hello, and thank you so much for being here. it is 10:00 eastern. i m ana cabrera reporting from new york, and this morning underwater sounds detected in the desperate search for the missing titan submersible. with more assets rushing to the search zone with time running out, the five on board believed to only have one day of oxygen left. the latest on that urgent race against the clock. plus, powell in the hot seat, the fed chair appearing before a house committee this hour. what s his next move with fears of a recession still looming? and later, new reaction from the attorney general to that plea deal for the president s son hunter biden. i would leave this matter in the hands of the united states attorney who want appointed by the previous president. this hour how that deal could impact the 2024 landscape with the gop front runner under indictment himself. let s begin with the underwater noises in that urgent search for the missing titan submersible and the five pe
paris. so incredibly humble, very down to earth. ana, as you know, last month the san antonio spurs won the draft lottery. that means they re up first in the draft. they ll be picking first and by all accounts, they re going for victor wembamyama. that s a name that is going to roll off our tongues and become second nature, i have a feeling. meagan fitzgerald, great story, thank you so much. up next on ana cabrera reports, it is the most comprehensive study yet on cte, including the impact on student athletes. you re going to want to see this. t athletes you greoing to want to see this
seconds, is donald trump s base starting to crack after the federal indictment? what new polling reveals about his republican support. plus, the attack on the capitol, we are at the courthouse where sentencing is happening right now for the man who drove a stun gun into the neck of former officer mike fanone. and ahead, new developments in the killing of four university of idaho students, what prosecutors are now revealing about evidence found at the scene. and later, high school football players face more g force than a fighter pilot according to the largest study yet on cte. what more we re learning about head hits and brain disease. n d. i served three overseas tours. i love to give back to the community. i offer what i can when i can. i started noticing my memory was slipping. i saw a prevagen commercial and i did some research on it. i started taking prevagen about three years ago.
welcome back. today there is a new and alarming study about cte, the most comprehensive yet. it finds that a football player s chances of developing cte are related to both the number of head hits they take and to the cumulative impact of all those hits. it is not just professional athletes at risk here, there is growing concern about hits that a high school player also sustains head-on, showing at the high school level those hits have more g-force than a fighter pilot doing a roll. and just a little bit less than a car crash at 30 miles per hour. let s bring in near neuroscient and ceo of the concussion legacy foundation, chris nowinski and a former wrestler. thank you for taking the time. this is a topic near and dear to
doctors and you hear from the women that we did at those round tables yesterday, we are learning the real practical effects and politically i think those stories make such a difference. but hearing from doctors and women have gone through horrible experiences, we re not being silent on the issue, and i think that s the most important thing. this is not something we re hush hush about like in the 1970s as women. this is something we are front and center and demanding, and that makes a difference. and women make up the majority of the voters. yes, they do. in this country. susan del percio, and symone sanders townsend, thank you both. great to have you here. don t forget to catch symone on weekends at 4:00 p.m. eastern saturday and sunday right here on msnbc. up next on ana cabrera reports, the most comprehensive study on cte including startling