good morning. buenos dias and welcome to cnn this morning. we are grateful you are starting your sunday, march 19th with us. i m boris sanchez. i m amara walker. is there a good morning? it is a very good morning for me. it is a great one. because boris is going to getting a lot more sleep on the weekends. look, there is really no bad news. there is some breaking news. i guess the bad news is that you won t be able to see boris bright and early in the morning saying buenos dias, but, for all the boris fans you will be getting a lot more of boris during the week. we don t want to disclose all the details. look, i think you and i channelled each other because we are kind of in mourning with all of our black. sadly, because we won t be together. that s the bad news. the good news, you will get so much more of boris. you are too kind. more of that in a sec. here is what we are watching today. russian president vladimir putin makes a surprise visit to the russian-o
experienced poor mental health. so what s behind the high levels of sadness for teens? cnn s dr. sanjay gupta explains the selfie effect might be part of a big problem. well, this term selfie effect was coined by professor sinclair mcbride, a psychologist at harvard. i think what she was getting at was this idea with so many selfies out there we are constant think in a mode of comparing selfies, pictures of ourselves, to all of the images that we see online. social media. many of which, most of which, frankly, are probably altered in some way. they have filters on them. they have been photoshopped. all of a sudden you are in a position where you are comparing pictures of yourself to unrealistic images of the outside world and it can lead to all sorts of different issues. it can lead to feelings of inadequacy, i can t possibly compare to the images i am
CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Sanjay Gupta agreed with the claim that selfie filters on phones perpetuate racial bias by making users look more "Eurocentric."