Skip to main content

tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 23, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PST

3:00 am
>> i gotcha to say that probably felt pretty good, didn't it. >> it felt pretty damn good, man. >> new heights with jason and travis kelce. and number three. >> welcome to the podcast where we discuss science and science based tools. >> tom whitlock has died, you know his music. ♪ highway to the danger zone ♪ >> and this next top gun song won him an oscar. ♪ take my breath away ♪ >> tom whitlock died in a memory care center in nashville, he was 69. thanks for joining us. "cnn this morning" starts right now. i just want to feel safe in
3:01 am
my town again. and i don't feel safe right now. >> did you shorten my life now? i want to retire and enjoy it. how are with we going to enjoy it? you burned me. >> not too much to ask right? >> yes, quite a night on cnn. that was a night filled with mixed emotions. she will be back with us tomorrow. angry ohio residents grilling officials about the toxic train disaster but were the answers good enough. we'll show you the key moments from the cnn town hall. secretary pete buttigieg is set to visit the crash scene just a few hours from now. >> a lot of people ask how are we doing? i will be honest with you, not good. but we are doing the best we can. as it hits us. >> that is position no one would want to be in especially as a tv
3:02 am
journalist. the reason he is feeling that way tv journalists there doing their jobs. even when they had to report the unthinkable, the attack on one of their very own colleagues. and a storm shifting to the east. 60 million people. >> reporter: we begin with morning with the toxic train disaster into east palestine, ohio. and pete buttigieg is heading there today. and he will be the highest ranked biden official on the ground there. just hours now we expect to get answers from federal investigators why the train loaded with chemicals derailed. this morning the ntsb will release their preliminary report. they found that the train started to slow down dramatically 44 minutes from the crash.
3:03 am
sparks flying from a wheel that appeared to be overheating. so did the engineer realize something was wrong nearly an hour before the tragedy. nearly a week after the spill families in that area are complaining of nose bleeds and rashes. and at the cnn town hall residents got a chance to confront the ceo. jason -- >> reporter: good morning to you. this was a moment were some many people here in east palestine were waiting for. a chance to get face-to-face with these people. the head of the rail company as well as state officials. and question them directly. and they did not hold back. >> thank you for being here. an emotional cnn town hall. an opportunity for east
3:04 am
palestine residents to share their concerns and anger with those they hold responsible for the toxic train crash and the fallout. >> i am angry. angry about this. and i'm disgusted that we lost it. i don't feel safe in this town now. you took it away from me. you took it away from us. your company stinks. >> i hear you. i am terribly sorry this has happened to this community. >> from payments to residents, to cleanup operations along with testing air, water and soil, norfolk southern president, alan shaw listed short-term and long-term commitments to east palestine but that did not stop the barrage of criticism. >> we could have been warned, and thank god there were no casualties, no loss of life, no loss of buildings. >> i understand the anger and i have experienced it.
3:05 am
what i can do, and what norfolk southern can do to help the recovery of this community. >> a community seemingly traumatized. >> it's norfolk's disaster, not a train derailment. >> and unwilling to hide their feelings of unsafety. >> if you do not feel safe raise your hand. >> but the epa administrator says there are guardrails in place to prevent that from happening. >> the orders are that the company will comply with our order which compels them to take full responsibility, full accountability, for the trauma they have inflicted on this community and the damage they have caused. are you going to follow that order? >> yes, administrator ragan and i are together on this.
3:06 am
>> state officials are in search of more reassuring answers. >> wherever things are said like maybe and potentially and might be. this is a really serious issue. i am trying to be as honest and straight as i could. i told you when i tested the water we posted the results on that. on the issue of soil testing the ohio epa director had this to say. >> the problem is so excavate everything we know that is contaminated. and we test it so see how contaminated it is and where it can be disposed. >> the threats or heightened as reads report bleeding noses and rashes, affecting both adults and children. >> i have the skin issues and his is bloody noses. >> the amount of blood that came
3:07 am
out was alarming. >> we are all sick now. >> many are facing a devastating reality for their home town. >> i am 56 years old and afib. did you shorten my life? i want to enjoy my life. how are we going to enjoy it? you burned me. >> reporter: again so many emotions running high here poppy. this morning the ntsb is expected to release their preliminary report on the investigation. and transportation secretary pete buttigieg will be here in this very spot he was criticized for not showing up earlier. but he will be here today. >> he said lesson learned from that. he should have been there sooner. this could be anyone's town and i think this is sort of the canary in the coal mine, an issue we'll discuss later in the show. they are dealing with it now tonight could be you next.
3:08 am
there are so many questions. did the engineer know anything about that train before it went off the rails. and cnn analyzed video of the train as it headed to disaster. it appears that the train slowed down in the 44 minutes leading up to the wreck. and you can clearly see sparks, there you go right there, from the wheels, they were flying as it continued to travel more than 20 miles. let's bring in tom miles now. >> reporter: if you look at the maps and evidence what you see is something here that is alarming. look at this map. when the train went through alliance it was traveling 49 miles per hour. that is based on from one town traveling to another. there say hot box detecter that say set of infrared indicators and they are looking for axel
3:09 am
bearings that are overheating. from alliance to salem it was traveling at the 49 hour speed and no signs of sparking. by the time it got to salem, that is when we see the sudden, dramatic decrease in speed. it was going 49 miles per hour that is normal for this section of track. between 40 and 60 miles per hour according to federal documents and at salem it drops by 20 miles and goes to 29 miles per hour. 49 power to 29 miles per hour. and you see the sparks and flashes coming from this car coming from security camera. it keeps going for another 21 miles to east palestine, where of course we have the calamity
3:10 am
here. and these hot boxes will be important to look at signatures coming off the bottom of this train that will tell them if these bearings failed. when they fail it's a serious thing. that is why they have hot box detectors. the question will be if indeed that is the key to this, if the sparks coming off the bottom of the train, why did the train not simply stop to address it? >> tom, i grew up near railroad tracks. some places trains go slower than others because of the areas they are in and the condition of the tracks, what have you. do we know if that is the case where this train slowed down? >> we know from federal documents, documents from 2020 would show that the typical seed would have been 40 to 60 miles per hour, not 29 miles per hour. obviously if you slow down that much you will know you slowed
3:11 am
down that much. the key question is why did you do it? if not this what other reason did you have? >> we will be joined by eastal stein residents that were at the town hall last night. are they satisfied with officials and what do they want to see happen next. and ohio governor will join us amid the response. s make sure you stay with us. and a tragedy in florida a 9-year-old girl and a journalist were fatally shot. >> no one in our community, not a mother, not a 9-year-old and certainly not news professionals should become the victim of gun violence in our community. >> a 19-year-old man is charged with those murders. we are joined now from orlando.
3:12 am
absolutely tragic and it reminds me of a tv journalist, allison, that was killed several years ago doing they are job as well. >> reporter: right, something that we as journalists have certainly never forgotten. poppy, in the last half hour spectrum news identified the teen members involved in this shooting spree. identifying 24-year-old dillon lions and jessie waldon. they described him as motivated professional who was living his dream in orlando. someone that was clearly very much loved. even in the local news community with his competitors. so let's back up and talk about exactly what led up to this, and what is still unanswered at this point. according to the sheriff here in orange county, he says that
3:13 am
around 11:00 a.m. yesterday they received a call of a shooting, a woman in her 20s was killed. and then about five hours later, the sheriff says that the suspect returned and opened fire again, shooting that news team, that spectrum news 13 team as well as a woman and her 9-year-old daughter. the 9-year-old died. that is 19-year-old keith melvin moses and he is in custody. the sheriff mentioned he has a lengthy criminal history that includes gun charges. so we'll wait to find out exactly what the charges are today in court. and in the meantime though, a lot, a lot of strong feelings being here at the hospital among the journalists that lost one of
3:14 am
their own. >> thank you, laila for bringing the names of those killed and injured. we appreciate the reporting. >> let's talk about the people that work with the journalists. putting the journalists at spectrum news 13, in a horrible position. they are forced to mourn a co-worker while continuing to do their jobs. as brave reporters continued to carry on there was moments they could not deny their emotions. >> we went to the scene after the call and there are a lot of us trying to wrap our head around this. it's a difficult situation and difficult day for our family. but at news 13 we are doing the best to bring this information. >> not good. we are doing the best we can as it hits us.
3:15 am
and it's not just emotion for a colleague. but as a parent to say a 9-year-old has lost their life. it's not good. >> i apologize, this is really difficult to cover. it is very emotional here at ormc. it's nice to see all the media come together in solidarity in this moment. this is every reporters absolutely worst nightmare. we go home at night afraid -- that something like this will occur. and that is what happened here. >> that is one thing that was said by the folks at spectrum 13. that last reporter is from a competitor but in the that moment everyone came together
3:16 am
for them. >> don't think people realize how dangerous it is to be a local reporter. one thing, i was a local reporter for a long time, before being at nbc and then coming here. the one when i saw adrian broadous, and she was on the side of the road. i hated to do live shots on the side of highways. many people are killed. someone was going to talladega for the auto race and died on the side of the road and moments later i had to do a live shot on the side of the road and it made me uncomfortable. once i was in philadelphia and i rounded the corner with a camera man and someone was shooting someone running away. and it was just moments. you remember the helicopter crash for channel 4. and i was not in philadelphia, but there was a weather man that died in a helicopter crash.
3:17 am
the whole city, the whole delaware valley mourned. so local reporters put their lives on the line every day. people think about war zones and war reporters but these folks in local towns all over america are putting themselves in harms way every day to cover the news, and i think that they should be commended and people at home so realize that. they get a lot of criticism. >> and targeted as well. we don't know the motive here but you remember allison parker a few years ago. >> remember when drew griffin died and in the moment when you read it and it becomes real. our hearts go out to you and we are really, really sore y. we are all with you and standing for you. we will stand strong if you can't right now. >> no question. we have much more on that ahead.
3:18 am
>> and speaking of, doing their duties now. we want to turn to the weather. more than 60 million people coast-to-coast are under winter alerts this morning. for some states the coldest temperatures of the season. more than 850,000 people are left without power in places like michigan, california and illinois. that really spans almost everything and 1700 flights have been canceled. delta and southwest are among the airlines most affected and causing 150 crashes in utah. there is one fatality reported. did i read that right? yes. one fatality. let's go to adrian. i am glad you are well off the highway and being as safe as possible. so now report the weather conditions where you are,
3:19 am
please. >> reporter: absolutely i can't ignore what you said a moment ago. we saw the highway yesterday before our viewers, and we were safe in a parking lot after so many close calls. as a local reporter not a risk i'm willing to take. let's get to this weather. behind me you see the crew clearing out the pathway for folks that do not have the luxury of staying home then have to come and work at the mall of america and some restaurants inside. the snow is continuing to fall and once we are past in dangerous area it will be fun to go out and play in the snow and maybe have a snow fight. but that is not the case now. the roads you can see ice under the area where they cleared. even on the highway, well on this stretch of roadway behind us. here in the twin cities at least 10 inches have fallen already. the snow fell overnight. and the snow is not the problem
3:20 am
it's the wind. earlier this morning the wind was whipping and hitting my face. that is what people will experience on the road. the snow is falling and as long as the wind is blowing with gusts of up to 35 to 40 miles per hour in parts of the state creating low visibility. >> adrian we are glad you are safe and reporting to keep others safe as well. thank you so much. so a college basketball player's attorney is pushing back on reporting that he allegedly supplied a gun in a deadly shooting. we'll talk about the details with we know. and also this -- >> i just heard a big bang right here behind me. i shouldn't have done a live shot here. there are big explosions taking place in kyiv right now. >> you know, it's interesting having to relive that. i can't believe that is one year
3:21 am
ago today. that was as vladimir putin launched his invasion of ukraine. still no end in sight as the bloody war enters the second year. the former secretary will join us to discuss that .
3:22 am
you may pay as little as $10 per prescription. couldn't use cpap.
3:23 am
now i have this. inspire is a sleep apnea treatment that works inside my body with the click of this remote. no mask, no hose, just sleep. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com. hi, i'm michael, i've lost 70 pounds on golo. i spent thousands on other diets that didn't work. on golo, i spent a couple hundred bucks and got back down to my high school weight. you're not gonna believe this thing is possible but it is. (vo) if you've had thyroid eye disease for years and your bloodshot eyes have you seeing red, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com that's treatt-e-d.com.
3:24 am
(vo) with their verizon private 5g network, associated british ports can now precisely orchestrate nearly 600,000 vehicles passing through their uk port every year. don't just connect your business. (dock worker) right on time. (vo) make it even smarter. we call this enterprise intelligence. the hiring process used to be the death of me. but with upwork... with upwork the hiring process is fast and flexible. behold... all that talent! ♪ this is how we work now ♪
3:25 am
chanting lock him up. and yelling guilty at a basketball player, brandon miller after he received a text to bring a gun to the scene of a shooting. good morning nick, can you explain what is going on here? >> yes, did morning poppy. miller's attorney is trying to distance miller from this shooting. and saying he is fully cooperating with police. and alleges that brandon miller was on the way to pick on his former teammate darius miles, got the text asking to bring his gun. and he allegedly left the gun in miller's car. and then took the gun and handed it off to a third man, michael lynn davis. both of them are held in custody and charged with murder. here is what miller's attorney
3:26 am
said. miller never touched the gun and was not involved in any way. >> nick, thank you. we are waiting for many more answers. thanks for the reporting. coming up on cnn this morning. an exclusive report from a ukrainian city under fire by russian forces for week. the former secretary mark esper joins us live as a new year of russia's war begins.
3:27 am
3:28 am
3:29 am
when i was his age, we had to be inside to watch live sports. but with xfinity, we get the fastest mobile service and can stream down the street or around the block! hey, can you be less sister, more car? all right, let's get this over with. switch to xfinity mobile and save big on the new samsung galaxy s23 series. i should get paid more for this. you get paid when you win. from xfinity. home of the 10g network. in order for small businesses to thrive, they need to be smart... efficient... agile... and that's never been more important than it is right now. so for a limited time, comcast business is introducing small business savings. call now to get powerful internet for just $39 a month, with no contract,
3:30 am
and a money back guarantee. all on the largest, fastest, reliable network. from the company that powers more businesses than anyone else. call and start saving today. comcast business. powering possibilities. now, to a cnn exclusion of. we are getting a battered look into the town in southeastern ukraine. this town is hammered by russian fire for weeks. and for the last couple of months it's part of russia destructive campaign. watch this. >> the fight is largely symbolic. this is a very strategic fight
3:31 am
for both sides. it's unique it sits at the two active fronts in ukraine. that is why russia wants to push in here and launch the offense into the town. they are struggling very badly now and they lost a huge am of men and armored vehicles as they try to cross open fields, including mine fields where the ukrainians have been able to inflict a huge amount of damage on their troops. at the same time the russians are absolutely pummeling this town. you see all around me these are soviet era apartment blocks. now largely empty and the residents have fled and almost every single one destroyed in varying degrees. all the windows are blown out. and craters here in the ground
3:32 am
where children used to play. ukrainians have the benefit of the higher ground here. and these buildings to use in the fighting. but as with so many of the battles here in eastern ukraine it is a fight of attrition. who can hold out the longest? the ukrainian side saying they need more ammunition to be able to keep the russians at bay and keep them from advancing. >> all right, alex, thank you for that. so joining us now the former defense secretary under president trump, mark esper. thank you for joining us on cnn this morning. >> good morning. good to be with you all. >> you say that the u.s. has the right strategy but needs an end game for ukraine. what exactly should that be? >> i think we need to follow the lead of president zelensky and his vision is that russian forces would be expelled from all of ukraine to include
3:33 am
crimea, the first step. that is what we need to aim to and support. look, your reporter just talked about attrition warfare and it looks like world war i. and if we don't take on a world war ii style, we could see this war go on and on and see a frozen conflict like we see in other parts of europe. >> we see the public interest, how do you keep that up. because democracy is at stake worldwide. there is a poll that shows that the u.s. continues to support giving weapons to ukraine. 48% versus 60% in may of last year. so how do leaders keep up public support here? what has to be done? >> well, vladimir putin is counting on western support to
3:34 am
ultimately fail. and it all hinges on american leadership. i argue that president biden has to come out for frequently and talk about what is at stake here. and put in a broader text, democracies versus -- and explain to the american people what it could mean to them. and it has gone on for 12 months. the ukraines constantly ask for more weapons. and we keep trickling these things out instead of giving them what they need to fight and win. and go on a counter offensive to finish off the russians. >> another question we are talking about is fighter jets and whether they should give fighter jets to the ukrainians. the concern is that it would look like, an escalation on the part of the united states and we
3:35 am
were actually fighting the war. do you think that is so? >> unfortunately that is the white house theory for 12 months now. we are self deteared to the point of disabling the ukrainians. we are giving them just enough not to lose but not enough to win. >> that is the question. do we want ukraine to win or not to lose? that is the question that everyone is asking. in order to win there are certain things that nato may have to do that they don't necessarily want to do. is that correct? >> we do want ukraine to win. ukraine is fighting the first major fight when it it comes to deck opensy. beijing is watching as well. trying to determine western support. we need to be delivering arms to taiwan today. if we don't like fighting the wars and don't want to see a
3:36 am
replay, give the taiwanese a chance to defend themselves now. >> putin held talks in russia yesterday with china's top representative. plus, secretary blinkin is warning that china is threatening sending lethal aid to use in the war. what are your concerns with russia and china? >> it's deepening. my sense is he believes that vladimir putin is losing, which of course he is. and he cannot afford to let russia fail. they are buying russian oil and gas. for them to make the next leap in terms of providing lethal military aid, that would be dramatic and i hope that would prompts a large scale response including financial and economic
3:37 am
sanctions. and when you step back that is the decoupling of china and russia. >> i have to ask you about this. i have to ask you about the chinese spy balloon. we are talking about china potentially getting involved in the ukraine invasion, plus we previously reported that the memo that a top air force general warneded of the conflict with china as soon as 2025. are the american people fully aware of the threat from china? >> i don't think so. the chinese has told us they want to dominate the pacific by 2049 if not change the global order in their favor. but this is where i think that president biden needs to come out and he is talking the right
3:38 am
themes but we have to hear it more frequently and bring it to the household level and tell the american people what is at stake. it will require sacrifice if we will defend the global order now and our way of life and our ideals of freedom and liberty and human rights. >> secretary esper thank you for joining us. >> be sure to tune in to cnn tonight. for a cnn town hall russia's invasion of ukraine a year later. so pharmacies across the nation are running low on adderall and what is behind the shortage? and donald trump is digging deeper into his inner circle. who they are eyeing now.
3:39 am
3:40 am
or want to shed those final 20, try golo for 60 days and never diet again. (uplifting music) [sfx: stomach gurgling] it's nothing... sounds like something. ♪ when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, ♪ ♪ upset stomach, diarrhea. ♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief... when you need it most. you love closing a deal. but hate managing your business from afar. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description.
3:41 am
visit indeed.com/hire ♪ this feels so right... ♪ adt systems now feature google products like the nest cam with floodlight, with intelligent alerts when a person or familiar face is detected. sam. sophie's not here tonight. so you have a home with no worries. brought to you by adt.
3:42 am
3:43 am
this morning with attention hypertension disorder or adhd are seeing an adderall shortage. we talked about this months ago. is this an exacerbation of that big problem? >> it is poppy, a couple of months ago when cnn said when is this going to end? they said shortly and it has not, people are going to fill up their prescription and they are told there isn't any. one is clara, a high school senior in utah. >> reporter: clara pits is from a musical family. >> let's go ahead with this section right there. >> she studies hard at piano.
3:44 am
>> i am using this spreadsheet since 11th grade. >> a high school senior with a heavy load of ap and honors classes. clara's dream is to be accepted at nearby brigham young university. >> she takes adderall since the first grade. >> the teacher forgot later in the year i ever struggled. >> and won a national scholarship. but a month ago before the exams right when the college application was due, she got this text from her mom rebecca at the pharmacy. there is some manufacturer shortage and i don't know what to do, i am sitting here crying because i can't get you these meds. >> i spent several hours calling eight pharmacies and i felt really emotional about it in the
3:45 am
first week or two. like strangely that i failed my child even though it was not my fault. it was hard to tell her and try to help her understand, we won't be getting this medication any time soon. and i felt scared what that would mean for her as a senior. >> clara is one of many americans impacted by widespread drug shortages. since last fall, adderall. the fda says that one reason is the demand has increased from 35.5 million prescriptions in 2019 to 45 million last year. and some companies that make adderall tell the fda they have shortages of an active ingredient or supply constraints and others companies list other as a reason for the short supply. and the fda is helping with anything we can do to increase supply. the fda does not give many
3:46 am
details on what has gone wrong or they will fix it. and experts say that is part of the problem. >> i think transparency is extremely important. it's really difficult to be able to anticipate let alone come up with meaningful solutions if you don't know what the problem is. >> clara got a prescription for a different adhd medication but she says it's not the same. but her hard work at school paid off. >> acceptance at her first choice college. >> i am going be a cougar mom. thrilled but still hoping to get adderall to help her through it. >> now, adderall has something in common with other drugs that are in shortage. it's not terribly expensive. that means the drug companies are not making a ton of money
3:47 am
off this drug. >> fascinating. i hope they figure out a solution for people that really need it soon. coming up, it's not a ufo. i don't want to say what this is. it's this iron ball falling from the sky and washing up in japan. can officials or can neil degrass tyson figure it out? he is going to join us. sometimes, the lows of bipolar depression feel darkestst before dawn. with caplyta, there's a chance to let the light shine through. and light tomorrow, with the hope from today. this is a chance to let in the lyte. caplyta is a once-daily pill that is prov to deliver significant relief across bipolar depression. unlike some medicines thatnly treat bipolar i, caplyta treats both bipolar i and bipolar ii depression.
3:48 am
and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. report fever, confusion, stiff or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be life threatening or permanent. these aren't all the serious side effects. in the darkness of bipolar i and ii depression, caplyta can help you let in the lyte. ask your doctor about caplyta today. find savings and support at caplyta.com. (vo) verizon has the epic new phone your business needs on the 5g network it deserves. boost your team's productivity with samsung's fastest processor yet. switch and save up to $1000 on the new galaxy s23 ultra. now that's epic. on the network america relies on.
3:49 am
you go by lots of titles. veteran, son, dad. -it's time to get up. -no hair stylist and cheerleader.
3:50 am
so adding a “student” title might feel overwhelming. but what if a school could be there for all of you? career, family, finances and mental health. it's coming along. well, it can. national university. supporting the whole you. - [narrator] we just signed the lease on our third shop. my assistant went to customink.com to get new uniforms with all the locations. he found great products, uploaded new art, and had boxes sent to all the shops. custom ink makes it so easy. get started today at customink.com. out here, you're more than just a landowner. you're a gardener. a landscaper.
3:51 am
a hunter. because you didn't settle for ordinary. same goes for your equipment. versatile, powerful, durable kubota equipment. more goes into it. so you get more out of it. the first time your sales reached 100k was also the first time you hit this note... ( screams in joy) save 20% with the lowest transaction fees and keep more of what you make. with a partner that always puts you first. godaddy. tools and support for every small business first. president biden back at the white house after his momentous trip to the war zone in ukraine. now he is facing multiple issues here at home including the chemical disaster in ohio and the controversial new immigration policy aimed at
3:52 am
turning away migrants. bringing in now mj lee on the white house lawn. good morning mj, the president now has to confront some urgent issues now that he is back on u.s. soil. >> reporter: it has been a whirl wind 72 hours with his visit to ukraine and poland. and now he is confronting domestic issues. first and foremost the situation at the u.s. border. and we saw this contrast and split screen when we saw this in poland thanking them for taking in refugees during the war. and their willingness to open their homes was extraordinary. just several hours later here at home, the biden administration introduces one of the toughest policies yet. not allowing them to seek
3:53 am
asylum. asylum seekers are not the same but we are talking about freedoms and protections for displaced people. so the timing of this announcement by the biden administration while the president was aboard that did not go unnoticed from democrats and activists. we can report they are extremely furious with the administration for making the announcement and feeling like they were blindsided and citing the lack of engagement from this white house. and all of this is such a reminder of how the situation at the southern border is a huge headache for the biden administration. and the situation in ohio is a big thing to watch for this administration.
3:54 am
and the secretary pete buttigieg is headed there today and he is expect to face a lot of questions and anger if the white house took action too late. >> thank you. angry, frustrated residents in east palestine, ohio. two residents who were at our town hall last night are joining us live onset. did they get the answers they deserve? plus this. >> our daughter was told she was going get one too. that it would be a slave hanging from a tree and say, you are my favorite slave. >> a disturbing incident at an elementary school, of students handing out racist drawings during black history month. how the school and parentsts ar reacting just ahead.
3:55 am
scout is protetected by simparica trio, and he's in it to win it. simparica trio is the first and only chew with triple protection oh, fleas and ticks ♪ intestinal worms... wow hearorm disease, no pblem with simarica trio. this drug class has been associated with neurologic adverse reactions including seizures. use with caution in dogs with a history of these disorders. for winning protection. go with simparica trio. (vo) if you've had thyroid eye disease for years
3:56 am
and the pain in the back of your eye is forcing bad words from your mouth, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com. research shows people remember ads with a catchy song. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's a little number you'll never forget. did you know that liberty mutual custo— ♪ liberty mutual. ♪ ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ ♪ custom home insurance created for you all. ♪ ♪ now the song is done ♪ ♪ back to living in your wall. ♪ they're just gonna live in there? ♪ yes. ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ the only thing i regret about my life was hiring local talent. if i knew about upwork. i would have hired actually talented people from all over the world. instead of talentless people from all over my house.
3:57 am
everything's changing so quickly. before the xfinity 10g network, we didn't have internet that let us play all at once. every device? in every room? why are you up here? when i was your age, we couldn't stream a movie when the power went out. you're only a year older than me. you have no idea how good you've got it. huh? what a time to be alive. introducing the next generation 10g network. only from xfinity. the future starts now.
3:58 am
everything's changing so quickly. before the xfinity 10g network, we didn't have internet that let us play all at once. every device? in every room? why are you up here? when i was your age, we couldn't stream a movie when the power went out. you're only a year older than me. you have no idea how good you've got it. huh? what a time to be alive. introducing the next generation 10g network. only from xfinity. the future starts now. my blood pressure is borderline. garlique healthy blood pressure formula helps maintain healthy blood pressure with a custom blend of ingredients. i'm taking charge, with garlique. >> tech: need to get your windshield fixed? safelite makes it easy. >> tech vo: you can schedule in just a few clicks. and we'll come to you with a replacement you can trust.
3:59 am
>> man: looks great. >> tech: that's service on your time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ just going to get my sports voice on. in sports this morning, on the 50 yard line! >> netflix has given us popular series on formula one racing and golf and tennis. and now football. they are partnering for a docuseries entitled quarterback. it gives a look at three players including patrick mahomes. the series will also feature
4:00 am
vikings curt cousins and marcus mariota of the falcons. they are producing this show along with mahomes newly quarterback it's expected to premier later summer. >> omaha. >> goal! >> that is a different one. cnn continues right now. i'm angry. i'm angry about this. i lived in east palestine for 65 years now. i don't feel safe in this town now. you took it away from me. you took this away from us. >> every right to be angry and to ask as many questions as they want. >> absolutely. >> good morning everyone. welcom

191 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on