their goal is $500,000. caleb s medical bills could top $2 million. in the meantime, survivors of the shooting spree received a surprise visit from the actor who was on the screen at the time of the shooting spree. christian bale met with the victims and their families and visited a memorial for those killed. it really showed his humanity and that he does care about people. and he cares about his fans. it was not a canned speech. it was nothing hollywood. he was the human being christian bale. with more, let s head to aurora and cnn s jim spellman. good morning. reporter: carol, it s fascinating how this began. somebody on facebook posted they thought that maybe christian bale should come here. then our affiliate started to hash tag on twitter, bail out aurora. and over 300 million people have used that hash tag to encourage cr christian bale to come here. but people have been so excited on twitter and facebook, and everybody i have spoken to here. as much as the fa
secret no longer. brand-new information this morning on what we will see during the olympics opening ceremonies friday night. details leaking out from london. two early hints, james bond and harry potter. newsroom begins right now. and good morning to you. i m carol costello. thanks for being with us. we begin with a single stor that captures both the heartbreak and the hope of the shooting rampage in colorado. this morning, americans are rallying to help this man, shooting victim caleb medley. he is in critical condition right now with gunshot wounds to his head, but that s only part of the story. he is also a brand-new father. caleb s wife, who escaped the massacre unharmed, gave birth to their son just yesterday. baby hugo is the glimmer of joy in one family s nightmare. they have no insurance. and now face a lifetime of debt. we begin our coverage this morning with cnn s randi kaye. reporter: katie and caleb are high school sweethearts. they knew katie was expecte
about the president s comments about entrepreneurs that started their own business, all they they they think they re smart and they have to recognize that they didn t get there on your own. what do you think about that. i didn t see those people down there when i was down there at night, weekend as holidays, i had my children with a nanney working night and day. i never saw those people. way on a very busy thorough fare. my building was visible. no one ever came like that. so i totally disagree. martha: della williams, thank you. very nice to have you with us today. thank you. martha: good luck with your testimony on capitol hill. we ll see where all this goes. thank you so much. bill: so that lesson is spreading with two very young entrepreneurs. 7-year-old clara sutton and her 4-year-old sister, eliza run their own lemonade stand you see. business is so good. so good they opened up their own facebook page and website. their proud father said the
instead of applauding saying this is what we have to do to get americans back to work, we have to encourage the small business owner to work harder and employ people, that s what we re about. that is what we celebrate every day. that is what we sell operate the coming weeks. bill: ed, let me pause you for a moment. i want to take viewers back to a little bit what was said last friday in virginia. here s the president. if you ve been successful, you didn t get there on your own. you didn t get there on your own. i m always struck by people who think, must be because i was just so smart. there are a lot of smart people out there. bill: take us into the mind frame for a comment like that. white house would come out and argue and i imagine they will government has a purpose and that was the point the president was trying to make. the point you re making this goes back to his days a as community organizer. explain that. well, i think in essence when you re a community organize