Severe weather sweeps the East after devastating the South; With beach season upon us, we'll tell you an expert's tips on how to avoid rip currents; We're celebrating AANHPI heritage month - from Broadway to K-pop with Aladdin's Iago; and more on ABC’s Good Morning America.
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Welcome to JuanOSavin – your destination for breaking news, real-time updates, and in-depth analysis of the stories shaping our world. From the halls of government to the global stage, we bring you exclusive interviews and uncensored coverage on the issues that matter most.
In today’s world, information is everything. That’s why JuanOSavin is committed to providing a clear, independent voice in the noise of mainstream media. Whether it's the latest political developments, global crises, or social movements, we deliver facts, not narratives. No spin. Just the truth.
We know that in order to make informed decisions, you need the full picture. That's why our coverage is thorough, unfiltered, and designed to keep you ahead of the curve. JuanOSavin goes beyond the headlines, offering fresh perspectives and challenging the status quo.
If you want the facts, if you want transparency, and if you want to stay informed without the usual filter, you’re in the right place. Join us as we take a deep dive into the world’s biggest stories and provide the insights you won’t find elsewhere.
🔴 Stay informed. 🗣️ Question the narrative. 🌍 Be part of the conversation.
#BreakingNews #JuanOSavin #Politics #GlobalNews #TruthMatters #IndependentMedia #AlternativeNews #Election2024 #StayInformed #FreedomOfSpeech
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NewsTranscript
00:00:00Good morning, America. Trails of destruction. Tornadoes tearing through the south. At least one person killed in Kentucky. Neighborhoods destroyed. The new severe weather and flash flood threats right now as smoke from more than 180 wildfires in Canada crosses the border. The air quality alerts this morning.
00:00:20Steel deal. President Trump in Pittsburgh touting a new merger and vowing to double tariffs on foreign steel.
00:00:28We're bringing it up from 25 percent. We're doubling it to 50 percent. Plus, the latest Supreme Court ruling. What it could mean for a half million immigrants.
00:00:41NBA star fires back. The Pelicans two-time All-Star Zion Williamson accused of rape and domestic violence in a civil lawsuit. Now he's responding to the allegations.
00:00:51Close call. After two jets were cleared for takeoff on parallel runways, then one pilot reportedly turned into the path of the other.
00:01:001152, turn left heading 280 immediately.
00:01:02Air traffic control demanding an urgent course correction. The FAA now investigating.
00:01:08Measles outbreak. The new cases reported and the caution to travelers heading out of the country. The advice from the CDC.
00:01:21What you're looking for has been here the whole time.
00:01:25And tailor-made deal. The singing superstar surprising Swifties with news that she's regained control of her entire catalog of music.
00:01:34Why she's thanking fans for their help.
00:01:39Live from ABC News in New York. This is Good Morning America.
00:01:46It's a little shoulder shuffle.
00:01:49Good morning.
00:01:51We're trying.
00:01:52So great to have you with us this morning. So, Taylor Swift, she's got her music back, folks.
00:01:57Ladies and gentlemen, after the masters of her first six albums were sold without her knowledge six years ago, but now she's got it back.
00:02:04A little help from the fans as well, too. More on that ahead. Plus, all eyes on the NBA playoffs tonight as the Eastern Conference finals shift back to Indiana for game six.
00:02:14Can't wait for that. Also, much more on that. Plus, what former President Biden said in his first public comments about his cancer diagnosis.
00:02:21That's coming up.
00:02:22Yes, a lot to get to this morning, but we do begin with the violent weather hitting the east and the wildfire smoke smothering the Midwest.
00:02:28Samara Theodore is tracking it all. Good morning, Samara.
00:02:32And the threat for thunderstorms is still looming, but they did leave in their wake devastation.
00:02:39This morning, new images revealing the scope of devastation after an EF-2 tore through Kentucky, killing at least one person, injuring multiple and shredding neighborhood after neighborhood.
00:02:51Confirmed tornado touched down multiple injured, including missing persons.
00:02:56Winds of up to 115 miles an hour flipping vehicles, flattening homes and uprooting trees.
00:03:02So it's a small area was hit, but it was devastating.
00:03:04According to officials in Washington County, at least one person was killed here and 14 more hurt, including a three-year-old child.
00:03:12Much of the heartland also ravaged by severe storms, tornadoes hitting Tennessee, fragments scattered throughout Loudoun County.
00:03:19Structures turned into mangled debris, left unrecognizable.
00:03:23South Carolina hit two toppled trees littered throughout Myrtle Beach, some falling onto homes, crews working to clear the area.
00:03:33And north of the American border, a state of emergency in Manitoba, Canada amid days of intensifying wildfires.
00:03:40Thousands of residents urged to evacuate as flames tear through the region, 187 active wildfires remaining.
00:03:47Now smoke from the blaze spreading to the states, seen here in Minnesota.
00:03:51Residents there, as well as Michigan and Wisconsin, under air quality alerts as that smoke starts drifting south.
00:03:58And so, yeah, it's not just the storms.
00:04:01We're also dealing with the wildfire smoke.
00:04:03In fact, you can see some of that smoke getting pulled down into the upper Midwest, all due to the storm system that's going to bring heavy rain and damaging winds to parts of the East Coast.
00:04:12So let's get right into it.
00:04:13Right now, flood alerts are already in place.
00:04:15We also have the threat for strong storms today.
00:04:18They won't be as severe as what we saw in those images, but we could still see heavy rain and damaging winds from Richmond to Washington, D.C., down to Roanoke as we head through the remainder of our Saturday.
00:04:29As far as timing this out, notice this afternoon, it's a bit of a soaker, especially for those living in New England.
00:04:35Heavy rain for those living in the Delmarva Peninsula in D.C.
00:04:38As we move through time into the second half of our weekend on Sunday, finally starting to see some reprieve and drying out.
00:04:45That's a look at your forecast.
00:04:47Whit, back to you.
00:04:48All right, we'll stay on top of all of it.
00:04:49Samara, thank you.
00:04:50We've got a President Trump promising to double tariffs on foreign steel and announcing a major deal with Japan as Elon Musk officially leaves his role at the White House.
00:04:59ABC's senior White House correspondent Selina Wang joins us with the latest.
00:05:03Selina, good morning.
00:05:04Hey, Whit, good morning.
00:05:05Yeah, President Trump is once again vowing new tariffs, this time saying he'll double tariffs on imported steel from 25% to 50%.
00:05:13The President says they'll kick into effect on Wednesday.
00:05:16All of this comes as Elon Musk is stepping away from his official role at the White House.
00:05:22Overnight, President Trump rallying at a steel mill in Pittsburgh, vowing to double tariffs on foreign steel.
00:05:28We're bringing it up from 25%.
00:05:32We're doubling it to 50%.
00:05:34That means that nobody's going to be able to steal your industry.
00:05:38Trump also touting an expected deal between U.S. Steel and Japan's Nippon Steel, but revealing few details, promising the iconic company will remain controlled by the USA.
00:05:48You're going to stay an American company.
00:05:50There will be no layoffs and no outsourcing whatsoever.
00:05:54And every U.S. steel worker will soon receive a well-deserved $5,000 bonus.
00:06:01Just hours before, Trump gave an Oval Office farewell to Elon Musk, the world's richest man stepping away from his official government role, leading the Department of Government Efficiency.
00:06:12Elon gave an incredible service. Nobody liked him.
00:06:15And he had to go through the slings and the arrows, which is a shame because he's an incredible patriot.
00:06:24Musk says he'll continue to serve as an unofficial advisor to the president, but falling far short of his original promise to cut $2 trillion in federal spending.
00:06:34Musk's team claims they've cut $175 billion so far.
00:06:38This is not the end of Doge, but really the beginning.
00:06:41Musk is leaving the White House just days after he broke with the president over his budget bill.
00:06:46I was like disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decrease it, and reminds the work that the Doge team is doing.
00:06:56This comes as the Supreme Court gives Trump a win, ruling the administration can end protections for more than 500,000 immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela, at least for now.
00:07:08In a scathing dissent, Justice Kintaji Brown Jackson warned of the devastating consequences of allowing the government to precipitously upend the lives and livelihoods of nearly half a million non-citizens.
00:07:21So this has major implications for the more than 500,000 immigrants who came to this country legally with the promise of being protected from deportation for at least two years.
00:07:31Now, suddenly, they could be out of the workforce, they could be deported, but this decision for the Supreme Court, it's not final.
00:07:38This legal battle still continues to play out.
00:07:40Gio?
00:07:41It does indeed.
00:07:42All right, Selena, thank you so much.
00:07:43Meanwhile, the latest numbers on the economy show inflation is slowing, but people still aren't racing to spend.
00:07:48ABC's Morgan Norwood is here with more on the escalating battle over tariffs.
00:07:52Good morning, Morgan.
00:07:53Hey, Gio.
00:07:54Yes, more trade war whiplash this morning, and American consumers could soon be the ones paying the price.
00:07:59President Trump is accusing China of violating a recent agreement struck in Geneva that temporarily scaled back tariffs while negotiations continued.
00:08:07He posted on Truth Social that he's, quote, no longer Mr. Nice Guy.
00:08:11Now, while Trump didn't necessarily detail how China allegedly violated that deal, we do know that both sides agreed to significantly lower their tariffs.
00:08:19The U.S. from 145% to 30%, China 125% to 10%, in turn giving some relief to businesses and importers.
00:08:29There's also this big legal fight over those tariffs overall. Federal courts, they've been split on this.
00:08:34One ruling said the president overstepped his authority with the sweeping Liberation Day tariffs, but for now, a federal appeals court is allowing them to continue under emergency powers.
00:08:44But all of this comes as new data shows Americans pulled back on spending in April, and that's a clue that economic uncertainty may already be hitting home.
00:08:53Bottom line, consumers and retailers are now sort of walking this tightrope heading into what could be a more expensive and unpredictable summer geo.
00:09:01Okay, Morgan, so if U.S. companies are the ones that are footing the bill for these tariffs, I think the big question is what kinds of price hikes could shoppers start to see?
00:09:10Yeah, let's talk about it. We're already hearing from some big retailers like your Walmart, Macy's and Ford who say some price hikes are coming.
00:09:16Just yesterday, Gap saying that they've taken a hit, but trying their best not to pass the bill on to us, to consumers.
00:09:22But as I pointed out, Gio, consumers are a little bit skeptical.
00:09:25Remember, April's spending is down, so if these tensions keep rising, these tariffs, they stick around.
00:09:30Shoppers and their wallets could soon start feeling this.
00:09:33All right, a lot to watch over the weeks and months to come. Morgan, thank you. Jenae.
00:09:37All right, Gio, now to the war in Gaza.
00:09:39President Trump says he thinks an American-brokered ceasefire deal is close as the humanitarian crisis continues to grow there.
00:09:46ABC News chief foreign correspondent Ian Pannell joins us live from Tel Aviv. Good morning, Ian.
00:09:53Yeah, good morning, Jenae. Close, but not there yet.
00:09:56Lots of talk about a ceasefire, but no sign that the guns have actually fallen silent.
00:10:01President Trump and his special envoy Steve Witkoff presenting this proposal for a 60-day ceasefire, the release of hostages with Israeli backing.
00:10:10Hamas is now studying the plan, but honestly, it wants guarantees of a permanent end to the war, and that doesn't seem to be there yet.
00:10:17Overnight, Israel bombing Gaza once again.
00:10:20As you mentioned, the humanitarian situation on the ground is just dire.
00:10:24Israel blocking all food and medical aid back in March.
00:10:27It is now allowing a limited number of trucks in, but the UN is saying it's having very little effect.
00:10:33And that, quote, the catastrophic situation in Gaza is the worst since the war began, with widespread hunger and desperation.
00:10:41There are also reports of some trucks being looted this morning.
00:10:44Meanwhile, an American-backed humanitarian relief operation also facing huge problems in delivering aid,
00:10:51although it claims to have handed out two million meals so far.
00:10:54Meanwhile, you have a planned visit to the Palestinian-run West Bank by Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries now being blocked by Israel.
00:11:02In short, guys, no sign that the suffering is easing or that peace is at hand despite President Trump's optimism.
00:11:09Wit.
00:11:10And as you pointed out, still so much desperation there in panel for us.
00:11:14Meantime, back here at home, former President Joe Biden making his first public comments about his cancer treatment.
00:11:19Biden saying that he feels good and is optimistic after revealing earlier this month that he was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer.
00:11:28The progress is good, you know. We're working on everything. It's moving along. I feel good.
00:11:36Biden also shared that he has started treatments for the cancer and is working with one of the best surgeons in the world.
00:11:43Okay, Wit, we turn now to NBA star Zion Williamson denying allegations of rape and abuse made by a woman in a new lawsuit.
00:11:49His lawyer is calling it an extortion attempt.
00:11:52ABC's Melissa Adan is here now with this story. Good morning, Melissa.
00:11:55Good morning, Gio.
00:11:56So two-time NBA all-star Zion Williamson is accused of rape and years of sexual, physical, emotional, and financial abuse in a new lawsuit filed right here in Los Angeles.
00:12:07Now, a woman claiming to have dated the New Orleans Pelicans forward from 2018 to 2023 accuses a 24-year-old of a continuing pattern of abusive, controlling, and threatening behavior.
00:12:19The civil complaint details two alleged incidents of rape taking place in 2020 in Beverly Hills, as well as accusations of strangulation, death threats to the plaintiff and her family, as well as physical abuse.
00:12:31Now, Williamson's attorney denies the allegations, calling the claims categorically false and reckless, adding that it appears to be an extortion attempt, which he says was reported to law enforcement.
00:12:42Now, his attorney also adds that Williamson and the plaintiff never dated, but maintained a consensual, casual relationship that began when he was 18.
00:12:51That's around the time that Williamson played one season at Duke before he was the Pelicans' first overall pick in 2019.
00:12:58Now, because this is a civil complaint, no criminal charges have been filed, the plaintiff is seeking monetary and punitive damages, and a Pelican spokesperson deferred comment to Williamson's legal team.
00:13:10Janae?
00:13:11All right, Melissa, thank you for that.
00:13:13Turning now to the FAA investigating yet another close call, two passenger jets with a combined 150 people aboard coming within 300 feet of each other on takeoff in San Francisco.
00:13:24ABC's Ike Ajashi explains how it happened.
00:13:28Good morning, Ike.
00:13:29Hey, good morning, Janae.
00:13:29It was a scary moment for air traffic controllers who had to react quickly when a commercial jet veered into the path of another jet taking off at the same time, an incident adding to the long list of recent aviation mishaps.
00:13:41This morning, the FAA is investigating a frightening close call at San Francisco International Airport between two commercial jets.
00:13:50On May 13th, two jets, one from United and another from SkyWest, were both cleared for takeoff on parallel runways.
00:13:58According to reports, the United jet was supposed to turn right after departure while the SkyWest plane was cleared to turn left.
00:14:05But in a critical error, the United pilot turned left directly into the path of the SkyWest aircraft.
00:14:11Alarms sounding in the cockpit, forcing the SkyWest crew into an evasive movement.
00:14:16Air traffic control demanding an urgent course correction.
00:14:231152, turn left heading 280 immediately.
00:14:261150, 280.
00:14:27280 immediately.
00:14:28Tracking data from Flight Radar 24 shows at their closest, the planes were less than 2,000 feet apart laterally and only 275 feet apart vertically.
00:14:39United 1152, how'd you wind up over there?
00:14:41In a statement, the FAA says that United plane turned without authorization, and the agency is investigating the event.
00:14:47This could have been an even closer call because the regional jets saw the United jet turning in front of it, and they aggressively turned behind the United jet so that they wouldn't come any closer.
00:14:58If they hadn't seen the United jet, it could have been a very, very close call.
00:15:04Now, this incident happened just after 5 p.m. during daylight and clear conditions.
00:15:09And, Witt, if the weather during that time affected visibility in any way, it could have been a massive disaster.
00:15:14Witt.
00:15:15Another alarming case.
00:15:17All right, Ike Jachi for us, thank you.
00:15:19A reality star who prosecutors called a career swindler is speaking out now that he's a free man.
00:15:24Todd Chrisley on Friday thanked President Trump for issuing pardons to him and his wife, Julie, after their convictions for tax evasion and fraud.
00:15:33Chrisley served two and a half years in federal prison.
00:15:35Authorities say they stole millions in a banking scheme and failed to pay their taxes.
00:15:40Chrisley maintained that the trial and conviction were unfair.
00:15:44Even though this part has happened, I still was convicted of something that I did not do.
00:15:51It could be you.
00:15:54Todd Chrisley says he now plans to advocate for prison reform and he's a return to reality TV.
00:16:01All right, Witt.
00:16:02Now to the nationwide measles outbreak.
00:16:0342 new cases reported.
00:16:05The total now climbing past 1,000 in 32 states.
00:16:08Almost all have been in unvaccinated people or people whose vaccination status is unknown.
00:16:13And this morning, the CDC also adding a travel caution, noting that cases are rising around the world.
00:16:18The agency says all international travelers should be fully vaccinated and will be at risk if they haven't been vaccinated or haven't had measles before.
00:16:27So a lot to watch there.
00:16:29Important reminders.
00:16:30Still waiting for that unofficial start to summer here on the East Coast.
00:16:33Matt, where do we get the heat?
00:16:35Gio's got the tank top box all opened up.
00:16:38They're still folding in there.
00:16:39You know what?
00:16:40I do.
00:16:40I'm ready.
00:16:41Let's go.
00:16:41He's ready.
00:16:42Here we go.
00:16:43All right.
00:16:43Let's turn to playoffs now.
00:16:44The NBA, New York Knicks.
00:16:46They face another win or go home tonight.
00:16:48ABC's Austin Singh is here with a look ahead.
00:16:50The big matchup.
00:16:52Pacers fans, though, they're feeling pretty good.
00:16:53That's right.
00:16:54Pacers fans are feeling good.
00:16:55But the Knicks are not done just yet, Whit.
00:16:58They were facing elimination in Game 5.
00:17:00And New York roared back to life at Madison Square Garden, blowing out the Pacers 111-94 to keep their playoff dreams alive.
00:17:08Jalen Brunson led the charge with 32 points, but they're calling it the cat game.
00:17:12Carl Anthony Towns added 24 points and 13 rebounds, energizing a Knicks squad that had suffered back-to-back home losses.
00:17:19Meanwhile, Indiana's Tyrese Halliburton, who had been a spark plug throughout the series, delivered a clunker, finishing with just 8 points.
00:17:25What was arguably his worst game of the postseason.
00:17:29Now the series shifts back to Indianapolis for Game 6, where the Pacers get another shot at closing things out at home.
00:17:34But after such a lopsided loss, it feels like momentum may have shifted towards the Knicks.
00:17:39Still, history isn't exactly on New York's side.
00:17:41Only 13 teams in NBA history have been able to climb back, being down 3-1.
00:17:45And the Knicks are 0-15 in such situations, including three previous instances against the Pacers.
00:17:51Game 6 tips off tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern.
00:17:54And with the trip to the finals on the line for Indy, guys, I'm expecting a dogfight.
00:17:59Yeah.
00:17:59Oh, my gosh.
00:18:000-15?
00:18:010-15.
00:18:02It's a tough one to climb back down 3-1.
00:18:04I mean, in all sports.
00:18:05Knicks fans are like, don't tell us the odds.
00:18:07Right.
00:18:07Don't say it.
00:18:08Don't say it.
00:18:09Hey, man.
00:18:09New York fans are saying, believe.
00:18:11You got the tanks ready for summer, too, right?
00:18:13Oh, Joe, you know.
00:18:14We're going to be on the beach.
00:18:15Let's go.
00:18:16Let's go.
00:18:16Let's do this.
00:18:17All right.
00:18:18Thanks so much.
00:18:18All right.
00:18:19Coming up here on GMA, cross-examination at the Sean Diddy Combs trial.
00:18:22The latest testimony from a former assistant to the music mogul.
00:18:26And regaining control.
00:18:28Taylor Swift's big announcement about buying back the rights to her first six albums.
00:18:33And ahead in our second hour, what parents need to know about managing the transition from school year to summer break.
00:18:39More GMA right after this.
00:18:40From now on, I'm number one, me, Margaret Houlihan.
00:18:50And believe me, soldier, I deserve better than you.
00:18:53At this chest, he's in pain.
00:18:55Welcome back to GMA.
00:18:56Fans are mourning the passing of actress Loretta Switt.
00:19:01Switt is best known for her Emmy-winning role as the quick-witted Major Margaret Hot Lips Houlihan in the classic TV show MASH.
00:19:10The series ran from 1972 to 1983.
00:19:14Switt died at her home in New York City.
00:19:16She was 87 years old.
00:19:18So many will miss her.
00:19:20What a life.
00:19:20Will be missed, absolutely.
00:19:22Now let's take a look at some of the other top stories that we're following on this Saturday morning.
00:19:25Police arresting a man suspected of shooting two officers in Ohio.
00:19:30Devontae Dixon is accused of opening fire on those two officers in Mifflin Township during a traffic stop on Wednesday.
00:19:37Dixon evaded police for hours until authorities closed in on him at a home outside Columbus.
00:19:43We say that's when Dixon turned a gun on himself.
00:19:46He survived and now faces attempted murder and assault charges.
00:19:50Also right now, the CDC's latest COVID vaccine recommendation appears to break with Health Secretary RFK Jr.
00:19:56The agency's updated immunization schedule still lists the shot for healthy children.
00:20:01The guidance now calls for children to get the shot after consulting with a health care provider.
00:20:06However, earlier this week, Kennedy said that the vaccine would be removed from the CDC schedule for healthy children.
00:20:12A semi-truck crashed, unleashing a massive swarm of bees, and it's causing quite the buzz in Washington state.
00:20:21That truck hauling 250 million bees lost its load near the Canadian border.
00:20:2870,000 pounds of honey beehives fell from the truck's bed, allowing the bees to break free.
00:20:34I also read that they brought in like a dozen beekeepers.
00:20:38It doesn't sound like enough for 250 million bees, but they're trying to collect as many as possible.
00:20:44Wow.
00:20:44Yeah.
00:20:45Clean up that mess for sure.
00:20:46All right, we do begin this half hour with the cross-examination of another star witness in the Sean Diddy Combs trial,
00:20:52a former assistant who alleges that Combs sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions.
00:20:57ABC's Erin Katursky has more on what happened in court.
00:21:01Erin, good morning.
00:21:01Good morning to you with three weeks of testimony so far, and witnesses have called the atmosphere around Sean Combs
00:21:07everything from chaotic, drug-addled, intense, sleepless, toxic, traumatizing, and violent.
00:21:13The defense is highlighting more fawning descriptions.
00:21:17After his one-time assistant, a woman testifying under the pseudonym Mia,
00:21:21told the jury working for Sean Combs left her with complex, severe PTSD.
00:21:26Defense attorneys confronted her with her flattering social media posts,
00:21:30calling Combs her mentor, a legend.
00:21:32The defense asking,
00:21:33One of the legends is the person you're telling this jury has traumatized you?
00:21:37Mia testified Combs physically and sexually assaulted her multiple times.
00:21:41She said it ruined her.
00:21:42Combs denies it.
00:21:43And his attorney questioned why she would then post,
00:21:45Thank you for being the good kind of crazy and continuing to inspire me every day.
00:21:51At this point, you have taken in so much trauma from him.
00:21:53That's what you told the jurors, right?
00:21:55Yes, I have, Mia answered.
00:21:57When the highs were high and the goods were good, you just fought so hard to stay in that.
00:22:01For his 45th birthday, the jury was shown a scrapbook of magazine articles from the 1990s
00:22:06that Mia made Combs and a handwritten card.
00:22:09Happy 45th birthday, Puff Daddy.
00:22:11The man who you say has ruined your life?
00:22:13This is what you write to him?
00:22:14The defense asked.
00:22:15At the time, as low as he would make me, he would also make me feel the opposite as well,
00:22:19Mia answered.
00:22:20It's called psychological abuse.
00:22:22Well, we all know that social media is typically people's most public persona.
00:22:26They typically do not put the worst of what is happening on their social media.
00:22:30So I think some of this, the jury is going to see through it and know that
00:22:34this is not a reliable source for everything someone feels about someone.
00:22:38While the cross-examination was going on in court at the White House,
00:22:41President Trump was asked about the possibility of pardoning Sean Combs if he's convicted.
00:22:46I don't know.
00:22:46I would certainly look at the facts.
00:22:48He used to really like me a lot.
00:22:50But I think when I ran for politics, he sort of, that relationship busted up.
00:22:55If I think somebody was mistreated, whether they like me or don't like me,
00:22:59it wouldn't have any impact.
00:23:01Combs' representative had no response to the talk of any pardon.
00:23:05Cross-examination of Mia is going to resume when court picks up on Monday with.
00:23:10And how does Mia's testimony fit in since Combs is not charged outright with domestic violence?
00:23:15The bigger picture here, the racketeering, the coercion, that sort of thing.
00:23:18And that's exactly where it fits.
00:23:19He is not charged with sex assault, with domestic violence.
00:23:23He denies sexually assaulting anyone.
00:23:24But federal prosecutors believe that Sean Combs subjected Mia to forced labor as part of the criminal enterprise that they've accused him of running.
00:23:34He denies running a criminal enterprise.
00:23:36But that's where her testimony fits.
00:23:38And she described being made to work 24 hours a day for eight years, sleepless nights, being made to do everything from cracking his knuckles to writing his next movie, to doing his taxes, to standing there for 22 hours a day doing nothing.
00:23:56That's quite the testimony so far.
00:23:58And more to come this week.
00:23:59That's right.
00:23:59Thank you, Aaron.
00:24:00Yeah, without a doubt, the world is watching this case.
00:24:02All right, Aaron, thank you so much.
00:24:03All right, coming up here on Good Morning America, Taylor Swift's huge announcement about her music and what it could mean for one of her beloved hit albums.
00:24:12Oh, this jam.
00:24:13Stick around.
00:24:14Welcome back to GMA and the announcement from Taylor Swift to her fans that she now owns the rights to all of her music, calling it her greatest dream coming true.
00:24:33Our resident Swifty, Will Gans, has more on this huge music deal.
00:24:38This is a big deal, Will.
00:24:40Good morning.
00:24:40A huge deal and a surprise, too.
00:24:42It's a moment six years in the making.
00:24:44Taylor Swift finally owns all her music every single era.
00:24:48Or as she said in her surprise announcement yesterday, my entire life's work, the best things that have ever been mine, finally actually are.
00:24:57No one has to know.
00:25:00At long last, she's reclaimed her reputation and her name.
00:25:04Cause our song is a slammin' screen door, sneakin' out late, tappin' on, hit a window.
00:25:10Taylor Swift revealing in a letter shared to her website, all of the music I've ever made now belongs to me.
00:25:17You belong with me.
00:25:20The Grammy winner buying back each of her first six albums, including the music videos.
00:25:25They'll tell you I'm insane.
00:25:27And concert specials from those eras.
00:25:30Taylor writing, to say this is my greatest dream come true, is actually being pretty reserved about it.
00:25:37All of Taylor's back catalog, off-limits to her for the last six years after they were sold against her wishes in 2019.
00:25:47Purchased by Ithaca Holdings and Scooter Braun.
00:25:50The masters then sold to Shamrock Holdings, which just struck this deal with Taylor.
00:25:54Traditionally in the record business, ownership has been out of people's grasp.
00:25:58It's been work-for-hire work.
00:26:00And she is one of the first who, people have quietly made deals to own their masters,
00:26:06but she was the first one who made a public crusade.
00:26:09And it just made her more relatable.
00:26:11No bad blood here.
00:26:12Taylor thanking the family-owned private equity firm, joking that
00:26:15my first tattoo might just be a huge shamrock in the middle of my forehead.
00:26:19You could call it karma.
00:26:21Karma's a relaxing karma.
00:26:23But your master's being sold prompted Taylor's re-recordings,
00:26:29devaluing the original music, simultaneously inspiring the heiress phenomenon and tour,
00:26:34which earned her the spending money to buy back that original music in the first place.
00:26:40Okay, so what does this all mean for Reputation Taylor's version?
00:26:44Well, the bad news is that Taylor says, quote,
00:26:46I haven't even re-recorded a quarter of it.
00:26:49The good news is that she also says there will be a time for the unreleased vault tracks from that album to hatch.
00:26:55So, we're done with the Easter egging and guessing what's next, right?
00:26:59Wrong!
00:27:00Oh!
00:27:00In the first paragraph of her letter, Taylor spells out the word this with 12 I's.
00:27:0612th studio album on the way, anyone?
00:27:08Anyone?
00:27:09Just me.
00:27:09I was going to leave you there to stew in that moment.
00:27:13I have not known rest for the past six years, and I don't plan on sleeping anytime soon.
00:27:19I do this with 12 I's.
00:27:21Listen, it could be something.
00:27:24Find in the Easter egg.
00:27:25It's probably nothing, but it could be something.
00:27:27You are a detective, sir.
00:27:28Wow.
00:27:29That's why we call you our Chief Swifty Correspondent.
00:27:31Thank you, Will.
00:27:32Now, on GMA, with the advice that could help keep you safe when you head to the beach.
00:27:36ABC's Victor Okendo sharing the new advice about rip currents, which have already killed at least 14 people in the U.S. this year.
00:27:43How to spot them and what to do if you get caught up in one.
00:27:46Here's his report.
00:27:49We're in Melbourne Beach, Florida, searching for rip currents.
00:27:53What makes a rip current so dangerous?
00:27:56They're out there every day, and surfers and watermen, we use them to our advantage to get out past the waves and enjoy them.
00:28:03But if you don't know and you bring your family from inland America somewhere, you can find yourself into trouble, and it can be a fatal day.
00:28:09We're focusing on two points that can help keep you alive.
00:28:13First, how to spot them so you can stay out of them.
00:28:15While rip currents can sometimes be impossible to see, there are clues you should look for.
00:28:20Here in Melbourne Beach, the most clear indicator are these dips in the shoreline, where the water stretches further up onto the beach.
00:28:28What I like to tell people is where there's a dip, there's a rip.
00:28:30Have you ever been on the beach and the tides come in and wet all your stuff, but the people along each side of you are dry?
00:28:36You're in the rip. Stay out of it.
00:28:38Other signs can be found on the surface of the water.
00:28:41Look for white foam like this, or debris being pulled away from the shore.
00:28:45Or they could look like this, that flat area where the waves aren't breaking, created by a rip current.
00:28:52And the most obvious signs of danger, areas along jetties or piers, and of course red flags.
00:28:58When in doubt, ask a lifeguard.
00:29:00Here we go.
00:29:01Next, if you do get caught in a current, how to escape it.
00:29:05Noah now says the age-old advice of swimming parallel to shore may not always work.
00:29:10So I put myself into one to show you why.
00:29:14It's taking us to the left.
00:29:15Which is parallel to shore.
00:29:17So for me, that is not the safest path out.
00:29:20Current can pull you to the left.
00:29:22It can pull you to the right.
00:29:23It can also spin you in a circle.
00:29:25It's chaotic and disorienting.
00:29:28Human instinct wants you to fight for your life.
00:29:31But experts say it's that panic, exerting too much energy, trying to swim against the current that leads to death.
00:29:37I just tried swimming against the current.
00:29:40I'd say I made it maybe 10, 15 yards, and you can hear me.
00:29:44I'm out of gas.
00:29:45Experts say most people can't swim more than about 50 yards without needing to touch bottom.
00:29:51If you get caught in a rip, you might have to swim three to four times that to get back to shore.
00:29:56Meaning, even if you can swim out of the current, you may not have the strength to get to safety.
00:30:01I'm pretty tired.
00:30:03And the idea of having to go another 50 or 60 yards back to shore, I don't think I can make that.
00:30:11So instead, experts now urging, do less.
00:30:14The key is not to panic.
00:30:16Let that current take you out and then flip and float.
00:30:21Some people call it floating like a leaf.
00:30:24A simple move we heard about from the Great Lakes Surf Rescue Project.
00:30:28Legs up, back of the head against the water, and using only gentle movements.
00:30:33This will relax you, conserve energy, and help you stay above water longer.
00:30:38It'll also give you a beat to determine which direction the current is flowing.
00:30:42If you can, swim perpendicular to that direction, like swimming to the side of a river.
00:30:47When you no longer feel the pull, swim at an angle back to shore.
00:30:52If you can't, just float until help arrives.
00:30:55Use your hands to signal somebody, and you should be okay.
00:30:59Which is why the safest place to swim is in front of a lifeguard,
00:31:02and why most coastal fatalities happen on unguarded beaches like the one we're at now.
00:31:08Over 75% of the drowns that we had are double drowns.
00:31:11Good Samaritans, family members, moms and dads going after their kids.
00:31:14You can't just watch somebody drown.
00:31:16He says one key to fixing this problem, installing life rings up and down the beach through his Drown Zero initiative.
00:31:23In 2024, they assisted in more than 200 rescues here.
00:31:27One was already used to save a 7-year-old boy earlier this year after his sister tried to help him.
00:31:34How many deaths did you guys have in the year before these rings were installed along the beach here in Melbourne?
00:31:39We had 14 drownings just a year before. After that, only two.
00:31:44For Good Morning America, Victor Okendo, Melbourne Beach, Florida.
00:31:47Wow. I hope that people re-watch that story and share it, because after so many years of covering rip currents,
00:31:54there's information there I've never seen before.
00:31:56All of us were locked in on that, but what Victor said, that most drownings are a double drowning.
00:32:01From someone else going out to try to help is just, it's heartbreaking, but a reminder of how serious you have to take it.
00:32:07Yeah, and watch for the signs. When there's a dip, there's a rip, and also be sure to relax, you know, let yourself float if you can.
00:32:13We'll be right back with more GMA after this.
00:32:18Good morning, America. It's our second hour.
00:32:21Trails of destruction. Tornadoes tearing through the south.
00:32:24At least one person killed in Kentucky.
00:32:26Neighborhoods destroyed.
00:32:27The new severe weather and flash flood threats right now, as smoke from more than 180 wildfires in Canada crosses the border.
00:32:36The air quality alerts this morning.
00:32:38The transition from school year to summer can be a tough adjustment for the whole family.
00:32:44Parenting expert Erica Suter is here with tips to keep kids on track.
00:32:50GMA is going a little bit country this morning with superstar Cain Brown talking about his new music,
00:32:56getting personal, family, and the music that shaped him.
00:33:02And we're celebrating AANHPI Heritage Month with one of the stars of Aladdin on Broadway.
00:33:08His recent journey to Asia to meet fellow performers in Disney musicals.
00:33:13And the K-pop connection he discovered along the way, as he says,
00:33:19Good morning, America!
00:33:25It's Saturday morning.
00:33:27This is GMA.
00:33:29How good was that laugh?
00:33:31He was so good.
00:33:32Yes, we are looking forward to talking to him.
00:33:35Good morning, America.
00:33:36Looking forward to chatting all about his experience as Iago and so much more.
00:33:40He's a lot of fun to watch on that show, all right?
00:33:43We do have a lot of stories to get to this morning,
00:33:45including tips for moms and dads ahead of summer break,
00:33:47how to help kids stay engaged when the school year comes to an end.
00:33:51That's coming up here.
00:33:52And a close call for two flights in San Francisco.
00:33:55Hear what went wrong at takeoff time.
00:33:57Yes, but first, a check on the severe weather that is pummeling the east
00:34:00and the wildfire conditions on track to impact the Midwest.
00:34:03Samara Theodore is tracking it all.
00:34:05Hey, Samara.
00:34:06And believe it or not, more storms are in the forecast for the East Coast.
00:34:10This system actually bringing the smoke into the upper Midwest.
00:34:13More on that a little bit later.
00:34:14For now, let's go ahead and take a look at the strong storms possible today.
00:34:18From Washington, D.C. to Richmond, down to Raleigh,
00:34:21that's where we could see some thunderstorms bringing heavy rain and damaging winds.
00:34:25The good news is it's not as elevated as yesterday.
00:34:28Timing this rain out, I hope you have some secondary plans
00:34:30if you live in New England this afternoon.
00:34:32That's where we're going to see most of the rain.
00:34:34A bit of a soaker at times for cities like Baltimore up the I-95 corridor.
00:34:37But by tomorrow afternoon, we're drying and clearing out.
00:34:41Back to you.
00:34:42All right.
00:34:42We'll take that, Samara.
00:34:43Now to President Trump promising to double tariffs on foreign steel
00:34:47and announcing a major deal with Japan as Elon Musk officially leaves his role at the White House.
00:34:52ABC's senior White House correspondent, Selena Wang, is tracking all of it for us from Washington.
00:34:56Selena, good morning.
00:34:58Hey, Whit.
00:34:58Good morning.
00:34:59Yeah, President Trump, he is once again vowing new tariffs,
00:35:02this time saying he's going to double tariffs on imported steel from 25 to 50 percent.
00:35:07The president's saying this kicks into effect on Wednesday.
00:35:10Now, all of this comes as Elon Musk is stepping away from his official role at the White House.
00:35:16Overnight, President Trump rallying at a steel mill in Pittsburgh,
00:35:20vowing to double tariffs on foreign steel.
00:35:22We're bringing it up from 25 percent.
00:35:27We're doubling it to 50 percent.
00:35:29That means that nobody's going to be able to steal your industry.
00:35:32Trump also touting an expected deal between U.S. steel and Japan's Nippon steel,
00:35:37but revealing few details, promising the iconic company will remain controlled by the USA.
00:35:43You're going to stay an American company.
00:35:45There will be no layoffs and no outsourcing whatsoever.
00:35:48Just hours before, Trump gave an Oval Office farewell to Elon Musk,
00:35:53the world's richest man stepping away from his official government role,
00:35:57leading the Department of Government Efficiency.
00:35:59Elon gave an incredible service.
00:36:01Nobody liked him, and he had to go through the slings and the arrows,
00:36:07which is a shame because he's an incredible patriot.
00:36:11Musk says he'll continue to serve as an unofficial advisor to the president,
00:36:15but falling far short of his original promise to cut $2 trillion in federal spending.
00:36:21Musk's team claims they've cut $175 billion so far.
00:36:25This is not the end of Doge, but really the beginning.
00:36:28This comes as the Supreme Court gives Trump a win,
00:36:31ruling the administration can end protections for more than 500,000 immigrants from Cuba,
00:36:36Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, at least for now.
00:36:40In a scathing dissent, Justice Kintaji Brown-Jackson warned of the devastating consequences
00:36:45of allowing the government to precipitously upend the lives and livelihoods of nearly half a million non-citizens.
00:36:53So guys, this has major implications for the more than 500,000 immigrants who came to this country legally
00:36:59with the promise of being protected from deportation for at least two years.
00:37:04Now, suddenly, they could be out of the workforce, they could be deported,
00:37:07but this decision from the Supreme Court, it's not final.
00:37:10This legal battle continues to play out.
00:37:12Gio?
00:37:12A lot to watch there, Selene.
00:37:14All right, thank you so much.
00:37:15A graduation day takes a violent turn when shots rang out after a ceremony in Minnesota.
00:37:20Police say two people were shot outside an arena on the University of Minnesota campus.
00:37:24The shooting happened yesterday after the commencement ceremony for a local high school.
00:37:28The two victims were rushed to the hospital.
00:37:30No word on their conditions or if they are students.
00:37:34One person is in police custody this morning, Janae.
00:37:37All right, Gio.
00:37:37This morning, the FAA is investigating yet another close call to passenger jets with a
00:37:42combined 150 people aboard coming within just 300 feet of each other on takeoff in San Francisco.
00:37:48ABC's Ike Adjachi is here explaining how that happened.
00:37:51Good morning again, Ike.
00:37:52Good morning, Janae.
00:37:53It's another frightening close call that could have ended in a disaster, this time at San Francisco
00:37:57International Airport.
00:37:59The FAA is investigating an incident happening on May 13th involving two commercial jets,
00:38:04one from United and another from SkyWest.
00:38:07Now, according to reports, both jets were cleared for takeoff on parallel runways.
00:38:11The United jet was supposed to turn right after departure while the SkyWest plane was cleared
00:38:16to turn left.
00:38:17But in the critical error, the United pilot turned left directly into the path of the SkyWest
00:38:21aircraft, forcing the SkyWest crew into an evasive maneuver.
00:38:25Now, tracking data from Flightradar24 shows at their closest, the planes were less than
00:38:302,000 feet apart laterally and only 275 feet apart vertically.
00:38:36In a statement, the FAA says that United plane turned without authorization.
00:38:40Witt.
00:38:40All right, Ike Adjachi.
00:38:42Well, it's do or die for the Knicks as they look to stay alive in the NBA Eastern Conference
00:38:47finals.
00:38:48The team faces off with the Pacers for game six in Indianapolis.
00:38:51Pacers lead the series three to two.
00:38:53They have the chance to close things out at home.
00:38:56Game six tips off tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern.
00:38:59We'll see what happens right after a show called World News Tonight, which we also enjoy here.
00:39:03That's right.
00:39:03Especially on Saturdays.
00:39:04Especially on Saturdays.
00:39:06Oh, my goodness.
00:39:07That's going to be a good game.
00:39:08A big-time game.
00:39:09Yes, absolutely.
00:39:10All right, coming up here on GMA in our morning menu, you know this, going from the school year
00:39:15routine to summer can be tricky.
00:39:17We've got tips to help the whole family adjust.
00:39:19The whole family.
00:39:20Amen, Papa Bear.
00:39:21Ball right.
00:39:22All's ahead.
00:39:23Broadway star Don Daryl Rivera joins us live for a dance-off you don't want to miss.
00:39:30We're going to be going to show us a few moves.
00:39:34Tori Johnson also here with the deals and steals to accessorize your summer.
00:39:39We're back now with our GMA cover story as we shift from the school year to summertime.
00:39:50It can be a difficult transition for kids and parents.
00:39:54So parenting expert Erica Suter is here with the tips on getting into a healthy routine.
00:39:58Erica, good morning to you.
00:39:59It's always great to have you.
00:40:01So what is one of the most important things that parents need to consider as we sort of plan our kids' activities here?
00:40:07Well, remember, the school year is tough for everyone.
00:40:09Most families are overscheduled.
00:40:11So summers are a really important time to reconnect and rejuvenate.
00:40:14And there are certain ways that you should do that.
00:40:16I love what I call white space days.
00:40:19Now, these are days where you don't plan anything.
00:40:21And I also don't let my children use their technology on those days.
00:40:25Yes, there are lots of complaints, but out of boredom comes a lot of imagination.
00:40:31And ditch the guilt.
00:40:32So many parents feel like, oh, well, I have to schedule everything out.
00:40:35I have to keep them busy all day.
00:40:37Well, you know, let it go.
00:40:38Let them be lazy.
00:40:39Lay around the house.
00:40:40Read a book.
00:40:40Watch a movie.
00:40:41Let the day come as it will, you know.
00:40:44And then lead by example.
00:40:45If you're overscheduled and you don't make any time for yourself, they're not going to think that, take it seriously and want to do it for them.
00:40:51It is such a good point.
00:40:52It also means that we probably need to put away our phones when we're telling them to put away the tablets.
00:40:57I want to be bored again.
00:40:58I know.
00:40:59Right.
00:40:59I'm trying to tap into that.
00:41:01So thank you, Erica, for the reminder.
00:41:02We've also heard about what's called the summer slide or learning loss over the summer.
00:41:07Explain how that happens and what we can do about it.
00:41:09Well, you know, the kid's been all year learning, learning, learning, learning new concepts, especially early readers.
00:41:15So this is especially important when you have an early reader.
00:41:17You know, they are learning how to build on their vocabulary skills.
00:41:21And you want to make sure that they don't lose that.
00:41:24So I'm a really big fan of summer work packets.
00:41:27And a lot of parents leave them to the last week of summer, and it's really stressful.
00:41:31But do one page a day and so that when the school year starts again, it's not such a shock to the system that they're doing work, right?
00:41:37You make the packet?
00:41:39The parent makes the packet?
00:41:40Well, most elementary schools actually offer them.
00:41:43And if your elementary school does not, you can ask them how to put one together because they're workbooks you can get from the bookstore or order from online.
00:41:48Now we're talking.
00:41:49Yeah.
00:41:50And then make reading fun.
00:41:51If you have an early reader, not all of them are into books with a lot of words and no pictures.
00:41:56So consider graphic novels or joke books.
00:41:59Ask them to read to their little sibling.
00:42:01And then do the 20 minutes a day rule.
00:42:04It's a lot of teachers will ask parents to have their kids read 20 minutes each night.
00:42:08Keep it up during the summer.
00:42:10And go on library adventures.
00:42:12My mother used to take me to the library every weekend and let me pick out whatever book that I wanted.
00:42:16And, you know, I have to tell parents, don't freak out if your kid picks the same book 15 times in a row.
00:42:20It's about not turning summer into school, but really making literacy a part of their everyday life.
00:42:26What about teenagers?
00:42:27What should we be watching out for?
00:42:28Oh, I have a teenager and it drives me crazy.
00:42:36If I let him sleep till 4 p.m., he would.
00:42:38And so what we have done in our house is we've set small little limits.
00:42:42So we have a time you have to wake up by and a targeted sleep time.
00:42:47So it's later than what's usual.
00:42:49So it gives them a little bit more freedom because kids do need to sleep in a bit.
00:42:53And in the morning, don't block the light.
00:42:55Kids like to turn their rooms into bat caves.
00:42:58Open those curtains up.
00:42:59Let the daylight shine in.
00:43:01It makes a big difference.
00:43:03And then also consider still having tech curfews because if they have their phones all night, they're going to be on them all night.
00:43:08And it affects their sleep cycles, their mood, and their health.
00:43:12Oh, these are such good stuff, Erica.
00:43:15I remember, though, being bored as a kid.
00:43:17Remember?
00:43:17That was like a whole thing.
00:43:18And then you had to go outside.
00:43:20But as a parent, you're trying to overschedule them.
00:43:22We've got activities every day.
00:43:24So the idea that summer you can calm it down some is so loud.
00:43:27Calm it down.
00:43:27They'll build stuff.
00:43:28They'll draw things.
00:43:29They'll play together.
00:43:30It will happen.
00:43:31I still like the bat cave, though.
00:43:32Yeah.
00:43:33I do.
00:43:34Thank you, Erica.
00:43:35We appreciate it.
00:43:36To Skinwalker Ranch in Utah.
00:43:39It is one of the most secretive and studied hotspots of paranormal activity.
00:43:42Ooh.
00:43:43And one series is getting full unprecedented access to it.
00:43:47Will Gann sat down with the owner of the ranch, our own little ghost whisperer over here.
00:43:51Yeah, you never let us down with the sound effects.
00:43:54And it is very appreciated, Gio.
00:43:55I appreciate that.
00:43:56Skinwalker Ranch, by the way, gets its name from a Navajo legend about demonic creatures
00:44:00that can shapeshift or take the skin of any creature they please.
00:44:04And if this next season of The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch is any indication, that is the least of their worries.
00:44:11It's the spot where close encounters of the third kind.
00:44:15Unbelievable.
00:44:16Feel closer than ever before.
00:44:18I got chills, dude.
00:44:19We got to get this thing to a lab and get it tested.
00:44:23Welcome to Skinwalker Ranch.
00:44:26This is the most scientifically studied paranormal hotspot on the planet.
00:44:29And viewers are going to get an inside look at the revelations that have come forward this past year.
00:44:35A 512-acre property in northeastern Utah with a long and sordid past.
00:44:41Unidentified aerial phenomena, you know, the bizarre cattle mutilations, the electromagnetic anomalies,
00:44:47even poltergeist-type activity.
00:44:49The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch is back for its eeriest season yet.
00:44:53Season 6 will feature some of the most mind-blowing, aggressive experimental activity
00:44:59in order to, as Dr. Taylor says, poke the hornet's nest and stimulate, I think, a lot of the effects
00:45:07and the strangeness that ends up appearing as a result.
00:45:10Are you hearing this?
00:45:12Something is blocking the radio signal.
00:45:15And that strangeness doesn't stop at Skinwalker Ranch.
00:45:18One thing that we have been tracking is what they call the hitchhiker effect, which is this phenomena where negative or strange activity follows people after they visit the ranch and participate in the research.
00:45:33It's a really unique problem set.
00:45:36And say there was a reporter based in New York who was interviewing the owner of Skinwalker Ranch.
00:45:42Do you think the hitchhiker effect might come into play there?
00:45:45You never know.
00:45:46You never know.
00:45:47I have been looking over my shoulder nonstop ever since that interview, people.
00:45:52The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch premieres this Tuesday at 8, 7 central on the History Channel.
00:45:57Ooh.
00:45:58I know.
00:46:00Made this a little spooky very early.
00:46:02Thank you, Will.
00:46:03Appreciate it.
00:46:04All right, Whit.
00:46:05Now we had Janae with the sound effects for a little while.
00:46:07Earlier with Janae, we got everybody involved.
00:46:09All right, we're moving on to deals and steals now with the weather warming up.
00:46:11And Tori Johnson is bringing us some summer accessories, all 50% off.
00:46:15Hey, Tori, how are you?
00:46:16Hello.
00:46:16Good morning.
00:46:17So this is one of the most stylish ways to protect your skin in the sun.
00:46:22I was hoping to have Janae as my supermodel this morning.
00:46:25Well, she was unavailable to me.
00:46:27You got second best.
00:46:28You're stuck with me.
00:46:29No, no.
00:46:29It would have been both of you.
00:46:31Anyway, this line, Cabana Life, was founded by a melanoma survivor who is really on a mission to eradicate skin cancer.
00:46:38And one of the ways to do that is to wear protective clothing.
00:46:41So all of these pieces not only are stylish, lightweight, breathable, but they have UPF 50 rating in the fabric.
00:46:49And that is the highest rating of sun protection given to any clothing.
00:46:53So it is stylish, protective, kind of checks all the boxes.
00:46:57We have an enormous assortment that you will find online of really cute dresses, all 50% off.
00:47:02Almost like the rash guard fabric, but, you know, as a dress.
00:47:05But you could go from the pool and the beach to brunch.
00:47:08Very nice.
00:47:08Yeah, okay.
00:47:09So from sun protection to bug protection, this is Hadley Wren, and you know summer's buggy.
00:47:15And so inside, infused in this fabric, is bug repellent.
00:47:19And yet you don't smell it.
00:47:21And so what's great about this is it will let...
00:47:22Now, are you just covering yourself with this?
00:47:24No, you could have a scarf.
00:47:26You could, yeah, you could have a scarf.
00:47:27You could also have a hat.
00:47:29The hats have the exact same protection built into the hats.
00:47:32You don't smell it, so you're not going to also smell like bug spray.
00:47:35The last, that protection lasts for up to 70 washes.
00:47:39So it's a really fabulous accessory that adds that added protection.
00:47:43All 50% off today starting at 13.50.
00:47:45That's amazing.
00:47:45Yeah, the bug repelling, it can stink after a while.
00:47:48It smells after a while.
00:47:48I mean, still use it if you need to, but, you know, there are alternatives.
00:47:52OS first.
00:47:53These are socks with a purpose.
00:47:55Every single sock has a specific purpose.
00:47:58So those right there, what I also love about all their socks,
00:48:00you can see it on these anatomically correct socks.
00:48:03Yes.
00:48:03So they mark the right and the left for you.
00:48:06So you don't get confused.
00:48:07So you don't get confused.
00:48:08There's the R right there.
00:48:08We've got options for light compression, no-show, bunions, plantar fasciitis.
00:48:13So the idea with these is that every sock literally serves a purpose,
00:48:18but all of them fit great, feel great, and just deliver a performance.
00:48:22We also have from them one of their newest products, these little fresh snaps.
00:48:25It's a charcoal-infused ball that you can pop into either sneakers, gym bag,
00:48:30anywhere where there's odor that you want to eliminate.
00:48:33The balls will grab that odor.
00:48:34My kids' soccer cleats.
00:48:36Yes, please.
00:48:37There you go.
00:48:37All 50% off today starting at 650.
00:48:40Great.
00:48:41Great shoes from Aerothotic.
00:48:44These are, we've got a huge assortment, even more that you'll find online.
00:48:48What's great about these is that they're designed specifically for summer,
00:48:51but also comfort, everything from the traction on the bottoms to the great arch support.
00:48:57They, even one of their specialties are padded toe posts.
00:49:01So right there, that little area that often when you wear flip-flops kind of chafes and annoys
00:49:07between your first two toes, padded toe posts will do the trick.
00:49:10All 50% off starting at $20.
00:49:13Excellent.
00:49:13Okay, so did you know that weekend getaways are more fun when you have a quilted tote bag?
00:49:18Obviously.
00:49:19Obviously.
00:49:19Especially when they're hot pink.
00:49:20Hot pink.
00:49:21There you go.
00:49:22What I love about these is they've thought of every detail, including a little shoe pouch
00:49:27that's so you could stick your shoes right in here.
00:49:30There you go.
00:49:30So keep them separate from everything else, or you can use it for dirty laundry,
00:49:34depending on your choice.
00:49:35But they've got all kinds of zippered compartments.
00:49:37We also have their little quilted cross bodies that are great.
00:49:41Big assortment, big colors, bright colors, all 50% off to make your little getaways a
00:49:46little more fun and bright.
00:49:47And then finally, unfortunately, rain.
00:49:50It's been raining all the time, by the way.
00:49:53But you know what?
00:49:54When you've got artful prints, it makes the rain a lot easier to deal with.
00:49:59They work with a lot of museums on collaboration, so they have really beautiful designs.
00:50:04They also are designed to be strong and sturdy and weatherproof.
00:50:10We also have, I like these little travel ones, because it's small but mighty.
00:50:13You fit that in your bag, but it's still big enough to take care of business.
00:50:17Everything from rain caper, 50% off, starting at $17.50.
00:50:21Perfect.
00:50:21We're all set.
00:50:22Thank you, Tori.
00:50:23You ready?
00:50:23Appreciate it, as always.
00:50:24We're ready.
00:50:24We partnered with all of these companies.
00:50:26You can find all the deals on our website, goodmorningamerica.com.
00:50:29And coming up, he originated the role of Iago on Broadway.
00:50:34Did I get this?
00:50:35Yes.
00:50:35Jafar says it.
00:50:36Iago, yes.
00:50:38This was more than a decade ago, but now he's traveled the world to meet his counterparts
00:50:42in Seoul and Tokyo.
00:50:44We'll be right back with Don Daryl Rivera next.
00:50:46Welcome back to GMA.
00:50:59Beyonce has set some buzzworthy records on the latest leg of her Cowboy Carter tour.
00:51:05Queen Bee's five shows hit several milestones at New Jersey's MetLife Stadium.
00:51:09Beyonce now holds the number one spot for musicians in every major category at MetLife.
00:51:15That includes most shows on a single tour, highest ticket sales of all time, with 250,000
00:51:22tickets sold.
00:51:23She also brought in $70 million, making her Cowboy Carter run the highest grossing show
00:51:29of all time at MetLife Stadium.
00:51:32My goodness.
00:51:32All the people posting pictures and videos from the show.
00:51:36Including Will Gans.
00:51:38Yes.
00:51:38He's been there twice, I think, already.
00:51:40Wow.
00:51:40Already?
00:51:41Yeah, we've got to get caught up.
00:51:42All right.
00:51:43Let's take a look at some of the other top headlines we're following right now.
00:51:46A steeple collapsed as fierce flames tore through a historic church in Ohio.
00:51:51That fire sending flames through the roof at St. John the Baptist Church in the town of
00:51:55Maria Stein.
00:51:56The blaze causing the roof to cave in, destroying the 128-year-old landmark.
00:52:02An investigation is now underway into what sparked that fire.
00:52:04A salmonella outbreak linked to cucumbers expands to 18 states.
00:52:10The FDA reports 45 people have been infected so far, with 16 hospitalized.
00:52:15Several retailers, including Target, have issued recalls for dozens of products that may have
00:52:21been used with, that tainted, that may have used the tainted cucumbers, including salads
00:52:25and vegetable wraps.
00:52:27International superstar Shakira is canceling her show that was set for tonight in Washington,
00:52:32D.C.
00:52:33The singer was set to take the stage for the World Pride Welcome Concert.
00:52:37Nationals Park released a statement saying Shakira had to back out because her team could not
00:52:41actually transport all of her concert equipment from Boston to the D.C. venue in time.
00:52:47Wow.
00:52:48Wow.
00:52:49Now to our celebration of AANHPI Heritage Month.
00:52:54American Filipino performer Don Daryl Rivera has starred in Aladdin on Broadway for over a decade,
00:52:59and he traveled to Asia to meet some of his fellow Disney performers there,
00:53:03and he picked up some K-pop dance moves along the way.
00:53:06Juju Chang went along on the adventure.
00:53:11That's Iago's signature evil laugh.
00:53:14Don Daryl Rivera plays the beloved character in Broadway's Aladdin.
00:53:19He traveled across the Pacific to meet his Iago counterparts in Asia.
00:53:27And in the birthplace of K-pop, we decided to check out a K-pop class at One Million Dance
00:53:33Studio with aspiring K-pop dancers from all over the world.
00:53:41Turn in one, two.
00:53:43The studio's director and master instructor, Koo Young-Pak, has worked with some of K-pop's
00:53:48biggest acts, like The Boys and EXO.
00:53:53When did you know that you were a dancer?
00:54:05When I was 10 years old, I was really into K-pop dance at the time.
00:54:10Like, I watched a lot of K-pop stars on TV, and I copied it.
00:54:15All the people who come to the studio who want to dance, are they doing it for sport?
00:54:21Most of our students are coming to be a dancer or K-pop star.
00:54:26Really?
00:54:26Yeah.
00:54:27So you're just, this is the boot camp?
00:54:29Yeah, right, right.
00:54:30To be a K-pop star?
00:54:31Yes.
00:54:31Wow.
00:54:32All right.
00:54:32You ready to become a K-pop star?
00:54:35Yes.
00:54:38But first, we asked Koo Young to improv some K-pop dance moves to a song from Aladdin.
00:54:46This is challenging.
00:54:47Yeah.
00:54:48Now, it was our turn to try.
00:54:58You're so good.
00:54:59For Good Morning America, Juju Chang, ABC News, Seoul.
00:55:03Nice.
00:55:03Awesome.
00:55:04So he's been to Seoul and Tokyo to hang out with his fellow Disney performers, but Don
00:55:08Daryl Rivera is back in the States and right here live in Times Square studio.
00:55:12We're so excited that you're here.
00:55:13You are.
00:55:14Yeah.
00:55:15I know.
00:55:16We're suddenly really even more nervous.
00:55:18Don't be nervous.
00:55:19Thank you for having me this morning.
00:55:20What has this experience meant to you, Don?
00:55:23So when Disney came knocking at my dressing room door saying, hey, we're going to go to
00:55:27Tokyo and Korea.
00:55:28You're going to see the shows there and you're going to meet your Iagos.
00:55:32And I was like, this is going to be great.
00:55:34I'm going to have so much fun.
00:55:35But what I didn't really expect was to really connect with my Asian American culture.
00:55:41Seeing how people live on the other side of the world is really cool.
00:55:46But the way that we do art is the exact same way.
00:55:49So it's like it really kind of touched me in an awesome way.
00:55:53Well, and you did it.
00:55:54You clearly did it.
00:55:55So after you take this K-pop class.
00:55:57Yes.
00:55:58You actually coined a new term and you're calling it B-pop.
00:56:01B-pop.
00:56:01What does that mean?
00:56:02So B-pop, I think Broadway pop, is a celebration of movement through storytelling, right?
00:56:10Storytelling and movement.
00:56:11Because when you watch a Broadway show and you have two romantic leads, you want them
00:56:15to fall in love and they're just not going to dance a random waltz or something.
00:56:18We're going to forward the story with some B-pop, with some storytelling through movement.
00:56:23So I understand you're going to show us a few moves.
00:56:25Is this going to be K-pop, B-pop?
00:56:29What are we doing here?
00:56:30We're doing some K-pop.
00:56:31This is exactly what I learned in Korea at One Million Dance Studio.
00:56:34We're going to come right over here.
00:56:35Let's do it.
00:56:36So you're going to walk us through this.
00:56:38Do we need like a beat or like how?
00:56:41We're going to have some music.
00:56:42Okay.
00:56:43Okay.
00:56:43Maybe some light stretching.
00:56:44All right.
00:56:45Okay.
00:56:45So everyone get on the ground.
00:56:46No, I'm kidding.
00:56:47No, I'm kidding.
00:56:47I was like, oh, I didn't get on the ground.
00:56:49Well, here we go.
00:56:50I'm kidding.
00:56:51I'm totally kidding.
00:56:52Okay.
00:56:52So it's just an eight count.
00:56:54It's very easy.
00:56:55The first four counts are basically the same.
00:56:57What you're going to do is you're going to make some fists.
00:56:59You're going to go one, two, and we're stepping on our right.
00:57:03Very good.
00:57:04We're going to go three, four.
00:57:07Perfect.
00:57:08We're halfway there.
00:57:09Okay.
00:57:09Right?
00:57:10And so we're going to do something called a pas de bourree, which is in a lot of Broadway shows.
00:57:13But this is a K-pop move also.
00:57:15You're going to step backwards with your right.
00:57:18And you're going to punch back with your right.
00:57:20So it kind of looks like this.
00:57:22Right?
00:57:23And we're going to step on our left.
00:57:24Okay.
00:57:25Uh-huh.
00:57:26And then we're going to step to the right.
00:57:28This is where it gets tricky.
00:57:30And then we're going to pivot a little bit.
00:57:32We're going to step on our right, but we're going to keep our weight on our left foot.
00:57:36Right?
00:57:37So we're going to look like this.
00:57:38Okay.
00:57:38And then we just slide our foot back and we're going to do that.
00:57:41Slide the foot.
00:57:42Okay.
00:57:42It's like a really smooth move.
00:57:45Okay.
00:57:46Yeah.
00:57:46So it looks like this.
00:57:48We're going to go one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
00:57:59See?
00:58:00You're a natural.
00:58:01Seven, eight.
00:58:01Seven, eight.
00:58:02Seven, eight is where I'm going to get lost.
00:58:04Yeah.
00:58:04So maybe we should, can we try it with music?
00:58:06Yeah, let's do it.
00:58:06Is that okay?
00:58:07We need a beat.
00:58:08Okay.
00:58:10We're going to go on a half beat.
00:58:14Five, six, seven, eight, and scoop, scoop, scoop, scoop, and back, box, box, box, box, yeah.
00:58:30Yes.
00:58:32Thank you so much.
00:58:33Why does my face always go like this?
00:58:35Like, you know, they have BTS, but we could be GMA, the K-pop group.
00:58:39There we go.
00:58:40Yeah.
00:58:40You're good at us, by the way.
00:58:42It's such a pleasure.
00:58:43Thank you so much.
00:58:44Thank you for having me.
00:58:45Thank you so much.
00:58:46He's fantastic in L.A.
00:58:47So go watch that.
00:58:48Go see that.
00:58:49Now with country superstar Kane Brown.
00:58:51He put out a new album earlier this year and is getting ready to hit the road on a summer
00:58:55tour.
00:58:56ABC's Ashton Singh got to sit down with him one-on-one.
00:58:58He is such a great guy.
00:59:00He is awesome, Gio.
00:59:01And after a decade in the country music game, for more than a decade, even at 31, Kane Brown
00:59:06started feeling like a veteran.
00:59:08Now he says he's recharged and approaching his life and new music with a fresh perspective.
00:59:12You can't wait to show fans what's next.
00:59:15His voice has helped define modern country music.
00:59:19And even as a forefront figure of the scene, Kane Brown is still being called one of the
00:59:24faces of country's future.
00:59:25I feel like there's a new life being born, so it's really cool just to be where I'm at
00:59:31right now, headspace-wise and all.
00:59:33Earlier this year, the 31-year-old released his new album, The High Road.
00:59:38The album blends playful sounds, like Miles on It, an upbeat single with an EDM spin.
00:59:44With the deeply personal and powerful, like Haunted, the more introspective, vulnerable
00:59:54message.
00:59:54The heart of me is feeling like a ghost.
00:59:57Whoa.
00:59:58We all have struggles and that we all have people that will love us no matter what and
01:00:04we can reach out to and get help.
01:00:06Especially guys, because I feel like guys, you know, they won't talk about it.
01:00:10How did you get to be so vulnerable on this record?
01:00:13And why?
01:00:13Why be so vulnerable?
01:00:14Well, I was in a place where I wasn't leaving my house and I was, you know, in my head, I
01:00:19had all these emotions and just trying to have to put an album together and think about stuff
01:00:24that I was going through.
01:00:25And for Kane, family is at the core of it all.
01:00:29When I talk about it with my wife, you know, that's the person that I can really tell her
01:00:33anything.
01:00:33So it helps me talking to her.
01:00:36Growing up, Kane and his family moved around a lot.
01:00:39When he was lost, music found him.
01:00:42I grew up on Tim McGraw.
01:00:43Okay.
01:00:44Shania Twain, Sugar Land.
01:00:46Eventually, Kane started posting his own music online.
01:00:50You were influencer before the influencer.
01:00:52Yeah, I was doing the Soulja Boy dances on MySpace, on my dial-up internet.
01:00:57Like, I was doing all that.
01:00:59That online presence leading to his 2016 self-titled two-time platinum debut album.
01:01:06Once I started seeing my numbers grow and we got to the millions, I think I was always
01:01:10still kind of like, I hope this doesn't end tomorrow.
01:01:13Since that moment, Brown has dropped three more studio albums and was named to Time's 100
01:01:19most influential people in the world in 2021.
01:01:22I never felt like it wasn't for me, just because I felt like, you know, I felt like I haven't
01:01:27belonged my whole life.
01:01:28I would say that you walk so they can run, but I feel like you walk so you can run.
01:01:32Like, are you ready to stop playing?
01:01:34I haven't started running yet, man.
01:01:36You feel that?
01:01:37You feel that way?
01:01:37Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:01:38I'm excited.
01:01:38That's what we're about to do.
01:01:39We're about to start sprinting.
01:01:40And guys, there's nothing cooler than seeing the growth of an artist like Kane.
01:01:45He's been in the limelight for so long and people often forget just how taxing it can
01:01:48be for someone who enters the industry so young.
01:01:51Now he's been focused on his physical and mental health and he says he quit nicotine and
01:01:55it's given him energy like never before.
01:01:57I love that you have these conversations.
01:01:59Yeah, super fun, especially when you get to like really break it down about their life
01:02:02and the music.
01:02:03It's a lot of fun.
01:02:04Great having you here.
01:02:05You said he's getting ready to run now.
01:02:06Exactly.
01:02:07That's right.
01:02:07Got a lot of cool stuff coming.
01:02:09He's sprinting.
01:02:09ABC Secret Sales and Will Gans is back with big savings on high-end beauty and skin care
01:02:15products.
01:02:15Everything here is shoppable.
01:02:17So scan right here, this QR code.
01:02:20Let's start with these mirrors.
01:02:21These are good.
01:02:21I've got one at home.
01:02:22In the words of Iggy Azalea, I'm so fancy.
01:02:25You already know.
01:02:25You already know.
01:02:26These are mirrors from fancy lighted LED mirrors that are mimicking daylight.
01:02:31So you can change the warmth of the lighting.
01:02:33So it's going to give you a realistic depiction of what you're going to look like when you
01:02:36leave the bathroom.
01:02:37Perfect for a backseat beat.
01:02:38Yes, that's a backseat beat.
01:02:40That's exactly it.
01:02:41And they're rechargeable.
01:02:42So you can take them in the backseat and never worry about being without your mirror.
01:02:45They're lightweight.
01:02:45They're a GMA viewer fan favorite.
01:02:48And you can save 40% on a wide assortment of sizes and colors from fancy.
01:02:52So good.
01:02:53And there's the magnified side.
01:02:54So you can get all up in there.
01:02:55Do a little tweezing if you need to do.
01:02:57That's what the magnified.
01:02:57Everything you need.
01:02:58Yes, that's right.
01:02:59Okay, one of the big selling points of this product is that they're pure.
01:03:02Yes.
01:03:03So it's not purr.
01:03:04It's not purr.
01:03:05But it's both, to be honest.
01:03:06Yes.
01:03:06Yes.
01:03:07So pure is fabulous.
01:03:09What's great about these is that it's products that make your skin look and feel its best even
01:03:12after the makeup comes off.
01:03:14I want to shout out the cleanser and skin care here.
01:03:17And then this is my favorite, the illuminating setting spray, which is going to basically
01:03:22be like a little Instagram filter right in your hand.
01:03:26Wait, go ahead.
01:03:26Spray it.
01:03:27Yep.
01:03:28I'll take it.
01:03:28I'll take it.
01:03:29And it smells nice.
01:03:30And it's going to look nice as well.
01:03:31It makes getting ready easy and enjoyable.
01:03:34Everything from Pure.
01:03:35You see we have makeup options as well.
01:03:37Slash in half.
01:03:38Ooh.
01:03:38Yeah.
01:03:38Cut in half.
01:03:39Okay.
01:03:39Dr. Brandt.
01:03:40Yes.
01:03:41This is also, yes, a fan favorite.
01:03:42So the Dare to Age Revitalizing Face Serum is using the latest in regenerative medicine.
01:03:50So it's going to push back against collagen loss, smooth, fine lines, all of the things
01:03:54that we love.
01:03:54Let me tuck this one into my pocket.
01:03:56Yeah.
01:03:56A little grab and go.
01:03:58And then this is no more baggage.
01:04:00This is for under eyes.
01:04:01So it's going to do everything that you want it to do if you're waking up early working at,
01:04:05I don't know, GMA, for example.
01:04:07Perfect for anybody who is looking to just sort of take care of that area under their
01:04:11eyes, all 50% off today from Dr. Brandt.
01:04:15Okay.
01:04:16And this has given some frozen feels.
01:04:18You can really mix this one up.
01:04:19Yes, honey.
01:04:20Just like Elsa and Anna, we're going to let it go.
01:04:23This is Love and Pebbles.
01:04:24And this is, I've seen this on my TikTok page.
01:04:26So I want to shout out these little cooling pops.
01:04:29This is so cool.
01:04:29Yes.
01:04:30So this, you get a little mixture, you mix it up, and then you freeze it.
01:04:33And then in the morning, you just kind of get the cooling power of ice and the ingredients
01:04:37that are going to make your skin look and feel its best.
01:04:40We also have the eye patches that are super cute.
01:04:43Yes.
01:04:43And reusable face masks as well.
01:04:46Everything today, 50% off from Love and Pebble.
01:04:49All right.
01:04:50And a bright smile always helps you feel good.
01:04:52Yes.
01:04:53Super smile.
01:04:53So this is going to.
01:04:55These are cute.
01:04:55Yeah.
01:04:55If you go to the dentist and he says, what have you been doing?
01:04:58You tell him you've been using super smile.
01:05:00This is like the Rolls Royce of toothbrushes.
01:05:01It looks like it.
01:05:02Five different settings.
01:05:04Oh.
01:05:04Really, really great.
01:05:05A two-minute timer.
01:05:06And then if you combine it with their toothpaste, it's going to whiten your teeth.
01:05:11We also have the dissolvable teeth whitening strips.
01:05:14So you don't have to walk around and then pull them out.
01:05:16Yeah.
01:05:17Which I hate.
01:05:18You're just like reaching in.
01:05:19And yeah.
01:05:19Those will dissolve in your mouth.
01:05:21Five different settings here.
01:05:22No harsh abrasives.
01:05:23Only clean ingredients there.
01:05:26Everything today starting at 40% off from super smile.
01:05:28All right.
01:05:29Secret sales, but we're not gatekeeping.
01:05:31We've partnered with all these companies on these great bargains.
01:05:33You can get them by scanning that QR code on your screen or by going to our website.
01:05:37Here we go.
01:05:37Can we figure this out?
01:05:38Ready?
01:05:39Ready?
01:05:39Five, six, five, six, seven, eight.
01:05:42Go on.
01:05:43Can you teach me Japanese?
01:05:44This is so bad.
01:05:47Something.
01:05:48Oh.
01:05:50We're going to be working on it all day long.
01:05:52There you go.
01:05:53There you go.
01:05:53Hit it.
01:05:54Oh, for starting your day with us.
01:05:56We so appreciate you.
01:05:57Much more weekend coverage over on ABC News Live.
01:06:00See ya.
01:06:00He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:01Have a great weekend, everybody.
01:06:03Will's on fire.
01:06:04He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:05He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:05He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:05He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:06He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:06He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:07He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:07He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:08He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:09He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:10He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:11He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:12He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:13He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:14He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:15He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:16He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:17He took off the jacket for dance rules.
01:06:18He took off the jacket for dance rules.
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