Episode Transcript

CNN 5 Things

APR 25, 2026
5 Good Things: She’s Cancer-Free After Taking This Treatment
Speakers
Krista Bo Polanco, Donna Gustafson, Pyxie Baker, King Randall, King Randall Video, Dr. Vinod Balachandran, Rhiannon Rees, 'Marie-Louise Eta translation, Garvin County Sheriff Jim Mullett, Prom DJ recording, Brenda Agee
Krista Bo Polanco
00:00:00
Hey there, welcome. This is CNN 5 Good Things, your weekly palate cleanser. I'm Krista Bo Polanco. Let's jump right in.
Donna Gustafson
00:00:07
There is hope. You know, it's not a death sentence. I'm living proof that you could come back 100%.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:00:15
'This woman is now cancer-free from one of the deadliest forms of the disease, thanks to a potentially game-changing treatment. Plus, you can eat it, you could use it as fertilizer, and now this natural resource is being used as an alternative to plastic. Then we head over to the soccer pitch to celebrate a trailblazer for the sport. And later on.
Pyxie Baker
00:00:34
I'm so glad they did it that way, I don't think any of us would have had it any other way.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:00:38
A high school in Oklahoma found a sweet way to thank the person who saved them from a school shooting. When we come back...
King Randall
00:00:44
The boys just need somewhere where it's cool to do the right thing.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:00:48
A young dad is stepping up for the boys in his community.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:00:53
You know the phrase, it takes a village to raise a child. King Randall certainly knows that growing up in Albany, Georgia. His family members taught him everything from fixing cars to the importance of a firm handshake. But he noticed a lot of boys in his neighborhood weren't getting that same guidance.
King Randall
00:01:08
And so to see these kids not knowing basic stuff that I would feel like is basic, seeing them not know it was a big problem for me. And so that's why I decided to wanna be a solution.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:01:18
So in 2019, at 19 years old, he started a mentorship program called X for Boys out of his dining room with a dry erase board and a dream.
King Randall
00:01:28
'We focus on creating a well-rounded young man so when he goes out into the world, there's not a whole lot that he doesn't know. A man that knows how to speak, a man that know how to protect, a man who knows how provide, and a man thats confident. The only way you create a confident man is putting him in scenarios and also creating routines.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:01:44
'The 26-year-old father of four is focused on teaching young boys all kinds of hard and soft skills, like how to manage money, order at a restaurant, book appointments, pump gas, and grocery shop.
King Randall
00:01:54
So we got milk, chicken breasts, apples, paper towels. We want to make sure as we're going down the list, we're checking things off, okay? You understand that?
Krista Bo Polanco
00:02:01
He's racked up hundreds of thousands of views on Instagram and TikTok for his boys should know life skill videos. They show kids how to fix problems like an overflowing toilet.
King Randall Video
00:02:11
Big problem here, don't we? So this could be an expensive problem or it could be a quick easy fix where we could just mop and get this stuff out of the toilet. Good to go? And our wife is...
Krista Bo Polanco
00:02:18
And how to conduct themselves. This video is called, Boys Should Know Nice Doesn't Mean Yes.
King Randall
00:02:24
Just because you give somebody something or because you're nice to them, that does not mean that they owe you something. You understand that?
King Randall Video
00:02:29
Yes, sir! Why can she say no? Because it's her body.Let's just say it again. Because it's her body! This is her body, we do not own anyone, you understand that?
Krista Bo Polanco
00:02:38
The program is completely free for families and runs after school and during the summer for kids ages seven and up. King says some of his former students have gone on to join the military, become mechanics, and head off to college, with many of them coming back to mentor the next group of boys.
King Randall
00:02:54
The boys just need somewhere where it's cool to do the right thing. Our mission is to create protectors and providers, not just their family, but for the community.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:03:02
If you want to support their work, head to thexforboys.org. The link is also in our show notes.
Donna Gustafson
00:03:13
There is hope, you know, it's not a death sentence. I'm living proof. You could come back 100%.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:03:20
A groundbreaking new treatment is showing promise in the fight against one of the deadliest cancers.
Dr. Vinod Balachandran
00:03:26
Pancreatic cancer has been one of the most challenging cancers to treat. 90% of patients die within five years of diagnosis with current treatments.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:03:35
Dr. Vinod Balachandran is a surgical oncologist with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. He led a small clinical trial testing to see if a personalized MNRA vaccine could fight pancreatic cancer. And the results are pretty amazing.
Dr. Vinod Balachandran
00:03:50
Could you even teach the immune system to make a really strong immune response against pancreatic cancer, one of the most challenging cancers in oncology. And what we're finding is that you can, and when you do, patients live longer.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:04:06
Of the 16 patients who received it after pancreatic surgery along with chemotherapy and an immunotherapy drug, he says half of those patients showed positive immune responses to the vaccine and nearly 90% of them were still alive four to six years later, including Donna Gustafson.
Donna Gustafson
00:04:23
Statistically, I knew the odds were so against me. So anything that was going to give me even a little bit more hope, I was very willing to try. Many people get diagnosed and do not survive the first year. And only 13% make five years.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:04:40
'The 72-year-old grandmother from Delray Beach, Florida became the first patient in the world to receive the personalized MNRA vaccine built from her own tumor.
Donna Gustafson
00:04:49
'Six years later, I'm 100% cancer-free. My husband and I just celebrated our 50th wedding anniversary. I got to see two more of my grandchildren be born. We've traveled extensively, and six more years just to be here and love everyone. It's wonderful.
Dr. Vinod Balachandran
00:05:06
And of course this needs to be tested in larger trials and we have larger trials ongoing. The hope is that if we can use it to treat pancreatic cancer, perhaps this could provide a blueprint to now treat other similar very challenging cancers. So that's exciting times ahead.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:05:24
'What if the answer to our plastic problem has been floating in the ocean this whole time? A company in Wales called PlantSea is turning seaweed into a biodegradable alternative to single-use plastic.
Rhiannon Rees
00:05:36
There's over 400 million tons of plastic being produced every year and it's everywhere. It's in our daily lives. You can't go to the supermarket without seeing it. And I was just a very frustrated consumer when we started PlantSea. I was trying to remove plastic from my life.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:05:53
'That's co-founder and CEO Rhiannon Rees. She started PlantSea in 2020 during lockdown and landed on seaweed as a plastic alternative because it's a free natural resource.
Rhiannon Rees
00:06:03
The seaweed actually lends itself very well to material innovation. It has a very rich chemical structure. It's full of sugars and polysaccharides, so it lends its self very well to biomaterials.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:06:17
'PlantSea is using that natural material to create plastic-free components to everyday items, like laundry detergent pods, caps and bottles for beauty products, food packaging, and more. Take laundry pods. Rees says the ones you typically buy are made from a synthetic polymer, which is petroleum-based.
Rhiannon Rees
00:06:33
'Now while they do dissolve, they don't ever really truly disappear. They create liquid microplastics. We know that these liquid micro-plastics attract toxins and heavy metals and they're actually very difficult to clean out of our drinking water.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:06:50
Polymer fully dissolves and doesn't leave behind any microplastics. They're already working with major brands.
Rhiannon Rees
00:06:56
The potential is huge. So many other opportunities in other applications like cosmetics, even food, pharmaceutical, agriculture. We could be replacing billions of capsules. Just in Europe that's a really exciting number that I hope that we can achieve.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:07:18
'Football goddess. That's what thousands of soccer fans in Berlin were chanting to mark the smashing of a glass ceiling. Marie-Louise Eta made history last week by becoming the first woman to coach a professional men's soccer team in any of Europe's top five leagues. The 34-year-old was named interim manager of the Union Berlin Football Club and the Bundesliga League.
'Marie-Louise Eta translation
00:07:39
'Yeah, I know that's a big- I know that this holds great significance and certainly sends a signal to the world as well. My focus here, quite simply, is on doing the best possible job.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:07:50
Her first foray on the football pitch ended with a loss. But her appointment has been widely celebrated across the soccer world. Even so, it doesn't mean she's immune to any hate, sexism, or misogyny from online trolls. Behavior of the club has been calling out with responses like, "No worries for you, then. She only coaches professional footballers, not sexist trolls." When CNN asked how she's dealing with the haters, here's what she said:
'Marie-Louise Eta translation
00:08:13
'I focus on what I can influence here, and that's working with the lads on the pitch, the day-to-day football content. It simply comes down to staying focused and concentrating on the task at hand. And that's exactly what we do, every day.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:08:27
Her appointment is only temporary since she's due to take over the women's squad at Union Berlin next season. But as the founder of Germany's most popular soccer magazine 11 Friends puts it, anything can happen. If she does well, the fans might want her to stick around.
Garvin County Sheriff Jim Mullett
00:08:41
If it wasn't for the actions of the principal and the staff, I don't know what other outcome we had. So we're very, very proud of them. The school did an excellent job.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:08:50
To honor his bravery students made a tribute their principal won't forget.
Prom DJ recording
00:08:54
Are you having a good time, Pauls Valley?!
Krista Bo Polanco
00:08:57
Students at Pauls Valley High School in Oklahoma usually don't crown a prom king and queen.
Prom DJ recording
00:09:02
Are you guys ready to crown the king and the queen?
Krista Bo Polanco
00:09:06
But they told CNN affiliate KTEN they made an exception this year. Just days after an attempted school shooting, they chose to honor the man who saved lives.
Prom DJ recording
00:09:15
Ladies and gentlemen, our king, Kirk Moore!
Pyxie Baker
00:09:22
Oh god, it was ecstatic and I'm so glad they did it that way. I don't think any of us would have had it any other way.
Brenda Agee
00:09:29
The kids were so excited. They were cheering him on, and he was just grinning ear to ear, and they put the crown on him. You'd have thought he won a million dollars.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:09:36
'Kirk Moore is the school's principal. His students surprised him with the title just 10 days after he was shot and wounded while stopping a gunman on campus. School officials are calling Principal Moore a hero for tackling a 20-year-old former student who entered the school with a gun. School surveillance video shows Moore wrestling the man before another teacher grabbed the firearm. Moore was shot in the leg, taken to a hospital, and has since recovered.
Garvin County Sheriff Jim Mullett
00:09:59
If it wasn't for the actions of the principal and the staff, I don't know what the other outcome we had. So we're very, very proud of them. The school did an excellent job.
Brenda Agee
00:10:07
I thought he was truly a hero. Good Lord above was watching over everybody that day and I'm so thankful that it turned out the way it did.
Krista Bo Polanco
00:10:18
'All right, that's all for now. Thank you so much for listening. I hope you enjoyed the show, and if you did, send it to a friend so they can too. And there's more goodness where that came from if you sign up for the CNN Five Good Things newsletter, the link to subscribe, and the links we talked about today are in the show notes. And join us tomorrow for the next edition of CNN One Thing. Elon Musk and Sam Altman are taking their feud to court next week in a trial about OpenAI's for-profit model that could shift the course of the AI race. Have a good day. Till next time.