the base that he has potentially enough to overshadow that? >> the victimhood that doug mentioned is powerful, and it's
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a financial driver. he taps into that to replenish those coffers. so it's a self-licking ice cream cone in a sense. but i don't think it necessarily puts a damper on it, but i think you can be very clever and dance this line, but at a certain point, you have to jump. you either want the protection or you want to control your purse. >> maria very smartly talked about rnc policy. one of the things that the rnc has is what's called rule 11. rule 11 is an ironclad thing that says they can't get involved in primaries even if kevin mccarthy is running for election. they can't get involved in his congressional primary unless the state of california republican party files a rule 11 letter declaring him the candidate. well, they can get rid of that rule whenever they want to, especially if donald trump tells them to. >> that's right. >> they may be likely to do so, in which case the other candidates are going to be out of luck. >> so the rules are there ain't no rules. >> that's the crux.
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>> we've seen ronna mcdaniel essentially kind of kneel at donald trump. i will do whatever he wants. >> when you think about that going forward, you mentioned the idea of almost all of you are presuming trump would be the obvious rnc nominee. do we think that's the case? i mean desantis, his ad, albeit reminiscent of the rams ad and the be a farmer notion, i think -- do you think he could actually overtake him? >> i think the fact that president trump is down in florida kind of planting his flag, the fact that he's even flirting with this very, very, very probably stuff means that he hears footsteps and is trying to get out there to box out. >> the party kind of breaks down like this. you've got 10% that will never vote for donald trump in any fashion. you've got 40% that will do anything donald trump wants to do. that's a marching order. about 50% voted for trump. they sort of like him. some of them are exhausted. they're looking at other people. but that core 40%, they are the
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most active in the primary process and that gives trump a huge leg up. >> president biden has said himself it's his intention to run for re-election, but he has not been as noncommittal, but he hasn't been as firm. and the midterm elections is really this clear mark, right? put down this as the key marker. so you got to wonder not just with who is in power, but what else will change going forward. talking about 2024. but alisyn, tuesday is almost here and that will be the key date and the days following that. and the prospect maybe even of a runoff if it's as close and deadlocked as people are predicting. we have a long road. >> we're definitely having a long night on tuesday. i think people are going to have to settle in and get comfortable because all of our experts have said we may not even know next week. so we'll see. all right. meanwhile, $1.6 billion. it's the biggest jackpot ever for the lottery. and before you start counting
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the powerball jackpot is now $1 $1.6 billion, breaking the record for the largest in lottery history. and if you think these billion dollar jackpots are getting more frequent, you're right. the jackpots are getting bigger, but your chances of winning are getting slimmer. joining me now to explain is harry enten along with keith boykin and tim naftali. so they're stacking the deck against us more in the past few
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years, aren't they? >> yeah, they basically made a shift back in 2015 in which you have to match the white balls, all of them, and then the powerball. they essentially made the white balls -- changed it from 1 to 59 to 1 to 69. that essentially changed the odds. you had a 1 in 175 million chance of winning -- you used to. now it's a 1 in 292 million chance of winning. i should point out of winning you have a better chance of winning the powerball than the mega millions, which is a little north of 1 in 300 million. so the odds are better. >> so you're saying i have a chance. that's crazy. they've made it harder. everybody has noticed there's bigger jackpots, but you just don't know that you don't stand a snowball's chance in hell. >> you really don't. if you line up the last few times that we've gotten the largest jackpots, they all tend to be in the last few years. they've made it significantly more difficult. but to me, it's like, okay, maybe some schools are getting
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some extra money. maybe some kids are going to be able to go to high school. you know, money shouldn't be free. it shouldn't be free. but, you know, it also goes through my head of what i would necessarily want with the millions. >> yes, what would you? >> you know, i think that if i won, you know, the $1.6 billion, of course it's a lump sum annuity would be only a little less than $780 million, somewhere around there. >> rip-off. >> rip-off. i think i would probably buy myself a diet a&w cream soda factory, and i would have all the cream soda that i would want. >> that's the cutest thing i've ever heard. tim, have you ever bought a lottery ticket? >> a couple of times. >> you have? >> generally speaking, i buy lottery tickets for my mom. my mother likes to play the lottery. so i'll go to the drugstore and pick it up for her. >> okay. are you playing in this one? >> no. but, you know, look, for $2, it's a lot of fun. there's a bit of fantasy and, you know -- >> it's worth it.
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>> but as long as you know you're not going to win. >> well, i don't know that. somebody's got to win. why can't it be me? >> but then if you win a little something, because there are ways of winning without winning the whole -- >> why can't i win the whole jackpot? >> i hope you do. >> thank you. >> somebody has got to win. eventually somebody's going to win. the chances that one of us will win are very unlikely. but somebody in this country or this universe is going to win this lottery. >> i think that fantasy is worth $2. >> it is worth $2. just don't get disappointed if you don't. >> i'm just hoping if one of you win, you'll cut me in a little bit. all i'm asking for is like $2 million. >> with a lifetime supply of cream soda. keith, do you play the lottery ever? >> i have played it. whenever i t
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>> i can tell you i probably wouldn't have a cream soda factory. i'm sorry, harry, i do love you. i think i would be a little bit of like an angel type investor, and i would go around the world trying to find people who i think were really in need of it and surprise them with it, almost like that undercover boss, but i wouldn't be so obvious like putting a mustache on and going, oh, no, it's not laura coates. here's the money for you. that, and i would probably buy a couple things for myself. by a couple, i mean 1. billion. >> i hope you win because that would be great, watching you be undercover boss and going around surprising people. >> like a bad '80s movie. oh, the girl comes out and the glasses come off, and she's supposed to be someone different. that would be my version of it, something like that. >> i would love that. that would be great.
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>> if we don't see you tomorrow -- >> it's a saturday. i'll call you and let you know. >> call me and split it. what do you mean let me know? no. let me know and give me half of it. >> got it. >> there you go. >> no problem. >> everyone, get ready to turn your clocks back an hour because you might need more time to think of a better way to spend all the money because sunday is the end of daylight saving time. apparently it's saving, not savings. who knew? but does it have to be? we'll talk about it next. ommon s were nausea and tiredness. migraine pain relief starts with u. learn how abbvie can help you save. ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine.
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all right, everyone. it's that time of year again. alisyn, right now we are currently in daylight savings time. but come sunday at 2:00 a.m., we will fall back and turn the clock back one hour. that means we'll completely gain one hour of sleep and push sunrise and sunset earlier and then come mid-march, we'll be sprinting forward into daylight saving time, and we'll turn our clocks ahead on hour. >> i do like the extra hour of sleep, but i don't like that it gets dark at like 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. that's so depressing. >> my kids don't care at all. >> they don't? >> they wake me up no matter what, but that's fine. >> earlier this year, the senate passed a bill to make daylight saving time permanent. but then it stalled in the house. so the push for permanent daylight saving time has gotten some mixed reviews. the golf industry, restaurants, and other businesses are in
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favor because you can imagine it stays lighter lololo. >> that's amazing. but also parents who don't want their children waiting in the dark for the school bus and sleep experts, who say it harms our circadian rhythms, they also object. back with us now to talk more about it, kara swisher, liam donovan, and maria cardona. first of all, there are sort of those in favor of and argument against, does it surprise you that it hasn't gone anywhere? do you expect this will be actually resolved? do you have personal opinions? we're all probably sleep deprived in our own way. do you have an opinion on it. >> i do. i don't think we need it. but maybe we need to figure out which side we want, right? i think most people would want a longer day because they feel like they're more productive and more gets done. but i think we should just decide one way or the other. i grew up in puerto rico. there is no daylight savings time there. it's always the same time. i remember when i was in school, i had to -- when i was calling
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my parents, i had to figure out, wait a minute. is it the same time? is it an hour earlier? is it an hour later? i think in general the reason why we had daylight savings time originally, it's not really there. it comes from colonial times, and most of the country was farming, and so it was a reason to do that. i don't think that exists anymore. but i think people are dug in, into the ways that they like their days and why. so i kind of don't think it's going to go anywhere. >> many haven't thought about the social reasons why. children at the school bus very early, going away to school in the darkness. i'm from minnesota. it was kind of that way. there are also certain industries who want it. it's very telling. the idea of trying to consume more, more time to buy, more time to play, more time to spend maybe time and money. that correlation can't possibly be a reason to influence congress, right? there's no lobbying ever. >> i hardly think about this topic at all whatsoever. i just do whatever my apple watch tells me to.
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>> it's time to stand up, kara. >> that's all i want it is some sort of technology that says put that donut down or put this on. i really -- i don't care. >> i wonder do you care? because i know i care about this thinking about how it -- >> i want to know who i go talk to to get that extra hour of sleep because in my house, that's not how it works. >> we both have a lot of kids. >> this wasn't supposed to get this far. it was a unanimous consent in the senate. nobody objected. the fact that it got halfway there is just a funny fluke of procedure. i think now we actually have to grapple with this seriously in a way we haven't done in 40 years. >> the house says they haven't acted yet because they've been overwhelmed by special opinions. are there not other areas that they've been overwhelmed by split opinions from voters? this is the one hangup? this is the one hurdle? >> you know, local governments can change it. there's a place in indiana, i
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believe, that doesn't have it. >> yeah. >> so it's not really keeping -- if you have like a locality and a majority of the people there don't want it, they could get rid of it. if a place in indiana can do it. >> i wonder thinking about this, i think back to the safety aspect of it, and i think about the way in which we've had all these studies now, time and time again, about the importance of sleep. >> yeah. >> the idea of thinking about mental health as an overall society now, really appreciating it in different ways. this does sort of tap into maybe a level of evolving as a society. we think about, well, is there a reason other than commerce, a reason other than something that is just inertia, where we actually change things based on those studies, based on the -- >> haeealth, right? >> we don't always see this. it's usually a big fight, and now it doesn't seem to be. >> i think it's something that -- and you're probably right, kara. i don't think many people think about this all that much, which
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is probably why it won't go anywhere. but this issue of sleep deprivation is a big one, especially here in the united states, right? i think we are probably the country, maybe next to japan, that is the most sleep deprived in the world. and sleep is such a benefit to mental health, to your physical health, to so many things. i mean i'm lucky because i can sleep whenever, however, in whichever way. i know i'm very lucky in that because a lot of people suffer from insomnia and not getting a good night's sleep. >> scree n legislated. it's not really a legislature there. >> they mandate it. study what
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is. >> alisyn, i want you to come in this panel as well. >> i wouldn't know anything about sleep deprivation. >> what time is it? >> i'm like maria. i'm a sleep champion. i pride myself on that, thank goodness. i'd also like to hear more about the eight children that -- >> they snuck that in, didn't they? >> later we're going to get married even though we're already married and i'm gay. then we're going to do a tv show. zb >> there's a show there, alisyn. i see it. >> discovery+ maybe. >> they share children but they're married to other people. it's all very fascinating. >> going to be good. >> isn't that wife swap, or maybe it's just pundit swap? i don't know. you know what? maybe if we had that extra hour,
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you'd be in that sort of leap year programming. like it's only available for daylight saving time. >> if we're going to leap year, i have to leave this panel immediately. >> kara is like i'm done with this. >> we're going to talk about elon. >> i think things are running off the rails there. >> because we're sleep deprived. we would like to go to sleep. that's why, alisyn. i need the hour at 2:00 a.m. >> we've got to fall back. >> i will be there with bells on, in flannels in fact. >> it's either that or kara has something else in that mug. i'm not sure. in any event, it's time for all of our viewers to sound off. we'll read your tweets next.
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all right, everyone. it's time to sound off. let's see what you have been saying tonight. there's one on daylight saving. here you go. it's from dw bullion. it says, no, we shouldn't. we need nmore sun in the mornins so it makes perfect sense to revert to extra time. leave it alone. cancel something else. >> okay. this one is from ah slewy. no, i guess meaning don't get rid of it. don't cancel it. it's too dark in the morning for kids to walk to school. that's your point, laura. >> you ever try to get your kid to the bus stop. it's awful to see them in the darkness. it's just too dark for me. another one from bob smith. it says, didn't realize it's been in place to reduce energy consumption. it definitely reduces my energy
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when i lose an hour of sleep. so it's time for it to go. >> all right. >> who knew? people care, see? >> except that sliver in indiana. you know where to find us. >> people who are making good and good news. the top cnn heroes of 2022. they've been announced. one of whom will be named the cnn hero of the year by you, our viewers. so we'll be introducing each of you to our top ten as you vote for your favorite in the next five weeks. as the russian war in ukraine rages on, more than 7.5 million people have fled the country, creating the world's fastest growing refugee crisis since world war ii. >> so top ten cnn hero teresa gray is doing all she can to help. a paramedic and a nurse from alaska, she sends small self-sufficient medical teams to natural and humanitarian
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disasters. since february, she and her volunteers have traveled to romania three times. >> what we were expecting to see was large groups of people housed in tient cities. actually they are housing these refugees in individual dorm rooms. they've got food. they've got shelter. but the trauma is the same. >> they've lost almost everything. >> this is filled with women, children, and elderly. there is a flu outbreak currently that obviously affects the children. we also have pre-existing conditioning. it isn't just about fixing the broken arm or giving you medicine. it's making that human connection. sometimes you need to hold their hand and walk them down a hallway and listen to them. we try to meet the needs of whatever presents to us. >> smile, everybody. >> human suffering has no borders. people are people, and love is love.
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>> teresa and her volunteers have provided care and comfort to more than 1,000 ukrainian refugees in need. >> everyone go to cnnheroes.com right now to vote for her, for cnn hero of the year, or any of your favorite top ten heroes. you can vote for any or all of them up to ten times a day every day. everyone, thanks so much for watching. >> have a great weekend. our coverage continues. introducing the new sleep number climate360 smart bed. the only smart bed in the world that actively cools, warms and effortlessly responds to both of you. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more restful sleep per night. proven quality sleep. only from sleep number. my name is tonya, i am 42. as mother of nine kids, i think i waited this long to get botox® cosmetic because i take like no time for myself. my kids are sports kids.
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