tv Good Morning America Weekend Edition ABC March 19, 2016 8:00am-9:00am EDT
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good morning, america. breaking overnight, deadly crash. a boeing 737 explodes while attempting to land. the disaster caught on camera. the plane erupting into a fireball. the investigation this morning, was bad weather to blame or perhaps something else? paris fugitive captured. the terror raid takedown. people running for cover as europe's most wanted is hauled away in this dramatic assault in his alleged role in the paris attacks hiding in the same neighborhood police have been searching for months. how did he evade them for so long? hulk hogan's huge courtroom victory. >> just give us something, hulk. >> awarded $115 million. his emotional reaction winning his lawsuit against the website that posted his sex tape. >> this is not only his victory today but also anyone else who's
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journalism. >> why did the jury award him even more than he asked for? and brackets busted. march madness living up to its name with this shocking win over michigan state. plus, the slam dunk that wasn't and this half-court buzzer beater. >> jesperson, half-court heave for the win! >> you better believe it's go big or go home. go big or go home hey, good morning on this last day of winter, all right, we've got a little bit of a bad news/good news situation. the bad news is there is a storm making a mess in much of america right now but the good news is rob marciano is back. hey. great to see you. >> this one is not really bad. we'll talk more about that. >> great to have you back. you did a phenomenal job filling in for job while on maternity leave.
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>> i'm happy to be back. >> i know we're looking at severe storms then possible snow in the northeast starting tomorrow. rob's is going to have the forecast in a moment. we'll start with the breaking news overnight, a fatal plane crash in russia. the plane coming in at a steep angle and then the fireball. >> tough to watch. it was a boeing 737 operated by a budget airline called flydubai. the plane was traveling from dubai to a city in southern russia. there were 55 passengers, as well as 7 crew members on board. no survivors, emotional scenes at the airport with distraught family members receiving the worst possible news. >> a disaster. for more on what went wrong here, let's bring in abc news aviation consultant colonel steven ganyard. steve, good morning. it appears to have been caused by strong winds, officials say, near hurricane force winds. given what you've seen on the video, does that make sense to you? >> winds in and of themselves
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perhaps it was a contributing factor but if you see the video and you see the angle that comes in at i think something else went wrong. perhaps pilot disorientation. >> we know the plane had tried to failland and failed two hours earlier and they went into a holding pattern. why not go to another airport if there were problems in that area? >> perhaps they were told by the weather forecasters that the weather would improve but we've seen the ground track this morning, the radar ground track. if you look at it, it's very circuitous, doesn't make sense, so perhaps the pilot was looking out the window trying to find the airport at night and when you have night and lost horizon it's not hard to get visually disoriented and lose track of which way is up. >> disorientation. a really scary prospect. of course, we all remember the russian airliner brought down by a bomb last october over the sinai peninsula. isis claiming responsibility for that. any signs of terror here that we know of? >> i don't think so. the thing -- one thing that's interesting, where this mishap occurred is very close to
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in eastern ukraine, but at this point i think with the weather, night, i think we're going to find something that indicates this was human error as are most mishaps that are caused by commercial aviation. >> and one of the black boxes has already been found. colonel steven ganyard, thank you for your analysis this morning, paula, over to you. >> 62 souls lost. our thoughts go out to their families. our other top story in morning, one of the most terrorists in the world is in custody this morning. a fugitive in the deadly paris attacks was captured in a gun battle in brussels believed to be hiding there for four months right under the nose of law enforcement. he is a big piece to this puzzle in terms of who else could be responsible, and abc's alex marquardt is where it all went down. alex. >> reporter: good morning, paula. that four-month manhunt came to an end right here at this house where salah abdeslam had been hiding. you can see the ground floor has been boarded up after the police raid. the police had been scouring this neighborhood and finally found abdeslam just a few hundred yards from his family's
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gunshots rang out as heavily armed s.w.a.t. teams moved in. this cell phone video showing residents running for cover. after four months on the run, one of the most wanted men in the world finally cornered on a quiet brussels street, the man in the hooded shirt believe to be salah abdeslam dragged to a waiting police car seeming to limp after being shot in the d to be salah abdeslam dragged to a waiting police car seeming to limp after being shot in the leg. 26-year-old salah abdeslam is the so-called eighth attacker, the only surviving terrorist of november's deadly attacks that left 130 dead. he grew up in belgium, a childhood friend of abdelhamid abaaoud, the mastermind. on the night of november 13th he drove the car carrying the suicide bombers to france's biggest soccer stadium. abdeslam also rented the car that dropped off the isis attackers at the bataclan theater where the american band, the eagles of death metal, was
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authorities believe abdeslam planned on carrying out another attack that night but got cold feet and called two friends in belgium to pick him up. when they stopped surveillance cameras snapped this image. the three were stopped near the border but were allow eded to pass into belgium. abdeslam's family claimed they didn't know where he was and urged him to turn himself in. belgian authorities launched a massive manhunt focusing on molenbeek. conducting more than 100 raids and arresting 58 people. meanwhile, abdeslam's friends told abc news he was trying to get to syria, worried that isis supporters in europe were unhappy he didn't detonate his suicide vest that november night but then on tuesday, a break in the case. a raid on this house turned into a shoot-out. one man killed by a police sniper. two others escaping, one of whom may have been abdeslam who reportedly jumped out the back
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of weapons and an isis flag. the net tightening, the police zeroing in, and 72 hours later, they had their man. abdeslam was released from the hospital this morning after being treated for that gunshot wound to the leg. he was arrested with four other people including three family members from this house. belgian police will interrogate abdeslam today, but france's president has already called for his extradition as soon as possible. dan. >> a lot of potentially valuable information to come from him perhaps. alex, thank you. we're going to shift gears now and come back to this country and the storm that's creating severe weather down south and could bring snow to the northeast. winter going out like a lion and rob is covering it all. >> good morning, dan. we had big hail across much of the southern plains yesterday as you saw in that video and this morning especially parts of southeast texas could see some then it shifts more towards the florida panhandle. this piece of energy is what's going to kind of bring a little bit of of a snow scare to the northeast, so let's go through that. here's the low and we'll time it out.
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snow to develop across d.c. and especially across some of the higher terrain in the appalachians off towards the west and then overnight tonight into -- or overnight sunday into monday morning, looking at snows from eastern parts of cape cod, boston will be more of a mess there. not going to see a foot plus. that's the good news, it is the first day of spring but 2 to 4 inches across eastern parts of new england. likely less than 2 inches if just some snow flurries maybe on a lucky way here from new york back through baltimore. so not as bad but it'll be the first day of spring so certainly significant. paula. >> rob, it's so great to have you back. let's move to something maybe a little less predictable than the weather, politics. next to the red hot republican race for the white house, donald trump continues to lead the pack with a big target on his back, not only from within his own party but angry left wing protesters who were out in force last night in utah. abc's amy bruce is on the political beat once again for us this morning. hi, mary. >> reporter: hi, paula.
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and arizona just around the corner, this morning donald trump is under attack from all sides, republicans, democrats, even international hackers, all trying to stop him. >> i think we get to the convention, it's over. i don't think there is going to be much of a dispute. >> reporter: this morning as donald trump tightens his grip on the nomination, the republican establishment is making a last-ditch attempt to take him down. >> there are only two candidates that have any plausible path to winning the republican nomination, either donald trump or me. >> reporter: ted cruz, who spent friday touring the arizona/mexico border, is racking up support from republicans who see him as their best hope to block trump, and now mitt romney says he will vote for cruz in utah's primary next week saying he's the only one who can deny trump the delegates to win the nomination forcing a contested convention. trump fired back on twitter saying "mitt romney is a mixed up man who doesn't have a clue. no wonder he lost." overnight in utah he went a step further questioning romney's
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are we sure? he choked. he choked. it was so sad. >> reporter: this as trump comes under attack from a barrage of takedown ads. $63 million and counting now spent on ad are ads like this. >> trump, the worst kind of politician. >> reporter: and now with just three days until those next big contests, the candidates are busy all weekend campaigning in utah and arizona as they prepare for a long slog to the convention. dan. >> another busy stretch ahead. mary bruce, thank you. now to the young man at the center of a headline making a prep school rape trial, he is waking up behind bars this morning. owen labrie, he had been free on bail while appealing his conviction for a misdemeanor sexual assault, but now a judge has revoked his bail after labrie violated his curfew. he was whisked away in cuffs, and abc's gio benitez was right there in the courtroom. >> reporter: a young man at the center of a high-profile prep school rape trial sent to jail. a judge ruling owen labrie violated his curfew while out on
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last fall -- >> guilty. >> reporter: -- he was convicted of misdemeanor sex assault on an underage schoolmate at the prestigious st. paul school. his accuser testifying at trial. >> i was raped. >> reporter: he was also found guilty of luring a child by computer, but he had been acquitted of the most serious felony rape charges, but when out on bail awaiting appeal, a reporter from "vice" spoke to him on a train in boston tweeting "he is in town visiting his girlfriend." the defense says he was on his way to a class lecture. prosecutors investigating and finding labrie traveled outside of curfew hours. >> your honor, he lied to the jury. he lied to your honor. >> reporter: labrie's attorney apologizing to the court. >> he chose wrongly, your honor. and he's sorry. >> reporter: but that wasn't enough for the judge. >> i have to find that it is unlikely -- that you are unlikely to abide by any
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>> reporter: and labrie has now officially started serving his year-long sentence. but even if he wins his appeal, chances are, he would have already served that time. paula. >> all right, gio, thank you. and for the first time, we are hearing from the baseball player who abruptly retired when his team changed the policy on just how much time his young son could spend in the clubhouse. adam laroche's move shocked chicago white sox fans and the nation for that matter and re-opened the conversation on that tricky life/work balance. laroche's teammates also weighing in this morning, and abc's eva pilgrim has more. >> that ball hit high and deep. looks up. you can put it on the board. >> reporter: adam laroche is walking away from what was likely the final year of his career and the $13 million left on his contract, retiring early after white sox vp ken williams told him he couldn't bring his 14-year-old son to the clubhouse anymore.
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to make some un popularpopular decisions in order to have an answer for the next person that comes along. >> we're missing two big pieces to our puzzle. >> reporter: laroche breaking his silence tweeting that prior to signing with the white sox he worked out a deal that his son drake could be a part of the clubhouse, but saying, this season i was told not to bring him to the ballpark at all. i had to make a decision, do i choose my teammates and my career or my family. the decision was easy. many of his teammates furious after a heated team meeting. >> drake's honestly one of the best kids i've ever met. >> i would probably say that the entire clubhouse is with adam. >> we're missing one of our troops and we can't get him back really. he's done. >> reporter: left-handed ace chris sale saying they were told three different stories why the team was not allowed even going as far as questioning the vp's version of events. >> we were bold-faced lied to by someone we're supposed to be able to trust. >> reporter: this controversy surrounding laroche's retirement undoubtedly tearing the white sox clubhouse apart with just a few weeks to go until opening
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the owner of the white sox is waiting to comment on the situation saying right now he's try to get to the bottom of exactly what happened talking to players, staff and the front office but this sparking a lot of controversy and a lot of talk about how much time you should spend with your kid. >> i spent six years in that clubhouse. it's a very family friendly clubhouse. i find it hard to imagine that some of the teammates didn't have a problem with it because that is a sanctuary where chemistry is built. it's tough to have a teenager in there every day. >> publicly a different story, sounds like. thank you, eva. >> let's check the other headlines with ryan smith in for ron. great to have you here. >> thank you so much, guys. good morning and good morning to you, as well. we begin with breaking news. newly released video out of iraq of british captive john cantlie one year after we last saw him. isis releasing the video of the war photographer mocking air strikes there. cantile was taken hostage in 2012. the space station got a few
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nasa sharing video of it carrying two russians and one american astronaut as it docked safely beginning a six-month mission in orbit. now, the capsule took off from kazakhstan very early this morning and this will be a record-breaking mission for american astronaut jeffrey williams, who will come home with the american record for the most time spent in space, a total of 534 days. a brazen jewelry store robbery near atlanta. broad daylight. all caught on camera. police are looking for this group of five to six men they say made their way into the diamond solution jewelry store in the cobb county mall and you could see them threatening clerks at gunpoint, smashing display cases, check that out. authorities say they threw the jewelry in the bag and then took off. police have found their suv that they allegedly made off in but the men still at large. and a midair scare on a flight to hawaii when an iphone burst into flames. the passenger says she was watching a movie when flames started shooting out of her iphone 6. she quickly threw it on the
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the airlines -- most have banned hoverboards because of similar fire dangers linked to lithium batteries. experts say cell phone fires are not a big concern. oh, my gosh. another retirement announcement, by the way, for this guy, the guy they call sheriff, peyton manning. the colts will retire the 18 jersey and build a statue of him in front of lucas oil stadium and made manning number one pick in '88 and played for 14 seasons, manning saying, i'll always be a colt and went to the super bowl twice for them but went with the denver broncos winning it right there. he announced his retirement from the game on march 7th. finally some schoolchildren in florida were a bit surprised to see a new student on campus. look at who the children spotted roaming around. that's right. that guy. this is geneva class academy. that's a ten-foot-long gator, right. the trapper was called in. he did not go down without a fight. check that out. >> are we sure it's not a
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>> it's a gator. it's a gator. they caught the guy, you know, they caught the gator, i should say. he was eventually set free somewhere else, not on school grounds, but maybe his navigator was off a little bit. >> you think navigator. >> oh. >> that's brilliant. >> did you like that? >> you know, i would >> that was a drop the mike you just need to walk off set >> drop the pen. >> drop the pen. you have many of those moments. we have missed you so much. >> i drop a lot of things. >> never the ball, though. >> that's true. great to be back. obviously ron's got a problem. we love ryan. rachel, hello, and i missed you guys. >> dan's been pining for you. >> i know. i'm in such a good mood this morning to have you back. >> finally. >> i see the eyes you've been giving indra. >> she did a fantastic job. >> indra did do a really great job. >> check out this video out of kearney, nebraska,
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conditions just perfect as we get a stronger sun angle with colder air moving over top of that. it is need to see video. often they do damage and this one obviously kicked up quite a bit of dust and debris. a storm will be rolling across parts of the south and see heavy rain across the florida panhandle and maybe strong thunderstorms that could become severe then that rainfall will get up into the mid-atlantic and then eventually mixing in with a little bit of snow.
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>> much more weather in about ten minutes. dan, eyes up here. >> okay. yep, no, i got you. i got you. thank you, rob. >> right there. thanks for throwing him under the bus. great to have you back. well, march madness is certainly living up to its name. how are your brackets this morning after two days of major upsets along with this amazing buzzer beater? well, espn host and "gma" contributor tony reali, just one of our favorite human beings here with more. tony, my bracket is toast. i'm sure yours is not. >> what a time to be alive and dancing into the second round, paula. the most upsets through two days ever including one some are calling the biggest of all time and that's not all. >> four seconds, no chance. it's good. >> reporter: march is officially madness. this 50-foot buzzer beater sending 11th seeded northern iowa to the second round over texas. >> it's amazing.
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buzzer. >> ellis, doesn't count. >> reporter: a late night heartbreaker for cincinnati after officials ruled this game-tying slam dunk no good. watch again. slo-mo showing the two-handed jam was milliseconds too late giving st. joe's their first tournament win since 2004. >> i think he still has the ball in his hands. >> reporter: two days of underdog surges led by 15 seed middle tennessee running away with a win over number two, michigan state. >> gives it to potts. he's open for three and he hits it. >> reporter: the blue raiders scoring led by reggie upshaw jr. and giddy potts, the nation's top three-point shooter showing why he's number one. >> giddy potts. >> reporter: the spartans' loss busting brackets across the nation. an uproar on social media. even "the new york times" tweeting, "no, really. your bracket is done." no perfect bracket left at espn's tournament challenge. >> get inside. >> reporter: cinderella stories just beginning for a record breaking ten double-digit seeded
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the first round. so i'm back on the telestrator, may god have mercy on our souls. look at this. this was the midwest region. i want to look. because this ceases to exist right now, paula. we'll look at it up close. middle tennessee, the biggest upset i'll say of all time. >> of all time. >> because 5 million people had michigan state into the final four including you. >> yeah. >> including the president of the united states. >> because you told us to. >> well, i mean -- >> you didn't even pick them. >> syracuse is double-digit seed advance. gonzaga, arkansas little rock and the big picture. >> big picture. >> nice and clean and not crumpled up in a garbage can. all these one seeds hanging out in plain sight happy not to be a headline. >> misery loves company. there's not a sing lle bracket on espn that's perfect so if that gives you a little consolation. tony, thanks for coming in. >> this was nice and neat. >> dan's your bracket is perfection and you're perfection to all of us. >> thank you.
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i appreciate it. not true, but anyway, thank you, tony. coming up here on "gma," hulk hogan's huge victory in his sex tape lawsuit against the website gawker. the massive verdict and the emotion in the courtroom. plus, the heartthrob hurt, the young actor injured on the set while shooting the latest "maze runner" movie. "good morning america" is brought to you by panera bread. food as it should be. and looking good and sandwich and soup and a new personal best. and a little help and soup and sandwich and study group. good, clean food pairs wellwith anything. try the clean pairings menu. at panera. food as it should be. ever since jim signed up for lowe's personalized lawn care plan, i've been up on my hind legs trying to get a better view of his grass.
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on treatment options. welcome back to "gma." we're kind of obsessed with this live footage, the eagle cam at the national arboretum in washington, d.c. where a much watched pair of bald eagles has welcomed a new family member. friday cameras caught the eaglet -- i didn't know that was a word. >> e-a-g-l-e-t. >> there you go. now you said it. if you add another "t" and "e," it becomes a fancy dish. anyway now we're waiting for number two to hatch. >> thank you for that information -- revelation, dan. also breaking overnight, a plane traveling from dubai to southern russia makes a crash landing killing all 62 on board. russian investigators say weather may have played a part in this fatal crash. and starbucks being sued for skimping on its latte. some angry customers saying that the coffee giant habitually underfilling it's lattes to save money on milk. the company dismissing the
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there's nothing more frustrating than getting the cup, and, oh, that's all that's in there. it's a little lighter than it looks. >> i don't drink coffee so not an issue for me. i somehow manage to survive as a news anchor without coffee. >> that in and of itself is a miracle. >> paula has delivered it intravenously. so we have a very different style. >> i.v. bags of coffee. coming up on the show this morning, the big accident on the set of the new "maze runner" movie, the star injured. how it happened. how he's doing and what is it going to mean for the production. but we're going to start here with a huge, huge victory for hulk hogan in the courtroom. >> that's right. it took the jury just a few hours of deliberations before they ordered the website gawker to pay $115 million for posting a secretly recorded video of him having sex. and abc's linzie janis is at the florida courthouse with the full story. good morning, linzie. >> reporter: good morning, paula and dan. the jury taking just six hours to award hogan that $115 million that was more than he asked for and it isn't over yet.
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with punitive damages too. overnight hogan tweeting "told you i was going to slam another giant." >> just give us something, hulk. >> reporter: this morning an absolute victory for hulk hogan in his invasion of privacy battle against gawker. the jury siding with the former wrestler on all counts awarding him $115 million, finding against gawker, its founder nick denton and former editor in chief a.j. daulerio for posting a secretly recorded tape of hogan having sex. >> did plaintiff prove that the video was posted in such a manner as to outright cause mental suffering achieving humiliation to a person of ordinary sensibility? yes. >> reporter: after the verdict hogan, whose real name is terry bollea, crying and hugging his legal team too emotional to speak. >> mr. bollea's exceptionally happy. this is not only his victory today but also anyone else who's been victimized by tabloid
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>> reporter: earlier in the trial hogan testifying gawker's 2012 post turned his world upside down. >> completely humiliated. >> reporter: the wwe star says he was filmed without his knowledge back in 2007 by his best friend at the time, shock jock bubba clem, who offered to share his wife heather after hogan's own wife linda left him. >> i was just so desperate, i went over there. one thing led to another. i just let my guard down. >> reporter: lawyers for gawker arguing the site's journalists were covered by the first amendment since hogan has long talked about his private life in public. gawker vowing to appeal. >> given the key evidence and the most important witness in this case were withheld from the jury, we all knew that the appeals court would need to resolve this case.
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that key witness, bubba clem, to the stand because clem planned to plead the fifth. the jury is back here again on those punitive damages. dan and paula. >> it's been a surreal trial from the start, to say the least. linzie janis, we appreciate your coverage. once again on a busy saturday morning and here's rob. >> we are wrapping up winter getting into spring, dan and, yeah, temperatures still feeling, and, much like winter. these are the temps that we're seeing right now. maybe a little warmer as we go through the day today, and the northeast, tomorrow night into monday morning won't stick around too long because monday highs will bounce back nicely. but today, 41 degrees in chicago, 65 in houston, some heavy rain across the florida panhandle and some rain moving into northern california, 68 degrees expected at san diego
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portland, oregon. >> this weather report is brought to you by state farm. speaking of farms and a bad transition, i want to defend dan who is a fervent animal lover. >> that's right, that's right. >> the little joke he made about eaglets, he meant nothing by that. he loves all eaglets. >> i'm sure i'll get some nasty tweets. >> don't you have a minor in zoology? >> i don't but i do have three rescue cats living an the house. >> and he has a child. >> you're really laying it on. >> those cats don't really like the child. let me just be clear. let me tell you what's coming up on the show the young star injured on the set of his new movie. what happened to dylan o'brien and how he is doing this morning. much more "gma" coming up after this. >> we stick through this. we get out now.
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movie. production has been shut down and abc's kendis gibson is in studio with details. good morning, kendis. >> dan and paula, good morning. investigators are in british columbia are on the set location located about 50 miles north of vancouver. they're trying to figure out how this popular actor was severely injured. "maze runner" star dylan o'brien injured on the set of the latest film in the series filming a stunt gone wrong. >> we get out now or we die trying. >> reporter: according to tmz, the 24-year-old actor was run over while shooting a sequence involving a car. "variety" reporting he was rushed to a hospital after the accident. >> dylan o'brien was struck by a vehicle and he suffered at least a few broken bones as a result but nothing life-threatening. >> reporter: twentieth century fox confirming to abc news in a statement "production on the film will be shut down while he recovers. our thoughts go out to dylan for a full and speedy recovery."
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>> reporter: "maze runner: the death cure" is the third film in the $400 million franchise who also stars the heartthrob in the popular "teen wolf" series on tv. he spoke with "gma" about becoming a reluctant action hero. >> i guess you -- you don't, you know, consider yourself an action person, i guess, but it's fun. it's fun to do. makes me feel like a little kid and gives that little 12-year-old dylan side of me excited. >> reporter: overnight #getwellsoondylan trending worldwide. and all that matters now is that dylan recovers. we love you, dylan. >> it involved multiple broken bones but told not life-threatening and prognosis is pretty good and expected to be okay. >> that is a relief. i'm sure his fans will be happy to hear that. kendis, thank you, appreciate i >> thanks, kendis. and coming up on "good morning america" -- taking the pain out of doing your taxes, is that even possible? yes. we have the advice in our
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well, the tax deadline is a little less than one month away, in fact, it's 26 days away exactly, so what can you do to get all that paperwork lined up? rebecca jarvis is here to give us some tips on what to work on right away. so what's the first thing you should do? >> you want to get organized. rob, that's the motor important you can do. you want to get your w-2s, your 1099s all pulled together but now there are so many great resources to really track your expenses to make sure those tax deductions are in order. for example, shoebox.com is going to let you track all of your receipts, keep them all in one
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>> should i have started that earlier in the year? >> you can go back and they'll help you historically search your purchases. >> we want deductions and want to pay our fair share but not overpay. >> there were a lot of people overpaying, rob. believe it or not, one in five tax filers are leaving $460 in refunds on the table. there are many things that you can deduct, for example, gas mileage on the job while you're working, you can deduct if you're paying for supplies at work. teachers get a $250 tax credit. uniforms are a deduction, and if you're a parent and you're sending your kids to summer camp, you can take a credit as long as you're a working parent for that. >> i love it. i only have one kid but i'm you might get mine.
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what makes thermacare different?two words: it heals. how? with heat. unlike creams and rubs thatmask the pain, thermacare has patented heatcells that penetrate deep to increase circulation andaccelerate healing. let's review: heat, plus relief, plus healing,equals thermacare. the proof that it heals is you. to the couple who set aside the whole day to sell their old car and buy a new one... oops. nana's got the kids til 9... but it's only 2. guess you'll just have to see a movie... ...then get some dinner.
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know how you earn the title ...world's best mom?by starting each day with aperfectly balanced mug of... i've got this.mom! mccaf\ coffees brew a smoothblend. that's not too strong,but never weak. mommy's not a napkin honey. so you can savor every sip.mccaf\. whoa. what's going on here? oh hey allison. i'm val, the orange moneyretirement squirrel from voya. val from voya? yeah, val from voya. quick question, what are voyaretirement squirrels doing in myhouse? we're putting away acorns. you know, to show the importanceof saving for the future. so you're sort of like a spokes person? no, i'm more like a metaphor. okay, a spokes-metaphor. no, i'm... you're a spokes-metaphor. yeah. ok. see how voya can help you get organized at voya.com. as an american, it's hard to hear
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retirement. time for "pop news." rachel is here. what you got? >> oh, some fun stuff for you guys this morning if you're game. >> we're game. >> but do you have food? >> no, not today. i know. maybe tomorrow. but a game. >> maybe tomorrow. >> okay, so first up, guys, a new reason to love tom hanks. 2340, it's not another movie role. actually the oscar winner is providing his own lost and found service on social media. kind of crazy but, you know, if you've dropped a glove while roaming the streets of new york city try checking out the actor's twitter account because over the last year he has developed the hilarious habit of documenting lost items he sees in the city like maybe mittens, gloves, even a student's i.d. card which was successfully returned to its owner. you know, it's all in a day's work for the world famous actor with some fans suggesting he's returning a favor after tony found the star's credit card and returned
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i mean, you guys have got to check out his twitter feed. it's pretty funny and best might have been a high heel and he says something like, she left in a hurry. it was really -- >> i always wondered like if you see a shoe or a heel like on a highway how did they lose it but in new york city you wear your shoes -- >> right. >> you wear your running shoes and put your heels on when you get to work so it falls out of the bag, right, dad. >> i wonder why tony didn't take take credit card out for a ride. >> because tony wanted to meet him. rapping in perfect harmony emma watson and lin-manuel miranda or maybe i should say hermione. see what i did there. well, she beatboxes to the "hamilton" star about gender equality. take a listen, guy. yeah it's lin and i have to laugh how can we not be equal we're like women women are half of the people on earth and yes they should have been cut since birth that means all day equal pay every way
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oh my gosh >> go, emma, go, emma and i mean, she's just chilling on the couch, you know, just free-styling so easily. clearly watson was like, embarrassed because she'd never thrown down a beat before. >> she did a great job. >> exactly. >> can you guys throw down a beep? >> of course. >> ah, yeah, wait, no, no, no. >> but that awesome rap was for -- >> you were working up to something there. you were really working up to something. i like that. >> for the outtakes. >> that was almost something -- that was awesome, but it was almost something extraordinary. >> and inappropriate probably. >> probably. >> awesome rap was for a good cause. she is supporting -- he for she -- an organization that she's working on right now. >> very cool. and i'm going to need all of your assistance right now. >> okay. >> okay, let's play rock, paper, scissors. are you familiar with the game? >> rock, paper, scissors and
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okay. >> let's do it one more time, ready, set, go. okay, so most of you guys threw down a rock, i think. >> i lost. >> i go with paper. >> yeah, i did scissors. >> i won. >> no, actually, actually i don't know -- >> i had rock twice and i put you -- you go over rock. okay, so anyway, guys, let me get to the point of this. >> this is the worst game of rock, paper scissors played anywhere. >> oh, my god. we need a refer rehere. the reason that we played that -- >> we need a basic understanding of rules. >> paper covers rock and then scissors trump paper. >> scissors cut paper. >> yeah, exactly but -- >> ladies and gentlemen, news you can use. >> i promise, i promise i'm getting to the point here. it can all be explained by a new study published in "scientific reports." researchers actually studied
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they studied 31 people playing 225 games each, the results revealing most people followed what's called a win stay, a lose shift strategy. if you win you're sticking with the same action that you just did. if you lose you're going to move on to a different sort of action, and, yeah, exactly so really crazy. >> how and why did they get funding for that study? can you imagine the grant writing process for that, yeah, we're going to study rock, paper, scissors. >> they played rock, paper, scissors to determine whether or not to do the study. >> the reason -- let me finish. the research will be used by a psychologist to study rational and irrational decision-making. >> aha. >> makes sense. >> you can't cheat you go, rock, paper, scissors and shoot, do under the table. and then reveal. so the lesson is -- >> we'll see you tomorrow, everybody, if you come back. >> rock, paper, scissors, don't come back. >> just go with paper. >> always go with paper. >> paper is the solid one to go
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>> yeah, not r announcer: "jack hanna's wild countdown" is sponsored by nationwide. jack: hi, everyone. i'm jack hanna, coming to you from my base camp here at the columbus zoo, and welcome to "wild countdown." transporting large animals is always a challenging job. whether it's moving them to better feeding grounds... i don't know. it happened so daggum fast, i don't know what happened. helping them repopulate their native habitat... you get chills when see that. jim: you do. jack: or returning them back home. wow, look at that. today, five moving stories about moving big animals. oh, gosh, it's a gorilla. sue: wow. jack: plus my blooper of the week! [laughing] we've got all that and more coming up next on "wild countdown." dave: the helicopter pilot's fully aware that once you've got the dart in, you've got about 8 minutes that you can work with these animals.
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