tv CNN This Morning CNN November 25, 2022 5:00am-6:00am PST
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justice for mariah carey. >> mariah carey. the jackson's christmas album, luther has a great christmas album and motown has a great christmas album. >> do you wait -- >> i do wait. christmas music is like a bloody mary for me. you get one bloody mary or maybe two. christmas music lasts three to four weeks and then you're like i can't really do it anymore. this is weird. some channels have the christmas movies on like year round. do you ever do that? i know people who watch those christmas movies on those channels year round. >> there are some movies i'll watch in a are christmas adjacent move efficiency but not primarily christmas movies. >> what's the bruce willis movie -- >> "die hard." >> is it a christmas movie?
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>> yes, it is. >> it's too early for that. >> "cnn this morning" continues right now. so good morning, everyone. as you can tell, it is the day after thanksgiving. we're in a bit of a holiday mood here. we have some big news to tell you about. it is friday, november 25th. poppy harlow is off. there is a lot to get to this morning, including this fascinating story. they say it's 12 hours. that seems like a long time to be stuck in water. a passenger who went overboard from a cruise ship and that sounds like a long time to be in the water. >> and an arrest warrant was issued in mexico after an american woman died while vacationing with six friends. >> cowboys owner jerry jones responding to a 1957 photo
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showing him in the ground as white students marched over integration. >> and in colorado springs, rallying around the lgbtq community there. how they kept the thanksgiving tradition and keep going in spite of the tragedy that happened at club q. >> we'll begin with a huge showdown coming up in just a few hours from the world cup, the u.s. versus england, soccer versus football. it is a rare meeting of the two sides and a big test for the united states squad. they're hoping to be the latest team to pull off an upset in an tournament that's been all about the upset. anna stewart is at box park to tell us what's happening. this is going to be major viewing all over the world, not just in the united states, not just in the u.k. but all over the world. wait a minute. how did you get this assignment, you're inside of a bar?
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>> top secret, i don't really like football but today i certainly do. this is one of the biggest viewing areas in london. there are lots of different rooms here. tickets sold out days ago to watch this game tonight. there is quite a lot of confidence, as you can imagine, from england. some may even go as far as to say a little bit of arrogance. you can see it sadly in the tabloids today. we have the sun. we also have the daily star. i am hearing, don, that the offices in the u.k. in the country are pretty quiet today. i think a lot of people doing a little bit of work from home ahead of this match. i am told there is something of a curse with team england when it comes to matches against the u.s. 1950 they lost. they do have to get past that. i identify more as a scot myself
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and i only slightly hope that team usa wins to avoid some scenes we saw here earlier this evening. take a look at this. >> a beer shower and i have my brelli at the ready. >> be safe, have fun, okay? >> now to this this morning. it was a miraculous rescue operation. a u.s. coast guard somehow located a man who went overboard on a carnival cruise ship that
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set sail for mexico. he was last seen in a bar on board the boat around 11 p.m. the night before. joining us is lieutenant seth cross, the coast guard search and rescue coordinator who conducted this mission. first we want to know how he's doing but also how you found him. good morning. thank you for having me. currently last known his condition is stable. he's receiving additional evaluati evaluation at a local hospital. >> lieutenant, question for you. they've been saying he was missing for 12 hours or he was in the water for 12 hours. can you clarify? 12 hours sounds like a long time to be in the water. >> the coast guard received their initial notification yesterday at 2:30 in the afternoon reporting that a potential man overboard from carnival as they made their way outboard to mississippi. any point from 11 p.m. on
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wednesday on he could have entered the waterway. so he realistically could have been in the water for 15-plus hours before we were able to successfully rescue him. >> if you get a report like this of someone who has fallen overboard, missing, how do you find them in the waters? >> every case is different. this one was especially complex. given the time difference between when he was last seen to when the coast guard received notification, we knew that communication with the mariners in the gulf of mexico was going to be critical. so we issued out a broadcast, a safety net message and urgent marine broadcast and that alerts all mariners operating in the gulf of mexico of our situation. in addition we launched all available resources to try to get on scene, understanding that time was paramount. we had a small boat out of venice, a coast guard helicopter out of new orleans and airplanes out of clear water and mobile. >> just for clarity here, have
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you spoken to him? i imagine the doctors are able to talk to him. is he in any condition to speak? because he could clarify, i would think, what time he went in the water, the conditions, how long he was in there. you know what i'm saying, lunt n lieutenant. >> absolutely. conditions to follow. i did speak with his family who was on board the carnival. one of them that will stay with me. obviously a huge testament to the working relationship that the coast guard has with the mariners in the gulf of mexico. and then obviously the training and commitment and professionalism of the coast guard men and women really resulted in this successful outcome. >> have you ever rescued someone who has been in the water this long? >> i'll be honest with you, 17-year career, this case is unlike anything i've been a part of. i think it blows the normalcy
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out of the water here and really just show the will to live is something you need to account for in every search and rescue case. >> how long could someone realistically survive treading water? >> you know, i couldn't say definitively. i think a lot of it depends on the individual, the water temperature, the sea state, the currents and wind. this is, like i said, one of the absolute longest that i've heard about and just one of those thanksgiving miracles. >> well, the water in the gulf a little buit warmer. do you know what the temperature was? >> i think the temperature reported to me was just above 70 degrees last night. not so bad. a little bit colder in the river. i do think it's important to note that we had over 200 miles of active search in the gulf of mexico. when the motor boat came upon
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him, just a huge success story. >> this is amazing. >> it is a holiday miracle. >> i know you spoke to the man's family. i'm sure they are so grateful. >> thank you, lieutenant seth gross for coming on. >> obviously a team effort, thrilled with the successful save. >> you and your team did amazing work so thank you. >> authorities in mexico have gotten an arrest warrant and started the extradition process after a woman was found dead last month at a place she and six friends rented in cabo san lucas. i understand they have someone expedited? >> you know as much as i do sometimes. black social media can be pretty strong. this story went viral pretty
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quickly after this incident. there's a piece of video we would love to show you. we haven't got it authenticated yet. what you see is someone beating someone and hitting them over and over and apparently someone from that villa shared it. her father thinks it is his daughter in that rvideo. at some point authorities were called to this location where this disturbing video was and the police found her and she suffered some serious spinal injury. obviously the mexican authorities are looking into this. they put that extradition movement in. but here is the thing so far. they have not released a name. we don't know what friend it is and as you can imagine for
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friends in charlotte they are upset about exactly where we are now and can't believe this happened. take a listen. >> i'm glad that it's getting the attention that it needs. i wish it was like this since day one. i'm more so disappointed she was around people she thought were her friends. >> to be clear with our viewers, this happened back on october 28th. you can understand there's been a large gap here. the fbi is involved, the mexican authorities were involved. but you had those friends sitting in there. should have been a great time, a time for people to enjoy their vacation. instead now there's this homicide investigation involving someone who didn't even seem to be fighting back when they were being hit over and over again. >> ryan, please stay on top of this story. >> this morning it is black friday, which is typically the biggest shopping day of the year but rising inflation and slower
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consumer confidence have tempered expectations. it's also forced retailers to put a lot of those deals out earlier. we go to the macy's flagship store in new york city. there were a lot of people there early on. what are you hearing from consumers about their concerns about the economy? >> if you had any doubt that black friday shoppers were in store no more, i'm here to tell you that in-store shopping is happening at least in this iconic macy's store in herald square. a couple hundred people out in the dark in the cold waiting to come in. they want to come in and touch the product. just today black friday shoppers expected to reach 115 million across the country. half of those are expected to shop in store. but as you know, many people
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love to shop online as well. one macy's exec i talked with said lots of people like to do it both ways. listen. >> i think we have a really big base of consumers that shop online. our best shoppers shop both of this many. we spend time allowing customers to use all the different options whenever it's most convenient for them. >> and you mentioned inflation and how that's impacting the shopper. yes, inflation, higher prices on just about everything, it's taken spending power away from consumers. i spoke with several shoppers who said they're staying positive and sticking to their budgets. something like this, 60% off the original price. this is what they're factoring in when making their decisions on what to buy this holiday
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season. the national federation is upbeat saying spending is expected to increase by 8% adding up to about $940 billion in holiday spending for november and december. >> thank you. many republicans condemning the colorado spring shooting on an lgbtq night club. but has the rhetoric contributed in a rise of attacks of transportation secretary pete buttigieg. a couple questions about that are next. t-mobilele won't raise the prie of your talk, text and data.a. and it's designed toto help make aches and pains a thing of the past. by relieving pressure points and supporting your body in a way no other mattress can. for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic® adstable mattress sets.
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the community in colorado springs has rallied around club q, which was the site of the shooting that left five people dead. every year this club prepared a thanksgiving meal together. it's a tradition that they say goes back ten years and after the shooting the questions remained about whether or not they were actually going to go through with the dinner still. a local church stepped up to host an event for club q and with the help from volunteers and donations from local businesses, there was a huge thanksgiving meal that was available to a community that is very much still grieving. >> so many people are coming together because they care about this community. they care about what's coming out of this community. they're not looking at it as black, white, gay, straight, they are looking at it as this is my community.
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>> this comes as president biden and first lady jill biden called the two owners of club q on thanksgiving to offer their condolences and their support after speaking with the hero. >> i know it's going to be fascinating and to talk about all the facets that we're dea dealing with when it comes to this story. we're speak now to chasten buttigieg. after what happened in colorado springs and what happened to these families, how are you dealing with it? what's important to you this morning? >> yeah, you know, it's tough. it's hard and it's definitely hard being in a position to watch people continuously attack your community.
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and it happened right after pulse our community was shattered. and seeing this happening again and seeing what's happening with the rhetoric surrounding it is certainly painful. >> can we talk about the rhetoric surrounding it because, listen, especially lately a lot of people have been using gay people -- not just lately but it ramped up during the mid terms, using gay people as political pawns in their messaging and their ads and things they're trying to get accomplished and trying to roll back certain issues. how do you respond? >> yeah. certainly it's uncomfortable watching them try to have it both ways. they spent the entire mid terms and for many of them they spent their entire time here in washington attacking the lgbtq community, attaching terrible
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labels to lgbtq and then something like club q happens and they want to send us their thoughts and prayers. i know people understand that words have power and they have created a very dangerous atmosphere for lgbtq people with their language. and then something like this happens and they quickly jump on social media and say thoughts and prayers. how awful. they can't have it both ways and they need to wake up and understand that ideology and their rhetoric and language is hurting people. >> what to you say to members of the community who are frustrated with the hate out there? >> i share in your frustration. but i also wants to say i believe that folks on the maga right, that people who have these mega phones on social media or here in congress are a very, very vocal minority. you have to understand and
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remember that the majority of americans believe in lgbtq equality, the majority of americans are with us. the majority of americans believe in marriage equality. the majority of americans believe that trans people should be protected and respected. these folks just have really big mega phones on social media. it's good to remember not everyone is spending their days on twitter, on facebook. they're going about their lives. these are folks who rather than focusing on getting things done or coming to washington and coming to solutions are just focusing on us. >> normally i don't like to give things like this oxygen, but i think it's really important because, one, it's happening and, two, you responded to it and it was a direct criticism and attack on your husband. this is fox news's tucker carlson attacking your husband and about this tragedy.
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watch this. >> pete buttigieg wants to talk about identity. he always wants to talk about identity. the funny, ironic thing is, until a few years ago, buttigieg wouldn't admit he's gay. he lied about it. now he's happy to suuse his sexl orientation as a cudgel to bash people with it. >> you responded with this post of your husband waving in his military uniform. what did you mean in that picture in. >> my husband served under don't ask, don't tell, which mean he would have been discharged from the military if he had come out of the closet. in the clip tucker carlson says
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my husband just wants to talk about that and not what's happening. this kind of rhetoric is so easy to attack people and to go on your talk show and fire people up about something that's not actually happening. i love my husband deeply. i know he's a committed public servant and he everyone's best interest at heart. i just think these people again with these mega phones, they have a big platform. rather than focusing on real issues, people's lives, making them better, they've decided to focus on hate. >> listen, i like to focus on the reality of america and that is there are members, gay, lesbian, bisexual communities, they are having great interactions with their families and talking about all of these issues. i am a family like that.
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i understand you have twins now. i'm wondering how you spent your thanksgiving, was it great, did they eat too much? >> they can polish a plate quite well. we had a lovely day. ne they are walking and talking and most beautiful having conversations with you but there aren't words yet. we're destroying everything we can get our hands on. it's lovely to have this time to spend together as a family. without bringing too much politics to it, i know we're on the press miss of a marriage equality vote. for any senator wondering whether they should vote yes or no, spend sm time with us lately, eating a good meal and
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and, listen, i think it's wonderful to see your family. i know that it's tough when you to talk about these social issues independently of that but i would think in this day and age, they would definitely say it was necessary. best of luck to you, happy thanksgiving and with regards to your husband as well. >> thank you. >> so jerry jones responding to a 1950s photo showing a class cowboy owner trying to keep black students from intergrading. coming up, we'll talk to the little rock nine, another group of sued ents who integrated another black high school that same month just miles away. from liberty mutual!!! only pay for w what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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students confronting black students as they were attempting to enter the north little rock high school. jones was asked about that photo, why he was in it, what it meant after the cowboys thanksgiving game yesterday. this is what he said. >> that was, um, gosh, 65 years ago and a curious kid didn't know at the time the monumental event really that was going on and i'm sure glad that we're a long way from that, i am, and that would remind me just to continue to do everything we can to not have those kinds of things happen. >> reporter: jerry, do you understand the perception that people have of you standing there? that was not exactly a welcoming committee that day? >> yeah, i sure do.
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i understand that. >> that was taken weeks before little rock nine integrated a school. president at the time eisenhower had students escorted. joining us is earnest green, a member. we want to get your reaction as he is explaining his presence in that photo. >> my view is that jerry jones has an opportunity to make that picture have a different ending by pursuing diversity and inclusion and involvement of the african-american community,
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people of color all throughout this country. that most americans know something about it. professional football is a did that everybody has talked about since 1957 and i think it's something we should do this year. >> good morning to you. happy thanksgiving. it is indeed an honor to be on with people like you. it's in large part why i'm able to sit in the seat and do what i do. so i think it's tremendous that
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you want to stay in the present and move forward. but if you look at that picture and the faces in that crowd, you faced similar faces. you saw those people. those people grew up to be adults many alive today. so for those faces that you and others witnessed, what's your message to them right now. >> well, that they have an opportunity today to make that picture a different outcome, to show that this can be a country that involves people not wants to keep them out. i mean, the reason is it was nearer to me than i could and central had more classes, diversity of classes. they had physics.
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we didn't have physics. all of that was to show that a segregated life in arkansas was not something that was going to have a good outcome. and i think today as head of the dallas cowboy on expanding opportunities in this country. >> and that's been a big question. is he using his role -- that's been the question raised, is he using being it seems like a big blind spot for them. >> well, i think you're right. the article that i really the cowboys have an african-american
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sets a f it really is set to tone as a country as a hole and going ffrm we need to be able to show that there's a relationship between education and success. all of this is tied together and. f have. >> i think you're right. if you look at the sports that's mad f you did it through integrating schools. this npg. >> thank you.
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and i wish frn. >> thank you, ernest. >> it's amazing to be a forkball. all right. we've also got some interesting news here. you know that old rule you've got to drink eight glasses of pal water a day, we'll tell yoyou whether or not that's actually trueue. it's the subway series menu. 12 irresistible subs.
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okay. you might have been told that you need to drink eight glasses of water a day. is that fact or fiction? a new study looked at how much water of drinking daily as as compared to what they really need. i have been drinking eight glasses of water so i would like to know if this is true or not. >> it's not. sorry, caitlin. you'll shoo be in cdc says
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there's no specific recommendation given how much any one person should drink because the needs vary so much. no one is sure where this glass statue came. >> sngt it funny how it gets in your brain and it's science! >> so how much water should we be drinking. >> well, there it they took 5,600 people, international study and they gave them water that was marked with isotopes and they could see how much their body was actually using. and what they saw was that people actually used 4 to 25 cups a day. it's a huge range. it depended on their physical ak
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it and were they in a hot and humid place? >> not including tea, coffee, anything like that, when it's just pure water, how much should people be i'm going to be a little bit sore of gross for a minute. i think we should leave aside the whole number of glasses of water and look at your pee. the cleveland pinnic wears it out they say if your key is the kol are if it's amber color, you're mildly dehydrated. if it's syrupy, kind of like a bad beer, that's bad. that's dehydration. you should rehigh draet and maub if this parkin israel, forbes,
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they've made up a song that every welfare reform frm. >> if you've got yellow pee, that's not good. any school child can tell you that. we all need to learn that. >> don is lawing so hard right now. >> don learned that song growing up. >> lid beth i have worked for you in 16 years now. it's the if you best thing i've ever heard you say, i look at your pee." >> yellow peepee that's not good. if it's sore of pale, you're a winner and. >> who needs $. all right, coming up don's
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i open my eyes: earth is our pandora. lisa ling is back with a special new season of "this is life." in the first episode, lisa takes a look look at how the loneliness of the pandemic era is changing the fabric of reof lagsships and how some days in a finished bedroom in this basement. >> hey, tootsy pop. ready to get that makeup off and
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get changed? >> a place he built for her where the two of them can be alone. are you physically intimate with to shtasha? >> yes. >> what's that like? >> it's different. it's different than i would have expected. but there is a relationship there. right now sex is a very smart part of it. it really is. look how gorgeous you are. >> sex may be why tony first purchased tasha but he tells me that was just the beginning. >> the host of "this is life with lisa ling." hello. lisa. >> hello. >> people will think this is weird to some extent maybe they're right but he's not the only one. that's the reason you did it. there are lots of people who are doing what this man is doing. >> look, don, this is not an
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episode about sex dolls. it is about the reliance and even relationship we all are in with non-human entities. most of us these days are reliant or addicted to our devices, smart phones and the things you can do and experience on them powered by very powerful a.i. so there are algorithms that know more about us than we know about ourselves. we spend more time on them than we do with other human beings. they know what makes us happy, what makes us sad, what kinds of things we want to buy and in someways they've even begun to think for us because we're not thinking for ourselves. these algorithms are kerr rating our feeds based on the data about us. steven hawking said about a.i. it will be a new life form that will out perform humans.
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these are things we actually need to be discussing and think thanksgiving about more. >> one thing this made me think about are the studies that they've done where if someone has dementia or alzheimer's, how they have these -- like dogs or stuffed animals they don't have to care for but helps them cope and helps them actually deal with what the progression of those symptoms looks like. with this specifically, when it comes to what you're talking about, the relationship this man has with this doll raises the question of loneliness i think and what it looks like that people feel the need to seek that out because there is something i think exacerbated by the pandemic. >> especially after the pandemic, right. >> absolutely. kaitlin. there are so many people out there with social anxiety or a crippling fear of rejection and i think those numbers have increased since the pandemic. when you think about something like a doll, right, a stuffed animal in the cases of people who have these neurological disorders, but again, even our
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devices. they validate everything about us, right? they will never speak negatively of us or never feed you information that you don't want it to feed you or you might not think, right? and so what does that say about the future of humanity, right? when this kind of technology really starts to take on a life of it own, which it is starting to do. again, it's occupying more of our time so to say we're not in a relationship with it would be false. >> anything about this day in age when we're so connected, right, but then yet so isolated and disconnected. >> this is why i love lisa's show. >> enjoy the holiday. hope to see you in person soon. >> so great to see you both. thank you. >> you can "this is life with lisa ling" on cnn sunday.
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>> for all refugees and immigrants, food is a sense of self-preservation. as long as you preserve those family recipes, it really instills a sense of rootedness, feeling connected to your cultural upbringing. in august the chef will highlight her dishes from afghanistan. >> my restaurant flavors from a far, we really bring international cuisine to los angeles in a way that hasn't been done before and it's a way to highlight chefs who all share some form of displacement. >> that's so cool and so special for them to be able to share that and keep that up. go to cnn heros.com and vote for her or any of your top ten favorites. >> in case you're wondering, we did not plan these outfits. i walked into the studio and said are you kidding me? >> great minds dress alike. >> see you on
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