WEBVTT #Elemental Media Engine(TM) 2.17.1.0 00:00:00.400 --> 00:00:04.904 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:00:11.711 --> 00:00:12.746 COY WIRE: Hey, everyone. 00:00:12.779 --> 00:00:14.247 It's your boy Coy here starting with some Monday 00:00:14.280 --> 00:00:15.949 motivation for you and me. 00:00:15.982 --> 00:00:18.184 I challenge you to say the alphabet backwards, 00:00:18.218 --> 00:00:23.156 Z Y X W V U T S R Q P O N M L K J I H G F E D C B A, like that. 00:00:23.189 --> 00:00:25.658 And I want you to challenge me to work 00:00:25.692 --> 00:00:28.862 a unique word of your choice into tomorrow's show. 00:00:28.895 --> 00:00:31.931 Follow me @coywire on Insta, Snapchat, and TikTok, 00:00:31.965 --> 00:00:33.833 and put your challenge words in a comment, 00:00:33.867 --> 00:00:36.469 and I'll choose one fun one to work in tomorrow's show. 00:00:36.503 --> 00:00:38.605 All right, it's time for the best 10 minutes 00:00:38.638 --> 00:00:39.773 in news for you. 00:00:39.806 --> 00:00:41.441 CNN 10 starts right now. 00:00:41.474 --> 00:00:43.810 We're going to start with the news out of Hawaii. 00:00:43.843 --> 00:00:46.046 On Sunday, huge amounts of lava continued 00:00:46.079 --> 00:00:48.782 to flow from the Mauna Loa volcano, the world's 00:00:48.815 --> 00:00:51.351 largest active volcano, which has been 00:00:51.384 --> 00:00:52.952 erupting for over a week now. 00:00:52.986 --> 00:00:55.221 It turns out, the lava is creeping closer 00:00:55.255 --> 00:00:58.858 to a key highway that connects the East and West sides 00:00:58.892 --> 00:01:00.293 of the Big Island of Hawaii. 00:01:00.326 --> 00:01:02.996 As of Saturday morning, the lava was just 2 and 1/2 00:01:03.029 --> 00:01:05.231 miles from the DKI highway. 00:01:05.265 --> 00:01:07.867 It had been moving around 40 feet per hour 00:01:07.901 --> 00:01:09.469 over the last 24 hours. 00:01:09.502 --> 00:01:11.838 For now, the highway remains open 00:01:11.871 --> 00:01:14.107 and it's even attracted sightseers 00:01:14.140 --> 00:01:17.310 who have flocked to the area to see the historic lava show. 00:01:17.343 --> 00:01:19.379 The volcano is erupting for the first time 00:01:19.412 --> 00:01:21.014 in almost four decades. 00:01:21.047 --> 00:01:23.216 The flow of lava is unpredictable. 00:01:23.249 --> 00:01:26.986 Its direction is expected to change hour to hour and day 00:01:27.020 --> 00:01:29.222 to day, making it difficult to estimate 00:01:29.255 --> 00:01:32.659 when or even if the lava flow will impact the highway. 00:01:32.692 --> 00:01:34.461 In the meantime, Hawaiian officials 00:01:34.494 --> 00:01:36.830 say they have a plan to shut the highway down 00:01:36.863 --> 00:01:39.532 if the lava gets close enough to become dangerous. 00:01:39.566 --> 00:01:42.469 Now while it may seem scary and potentially destructive, 00:01:42.502 --> 00:01:44.137 some people see it as beautiful. 00:01:44.170 --> 00:01:46.406 After all, the islands were formed as a result 00:01:46.439 --> 00:01:47.974 of volcanic eruptions. 00:01:48.007 --> 00:01:50.977 So without lava flow, there would be no Hawaii at all. 00:01:51.010 --> 00:01:55.415 CNN's David Culver is on the scene with the latest. 00:01:55.448 --> 00:01:58.218 DAVID CULVER: The nighttime glow of Mauna Loa's oozing lava, 00:01:58.251 --> 00:02:01.054 well, you just have to pull over to properly admire it. 00:02:01.087 --> 00:02:02.422 It's basically the middle of the night 00:02:02.455 --> 00:02:05.024 and you guys are out here. 00:02:05.058 --> 00:02:06.292 Why? 00:02:06.326 --> 00:02:08.895 PIILANI ZYCH: Well, I mean, this is a once in a lifetime 00:02:08.928 --> 00:02:11.097 opportunity to be able to experience this 00:02:11.131 --> 00:02:12.899 and we decided to come early in the morning 00:02:12.932 --> 00:02:14.367 so we didn't have to sit-in the traffic. 00:02:14.400 --> 00:02:16.136 DAVID CULVER: Having hopped from Oahu to here, 00:02:16.169 --> 00:02:18.671 the Big Island, this family, three generations, 00:02:18.705 --> 00:02:21.608 came to respectfully honor the Hawaiian eruptions. 00:02:21.641 --> 00:02:23.076 PIILANI ZYCH: It's all beautiful to us. 00:02:23.109 --> 00:02:25.478 And so we pay huge reverence to this. 00:02:25.512 --> 00:02:28.248 It's very culturally significant for us as well. 00:02:28.281 --> 00:02:30.116 So, it's a big deal. 00:02:30.150 --> 00:02:31.618 DAVID CULVER: A sight made even more alluring 00:02:31.651 --> 00:02:33.753 with a side of sunrise, which brought 00:02:33.786 --> 00:02:35.655 the crowds to Old Saddle Road. 00:02:35.688 --> 00:02:38.691 Officials turning this stretch into a one-way street, 00:02:38.725 --> 00:02:42.962 allowing passersby the chance to stop and let the views seep in. 00:02:42.996 --> 00:02:45.665 And that keeps drivers from pulling over and stopping 00:02:45.698 --> 00:02:49.469 on this, what is one of the main highways connecting one part 00:02:49.502 --> 00:02:51.171 of the island to the other. 00:02:51.204 --> 00:02:53.840 USGS and state officials warn the lava flow, 00:02:53.873 --> 00:02:56.910 while slowed in recent days, is inching closer 00:02:56.943 --> 00:02:58.645 to cutting off this highway. 00:02:58.678 --> 00:03:00.313 It's within three miles now. 00:03:00.346 --> 00:03:03.616 The other worry, not here on the ground but up in the air. 00:03:03.650 --> 00:03:05.785 What looked like plumes of smoke, 00:03:05.818 --> 00:03:08.488 experts say those are acid gases. 00:03:08.521 --> 00:03:10.857 Officials monitoring the levels warning it 00:03:10.890 --> 00:03:14.360 could become toxic for residents and visitors of the Big Island. 00:03:14.394 --> 00:03:17.430 Mauna Loa is the second of the Big Island's five volcanoes 00:03:17.463 --> 00:03:18.865 currently erupting. 00:03:18.898 --> 00:03:21.134 Kilauea, still rumbling after destroying more 00:03:21.167 --> 00:03:24.470 than 600 homes here in 2018. 00:03:24.504 --> 00:03:27.607 But many Hawaiians see the potential path of destruction 00:03:27.640 --> 00:03:30.310 as simultaneous creation surfacing 00:03:30.343 --> 00:03:35.381 from this, the world's largest active volcano. 00:03:35.415 --> 00:03:38.117 And with the eruption continuing at its current pacing, 00:03:38.151 --> 00:03:40.820 officials feel like they should be able to give folks up 00:03:40.853 --> 00:03:43.489 to two days' notice should the lava 00:03:43.523 --> 00:03:46.292 make its way onto that major thoroughfare 00:03:46.326 --> 00:03:47.627 cutting off that highway. 00:03:47.660 --> 00:03:50.597 But they also warn, when it comes to the flow of lava, 00:03:50.630 --> 00:03:53.766 there is no forecasting. 00:03:53.800 --> 00:03:55.134 COY WIRE: 10 second trivia. 00:03:55.168 --> 00:03:56.936 Who conducted the first spacewalk, 00:03:56.970 --> 00:03:59.005 which took place in 1965? 00:03:59.038 --> 00:04:02.609 Alan Shepard, Yuri Gagarin, Ed White, or Alexei Leonov? 00:04:06.746 --> 00:04:09.716 While Ed White was the first American to spacewalk, 00:04:09.749 --> 00:04:13.253 the first to ever do it was Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov. 00:04:13.286 --> 00:04:17.023 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:04:17.056 --> 00:04:21.094 On Saturday, the International Space Station got powered up. 00:04:21.127 --> 00:04:24.364 NASA astronauts, Josh Quesada and Frank Rubio, 00:04:24.397 --> 00:04:27.233 got suited up and floated outside the station 00:04:27.267 --> 00:04:30.903 to install a solar array, or panel, on the outside 00:04:30.937 --> 00:04:31.971 of the space lab. 00:04:32.005 --> 00:04:34.774 Their mission lasted seven hours. 00:04:34.807 --> 00:04:38.711 There were two solar arrays installed back in June of 2021, 00:04:38.745 --> 00:04:41.514 but now the plan is to add a total of six more 00:04:41.547 --> 00:04:43.516 to hopefully boost the space station's power 00:04:43.549 --> 00:04:46.252 generation by more than 30%. 00:04:46.286 --> 00:04:49.589 The original solar arrays were only designed to last 15 years, 00:04:49.622 --> 00:04:52.525 but they've been supplying power for more than 20 years. 00:04:52.558 --> 00:04:54.794 They still work, but they're definitely showing some signs 00:04:54.827 --> 00:04:57.363 of wear and tear after that long-term exposure 00:04:57.397 --> 00:04:58.464 to the environment. 00:04:58.498 --> 00:05:00.900 When it comes to office views, though, this one 00:05:00.933 --> 00:05:03.069 might be the best one in the world 00:05:03.102 --> 00:05:06.439 or the best out of this world. 00:05:06.472 --> 00:05:11.077 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:05:11.110 --> 00:05:14.547 For today's 10 out of 10, a fresh look at a game of golf 00:05:14.580 --> 00:05:15.515 on the moon. 00:05:15.548 --> 00:05:18.184 Astronaut Alan Shepard will forever 00:05:18.217 --> 00:05:20.386 be remembered for becoming the first American 00:05:20.420 --> 00:05:22.588 in space in 1961. 00:05:22.622 --> 00:05:27.060 But in 1971, as commander of the Apollo 14 moon mission, 00:05:27.093 --> 00:05:29.962 he left viewers, and even folks back at mission control, 00:05:29.996 --> 00:05:32.131 stunned when he pulled out a club 00:05:32.165 --> 00:05:35.568 and ball to take a celestial swing on a fairway 00:05:35.601 --> 00:05:37.870 230,000 miles away. 00:05:37.904 --> 00:05:41.040 His moon game is now being seen in a whole new light 00:05:41.074 --> 00:05:42.975 after a NASA specialist dedicated 00:05:43.009 --> 00:05:45.578 over 10,000 hours to restoring flight 00:05:45.611 --> 00:05:47.547 film of the Apollo missions. 00:05:47.580 --> 00:05:49.849 [INAUDIBLE] airs teeing up for us right now. 00:05:49.882 --> 00:05:51.584 Roll it. 00:05:51.617 --> 00:05:55.555 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:05:58.524 --> 00:06:03.930 - We have liftoff at 12:03, 3 minutes past the hour. 00:06:03.963 --> 00:06:08.801 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:06:08.835 --> 00:06:10.737 BRIAN ODOM: I think it resonates with people, because it's 00:06:10.770 --> 00:06:15.141 just a very human activity, a very cultural thing that's 00:06:15.174 --> 00:06:16.342 taking place on the moon. 00:06:16.376 --> 00:06:19.078 So I think that's why it really resonates with folks. 00:06:19.112 --> 00:06:22.715 You can talk seismometers and all of this stuff all day 00:06:22.749 --> 00:06:24.250 long really of what they're doing on the moon. 00:06:24.283 --> 00:06:25.785 But you talk hitting a golf ball on the moon, 00:06:25.818 --> 00:06:27.653 and people are like, Oh, yeah right. 00:06:27.687 --> 00:06:31.023 Shepard, obviously, was the first American in space 00:06:31.057 --> 00:06:33.192 and he'd been grounded for a long time. 00:06:33.226 --> 00:06:35.528 So he thought he may never get to go back into space. 00:06:35.561 --> 00:06:36.829 So when he finally gets this-- 00:06:36.863 --> 00:06:39.065 his health works out and he gets this opportunity 00:06:39.098 --> 00:06:41.634 to go back, you can kind of see him thinking, 00:06:41.667 --> 00:06:43.703 what's something fun and cool I can do to put 00:06:43.736 --> 00:06:45.338 my own stamp on this program. 00:06:45.371 --> 00:06:48.007 And, you know, sneaking things onto the capsule 00:06:48.040 --> 00:06:50.643 and hitting a golf ball, that seems to be pretty well in line 00:06:50.676 --> 00:06:53.246 with the Shepard we know. 00:06:53.279 --> 00:06:57.283 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:07:04.490 --> 00:07:06.392 ANDY SAUNDERS: I wanted to see Neil Armstrong on the moon. 00:07:06.426 --> 00:07:09.595 That was the first person on another world, this 00:07:09.629 --> 00:07:11.597 monumental moment in history. 00:07:11.631 --> 00:07:13.900 Since childhood, I was obsessed with anything 00:07:13.933 --> 00:07:19.572 that could fly, really, from boomerangs and paper airplanes. 00:07:19.605 --> 00:07:21.507 Rockets were the ultimate. 00:07:21.541 --> 00:07:23.476 And it was also out of fascination with the moon. 00:07:23.509 --> 00:07:26.679 At one stage, I was kind of a semi-professional photographer, 00:07:26.712 --> 00:07:29.081 probably is about as serious as I got. 00:07:29.115 --> 00:07:31.284 And it's kind of uniting those two things, 00:07:31.317 --> 00:07:33.186 those two interests, that led me to take 00:07:33.219 --> 00:07:35.688 on this particular project. 00:07:35.721 --> 00:07:38.291 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:07:41.360 --> 00:07:44.797 They had TV footage of him swinging 00:07:44.831 --> 00:07:47.133 the club, live TV footage that was beamed back 00:07:47.166 --> 00:07:48.901 very, very, very low quality. 00:07:48.935 --> 00:07:49.802 But you couldn't see. 00:07:49.836 --> 00:07:52.238 I mean, the ball disappeared off screen. 00:07:52.271 --> 00:07:55.241 In the lower res images, everything 00:07:55.274 --> 00:07:57.410 just looks like small rocks. 00:07:57.443 --> 00:08:00.646 But in a high resolution scan, I could zoom right in 00:08:00.680 --> 00:08:03.349 and enhance it and find something which 00:08:03.382 --> 00:08:05.451 looked very much like a ball. 00:08:11.591 --> 00:08:13.926 When he said, Oh, it's gone miles, and miles, and miles, 00:08:13.960 --> 00:08:19.131 I think he knew deep down that it didn't quite go that far. 00:08:19.165 --> 00:08:20.099 [INAUDIBLE] 40 hours. 00:08:20.132 --> 00:08:23.236 That's terrible, but they had these visors, 00:08:23.269 --> 00:08:24.403 they built the spacesuit. 00:08:24.437 --> 00:08:26.572 They could barely even see their feet. 00:08:26.606 --> 00:08:29.008 So visibility wasn't very good. 00:08:29.041 --> 00:08:32.845 Because of the restrictive suit, you had to hit it 100. 00:08:32.879 --> 00:08:37.283 So to even make contact, I think was pretty impressive. 00:08:37.316 --> 00:08:43.222 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:08:43.256 --> 00:08:45.491 BRIAN ODOM: It's the human side of this, that's 00:08:45.525 --> 00:08:46.759 the thing we can't forget. 00:08:46.792 --> 00:08:49.629 When it comes to a human activity, something that's 00:08:49.662 --> 00:08:52.164 done just for the joy of being alive, 00:08:52.198 --> 00:08:54.267 that's something that people can appreciate. 00:08:54.300 --> 00:08:56.903 ANDY SAUNDERS: A lot of people know that someone 00:08:56.936 --> 00:08:57.904 played golf on the moon. 00:08:57.937 --> 00:08:59.438 But not a lot of those people would 00:08:59.472 --> 00:09:02.008 know that it was on Apollo 14, that there 00:09:02.041 --> 00:09:03.976 even was an Apollo 14. 00:09:04.010 --> 00:09:07.213 So those human moments resonate forever 00:09:07.246 --> 00:09:10.483 and that's one of the few. 00:09:10.516 --> 00:09:12.084 COY WIRE: That's all we have time for now. 00:09:12.118 --> 00:09:15.755 We hope that story helped to capture your i-moon-gination 00:09:15.788 --> 00:09:17.123 on this marvelous Monday. 00:09:17.156 --> 00:09:18.958 Our shoutout today goes to a school 00:09:18.991 --> 00:09:21.727 of innovation, the Franklin School of Innovation 00:09:21.761 --> 00:09:23.529 in Asheville, North Carolina. 00:09:23.563 --> 00:09:27.300 Our goal is to shoutout all of your schools lunar than later. 00:09:27.333 --> 00:09:29.702 We hope you and everyone watching around the world 00:09:29.735 --> 00:09:30.736 have a wonderful one. 00:09:30.770 --> 00:09:34.106 I'm Coy Wire and this is CNN 10. 00:09:34.140 --> 00:09:38.077 [MUSIC PLAYING]