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0:01
Live in Times Square. This
0:03
is Good Morning America. Good
0:07
morning America. Hope your Friday is off to a
0:09
good start. We are going to begin with the
0:11
celebration of Pope Francis in preparations for his funeral
0:13
tomorrow. Thousands of mourners still lining up
0:16
to pay their respects as he lies in state
0:18
in St. Peter's Basilica until this evening. And
0:20
tonight the Pope's coffin will be sealed in
0:22
a ceremony. Chief International Correspondent James Long lives in
0:24
St. Peter's Square with the latest. Good morning
0:26
James. Yeah, good morning, George. We
0:28
are just one day away from the funeral
0:30
of Pope Francis Monach's presidents, prime ministers.
0:32
They will all be here in the square.
0:34
And then when he is buried, some
0:36
of Rome's poorest and most needy will be
0:39
there to say a final goodbye. The
0:41
Vatican is preparing for the eyes
0:43
of the world this morning. 200 ,000
0:45
people are expected in St. Peter's Square
0:47
tomorrow for Pope Francis' funeral. Millions
0:50
more will be watching across the globe. The
0:52
people's Pope will be honoured in a
0:54
ceremony presided over by Cardinal Giovanni Battista
0:57
Ray, the Dean of the College of
0:59
Cardinals. Francis made his last appearance in
1:01
this square in the Popemobile to greet
1:03
the faithful at Easter. Thousands will now
1:05
witness his final journey across St. Peter's
1:07
and out of the Vatican, across town
1:09
to St. Mary Major, where he'll be
1:12
buried. preparations for the funeral
1:14
of Will Underway here at thousands. Still
1:16
lining up to see Francis lying in state
1:18
but take a look at the top of the
1:20
stairs you can see that is where Francis
1:22
will be brought out for the duration of the
1:24
funeral. It should last at least an hour
1:27
and a half. can see the
1:29
sea of chairs are here for the thousands
1:31
of mourners and then when the funeral
1:33
is done Francis will be taken into Rome
1:35
and to St Mary Major where he'll
1:37
be buried. The Vatican releasing the first
1:39
project photo of the Pope's future tombstone
1:41
made of marble from the land of
1:43
his Italian ancestors. It will bear only
1:45
the inscription, Franciscus. 130 foreign
1:47
delegates, world leaders and monarchs among
1:49
them are planning to attend the funeral.
1:51
President Trump, the First Lady, President
1:53
Zelensky and Prince William all set to
1:55
appear. The Pope's coffin will be
1:58
sealed later tonight in a ceremony led by Cardinal
2:00
Kevin Farrell, a former Dallas bishop. Over
2:02
the last three days, hundreds of thousands
2:04
have poured into St. Peter's Basilica to
2:06
get a last glimpse of the Pope. I
2:08
was very, very emotional. I didn't think I'd
2:10
cry, but when I saw him, I did. I
2:13
started to cry. It's very
2:15
emotional. Meanwhile, the
2:17
Cardinals continue their deliberations. New York's
2:19
Cardinal Timothy Dolan joining the more
2:21
than 100 others meeting here Thursday discussing
2:24
the future of the church and
2:26
the conclave to choose their next leader.
2:28
That's the time that we get
2:30
to know one another. We listen to
2:32
one another. Each of the Cardinals
2:34
will have a chance to speak. They
2:36
speak about the beauty and the
2:38
challenges of the church and their diocese.
2:41
Now, with all these world leaders here, as you
2:43
can imagine, security is very tight. There are anti -drone
2:45
guns being deployed, fighter jets in the
2:48
sky to secure the no -fly zone. I
2:50
think it's fair to say that the
2:52
procession out into Rome is going to
2:54
complicate that slightly, given all of these
2:56
ancient narrow streets, but the thousands of
2:58
people who will turn out, well, that
3:00
will just underline France's status as the
3:02
People's Pope. Rebecca? Indeed it will.
3:05
All right, James, thank you. We go
3:07
now to Debra Roberts with more on
3:09
the place that Pope Francis to
3:11
be laid to rest. Good morning Deborah. Good
3:16
morning, Rebecca. Most popes are laid
3:18
to rest at St. Peter's
3:20
Basilica. But Pope Francis, known
3:23
for breaking with tradition, will actually be
3:25
buried a few miles away from the
3:27
Vatican here at Santa Maria Maggiore, the
3:29
Basilica of St. Mary Major. He said
3:31
he wanted to end his earthly journey
3:33
at the place where he often came
3:35
to pray and to seek the help
3:37
of the Virgin Mary. This people's
3:39
pope, as he was referred to,
3:42
wanted a simpler burial, a right
3:44
to reflect the simple life that
3:46
he led. So per his instructions,
3:48
gone are the elaborate triple
3:50
coffins, cypress, lead and oak, and
3:52
instead he'll be buried in
3:54
just a plain coffin. And
3:56
he also specified that in his
3:59
marble tomb, seen here in a project
4:01
photo released by the Vatican, that it
4:03
will have no decorations, none of those
4:05
red ribbons inscribed only with one word,
4:07
Franciscus. But much of the age -old
4:09
ritual will remain. A white veil will
4:11
be laid over the late Pope's
4:14
face in his coffin. and buried with
4:16
him the coins of his pontificate
4:18
his vestment called a pallium and a
4:20
metal cylinder which with a written
4:22
text that sort of summarizes the dozen
4:24
years of his work as Pope
4:26
and the Vatican tells us that a
4:28
group of people whom they describe
4:30
as the poor and the needy will
4:32
also be here to pay their
4:34
respects to this Pope Pope Francis who
4:36
chose his name because he will
4:38
never forget them a Pope who is
4:40
different and was different in life
4:42
and certainly will be to in death.
4:45
George. OK, Debra. Thanks very much. And
4:47
we're going to have complete coverage of the
4:49
funeral of Pope Francis beginning tomorrow morning at
4:51
3 30 on ABC Hulu and Disney Plus.
4:53
Now to President Trump and the war in
4:55
Ukraine as Russia escalates its attacks, Trump pushed
4:57
back but also embraced Russia's goals in peace
4:59
talks. Senior political correspondent Rachel Scott is at
5:01
the White House with the story. Good morning,
5:03
Rachel. George, good morning to
5:05
you and the president has made
5:07
it clear he's not happy with Russia's
5:10
aggression against Ukraine, but overnight they
5:12
launched another strike as the fighting continues.
5:14
This morning in Moscow, Russian officials
5:16
claiming a car bomb killed a
5:19
high ranking Russian military general. This
5:21
surveillance video showing the moment a
5:23
parked vehicle explodes as a person
5:25
walks toward it. Ukraine is not
5:27
taking credit for the attack. It
5:29
comes as Russia launches another drone
5:31
strike across Ukraine, just one day after
5:33
targeting Kyiv and one of the
5:35
deadliest attacks on the Capitol in months.
5:37
President Trump posting on social media,
5:39
Vladimir stop urging him to get the
5:41
peace deal done. I didn't like
5:43
last night. I wasn't happy with it.
5:46
And we're in the midst of
5:48
talking peace and missiles were fired. that
5:50
I was not happy with it. That's
5:52
what I meant. President Trump repeatedly said
5:54
he could end the war on day
5:56
one, but months into his second term,
5:58
his vice president is threatening to walk
6:01
away if both sides don't agree to
6:03
a deal. We've issued a very explicit
6:05
proposal to both the Russians and the
6:07
Ukrainians, and it's time for them to
6:09
either say yes or for the United
6:11
States to walk away from this process.
6:13
In the Oval Office, when asked what
6:15
concessions Russia was giving up for peace,
6:17
the President says Putin is not taking
6:19
the whole country. Stopping the war, stopping
6:22
taking the whole country.
6:25
Pretty big concession. The Trump
6:27
administration has put forward a peace proposal
6:29
that would prohibit NATO membership for Ukraine
6:31
and force Ukraine to give up land
6:33
that Russia has seized since its invasion,
6:35
in addition to giving up Crimea. Ukrainian
6:38
President Volodymyr Zelensky has rejected the
6:40
current proposal, saying we will negotiate,
6:42
we will not surrender. For
6:44
the White House, it's in a bound
6:46
face, from President Trump's first term, when his
6:48
administration pledged that Crimea would remain a
6:50
part of Ukraine. And before becoming
6:52
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio spoke out
6:54
about the danger of allowing Russia to
6:57
keep Crimea. The president's special
6:59
envoy to the Middle East, Steve Wittkoff,
7:01
is back in Russia meeting with Russian
7:03
President Vladimir Putin. But again, George, this
7:05
comes as Russia continues their aggression and
7:07
their attacks against Ukraine. And Rachel, the
7:09
president also in this trade war with
7:11
China. China made a couple of moves
7:13
overnight, but also said there's no talks. Exactly,
7:16
George. And they're really pushing back
7:18
hard against the president's repeated claims that
7:20
he is, in fact, engaging
7:22
in talks and negotiations with China to
7:24
end this trade war that he started.
7:26
The president, a new interview with Time
7:28
magazine, says that he has spoken to
7:30
President Xi, but China is pushing back
7:32
on that, calling it fake news, saying
7:34
there are no negotiations on tariff issues
7:36
and no agreement has been reached, George.
7:38
OK, Rachel, thanks very much. We're to
7:41
get the latest now on the controversy
7:43
surrounding defense secretary, Pete Hegseth. Security
7:45
questions raised from his use of
7:47
a commercial messaging app for sensitive national
7:49
security communication. Chief Global Affairs anchor
7:51
Martha Radis tracking that story. Good morning, Martha. Good
7:54
morning, George. This morning, more
7:56
alarming news out of the Pentagon.
7:58
Sources telling ABC that Defense
8:00
Secretary Pete Hegseth accused the then
8:02
acting chairman of the Joint
8:04
Chiefs, Admiral Chris Grady, of leaking
8:06
information to the press. The
8:08
sources say Hegseth was shouting at
8:10
Admiral Grady after a story
8:12
appeared about Elon Musk's possible top
8:14
secret briefing by the Joint
8:16
Chiefs on China. The Wall Street
8:18
Journal first to report that
8:20
Hegseth demanded proof from Admiral Grady
8:22
that he didn't leak the
8:24
story yelling, I'll hook you up
8:26
to a expletive polygraph. And
8:29
this morning, Hegseth's press spokesman denying
8:31
that the Defense Secretary had
8:33
the commercial app signal on a
8:35
personal computer inside his Pentagon
8:37
office. Sources told ABC that the
8:39
computer was connected to an
8:41
unsecured commercial line, what is known
8:43
as a dirty line, since
8:45
it does not have firewall protection.
8:48
All this, as we've learned this
8:50
morning from sources, that Hegseth's chief
8:52
of staff has now departed the
8:54
Pentagon. Joe Casper will now take
8:56
on a part -time advisory role in
8:58
the government. We are told Casper's
9:00
departure follows the dismissal of top
9:02
aides to Hexeth. Those aides were
9:05
escorted out of the building by
9:07
security, George. Yeah, real exodus there.
9:09
Meantime, the New York Times reported
9:11
just moments ago that these phone
9:13
numbers that Hexeth was using were
9:15
actually available online. Yeah,
9:17
George, you know, any personal phone
9:19
is vulnerable, especially if you are the
9:22
defense secretary. Foreign adversaries would like
9:24
those numbers and those numbers are pretty
9:26
easy to find. And Hegseth had
9:28
highly sensitive information on his phone in
9:30
those signal chats about the attack
9:32
plans in Yemen. George, Martha Raditz. Thanks,
9:34
Jill. Lots of questions this morning.
9:36
All right, George, now to the wildfire
9:38
burning in New Jersey. A 19
9:40
year old has been charged with arson
9:42
as crews work to put out
9:44
that fire. Morgan Norwood with the latest
9:46
now. Good morning to you, Morgan. Good
9:49
morning to you, Gio. 19 year old Joseph
9:52
Kling is accused of intentionally starting the wildfire that
9:54
gutted this business you see right behind. You
9:56
can see the polls pretty much the only thing
9:58
that is still standing. But this morning, one
10:00
of the big concerns is the smoke. We see
10:02
it in the air. We smell it as
10:04
well. We know it is on the move and
10:06
it's triggering air quality concerns all the way
10:08
in New York City. This
10:13
morning, a teenager is accused of
10:15
sparking one of the largest wildfires New
10:17
Jersey has seen in years. 19
10:20
year old Joseph Kling facing
10:22
a judge from the Ocean
10:24
County Jail, appearing virtually on
10:26
multiple arson charges. Charges
10:28
are second degree aggravated arson
10:30
with purposely destroying a forest and
10:32
third degree arson recklessly endangering
10:34
buildings or structures. Authorities say he
10:36
intentionally set a bonfire using
10:39
wooden pallets and walked away leaving
10:41
it burning. They say the
10:43
result was the massive Jones Road
10:45
wildfire which since Tuesday has
10:47
now scorched more than 23 square
10:49
miles of pine barrens. This
10:51
satellite photo showing the extent of
10:53
the damage. More
10:55
than 3000 people were forced to
10:57
evacuate and at least one commercial
10:59
building was destroyed. James
11:01
Herbst says it was his family's
11:03
business with millions of dollars
11:06
in inventory up in flames. It's
11:08
completely gone, lost everything. And
11:10
Joseph Kling is due back in court
11:12
next Tuesday. Rebecca. All right, so much
11:14
lost there. OK, Morgan, thank you. We
11:17
turn now to Luigi Mangione,
11:19
set to be arraigned this afternoon
11:21
on federal charges in the
11:23
fatal shooting of United Healthcare CEO
11:25
Brian Thompson. Chief investigative correspondent
11:27
Aaron Kotersky is outside the court
11:29
with more. Good morning, Aaron. Good
11:32
morning to you, Rebecca. Luigi Mancione's
11:34
do hear just hours from now
11:37
to answer federal charges that could
11:39
land him on death row. Mancione
11:41
allegedly stalked and then shot and
11:43
killed United Health Care Chief Brian
11:45
Thompson outside the Hilton Hotel in
11:47
Midtown and overnight prosecutors told the
11:49
court Mancione deserves the death penalty
11:51
because he sought to provoke broad
11:53
based resistance to the entire insurance
11:55
industry. Police said they found words
11:57
associated with insurance claims on some
11:59
of the shell casings. Denied, delayed.
12:02
Attorney General Pam Bondi has already
12:04
said Mangione should be executed
12:06
for what she called a premeditated
12:08
cold blooded assassination. But
12:10
Mangione's attorney called that barbaric
12:13
and a political stunt. Online
12:15
donations for Mangione's defense are now
12:17
closing in on a million dollars
12:19
and he says he's inundated with
12:21
mail. With 800 letters so far,
12:24
an average of 14 a day,
12:26
Mancione is keeping a handwritten catalog, writing,
12:28
I know the people who took
12:31
the time and spent the money sending
12:33
letters will appreciate verifying their letters'
12:35
receipt. Mancione is expected to plead not
12:37
guilty here today. Federal prosecutors said,
12:39
if convicted, he deserves the death penalty.
12:41
In part, because they say in
12:43
carrying out one lethal act of violence,
12:46
guys, Mancione tried to take on
12:48
an entire industry. more
12:52
than 200 ,000 people were outside Lambo
12:54
Field in Green Bay last night. First
12:56
pick went as expected after that there
12:58
were some surprises. Ikejachi is in
13:00
Wisconsin with the details. Good morning, Ike.
13:02
Good morning, George. What a show the
13:04
City of Green Bay and the NFL
13:07
put on last night. Over 200 ,000
13:09
people surrounding Lambo Field and essentially that's
13:11
almost twice the size of the City
13:13
of Green Bay itself. Now this exciting
13:15
night was filled with laughter, tears
13:17
and a little bit of dancing. To
13:22
the 2025 NFL Draft. Overnight,
13:24
it was a wild ride as
13:26
the future of football gathered
13:28
in Green Bay for the NFL
13:30
Draft. It was Light's
13:32
Cameron action. With the
13:34
first pick in the
13:36
2025 NFL Draft, the
13:38
Tennessee Titans select Cameron
13:41
Ward, quarterback Miami. Cam
13:44
Ward, the ACC player of the
13:46
year from Miami, heading to Tennessee.
13:48
The Titans hope him to capitalize on his
13:50
dynamic arm. Back in the end zone,
13:52
look at that, bro! The
13:55
Jacksonville Jaguars select Travis
13:57
Hunter, wide receiver,
13:59
defensive back from Colorado.
14:02
Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter
14:04
dancing his way into the
14:06
second overall pick. Expected to
14:08
bring big energy to the
14:10
Jacksonville Jaguars and possibly playing
14:12
on both offense and defense.
14:14
The New York Giants select
14:16
Abdul Carter. Abdul Carter, the
14:18
first defense only player picked by the
14:20
struggling Giants. I gotta ask, man.
14:22
You're a filling guy going to New
14:24
York. I mean, come on, man.
14:26
How you feel about that? I'm a
14:28
New York guy. I don't know
14:30
about Philly. Over 125 ,000 rabid fans
14:32
from around the country surrounding Lambeau Field
14:34
showing off their team spirit. Eight
14:37
people. The entire field
14:39
turning into a sea of
14:41
green for the home team's 23rd
14:43
pick. Matthew Golden. There
14:45
were a wide
14:47
range of reactions throughout
14:49
the night. Cowboys
14:52
newest offensive lineman Tyler Booker celebrated
14:54
by taking his friend for a
14:56
little ride. While the New Orleans
14:58
Saints newest offense blind and Kelvin
15:01
Banks will so overcome with emotion,
15:03
he hit his face in his
15:05
hat. Now there's still so
15:07
many amazing players still left on the board,
15:09
including Dion Sanders, his son, Shador Sanders, who
15:11
was expected to go in the first round.
15:13
Tune into ABC later today to find out
15:15
where he and all the rest of the
15:17
amazing players will be playing. Thanks very much
15:19
and tune in here in our next hour
15:21
for Cam Ward. He's going to join us
15:23
live. Coming up
15:25
the new rulings by the judge in the
15:27
Idaho College Murders case, including on the
15:30
death penalty. And Eva Pilgrim is here with
15:32
the story of a quick thinking teen
15:34
Eva. Hey Rebecca, a 16 year old girl
15:36
said she was terrified when she realized
15:38
a stranger was following her. She made a
15:40
split second decision that got her to
15:42
safety. You'll hear from her exclusively. OK, see
15:44
you soon Eva and new at 7
15:46
30 former Congressman George Santos is set to
15:48
learn his face. But first let's go
15:50
back to ginger. And right now we've got
15:52
Philadelphia with really decent air quality and
15:54
throughout the day shouldn't be too bad with
15:56
the southeast wind that's right now. The
15:58
problem is going to be the increase in
16:00
fire danger new fire starts all way
16:02
from Harrisburg Pennsylvania to Williamsport over to Morristown,
16:05
New Jersey down to Atlantic City. We
16:07
could see gusts up to 25 miles per
16:09
hour and relative humidity is really low.
16:11
We are going to get some rain tonight
16:13
through tomorrow morning, though. That's good news.
16:15
How baby owl ended up in a police
16:17
car. George's favorite story. Sure, up. The
16:23
missing child is Lucia Blix,
16:26
nine years old. Please let
16:28
her come back home safely.
16:32
Wednesdays. The kidnappers plundered meticulous. If money
16:34
is what it takes to get her
16:36
back, we're going to pay it. The
16:38
secrets they hide. You can't talk about
16:41
this. You can't write about it. Are the
16:43
clues. The mother's hiding something. I know
16:45
it. To find her. Tell me what she
16:47
is. The girl Wednesdays
16:49
at 10 on Free Farm and
16:51
on Hulu. Unbelievable.
17:00
Unfair. They don't write nasty.
17:02
Straight up. Can't miss. Don't
17:05
blink. Grab your popcorn and
17:07
strap in cinema. This
17:09
isn't about who's next. This
17:12
is about who's now.
17:14
This time is different. The
17:18
NBA Playoff presented by
17:20
Google. Continue on ESPN
17:22
ABC. Well,
17:26
I wanted to talk when we saw
17:28
the flip. Because that's whole point. But
17:30
okay, let's talk now. It was a
17:32
flippin' moment from Benson So
17:34
this year at the Grammys, you know
17:36
that performance and now this morning, Benson
17:38
Boone is releasing a brand new song.
17:40
We've been waiting for it. We'll tell
17:42
you all about it in news. I
17:44
have wardrobe for my baby blue I
17:47
know you don't. And just learning
17:49
some acrobatics. I just don't think
17:51
you can deliver Sam. First
17:55
New at 7 A federal judge has
17:57
ordered return of another migrant deported del Salvador.
18:00
Judge Stephanie Gallagher, a Trump appointee, ruled that
18:02
a 20 -year -old from Venezuela was deported
18:04
despite being protected as an asylum seeker came
18:06
to the U .S. as an unaccompanied minor.
18:09
The judge has ordered the government to facilitate his return. Also
18:12
former New York Congress and George Santos will
18:14
be sentenced today on fraud charges. Santos admitted
18:16
to deceiving donors and stealing the identities of
18:18
nearly a dozen people to fund his congressional
18:20
campaign. prosecutor seeking more than
18:22
seven years in prison and an alert
18:24
this morning for parents about a
18:27
recall involving nearly 180 ,000 car seats.
18:29
Federal safety regulators warning of a potential
18:31
choking hazard with specific safety first
18:33
grow and go sprint car seats pointing
18:35
to loose pieces of foam in
18:37
the headrest. No injuries have been reported
18:39
and owners will be notified by
18:41
mail and the NBA playoffs. The top
18:43
seated Oklahoma City Thunder are one
18:45
game away from moving on to the
18:48
second round and the LA Clippers
18:50
are up in their series after winning
18:52
game three at home against the
18:54
Denver Nuggets. And the Knicks have regained
18:56
home court advantage, topping the Pistons
18:58
in game three in Detroit. You can
19:00
catch more NBA play -off action tonight
19:02
on ESPN. Right now, the Idaho
19:04
College Murders case the latest on that.
19:07
Judge issued key rulings in the
19:09
case last night, including on the 9
19:11
-1 -1 call from the surviving roommate. Kena
19:13
Whitworth has the details. Good morning,
19:15
Kena. Yeah, George, good morning. So the
19:18
judge ruling the jury will hear
19:20
most of that 911 call and receive
19:22
the transcript, but they won't hear
19:24
arguments about the defendant's autism spectrum disorder
19:26
as a reason to avoid the
19:28
death penalty. This morning, a striking
19:30
blow to the defense in the Idaho
19:32
College murder case, as their most recent
19:34
attempt to have the death penalty taken
19:36
off the table is denied. Mr. Coburger
19:38
sits here today. He's innocent
19:40
and it's up to the
19:43
state to bring evidence. Brian
19:45
Coburger's defense team has argued
19:47
that his autism spectrum disorder should
19:49
preclude him from capital punishment. And
19:51
this morning, the judge
19:53
disagreeing, writing in part, no
19:55
court has ever found
19:57
ASD to be a categorically
19:59
death disqualifying diagnosis. The
20:02
judge also citing the defendants
20:04
IQ, which is in the 90th
20:06
percentile for his age and
20:08
his 4 .0 GPA when receiving
20:10
his master's degree in criminal justice.
20:12
The judge has found because
20:14
his diagnosis does not affect his
20:16
intellectual capacity, he can still
20:18
be subject to the death penalty.
20:20
Coburger, whose defense team says
20:22
is innocent, has been charged with
20:24
the 2022 murders of Kaley
20:27
Kinsolvis, Madison Mogan, Ethan Chapin, and
20:29
Zana Kernodal, and the latest
20:31
filing from the judge providing new
20:33
details about when Zana's body
20:35
was discovered. The judge citing
20:37
grand jury testimony from a surviving roommate
20:39
stating that when her friends were
20:41
called over the morning after the murders,
20:43
one of them went to the
20:45
second floor to grab a kitchen knife
20:47
when he came back out. The
20:49
surviving roommate saw Zana again for a
20:52
split second and I just started
20:54
bawling. The roommate testified that
20:56
I thought maybe she was still
20:58
just drunk and all asleep on
21:00
the floor. And at 1155, that
21:03
surviving roommate is heard pleading
21:05
with the 911 dispatcher. Cobra's
21:09
defense had argued that call shouldn't
21:11
be played during the trial, but this
21:14
morning the judge ruling most of
21:16
it can be. along with the surviving
21:18
roommates text to each other and
21:20
their attempts to reach the victims. The
21:22
redaction that the judge is going
21:24
to do to ensure that hearsay is
21:26
excluded and redacted from what the
21:28
jury hears, they will also make sure
21:30
that it is complete enough for
21:32
the jurors to understand the portions that
21:34
are left. Now the judge
21:36
also allowing prosecutors to call several expert
21:38
witnesses to the stand during trial and
21:40
that includes two members of the FBI
21:42
to discuss cell phone records and a
21:45
change in spending habits as well as
21:47
a supervisor at Amazon. Now the next
21:49
pre -trial hearing is on May 15th,
21:51
guys. And we know you'll continue to
21:53
follow it. Okay, Kena, thank you. We
21:55
turn now to a scary encounter caught
21:57
on camera, a teenage girl fleeing a
21:59
man who she says was following her
22:01
and authorities say she did everything right.
22:04
Eva Pilgrim. is here with that story.
22:06
Good morning, Eva. Good morning, Rebecca. Such
22:08
a scary close call diverted thanks to
22:10
a quick thinking teen and two store
22:12
owners who didn't hesitate to help. And
22:14
this morning, that teen and her mother
22:16
are speaking out exclusively to GMA. This
22:19
is the terrifying moment that a 16
22:21
year old Pennsylvania girl says a man
22:23
started following her. I kept on hearing
22:25
this guy, but I was just like,
22:28
it sounds like an older man. I don't think an
22:30
older man would approach me that way. And
22:32
he had finally ran up
22:34
to me. In this surveillance video
22:36
obtained by our station WPVI, Ariana
22:39
MacMillan was walking along a
22:41
busy road outside Philadelphia when she
22:43
says this man began walking
22:45
closer and closer to her, making
22:47
inappropriate comments. He did
22:49
have a very large bottle of liquor
22:52
in his hand and in my
22:54
eyes I saw that as a weapon.
22:56
He pushes me a little bit.
22:58
We better start walking. and this moment
23:00
I had a sense of panic
23:02
in my brain that I needed to
23:04
do something immediately. The teen, scared,
23:06
made a quick decision running to a
23:09
nearby shop. I just was like,
23:11
there's a woman there and I'm going
23:13
to run to her. I saw
23:15
like someone had like a sign in
23:17
like their yard or something that
23:19
said something about someone named Rachel. So
23:21
the name I just went, Aunt
23:23
Rachel, Aunt Rachel, is that you? It
23:26
distracted whatever that gentleman was trying
23:28
to do. Aunt Rachel. Actually, Tina Moss,
23:30
a shop owner, saw her running
23:32
toward her, immediately played along, taking the
23:34
girl inside her store with her
23:36
husband, Bill. He followed her directly from
23:38
the store to the window and
23:40
banged on the glass. They called the
23:43
police, and once they came, he
23:45
still was banging on the doors and
23:47
wasn't stopping, and they were trying
23:49
to arrest him. the man now charged
23:51
with stalking and harassment. Christina Pino
23:53
grateful to those store owners who helped
23:55
her daughter visiting the shop to
23:57
meet the couple. Thank you. Yeah,
24:00
and her mom calling those store
24:02
owners her daughter's guardian angels. The
24:04
store owners say. their parents
24:07
and they hope someone would do
24:09
the same for one of their
24:11
children. Absolutely. really nice to see
24:13
people helping each other. It is. Thank you Eva.
24:15
Coming up breaking it eight the latest in the Caron
24:17
Reed retrial and next points guy Brian Kelly joins
24:19
us with the summer travel alert while some airlines are
24:21
forecasting a drop in ticket prices. We're
24:26
back now to look at how the current
24:28
economic uncertainty is affecting summer travel plans. Point
24:30
Sky Brian Kelly is here. Brian,
24:32
thanks for coming in this morning, getting a lot
24:34
of warnings about this uncertainty from airlines. What should
24:36
travelers expect? Well,
24:39
you know, the biggest news is
24:41
that foreign travelers are not coming to
24:43
the US. The March numbers are
24:45
pretty stark. And we're seeing
24:47
Canadians drop by almost 20 % in
24:49
March. And I anticipate those numbers
24:51
to jump even more in April, because
24:53
that's when the trade war really
24:55
took off. So high level domestic travel
24:57
could be cheaper without all of
24:59
those Canadians and Western Europeans coming to
25:01
the US, taking up that hotel
25:03
space. This summer could be the
25:05
summer where you look to do a domestic
25:08
trip instead of an international one. But
25:10
you know what Brian? With those domestic flights
25:12
Southwest United Delta, they've all said that they're cutting
25:14
some domestic flights. So what if you've already
25:16
have your tickets booked and you have those flights
25:18
booked? Can it be canceled? Absolutely.
25:21
The airlines often do this. They'll downgrade
25:23
the aircraft on a flight to meet
25:25
that reduced demand. The airlines don't want
25:27
a lower fare, so they're going to
25:30
try to control capacity first by canceling
25:32
flights. And many times, you'll
25:34
log into your account and see
25:36
that you have a connection when you
25:38
book that nonstop flight. And this
25:40
can be infuriating. And what I recommend
25:42
to passengers, you don't have to
25:45
take what the airline gives you. New
25:47
DOT rules state that you can
25:49
get a full cash refund if you
25:51
don't like the flight that they
25:53
put you on, of course, check the
25:55
p might have one up. So
25:58
you m it, but you can always
26:00
call them to put you on
26:02
a better day that you booked. So
26:04
don't g the airline gives you
26:06
is w So it's worth making a
26:08
fo on hold potentially for th
26:11
Well, it can be forever. I
26:13
like it when they
26:15
say your number and we'll
26:20
with domestic travel. Now you've seen this
26:22
decline from international travelers coming to the
26:24
U. S finding hotel deals. What's the
26:27
best way to find it? And if
26:29
someone was looking a week ago, are
26:31
they going to find better prices next
26:33
week? Absolutely the
26:35
best thing about hotels. Many are
26:37
refundable, but people don't realize this
26:39
too many people book a hotel
26:41
and forget it. But highly recommend
26:43
always check back. Now, if you
26:45
are staying at a budget or
26:47
economy hotel and you booked through
26:49
an online travel agency, I recommend
26:51
reaching out to the hotel directly. Often,
26:54
they'll beat the rate that you
26:56
saw online. And hotels generally treat customers
26:58
better than booked directly with them. At
27:01
the luxury angle, if you're
27:03
booking luxury hotels, I highly recommend
27:05
go through a luxury travel advisor, like
27:07
a virtuoso agent. They'll usually get
27:09
you the same price, but also add
27:11
in tons of extra perks, like
27:13
upgrades, free breakfast, et cetera.
27:16
So there you don't want to book directly. You want
27:18
to go through luxury travel advisors. That is so
27:20
true. You can even get a newspaper, should you want
27:23
to read one. So Brian,
27:25
I watch the news every day. And
27:27
I know about this whole global uncertainty
27:29
and economic uncertainty, because I watch the
27:31
headlines. Is there a way my viewing
27:33
the news can help me? Can I
27:35
take advantage of this uncertainty for any
27:37
deals? Absolutely.
27:39
Well, I think in general, there's always
27:41
going to be deals out there. One of
27:43
the silver linings of a lot of
27:45
this uncertainty is the credit card companies
27:47
are in a huge war right now
27:49
to get premium consumers. The
27:51
Chase Sapphire Preferred is $100 ,000 point
27:53
bonus right now, which is over
27:55
$1 ,250 in value. So my tip
27:57
to people looking to get in on
27:59
this uncertainty is sign up for
28:02
a great credit card, get $1 ,000
28:04
in points, and use that to book
28:06
your flights. And remember, points, redemptions,
28:08
and when you use your airline miles,
28:10
you can change those. So
28:12
free of charge, which most people don't realize.
28:14
And even if you get stranded this
28:16
summer, and the airline can't get you
28:18
home. Use your frequent fire miles to get
28:20
you home instead of waiting in the two hour
28:22
line in the airport. That always a lot
28:24
of good advice. Yes, thank you. Yeah, all right.
28:26
Good tips there coming up here. Why the
28:28
cost of weddings may be going up and how
28:30
couples can prepare and Sam has the play
28:32
of the day. Take a look at this picture,
28:34
guys. It's a baby owl in a police
28:36
car. List that on sentences you didn't think you'd
28:39
hear today. That's right. A baby owl in
28:41
a police car. We've got the full story on
28:43
how and why this happened. We'll tell you
28:45
in play. Oh, the day. It's looking right at
28:47
us. And we are
28:49
back now with our play of the day and it's
28:51
a good one because we've got Sam OK and we've
28:53
got a baby L. Who? It's
28:56
an owl story. I
28:58
didn't know where to go.
29:02
we was walking as you
29:04
do throug clear water
29:06
florida one mor on this
29:08
tiny eastern sc you
29:10
call a baby owl all
29:12
scooped it up and
29:15
saved it fr it was
29:17
in immediate danger location.
29:19
And then get this key
29:21
because he wanted a
29:23
parent nearby, but no
29:25
ad this outlet. That's
29:28
when t it was
29:30
time to call in
29:32
the local fish and
29:34
wild took this adorable
29:36
outlet center as one
29:38
does for expert stress
29:40
and let's learn find
29:42
young wildlife and be
29:44
orphaned. Please first parents
29:46
are often near and
29:48
you get in between
29:50
them If
29:53
the animal is in danger, go ahead and move
29:55
it to safety. And if you're in doubt, contact
29:57
the local wildlife rehabilitation center or just call the
29:59
authorities guidance. You're right. I do like the story
30:01
because Ali and I actually once saved a baby
30:03
owl. To get out of here. Same exact story.
30:05
We found it right in the middle. It was
30:07
out of the beach when we saw it right
30:09
in the middle of the street. And
30:12
we did exactly what you said. We
30:14
moved it to the side called Who
30:16
picked up the outlet? You or
30:18
Ellie? George,
30:21
I love that story. Good job,
30:23
Ellie. Well done, Ellie. Well,
30:25
we've got more baby animal news
30:27
coming up ahead. The new video of
30:29
the baby sloth born at the
30:31
San Diego Zoo, and we're going to
30:33
exclusively reveal his name. And we
30:35
also have Super Bowl champions in Times
30:37
Square. These Eagles, their players, and
30:39
they're here to tell us about a
30:41
cause very close to their hearts.
30:43
Stay with us. Marvel
30:48
Studios Thunderbolts will take
30:50
the world by storm. Yes!
30:53
There's some big people right out there, and
30:55
you're gonna help me stop it. Us?
30:57
Why, you got some place to be? On
30:59
May 2nd... The Avengers are gone. No
31:01
one's coming to save the day. They're time.
31:04
I think we could be the people
31:06
that are coming. ...has come. Being the hero,
31:08
there is no higher calling. Let's do
31:10
this. Marvel
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Studios Thunderbolts. Only theaters May 2nd
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get to get now. This film does
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not get rated. If you're running
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Ship station.com slash audio. The
31:50
Eagles have such a great program. They're
31:52
so happy to welcome them to Times Square
31:54
this morning. Hope you all are starting
31:56
your weekend off well as well. Yes, absolutely.
31:59
We are so ready for this this
32:01
morning. They're here with some of their friends
32:03
for autism acceptance month. The teams made
32:05
it their mission to uplift kids with autism,
32:07
doing so much good work and we
32:09
can't wait to talk to them all about
32:11
it. So special. We can't wait. Also
32:13
this morning, Lori B has sneak peek there
32:15
at some of the products inspired by
32:17
the new live action Lilo and Stitch. including
32:19
ones for your four -legged friends. First look
32:21
at the top stories breaking today. We
32:23
start with the latest on the celebration of
32:25
Pope Francis and the preparations for his
32:27
funeral tomorrow. Senior National Correspondent, Terence Murnin and
32:30
Symbatican City, good morning, Teri. Good
32:33
morning, George. The Cardinals are gathering.
32:35
World leaders and royals from around the
32:37
world are flying in and thousands
32:39
of people are still streaming into St.
32:41
Peter's Square on the last day
32:43
that Pope Francis will lie in state
32:45
here. Tonight, the coffin will be
32:48
closed in a formal ritual and the
32:50
square has been transformed. for the
32:52
Pope's funeral. 200 ,000 people are expected
32:54
to attend, and the high mass will
32:56
be presided over by Cardinal Giovanni
32:58
Battista Ray. He's the dean of the
33:00
Cardinal of Colleges, and he's 91
33:02
years old. And then that wouldn't coffin.
33:05
Caring Francis' mortal remains will be transferred
33:07
at a slow pace two miles
33:09
across the city of Rome to the
33:11
ancient Basilica of St. Mary Major,
33:13
a place he loved. There will be
33:15
nine days of formal mourning, and
33:18
during that time, the Cardinals will meet
33:20
privately to discuss the challenges facing
33:22
the church and size each other up,
33:24
because after that... the secret conclave,
33:26
that ancient rituals, the Cardinals
33:28
in the Sistine Chapel voting twice a
33:30
day, once to have four times
33:32
a day, twice in the morning, twice
33:34
in the afternoon, until they choose
33:36
the next pope. And when they do,
33:38
we'll see that white smoke coming
33:40
up from the chimney, a sign that
33:42
a successor to Francis has been
33:44
chosen. George and Terry Moran, thanks
33:46
and of course we're gonna have complete coverage
33:48
with the funeral of Pope Francis. That
33:50
starts tomorrow at 3 .30 a .m. on ABC
33:52
Hulu and Disney Plus. Gio. And we'll
33:54
be watching. Okay, Gio. now to the Karen
33:56
Reed retrial where prosecutors are focusing on
33:59
the relationship between the Massachusetts woman and the
34:01
boyfriend she's accused of killing. We're now
34:03
seeing text messages from the day before he
34:05
died. Chief National correspondent Matt Gutman joins
34:07
us with more on this. Good morning, Matt.
34:09
Hey, good morning, George, those text messages
34:11
exposed the crafts in the relationship between Reed
34:13
and her boyfriend, police officer John O 'Keefe,
34:15
with accusations of cheating in the days
34:17
leading up to his death. Now, prosecution's put
34:19
in all of this to show that
34:21
Reed had a motive for allegedly hitting him
34:23
through SUV the night of that Boston
34:25
blizzard back in 2022. This
34:27
morning in that third day of the
34:29
retrial, the prosecution using text messages between
34:31
Karen Reed and her boyfriend, John O
34:33
'Keefe, to try to prove their relationship
34:35
was on the rocks at the time
34:38
of his death. This is from Karen
34:40
Reed to John O 'Keeffe. You
34:42
have really hurt me this time. Karen
34:44
Reed facing second degree murder charges accused
34:46
of hitting O 'Keeffe with her SUV
34:48
in 2022, leaving him for dead
34:50
in another officer's yard during a
34:53
blizzard. Massachusetts State Trooper Nicholas Garino
34:55
reading allowed the text exchange which began
34:57
the day before O 'Keeffe's death. From the
34:59
defendant to John O 'Keeffe, tell me
35:01
if you're interested in someone else. Can't
35:03
think of any other reason you've been
35:05
like this. From John O 'Keeffe
35:07
to the defendant. Nope. Things haven't
35:09
been great between us for a while. Ever
35:11
consider that. After that, the call
35:13
log shows a flurry of calls from
35:15
Reid's phone to O 'Keeffe's calls he mostly
35:17
ignores or sends straight to voicemail. Reid
35:19
continues to text, I know your heart
35:21
isn't in this anymore. I
35:23
felt it for a while and especially lately. I'm
35:26
willing to try more, but not if you
35:28
approaching the point of indifference. John O 'Keeffe
35:30
to the defendant. I've told you already, I
35:32
don't bounce back as quickly as you do
35:34
after we have a battle. And
35:37
there's also much discussion about how much
35:39
she drank. Remember, police say her blood
35:41
alcohol level was up to .089 hours.
35:43
after she dropped him off of that
35:45
get together, legally intoxicated in Massachusetts. And
35:47
today the jury is going to be
35:49
taken to the Boston suburb of Canton
35:51
to see the house where John O
35:54
'Keefe was killed with their own eyes.
35:56
Rebecca. Alright, community watching this one so
35:58
closely. Matt, thank you. We're going to
36:00
turn now a GMA health alert on
36:02
the rise in whooping cough cases. The
36:04
CDC reporting cases are more than double
36:07
what they were this time last year in
36:09
our chief medical correspondent. Doctor Taryn Arula
36:11
is here with more. Nice to see you
36:13
doc. You too. What is happening and
36:15
why is it happening? So yes, whooping cough
36:17
is a contagious respiratory illness caused by
36:19
a bacteria. And in fact, we are seeing
36:22
now a little over 8000 cases, which
36:24
is more than double what we saw last
36:26
year. The same time last year we
36:28
saw about 35 ,000 cases total, which was
36:30
the most we had seen in the last
36:32
decade. So cases are definitely on the
36:34
rise. We usually see about 10 ,000 per
36:36
year pre pandemic. Why is this happening? We
36:39
talked about this with the measles, but
36:41
probably lower vaccination rates. So in 2023 to
36:43
2020, about 92 % of kindergartners got their
36:45
vaccination. That's compared to about 95 %
36:47
pre pandemic. So whooping cough starts out as
36:49
really what looks like a cold, but then
36:51
it develops into something that's more associated with
36:53
rapid kind of violent episodes of coughing so
36:56
violent that you may throw up. You may
36:58
develop a headache and then when you take
37:00
a breath in, you hear that high pitched
37:02
whooping sound. It's spread by respiratory droplets. So
37:04
when someone sneezes or coughs, we diagnose it
37:06
with a nasal or throat swab and then
37:08
we like to treat it early in the
37:10
first three weeks with Anna. So it's important
37:12
to know that for babies, they may not
37:14
have those classic signs. What you might see
37:17
is that they're struggling to breathe their lips,
37:19
skin or nails are turning blue. Those
37:21
kinds of things are actually there are
37:23
pausing when they're breathing. It's sort of stopping
37:25
briefly, which is terrifying for a new
37:27
parent. When you look at
37:29
vaccines, what what is the timing of the
37:31
first whooping cough vaccine and who can get
37:34
vaccinated if they haven't been yet? Right, so
37:36
we know that vaccination is really the key
37:38
to not only preventing but decreasing the severity
37:40
of illness. vaccines since the
37:42
1940s. So the schedule goes as such. Essentially
37:44
when you're two, four and six months
37:46
old, a baby will get a vaccine. I'll
37:48
get it again at 15 to 18
37:50
months and then four to six years old.
37:52
In those tween years, 11 to 12,
37:54
they'll get another dose. Adults should get one
37:56
if they've never had one and important
37:58
pregnant women in their third trimester should all
38:00
get a vaccination. It's important for
38:03
them to pass those antibodies on to
38:05
those infants because they're so vulnerable. You know,
38:07
infants less than six months are really
38:09
at such a high risk. as our individuals
38:11
over 65 and pregnant and those with
38:13
underlying conditions like asthma. I totally hear that
38:15
every time we get through the six
38:17
month marker, it's a sigh of relief for
38:19
parent and caregivers too because they're with
38:21
your babies. You want to make sure that
38:23
they're vaccinated. Thank you, Dr. Nerola. Thank
38:25
you. Thank you. Coming over to GMA Morning
38:27
Menu. Top pick of the NFL Draft
38:29
joins us. Cam Ward tells us about the
38:31
life -changing moment. Big, big moment also ahead.
38:33
Wedding season's about to get more expensive.
38:35
We'll tell you how couples can keep those
38:37
costs down. Plus the great airplane seat
38:39
debate taking off thanks to this viral video.
38:41
Who gets the armor us? We're going
38:43
to tell you where opinions are landing. Sam
38:45
has an opinion on that and he's
38:47
with our special guests. I will
38:49
tell you this is the best part of the
38:52
morning, guys, and you want to come outside and
38:54
enjoy it. The whole Eagles family is here. Swoops
38:56
here, coaches here. The cheerleaders are here.
38:58
All right, you are going to show me
39:00
an Eagle Claw, so I don't mess this. What
39:02
are we doing? So here's what we're going
39:04
to do, Sam. Yeah. We got a key shot
39:06
from Pensgrove, New Jersey. He's going to
39:08
show you how... Eagle, we don't want a fumble. We
39:10
don't want... No, I don't want a fumble, Keith. I
39:12
don't want a fumble. We'll show you. We'll come back.
39:14
We'll be right back with all this. Hang with us.
39:16
Matt, what am I going to do? Head in and
39:18
tight. Elbow in tight. Eagle
39:21
claw. We
39:26
are back with our GMA cover story
39:28
and if I'll draft, join us now
39:30
from Green Bay, Wisconsin. The first pick,
39:32
University of Miami quarterback Cam Ward. Cam,
39:34
congratulations. Good morning. Well done. Yes,
39:36
congratulations. How you doing? So
39:38
did you get any sleep last night? I
39:42
got about a odd sleep. I'm
39:44
ready to go. How are you
39:46
feeling this morning? I'm
39:49
feeling great. Finally, you know, got to live out
39:51
my dream for a night. I'm excited to do
39:53
with a good organization like Tennessee, and I'm just
39:55
ready to get to Nashville, get to know my
39:57
teammates. Yeah, it's gotta
39:59
be an amazing feeling. You
40:01
got just one scholarship in
40:03
high school, and now here
40:05
you are, the first draft
40:07
pick. Wow. What does that
40:10
tell you about your story? Well,
40:14
I just think it's inspirational. You
40:17
know, a long journey, you know, not only for myself, but a lot
40:19
of people in this world who had to come up like I did. And
40:21
I mean, I've been blessed. I work
40:23
hard. You know, I got faith
40:25
in God. And, you know, it's just been an
40:28
awesome journey for myself and my family. And,
40:30
you know, the road's just getting started. Yeah, and
40:32
it's quite the road. First of all, I'm
40:34
glad to see someone on this show also repping
40:36
Miami. So congratulations. Tell me because
40:38
your parents, they were by your
40:40
side as that announcement was being
40:42
made. How important has that relationship
40:44
been on your road to the
40:46
NFL? It's
40:49
been a important relationship. They've been there
40:51
since day one, since literally all
40:53
the way to this point. And for them to
40:56
be by my side, one of
40:58
the biggest days of my football career, it's a
41:00
blessing. That's something that not a
41:02
lot of kids get. I'm honored to have them
41:04
by my side every day. You have been by their
41:06
side every day. You've been living at home. You
41:08
ready to move out? I'm
41:11
ready. That's one of the best things about getting
41:13
dragged out. Finally getting me somewhere to live now.
41:17
What do you know about Nashville?
41:19
you excited? I
41:22
know a little bit about Nashville. Not
41:25
too much, but you know, that's why I got
41:27
a lot of time to learn and learn more about
41:29
it. But I'm excited. They got some good food.
41:31
That's all I really need. They got
41:33
some good good houses to live in. So
41:35
you know, it's going to be exciting time
41:37
for me. Good tips on Nashville. Do you
41:39
have a worship? What's what's your favorite? I'll
41:41
send my send my daughter Harper. They
41:44
do have good food in great houses
41:46
and you'll have to figure out a
41:48
place that that allows dogs because you
41:50
are bringing uno. your dog, your number
41:52
one, right? Yes,
41:55
yes, ma 'am. I got a hundred
41:57
thirty pound Rottweiler. Boy,
41:59
there is something different even with
42:01
me since I got it when I
42:03
was in Washington, 130 pounds journey. That's
42:06
a full flip. Well, the
42:09
name Uno was that thinking ahead to
42:11
being the number one draft pick or your
42:13
number one? What
42:19
do you expect
42:21
to be starting
42:23
quarterback for the
42:25
Titans on day
42:28
one? confidence
42:35
in themselves so you know want to go out
42:37
there and make plays but in the end days not
42:39
my decision it's the GM and the head coach
42:41
I know they're gonna put myself in the best situation
42:43
in the franchises so I'm excited you know just
42:45
learn to play books and more and you know be
42:47
with my teammates. Well congratulations
42:49
you really earned it and as you said it's
42:51
a great blessing hope you enjoy it thanks
42:53
for coming in camp. Yes
42:56
sir I appreciate it. Take care. How
42:58
about some pop music? What a nice
43:00
young man. I love that things just
43:02
worked out like that for him. All
43:04
right, so let's begin with some mystical,
43:06
nay, magical and mystical news. Well, every
43:08
pop news should begin with Benson Bone
43:10
or some kind of word like nay.
43:12
He's released his second single from his
43:14
highly anticipated new album, American Heart. And
43:16
it's just in time for New Music
43:18
Friday because that's a thing now. Everybody
43:21
drops new music on Friday. That's when
43:23
you thought it couldn't get better. It's
43:25
better than the last hit. That's huge.
43:27
The Grammy nominated star debuted. It's the
43:29
first time I heard it mystical magical
43:31
during his incredible 2 weekend performance at
43:33
Coachella here, Larry and I had cut
43:35
our fringe. We were so ready to
43:37
miss all of this. We didn't get
43:39
a chance to go this month was
43:41
Coachella Vincent Boone on festival kick right
43:43
now stopping in North Carolina, Tennessee, California
43:45
before headlining the governor's mom ball music
43:48
festival. I didn't know this was a
43:50
thing here in New York June 6
43:52
we got to go mystical magical is
43:54
streaming everywhere now and American heart drops
43:56
as an album. on june 20th. Congratulations.
43:59
That's quite a thing. I don't know, but maybe
44:01
climb the tree, jump out of the tree,
44:04
do a flip maybe. I don't know, just maybe
44:06
just get it. He's ready for his choreography.
44:08
He's got to be extra there. All right, now
44:10
it's Friday. So let's double down on our
44:12
baby animal beat, which until now has been moving
44:14
a little slowly this week. I'd say, and
44:16
I'll mean that literally here because last month, the
44:18
San Diego Zoo announced the birth of a
44:20
baby sloth and nothing slower than a baby sloth.
44:23
The first pup, which is what you call
44:25
a baby sloth born at the zoo in over
44:27
three years now this morning we've got brand
44:29
new footage that sweet little guy and right now
44:31
we can exclusively reveal the name his name
44:33
laptop drumroll. Is
44:35
cashew I didn't see it coming but
44:37
it's super cute the zoo telling us
44:40
that cashew is doing great becoming increasingly
44:42
independent climbing on branches spending time away
44:44
from mom and dad pretty soon he'll
44:46
be saying he wants to go to
44:48
college in Tennessee that's the way children
44:50
are free zone. I'm
44:54
not sure. And it was
44:56
a surprise for me because maybe it's the
44:58
color. I'm not sure. But you know when you
45:00
open up to names and people give you
45:02
names and they chose it. A cute name. Yeah,
45:04
they didn't ask me. It's like let's keep
45:06
it. Finally this
45:08
morning, spring means love. And one person
45:10
taking advantage of that is Tori Patuk.
45:12
But not for herself. Tori has gone
45:14
viral on TikTok for creating a matchmaking
45:16
profile for her 35 year old brother.
45:18
And he had no idea. Tori. posting
45:20
that Reid lives in California, likes long
45:23
walks on the beach, takes care of
45:25
his dog, Carl. Carl's a great name
45:27
for a dog and spending time with
45:29
his family. Well, that video racked up
45:31
over a million and a half views
45:33
just since last week. So Tori put
45:35
together a dating profile of Reid's two
45:37
friends as well, which have been viewed
45:39
over 180 ,000 times. Tori, I think
45:41
you've got a career coming right now.
45:43
Tori and Reid are joining us live. Tori,
45:46
it's so nice to see you.
45:48
Reid, nice to see you as
45:50
well. Tori, let me start here.
45:52
What inspired you to be a
45:54
matchmaker fo I mean, did he
45:56
need that much h he necessarily
45:58
needs that was completely a joke.
46:00
I never of it going viral.
46:03
Um I on into a
46:05
yoga class. I d before
46:07
I posted it and then
46:09
class and they got al
46:11
right. Well, that's the way
46:13
your sister didn't tell you
46:15
about the post. What did
46:17
you say Yeah,
46:21
no, she actually asked me if she could post
46:24
it. I said, absolutely not. And she said, too late,
46:26
I've already posted it. So
46:29
it was off to the races. I was
46:31
actually recording a podcast with my buddy and
46:33
came back and had my phone turned off.
46:35
And my phone had absolutely blown up hundreds
46:37
of messages. So it took off real quick.
46:39
Yeah, that many views. I bet it was
46:41
a blow up. Say, Reed, have you gone
46:43
out with anyone from a candidate from the
46:45
posting yet? Yeah,
46:47
no, I've had some interactions heavily influenced by
46:49
the twins. So there's another sister as well.
46:51
So Tori and Emily both have had their
46:53
input on this. But yeah, no, it's been
46:56
fun. Honestly, the best part about this has
46:58
been the family kind of aspect. So like
47:00
everyone's gotten in on it. My parents don't
47:02
have TikTok. They drove to a friend's house.
47:04
I love this story. TikTok so they drove
47:06
across the neighborhood. But yeah, it
47:08
was a whole thing. But you know, it's been
47:10
a ton of fun. And it's been fun to
47:12
connect with the kids. obviously we live across the
47:14
country so it's fun to connect and I know
47:16
they like having their fingers in my dating life.
47:21
You'll have to undo that grasp a little bit. We love
47:23
both of you. It's so nice of you to come
47:25
on and say hi. Good luck with all the future. I
47:27
don't think you need it. The one thing I would
47:29
say by the way though is we have some very wonderful
47:31
producers here at GMA and I know you had a
47:33
chance to talk to any of them and if one of
47:35
them stood out you just let me know because I
47:37
can facilitate. I can make this
47:39
happen if love's not happening that
47:41
way. George, that's pop news. Thank you
47:43
guys. Thank you, Sam. Let's go. Sam,
47:46
I was doing the same thing. I was
47:48
like, oh, Samantha, that would work, right? I
47:50
mean, I'm calling her out. OK, maybe I
47:53
make a TikTok soon. Let's talk about severe
47:55
storms because there have been quite a few
47:57
in the plains. That's for this week. And
47:59
this was from Silverton, Texas. That tornado there
48:01
out in the field, thankfully. Unfortunately, it's going
48:03
to be a lot more populated areas by
48:05
Monday, including Des Moines. So prepare now or
48:07
three days out. This is your heads up
48:09
that you're going to have a really busy
48:11
Monday. And then Tuesday, that front still does
48:13
quite a bit of damage. But Minneapolis. City
48:16
included on Monday afternoon and evening. Okay,
48:22
we're going now to the right stuff
48:24
to put an end to bad hair days
48:26
and Lori Bergabotto is here with what
48:28
you need to get salon style at home.
48:30
Everything here shoppable on our website at
48:32
that QR code at the bottom of the
48:35
screen as well. So great to see
48:37
you, Lori. And you're bringing tools for us.
48:39
So tell us what we need. So
48:41
we are so lucky because we have such
48:43
talented stylists here, We do. But if
48:45
you don't have that and who does at
48:47
home, I don't at home, you need
48:49
something like this tool. This is the Shark
48:51
Flex style. And we've heard about it.
48:53
from so many yes they want to know
48:55
is it good does it work is
48:57
it worth the money and the answer is
48:59
a resounding Yes, OK, it is amazing.
49:01
So this is one magic wand and it
49:03
has multiple attachments. You can smooth hair.
49:05
You can dry hair. You can get curls.
49:07
I actually my stylist Greg used it
49:09
this morning. You can see Rebecca there. My
49:11
hair during my hair after it looks
49:13
like this. I mean, I am the after
49:15
picture and what was so great about
49:17
it is he said and a lot of
49:19
the stylists in the room said this
49:21
is a great tool for people at home
49:23
to use if you don't have that
49:25
prowess with tools or curling irons or things.
49:27
like that. No heat damage. It
49:29
drying time and you can
49:31
g styles. So this is a
49:34
great one. All right. And
49:36
you're Well, thanks. Well,
49:38
thanks if you want
49:40
to travel and that multipurpose,
49:42
you know, th was
49:44
fantastic for that. It's
49:47
under $60 at Sephora.
49:49
And our social media
49:51
producer Angelica try this
49:53
out for us. So
49:56
before, during, and after. And what she said is
49:58
that she used the curling iron attached when
50:00
it gave her really beautiful beachy waves. She was
50:02
sort of surprised at how powerful it was
50:04
because it is mini, you guys, but it's mighty.
50:07
And she has long hair. So it actually
50:09
did really long hair. Really great. Yeah. And to
50:11
that point, you know, with the straightening brush,
50:13
she said, if you have really, really curly hair,
50:15
you might want to opt for something a
50:17
little bit bigger. But for me, you know, my
50:19
hair is just a little bit wavy. This
50:21
sort of thing would be perfect so you can
50:23
have straight or curly either way on the
50:25
go. Nice. Okay, this is so viral. Have you
50:27
ever used one of these? No, no. They
50:29
look very confusing to me, I'll be honest. Okay,
50:31
so they're not. You just need one practice
50:33
round. So this is the Kitch Heatless Curling Set
50:36
and our producer Jillian tried this out for
50:38
us. And Jillian, as you know, has this beautiful
50:40
thick head of hair. Gorgeous. And
50:42
what she was saying is it does take practice to get
50:44
to do it because you roll it up, you sleep
50:46
in it overnight. And when you
50:48
take it out, Rebecca, it is just
50:50
beautiful natural waves. Bouncy, yes. Bouncy,
50:52
just gorgeous. and if you have hair
50:54
that is damaged or colored, you
50:57
might want to use this because there is
50:59
no heat damage. I also love this for middle
51:01
schoolers or teams to get them started without
51:04
any heat damage. And then finally,
51:06
this is so old school. I love
51:08
this so much. The Conair Hot
51:10
Rollers, they're making a comeback people. 21
51:12
,000 five star reviews on Amazon under
51:14
$40. We had producer Nicole Wilkins
51:16
try these out for us. What she
51:18
loved is that it didn't damage
51:20
her hair. She said it just gave
51:22
her a really soft to gentle
51:24
curl, largely in part to the ceramic
51:26
technology and the velvety coating on
51:28
these curlers. Great options at every price
51:30
point, no heat damage and great
51:32
hair. Always great hair with this
51:34
one, Lori B. And thank you to all
51:36
of our models. You can get these products
51:39
on our website and coming up, some Philadelphia
51:41
Eagles are here to swoop in and help
51:43
us out. We're
51:46
a war. You want to
51:48
fight or you want to win? Now
51:50
streaming. The thing is smaller, thinking like
51:52
a thief. I'm thinking like a soldier.
51:55
Think like a leader. The critically
51:57
acclaimed series, Andor, returns to
51:59
Disney+. If it goes up in
52:01
flames, it will burn very
52:03
brightly. Remember this moment. You're right
52:05
here, and you're ready to
52:07
fight. Welcome to the rebellion. Andor,
52:10
season two, new episodes
52:12
Tuesdays only on Disney+.
52:20
Adoption, she has dwarfism. Starring Ellen Pompeo
52:22
and Mark Duplass. Something is off.
52:24
She's just a little girl. You think
52:26
she's a faking? She has adult
52:28
teeth? They're signs of puberty? Inspired
52:30
by the shocking stories, the Torah family
52:32
apart. I don't know what's going on. How
52:34
old are you? You should get a
52:36
lawyer. You have no idea how those people
52:38
hurt this girl. I
52:49
promise this is the best thing
52:51
to do on a Friday. This is
52:53
an amazing story. Welcome back to
52:55
GMA. We've got a great crowd here
52:57
this morning. Everybody's from the Eagle
52:59
organization and the family to help recognize
53:01
Autism acceptance month. And we're teaming
53:04
up with Super Bowl 59 champion, Philadelphia
53:06
Eagles, who are making sure everyone
53:08
wins off the field, too. With the
53:10
Eagles Autism Foundation, it's raised nearly
53:12
$40 million for research and care. Isn't
53:14
that incredible, guys? Good job, everybody,
53:16
by the way. people with
53:18
autism and their families live life to the
53:20
fullest. We're going to talk to the team and
53:23
that makes these clanks happen but first let's take
53:25
a look at what they do. For
53:30
13 -year -old Eagle fans Tyler and
53:32
his mom Stephanie the Eagles Autism Foundation
53:34
has been a game changer. It's
53:36
more than just a foundation it is
53:38
a family. Tyler even making a
53:40
big catch like this. At
53:43
one of their all -purpose clinics. And you
53:46
know that gave Tyler a thrill like
53:48
no other. It feels great. It
53:50
feels like I'm getting attention for
53:52
what I'm doing. He just wants
53:54
to show everybody what he can do.
53:57
It's great. It's really fun to watch.
53:59
The clinic's focusing on abilities, not
54:02
disabilities and giving kids a chance
54:04
to practice, cheer and even
54:06
drum it up. Something
54:08
Tyler couldn't get enough of. We'll
54:10
do it again and again and
54:12
again. The organization also
54:14
giving families a community of
54:17
inclusion and acceptance. I needed
54:19
an outlet. Sorry.
54:24
The biggest thing is we have
54:26
other people to relate to meeting
54:28
people and talking to people and
54:30
being connected with these people. It's
54:32
literally impacted every possible facet of
54:34
our lives. And it gives
54:36
the kids a chance to meet some of their
54:38
Eagles heroes, like offensive tackle Jordan
54:40
Milada. For them, it is a breath of
54:42
fresh air that they get to hang
54:45
out with somebody that they may look up
54:47
to. It reminds me there's more to
54:49
life than just stresses of football. The
54:51
team selling these special shirts raising
54:53
more than a quarter million dollars
54:55
for autism research and programs. That's
54:58
the best part about our fans. We
55:00
start something, our community, our fans, they really
55:02
get behind it. As for Tyler and
55:04
Stephanie, it's like going home. I honestly don't
55:06
know where Tyler would be without it. So
55:12
we've got a mini clinic happening right
55:14
now. We've got the Eagle cheerleaders. We've
55:16
got swoop. We've got families all here.
55:18
Jordan Milana is here. Landon Dickerson is
55:20
here. Coach Stowland is here. These kids
55:23
have been running drills all morning long.
55:25
They're not tired yet. The Philadelphia Eagles
55:27
Foundation. Guys, welcome.
55:29
We're so glad you're here. Great
55:31
to be here. All
55:34
right, so Ellie,
55:37
let's talk a
55:39
little bit. How
55:41
impactful is the
55:43
organization for the
55:45
families? Absolutely. I mean
55:47
any parent that has a child with autism
55:49
will tell you that having a job
55:51
is a huge achievement and for him to
55:53
experience this every day and to experience
55:55
this a few minutes from his own house,
55:57
to drive there, to spend time with
55:59
these guys who are his idols, his whole
56:02
childhood. I mean, we live by the
56:04
Ego Stadium. We're huge fans of
56:06
the family before that. I feel
56:08
like he made it and I feel like it's
56:10
a dream come true for the whole family. And
56:12
it's amazing to see him so happy like he
56:14
is this morning. Yes, Jared. Okay, tell us about
56:16
popcorn for the people. You also work
56:18
at this company? Yes.
56:22
One of the things I work there is
56:24
making plain popcorn for the guys from the
56:27
Turtles. And I started working
56:29
there, since this company
56:31
opened in the city, it
56:33
also works for the eagles as
56:35
a foundation. The eagles actually gave
56:37
him the opportunity to get a
56:39
second job, so not only he
56:41
had to have a part time
56:43
job, he has two jobs, and
56:45
both companies are equally. So
56:49
you stay busy, Jared. Two
56:52
jobs. Busy guy. And,
56:55
Landon, you're part of this foundation all
56:57
year round. Why is it so important for
56:59
you? Yeah, for me, really,
57:01
it's educating people about autism, acceptance, and
57:03
awareness, and not only other people, but
57:05
even myself at times. There's a lot
57:07
of learning I've been able to do
57:09
from joining the Eagles and being a
57:11
part of the Eagles Autism Foundation. And
57:13
really, the second part is, you know,
57:15
stuff like this, being able to interact
57:17
with fans, families, and come out here
57:19
and support these guys. Honestly, they
57:21
bring more energy than most other fans I
57:23
know. They love to be out here. They love
57:25
us, and we love to be with them. And
57:28
they're just, honestly, just a great time.
57:30
mean, I enjoy having fun as
57:32
much as they do, so. I mean, you can
57:34
hear the excitement. Jordan, coach, why
57:36
is it important to you guys to do
57:38
this all the time? Well,
57:40
it's very important to
57:42
Mr. Lauren Eagle's organization.
57:46
This means a lot to
57:48
our family. And
57:50
to be honest, we, you know,
57:52
these shirts, we kind of stumbled
57:54
into this whole thing. Raised
57:56
over $250 ,000. That's your name
57:58
on the top there. Yeah, well,
58:00
it all started with Jordan, really,
58:03
Lane Johnson. Jordan
58:05
having a conversation in the locker room,
58:07
and then it just took off
58:09
from there, and we're grateful. Every dollar
58:11
of this goes to the Eagles,
58:13
the autism organization. Every dollar,
58:15
that's amazing thing to do.
58:17
incredible work that you're doing. And
58:19
we also have a special
58:21
announcement this morning. What can
58:23
you tell us? Breaking news! Breaking
58:25
news! Breaking news! We've been working
58:28
on this all morning, Sam. That's
58:30
really well Look, we have people
58:32
from all over this New York
58:34
area, okay, and they have come
58:36
to us and said, we are
58:38
gonna match up to $150 ,000. Every
58:43
dollar goes to Eagles Autism
58:45
Foundation. All right. That is amazing.
58:47
That is breaking news. Thank you guys. But you
58:49
know what? We can't have the current Super Bowl
58:51
champs right here with us without playing some football.
58:53
Okay, so it's time to put you guys work.
58:55
I think that's what Sam said. Oh yeah. That's
58:57
why he's got the jersey on. what I just
58:59
said. So one of the awesome
59:01
initiatives of the Eagles Autism Foundation, the football
59:03
clinics that you guys put on throughout
59:05
the year and across the globe. And this
59:07
morning, we're going to see the clinic
59:10
in action. You guys ready? I
59:15
kind of walk
59:17
you through it
59:19
while Jordan's going.
59:25
Oh, good job! George, start on the right side.
59:27
OK, start on the right side. It's going
59:29
to go left foot, right foot, left, and you
59:31
stick. And then you're going to
59:33
go right, left, right, stick, left, right,
59:36
left. Hey, why? Jordan will pick up the
59:38
pace here. Well, no, Jordan too bad. And
59:41
that's called the Iggy Shuffle. All
59:43
right. That was pretty good. because
59:45
you've done it for how many years now?
59:47
No, not long. One, two, three, stick.
59:49
And then go right. One, two, three, stick.
59:51
One, three. There you go. There you
59:53
go. back
59:58
don't you dare
1:00:00
cheer for that Rebecca
1:00:02
Jarvis you tell
1:00:04
me we have to
1:00:06
go what are
1:00:08
you telling me we
1:00:10
got to go
1:00:12
or what are you
1:00:14
telling me we'll
1:00:16
be right back you
1:00:18
go up Welcome
1:00:23
back. Wedding season is fast approaching
1:00:25
in some multi -billion dollar industry, as
1:00:27
you know. Rebecca, it's about to get
1:00:29
more expensive. Unfortunately, it is George.
1:00:31
According to the knot, the average wedding
1:00:33
cost is $33 ,000 last year, but
1:00:35
experts warn that tariffs could drive
1:00:37
those prices higher. There are some things
1:00:39
you can do to prepare. Plan
1:00:43
for the worst. Hope for the
1:00:45
best. Planning your dream
1:00:47
wedding might be getting even more
1:00:49
expensive due to the impact of
1:00:52
tariffs on the wedding industry. We're
1:00:54
all just kind of bracing for
1:00:56
impact with many aspects of wedding
1:00:58
sourced abroad. Maren White, a wedding
1:01:00
planner at toast events in Atlanta,
1:01:03
says the impacts could be felt
1:01:05
across the board from flowers and
1:01:07
invitations to hair and makeup. And
1:01:09
of course the gown. I definitely
1:01:11
think we need to be inflating
1:01:13
basically every category at this point.
1:01:16
90 % of bridal gowns are produced
1:01:18
in China along with other Asian
1:01:20
countries. According to the National Bridal
1:01:22
Retailers Association, they warn
1:01:24
that combined tariffs and duties
1:01:27
on gowns from China would
1:01:29
now be 169%. We have
1:01:31
to call 211 clients and
1:01:33
ask them for more money
1:01:35
for tariffs. That's $65 ,000. We're
1:01:38
a small store. We can't absorb
1:01:40
that. So what is what
1:01:42
happens? It goes back to the customer.
1:01:44
It's going to be the end user. The
1:01:47
client is going to have
1:01:49
these higher costs across all aspects
1:01:51
of the wedding world. Joanne
1:01:53
Gregoli, owner of elegant occasions, says
1:01:55
it has some of her
1:01:57
clients already taking a cautious outlook.
1:01:59
I think people are just
1:02:02
kind of the waitancy approach. Planners
1:02:04
tell us not everything can
1:02:06
be sourced locally. There is no
1:02:08
single wedding business in the
1:02:10
United States that use 100 %
1:02:12
American made supply chain items. It's
1:02:14
just impossible. The vision may
1:02:16
be impacted and may have to
1:02:19
pivot slightly due to these
1:02:21
tariffs. But at the end of
1:02:23
the day, you're here to marry your partner. That's
1:02:26
right. Remember what it's all about at
1:02:28
the end of the day. There are
1:02:30
some other ways to save, though, buying
1:02:32
off the rack instead of getting that
1:02:34
custom made dress can be very helpful. Also
1:02:36
think about. it up.
1:02:38
You know, people can do a backyard wedding.
1:02:40
There's plenty of different ways you can do this.
1:02:42
If you are doing it at a venue,
1:02:44
look at that contract. The fine print is really
1:02:46
key. And Sam, you had an idea. Well,
1:02:48
I'm just saying put it to your house. Take
1:02:51
all that money, put it to your house,
1:02:53
put it to your future. Of course,
1:02:55
no one liked that idea. I mean, you know, it made
1:02:57
sense to me. But you did say throw a party in
1:02:59
the house. Right, right. And then a party in the house.
1:03:01
But like my niece, Sydney, all of her friends got married
1:03:03
at about the same time. I'm like, well, can't you share
1:03:05
a dress? And no one liked that idea either. If
1:03:11
you want to throw any ideas out there,
1:03:14
go for it. I am all about the
1:03:16
shared dress. That's
1:03:18
what I'm talking about. We don't need this many dresses
1:03:20
in the world. That's for sure. Somebody could have mine.
1:03:22
I'm happy to give it to you. Let's
1:03:25
talk about the sweltering weekend ahead
1:03:27
that's coming for Longboat Key, Florida.
1:03:29
Just one of the many cities that will get close
1:03:31
to or break daily records. That's kind of been the
1:03:33
trend. They've been doing a lot of that near Tampa. of
1:03:36
course is closer to Sarasota, but Fort Myers
1:03:38
could do it tomorrow at 91 Tallahassee even
1:03:41
at 90 and 92. So through the weekend
1:03:43
and much warmer than normal, even looking into
1:03:45
the first part of May. We
1:03:47
are so happy to be joined now
1:03:50
by bestselling author Laura Day. She's an
1:03:52
expert on intuition and is here to
1:03:54
talk about her new book, The Prism,
1:03:56
Seven Steps to Heal Your Past and
1:03:58
Transform Your Future. Laura, good morning. Hello.
1:04:00
Good morning. Hi. You know, we've had you
1:04:02
on GMA for years and we have a
1:04:05
photo. 30 years. I don't want to admit
1:04:07
to it. 30 years. But we have a
1:04:09
photo from 2006. I want to show that
1:04:11
photo here. There's something special about your dress. Yes,
1:04:14
this is the dress that I
1:04:16
wore for my very first book,
1:04:18
for my first appearance around 30
1:04:20
odd years ago on GMA. I
1:04:22
had it taken out two inches
1:04:24
full disclosure. But this
1:04:26
is it. And I thought, wow, it's my
1:04:28
lucky dress. It's beautiful. This is my
1:04:31
last self -help book. So I wanted to
1:04:33
start and end with this dress. OK. And
1:04:35
you call it the prism. What
1:04:37
led to that? The Prisma
1:04:39
is the architecture of all of us.
1:04:41
It's what makes you you, but
1:04:43
what makes you you also determines your
1:04:45
life, what you attract, who you
1:04:47
meet, and a lot of us need
1:04:49
to change that. So this is
1:04:51
the way to change. Well, and you
1:04:53
just teased that, but that's big
1:04:56
headline here. This is your last book.
1:04:58
Yeah, it's my, I'm gonna write
1:05:00
Memoir Next, but this, I realized that
1:05:02
this was the book that saved
1:05:04
my life. intuition, those flashes of insight
1:05:06
helped, but that this was in
1:05:08
a way given to me when I
1:05:10
was a small child. I have
1:05:12
two siblings and a mother who suicided
1:05:15
and I realized this was the
1:05:17
difference. And after my brother's suicide, it
1:05:19
emerged and I thought I need
1:05:21
to put this down because people need
1:05:23
to know a small change makes
1:05:25
an enormous difference in your life. It
1:05:27
can have that ripple effect. It's
1:05:29
the butterfly effect in the universe. When
1:05:32
you think about making those small changes,
1:05:34
however, it can be very daunting for anyone
1:05:36
out there, especially if you're stuck in
1:05:38
those patterns and the book goes into depth.
1:05:40
But what would be the first step
1:05:42
you would recommend someone take if they're struggling
1:05:44
with that question? You know,
1:05:46
I think that the most important
1:05:48
awareness and it's why I write self
1:05:50
-help. It's why I use self -help.
1:05:52
It's why I go into communities. The
1:05:54
most important awareness is that
1:05:57
we're taught that the answer is inside
1:05:59
of us. I guarantee if the answer
1:06:01
was inside of you, you would have
1:06:03
fixed the problem. You need to find
1:06:05
something outside, those flashes of intuitive insight,
1:06:08
self -help, being in communities and taking a
1:06:10
moment to let things have impact. and
1:06:12
make a shift, but a miracle takes
1:06:14
a moment, and it's so important, especially
1:06:16
in those moments of desperation to remember,
1:06:18
it takes a moment, way to beat,
1:06:21
do something different, and you cannot do
1:06:23
something different from inside yourself. And it
1:06:25
may feel like a lot right at
1:06:27
that moment, but later on, when you
1:06:29
look back, you say, oh, I'm glad
1:06:31
it happened in the time that it
1:06:33
happened. Right. Yeah, absolutely. This is part
1:06:35
memoir. What do you hope that people
1:06:38
take away from this? You
1:06:40
know I I did include memoir
1:06:42
and it's actually every time I
1:06:44
read it. It's a little embarrassing
1:06:46
But I did include memoir because
1:06:48
I really wanted people to understand
1:06:50
that that intuitives people who have
1:06:52
that extra sense People who write
1:06:54
the answers the changes They do
1:06:56
so because they were in such
1:06:58
trouble They were such messes. They
1:07:01
were built so poorly that their
1:07:03
whole life work is finding the
1:07:05
answer. And I was lucky enough
1:07:07
to have thousands of thousands of
1:07:09
students over the last 10 years
1:07:11
to really try, I love the
1:07:13
feel of this book, to try
1:07:15
this system out and tell me,
1:07:17
hey, this one took too long.
1:07:19
You've got to revamp it. This
1:07:21
worked for me immediately. Are we
1:07:23
all intuitive? We're all intuitive.
1:07:26
And that's a double -edged sword because intuition
1:07:28
is also how porous we are at
1:07:30
picking up and being manipulated by others.
1:07:32
We need to train that intuition, so
1:07:34
it makes us better versions of self.
1:07:36
Oh, well, this is such a fantastic
1:07:38
book. Thank you so much, Laura. so
1:07:40
Thank you so much for having me.
1:07:42
And the Prism will be available on
1:07:44
Tuesday. All right, thank you. And coming
1:07:46
up here, Laurie B. has some special
1:07:48
guests showing off fun new merch. And
1:07:50
all those dogs are adoptable from best
1:07:52
friends of Animal Society. Stick around. Oh,
1:07:54
there's Stitch. We'll be right back. Welcome
1:07:59
back to GMA. And there is Sam.
1:08:01
And you will see Stitch in just a
1:08:03
minute. He is the star of the all
1:08:05
new live action movie, Lilo and Stitch. And
1:08:07
Lori Bergamotto is back with a sneak peek
1:08:09
at products inspired by both, oh, there's Stitch,
1:08:11
inspired by both the original 2002 movie
1:08:13
and the upcoming one. And you can find
1:08:15
this all on our website. Hello, Lori. Hello,
1:08:17
my friends. We've got Stitch. We've got Sam.
1:08:20
What else could we need, right? All
1:08:22
the S's are covered. There we go. OK, but
1:08:24
I want to talk to you about this amazing stuff.
1:08:26
You guys know it's been 22 years. since the
1:08:28
original came out, but the live actions coming out and
1:08:30
look at all these fun toys. amazing.
1:08:32
It's a huge plush. We've got these blind
1:08:35
boxes. You have kids you know blind boxes,
1:08:37
half the fun is the mystery, but I
1:08:39
want to show you this many moods stitch.
1:08:41
So seven different moods when you press
1:08:43
him. Look at his LCD eyes.
1:08:45
Okay, the eyes are coolest. Isn't
1:08:48
that so cool? And they have all different
1:08:50
moods. There's one that's hangry, which is representative
1:08:52
of all of us before we had coffee,
1:08:54
right? But he's so much
1:08:56
fun, chaotic, cute. Exactly what you
1:08:58
want from Stitch in these toys. Everyone will
1:09:00
love it. And here you can wear
1:09:02
your love for Lilo and Stitch. I mean,
1:09:04
Gio, you know, Stitch is not just
1:09:06
a character. He is a lifestyle. So
1:09:09
this is the first look, you guys.
1:09:11
Disney for the Gap. This is the
1:09:13
first collab that your first time you're
1:09:15
seeing. Oh, really? Disney and the Gap.
1:09:17
Disney for the Gap here. And then
1:09:19
also we've got this great lounge fly
1:09:21
belt bag, this Disney store backpacks, and
1:09:23
the crocs. A little bit of comfort
1:09:25
with your chaotic alien. at the time
1:09:27
of year, you need those exactly. So
1:09:29
we love that and then also for
1:09:31
the home. Look at all this fun
1:09:33
stuff. So we've got this F H
1:09:35
I heat unbrushed. This is so fun
1:09:37
and look at this fuzzy blanket. Love
1:09:40
that the little so I feel
1:09:42
like you know, right? Yeah, that
1:09:44
look great. Yeah,
1:09:46
we got to get to the puppies. These
1:09:49
are Sam. So
1:09:51
these are actually senior adoptable dogs from
1:09:53
Best Friends Animal Society. variety. We love
1:09:55
them look at how cute fruit that
1:09:57
is in this pet that they describe
1:10:00
for that just as a sassy middle
1:10:02
-aged lady and let me tell you
1:10:04
I can relate for that. We
1:10:06
have a look at Princessa in
1:10:08
this costume that's so adorable this stitch
1:10:10
costume and then of course we
1:10:13
have a harness over here on Sarah
1:10:15
look at beautiful Sarah. And again,
1:10:17
these are senior dogs they are adoptable
1:10:19
you guys and with this. If
1:10:24
you don't want to run a puppy around
1:10:26
or chase after one. A senior dog's a
1:10:28
good bet. I mean, I have three kids.
1:10:30
I feel like a senior dog is actually
1:10:32
right. It sounds like I should be looking
1:10:34
for it. I could take fruit with the
1:10:36
pet bed, too. I mean, come on. If
1:10:38
you want the chaos in the product and
1:10:40
not in the dog, this is the way
1:10:42
to go. Beautiful. Thank you, Lori, especially fruit
1:10:44
bat. And of course you, Sam, as My
1:10:46
pleasure. My one stitch is opening exclusively in
1:10:48
theaters on May 23rd. And you can find
1:10:50
all these products on our website. Thanks so
1:10:52
much for joining us on this Friday. a
1:10:54
great show. I hope to see you tomorrow on
1:10:56
GMA Saturday. Have a great weekend everybody. Rapper
1:11:34
Sean Diddy Combs was a
1:11:36
kingmaker. He had wealth,
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fame, and power. Until it
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all came crashing down. Federal
1:11:42
investigators raiding two homes owned
1:11:44
by hip -hop mogul Sean
1:11:46
Diddy Combs. I'm Brian Buckmire,
1:11:49
an ABC News legal contributor.
1:11:51
As Diddy heads to trial,
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we trace his remarkable rise
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and fall and what could
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be next. Listen to Bad
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Rap, The Case Against Diddy, a new
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series from ABC Audio. Listen
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now, wherever you get your podcasts.
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