Episode Transcript

CNN 5 Good Things

MAR 22, 2025
A Sports Bar Where Barriers (and Brackets) Are Broken
Speakers
Krista Bo, Kristina Ulmer, Prof. Chris Hayward, 'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students, Jenny Nguyen, Sherri Taliercio, Mary Cooper, Emergency Operator, Four Year Old, Mom, Police officer
Krista Bo
00:00:00
Hey there. I know the world can feel a little cruel sometimes, but kindness is actually more common than you might think. Don't believe me? Well, I have the data to back it up. This year's World Happiness Report from the U.N. says 7 in 10 people worldwide did at least one nice thing for a stranger in the last month. Hundreds of high schoolers in Pennsylvania are learning just how far a small gesture can go.
Kristina Ulmer
00:00:26
I think it's important to know that not only are people out there doing kind things, but that kids are doing fine things, and that these kids are going to grow up and be the adults that are running our world.
Krista Bo
00:00:36
Plus, how justice and dessert was served to a four year old with a sweet tooth. From CNN I'm Krista Bo and this is Five Good Things.
Krista Bo
00:00:50
Having a heart of gold is ideal. But an Australian man is living proof that having a titanium heart could be a real lifesaver.
Prof. Chris Hayward
00:00:59
This isn't the first time that someone with a total artificial heart of this sort has gone home in the world, and so really, it is world leading.
Krista Bo
00:01:08
St. Vincent's Hospital in Sydney says an Aussie in his 40s, is now the first person to live 100 days with an artificial titanium heart. Facing severe heart failure, the man got the surgery back in November and left the hospital in February. Doctors say he was living at home until a donor heart became available earlier this month. Professor Chris Hayward is one of his cardiac specialists.
Prof. Chris Hayward
00:01:30
This kind of technology is a real game changer. Our patient is up and about. He's walking around. He is doing things that he has been able to do for many years.
Krista Bo
00:01:39
'The U.S. has also had some success with the new technology. Five patients in an FDA trial received titanium hearts, including a 58-year-old man in Texas who was sustained for eight days last July until he received a transplant.
Krista Bo
00:01:53
The World Health Organization reports cardiovascular diseases claim 18 million lives globally each year. And in the U.S., federal data shows only a fraction, about 3500 people received donor hearts last year. Professor Hayward predicts that within a decade, these artificial hearts could become a vital alternative for those waiting for a lifeline.
Krista Bo
00:02:17
'If someone gave you $20 to make someone else's day, what would you do with it? Well, students at Hatboro-Horsham High School in Pennsylvania certainly understood the assignment.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:02:29
So for the $20 challenge, we decided to combine all of our money.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:02:33
And we're here to target getting toys for little kids in the hospital.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:02:37
Yup. Let's go.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:02:38
Our $20 challenge. We made goodie bags for hygiene items for the homeless. We made truffles and distribute them to all the teachers, and we planned to do it until we graduate.
Krista Bo
00:02:47
That's just a taste of how hundreds of teams over the last seven years have turned $20 bills into ripples of kindness. Their English teacher, Kristina Ulmer, started the $20 Kindness Challenge in memory of her sister Katie, who tragically died in a car crash in 2014 after finishing her shift as a waitress. When Christina arrived at the scene, she asked the police officer if she could go home with her sister's purse because she didn't want to leave without something of Katie's to hold on to.
Kristina Ulmer
00:03:15
And she had a wallet and it was stuffed full of cash, you know, dollar bills and fives and tens. I just sat there with the money and I thought, what do I do with this money? I don't know what to do with this. But I knew I had to go to something good because my sister, from the time we were little, always wanted to help people in like, their worst moments.
Krista Bo
00:03:35
Kristina stashed the purse and its contents in the back of a closet. Fast forward to 2018, she assigned her students Ray Bradbury's 1953 classic, "Fahrenheit 451." The novel is set in a world where everyone is glued to their screens and lacked empathy.
Kristina Ulmer
00:03:50
And so we were talking a lot about dystopian novels are their warnings to us. And so what can we do to prevent our world from becoming that world to this very eerily similar.
Krista Bo
00:04:01
That was her light bulb moment. Use her sister's money to create the $20 Kindness Challenge.
Kristina Ulmer
00:04:07
And my only requirement was that they record a little reflection. And then I compiled it in a big video just for me to share with them, so that we could all watch it and see what everybody did.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:04:15
We combined our $20 to make cookies for people at a retirement home.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:04:19
We helped to buy presents for one of the kids in our school district.
'Hatboro-Horsham High School Students
00:04:22
We went to the animal shelter, bought them a bunch of toys and gifts for them.
Krista Bo
00:04:27
And thanks to donations. She's been doing it twice a year ever since with her classes.
Kristina Ulmer
00:04:32
They start to realize I can do things that show that I'm thoughtful, and I'm thinking about someone without really spending a dollar.
Krista Bo
00:04:39
She finds comfort in the fact that these acts of kindness keep her sister's memory alive while planting seeds for a better future.
Kristina Ulmer
00:04:46
These kids are going to grow up and be the adults that are running our world. And so the fact that they're doing it as teenagers, my hope is that they continue doing it into adulthood.
Krista Bo
00:04:57
March Madness fans, your time has finally come. The NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament has officially kicked off, and for the next few weeks, dozens of teams will battle it out to get to the championship game in Tampa, Florida on April 6th. And if you're looking for a place to watch the games, Jenny Nguyen suggests finding a spot that champions women's sports. Like The Sports Bra.
Jenny Nguyen
00:05:21
So The Sports Bra is the world's first sports bar, 100% dedicated to women's sports. We support women. That's that's our tagline now. It's like a double entendre. It's funny, but it's also true.
Krista Bo
00:05:33
Jenny is the founder and CEO of the Sports Bra, or just "the bra," as it's affectionately called, located in downtown Portland, Oregon. It's got four screens, a bar top custom made from NCAA tournament hardwood floors and walls covered with sports jerseys and memorabilia.
Jenny Nguyen
00:05:50
We were seeing record numbers like hours and hours of waits. People like lining up around the block, and that's when it was just like, oh, you know, I feel like we've tapped into something really important and really special.
Krista Bo
00:06:02
Opened in 2022, Jenny says her secret sauce was just being inclusive and community centered.
Jenny Nguyen
00:06:09
I opened a place for a lot of people, whether they were women's sports fans, sports fans in general, or not.
Krista Bo
00:06:16
I'm sure you remember last year's Women's March Madness tournament was so popular it broke TV viewership records, which meant Jenny's Sports Bra had to keep a waitlist.
Jenny Nguyen
00:06:25
I feel like people were calling in sick to work to come watch their teams play in March Madness, like brackets were legit.
Krista Bo
00:06:32
'This year, Jenny says she's expecting the same energy and attendance, especially during the evening games. When the big dance is over, jenny expects business to keep booming, along with the popularity of women's sports and the number of bars where you can watch them. And with some help from Alexis Ohanian, Serena Williams husband and Reddit co-founder, Jenny plans to franchise for The Sports Bra. She hopes to open three new locations by the end of the year.
Krista Bo
00:07:01
'When Mary Cooper was sorting through her late mother's belongings, the 81-year-old stumbled upon an unexpected treasure - a library book that was way overdue.
Sherri Taliercio
00:07:12
Mary had said, you know, you're going to want to take a look at this. You know, it's 99 years late.
Mary Cooper
00:07:17
And I find the dates and I'm thinking this had to have been taken out by my grandfather.
Krista Bo
00:07:23
Mary's grandfather's name was Charles Tilton, a boat builder and craftsman who checked out the book from the Ocean County Library in New Jersey back when Calvin Coolidge was president in 1926.
Krista Bo
00:07:34
The book was called, "Home Made Toys for Girls and Boys" by A. Neely Hall. Published in 1911, it taught readers how to make toys from wood, metal, and household items. Mary says her grandfather used to build toys for her mom when she was a kid. The toy boat in the book looked just like the one her mom used to have.
Mary Cooper
00:07:53
I said, I have to return this book to the library. I was sure they would like to have it back.
Krista Bo
00:07:59
And Sherri Talierico from the library said the timing of the book's return couldn't have been more perfect.
Sherri Taliercio
00:08:05
What a serendipitous thing to happen that during our 100th year is when this book got returned. Such a throwback to a different time, a simpler time.
Krista Bo
00:08:15
Mary was worried about getting charged a late fee, which the library said would have been $18,000 if they still charged fines. FYI, you won't be able to borrow this book. The library is going to keep it in a special case to preserve it.
Sherri Taliercio
00:08:28
It's finally in its home for years to come.
Krista Bo
00:08:36
'A four-year-old called for backup after his mom did the unthinkable and stole his ice cream. Up next, hear how he got some sweet justice for a sweet tooth.
Krista Bo
00:08:52
'A four-year-old in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, accused his mom of committing the ultimate crime - eating his ice cream. Unwilling to let this injustice slide, CNN affiliate WTMJ reports the little boy called 911 for backup.
Emergency Operator
00:09:07
What's the address of the emergency?
Four Year Old
00:09:10
My mommy's being bad.
Emergency Operator
00:09:12
Okay, what's going on?
Mom
00:09:15
I ate his ice cream, so that's probably why he's calling 911.
Emergency Operator
00:09:19
Okay.
Krista Bo
00:09:20
Officers showed up at the family's house just to make sure everything was okay. And they were met with the pint sized prosecutor who doubled down on his case for his mom's arrest.
Police officer
00:09:29
Did you call the police?
Four Year Old
00:09:31
Yeah.
Police officer
00:09:31
Why?
Four Year Old
00:09:32
Tell my mommy to go to jail.
Police officer
00:09:35
Why do you want mommy to go to jail?
Four Year Old
00:09:37
Because she's being bad to me.
Police officer
00:09:41
Should we take her to jail for eating your ice cream?
Four Year Old
00:09:43
Yes!
Police officer
00:09:44
I agree.
Mom
00:09:44
I would let you arrest me, I think.
Krista Bo
00:09:47
Instead of mom doing the time for the crime, officers struck a plea deal.
Police officer
00:09:51
Okay, you got to be good for mom, okay? And then you get some ice cream. Can you say yes ma'am.
Four Year Old
00:09:56
Yes ma'am.
Police officer
00:09:57
Okay.
Krista Bo
00:09:56
In the end, cooler heads and sweet treats prevailed. 48 hours later, the officers surprised the young whistleblower with two scoops of ice cream topped with blue sprinkles. Case closed.
Krista Bo
00:10:13
All right, that's all for now. Join us tomorrow for the next edition of One Thing. All about the problems Tesla is facing right now amid Elon Musk's DOGE efforts.
Krista Bo
00:10:23
Five Good Things is a production of CNN Audio. This episode was produced by Eryn Mathewson and me, Krista Bo. Our senior producers are Felicia Patinkin and Faiz Jamil. Matt Dempsey is our production manager. Dan Dzula is our technical director. And Steve Lichteig is the executive producer of CNN Audio. We get support from Joey Salvia, Haley Thomas, Alex Manasseri, Robert Mathers, Jon Dianora, Leni Steinhardt, Jamus Andrest, Nichole Pesaru, and Lisa Namerow. Special thanks to Wendy Brundige. And thank you for listening. Take care. Till next time.