tv CNN This Morning CNN June 16, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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>> translator: thursday. >> no. i need to go home. >> well, he needed to go home but he maybe delayed that. a change of heart and now he says he is glad he stuck around for the championship parade. >> i said i don't want to stay on parade but i [ bleep ] want to stay for parade. yeah this is amazing. this is -- our whole lives and you came out on the streets and this one is for you. this one is for you. >> yeah, don't want to miss that moment. the nuggets will get their championship rings in october. >> love that. "cnn this morning" continues right now. a devastating tornado ripping through northern texas. damage in the panhandle is
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extensive. >> the problem was this time the storm developed very rapidly. >> head injuries, collapsed lungs, broken legs, major lacerations. >> our community could use all of the prayers sent to us right now. a judge some feared might slow walk the trump case kick starts it instead. >> it comes just two days after the arraignment, and she's setting a pretty tight time line. >> this will be the case of a lifetime. it will be hard to find people who don't have an opinion. a federal grand jury has indicted that air national guardsman. >> six counts of willful retention and transmission of classified information. >> bringing this case to trial could be embarrassing to the department of defense. >> the justice department has informed the pga tour it is going to investigate the surprise merger. >> a doj investigation could stop the merger and say it will violate antitrust laws. >> take the competitor off the board, exist as a partner. >> i don't think this will end
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anytime soon. they're called grand fluencers pulling in deals. >> i'm not afraid to be myself. >> i think young people are craving authenticity and that's what i try to encourage. >> is being older actually an asset on social media? >> totally. not only on social media but in life itself. good morning, everyone. i cannot wait for that. older people taking full advantage of instagram that is something to highlight ahead, but we do begin with very tragic news from overnight. >> we've been following very closely what's left after this devastating tornado made its way through perryton, texas. >> you see that massive cloud there. folks in the area telling cnn they had little warning before the tornado began ripping through the town of about 8,000 overnight. here is what we know this hour.
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three people have been confirmed dead, as many as 100 more injured, and those injuries range from cuts and bruises to far more severe injuries, even a head injury. the tornado left about 200 homes destroyed as you can see from this picture here. some buildings just absolutely leveled. downed communications towers. one man saying he is simply thankful he and his family are alive. >> i'm just happy my brothers are alive. i mean, i know all the property and everything can be replaced but a life can never be replaced. being in the tornado thinking about it, like, my brother, worrying, crying t. would have killed me, hurt me inside. i don't know what i would have done. >> this is just one of several reported tornadoes across the country. look at dash cam video here from
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toledo, ohio. you can see strong winds sending debris everywhere as drivers waited for the storm to pass. nearly 400,000 customers in texas, florida, oklahoma and alabama are without power. to our colleague lucy kafanov in perryton, texas, with more. the sun is up. you can see the devastation. what is the human toll? >> reporter: the human toll is still, unfortunately, being counted as daylight breaks, you can see more of the scale of the destruction here in perryton. homes were completely flattened, structures like the one you see behind me turned to rubble. at least three people lost their lives. dozens injured, hundreds now left without their homes. a deadly tornado touching down in the texas panhandle leaving a brutal path of destruction in perryton. >> the tornado is 100 yards or
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so right there. >> reporter: large hail pelted down as the tornado moved through the area. and soon after a possible second smaller tornado was seen as well. one storm chaser says there was very little warning ahead of this tornado as the funnel cloud formed very quickly. >> whenever i was flying around it looked like people were just having to self-rescue themselves, people were climbing out of rubble. there was a fire nearby. >> reporter: as many as 200 homes were destroyed according to the town's fire chief, and some of those homes were completely leveled as seen in this aerial video shot in the tornado's aftermath. >> this whole area is wiped out. >> reporter: one nearby resident drove through in the tornado's wake and documented the damages. >> there's tanks, oil field tanks. that right there is a trailer, an oil field trailer. >> reporter: texas governor greg
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abbott deploying the state's emergency response resources. the surrounding cities and counties also rushed to the area to provide aid. in neighboring county, the judge says they are preparing to assist for a possible mass casualty and/or recovery event. the red cross is mobilizing teams to offer support on the ground. the local high school is opening its doors to offer shelter to those in need. >> i think there's a sense of fear just of the unknown. i don't think anybody has any idea what's going to happen next. the shock is still setting in. the sadness, the anger, every emotion that people can be going through they're going through. >> reporter: the interim county hospital's ceo says it's operating off generators that can only last a little over 72 hours. she says the hospital has treated somewhere between 75 and 100 people with injuries. >> anything from minor lacerations to major traumas, head injuries, collapsed lungs,
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broken legs, major lacerations. a little bit of everything. >> reporter: and people here are still coming to grips with what happened. it happened so quickly. there was really no time to get to a shelter even though there is a shelter just a block and a half from here, folks who live in the buildings behind me said they didn't have time to get away this is just the beginning of the difficult battle they have ahead of them. the power is still out, food, water, just about everything you can think of folks here need right now. >> lucy, we're glad you're on the ground bringing the stories but it is tragic. thank you for that. there's new reporting this morning in the federal case against donald trump. his attorneys have contacted the justice department getting necessary security clearances in this classified documents case according to a source familiar with the matter. and it also underscores the sensitive nature of the documents the former president is accused of withholding.
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this is part of judge aileen cannon's first order here since the president, the former president, had that not guilty plea entered earlier this week. not guilty to charges of mishandling classified information and to obstruction of justice. so by june 20th judge cannon said she wants the lawyers to file notice they have complied with her instructions. we are still waiting to learn whether the trial will take place before or after, of course, the 2024 election. but, look, there is a busy calendar already here for donald trump. as you can see a lot going on there. >> let's bring in our experts, former prosecutor, host of "time's" person of the week podcast. good morning, guys. thank you for being here. shane, you say florida courts tend to move fast. is this a sign of things to come this whole thing goes tfast? >> potentially this could be a
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slow process, getting security clearances takes time. trump doesn't even have a full legal team yet. he just parted ways with two of his top lawyers. he has to bring in new lawyers, pick his lawyers and they have to get security clearances. the special counsel said he wants to have a speedy process here and there's a real big deadline which is the 2024 election. can you do this before that election? if you wait until after there's a whole new pandora's box. >> can this trial happen before the election? >> can is a relative term. yes, it can. >> it's possible. >> with a security clearance this will not be measured in days and weeks, a much longer time than that. the process is not just an attorney filling out a form and saying where you live, where you went to school, arrests, things like that. once they're investigated, there are further steps. it takes time. >> is there a way to safely fast track that process if needed? >> you can relatively speaking prioritize, a district judge can
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say this should jump to the top and move things along. the investigative process itself takes time, documents that are relevant to the united states defense and security. >> that's for sure. also, the deference is given to the defendant's team to say we have enough time, we're ready, et cetera, et cetera, even if the special counsel wants to move fast it's not totally up to jack smith. what's your take? >> i think the schedule here is getting tricky for donald trump. georgia prosecutors are set to announce whether they're going to charge him for his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election in late summer, right around the time of the rnc debate. his stormy daniels-related trial is set for marp och of 2024 aft super tuesday. there's a lot of tricky timing to balance with his legal schedule and his political schedule and so this is not the only -- this is not the only trial that he's facing. there's going to be a lot of
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balancing here. >> shane, you were in bedminster on tuesday night when the president was making his speech doing fundraising in reaction to what had happened in florida earlier in the day. i was struck by your assessment of donald trump that night. just walk us through what you saw at that event and what was different about his demeanor? >> the preevent was different, too. we were there for hours before it began and attendees came in wearing almost wedding attire, bright colored dresses, high tops for a wedding at this golf club. and almost a celebratory atmosphere this is a big movement for trump and we're here to watch it. he arrived and people were excited, krangcraning their pho. he didn't come with this excited energy. he sounded and looked tired and depp flighted by the process. this is a person who spent decades trying to avoid being indicted for crimes. he negotiated with regulators.
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here he is not just accused of crimes not once but twice this year and this is a federal crime. there's a political issue and, yes, this is not hurting him in the republican primary. it doesn't mean it's something he was looking forward to even if his political advisers see him in the short term. >> no one wants to be indicted. i certainly don't. i think he's right. >> most people, erica, she's perfect. >> there's something bigger here than whatever happens to trump. it's what happens to the institutions in our country particularly given not just his attacks but a growing number of republican attacks, presidential attacks on the independence of the justice department this is something ron desantis went at hard in his first interview when he announced, but i thought it was interesting, shane, what john thune said. let's listen. >> obviously we need accountability and oversight, the job that we have to make sure they're doing their job the right way, but are we going to get rid of the justice
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department? no. and i think defunding it is a really bad idea. >> increasingly on an island in his party or no? >> he's in the leadership of his party in the congress, but he is not in the mainstream of where republican primary voters seem to be based on comments of other trump rivals. it's not trump or ron desantis, talking about weaponization, ending the justice department as they see it, replacing the fbi director. the new mainstream of the republican party even if thune is top ranking. >> the piece by your colleagues in the "times" today, a bigger picture we need to think about this and what it means. >> what does it mean, bigger picture? when you have an effort as well to delegitimize some of these institutions and to come into question whatever charges may be filed and to immediately label something as being political because maybe it's going after someone you support politically,
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how do you fight back against that? >> it's interesting, anti-weaponizers, if that's the proper term, are trying to weaponize what they're saying as being weaponized. it's ironic and does a great injustice to anybody who cares about law and order even if you believe donald trump did nothing wrong in terms of his subpoenas. his sponsor lack of response in avoiding the process and ignoring that legal process is what he did wrong even if you think nothing was confidential, acceptable to have the materials, he ignored the process. that's not okay. >> it was interesting to hear yesterday morning francis suarez, the mayor of miami, is a lawyer himself. a practicing lawyer. went after this indictment in his interview with george stephanopoulos. didn't name exactly what he took issue with, but he called it political. it just seems that is the line to toe in this republican
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primary. >> i thought the suarez announcement was interesting because he is toeing that line but it's interesting to look at his speech last night which seemed to be trying to almost also stem away from that line as well. he was trying to position himself as this next generation leader, a young mayor who sort of is outside of the political and cultural and social national trends and can really focus on getting people jobs and making our cities work t. reminded me a little bit of the way pete buttigieg tried to position himself in the 2020 campaign. so it was interesting to watch him kind of toe the line between what republican primary voters expect from their candidates and the message he's trying to send about turning a page for the gop. >> interesting to see all that messaging and balancing act, too, moving forward. shane, charlotte, jeremy, great to have you with us. >> thank you. just ahead the pga tour
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under fire for that surprise partnership with saudi-funded liv golf. now a new report says the justice department is launching an investigation so what could that mean for this deal moving forward? we'll dig in. our heritage is ingrained in our skin. and even when we metamorphosize into our new evolved foform, we cararry that spirit with u. because you can take alfa romeo out of italy. but you best believe, you can't take the italy out of an alfa romeo. beach defense®, from neutrogena® more protection. more sun. more joy. the ncare brand used most by dermatologists for themselves and their famili. vital protection r all your days in the sun with neutrogen® beach defense®. - [narrar] we just shipped our millionth monthly coff subscription box.
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quite a development in the surprising partnership between the pga tour and the saudi public investment fund which is backing liv golf. "the wall street journal" reporting the justice department will investigate this proposed merger, antitrust concerns there, "the journal" says. the deal was announced last week and would unite the commercial businesses of the pga tour, europe-based dp world tour and saudi backed under a for-profit company. in a statement thursday to cnn the pga tour said we're confident once all stakeholders learn more about how the pga tour will lead this venture it will benefit our sport while protecting the american golf institution. joining us is christine brennan. i'm totally fascinated by this for many reasons. not only the fact this proep
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posed merger is happening but with doj sniffing around does this even get done? >> that's a great question. the idea this was a done deal, which everyone thought a week ago i think is up in the air. it ensures there will be chaos in men's golf the next year at least. that's what experts are telling me. that's what the game of golf does not need at this time. there was antitrust, doj antitrust concerns prior to this merger. when you have the commissioner of the pga tour now on leave, when you have him saying we've taken a competitor off the board and now join us, that raises everyone's concern. no surprise to me doj is investigating. it hurts the game of golf, that
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pr side of it where people say why am i watching this? it seems to be about greed, about controversy and is a tough time for the game of men's golf. as i've said it is all self-induced. this is all about these guys wanting more, more, more, and we will see, of course, how it plays out. >> self-induced was to be expected. is there a world, a universe this gives the pga some cover that the doj is digging around? >> certainly in the sense if they say at the end of the day, poppy, it's okay and everything is fine. then, yes, it would. the pga tour, to be fair to them, was in a real jam going up against mbs and billions of dollars and the pga tour didn't have that. the saudis bought their way in to an american sport. with the saudis we have to say
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this comes with terrible baggage. 15 of the 19 hijackers of 9/11 were saudi. the murder and dismemberment of jamal khashoggi. a sport like golf trying to attract women and trying to attract new people, not just old grandpa and grandma. well, guess what, that sport is now in business with someone who repels, who could repel your fan base and that is a huge problem for golf moving forward. >> for sure, right? the issue of sports washing has come up by some prominent senators. elizabeth warren, ron widen, two democrats sent a letter calling for their antitrust division to take a look. we don't know -- it sounds like this was launched before they sent the letter n. part it said the deal, quote, enables the
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government to sports wash its human rights record. that interestingly is not what doj would probe. >> no. doj would be looking at the antitrust implications. in this case there is also that public relations side and we know covering politics for so long you have senator widen, who has been on this for a year. i interviewed him a year ago about this. he has been concerned and critical of liv golf. i imagine others would come in as well. the issue of human rights abuses and as senator wyden said last week, you're allowing the saudis to take over real estate. not buying the golf courses but will have business going on on american property that is part of it, too. what it means for the golf fan,
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the casual fan looking at this, nothing but chaos and confusion for the next year at least. certainly the game of golf and as tiger woods is near the end of his career, so those tv ratings tiger had, those days are long gone for golf, another problem for the game of men's golf. >> thank you. >> great to see you both, thank you. russian cyber criminals reportedly targeted several u.s. government agencies. what we know about that hack and how washington plans to respond just ahead. >> also, i hope my son is up watching, there's a new dinosaur species off the coast of england. name that tune this is "jurassic park," right? come on. ♪ a new car loses about ten percent of its value the minute you drive off the lot. or more. that's why farmers new car replplacement pays
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the justice department says 21-year-old airman jack teixeira is facing six counts of willful retention and transmission of national defense information. the massachusetts native has not entered a formal plea. he was arrested in april under the espionage act. he allegedly took files and posted them on a social media site. u.s. officials are saying russian-speaking hackers are likely conspirators behind a global attack that hit several u.s. government agencies. beyond that officials are saying, quote, several hundred companies and organizations in the u.s. could also be affected by the hacking spree. joining us nor florida congressman who sits on foreign affairs, armed services and intelligence committees, endorsed former president donald trump in his 2024 bid. nice to have you here with us in the studio. >> good to be with you in person. >> the cyber hack that we learned about, have you been briefed in what's your level of concern? >> haven't been briefed
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specifically but on the explosion, the tsunami of ransomware attacks coming. these are criminal actors all over the world. what's most concerning are the ones that appear to be and often are state backed, particularly russia and particularly china. what concerns me so much by the reporting this appears to be russian hackers, what has me even more concerned about the chinese hackers is that according to their law if you're a software company like microsoft in china, you have to hand over the government your source code. you have to hand over the chinese government when you find vulnerabilities in order to be able to do business there. you can imagine windows or microsoft handing over the source code to windows because they want to continue to make money in china and how that now is affecting our government agencies and businesses. >> do you believe it's a direct line, the chinese government is using that source code to go around and go after u.s.
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government agencies potentially or businesses? >> look, i can't imagine that they're not. and we know the chinese communist party is using -- and to an extent the russians as well, using these hackers as an extension of the state and to conduct economic warfare on our businesses. one, to put them on their back foot but often to give their businesses a competitive advantage in the global marketplace. >> real quickly because we have a lot of topics, it's the lightning round, is the u.s. doing enough to prepare for these attacks based on what you know? >> what has me concerned about this attack major agencies, sensitive agencies like our research labs, the department of energy and others appear to have been hacked. we should have a very different standard for those agencies with government funding than a small
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mom and pop that is trying to make payroll. trying to bridge and have a lot of work to do but on the government side they should be secure. >> we'll keep an eye on that. let's talk about the indictment. information about military capabilities, the u.s. nuclear program, plans of a possible attack against a foreign nation. this is information that the indictment laid out puts national security at risk, the military at risk, given how the former president is alleged to have handled these documents and this information you endorsed him, as i noted, in april in his re-election bid here. does any of this give you pause? >> a couple of things and this is all going to play out.
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you mentioned the word alleged. this is the prosecution's side of what happened and the president will mound his defense and given the other side of the story context, what have you. a very difficult complex and convoluted legal case here. you have conflicting statutes in the presidential records act and the espionage act. >> a newer and more specific law many legal and a cystalysts say trump -- pardon the pun -- when you have to prove intent on the front end and on the retention end through the espionage act if that's what they stick with, then if the president believed and legal precedent holds, for example, in the clinton tapes that the presidential records act was the governing statute, i think that's going to be an
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incredibly difficult case to make and then finally a lot of the evidence rests on piercing the attorney/client privilege, which is very rare, unprecedented, certainly hasn't been done before with a former president and sitting political candidate. if the judge decides that's not admissible, that could be a significant development. >> as we watch for that, we look at where things stand, the presidential records act says those records belong to the public, right? a lot of confusion over documents, how they're classified, when they can be declassified, who they belong to, who is in charge of them. a lot of that has been established as we look at this. what about when it comes to obstruction? >> you're actually making my point. there's a lot of confusion of what belongs to the president, to the public, and -- >> hang on, let me finish. we have released this testimony.
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80 instances going back to reagan and every administration where there have been a back and forth, confusion, including 80 congressional and senatorial offices. 80. not 8, not 2. a broader systemic problem in terms of the management of classified documents and what belongs to who. i don't think that's out there how often this is happening. so to your point there were conversations to return some of the documents. you're citing this happens a lot. most of the time it appears to be inadvertent, there's a conversation and it's given back. "the washington post" reporting this week, in fact, i believe, there is reporting that he talked to the president about, hey, why don't we talk to doj, tell the former president you
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took these by accident and we can avoid all of this here. multiple times the archives tried to get that information, those records back, the president didn't just hand them over. why not just hand them over? to your point this happens a lot. >> he believed he was privileged that is a conversation that i would argue should have continued to happen because what's missing also in this conversation and i can tell you this talking to folks back home. you can call it what aboutism. they're calling it fairness. there's legal precedent here when you have the clinton tapes, when you have the clinton emails, when you have the fact the sitting national security adviser, jake sullivan, sending into an unclassified server on top of the fact the sitting president of the united states
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admitted he had documents in his garage. people say, wait a minute. they didn't go after these folks and all of the other instances but in the one you go after president trump -- and i've served in places where this -- in the third world, all over the country the party in power uses the power of the state to go after political opponents and we're seeing that now i never thought i would see this in the united states. i think the damage done to trust on the years of russia, russia, russia, russia, the report that shows and the fbi director said was abhorrent, unacceptable, they have been fired. now we're telling people trust us when it comes to trump this time. people aren't buying it and i think that's why you're seeing the poll numbers go up. >> let's unpack some of this.
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there is confusion. these are not all apples to apples. we're out of time but president biden, the special counsel, is still investigating president biden in terms of the documents found there. hold on. there are questions from both sides of the aisle. so president biden is still being investigated, right? you talk about these tapes -- >> this went in just a few months and the hunter biden investigation and now the joe biden investigation seem to be moving -- >> but you're throwing a bunch of things into a basket that are not all the same. i think it's important for our viewers to understand the differences there. >> i hope you unpack those. >> we will. we have multiple times. we have multiple fact checks on the website as well. i'm told we're out of time. i do appreciate you coming in to the studio. congressman, thank you. poppy? a deputy's body camera capturing a miracle on the side of the road. >> look at me.
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we have their story. how far along are you? >> reporter: law enforcement officers face life-and-death emergencies. >> keep breathing. i'm not going to move you. you look comfortable right now. >> reporter: one florida deputy braved the high-stakes extremes on a single shift. >> whether it's catching a baby or stopping a bad guy it's what we get paid to do. >> reporter: a 22 veteran was responding to a road rage call. >> that one guy at gunpoint. >> reporter: moments later -- >> a black suv pulled up behind my truck and the driver got out. you can see the panic in his face. i started making my way towards him. he met me halfway across, you need to escort me to the hospital. we don't do that. that's only in the movies.
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my wife is having a baby. >> ingot out of the car and i screamed, can i get help? >> reporter: the expectant mother was in labor agony. they rushed to the hospital but the baby was coming too fast. >> i knew we weren't going to make it to any hospital around us. we weren't going to make it to either of them. she was pushing down. >> look at me. breathe through, all right, mama. breathe through. you had your water broke? >> yes. >> you have to let me know if the baby is coming, okay? >> reporter: and right there on the side of the highway, he helped welcome the baby. >> there we go. we have a baby. don't pull. i've got her. there you go, mama. >> reporter: 4 pounds, 11 ounces and 18 inches, she's the couple's first child together. >> no training for us for birthing babies.
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>> reporter: if there were, deputy jones would make a fine instructor. >> this is my third little one since i've been at the sheriff's office. >> reporter: during a mother's day party, the four reconnected. >> she's wearing a onesies he got her. >> i think we made an instagram page. one more thing. >> reporter: after all they've been through together, one more favor to ask of red. >> since you delivered her, right, how would you feel being her godfather? >> very good. that would make me very happy. that would make me very happy. thank you, mama. >> reporter: a bond that began on the side of the road now destined to last a lifetime. >> such a great day. >> and the third baby on the side of the road for that officer. >> he was born to do this.
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>> clearly, yes. a brand-new dinosaur species found on the isle of wright off the coast of new england. this is the first in 142 years and that is so cool. >> it's very cool. tiktok rose to prominence among gen-z. some of its older creators are really having a moment and the brands are taking notice. prepare to meet the grand-fluencers. a production company started by the duke and duchess of sussex joint statements against a mutual agreement. they announced in december of 2020.
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i kind of keep want to keep watching it. boomers and grannies taking tiktok by storm. not just making videos. they are teaching, mother teaching younger users. the tiktok. ♪ ♪ >> six strangers picked to live in a house and have their lives taped for social media. ♪ >> this isn't exactly the real world house. these six strangers are well into retirement age but their
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tiktok the retirement house is anything but. they are doing a bit of acting, pumping out curated consent, rivaling influencers half their age while amassing 5 million followers. they are called grandfluencers and are pulling in huge brand deals. the creator economy is worth $250 billion and could double to 480 billion by 2027. the retirement house promoting sa cereve. 11 million followers, partnered with hyundai. and 74-year-old lynn davis' cooking videos and 15.7 followers. 62-year-old helen is approaching 1 million followers on tiktok. >> it's daunting to think about that many people because it's populations of cities.
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>> she found tiktok over the pandemic, a distraction and way to have fun. was there a point this turned into more of a business? >> some people say how did you do that transition, figure that out? i said i will make tutorial for you. that was the turning point in social media for me. >> reporter: instead of brand deals she is teaching followers how to tiktok through paid tutorials. it started with mostly older people. now it's younger people, too. >> i am really good at technology, probably better than a lot of young people. i want to highlight it's okay to get older. i feel more authentic and i think that's helpful on social media especially. >> reporter: and for older influencers, success comes in the form of connection to millions of people often a quarter of their age. >> it also opens up a lot of community. i have more friends than i can count and i have more friends who are like 25 and 30 than 75,
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80-year-olds. >> reporter: at 78, debra rappaport has found a new audience for her sustainable wearable art on instagram. she is able to promote her upcoming shows, workshops and sell what she has need made. >> i modelled this national security he had. >> reporter: to her nearly 60,000 instagram followers. >> you think young people are craving authenticity and that's what i try to encourage. >> reporter: is being older actually an asset on social media? >> totally. totally. not only on social media, but in life itself. i am not afraid at 78 to put myself out there and say this is who i am, this is what i do, i have been doing it a very long time, i don't intend to stop. >> reporter: for many grandfluencers, this is fun and doesn't feel like work even while we filmed, she was capturing her next tiktok. ♪ ♪ >> there you are!
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>> that was the entire cnn crew's first tiktok with helen there. we had so much fun. they had so much fun. helen actually took to tiktok to also share her story about cancer. she had cancer. she is cancer free now thank goodness. but she says she doesn't know if she would have been able to get through emotionally without the support of her followers. one of her followers said i came to your platform to learn about tiktok but instead i learned about life. it is so nice to see this positively on social media when there is, obviously, such a big concern about mental health, especially with teens. we had so much fun. these baby boomers, grandparents, granfluencerers are great. >> it was a great story. i can tell whey you had so much fun. thank you. just ahead in our 8:00 hour you will hear from the latest republican to join the crowded
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race for the white house, miami mayor francis suarez will join us. in texas a tornado tririppe through perryton. what we're learning as the sun comes un. >> tornado just went in town. tornado just went through town! ? with 24 trusted brands by wyndham to choose frorom... your wyndham is waiting. get the lowest price at wyndhamhotels.com - this is my coffee shop.
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♪ i am just happy my brothers are alive. i mean, i know all the property and everything can be replaced, but a life can never be replaced. just being in the tornado thinking about it, like my brother, worrying, crying. it would have killed me, hurt me inside. i don't know what i would have done. >> good morning, everyone. it that was a resident of pair ton, texas. getting emotional, talking about his brothers who survive
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