tv CNN This Morning CNN June 1, 2023 5:00am-6:01am PDT
5:00 am
we need to have complete transparency from the tech companies upfront. when you install them now, you do get a lot of information about what you will share, what you don't want to share, opting in, opting out, and people tend to install these devices and apps very quickly and don't pay attention. so, but again, it falls on amazon to do the hard work. you can't expect consumers who are not technologists to dig into this. make it as simple as talking to the device saying delete all my utterances for the last two weeks. >> i find it striking that amazon said and reiterated as recently as january that privacy is foundational to its business. and now the question is what more can be done to protect them? >> again, when you have these cases, which started in 2018, a
5:01 am
lot has happened in between. i have gone to a lot of amazon events where a huge part of it is about security and privacy. constantly. but then they do something like sidewalk, which uses all the devices and creates a mesh network and they did it and didn't tell everybody they were sort of opted into it and had to say, no, no, you guys don't have to be a part of that. amazon is learning. you know, by the way, with the ring thing, what happened there, they bought that in 2018, right? so after this happened and, of course, ring again, oh, let's put video cameras throughout the house? what's that going to be like when thousands of people can see the data and we don't really have -- they didn't have encryption, two-factor authentication. they atdded that in 2018, 2019, 2020. >> thank you. "cnn this morning" continues right now. did you show those classified documents to anyone?
5:02 am
>> not really. i would have the right to. >> what do you mean not really? >> not that i can think of. >> good morning. it is thursday, june 1. my friend erica hill is here. >> nice to be with you. and it's your mom's birthday. >> happy birthday, mom. i hope it's a great one. let's begin with the news. that was former president trump being asked about his handling of classified documents when he left office. now federal prosecutors have trump on tape acknowledging that he held on to a classified pentagon document and telling people he can't share that material. what this audio recording could mean for the investigation. plus, the debt limit deal now heading to the senate. what to expect with just days remaining until the projected default date. and a daring rescue below mount everest summit when a sherpa saved a climber that he found clinging to a rope. it is amazing. we can't wait to tell you about it. "cnn this morning" starts right now. ♪
5:03 am
here is where we begin this morning with first on cnn reporting, sources tell us there is a tape of former president donald trump admitting he held on to a classified document from the pentagon suggesting he wants to share the information but he is limited by his post-presidency ability to declassify records. cnn has not listened to the recording but special counsel jack smith has it and sources describe it as an important piece of evidence in the possible case against trump. it undercuts his argument that he declassified everything and he knew he wasn't supposed to share sensitive information with others. it's two minutes long from july, 2021, he talks about a document involving a potential attack on iran. paula reid helped to break this story. she has all her reporting on t
5:04 am
why is this so significant? >> it's so credibly significant to the special counsel investigation because investigators can hear trump in his own words confess that he has a classified document at his golf club in bedminster, new jersey, and then he also acknowledges that there are limits to his power to declassify once he left the white house. and those statements undercut every public defense he and his lawyers have ever given. >> federal prosecutors hobtaine a recording of former president donald trump acknowledging he held on to a classified document about a potential attack on iran after he left the white house according to multiple sources. the recording is of a meeting at trump's bedminster golf course in july 2021. among those in attendance were trump aides and two people working on an autobiography, a former white house chief of staff mark meadows.
5:05 am
meadows was not in attendance, but at this time trump was having aides record conversations with writers and journalists so he was aware he was being taped. cnn has not listened to the recording, but multiple sources have described it and say it indicates trump understood he retained classified material after leaving the white house despite what he said publicly. >> i have no classified documents. they become automatically declassified when i took them. if you are the president of the united states you can declassify just by saying it's declassified even by thinking about it. >> reporter: sources say he can also be heard acknowledging the limits of his ability to declassify material after leaving office. the remarks appear to be in response to this new yorker article published days before the meeting claiming that the chairman of the joint chiefs, general mark milley, was concerned trump might set in
5:06 am
motion a full-scale conflict that was not justified with iran. trump appeared to be angered by this report and said he had in his possession a document that showed milley's plan to attack. cnn is told that the document was not produced by milley. his spokesman declined to comment to clinic. it's unclear if trump actually showed the document during the recording. trump's former national security advisor says he absolutely should not have had that document. >> i have very little faith in donald trump's credibility. he could have had a rolled up carry-out menu in his hand waving it around saying it was an iran draft war plan. >> reporter: it's a key piece of evidence for special counsel jack smith. his investigators have questioned witnesses about it, including general milley himself. trump's attorney was asked multiple times whether there was any evidence that trump had
5:07 am
declassified this document. he would not answer. >> the president under the presidential records act has unfettered authority to do what he wants with documents that he has taken from the white house while president. i am not going to sit here and dignify leaks that are incomplete, that are unfair and that are dishonest. this is a leak campaign. >> reporter: he also would not say how this document wound up in bedminster. >> i am not going to try the case that's being set up by leaks that i don't believe are accurate. >> reporter: how -- has the document been returned to the knives? >> same answer. >> it was a result of dogged reporting by our team. most of the reporting has focused on classified documents found in florida at mar-a-lago, but to new reporting reveals at least one classified document was for a time in bedminster, new jersey. now, this new recording, this really shows the extent of the legal jeopardy the former president is facing.
5:08 am
>> paula reid, to you, to the whole team, you, kaitlan, the five women who worked on this story did an incredible job. thank you, paula. the bipartisan debt limit bill that just cleared through the house is headed to the senate. if it passes there, it would be signed into law by the president and allow the country to avert a default and in turn a global economic crisis. house speaker kevin mccarthy taking a victory lap last night. >> i wanted to do something no other congress has done. we would literally turn the ship, and for the first time in quite some time we'd spend less than we spent the year before. tonight i hope we proved to you again that we put the citizens of america first. >> president biden congratulating mccarthy and democratic leaders writing in a statement i have been clear that the only path forward is a bipartisan compromise that can
5:09 am
earn the support of both parties. this agreement meets that test. i urge the senate to pass it as quickly as possible so i can sign it into law and our country can continue building the strongest economy in the world. what's in this bill? a reminder, republicans fought hard to expand work requirements for food stamps and make cuts to irs funding. democrats blocked implementation of work requirements for medicaid. the debt limit will be suspended. that's through 2025. non-defense spending will be capped. student loan payments restart the end of the summer. so now having passed the house, the big question this morning will this pass in the senate? joining us is senator jeff merkley of oregon. a senator, good to have you with us this morning. you said you will be voting against this bill going so far as to say i fully recognize the debt default would be a disaster for working families, must never be allowed to happen but there is nothing in here to match what
5:10 am
the people of oregon care about. i can't throw them under the bus. i will vote no. has the president reached out to you personally in an effort to change that vote? >> no. no, he hasn't. his team has. they lobbied quite heavily. three fundamental problems with the bill. one is it reinforces a cycle of hostage taking. now we know instead of having a legitimate negotiation we'll end up with the republicans whenever there is a blue president saying we are going to do this again. this is the sort of battle that should happen over the fiscal year 2024 spending bill and the revenue bills that we passed not over an artificial debt ceiling where the threat is to throw the economy off the cliff. the second big problem is that it goes against everything oregonians are telling me. i held two dozen town halls. people say take on day care, you need to take on mental health,
5:11 am
you need to take on fentanyl and, above all, the cost of housing. this structure does damage to everything oregonians are concerned about. finally, it's devastating in terms of fighting climate. it puts in a mountain valley pipeline exempt from any environmental law and it says that there is a court case, we are going to change the venue. that precedent directly attacks. integrity of our judicial system. so all of this together is a big problem. i am going to stand up for the people of oregon and vote against this bill. >> in terms of in pipeline, tim kaine has talked about proposing an amendment that would strip that out of the bill. if there were votes on amendments this would send this back to the house. this is a further issue when it comes to timing. is that an amendment that you would get behind even if you knew it would not change things?
5:12 am
>> i absolutely support that amendment. it would solve two egregious provisions of this bill. and there will be amendments voted on. the republican senate members are going to insist on amendments. and by the way, that was the one thing in this bill that came more from the democratic side due to the side deal that had been pursued by the president earlier. so repubvoted against it before. it should do nothing to damage the repassage of this bill in the house. >> this morning do you believe this bill -- i know you are not voting for it, but do you believe it will ultimately pass? >> yes. yes, it will pass. the votes are there as demonstrated in the house, the parallel situation in the senate. >> so but you are staking your claim on this. i am going to leave -- i want to get you on a couple of other notes because you are on foreign relations. what we have seen in terms of an uptick in activity in ukraine and in russia has, obviously, been a hot topic this week. we are talking about the drone
5:13 am
strikes in moscow area in addition to further activity in the belgorod region on the border with ukraine. we spoke with john kirby yesterday who said while the white house of course supports ukraine's right to defend itself, they do not support ukrainian attacks inside russia. we don't know that ukraine was behind the attacks. they denied any involvement. do you have any information on who may be responsible? >> no, there is nothing more i can share on that. we had these reports of russian troops themselves turning and attacking other russians, and that's very troubling, obviously, to putin. and putin wants to shelter the russian people from a sense that there is much going on there. he has controlled the media. then to have a drone attack on moscow, this changes the dynamic and the conversation inside russia. there is a lot of concern about how it would manifest itself. maybe increases support among the russian people for the war. certainly it draws their attention a way that putin has been trying to prevent.
5:14 am
>> there are also questions about if ukraine were behind attacks, if weapons that had been supplied by the oust or nato members, does this give you pause in terms of u.s. commitments to continue to supply ukraine with weapons? >> it would be a big mistakes to use our weapons in a fashion not allowed because we have been working so hard to maintain the coalition with europe. listen, we are defending a republic against a kgb thug dictator, and if we fail in that, it will encourage other dictators around the world to take over adjacent land, maybe including russia, china to watch a military assault on taiwan, so forth. we have to stand with the people of ukraine and they have to use the weapons in accordance with the rules we have set out for them. >> senator jeff merkley, appreciate you joining us. >> thank you, erica. today marks the first day of hurricane season. but some communities are still
5:15 am
picking up the pieces from last year's major storms, including, of course, hurricane ian which wiped out major areas in florida of last year. this year noaa is predict a near normal system. five to nine hurricanes is what they are estimating. i can't get those images out of my head. communities destroyed. boats on top of restaurants. i mean, they are still picking up the pieces. >> reporter: yeah, and what i have seen here is a group of very resilient people trying to get back to some sense of normalcy after the costlyist hurricane to strike the u.s. coastline, hurricane ian, just eight months ac. i am at ground zero where 11-foot storm surge and 155-mile-per-hour winds came in off of the gulf of mexico, which is directly over my shoulder. now what looms heavy over the minds of the residents here within fort myers beach, lee
5:16 am
county in particular, is the start of another atlantic hurricane season which is today. fitting with june 1 is, unfortunately, the potential of development. new this morning from the national hurricane senator a 50% probability of tropical depression or tropical storm forming in the waters. you can see structures that have been completely removed off their foundations still overturned vehicles. that is from the force of what was a category 4 monster hurricane. we are on location at this beach baptist church on fort myers beach which now serves as a food pantry. you see the destruction here. 50,000 residents and commercial buildings were impacted by ian eight months ago. get this. lee county alone has cleaned up an estimated 11 million cubic yards of debris. that's concrete and wood pallets that is equivalent to filling up 3,000 or more olympic-sized
5:17 am
swimming pools. i spoke to a manager of a restaurant here about how they feel about the upcoming hurricane season. have listen. >> we are just hoping it doesn't happen again. it would be really bad luck if it did especially after we just opened nd up to the public again. hopefully, it stays away. >> it doesn't make me nervous. i have lived here my whole life. but right now everybody is kind of excited that we have opened back up. everybody is ready to get back in there. >> reporter: you know, i spoke to a resident here who lives in fort myers beach about this upcoming hurricane season and she said looking me straight into the ice, we are not participating in this year's hurricane season. >> we are not available. >> best answer ever. >> reporter: not available. [ laughter ] >> i may not either. >> right? >> thank you. >> exactly. we will skip right over to january. >> yeah. thank you. some new reaction this morning to cnn's reporting about
5:18 am
a tape of former president trump admitting he held on to a classified pentagon document after leaving the white house. there is, trump fired the cybersecurity official. t now the special counsel has questions about that. new reporting from "the new york times" ahead. every hour of your life. except the hours that you're sleleeping. so why do we leave s so much untapped potential on the table? this is a next level bed,, for a next level you. my circadian rhythm is kicking your circadian rhythm's butt! it's not a competition. i know, but i'm still winning! so, it is a competition. save 50% on the sleep number limited edition smart bed. plus, free home delivery when you add an adjustable base. only at sleep number. what's the #1 retinol brand used most by dermatologists? it's neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair® smooths the look of fine lines i1-week, deep wrinkles in 4 so you caniss wrinkles goodbye!
5:19 am
neutrogena® ♪ upbeat music ♪ ♪ take it wherever. with whomever. ♪ this is the no-holds-barred, multi-purpose vehicle with the capacity to take life on, and the audacity to say, [engine revving] what else ya got? the kia carnival mpv. kia. movement that inspires. moderate to severe eczema still disrupts my skin. despite treatment it disrupts my skin with itch. it disrupts my skin with rash. but now, i can disrupt eczema with rinvoq. rinvoq is not a steroid, topical, or injection. it's one pill, once a day. many taking rinvoq saw clear or almost-clear skin while some saw up to 100% clear skin. and, they felt dramatic and fast itch relief some as early as 2 days.
5:20 am
that's rinvoq relief. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal, cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer, death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq, as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. disrupt the itch and rash of eczema. talk to your doctor about rinvoq. learn how abbvie can help you save.
5:21 am
sometimes you're so busy taking care of everyone else you don't do enough for yourself, or your mouth. but eventually, it will remind you. when it does, aspen dental is here for you. we offer the custom dental treatments you need, all under one roof, right nearby. so we can bring more life to your smile... and more smile to your life... affordably. new patients without insurance can get a free complete exam and x-rays, and 20 percent off treatment plans. schedule your appointment today. welcome back to "cnn this morning." former president trump is no stranger to making a lot of comments that make a lot of headlines caught on tape between the "access hollywood" tape that emerged before the 2016 election to the recording of him asking a georgia election official to, quote, find votes to help him
5:22 am
change the results of the 2020 election. >> now his history of potentially damaging audio tapes adding a new chapter. federal prosecutors have obtained a recording of former president donald trump acknowledging he held on to a classified document about a potential attack on iran after he left the white house and suggested that he wants to share the information but was limited to do so by his post-presidency ability to declassify records. joining us maggie haberman. great to have you with us. the way this has been detailed to our reporters when they broke this about the recording, there are sort of three parts, right? the fact that there was this document reportedly, there were conversations about it and the former president acknowledged he wanted to share it but there were those limitations. really gets to a number of the, yo you, quote, unquote, explanations we heard from the former president and these don't
5:23 am
scare? >> there has been a lot of news breaks in this documents investigation. this one is very meaningful and it's a big deal for the reason you just said. it gets to document in his possession, documents at bedminster, a different location than mar-a-lago where the search was focused. whatever that document actually was because trump is not the most reliable narrater about what that document was and we know and you reported mark milley did not produce this document, what matters is trump most is trump saying i haven't heard the tape, no one has yet, but our reporting is also that trump says something about the limits of his classification abilities, you know, he expresses some regret about not having declassified this particular thing while president. that undermines the excuse that they have made over and over again that he had this, you know, ability to de -- that he automatically declad everything.
5:24 am
and then specifically not answering whether it was declassified. so i don't see -- >> and the question about is it with the national archives. >> that's right. i understand why he doesn't want to answer the questions but then don't go on tv and say i am not going to answer these questions other than making the client happy. this tape is multiple sources have described it as very problematic for trump. this investigation is still ongoing. we don't know where it's going to end up. of all of the evidence that we know of, this is the most damning i have heard of and it reminds us there is so much we don't know what the prosecutors have. >> and so much else could be out there when it comes to recordings because recordings were made often with the former president. >> well, so actually that's, i think, another piece that's striking to me about this. number one, trump is very paranoid about people taking notes and paranoid about tapes. was notorious when he was a businessman claiming he was taping other people. people at mar-a-lago thought
5:25 am
conversations were recorded. he knew that he was being taped. his own aides were taping because they -- >> for a book. >> it was for a mark meadows book and there is an irony to the fact that relates to mark meadows, whose resistance has been central to investigators in the january 6th investigation and so farther and he had not been a key parts of the investigation before. this is significant. but trump was aware that they taped routinely, his aides, because they were taping book interviews, my book interviews with him that year were taped. he was aware of it. so it's not as if this was a secret recording. but he has this impulse, you know, in certain settings to sort of show off and that's really what this seemed like. >> you have some really interesting new reporting, you and jonathan swan, in "the times," about the particular interest of special counsel in the federal probe jack smith has taken around trump's mindset when he fired chris krebs after
5:26 am
krebs said the 2020 election was the most secure election we had. he was the top cybersecurity official under trump. why does jack smith want to know what trump was thinking when he fired krebs? >> what we believe he is trying to do, and part of why this tape is important, goes to mindset, what he was thinking when he made certain decisions. and so is the idea, you know, and these subpoenas relate to personnel office officials in the white house, you know, who compiled this dossier about, you know, misdeeds that krebs supposedly committed which i think a lot of people looking at it would have a different view. but that's basically something that smith is looking at is trying to figure out how the white house interacted with krebs, with the doj as various actions were being taken by trump in relation to his efforts to claim power. >> the other probe that -- >> yes. >> important to differentiate, right. >> jack smith's team is up to a lot. so the documents investigation
5:27 am
is the one that is sort of i think the most decision tilled and narrow fact set. it's clear. we know what we are talking about. the january 6th investigation, the question about why does he care, there are so known offshoots of that investigation and this is one of that. >> in your reporting in this piece you also mention this, quote, unquote, loyalty test around that same time. that's important, too, when it gets to mindset, when it gets to where everyone was. >> exactly. and they had been asking questions about this loyalty test which my colleague jonathan swan broke the news when he was at oxios that this thing existed. they were trying to -- and krebs was a political appointee. trump appointed him. trump had the right to fire him. but trying to figure out whether this person was personally loyal to trump versus, you know, the government at large is part of what jack smith's team has been asking questions about. >> pretty solid by-line. >> i'll take it. i am happy with it. >> yeah, left and right. thank you.
5:28 am
this is really interesting, maggie. appreciate it. simple question for you. are your airplane seats too small? now two senate democrats are calling on the faa to take action. also, what immigrants across the country are doing today to protest the new florida law signed by the governor and republican presidential candidate now ron desantis. unlike some others, neuriva plus is s a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of b brain health. to help p keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. was also the first time your profits left you speechless. at the counter or on the go, save 20% with the lowest transaction fees and keep more of wt you make. start saving today at godaddy.com dinner! [sfx: phone ping] ♪ what? tween milestones like this... may start at age 9.
5:29 am
hpv vaccination, a type of cancer prevention... against certain hpv-related cancers... can start then too. for most people, hpv clears on its own. but for others, it can cause certain cancers later in life. embrace this phase. help protect them in the next. starting at age 9, talk to your child's doctor about... hpv vaccination.
5:31 am
i think that's an excuse. i don't accept as a business owner, your bottom line is always top of mind. so start saving by switching to the mobile service designed for small business: comcast business mobile. flexible data plans mean you can get unlimited data or pay by the gig. all on the most reliable 5g network, with no line activation fees or term contracts... saving you up to 75% a year. and it's only available to comcast business internet customers. so boost your bottom line by switching today. comcast business. powering possibilities™.
5:32 am
airline seats back in the hot seat. two democratic senators calling for the faa to reassess whether the size of seats on planes are, in fact, too small in the event of an emergency. there is new legislation from senators tom any duckworth and tammy baldwin urging the faa to conduct more cabin tests. pete muntean is joining us live. this is not about comfort so much. it's about safety? >> that's right. more seats onboard an airplane, the airlines got to make them smaller, but with more seats it makes it harder for the airlines to evacuate a plane in the case of an emergency. i just spoke to tammy duckworth
5:33 am
about this. she says this is all about safety, even though the unintended outcome here could be a federal regulation that makes it so that airlines can't make seats any smaller. here is the rub. right now the regulations, sorry, the average seat size is 31 inches onboard a plane. it's a pitch. the leg room from your seat essentially to your knee. it was about 35 inches back in 1960, but since that time men are the example here, they have gained about 30 pound on average according to the cdc, gotten an inch taller. so the faa looked at this back in 2019. they did a mockovak situation and they figured by doing this, they only -- a sample of people who were over 18, under 60, no kids, no car seats, no carry-on bags. so duckworth says it is long overdue to redo this experiment and this bill would do exactly that.
5:34 am
>> it is very much long overdue. the standard that the faa is using was set in the 1960s and the fact of the matter is air travel has changed a lot since the '60s. there are a lot of folks onboard, for example, with carry-on luggage because many people can't check their luggage because there are additional fees. the faa doesn't test, do these tests where they include carry-on luggage. >> of course, the airlines would really chafe at. more seats means they can charge less. of course, they would say if there are fewer seats onboard, that means that fares would go up, erica. >> i am sure that's what we would hear. it's so interesting. let's say this happens. when could we see any change? would they have to reconfigure the planes in operation? >> it takes a lot of time. the good news is that the faa answers the congress here and it's going through reauthorization process. the faa gets told by congress essentially how much money they can spend from the federal
5:35 am
kbroft. and so congress has a lot of power, so they could force their hand here to cause them to put into place a regulation keeping it so that seats don't get any smaller, erica. >> interesting stuff. we will be watching. appreciate it. thank you. now to. florida governor ron desantis' policy on immigration sparking protests across the country. the so-called day without immigrants is taking place in six cities in florida, also cities across california, colorado, texas, minnesota, illinois, south carolina as well. latino business owners, many banding together with black, indigenous and other allies are banding together for a day of strikes against ron desantis's rackdown on undocumented immigrants. carlos sch carlos suarez is live with more. what sort of message to the governor and what are they hoping to achieve? a change in policy legislation? >> reporter: i think they are trying to highlight the economic
5:36 am
impact that the immigrant community has on florida's economy. we are in a farming community to the east of fort myers where we're told hundreds, if not thousands, of undocumented workers are set to take part in a work stoppage event throughout the day here. now, yesterday we were in west palm beach. an own of a next rin restaurant said he lost a third of his staff. most of em were undocumented workers and all he said are moving out of florida because of this immigration law. here is a part of our conversation where he got a little emotional describing the impact that this new law is having on his workers and on his business. >> i come to this country 23 years. working, working hard. i have the opportunity to open the restaurant with my partners and then we are not criminal.
5:37 am
i feel bad because i open the restaurant. i losing my business. for one law. it's not fair. >> reporter: he said he is losing business and that he is closing today in support of florida's immigration community. several businesses, you restaurants, even the catholic church out here has said they are going to close in support of immigrants across the state of florida. this new law goes into effect in july and it does a number of things. it requires some businesses to expand the use of the e-verify program, a federal database to check the immigration status of workers. some hospitals are now going to have to ask patients about their immigration status. and it is going to make transporting someone in the u.s.
5:38 am
illegally into florida a third-degree felony. >> carlos, thank you very much for that reporting. this morning we are learning more about the victims and the loved ones impacted by that partial apartment building collapse in davenport, iowa, over the weekend. brandon is unaccounted for. his son, brandon colvin, jr., has been splleeping outside the building since it fell. senior had recently moved in the building, was living alone. family members last heard from him on sunday morning and remain hopeful he is alive. colvin's cousins say he is a great person and father. >> thinking of all of them. happening today, extreme heat forcing some schools to close in at least two states. officials in grand roop ids, michigan, cancel classes today and tomorrow with temperatures in the 90s at the public school district, serving 14,000 student. some schools don't have
5:39 am
air-conditioning. 40 public schools in pittsburgh shifting to remote learning today because of the high temps. offi rerecently announced they will shift to remote learning when temperatures hit above 85 degrees. robert de niro and al pacino both welcoming new babies. when it comes to parenting, especially dads, is age really just a number? harry smith is this here with this morning's number. ♪you said close your eyes don't look down♪
5:40 am
♪fall into me and i'llatch you darling♪ ♪we'll dance in the street♪ ♪ remember the things you loved... ...before asthma got in the way? fasenra is an add-on treatment for asthma driven by eosinophils. it's designed to target and remove them and helps prevent asthma attacks. fasenra is not for sudden breathing problems or other eosinophilic conditions. allergic reactions may occur.
5:41 am
don't stop your asthma treatments without talking with your doctor. tell your doctor if your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. get back to better breathing. ask your doctor about fasenra. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ get 2.9% apr for 36 months plus $1,500 purchase allowance on a 2023 xt5 and xt6 when you finance through cadillac financial.
5:42 am
maisha: shared leadership has to do with... michael: acknowledging parents as equal partners. narrator: california's community schools. grant: community schools lift the voices of folks that have traditionally not been heard whether they're parents, students, community groups. john: it's shared decision-making with parents. they're saying that these are the priorities that they want to see for their kids. wendy: it allows us to create the school that our students deserve. rafael: community schools are innovative, and they're working. narrator: california's community schools: reimagining public education.
5:43 am
5:44 am
with his 29-year-old girlfriend norah alfalla. age may be a number for many. is this true, harry enten, when it comes to relationships, specifically parenting relationships? our senior data reporter harry enten. >> i do have a little bit of personal stake. we will get to it later this morning's number is 53. that is the age gap that we're dealing with in this relationship. it's a little over 53 years. that's why it's 53 plus a little bit morism was interested. how common is an age gap that's 53 years? this is the spouse age gaps in the united states. break it down by getting wider in the age gap in the relationship. 10% of relationships are ten years plus. you get to 30 plus years, you drop down to 0.5%. less than 1%. you get to 50 plus years, look at that, 0.005. we are dealing with such a small
5:45 am
sample size, it could be somewhere in that area. it's very, very, very small. the other thing about age gaps they are becoming smaller in this country. so the average male -- female age gap is 2.2 years. about 50 years ago, it was three years. you go to 1920, 4.4 years. so the age gaps have shrunk in half on average. >> so also congratulations to pacino and his buddy robert de niro because they are both having kids a little bit later in life. what can you tell us? >> what about fathers newborn ages? the fathers' ages for newborns in the united states, okay, age 40 plus. 14% of the fathers of newborns are about age 40 plus. age 60 plus, look at that drop down to 0.05%. down to age 80 plus, again look at this small percentage.
5:46 am
0..003. b that's an approximation. it could be smaller than that. the other thing that i'll note is that mothers in this country, just u just got a new report, age 40 plus. the share of newborns in 1992, 1%. 4% now, you under age 18, that's dropping from 5% in '92 to 4% in 2022. and then the other thing i will note is -- >> ooh! i love this picture. >> my personal stake in this. my father was age 60, my mother in her 40s when i was born. i like to think i turned out okay. >> stellar. >> thank you. >> i like that. it's me. i'd like to think i turned out okay. >> best picture ever i hope. i hope mom is watching. >> she is not. >> thank you, harry. and just like that, samantha jones has returned to the city. what we're learning about kim cattrall's upcoming cameo. ♪ at morgan stanley,
5:47 am
5:50 am
- i'm fernando, i live outside of boston. i've been with consumer cellular for five years. consumer cellular gives you all the same features that these big companies give you. what you get for the cost is remarkable. why would you pay more money?! - [announcer] why would you pay more when you can get unlimited talk & text with a flexible data plan starting at just $20 a month. - i think they should raise their prices! (laughs) - [announcer] sorry fernando! our prices are staying low. so switch today and save! call or go online.
5:51 am
relationships have been on decline since women came out of the cave looked around and said this isn't so hard. >> so you don't need a man, but do you still want one? >> oh, honey, i want more than one. >> she's back! one of the key characters from "sex and the city" making a much anticipated return, kim cottrell who plays samantha jones, she is coming back for the second season and the reboot of "and just like that..." on hbo. it is especially surprising after she said last year that she declined to join the cast amid rumors of in-fighting. joining us now on this and other entertainment reporting is our friend chloe. >> and this was a story that broke the internet yesterday evening. it was all anybody was talking about. you hit the nail on the head. kim cottrell and sarah jessica
5:52 am
parker don't get along. and we know when they were filming for all of those seasons that there was a lot of drama behind the scenes. but you've seen that with other shows. maybe some of the golden girls didn't get along. and i know the horror of loving your favorite celebrities on scene, sometimes they aren't the best of friends behind the scenes. so for kim cottrell to return is a big deal for all of us who love the show. and just like that, she's back. so here is what we know though. we know this was filmed in march. it was one scene. reports claim that it was her in a town call and her name wasn't on the call sheet, she didn't rhee interact with any other members, she was in, she was out. i just want to know how much she was paid. >> and even more than that, i want to know what the conversation was that made her agree to do it. >> fans have been wanting her to come back. we know the creator of the show has been wanting her to come back. and she had said, you know, it
5:53 am
was bizarre the way that she was sort of -- her absence was addressed in the first season. so it premieres later this month on hbo max. and so it will be a scene that we're all going to be waiting for. >> absolutely. >> two other really serious headlines dominating the entertainment world this morning also, let's begin with danny masterson the actor in the 70s show found guilty of raping two women. >> yes, this came after the jury deliberated for six days. they were hung on the third count with the third woman jane doe. we have not heard anything from masterson or his legal team, but what i can tell you is that this is after a mistrial. these same charges we saw him face them in court and it was a hung jury before. and i'll read to you what one of the women is saying telling cnn, i'm experiencing a complex array of emotions, relief, exhaustion,
5:54 am
strength, sadness knowing my abuser danny masterson will face accountability for his criminal behavior. we had a reporter in the courtroom and we know that his wife left the courtroom crying as he was led away in handcuffs. he has a hearing in august. no sentencing date has been set just yet. but we know that he could face 30 years to life in prison. >> wow, that is a lot. and no charges for army hammer? >> yes, after more than a year of an investigation, los angeles district attorney announcing yesterday that they are not bringing rape charges against army hammer. he took to instagram to say that he is grateful and now he has to begin the process of rebuilding his life and reputation. >> appreciate your reporting on all that. thank you. a missing climber rescued from mt. everest in an operation that is being described as not only very rare but almost impossible.
5:55 am
it is a truly remarkable story. poppy's favorite story of the day. >> it is. >> we'll tell you how it happened.. a new, bigger space, and brought on another employee. to celebrate, i i ordered new branded gear for the whole team. everything was so easy to make with custom ink's design lab. i just chose my products, added our logo, and placed my order. our new gear really helps us look and feel like a team. bring your own team together with custom gear. get started today at customink.com.
5:56 am
my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. wake up, achievers. you're making the most of every hour of your life. except the hours that you're sleeping. so why do we leave so much untapped potential on the table? this is a next level bed, for a next level you. my circadian rhythm is kicking your circadian rhythm's butt! it's not a competition. i know, but i'm still winning! so, it is a competition. save 50% on the sleep number limited edition smart bed. plus, free home delivery when you add an adjustable base. only at sleep number.
5:57 am
5:58 am
my little family is me, aria, and jade. just the three of us girls. i never thought twice about feeding her kibble. but about two years ago, i realized she was overweight. she was always out of breath. that's when i decided to introduce the farmer's dog to her diet. it's just so fresh that she literally gets bubbles in her mouth. now she's a lot more active, she's able to join us on our adventures.
5:59 am
and we're all able to do things as a family. ♪ get started at betterforthem.com a missing climber narrowly escaping death on mot. everest. a person was shivering from extreme cold in an area known as the death zone because temperatures there can drop to minus 86 degrees. the sherpa hauled him down over a six hour period.
6:00 am
>> translator: in places where it was rockier, we could not drag him, we had to carry him on our backs with difficulty. it was important for us to rescue him even from the summit. money can be earned anytime. left like that, he could have died. we have saved his life by quitting the summit. >> wow. wow, wow. the climber was eventually air lifted down to a base camp. a government official says this sort of altitude this high of a rescue is very rare and almost impossible. climber has not been identified but is back home and safe in malaysia. and that is my favorite story of the morning. >> with good reason. and a nice way to end this morning. you have the day off tomorrow. so enjoy. >> to enjoy my daughter's first play tonight. >> she will nail it. >> thank you. erica will hold towdown the for tomorrow. i'll see you monday. "cnn news central"
137 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1840393324)