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  • They say life is 10%.

  • What happens to you and 90% Fridays are awesome.

  • Something like that.

  • Welcome to see a man.

  • 10 Garlic juice.

  • It's great to have you watching as we put this show together.

  • A super typhoon was whirling toward the nation of Japan.

  • Its name is Typhoon Hagibis.

  • It's called a super typhoon because it's especially powerful.

  • On Thursday, Hagibis was the equivalent of a Category five hurricane.

  • The strongest classifications, if it shifts direction, is forecasters expected to.

  • This storm could come very close to the Japanese capital of Tokyo on Saturday.

  • Meteorologists think it will have weakened by then, but Hagibis is on track to make landfall right near where Typhoon Fox I hit in September.

  • That storm reportedly killed three people and caused more than $7 billion in damage.

  • Supertyphoon Hagibis is expected to bring heavy rain too much of south central Japan near the coast.

  • Forecasters are concerned about a potentially large storm surge, a rise in sea water levels pushed ashore by a storm and Hagibis has already had an impact on the Rugby World Cup.

  • It's being held in Japan this year and some matches have been canceled as the storm approaches.

  • On the other side of the Pacific.

  • General Motors Theo Automotive company that makes Buick Cadillac Chevy.

  • It's in the midst of the car industries.

  • Longest strike in decades.

  • The union, representing almost 50,000 workers, is negotiating with GM over issues like wages and profit sharing.

  • And a big hang up between the two sides is over production in Mexico.

  • GM has four factories there and 33 in the United States.

  • But the company's planning to close for US plants and the union wants production in Mexico shifted back to the U.

  • S.

  • One industry expert says that would come at a heavy cost to GM.

  • The strike has been going on for 25 days.

  • Second trivia, The first known types have been traced back to what country China, India, Egypt or Australia.

  • Though the exact origin of the kite isn't known, historians believe they were first used in China.

  • They fly like the wind, but ken kites be used to gather electricity from it.

  • There are a number of companies experimenting with this idea.

  • It requires huge kites that fly high enough to catch the steady winds and our atmosphere and then transfer that energy back to Earth, their concerns about the amount of maintenance they need, the threat they could pose if they crash and what would happen in bad weather.

  • But if everything goes right, some of the world's strongest winds are found here, out on the ocean, where water is too deep for most offshore wind turbines.

  • But a company called Makani believes it has a solution with the new wind technology, inspired by a familiar child's toy.

  • The kite.

  • To me, it almost looks like an airplane.

  • What makes it a kite?

  • You know, when you fly a kite in the park, it's being lifted by the wind, and you're holding on to it with the tether.

  • And so our kite is the same way.

  • Once airborne, Makani ZX 85 foot long energy kite flies around autonomously, guided by computers.

  • Cross wins been eight.

  • Roeder's producing electricity that sent back to the ground through a tether, and it's carbon fiber frame makes a kite extremely lightweight.

  • Our energy kites air so lightweight we can install them in deep water on floating platforms, and that means they can capture wins much further off shore, where other turbines can't.

  • Last month in Norway, Makani successfully completed its first deep water offshore flight, but their kites won't be ready for market for several years.

  • If your system is widely adopted, what kind of impact do you think it could potentially make their many areas around the world that really don't have a good resource for renewable power but do have offshore wind resource and so are lightweight kites.

  • Create the possibility that we could tap that resource very economically and bring renewable power to hundreds of millions of people.

  • Whether it's flying in a blimp, driving an 18 wheeler or jumping out of a plane, a CNN hero is helping senior citizens seek the thrills they've always dreamed of.

  • His name is Web Wyman.

  • His nonprofit organization is jump, he says.

  • It's all about taking seniors from darkness to light.

  • I tell seniors live by two rules.

  • There are no bad bucket list wishes, and everyone should have a bucket list Wish for every bucket list fulfilled.

  • There is a sense of accomplishment, a story that they get to take back to their community.

  • It lifts their spirits.

  • My name is Webb, and I help seniors achieve their dreams go, my dad.

  • It is a piece of work.

  • He's a 95 year old veteran.

  • He was in World War Two, participated in the invasion of Normandy at D Day.

  • That's a Krewe island, right?

  • He worked hard all his life, was always kind, always had friends and would do anything for anybody.

  • Give them the shirt off his back.

  • All right, so the last number was B.

  • With that, aging be slowing down.

  • His body is not keeping up with his mind.

  • Then go.

  • Hey, hey.

  • Wants to be Energizer Bunny again, believing that aggravates him, that he can't do what he used to be able to do.

  • We're gonna clear it out.

  • The reality of living in isolation is out there, and it's really and that's really one of the driving forces for us to keep going, drag the bucket lists out of them.

  • When he saw the balloon being blown up and I looked at his face, his smile could have filled up the balloon.

  • But it's in that moment that I know this is where I'm supposed to be.

  • It's just heartwarming to see him going up in that blue.

  • I think he's still smiling just so proud of him.

  • You keep smiling, that's that's your only requirement.

  • I looked at it like much more than a hot air balloon, right?

  • Calm, beautiful.

  • It was a moment in time to share a little space with two heroes.

  • You got a good shot of the moon.

  • It's a feeling that's undescribable.

  • I could feel the joy in their hearts.

  • I could see the spark in their eye and feel the gratitude that fills the air.

  • And I think knowing that they're feeling the same way is really all I needed to know this was a successful mission.

  • Good time that he won't believe he's this old if he keeps doing adventurous things again, it was something he'd never experienced before, and he'll never forget it.

  • Ever.

  • Even in your nineties, you're still flying high and a human large.

  • I want to thank you.

  • This was a great day.

  • Theo.

  • Canadian Fire Department recently ordered 18 large pizzas for $300.

  • They thought they'd called a limo's pizzeria in Alberta, Canada, where they're based, but instead they had ordered from Alamos Pizza in San Antonio, Texas.

  • Hoops that's 2300 miles away.

  • So a bit far for delivery.

  • So what they decided to do was donate the pizzas to two local fire stations in Texas firefighters.

  • Their shared some pictures of themselves enjoying the pies, and now people from all over are donating pizzas toe workers who wouldn't want a pizza that effort for anyone in pepperoni need of a pick me up.

  • These pizzas are making the rounds where slices of goodwill abound, and folks don't wanna miss the chance to dish out a gesture whose ingredients are kindness and generosity.

  • And it's never too cheesy to pie it forward of Carla's use hope your weekend It's fresh, okay?

They say life is 10%.

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