tv CNN This Morning CNN December 14, 2022 5:00am-6:00am PST
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it was a lot higher than i expected. a carvana advocate came to my house. as soon as they stepped in the car they paid me on the spot. i couldn't believe it. i'd recommend it to anyone. try it for yourself. go to carvana .com and get an offer for your car. at carvana good morning. we are halfway of through the week. halfway through. it is wednesday, december 14th. welcome. >>. we . >> we have a lot to get to today. we have to catch you up
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immediately. the framework of a budget deal that funds the federal government for a full deal has bipartisan support in congress but republican leader mitch mcconnell and kevin mccarthy, they're at odds over the breakthrough. mccarthy, the house minority leader, says that he is a hell no on a one-year agreement but the measure is expected to pass. a tornado barrelled across northern louisiana overnight killing a child. now a search is under way for the mother who is also missing this morning. at least 20 people were injured when a twister ripped through a mobile home park in farmerville. we'll show you the scene in just a moment. >> 13-13. president zelenskyy says all 13 drones shot by russia were shot down as the pope is suggesting all of us buy fewer christmas presidents and instead donate to
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ukraine. >> and an attorney for bankman-fried climbed his client has long suffered from insomnia and he has been indicted on eight criminal charges. >> the last semifinal match of the world cup kicks off this afternoon. reigning champion france will take on underdog morocco for the chance to play argentina in the final on sunday. >> so this morning officials on high alert at the u.s.-mexico border. the biden administration is sending more agents to el paso texas over the concerns over the recent migrant surge there as title 42 is expected to expire two weeks from today. 19 states are asking courts to keep title 42 in place, which allowed them to quickly
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expel migrants at the border. >> title 42 going away with the numbers we're seeing today is a true emergency for the community. it's a federal crisis that's happening within the border of el paso. >> ed lavandera is live for us in el passo. y you have been on the ground live in el paso. what are you seeing there? >> reporter: there's a great deal of concern about what is going to happen next week if title 42 is officially lifted. over the last few days we've seen about an average of 2,500 migrants crossing the border into the el paso area. this is separate from the issue of title 42. what we are hearing from officials here in el paso is shelters are over capacity, the processing center is also over capacity as well.
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that is raising a great deal of concern about what is going to happen next week? city officials here are sounding the alarm. >> what we need to do here i think is much more than what weir d we're doing at this point. we need people to step up. we need to stop pointing fingers, we need to work together and collaborate and keep folks passing through our neighborhood safe and also keeping our communities safe as well. >> reporter: and, don, the biden administration is predicting if title 42 is lifted, there could be as many as 9,000 to 14,000 people crossing the u.s. southern border next week. that is what they are preparing for. dhs officials said yesterday they are sending more agents here as well as a thousand processing officers that will help handle the number of people coming across the border. but there is a growing sense of concern about what is going to unfold next week.
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>> where exactly are the migrants looking to go and where would they go after being deported? >> reporter: it's interesting. we were in a shelter last night so there are a number of people because of title 42 who are being expelled and immediately returned back to mexico. but there are people who are given processing papers and court dates, immigration court dates to appear several months from now. we spoke with a number of people who told us they were planning to travel to places like georgia, pennsylvania, new york. so they're actually spending very little time here in border communities, moving on to other destinations where they might already have family members or friends who have already set up or established some sort of roots. that's what we're hearing a lot from the migrants that we've spoken to. >> ed lavandera, thank you. >> lawmakers are now urging president biden to extend title 42.
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they warn lifting it next week will result in a complete loss of operational control over the southern border and believe it will have a negative impact on those communities. congressman, if title 42 ends as scheduled, how much more difficult does managing the migrant crisis become, do you believe? >> communities are going to be overwhelmed. we've seen that in the past with rio grande valley and del rio. they're going to be overwhelmed. there's just not enough shelters and border processing centers to handle t handle the large number of people. what border control is doing, it's almost like whack a mole. if there's a surge in the valley, they'll move people there. now they're moving agents to el
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paso. this is not the way to secure the border. we can do two things at the same time. we can provide a compassionate way of treating the immigrants that are trying to come in. at the same time we have to secure the border. the only thing the border control is doing is processing a lot of them to come into the u.s. and then returning some of them under title 42. if title 42 goes away, this is going to open up a large number of people coming to border communities. >> do you think the biden administration understands that sense of urgency? >> you know, i don't think they do or if they do, they just have a very different perspective. it's okay to listen to immigration activists. it's okay to do that. but who is listening to the men and women in green and blue and who is listening to ou border
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communities. i don't just go visit there, i know and i talk to the mayor, county judges, commissioners, land owners and the administration is not listening to them. it's about time that they pay attention to border communities. >> would it help if they placed new limits on asylum seekers? >> well, it's not a matter of putting limits on asylum seekers. it's how you process those asylum seekers. if you put 100 people in front of an immigration judge and, by the way, there's a back log of 1.9 million cases, that's years, years in the future before they can really have their day in court. if you put is 100 people in front of an immigration judge, 88 to 90% are going to be
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rejected. why are we not saying there's an asylum seeker coming in from another country and they pass a third country? independent been talking about this for four, five years where they can seek asylum somewhere else. why is the u.s. the only place that they can get away from percent crucial? or if they can do it in an orderly process, ask are what you've seen in el paso and in the valley, i don't call that orderly and i don't understand why the administration doesn't understand that. i want to be constructive. you want to work with them to enjoy this issue. >> congressman, you saw dhs secretary. do you think it would help if president biden came to the border to see this firsthand? >> yes, absolutely. i think -- i don't know why they
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keep avoiding the border and saying there's other things more important than investing in the i think part of the battle is he why just shows up. it would send a strong signal to the communities that he's there, he cares about the border communities. just show up. it doesn't take much to just show up at the border. >> congressman, while we have you this morning before we let you go, sam bankman fried, he has been -- >> i think you're incorrect. as far as you know, he has not donated to me. >> it was reported he had donated to you. do you want to see fellow
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democrats and republicans that he donated to all return though donations or donate them to charities like we've seen some do? >> yes, i think they should return it to charity. >> congressman, thank you so much on two very important topics this morning. thanks for joining us. >> thank you so much. >> kaitlan, great interview. a deadly and destructive tornado tore through louisiana last night. officials outside the shreveport say one child was killed. that child's mother is still missing. at least 20 people were injured when the tornado moved through a mobile park in farmerville. >> we got in the shower, like i said and all of a sudden by the time we got hunkered down here, it was gone, the roof was gone. they always say you hear a train coming. well, this was a big train come through here. >> when you joined us at the
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beginning of the program the sun was not up. now it is and up you see a whol lot more. >> yeah, poppy, we are seeing some of the devastating and simply heartbreaking damage left behind by these devastating tornadoes here in northern louisiana. you're just seeing really a small drop in the bucket because we are still not permitted to go to the mobile home park that was directly hit behind me here, but we're in union parish. this is just northwest of monroe, louisiana and you can see just some of the memories left over of children's toys, typical shrapnel, the tops of roofs and buildings, electrical wire. you name it. this is what we would typically season within a devastating tornado. when you're not seeing behind me because of our restrictions within this particular yaur is t area is the mobile home
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community behind me. we talked to some eyewitnesses they came across some individuals this morning who literally were confused walking out of the woods, talking about how their mobile home was swept into the woods and just being completely disoriented after this tornado struck just moments after that particular devastating and terrifying thing for them to take place. there are cadaver dogs and search and rescue operations that are still ongoing here, as is typical with any kind of tornado damage that we would see across the country. the national weather service is en route to come here and assess how powerful the winds were in this union parish tornado that has left the path of destruction that you see directly behind me. poppy? >> thank you for being there. we're thinking of everyone there this morning. >> in just a split second, everything is gone.
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>> i hate when they hit overnight. >> this morning an l.a. city council meeting elected into chaos as the cry for one member to step down has been growing as comments were made by his colleagues about his child. >> the president of the united states has demanded his resignation and husband own hubris is the only thing keeping hihim in office. seen the impact o of what we do? you bet i have. (kathryn) we have worked with so m many amazing causes and made a diffeference. (vo) by the end of this year, subaru and our retailers will have donated over two hundred and fifty million dollars to charity. (brent) it's about more than just selling cars. (phil) the subaru share the love event going on now. introducing the new sleep number climate360 smart bed. the only smart bed in the world that actively cools, warms
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ladies and gentlemen, you've been warned repeatedly that your behavior of yelling in the council chambers and disrupting the meeting is not permitted for council rule 12. if you continue, you will be asked to leave. >> that is a los angeles city council meeting erupting in chaos as calls for the resignation of the embattled council member kevin deleon grow. he has refused to step down as he was caught on a leaked tape with or council members making racist remarks about a young black child of one of his colleagues. the other council members who participated in that meeting have either resigned or are leaving. deleon is under renewed scrutiny after he was caught on camera getting into a physical altercation with a community activist during a holiday event. in an exclusive interview, he
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defended his decision not to resign. >> voters make decisions, not folks in the peanut gallery. tens of millions of americans go to work every single day with folks that they don't like. but you know what they do every morning, they get up and they go to work and they don't have the luxury perhaps that some folks do that want to walk out. i'm here to do the business of my constituents. >> fascinating interview. we want to talk more about it. there she is, cnn anchor kate bolduan and so glad to have both of you on. this is craziness that's happening. he said he took it out of context, that remark, and you showed him the evidence. >> there's a whole lot that went into this whole thing.
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this all started in october when this leaked tape came out. i brought it up to him and he said the media had been taking it out of context. as anyone would, we played it in context. the reason i wanted to speak with kevin deleon is there were two question, what were you thinking and what are you going to do today? it's like the second largest city in america in a city like so many others that has huge issues. homelessness isn't something that kevin spoke to me about but huge issues that need to be addressed. i'm curious to know how well the council is actually working when essentially it's locked up because every time they get together, there are protests. deleon didn't show up for 60 days, then he shows up. the way it was put to me is the
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city essentially has been held hostage because of how this has all played out. he said it's up to the voters to decide my political future. he said tens of millions of americans go to work every day with folks they don't like. it may be true that people don't like the folks they work with but will is a question of how well the they are working to do the people's business at this point. >> two things interesting about that interview is, one, we're in the post-shame period for politicians so there is a school of thought you ride it out no matter how bad it seems to get because there is evidence, let's say at the highest levels that that can be done. so there is a different thinking than before that you should just get out. >> and some of the council members resigned and he is not. >> do you think he should
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resign? >> i think there is a broader thought about people saying for latino power. it really is who is in control in this city. who can have the airport in their district, who can have the jobs there and that's why it seems so tightly held and why people were so passionate about it. >> that was one of the questions i don't really feel there was fully an answer to. he has apologized and said he's tried to make amedicals and move forward to do the people's business but what is the mistake he is apologizing for? there's the language, which he said was taken out of context and he was not trying to make fun of the son of one of the council members and latino
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members trying to work the redistricting in their favor and to dilute the power of black voters in the process. >> in your interview, what you just said there about politicians riding it out, he didn't even acknowledge what he actually said. he said i wish i stood up and had more construct uf conversations. you compared a young black child to a luxury handbag. >> never repeat the words that you are on tape doing. we've seen this in many other contexts. always ride above it and talk about how it really the voters edecision and it's a new way of thinking and critical pncht rncht and crisis management to get through it. i don't know what other piece of sound we have but there's more on that conversation when he's believed he was taken out of context
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he basically said there was an artful way to -- >> there's no scenario where that works but he tried it. >> there's really nothing that the council can do. the council censured him and taken away, as he said, it does get back to the voters. it expensive. they need to get some 20,000 votes from his district to move forward. his term is through december of 2024. there's a lot of time between obviously now and then. at its most basic, it is kind of a study in how to react to a crisis. but when you are the continued center of the crisis. >> right. >> he had said we need to and is he doing the work to figure out the business, they'll figure it
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out. >> teaching can be a very lucrative business. you would be good at it but don't leave us here. >> sports journalist grant wall sudden recent tragic death shocked all of us, shocked everyone, shocked the sports world. the 49-year-old died friday after collapsing while covering the world cup in qatar. the circumstances around his death are still unclear and now his widow is remembering her husband and revealing how he died. listen to her. >> i think for him soccer was more than just a sport. it was this thing that connected people around the world. there's so much about the culture, the politics of sport, of soccer, to him it was a way of really understanding people and where they were coming from. i want people to remember him as this kind, generous person who was really dedicated to social justice. you know, i think that's another
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aspect of soccer that was really important to him, promoting the women's game, you know, the recent statements he had made by lgbt rights. that was grant. that was grant. so he had an autopsy done here in new york by the new york city medical examiner's office and it showed that he had an aortic aneurysm that ruptured. >> which means what? >> that's the big blood vessel that comes out of your heart, sort of the trunk of all blood vessels and an and eurysm is th ballooning of a vessel wall. it's one of these things that was like live brewing for years and for whatever reason it happened during this point in time. >> let's bring in dr. sanjay gupta. just her to have the strength and to come on and speak about had her beloved husband.
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can you help us understand what happened to him now that she has told the world? >> yeah. it's so sad. you know, grant wall is one of these p -- grant wahl is one of these people i would communicate with from time to time. celine was a medical contributor to cnn as well. what she was talking about was the major blood vessel called the aorta leaves the heart and then gives off tributaries to all these other organs in the body. sometimes that blood vessel itself, it can actually start to weaken. it's made up of all these layers and some of the layers are weakened. you see that sort of in the middle of the screen, that candy cane looking structure instead of being normal contour like that it will start to become the shape of a balloon.
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and that balloon is weaker and as the walls did tend, the walls become whacker or it can rp tur or you can get blood that dissects through the walls of the aorta. either way it can be a catastrophic problem. i would say it typically happens in someone who is older there's really not a way that he knew he had this. unless he had family history or was being screened, it's like live he didn't know this. he thought he had bronchitis. sometimes that ballooning can become so large, it can start to push on other things in that part of your body or chest. people may develop cough or weakness of voice and it's a totally different problem. >> before you run, i want to make sure we get this in. people at home who are watching. i keep looking at the picture of celine and grant playing.
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it's devastating. is there anything -- can you go to the doctor? is there a checkup? is there any way to know about something like this. >> you can be screened for this sort of thing. it's so rare, it's not recommended people go out and get screened. about 20% of the time, there is family history. if you have family history of this, that is something you can p should potentially get checked out. and you do that with imaging tests. one of the first stories i covered in 2003 was the story of john ritter dying. he was 54 years old and he basically had at same problem. he was a few years older than grant specific now and it ended up being an aortic and why are
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but obviously these sad, sad stories like this do happen. >> thank you, doctor. appreciate it. i know celine watches us. she texts. we're thinking about you. we're so, so sorry. >> absolutely. it's hard to believe but it has been ten years since sandy hook. up next, we're going to talk to a survivor. she hid in a coat closet with 17 of her little classmates and she's now 17 years old. she says she lost her childhood that day. ts amazing camera at t-mobile. wow! for a limited time at t-mobile, get four iphone 14s on us. and 4 new lines for $25 bucks a line. ♪ for skin as alive as you are... don't settle for silver. harness the power of 7 moisrizers & 3 vitamins to smooth, heal, and moturize your dry skin. gold bond. champion your skin
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save hundreds a year over t-mobile, verizon, and at&t with xfinity mobile, and for a limited time get $400 off a new eligible 5g phone. switch today. second graders who survived the sandy hook shooting and about to enter college, they're all about to enter college, right? today marks ten years since the unthinkable struck newtown when 20 first graders and since adults were murdered at school. it seemed certain that lawmakers would right away after that pass meaningful gun violence legislation. this was president obama after congress rejected a bipartisan proposal to expand background checks in 2013. >> there were no coherent
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argument as to why we wouldn't do this. it came down to politics. so all in all this was a pretty shameful day for washington. >> and since then school shootings have sadly become more common in america, including in uvalde, that massacre at their school this year, a chilling echo of sandy hook and since columbine in 1999, "the washington post" reports more than 232,000 students have experienced gun violence at their school. our next guest survived the sandy hook shooting. she was a second grader at the time. she hid from the gunman in a classroom coat area with 17 of her classmates. her first grade teacher, her favorite teacher, was murdered that day. serena is now 17. she's about to go to college. she says her childhood was taken away from her. she has become an activist for newtown alliance and met with senators last week about gun legislation. she says she wants others to experience a normal childhood.
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ser serena joins me now. good morning, and thank you. >> good morning. thank you, poppy. yes, i think it's so important to keep this from happening. and just preventing gun violence as a whole from happening and to help our future generations continue to thrive. >> yeah. that day ten years ago you lost so many people you loved. and i know you lost your favorite teacher. we have pictures of her. could you tell people what she meant to you? >> yes. she was very kind. she was sweet. she was loving. she was caring. and most of all, she was just an important person to me because she was so special. and i remember her and --
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>> right there you see the images, her name was victoria, sort of a name that we know so well. i hate saying the word anniversary, it's a tragedy but it's ten years later, i remember so well being in newtown in the wake of it. what do you make of where this country is ten years later? >> it is really difficult, especially seeing all these other shootings, especially uvalde because it was so close to sandy hook. i feel like it affected me and i failed to know that something similar happened again is very tiring. >> you feel like you failed. you did not fail. you go to washington, you meet with senators, you meet with
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lawmakers. it's not you who has failed. why do you carry that weight? >> well, first of all, it's just so hard to experience a school shooting and to relate to other survivors as well. and i think it's so important to keep fighting for the assault weapons ban as well and just to keep children and young adults alive. >> you went to that vigil, right, just a matter of days ago where president biden spoke. and i want people to listen to what he said there and the contest of this is that he has said in recent weeks, the president, that he is once again pushing an assault weapons ban. listen to this. >> the world continues to limb limit the number of bullets in a
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cartridge, the type of weapon purchased and sold but it's still not enough. still not enough. [ applause ] >>he's pushing for more. this was former president obama just last week. listen. >> perhaps the most bit ter disappointment of my time in office, the closest i came to being cynical was the utter failure of congress to respond in the immediate aftermath of the sandy hook shootings. >> what do you think, serena? do you think congress will act to pass more gun violence legislation? >> i hope we do. we have to just keeping them forward to pass these legislations, to improve our communities and make them much safer. >> i was struck specifically about one thing that you've been
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doing when it comes to black children especially. you said i'm trying to help communities of color to help prevent black people from dying from guns. because we know a disproportionate number of those impacted by school shootings are people of color. >> mm-hmm. yes. and i'm trying to help these communities because it's important for children to grow up and live a normal childhood and experience a childhood that i never had because it was taken away from me because of sandy hook. and i just want to help all communities no matter what to help improve their safety and to help kids thrive. >> and before we go, can you share with people what you want to become after college? because i think it's so appropriate that you want to heal people. >> yes. i want to become a
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cardiothoracic surgeon, which is a heart and lung surgeon. >> we are cheering you on all the way. serena, thank you for being here and for standing up and fighting and going to washington and making your voice heard. thinking about you today. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> all right. so all of you are going to want to watch tonight because our friend and colleague allison camerota is hosting "sandy hook forever remembered," that is at 10:00 tonight. back in a momement. i see an amazing place.
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choose change, california, and find medically proven treatment options at choosechangeca.org. arizona cardinals quarterback kyler murray is out for the entire nfl season after suffering a torn acl. murray is just the latest on a growing list of nfl stars to suffer this fate. players on the bills, cowboys, steelers just to name a few. let's turn now to our senior data reporter, harry "data" enten for this morning's number. there are at least four players out there that are now out for
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acl injuries. what's going on here? is it on the rise? coincidence? >> i love these kind of questions because there's kind of great mysteries. one of those, vaughn miller, who is a big player on my buffalo bills hurt my heart. here are the -- this is not the official nfl data but according to "usa today" at least 40 players are out with acl injuries with four regular season games to be played. past data shows that 2021 had more acl tears than any other recent season. that far eclipses the previous season in 2018 with 57. it does seem in 2021 the acl injuries were on the rise. we'll see when the official data is produced in 2022. at least in 2021, it did show
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acl injuries were rising. in. >> is artificial turf really a factor here? >> yes. >> so the nfl says that there's now no difference between turf in grass but there was one pre2020. the nfl player association sites the same data to say grass is safer. but there's no doubt historically surf. >> thanks. thank kayla is buying it, though. >> a the lot of families have said they believe turf is more harmful to the players, it's hard on their bodies. >> i feel like you should -- come on. >> this happened right after the show ended yesterday and i
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two years ago, mike leach was asked how he would like to be remembered when his obituary was written. >> when people write the mike leach obituary, many years from now, many, many years from now, how do you want to be remembered? >> well, that's their problem. their eight one writing the obituary. what do i care? i'm dead. the only regret i'll have is i didn't get to do more things. >> the sports world is remembering that characteristically dry humor after leach died monday at age of 61 following complications from a heart condition, he was known as an innovative, texas thame tech, washington state, mississippi state, one of the first things that comes to mind but he has been known for so
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much more than the three decades of college coaching. it seems everybody has a coach, because of comments like this. >> first of all, what kind of mythical powers does a sun devil have? we got to consider that. and i'll say the wildcats are out. the trojan, is he on horse or on foot, bow and arrow or a sword. >> my favorite weather pattern happens to be when it rains mud. goy out there, i go out there and look it and watch it and worse of it you have to wash your car, who cares, it's worth seeing, trust me. >> i'm going to get my grandkids one of these things so they can, you know, my daughter, and her husband, they need to hear this, because i went through years of random noises. >> now on, monday, it says bad stuff. serious storms. well, you're going to be getting 100 years anyway. live dangerously. i would go opposite of that. >> it's a must-have.
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>> there we go. >> there. >> coach, the mustache sensation, it has taken over, much of the country, how can you describe what you have meant to the team? >> i don't know. i don't think he had a mustache when i recruited him. i don't recall. >> this weather report here, what do i know, i'm a football coach. i suggest you go out and do what i do, get out of bed, go outside, then you know. >> there's really no one like him. such a cliche. every cliche about mike leach, it's true. when the news came yesterday when he passed, andy scholes our sports reporter emailed me and he covered him for two years and he said after an interview one time, andy told me he was going to propose to his girlfriend, and mike gave him all this advice and said do it on the phone to alleviate any pressure, and he then went along with what you do most to avoid the nagging
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questions about flowers and music and more and whatever answer you give wouldn't be good enough and i get more questions. that was him. >> everybody remembers his funny comments, and a smart guy, almost top of the class at pepperdine in law school, and his approach with geronimo, so much more than coaching but such a funny coach. >> i like his attitude. why do i care? i'm dead. why do i care about what they say in my obituary. a great attitude to have. >> that was his humor and his attitude. and i love the arizona cardinals coach said, the sport was better because of him, and it's far less interesting without him. so just think of his wife sharon and their kids this morning. >> all of them. >> nice tribute. >> okay, up next, from boy band to boot camp, one of the members of bts heading off to the military.
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what a busy show. and i just want to say to my home state, people will be waking up now, the sun is coming up, lots of devastation, so we are thinking about you this morning. we're thinking about celie gallander and your coach and the newtown families as well on the 10th anniversary. appreciate you joining us. >> we are glad you're with us. see you back here tomorrow morning. "newsroom" is now. good
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