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tv   Good Morning America  ABC  November 15, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EST

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good morning, america. anti-trump protests escalate. a trump supporter caught on camera attacking a fellow student on a college campus as president obama tries to peacefully pass the baton. >> i don't think he is ideological. i think ultimately he's pragmatic. >> his president-elect as donald trump builds his team, the new role rudy giuliani may play in his white house. breaking overnight a massive manhunt for this accused killer escaped from a county jail. now authorities warn he may have stolen a truck with a rifle inside. the search for this man who could be armed and dangerous. caught on camera, this hot air balloon goes haywire at a festival catching fire as fireworks explode. firefighters on the scene as the
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lives. an abc news exclusive. the woman in the middle of two of the biggest stories of the year, megyn kelly here live. >> you call women you don't like fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals. >> what does she think about donald trump's election and the private meeting they had during the campaign to try to end his attacks against her, plus sexual harassment charges against roger ailes. what she is saying about her former fox news boss and why didn't she earlier only on "gma" this morning. and good morning, america. a lot of news to get to this morning but also a very big "gma" tradition. >> because it's that time of the year. we're revealing "people's" sexiest man alive. who is going to be on that cover? >> we know. very sexy man. >> i don't know. >> you don't know? >> no. >> you might really be
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>> we'll have much on that. first calls for a peaceful transition of power from president obama. there he is touching down in greece just hours ago for his final international trip as president. back here at home anti-trump protests like this one at ohio state university escalating. abc's tom llamas is here with more on the reaction to donald trump's election and who will be joining his white house. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the trump team coming together de his first hires. this as some of trump's closest allies are giving us a glimpse of what may be ahead. trump loyalist rudy giuliani may soon be joining president-elect donald trump in the white house. giuliani saying he won't be trump's attorney general but he may be secretary of state. both giuliani and former u.n. ambassador john bolton are contenders for the post. >> john would be a very good choice. >> is there anybody better? >> maybe me. i don't know.
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trump's first decisions is coming under scrutiny. elevating his campaign ceo stephen bannon to chief strategist and white house counselor. >> don't believe the media. don't believe the establishment. do not believe the permanent political class. we are on the right side of history. >> reporter: bannon who ran breitbart led the charge to turn the conservative site into a platform for the alt-right. from house minority leader nancy there must be no sugar coating the reality that a white nationalist has been named chief strategist for the trump administration. trump advisers slamming those descriptions of bannon. >> he's been the general of this campaign and, frankly, people should look at the full resume. he's got a harvard business degree. he's a naval officer. he has success in entertainment. >> reporter: in his first news conference since the election president obama revealing that during that oval office meeting
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should reach out to the groups that opposed him and realize the importance of his post-election decisions. >> how he staffs the first steps he takes, the first impressions he makes, the reset that can happen after an election. >> reporter: obama telling americans to give president-elect trump a chance and offered his successor this stern advice. >> there are going to be certain elms of his temperament that will not serve him well unless them. >> reporter: and before he wrapped up his news conference president obama also had some advice for his own party saying they have to spend the time in small towns and states like iowa to create political bases that deliver votes and victories on election day. >> tom, thanks. joining me now fox news anchor megyn kelly out with a new book "settle for more" but let's look at these appointments.
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to the victors go the spoils. >> absolutely right and trump is entitled to surround himself with the people he most trusts. bannon is the only one that's caused a lot of controversy. sort of like a tale of two cities where you've got reince priebus who is more establishment which trump has been railing against and stephen bannon who spent his entire career -- >> he says they are going to be equal partners but what does that mean inside the white house. this could set up kind of a civil war. >> it could be awkward but what i'm hearing is steve bannon will be i >> even thoe he's not the chief of staff. >> unusual situation because normally the chief of staff would be the one who is. we're being told steve bannon will have the ear of donald trump. i don't know what that means for reince priebus. maybe president-elect trump needs somebody to work the hill and staff decisions. >> that would suggest perhaps president obama was wrong in his judgment when he said he doesn't think trump is ideological and thinks he's pragmatic. >> both are true. i think both are true.
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steve bannon though he is a controversial figure has advised donald trump very well. it was flailing until bannon came in who doesn't run political campaigns but who completely understands these working class americans who have had it with washington and the so-called establishment. >> what do you say to those who say it's bringing a white supremist into the white house. >> i don't know there's evidence of that. >> the breitbart headlines. >> the breitbart headline, his defenders, they're a defenders say is he's not responsible for every single headline that went up on breitbart while he was the executive chairman and that that website is known for being provocative and so they're looking for cliques. now it definitely appeals to a segment of the so-called alt-right but i don't know you could tar the entire team with that brush or steve bannon with that brush but no question this man is controversial? we'll talk more about your book
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you are called 2016 your year of trump and it really details all of your encounter, the tough encounters. what does that tell you about what kind of president he will be and how can you mutt that all aside in covering him? >> i have a year of doing it so now it's easy to cover him because we're out of that weird place that we were in. it definitely poses challenges when he was coming after me so relentlessly and causing security issues in my life and the life of my family but i did it. and it was a test of me as a think my team and i at "the kelly file" managed to navigate it pretty well. what it tells me about what kind of president he will, listen, no question he is thin-skinned and can be mean-spirited and vindictive but my own experience with him proves that he's able to let things go if he so chooses, right. he came after me like a dog with a bone for nine months but finally when i went to see him at trump tower and believe me, i
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we got past it. i think he has a magnanimous piece of him. he has a charming piece to him as well and while i think trump doesn't like it when he feels attacked if he feels you're open-minded or neutral towards him he becomes a bit more open-mind. he often fee as tacked when he's not is often the problem. >> "settle for more" is out today. we'll talk about that. donald trump, roger ailes in our next half hour. now to new questions about the internet's possible effect after fake news stories trended online, facebook and google are now reportedly taking steps to curb those sites. our chief business and economics correspondent rebecca jarvis is here so, rebecca, how are they responding? >> well, robin, they are responding big this morning and if you've spent any time on the internet and social media chances are you've seen these fake news stories but might not even know it. for example, we googled who won the popular vote and we found this high up in the search results, a fake story claiming
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the popular vote by a wide margin, then there's this on facebook, trump loses support of police union after saying tulsa shooting cop choked. that's not true either. well, now google and facebook are targeting how the creator of these fake news sites make money. that's advertising. google announcing overnight it will prevent websites that push phony news from using its ad sensitizing network and facebook announcing it is on that too. >> thank you. we move to that breaking news from missouri. an accused killer escaped from jail after a door was left open. pierre thomas has the latest on the search, good morning, pierre. >> reporter: good morning, george. that's right. a massive manhunt now under way for a convict that police believe is armed and dangerous. daniel campbell charged with first degree murder and assault snuck out of the county jail in
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door that was open while construction work was going on at the jail. they believe he stole a dodge pickup truck two hours later with a deer rifle inside. scary situation unfolding for the people in that area, george. >> okay, pierre, thanks very much. >> scary, indeed. now to that stunning verdict in that hot car trial in georgia. justin ross harris found guilty on all eight charges convicted of murdering his son by leaving him locked in a car for abc's steve osunsami is in marietta, georgia, with more. good morning, steve. >> reporter: good morning to you, robin. this was a surprising result for many who have been following this case closely from the very beginning. jurors not only agreed this father was negligent but that he intended to kill his son. >> we find the defendant guilty. >> reporter: justin ross harris sat nearly stone-faced after they delivered blow after blow.
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cruelty and seconding with an underage girl which prosecutors say was happening while his son was dying outside his atlanta office in this silver suv. the jury of six women and six men decided that 22-month-old cooper harris was killed intentionally after being strapped into this rear-facing car seat by his father and left for more than seven hours in the parked car on a summer day in 2014. >> you had to accept that somebody is capable of this level of evil. it really affected >> reporter: harris failed to convince jurors that this was an accident. that he simply forgot to drop his son off at day care on his way in to work that morning. his now ex-wife even took his side. >> he must have forgot. >> reporter: during deliberations last week jurors asked again to look at a police station video where harris and the boy's mother are heard discussing the story he told authorities. >> did you say too much? >> all i did was tell them the events of the day?
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harris, we've never once ever once wavered in our absolute belief that he's not guilty of what he's just been convicted of. >> reporter: harris is looking at life in prison and he'll be sentenced in this courthouse behind me here in marietta, georgia, on december 5th. george. >> okay, steve, thanks very much. thousand to that smoke and fire tearing across the southeast. eight states battling flames right now and abc's eva pilgrim is on the scene in north carolina, where firefighters have been working all through the night. good morning, eva. >> reporter: good morning, george. you can see the fire coming down the mountain. we're staying across the street. trees could fall down here. this morning, there's no end in sight to the flames. flames crawling up and down mountains all across the southeast, thousands of firefighters from as far away as alaska battling 42 wildfires across eight states. authorities say many
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cooperation with anyone who has information on anyone who may have started any of these fires. we do believe most of these fires are man-made. >> reporter: in north carolina, the party rock fire around chimney rock forcing a thousand people out of their homes, mandatory evacuations in place. the ongoing drought creating dry conditions fueling the fires. some burning for more than a month and no rain in the forecast any time soon. for now you can see the fire is moving very slowly down the mountain as it continues to move down. >> we could have these challenges through march. >> reporter: the widespread smoke prompting air quality warnings, code red in western north carolina, orange in parts of georgia, some residents wearing masks. >> just went in my lungs and i had to get out of here. >> reporter: another problem here, you can see there's still leaves on the trees, when those leaves fall, it can reignite the flames. michael.
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let's turn to david kerley standing by reagan national airport where it sounds like there was a scary moment in the sky on monday, david. >> reporter: yeah, it was a very scary moment, michael. a couple of pilots took evasive action thinking they saw a drone and injured two of their own flight attendants. the investigation this morning into what the pilots of a plane with 54 passengers on board saw coming towards them leading to their severe action. the pilots making a sharp turn at 9,000 feet in the two flight attendants thrown in the cabin and injured. once on the ground the pilots said they thought it was a drone coming towards them. >> they see a flash. they see something at an altitude they would not expect another airplane or something to be flying and so they instinctively make a sharp turn to get away from whatever it is. >> reporter: the two flight attendants were treated and released in toronto. already this year, pilots' sightings of drones are up 40%
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>> reporter: the worry what happens if it hits a passenger plane. >> i'm just hovering. >> there are several efforts like this one to come up with technology to counter drones. this government funded corporation can overpower a drone's signal taking over control of the drone and flying it to safety. of course, now a pilot traveling several hundred miles an hour has to make a split-second decision and that's what those canadian pilots did yesterday, what they thought was a drone. >> they make those quick decisions, you're right. amy with the other top stories including tourists trapped by an earthquake. >> a u.s. warship arrived to help evacuate thousands of residents who are stranded in towns cut off by monday's powerful earthquake in new zealand. a nine-story building is in danger of collapsing at this hour prompting evacuation orders there. damage right now stichlted in the billions. meanwhile, those cows we showed
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that hill after a landslide have now been rescued. well, some u.s. service members and cia operatives could face charges for the alleged torture of detainees in afghanistan. the international criminal court says there is evidence americans tortured more than 80 prisoners back in 2003 and 2004. a full investigation is possible which could lead to charges. and this morning, we want to take a moment to pay tribute to a pioneering journalist, gwen ifill. the role model for so many has died of cancer at the age of 61. >> good evening, i'm judy woodruff. >> and i'm gwen ifill. >> reporter: one-half of the first all female anchor team on nightly news. >> how are you? >> reporter: gwen ifill once told "the new york times" that as a little girl watching the news, she would look up and not see anyone who looked like me in any way. >> that's why diversity matters. you're bringing a different life experience to your interpretation. >> reporter: the trailblazing
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graduated from simmons college recalling her first news internship at the boston herald american on the pbs series "makers." >> i call myself the only only because there were no other black women really in that situation at that time. but that didn't stop me. >> reporter: and nothing could stop her. >> is it fair for americans who fear government to fear you? >> reporter: ifill covering politics for three decades. a fixture behind the moderators' desk. >> was it the worth or best of washington we saw play >> reporter: shining bright for those future journalists also watching the news every night. >> as long as i remember there's someone on the other side of the piece of equipment, the camera, i have to take what i do seriously every single day. >> i love what she said so many types. she wanted to bring light, not heat to issues and i also loved your beautiful tribute to gwen on facebook. i saw that and it really was remarkable. you all had such a relationship. >> she reached out when she was first diagnosed and i think
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don't lose your battle, you know this, you don't lose your battle to cancer, you beat cancer by how you live and the manner in which you live and she was a shining example of that. wonderful the things president obama said about her. >> i was on both sides of the table from her and first covered the clinton campaign, the clinton courthouse, she was fierce and fearless, a very, very tough reporter but then when the day was done, a warm and caring and really joyful human being. >> she'll be missed. >> she sure will. >> let's go to rob with the us. normally we wouldn't celebrate this but we need it in new york and boston. heavier bands rotating in. severe drought in much of the northeast. will snow be dropped in the intermountain west and plains and much colder air behind this and lake-effect know this weekend and the cold will get all the way down into the deep
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weekend into early next week today: am clouds, stray shower early. pm sunshine. highs: 58-62 winds: nw 5 mph lows: 33-42 winds: w 5 mph wednesday: morning sun, becoming mostly cloudy. highs: 60-63 winds: nw 5 mph and coming up, much more with megyn kelly. opening up a lot about that
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those sexual harassment allegations against her former fox news boss roger ailes. that is only on "gma." a new twist in that "making a murderer" case. why a judge is now ordering one of the convicted killers featured in that next application docu-series, the judge is saying he should be set free. we'll talk about that and much more. come on back. aughter. roller derby. ? now give up half of 'em. this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income... we could keep doing all the things we love.
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>> anchor: good morning, washington. i'm melanie hastings. here is a check of your stop stories. students at dc public schools plan to walk out of class to protest donald trump. this comes after hundreds of students walked out of montgomery blare high school yesterday and marched for miles t protest in dc according to social media 1:00 p.m. t group will meet at metro center and march to trump international hotel. new this morning, overnight shooting in southeast dc being investigated as a homicide. this happened on the 4300 block of third street just after 11:0. man who was shot died at the hospital. right now, there is no lookout for a suspect. we will let you know more as soon as we find out any new
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first part of the day here we'll see early day clouds. chance of an isolated or stray shower. that through your morning rush. temperatures push from the mid and upper 40s to upper 50s during the afternoon hours. could get late day sunshine inhere. there is that possibility. more sunshine tomorrow, the high going up upper 60s by the end of the work week on friday. tail of two somebodies the upcoming weekend. showers on saturday, feeling like fall. more like winter on sunday with wind. >> reporter: on the roads we are actually ceiling with crash cleanup, dc295 approaching pennsylvania avenue southbound. sky track 7 is in tyson's office the accident on 267, dulles toll
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? laurie hernandez and val last night on "dancing with the stars." what an emotional performance. finals just a week away and we have the booted couple, terra jole and sasha farber here. >> you know ginger loved b president obama has a full day ahead in greece. he's there for his final international trip as president after offering advice to donald trump telling the president-elect to reach out to the other side as trump faces criticism over one of his first decisions naming stephen bannon his chief strategist and white house counselor. >> and also this morning we've got that big reveal, sitting on pins and needles all morning, one of the most highly anticipated magazines of the
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alive" issue. >> david beckham graced the cover last year. we are moments away from finding out who graces the cover. michael, what is it like? >> they only put me in there because of my son. you have to ask him. >> we have a lot more coming up. first more from megyn kelly, her new book "settle for more" is out today and a quick look back at her rocky relationships with donald trump and her former boss roger ailes. >> like fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals. >> the feud began with that first question. >> what i say is what i say and honestly, megyn, if you don't like it, i'm sorry. i've been very nice to you although i probably could not be based on the way you've treated me but i wouldn't do that. >> reporter: a torrent of insults followed calling her a bimbo, unprofessional and crazy. >> you could see there was blood
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>> i was referring to nose, ears, and only a deviant would think of that. >> i became the story. you never want to be the story when you're a news person. >> reporter: now in her new book "settle for more" -- >> it's a personal book. roo he vrieling and under an embargo. they would have to hurt you if you found it. >> reporter: "the kelly file" anchor says her interview with donald trump began six months before he announced claimed he tried to charm her and offer her trips and gifts clearly meant to slip coverage. >> i had a meeting with donald trump. >> reporter: she found herself part of the story after gretchen carlson filed a sexual harassment suit against roger ailes. after carlson spoke out kelly told her bosses that at the start of her career, ailes made unwanted advances against her too. shortly after ailes was fired from fox. and megyn kelly is back right now. thanks for coming back. let's start right there.
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co-chairman lackland murdoch. what did you tell him? >> well, i mean, listen, i wrestled with what to do. i wasn't sure what the truth was about roger. >> you knew what he did to you. >> exactly. and that's one of the bizarre things. i knew my own experience but he and i had gone on to have nine years of a healthy working relationship and so in my mind i had attributed it to he was interested in me, that he was having a marital difficulty, perhaps he was just i affair. and i didn't -- >> he was explicit about that? as explicit as you could be. i mean it was very on the nose and then it culminated in a physical attempt to be with me which i rejected in his office and then i -- >> he touched you. >> he tried to kiss me three times. >> so i rejected that and when i rejected that he asked me when my contract was up. as soon as i left his office i called a lawyer and i did bring the matter to a supervisor at
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>> years ago when it happened to me. and that person vouched for roger's character, assured me he was a good man, he was likely just smitten and that i should try to avoid him which is what i did. >> as you know roger ailes put out a statement through his attorney that says, i deny the allegations megyn makes about me. i worked tirelessly to promote her career. as megyn admitted to charlie rose, watch that interview and decide for your several. this is what he was referring to on charlie rose. >> i really care about and he's been nothing but good to me and he's been very loyal and he's had my back. >> so how do you square that when what you're writing now. >> both things can be true. ray woman can be harassed and go on to have a good working relationship with the man harassing her and that is what happened in my case. i avoided roger for six months after my supervisor suggested that was the proper course to pursue and sure enough, he stopped. and i was down in the d.c.
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he was up in new york. this is all laid out in the book in great detail. but he stopped and we went on to have a healthy working relationship and what he said about promoing me and having my back is true. and it was one of the reasons why even i found it hard to believe that he was a serial harasser, george, when the lawsuit broke and then women started coming forward anonymously but it soon became clear upon reading the allegations that at least an investigation was necessary. >> so did any part of you thi looking back you should have come out earlier publicly? >> listen, it's hard to say to to that because i know now the number of women targeted and it's disturbing, but realistically and this is one reason i wrote about it in the book, realistically that would have been a suicide mission for me and my career because i had been there 12 months, not the megyn kelly of today. i had no power and he was on the cover of industry magazines as
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there was no one to go to. if i had gone to the general counsel of the company it would have been me first year person -- >> leads to a tough question for fox news as well. if gretchen carlson hadn't sued, would roger ailes still be the chairman of fox news? >> i think so. i think so. i mean because we all have arbitration clauses which prevented us from filing public lawsuits which her filing publicly was a big step in this whole process. i'll tell you, what i wanted was for it to investigation into him. that's all i really wanted because i didn't know whether it was just me, just gretchen, who -- is this a serial problem or not and that's why i called lackland murdoch to tell me, it didn't bring me any joy but to tell him it did happen to me ten years earlier and that they needed to take a hard look at who they had running the company and within days they had announced they had hired paul weiss and i cooperated with that
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trump. take us inside that meeting where you basically tried to bury the hatchet. what did you say and do? >> so the actual meeting was off the record so i don't want to get into the specific content. i went over there. i walked in. and he gave me a nice greeting. he hugged me. >> he hugged you. >> yes, which i -- >> how did you accept that. >> well, i talk about it in the book that it was bizarre, right, to be hugging this man who had tried to torment me for nine months and who had security and all sorts of things that are detailed in the book. but i accepted it for the gesture it was which i think was a goodwill gesture to try to say if not i'm sorry, then let's move on. which is what i was doing there. so i neither apologized to him nor did he apologize to me and after the meeting we discussed the state of the race, we did not discuss his nine-month campaign against me. we tabled that but was a reset of sorts that worked for us.
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daughter yeardley. she said she was afraid of him. >> so she's a recurring character in this book as are all three of my children but yeardley is amazing and i talk about how a year ago after i went to the fortune most powerful women's conference she said, what is that? i said it's a gathering of really strong women who celebrate their accomplishments and i was taking yeardley down there with me and she said, are we two of them? and then a year not quite a year presidential debate in detroit and that's when she told me she was afraid of donald trump. i had never revealed to her any of the things trump had done. president-elect trump had done. but she is 5 and she hears things in this world and one of the lowest points was when she came home and asked me what a bimbo was and i just thought, you know, the same girl who thought she was being honored at the most powerful women's conference had learned a new word which was one of the low
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what's next for you? publicly, everyone knows your contract is up next year. can you stay at fox after all this? >> oh, sure, i mean, i can easily stay at fox. i can go hopefully anywhere i want. i don't think anything happened in that the past year that limited that. i think trump and i are -- president-elect trump. we're all getting used to that are on better terms and i'm grateful fox news has given me the 12 years i've had there and want me to opinion the murdochs who are running it are honorable men would want to do what's right and -- is there do you want to stay. >> i'm figuring that out. it's not really appropriate to discuss with you, george, i'm on "good morning america" but i'm figuring that out. as much as i love my job i love those three little lives that my husband and i brought into the world. this is my philosophy i need to settle for more and that's the name of the book. >> thanks for coming in. our big board that "making a
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why the judge ordered one of the convicted killers should be set free. we're going to talk about that when we come back in two minutes. good is in every blue diamond almond. a good that comes in 20 flavors from whole natural to wasabi and soy sauce. and once good gets going, there's no stopping it. get your good going. blue diamond almonds. what's going on here? i'm val, the orange money retirement squirrel from voya. we're putting away acorns.
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back here, time for our big board. our team of insiders standing by live for more on this morning's top stories. we've got our legal team with us, we got sunny, sunny is here, dan is here. so we'll talk about legal issues. all right, so let's start with that new twist in the "making a murderer" case. brendan dassey be released from prison after he and his uncle steven avery were found guilty of murder nearly a decade ago. now, this has taken some time for this. why is he being released now? >> his conviction was overturned in august basically the judge at the time said i'll effectively give 90 days because the prosecution can still appeal this ruling. the prosecution did appeal. but at this point the judge is basically saying, look, i'm not
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that i issued. now, prosecutors are now effectively saying, well wooshgs ale's go file an emergency appeal to try to make sure he stays behind bars. i think it's unlikely that they're going to get that. and as a result i think it's likely that dassey will be released in the next couple of weeks but sounds like pro prosecutors are also going to retry him so it's possible that he could get convicted again although i think that's unlikely based on the lack of evidence. >> with the possibility of dassey getting out, w >> totally separate case, right. the case against brendan dassey in my view was always weak. the case against steven avery is a totally different story. from the defense's perspective they want to retest the blood to see if maybe it was planted. they want to be able to do a type of testing called carbon testing which can maybe date the blood. i don't think that's going to make much of a difference. their lawyer thinks it will. their lawyer has been saying
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avery's lawyer is saying again and again he will eventually be exonerated. i think it will be very difficult. >> before we weigh in on your case, what do you think on this, sunny. >> i think it's interesting we're even talking about this case because of the documentary and so it leads to that notion of transparency. we don't have cameras in a lot of courtrooms, not even inside the supreme court and i think this case sort of highlights the fact that we need those cameras in courtrooms and need those in the supreme court because i think it uncovers a lot of this case. this confession was beyond the pale but we only know about it because of the cameras >> that's it. good point. >> i love having our legal team here. tag team. >> this is awesome. why don't we do this every day. >> i love when i don't need advice. all right. now up next we need you both for this too. they say diamonds are forever but maybe not for this one manhattan couple. "the new york post" reports a
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their wedding was canceled at the last minute and, sunny, oh, man. >> that's a lot of money. >> neither one will comment on the case but could the court make her return the ring? >> the court could, michael. you know what's interesting. this is the question that i get the most from our viewers, i get this question almost every week. who gets the ring? most states don't want to be involved in matters of the heart so most states say, you know what, i don't care who is at fault bottom line is if the ring back. those states are new york, pennsylvania, iowa, kansas, new jersey, new mexico and wisconsin. but there are a couple of states that say, i do want to get involved. those states are california, texas, they say, you know what, if you are the dumper, the dumpee gets to keep the ring. >> the dumpee. >> how do people protect themselves when engaged? >> you know what i'll tell my son, robin, i'll say give her my
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she breaks that engagement off you get the ring back. the other thing i'll advise him, dent propose on a holiday. if you propose on christmas or hanukkah, many courts say that was a gift that wasn't part of the engagement and you get to keep it. >> that's a lot of work, sunny. >> sorry. >> a question of whether it's a conditional gift or not. is it conditioned upon us getting married as opposed to on a holiday where you basically said it could have been a christmas gift. >> this is a question for everybod but what about just social etiquette. do you give the ring back? >> you know what, you dump me, i'm not giving the ring back. but look at mariah carey. mariah carey gets to keep her ring. >> it's only damages. basically to me the only reason you keep it is damages to say, you know what, i was so wronged and i'd be entitled to x amount of dollars. instead i'll take this bling and i'll go home. >> sunny went to the what would mariah do defense.
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>> $125,000 damages clause. basically said you break up with me that's how much this is costing you. >> no mas. coming up in two minutes finally time. we'll reveal the one and only "people" magazine sexiest man alive. ean better than a manual. he said sure, but don't just get any one. get one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head! go pro with oral-b. oral-b's rounded brush head cups your teeth to break up plaque and oral-b crossaction delivers a clinically proven superior clean vs. sonicare diamondclean. my mouth feels super clean! oral-b. know you're getting a superior clean.
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? happy holidays from crayola. so when do i start? um, shouldn't it be "spokes-crayon?" can somebody turn on the a/c? i'm melting here. ?air marker spraayer!!!? chemistry, baby! so i just hold this part and spraaaaaay... i'm okay. the holidays just got more surprising. you can find these great gifts and more in the crayola aisle. aaaaaah! each sold separately. we are the tv doctors of america. and we're partnering with cigna to help save lives. by getting you to a real doctor for an annual check-up. so go, know, and take control of your health. doctor poses. learn your key health numbers and take control today. every tv doctor knows scrubbing is serious business. they also know you need to get your annual check-up. now with one touch using the mycigna app you can find a doctor in your plan's network to save money.
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we're back now with one of the most anticipated magazine issues of the year. "people's sexiest man alive" here with "people" magazine last year it was david beckham and now it is time, jess, to reveal the man of the 2016 cover. >> are you excited. >> >> we are. we have a drum roll and everything. [ drum roll ] >> dwayne "the rock" johnson. >> all right. very cool. he's such a good guy. couldn't have happened to a nicer guy. is that one of the reasons you chose him. >> incredibly nice guy, slightly nerdy smart. very funny.
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the hulk. like the ultimate -- >> that too. >> the ultimate sexiest man alive like we built him from a kit. >> i like that nerdy and nice wins. >> right now it's nice to celebrate somebody that everybody can get behind. >> i agree. i think it's an excellent choice, the sexiest man alive issue hits newsstands on friday and revealing more stars in the issue coming up, hint, hint. >> somebody i'm sitting next to. somebody i'm sitting n which one is it? may made the sexiest list again. >> i have a feeling. should you secretly monitor your kids' phones? our experts are weighing in. >> i think you're sexy, george. coming up "gma's" countdown to thanksgiving. brought to you by walmart. save money, live better. our hea. and i'm just grateful that we can all be here in this moment.
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we've been through a lot of trauma no matter what color we are, no matter what uniform we got on. you guys are my family. nothing more important than family today. it's good to be together. lets enjoy. ? as soon as i left the hospital after a dvt blood clot, i sure had a lot to think about. what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. yes, eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to.
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welcome back to "gma." middle of november. temps still in the 80s across parts of kansas. down through texas, 10 to 20 degrees above normal but winter is coming. snow finally in the intermountain west above 6,000
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>> anchor: good morning, washington. i'm melanie hastings. here is a check of your stop stories. right now, police are searching for a woman they say through hot soup on a metro bus driver. this happened sunday morning near union station. metro says the woman in this picture swore at the driver and refused to pay when she boarded, 20 soup on the driver as she got off the with us. dc council is set to take a final vote on death with dignity act. 11-2 was the vote. it would allow meant able cap to believe get a prescription drug to end their life. 67% of dc residents support this legislation. our showers have moved out. here is valerie jarrett with an
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forecast. >> reporter: first part of the day here we'll see early day clouds. chance of an isolated or stray shower. that through your morning rush. temperatures push from the mid and upper 40s to upper 50s during the afternoon hours. could get late day sunshine inhere. there is that possibility. more sunshine tomorrow, the high going up to 60. upper 60s by the end of the work week on friday. tail of two seasons the upcoming weekend. showers on saturday, feeling like fall. more like winter on sunday with wind. >> reporter: we are checking our drive times right now. costing you almost an hour from frederick on southbound i270, through urbana headed to german town. you can see the delays passing father hurley boulevard on the left side of the screen. permanenting to northbound 395, struggle through landmark this morning. into pentagon, some pretty hefty volume delays, interstate 66, off and on slowing.
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melanie, back to you. >> anchor: thank you so much. you can get more news, weather and traffic on good morning washington on news channel 8. we'll send it back over to good morning america.
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good morning, america. it's 8:00 a.m. before you pack up the pumpkin pie and hit the road, the brand-new travel alert one week away. why it's about to be the busiest year yet for travel. cracking the kid code. should you spy on your own children by secretly monitoring their phones? the scary scene when one mom had to confront her own daughter confessed she was spying. did she save her life? ? i'm going to stand by you ? hope and healing. reinventing cancer recovery. the new methods to treat all of you, how they changed my life and turing so many into thrivers. who is joining george, matt, adam and brad, the brand-new sexiest man alive is dwayne "the rock" johnson and wait till you see who else made the list. ? make you feel good ?
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booted couple and emeril all here live saying -- >> good morning, america. >> wonderful to have our good friend emeril and terra and sasha here from "dancing." that was something last night. >> you know who was there for every single minute of it, ginger, front row seat for all the excitement last night just one week away -- >> she still got it. >> bust out on the dance floor in a little bit and in a little bit. plus, counting down to, what, thanksgiving, everybody and with thanksgiving comes pies and just take a look at those, emeril is here sharing his best recipes and will give us the secret to making the perfect pie crust. >> yeah. >> i love a good crust. also giving thanks for our mission pawsible on "gma." you guys have been amazing and now we want to tell you about a dog that's been moving on up going from homeless to living with a former president, we'll tell you about the pup and the president coming up.
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it's so cute. >> i mean, our initiative is spreading. it's a movement. >> can't wait to see that. >> let's get the morning rundown from amy. >> good morning. the big story, donald trump poised to fill his cabinet as opposition grows over his pick for chief strategist. there is word that rudy giuliani is being considered for secretary of state as well as former u.n. ambassador john bolton. but trump is facing backlash for hiring former breitbart executive steve bannon who championed t many as racist, sexist and anti-semitic. president obama calling on americans to give trump a chance saying he will be drifting by pragmatism and not ideology. megyn kelly told george earlier on "gma" that bannon will be the one in charge at the white house even though reince priebus will be chief of staff and based on her experience with trump, kelly gave us her trick on what kind of president she thinks he'll be. >> there's no question that donald trump is thin skinned and
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but my own experience with him proves that he's able to let things go if he so chooses. >> reporter: meanwhile, anti-trump protests expanding with students walking out of schools from california to maryland. a student at ohio state university was arrested for ta tackling an anti-trump protester. president obama arrived in greece on his final overseas trip as president trying to's assure european leaders about a trump presidency saying the u.s. will reafill its relationship with nato. this man punched the other right in the face. order was restored but a moment later they were at it again arguing about russia. well, back here in this country new details about the police shooting in cart that led to days of protests in september. an autopsy reveals keith scott was shot three types including once in the back. an anti-anxiety medication and a
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system. police claim scott was armed. his family denies that. 41 large wildfires are burning across the southeastern u.s. and more than 100,000 acres have already burned. north carolina and georgia have been hardest hit and there is no relief in sight. smoke is so thick near atlanta that the air quality is considered unhealthy. and a new warning about travel this thanksgiving. aaa predicting nearly 50 million americans will hit the roads and take to the skies, the most sinc top destinations include las vegas, san francisco, san diego, orlando and new york. nothing says thanksgiving like las vegas, right? all right. and finally did you hear the one about the koala that walked into account apartment's office? well, it actually happened in australia. there is the koala marching right in there with fierce determination checking out the disks, maybe trying to get his taxes done seeing how he's not
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>> good one. >> i'm cracking myself up. some in the office say it's prove money does not grow on trees. >> one-two punch. one-two punch for amy robach. >> got to give it to you, amy. >> the thing is you have to know amy knows it's all about the sell. you have believe. >> you have to stick it. >> you stuck that landing. >> thank you. >> thank you. how about news that goes and here i go. before we get started, a little music news for everybody. cannot wait for the american music awards this sunday. 8:00 p.m. eastern on abc. the final five nominees for artist of the year are, we're announcing them right now right here. ariana grande, carrie underwood, justin bieber, rihanna and selena gomez. all five. >> wow. >> very well done. you can vote through thursday for your favorite at amavote.com on twitter. there you go.
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on abc. now, in music news, mick jagger ran into a little problem while dusting off his 1970s rock star duds for the new retrospective on the band called exhibitism rolling stone. when he went to storage to get boxes of his costumes he discovered two of his kid, daughters elizabeth and georgia had, excuse me, borrowed a few things. do i i have to cough. >> step into his collection lafky models and could fit into his very thin trousers. >> his stick thin. >> i didn't think i could say that. >> do what you want. i can take it from here. the rock star went on to tell the magazine "i used it as a good excuse to say time for you guys to give them back." the rolling stones exhibit resides at the industrious studio till march and travels to ten more cities over the next four years.
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stones fan check it out. >> i would love to see the costumes and want to see how thin his pants are. >> stick thin. >> you heard it here first, america. thank you for the assist, george. also in "pop news" this morning, the only thing photographers may like more than snapping gorgeous cindy crawford is getting to shoot her incredible malibu estate. now they can. she and husband randy have listed the family spread for $60 million. they bought it and the adjacent ago and renovated it which has four bedrooms, 5 1/2 bath, boasts a tennis court and, of course a pool to lounge in on those hot california days and those million dollar views or should we say, $60 million views. just a little real estate eye candy for you, you know i like to include it, not assuming that many of us will be bidding on it but it sure is nice to look at. then finally, looks like our former president is in on
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we want you to meet the newest member of george w. bush's family, freddy. >> hi, baby. >> freddy. they just released the picture of this lucky fella adopting him last week after visiting a shelter. even their cats bob and bernadette are finding freddy's charm impossible i believe . he is a magical mix. >> congrats to the happy family. if you want to get serious happy in your life, ask robin, ask me, ask the 2,000 something we'll tell you later people who are done it. get a list of participating shelters like the bushes did across the country at goodmorningamerica.com at yahoo! we are saving lives. >> you'll find out you'll the one that's rescued. >> they are rescuing you. coming up, where are we?
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back here on "gma" we're cracking the kid code looking at kids and technology and the big debate over whether you should monitor your kids' cell phone. t.j. sat down with a says yes. >> robin, let me be perfectly clear here. we are talking about flat out spying on your child. there are some apps out there that will allow a parent to see everything their child is doing on the phone even deleted techs, some parents might be itching to run out and get that app but others, it brings up this heated question, does a child's right to privacy, is it actually trumped by a parent's desire to
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many adults will never know but there's one who does. >> you can't hide from me. >> reporter: christine presti, mom of isabella and michael was so anxious to know what they are kids were doing than air phones she secretly installed spyware to watch them and can see anything. it's legal to monitor your kids but a controversy lurks. do teens deserve privacy? or is secretly monitoring for safety sake more important? >> at 11 and 13, we should know what's going >> what's the problem with letting you see your phone. >> i like some privacy. >> reporter: last summer christine says isabella suddenly became more secretive. >> i immediately think that something is going on. >> reporter: so she downloads spy software on both kids' phone sflsz were you torn? >> nope. >> you were not. >> not one bit. they are my kids an i needed to protect them. >> reporter: experts say secret monitoring may hurt your children and your relationship with them in the long run.
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of "how to raise an adult." >> every moment is effectively saying, i do not trust you in the slightest. >> how do you tell them you trust them when you spy on them? >> wow, i hope they just know that i do trust them and that i'm doing this just to protect them. >> reporter: using the app christine discovers isabella is texting someone she thinks is a teenager. but when christine calls the number, she gets a it's an adult. >> she thought she was talking to a friend and it turned out that it wasn't. >> reporter: christine blocked the caller. still it was a scary moment. >> went through every scenario. meeting somebody. kidnapping. >> reporter: christine knew she had to confront her daughter which meant confessing about the spyware but isabella came clean first. >> she came down the stairs and was like, i need to talk to you. >> she beat you to it. >> she beat me to it. >> isabella told her about the
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also saw the other side. >> i had a lot of different emotions like why is she doing this but was happy because i knew she was protecting me. >> your momma loves you. 2 for 2, the piece today and the one today. our chief medical editor dr. richard besser is here and callahan walsh, friend of the program is hire, nice to see you, cal. dr. besser, let me start with you. should you monitor your child's cell phone? >> i don't think you know, as a parent and a pediatrician, i know that what concerns us most is our children's safety. but in order to ensure that there's all kinds of dangers, i think you need to develop a relationship in which you show you trust your child show they can trust you to come to you with anything and i think this can torpedo everything. >> we believe parents should
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waters but for the older kids we want parents to have ongoing empowered conversations to make sure those kids can make those safe and smart decisions on their owns. parents can go blue in their face monitoring them all day but they're not always going to be there. >> i also believe, you got two sons. >> t.j. has a young daughter. you have a little time. >> some of this even from the parps is not just a matter of making sure the kid is safe but for the parent's peace of to break trust, the parent just needs that comfort to know i got an eye on everything. >> you bring up trust and now i want to ask you both about that. as a pediatrician do you feel that that could damage the trust between -- >> well, i think it could. you know, if -- as a parent, the idea of bubble wrapping your child and protecting them until they're dulls and releasing them is comforting but if your child doesn't trust you as they hit the teen years facing decisions
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i worry that if they don't feel there's trust, those tough issues they're not going to come to you and could be riskier. >> aren't there some times you know your child and know something is not right here and want to weigh in. >> again, we want parents to empower their kids. this may be an option the parents need to take. that phone is often bought by the parent, paid for by the parent and that's the responsibility till they turn >> you sound like my parents now. i bought this phone. >> i'll take you out. >> this is a serious conversation to have and i know one that parents struggle with. it's about spying. i know we're running out of time. is spying a bad thing? what if you let your kid know we're going to keep an eye -- >> i think you need to set up rules up front as to what's allowable and if you see a behavior or something different that you're going to sit down and go over it together because that's not acceptable. >> work together.
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about your kids about safety. >> you're the best. >> dr. besser. t.j., you too. >> coming up, the booted couple is here live, terra and sasha. ? beautiful just the way you are ?
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all right. look at this tough crowd here. coal, rainy and they are here to see "gma." we appreciate you. we're about to hear from the eliminated couple, terra jole and sasha farber and ginger zee live from los angel- big cool-de weekend into early next week today: am clouds, stray shower early. pm sunshine. highs: 58-62 winds: nw 5 mph tonight: partly cloudy. sun, becoming mostly cloudy. highs: 60-63 winds: nw 5 mph to that dramatic night on "dancing with the stars" that
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should not say booted couple. terra jole and sasha farber. >> no longer on the dance floor. going to be our new term. ginger, of course, was right there. we'll check in with her but first let's talk to terra and sasha. thanks for flying all night long. sasha wants to point out these are not real tattoos. this is part of his costume last night. tornadoes, you just said it best to him. >> it's a great idea that he got allf were going to be eliminated. >> could be halloween week. >> you have a great attitude. what a way to go out. terra, two perfect scores. >> it was really great. that was our first perfect score and then we got two of them which was -- it was a great night. >> a great night and a great thing. what was the biggest challenge in the choreography?
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>> terra has been a dream come true to work with and the second that i met terra i was like how is this going to work? terra is the first little person on the show and within the first hour of rehearsal she inspired me so much and definitely wouldn't be here if it wasn't for terra and she's been the best partner i've ever had and she's just amazing and i feel like this journey end the and i have a friend for life. >> and what did you learn about dancing, about teaching, because of this journey? >> terra me to push myself and it was challenging but she has proven to me there is no challenge that we can't do. >> well, talking about pushing yourself you really pushed yourself. you came out three weeks after having grayson your son, started rehearsing and your husband said last night you are the best mom and the best wife. you are wonderful. >> yeah. it was quite hard that those first few weeks actually just having my c-section and then
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easier, i may have accumulated some hernias because of it. but i mean you just keep pushing because this competition is such a unique opportunity and a life-changing experience that you never want to give up on. >> well, you never gave up and congratulations. we loved watching you. do you want to get to ginger real quick. ging, you were there. you've seen it all. who did you believe is going to take it all the way? >> oh, ihi go with james for a second and then i'm going laurie first. i really think laurie and val will pull it out. so much feeling that came into that young woman last night that so many people saw but james got that place erupting, so -- >> you can see it monday night.
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>> good morning, washington. i'm melanie hastings. here is a check of your stop stories. dc police spent the night at a home on wood ridge street in northeast, that is where they found a man shot in an apparent domestic incident. he later died. we have calls out to police right now and we will bring you more as soon as and students at dc public schools plan to walk out of class in protest of donald trump. this comes after hundreds of students walked out of montgomery blare high school yesterday and marched for miles t protest in dc according to social media posts is set to start at 1:00 p.m. this afternoon. they will meet at metro center and then march to the trump international hotel. we should see some sun. here is veronica johnson with your forecast.
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clouds. even a chance of an isolated or stray shower. that through your morning rush. temperatures push from the mid and upper 40s to upper 50s during the afternoon hours. could get late day sunshine inhere. there is that possibility. more sunshine tomorrow, the high going up to 60. upper 60s by the end of the work week on friday. tail of two seasons the upcoming weekend. showers on saturday, feeling like fall. more like winter on sunday with wind. >>e traffic live inside the capital beltway, we are looking at a struggle on 50. john hanson highway through land over hills and chivalry, you're on the breaks. stop and go all the way into the district this morning. again, that is on 50. else where, we're looking at the slow pace for folks on the capital beltway. as you pass braddock road it's going to be stop and go for you as well. toward the american legion bridge, we've got inner and
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stretch. back to more good morning back.
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? [ applause ] we have a very, very happy audience here with us this morning. >> they are re happy to be in from the rain. >> yes, i think so. >> thank you for copping. how many of you have siblings? now which ones will admit to being troublemakers when you were kids? okay. put it up and down at the same time. well, you know have someone else to blame. it turns out you can blame your sibling. >> for being a troublemaker. yeah, they did a study out of florida atlantic university in quebec, canada, identical twins and found the most important influence on a kid, when engaging in bad behavior, is your sibling.
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age, it travels from one sibling to another, matters more than the parent thing and genetics. >> is the older always to plame for the younger one -- >> i this is the part i can't understand. how come it's always the bad behavior that spreads as opposed to if the good behavior doesn't spread. >> i'm sure it does. i think we're all a big giant influence on each other. i believe that i have evidence i would like to show you. is they're picture. i found this picture. okay, tho everybody assumes that it's me in the pink crown that is the troublemaker in my family. i will like to point out that little one in the orange, the oldest sister is actually the instigators always. lisa, you are owed. >> of course, you have the platform. you can make the charge. >> exactly. >> she doesn't have ha. >> you love being -- who is the baby in the family? >> me.
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i wouldn't trade that for anything. >> no, it is a great position -- family position to be in. >> i think when you're the baby, probably able to get into more trouble because your parents are so tired. >> they're just done. >> hang out with your brothers and sisters. >> wait. >> look at you. >> there i am with my three older brothers right there. >> look at you, michael. >> you were a little bitty thing then. >> i kept growing. they didn't. >> nice. >> beat up on your little brother no more. >> so the moral of the story is that siblings are the best and we -- in every single way. more than any other -- in life, really. you know what else is best, really great, "people's sexiest man alive." so earlier we revealed that dwayne "the rock" johnson is
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well deserved. we want to share with you some of the others that made the cut in the new categories added this year so welcome back "people" editorial director jess cagle. >> editorial director. >> hi. what's happening? >> good to see you back. >> good morning, george. >> george and i planned this. hi, lara. michael. >> good to see you, my friend. >> nice to see you. >> let's talk about categories, tell us about those in couples who are both incredibly sexy and both incredibly glamorous and in every single case was like one plus one equals five like chrissy teigen and john legend, you know. >> yes. >> look at them. also don't you want to live with chrissy teigen and john legend. >> i follow her instagram just to pretend that i do. >> yes, according to instagram they watch television naked, so all the more reason.
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>> they could be watching us right now naked. are you watching us naked? >> i just started to think myself chrissy and john laid up on the couch watching tv naked. i don't want to live with them now. i'll go over for dinner. >> what other categories are there? >> taking a turn. >> that's how you say naked -- cross your >> burt reynolds pose. that was your burt reynolds? yeah, that was burt back in the day. >> robin, as you wish. let's talk about geeky to gorgeous. >> we do this one every year. where we -- basically we take hot guys and then show pictures of them in high school. >> ah. >> right. >> tough. >> like jeremy renner. by the way, i don't think he's
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my vintage. >> a little bit mean i think to show high school photos of people however it's a public service because it givers hope. >> yes. >> to every high school boy out there. >> you worked often that. >> i did. >> so last year michael strahan was on the list. >> yes. >> and this year, i do believe that we know somebody else who made the list, michael, would you help us with this. >> drum roll, please. [ cheers and applause ] ? >> look at that. >> you're welcome, george. >> you threatened this last year and followed through. >> a dream come true. >> tell us, jess, what was it about george stephanopoulos that makes him one of the sexiest men alive.
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i went to the source. i said to ali wentworth what makes george sexy and she said he's married to ali wentworth. >> george, i got to say you're consistent in your suit choices. >> that's right. >> so this is embarrassing. ali will sit in your chair tomorrow and keep it going. >> congratulations. >> thank you. thank you. >> i think it's more like sexy considering. fit. a good guy. a good father, a good husband. >> great co-worker. >> check all the boxes. >> pal. >> check, check, check. >> sexy all the way around. >> i have a question. you do the most beautiful. in your opinion, jess, what's the difference between sexiest and most beautiful. >> that's for women. i think it would feel weird -- >> we can't be sexy?
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>> don't answer. don't say another word. you can't -- they trap you. you've been trapped. >> i'm not going to say a word. >> we'll get you out -- i'll get you out of this because i'll bring somebody who is going to show us all of the illusion. you know who i'm bringing to the table, the one and only david blaine, everybody. [ cheers and applause ] >> come on out, david. [ applause ] >> hi, david. >> good to see you. >> how are you d >> how are you doing, man? >> how are you doing? >> david, you got some -- >> how are you doing. >> you got a special on abc tonight. >> tonight. >> tell us all about it, man. >> i worked two years on it and i think it's -- i think it's the most interesting one that i've done because it's not just magic tricks, per se, it's kind of a documentary that goes into the secrets behind how i actually work an tricks. >> i had a chance to actually see it and it is amazing.
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stuff you're doing is just blows your mind because why would you want to do it. you have good reasons for diving so deep into these tricks but you tricked a lot of stars. who was the most surprised. >> man, they're so good in so many way, it's hard to isolate one. i picked all my favorite people and was lucky to be able to just jazz out with them. by the way, i brought you these special abc decks of cards. right. >> thank you. >> since you brought cards we can't let you go without one. >> i agree. but wait, can everybody stand up except for michael because you'll make us look short. everybody else, can you all stand up? so, michael -- but, michael, you know how to shuffle, correct. >> yes, sir. >> can you shuffle the deck a couple of times and examine it, make sure it's okay. can i use your card? >> absolutely. >> can i write on the back of it. >> absolutely. >> so i'll write some words down while michael shuffles so you
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what does that mean to you. >> extra -- >> sidekick, whatever, right and i'll write vip. what does that -- >> very important person. >> peffer pect. >> then i'll do now like this, n-o-w. now. can you hold this for me? now, michael, you shuffled the cards. can you spread them face up so she can see them -- face up, face up. yeah, great. good so we can see all of them. so, spread them out. here's what i want to you do perfect. put your finger at the top of the deck like this and i want you to slowly move across the cards but you're not thinking about a card specific just slowly move across the deck and yeah slow down as you go and keep slowly moving across, good, keep moving across and then you're basically going to stop anywhere so wherever want, just stop. you're stopping?
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stopped on what card, three. >> 3 of dimes. >> push it forward so you could have stopped anywhere but you chose to stop on the three of dimes. do you know why you stopped on this card. >> i don't know. >> i'll tell you why because of that. subconsciously your brain read that differently. can you turn it so we can read it this way. flip it this way. what does it say. like this, what does it say, read it. >> 3 diamonds. see that, hold on. >> i'm saying subconsciously your brain processed it but you weren't aware -- >> you chose to stop there. >> oh, my god. >> you know that is subconsciously. consciously we'll watch your show. it is "david blaine: beyond magic" that airs tonight at 10:00 here on abc. check it out.
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and we're going to have some thanksgiving pies so don't go anywhere. anywhere. be back with more "gma."agine ae instead of rushing to buy we gave thanks for what we already have. at t.j.maxx, marshalls and homegoods we're closed on thanksgiving because family time comes first.
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we're back were exciting news for "star wars" fans. the release of "star wars: the force awakens" 3d and never
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director j.j. abrams and the kicker is everyone here gets a four-disc cd set. that's right. you get one andwarming up each (upper 60s by friday) - big cool-down late weekend into early next week today: am clouds, stray shower early. pm sunshine. highs: 58-62 winds: nw 5 mph tonight: partly cloudy. lows: 33-42 winds: w 5 mph wednesday: morning sun, becoming mostly cloudy. highs: 60-63 winds: nw 5 mph robin, back inside to you. >> thank you, rob. i love how our audience was like what, do we get? you were looking like -- we'll see if there's some leftover. a new approach to cancer recovery changing the way we heal and offering new hope all about treating the whole you with everything from yoga, meditation, it's something that really has impacted my life
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rockin' robin productions teamed up with webmd for a new series, the cutting edge of cancer. here's a look. when sheila cox had finished treatments for breast cancer she tried to run full force back into her life but instead she stumbled. >> i had three surgery, i thought i was healed and i thought i was ready to go and i wasn't. i felt physically, emotionally and spiritually devastated by it all. >> there's this feeling that okay, you've had your surgery, good prognosis, so done. that's just not the case, is it. >> that's when you feel really alone. >> how do we let the people know that the journey continues even after the treatment? a different type of journey continues. >> that's actually where the real recovery and healing begins. whenever i was depressed the way out of depression for me was through movement.
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bodie. i was holding myself in a strange way and wasn't breathing properly and i was fearful and had never been before in my life. >> to use that phrase that it was lost, how did you find it again? >> up, up. >> reporter: this is how she found it again. across the country cancer treatment programs are increasingly using innovative treatments such as this fitness class at the tiff medicine center in new york city. >> it's our 2kr50e78 to make it part of the standard cancer care. >> reporter: as you can see here intergray tiff medicine is a more holistic approach to cancer. these patient, many still fighting cancer, some even stage 4, are participating in movement therapies, acupuncture, massage, and meditation. >> bring the mind back to the present moment. >> reporter: intergray tiff medicine focuses on the well-being of the whole patient
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something i discovered on my own cancer journey. after the treatments i received for breast cancer led to a rare blood disorder called myelodysplastic syndrome, it was intergray tiff therapies like yoga that helped me not only recover physically but spiritually and mentally. >> i have been waiting 174 days to say this, good morning, america. >> i was given a sense of hope and energy that helped me re-enter my >> open. >> reporter: there's a palpable vitality, a life force given back to cancer patients taking part in intergray tiff therapies. >> your confidence has returned. >> it has. >> yeah. i look at you. you are beautiful. you absolutely -- i mean the light that is coming through your eyes and the way that you hold yourself, i don't know about you, i'm not crazy about the word survivor. >> i hate that word. i hate that word.
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we are thrivers. >> i would add to the thriver. i feel like i'm a warrior. >> warrior and i'm standing next to another warrior. you get so -- >> i get emotional because it is the mental battle is something we don't talk about enough and i'm so glad you did and the physical helps the mental. >> it does. >> getting through it because the battle is always there. we're warriors still, robin. >> we're still working but through chemotherapy you were running and moving. >> i had to run. it's the thing i do. it's my meditation many wonderful memories and that fight song with rachel platten, that got me through a lot of it too. >> you were sobbing through running. >> i truly was. she was truly kemo sabe. >> the cutting edge, the five-part launches this morning. you know what else is good for recovery, pie. >> i agree. >> pie.
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pop! happy birthday! i survived a heart attack. i'm doing all i can to keep from having another one. and i'm taking brilinta. for people who've been hospitalized for a heart attack. i take brilinta with a baby aspirin. no more than one hundred milligrams as it affects how well it works. brilinta helps keep my platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. brilinta reduced the chance of another heart attack. or dying from one. it worked better than plavix. >>don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor since stopping it too soon clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. tell your doctor about bleeding, new or unexpected shortness of breath, any planned surgery, and all medicines you take. >>talk to your doctor about brilinta. i'm doing all i can. that includes brilinta. if you can't afford your medication,
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back now with our countdown to thanksgiving. we got emeril lagasse here with his best holiday pies. the secret to a perfect pie is the perfect crust. >> exactly. >> let's get started. >> here's what we'll do. listen, i even the night before measure my flour and put it in the refrigerator or the freezer in a zip bag. the colder the ingredients and the less you work it, the better the crust is going to be. even your b south, everything except salt should be cold. even have ice inside of the water then you don't want to overwork it, make perfect crust, roll it but the other key to this, michael, is this, do it the night before and let it refrigerate overnight. the simple -- >> what are we making now? they started eating before we even started discussing this.
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combination of granny smith, the best baking and gala apples as well. nutmeg, allspice, salt and cinnamon. >> i got to mix that. >> then add butter in here. >> okay. >> a little flour, that's going to be the thickening agent. >> thicken it up. there we go. >> sugar. as sweet as you want the apples. taste the apples. see how start it is and then you can -- then a little bit of vanilla. >> got to have the virginia nil ha. >> then lemon juice which you also not keep it from turning color or oxidizing. once you have all that have mixed in you roll out your pie dough, put that inside of here and then what we'll do is then we do the crust on top of that. perfect. okay. let's talk about this. this is the deep dish apple pie what we just made right there. >> that's beautiful. >> how is it. >> banana cream pie. >> banana cream pie. that's my favorite.
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chocolate pecan -- >> i love that pie. >> your favorite, george? >> yeah. >> i have to tell you this, this is like when i was 2 years old, 25 years ago is the first time i made this on "good morning america." with margo. margo and i and i had to bring it back for her so this is the banana cream pie for margo. >> no, no, no. that was another guy. >> thank you so much. >> perfect pie crust. i'll try this for thanksgiving. try it too, man. >> yes, indeed. >> we have the recipe. >> "gma's" countdown to thanksgiving is brought to you
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we want to welcome a new member of the "gma" family. congratulations, sara, her husband greg and their beautiful baby boy benjamin t messer. >> congratulation. >> we love you. > have a great day, everyone. ? >> anchor: good morning, washington. i'm melanie hastings. breaking overnight in the district, a deadly shooting in
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third street, about half mile from the dc maryland border. police tell us a man was found unresponsive, he was taken to the hospital where he died. so far, there is no word on a suspect. and students at dc public schools plan to walk out of class in protest of donald trump today. this comes after hundreds of students walked out of montgomery blare high school yesterday and marched for miles t protest in dc according to social media posts is set to start at 1:00 this afternoon, center and march to the trump international hotel. expect some clouds and sun. here is veronica johnson. >> reporter: first part of the day here we'll see early day clouds. even a chance of an isolated or stray shower. that through your morning rush. temperatures push from the mid and upper 40s to upper 50s during the afternoon hours. could get late day sunshine in here. there is that possibility. more sunshine tomorrow, the high going up to 60. upper 60s by the end of the work week on friday.
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showers on saturday, feeling like fall. more like winter on sunday with wind. >> anchor: on the roads we take a quick peek at the capital beltway, plenty of company. from the robinson terminal, traveling on the inner loop headed toward interstate 66, we've got the off and on slowing inner loop and outer loops but especially on the inner loop. else where, we're looking at a slow ride making the drive into the the brakes approaching eastern avenue toward the 11th street bridge. getting better on interstate 66, though, headed in toward the centreville area and, of course, closer to the capital beltway.
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>> announcer: it's "live with kelly!" today, from the new movie "bad santa 2", billy bob thornton. and film and television legend robert wagner. plus, andy cohen joins kelly at the cohost desk. also, thanksgiving. all next on "live!" and now, here are kelly ripa and andy cohen!

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