imperial ambitions. darya dugina died as an explosive device went off as she drove. she is the daughter of alexander dugin, an ally of russian president vladimir putin. for the latest let s turn to frederik pleitgen in moscow. fred. reporter: hi there christine. first of all, the reason why i m standing here is because today is also russian flag day and there is a big celebration here, people coming out and are told to show their patriotism here in central moscow. but of course the killing of darya dugina really is something that continues to dominate the headlines here and especially the question of how it could happen and second of all who might be behind it which is really something that lot of people are debating here. what is being becoming clear is that there does seem to be a pretty high degree of sophistication behind all of this. of course we know that her car blew up on a moscow highway late saturday night. and then engulfed in a fireball, she crashed and was dead
cnn s chief white house correspondent caikate lynn coll with us. the daughter of alexander dugina was killed. they believe someone planted explosives and ordered the attack. darya dugina died at the scene, she was a russian tv commentator and outspoken supporter of russia s actions in ukraine. dugina s father alexander owned the vehicle and might have been the intended target. he is an influential writer in russia, he advocates for an aggressive imperialist russia and many believe that his ideas have a lot of sway inside the kremlin. some russian officials are already blaming ukraine for the deadly bombing, but a top adviser to ukraine s president says that his country had nothing to do with it. fred pleitgen has the latest from the moscow. reporter: hi there, kaitlan. the read of russia today, kremlin controlled media, has come out and demanded that kyiv be hit in response to the death of darya dugina. you already just mentioned the fact that there are some in russia who
so that will be something i m sure you and your crew will be carefully listening for throughout the morning hours right. that s right. so no sirens sounding off just in these minutes that we ve seen. it will be something that we will need to watch to see if we get that official confirmation, not only from israeli officials, from officials in gaza, but also from those negotiating these deals. qatar has been very instrumental in making sure that these negotiations take place and saying that it has successfully been agreed upon. but there are so many moving parts and it s a very dangerous and tricky situation to make sure that, yes, despite the fact this has been a green lighted and this is moving forward, that that this actually does come to fruition today. claudia well, alex, take us through the rules of this cease fire. as you mentioned. it s very complicated. a lot of moving parts, a lot of tense negotiations went into this. but really, who gets what out of this cease fire
i m judge jeanine pierro, along with jessica tarr law, jesse watters, dana perino, and harold ford jr. it s 5:00 in new york city and this is a special edition of the five. happy thanksgiving. we hope you are enjoying your turkey and all of the trimmings with your family and friends. now put down the drumstick and get ready because we have a fantastic show ahead. we are answering your fan mail questions for the entire hour, so let s get started. who would you like to sit next to it thanksgiving dinner? so, i will start with you, harold. harold: well, i love sitting next to my kid, but if i could pick somebody who was living or dead, i would love to sit next to prince. jeanine: wow. harold: huge prince fan pit jeanine: i read that book. harold: the one i gave you? harold: yes beard jeanine: dana? dana: that is a great question. i must say peter. i would love to have thanksgiving with president bush. when i was the deputy i would travel on thanksgiving and
this week. like this? that s it? yeah. yeah, that s it. pat your head. pat your head, rub your stomach. 0k. 1-9-8-7. ..tim s taking me to task. ..tom s tackling table football. 0h! ..and anyone for a dance? this is tim peake, only the uk s second astronaut. he spent six months aboard the iss in 2016, living, working and walking in space. coming out. 0k. he s one of only 628 humans to have left our planet. and in his latest book, he s written the story of some of the other 627. all of them are special, a rare breed. and i met tim at imperial college london s data observatory to talk about a few that mean something extra special to him. yes, so this is bruce mccandless. 1984, out of the space shuttle challenger. and it s an iconic photograph. it s the first untethered spacewalk. we do lots of spacewalks today. they re never without risk, but they have become more commonplace. but we re always tethered to something in case we fall off. but to go outside on a spacewalk with no te