good morning. top of the hour. so glad you are with us. team coverage on the big breaking news this morning. kaitlan collins and clarissa ward in tel aviv. a four-day truce is expected to begin tomorrow morning as hamas prepares to release dozens of hostages in this breakthrough deal with israel. israeli source tells cnn the pause is expected to start local time 10:00 a.m. tomorrow, 3:00 a.m. here in the united states. >> hamas agreed to release at least 50 women and children abducted during the october 7th terror attacks in exchange israel has agreed to let 150 palestinian prisoners out of jail. a u.s. official says three american hostages could be part of this deal. the youngest is 3-year-old abigail edan. both of her parents were murdered by hamas october 7th. >> we are seeing this morning large explosions rocking northern gaza of the israeli military says its offensive is on going ahead. truce. the white house weighing in this morning. take a listen. >> this will be done in a carefully choreographed way so that both sides can verify that the other side is upholding their end of the deal. we don't have exact proof of life on everyone, and that's why they are doing this in this staged way, to ensure that hamas is actually following through on the people it says it has. >> kaitlan collins joins us from tel aviv. what happens now? >> major questions still about logistically what this will look like. we are learning some of what -- how tomorrow is going to shape out, that is, what is expected now. none of this seems to be concrete. what we are hearing from israeli officials 10:00 a.m. local time, in israel is when that pause in fight something set it begin, when the hostages are going to start to be released, we are told. what i hear from an israeli officials is there is a window from 10:00 a.m. local to 4:00 p.m. local and that is that window of when the facilitation of the release of those hostages is expected to happen. now, i think there are still major questions about wihere thy will be coming through in gaza, which crossing to get into israel. we know that is where they are expected to end up. we still don't know a lot of what the logistics are going to look like here. right now about ten hostages per day, we believe, over the next four to five days in the pause in fighting that is slate today happen. one thing that i have learned is there is an option for this to go on as long as ten days potentially. we have heard from prime minister netanyahu saying that for every additional ten hostages this are released outside. 50 dragreed to between israel a hamas would warrant another day and a pause in fighting. there is a lot of skepticism here among the israeli officials and government that it could go on for ten days. i think there is questions about the condition of the hostages that hamas is holding. some are held by outside groups. remains to be seen how long this goes on. that is an option on the table. so i think tomorrow we will get a sense of what this looks like and how the hostages are being facilitated as they ir release happening. it is slated to start and that is welcome news for family members on edge for several weeks now as we are now seeing what is the biggest diplomatic breakthrough since october 7th. >> getting to this point of this diplomatic breakthrough, kaitlan, has been delicate and detailed. walk us through the weeks really of meetings here and how we got to this point. >> it's come up to the brink several times where they thought they had a deal. even before israel's ground operation in gaza began. we saw how that has changed so many times. and so what has happened here essentially behind the scenes is a lot of back and forth, intensive negotiations, moments where they weren't sure if there would be a deal at all. i think there was a lot of skepticism among israeli officials in the beginning there would be any hostage agreement because they didn't believe that either hamas, there was any proof of life, that they actually had hostages together, what that really looked like. as you saw over the course of several weeks, as they began to believe that hamas did have that, you start to see a deal come together. and that came to points where we saw brett mcgurk, you know, president biden's top official for the middle east, here on the ground multiple times, in qatar multiple times, which has been where officials have been mediating between israel and hamas. at one point a little over a week ago he was on the ground in israel and as they were leaving a meeting prime minister benjamin netanyahu grabbed his arm and said he really needed to get a deal done. he was facing an immense amount of pressure from the family members, the loved ones of the hostages here in tel aviv and jerusalem, all over israel, to bring their loved ones home. they didn't care how. they just wanted them to get home. now we will start to see some of that. of course, a lot of these families are waiting to learn more about whether or not their loved ones will be included in this initial group of 50. clarissa ward is here in tel aviv where the families of the hostages have been gathering in what has informally and tragically been known as hostage square. a meeting group for a lot of these families. i know earlier you said that some heard nothing from the government, that they found out about this agreement for the release of these hostages for this truce from the media. what else are you hearing from the families that you have been speaking with? >> so, we spoke to a number of families now, kaitlan, and i think the sort of overriding sense is, of course, there is a glimmer of hope and excitement about the possibility that they might see their loved one soon. but there is also a lot of confusion and a lot of concern. the confusion comes with the piece of they have not, anyone who we've spoken to, had direct communication from the israeli government as to what sort of state their family members are in, what conditions they are being held in, if the red cross has had access to them, and, of course, most crucially at the moment, whether they are on the so-called list of 50 individuals who are believed or hoped will be released in the coming days as part of that agreement. we spoke to thomas hand, you may remember, the irishman who lived for 30 years in kibbutz be'eri. his daughter, emily, turned 9 last week. he was initially told emily had been killed during the hamas rampage on october 7th. then weeks later was told they believe she might be held in gaza. we have spoken to him. he says he has no information as to whether emily is still even alive or whether she will be released in the coming days. he said -- and i want to quote him here -- i want to jump through the roof with hope, but i also have to keep a level heady emotionally. i can't get too far ahead of myself. and i think that sentiment is one shared by a lot of these families. they are so desperate to cling on to that sense of hope and the possibility that they might be reunited with their loved ones, but they are very concerned not only that they don't know about what state their loved ones are in physically, what conditions they have been held in, but what state emotionally they will be returning potentially in. and we spoke to hadas, a mother, her case has drawn a lot of attention in israel and around the world because they are two children are being held in gaza with her ex-husband, their father. her mother and autistic national archives were murdered on october 7th. she says she has been fighting day in, day out, 47 days, non-stop to really push emphatically for their release. she doesn't know if they are on this list, if they may be coming out soon, but she is so cokeenl aware that the little boy and girl who she last saw are not going to be the same little boy and girl who are going to potentially emerge from gaza, even if they are safe, even if they are physically okay. there is a broader understanding that the trauma that this experience will have taken on them, and she talked about her little boy, she said he was a nervous little boy anyway, prone to anxiety, and it's been eating her up at night to try to imagine what kind of emotional turmoil he has been through and what the impact of that will be on him going forward. so while there is definitely a sense, kaitlan, as you alluded to, of a glimmer of hope, a moment of desperately needed good news potentially, that is absolutely being tempered by the confusion, the questions, and, of course, the critical issue as to the state that these children who will, hopefully, be coming home will be returning in. >> yeah. it's hard to think of the trauma that they face. clarissa ward, thank you for that. of course, this hostage deal followed weeks of negotiations behind the scenes. it was eventually approved by israel's cabinet in the early hours of wednesday morning. it followed aics-hour meeting that we are told by one israeli officials was tense and emotional. joining us is a man who has been in similar cabinet meetings before. maybe not to this degree, given what they are facing. former israeli prime minister bennett. what do you make of this deal? do you think this is a good deal? >> i don't want to voice my personal opinion. i have an opinion, but i don't want to go against or anything that israel is doing. i am representing the state of israel. this is the deal. the deal has arrived. as a result, very successful israeli pressure of an activity of the idf in gaza. it put the leaders of hamas under tremendous pressure and loss. so they felt they have to do the deal in order to buy a few days of respite and we're going to pay a price for that, but this would not have come about without the actions of the idf. >> it sounds like you are skeptical of this deal. what do you mean when you say pay a price for it? >> well, you know, our opponent has been hit badly. hamas has been taking massive hits over the past several weeks. and it's at a point of very tough point. that's a pint where you typically don't want to lift them up from the floor and allow them to recuperate. but the deal here is providing us, of course, with 50 lives, hopefully, assuming the deal will be performed as it's promised. and that i would not assume that automatically. we are going to get home children and moms, and it's just heartbreaking. these are families that were in their homes in the morning and they were taken out of their beds and kidnapped into hamas land in gaza. so israel has a duty to bring them home. >> of course, the prime minister has been facing immense pressure to do so. tactically speaking, sounds like you think this is a mistake? >> again, i don't criticize or attack my own government. i am citizen of the state of israel. i am not in the political scene. therefore, i support any action that my government takes. and it is what it is. we are going ahead with this deal. i am sure that the cabinet ministers were aware of both sides of the equation and they probably have information that i don't hold, which only tilted it in favor of the deal. israel set two objectives. one is toer add indicate hamas, and the other to bring all the hostages home. we are making a major strand, a major advance in terms of bringing some of the hostages home, but, obviously, there is a price to pay and i'm sure the cabinet ministers took this into consideration. >> would you have made this deal if you were the prime minister? would you have signed off on this? >> i don't want to second-guess people. i want to say that we're fighting a barbaric, savage enemy that literally pulled kids and babies out of their beds. i want to show you something. this is a teddy bear from a girl pulled out of her bed with her small younger children, out of the shelter. i found this in their home. obviously, i want this to go back to her. but just imagine a terror organization that you can see how she to let go of this doll. we want her to come back to this doll. we are fighting with the worst terror organization that no qualms on anything, on raping women, on butchering families, on burning families alive. we have to eradicate hamas. so when this temporary ceasefire ends, the idf will continue until we eliminate hamas from the face of the earth. >> yeah. i visited kibbutz. we saw several of those kinds of, you know, just everyday mow mentos, stuffed animals, bikes from children, you know, scattered across. but when you just mentioned there about this being a temporary ceasefire, we heard from the prime minister netanyahu saying that for every additional ten hostages that hamas releases there will be an additional day of pause in the fighting. do you think this could turn into a complete ceasefire? >> one way or another, we set two objectives. one is bringing the hostages home. but the other one to eradicate hamas. we cannot allow this war to end with hamas on our border. because they explicitly already said they will do more massacres if they can. we have sort of al qaeda on our border. imagine after 9/11 instead of mexico you had al qaeda on the border of the united states of america. obviously, the united states would wipe out that terror state. that's what we are going to have to do to hamas. right now there is a temporary ceasefire and the prime minister netanyahu set an equation. you know, as citizen of israel, i stand behind all of the actions of my own country. >> former israeli prime minister naphtali bennett, thank you for your time this morning. >> thank you very much. >> erica, poppy, back to you. >> as we learn more on the deal between israel and hamas, the role qatar played in getting this deal to come to fruition is significant. and it's coming into a greater focus. becky anderson just spoke with the lead negotiator. those details ahead. millions of americans gearing up for the busy holiday. thanksgiving, here we come. would severe weather could disrupt some of f your travel plans, w what you cocould expec that's's just aheaead. . heavy wind and rain pelting the northeast this morning that. is throwing a monkey wrench in holiday plans for folks on what is considered to be the busiest travel day of the year. jason carroll is live at new york's laguardia airport. so 6:00 a.m. hour. it was smooth sailing. what about now? >> reporter: we're still smooth sailing along at this point. we haven't jinxed it so far. this is everything. take a look behind me. very few lines. we keep checking the departures board. again, on time, on time, no matter where you look on the board. we were worried about the weather system moving through the area in addition to what tsa was saying, predicting this to be the busiest thanksgiving travel season that they have had on record, that tsa expecting to basically go through 30 million travelers, going through their checkpoints. so with all of that, we expected things here to be much, much worse. at last check, lga, 12 cancellations so far. jfk looking at 47. newark looking at just 13 cancellations. one traveler we spoke to said she walked in here, we looked on her face, she said, where is everybody? listen to what some of the travelers had to say to us. >> i am shocked. there is nobody here. it is empty and it's 7:21 in the morning. i got her early because i am slow. >> i came early because the weather is horrible and i heard that it was going to be packed. it actually doesn't look that bad. >> reporter: so you see there travelers did what they were supposed to do, what everyone has been recommending, basically get here two hours before if you are on a domestic flight, at least three hours before if you are on an international flight that. still stands because even though things look good here, you have to consider the rest of the country. whether you're in denver, los angeles, chicago, atlanta, o'hare, continues are going to be different than conditions here. but where we are right now, things looking pretty good. >> i think we will take that bit of good news, jason carroll. well done not jinxing it. >> reporter: absolutely. >> thank you, my friend. also, we have this video to show you this morning. news that the pilot of a single-engine plane died, it crashed into the parking lot of a shopping center, exploded into flames. this happened in plano, texas, north of dallas. fire officials say no one else was injured, luckily, in the incident. but it was at a busy intersection. a witness driving by describes what they saw. >> i saw just black smoke, you know, coming off -- in the sky. i was really close buyy and i s busting out flames. >> the faa and ntsb are investigating. openai's cofound ser back at the top top of the company. he is ceo again. what a week it has been. senior u.s. officials say three americans could be released from gaza, one of them is 3-year-old abigail edan and her family is here with us next. we're following breaking news this morning as a hostage deal between israel and hamas has been reached after weeks of painstaking negotiations. here's what we know about the deal so far in the outlines of it. hamas agreed to release at least 50 women and children abducted during the october 7th terror attacks. in exchange for that, israel has agreed to release 150 palestinian prisoners from jail. all of this will happen amid a four-day pause in fighting. sources are telling me that the hostage release will begin here at thursday at 10:00 a.m. local time, that's 3:00 a.m. in the eastern time in the united states. this is a deal that was approved by israel's cabinet in the early hours of wednesday morning following a six-hour meeting described by an israeli official as tense and emotional and it was something that the israeli government said came as they published the names of up to 300 palestinian prisoners. that is the potential of who could be released. that 300 is israel saying they are potentially prepared to release more. we heard from the prime minister who said that for every additional ten hostages that are released by hamas, there will be an additional day of the pause in the fighting. all of this remains to be seen. this morning we are seeing large explosions still that are rocking gaza as you can see here. becky anderson interviewed qatar's prime minister of state, the lead negotiator on this hostage deal and joins us live from doha. this is something that has been a very intense kind of negotiation happening behind the scenes. what did this chief negotiator tell you about what was happening behind the scenes? >> reporter: yeah, it was really interesting. he described the atmosphere of the last 45 days as intense, as extremely challenging, and as complex not least because of the escalation in hostilities on the ground in gaza. but they are hopeful that what they've got in the first instance here is at least a deal, which could, they hope, lead to a more sustained peace ceasefire going forward. they describe this very specifically as a humanitarian pause or lull, a truce in the gaza strip. but two main pillars. the release of these hostages and an increase in humanitarian aid to those who need it most in the gaza strip. and i think that's really important that this is a kind of 360 deal, as it were, which includes those two key pillars. what do we know about the sort of -- how they are going to operationalize the hostage releases? there is sort of the details. 50 over a four-day period hostages released out of gaza in exchange for palestinian prisoners in israeli prisons. but i asked mohammed al califi, how are they going to make that hostage release work and how are they going to ensure that both faerts in this deal stick to the parameters, the details of the deal. this is what he told me. >> within the four days pause, in each day there will be an obligation on each side, on the israelis and obligation on hamas, making sure that they are going to fulfill those obligations each day. on each day we aim to have a number of releases because the number is big. so we -- we've managed to get the parties to agree on the releases systematically. in other words, there will be an organized schedule allowing the releases each day and each body is quite familiar now with their obligations. rangers. >> reporter: that is important. at least ten hostages to be released by hamas, and if they fulfill that over the four-day period, then there is an opportunity for more to be released over a period of days. you know, every ten that are released, that increases this truce period potentially. and they need to see a list every day of the names of those who will be released because at present we do not know who we are going to see released by hamas on the first day, for example. that being as we are reporting likely 10:00 a.m. local time on thursday. so, you know, it's important that the negotiators have a clear understanding of who is going to be released both from gaza and from the israeli prisons. the cessation of hostilities, you know, keeping these pauses complete over those periods, that's important. that's an obligation. on the other side, kaitlan, and i think this is really important, on the aid coming in through rafah, this is something they have been able to achieve, which ishas been really difficu. there is fuel included in those aid shipments coming through gaza, and that aid, that fuel is specifically for humanitarian infrastructure throughout the gaza strip. both in the south and the north. hospitals, education facilities. this is much needed. so they have wrapped this hostage release around a humanitarian opportunity as well. that is why they are calling it a humanitarian pause in the gaza strip. they hope that this will hold. they hope to get some success in these first four days, and then they hope that they can add layers to this going forward. kaitlan. >> yeah, and that fuel going in, obviously, has been a key sticking point. becky anderson we, thank you. you heard becky mention that we have seen israel release the name of 300 palestinian prisoners who could be released. we have not seen a list from hamas of which hostages could potentially be released. that is something, obviously, the families in tel aviv and jerusalem and israel are waiting desperately to find out whose name is on that. >> thank you. a senior white house official tells cnn that three americans could be a part of the deal to free dozens of women and children held by hamas. that official noting that two women and a 3-year-old girl who turns 4 on friday are among the ten americans unaccounted for. the toddler is presumably israeli american abigail edan. she was kidnapped after her parents were killed by hamas on october 7th. with us now abigail's great aunt and cousin. thank you both for being here. >> thank you for having us. >> is it your understanding, liz, that abigail will be a part of this hostage release? >> it is our belief. we have not had anything confirmed. there is no lists. but we believe that a 3-year-old orphan, american israeli, is -- should be a priority for release. i keep thinking about these innocent children and no child should be held hostage. no child should be in the middle of this and they should be released and come home right away to their families. and abigail's fourth birthday is on friday. no child should spend their birthday as a hostage somewhere in the dark. so we don't have any confirmation, but it is our hope and belief that she will be one of the first hostages to come out. >> you have had -- we were talking this morning. you have had a fair amount of communication, regular communication with u.s. officials, your family in israel. how much confirmation or how much communication, rather, have they had with officials especially over the last 24 hours? anything? >> they have had communication. unfortunately, until we see abigail with her family, we can't know anything or be sure of anything. >> remind people why you are wearing the number 46 on your shirts. last time you were with us at the table, a couple days ago, it was 41. >> 46 represents the amount of days that these hostages, these innocent civilians were kidnapped and taken to gaza. and we put this, rachel goldberg, the mother of hirsch, in solidarity, because she started this, and other families, as the hostage families have been working together, we are cognizant when we talk to people like yourselves that these children, grandmothers, aunts, uncles, fathers, brothers, sisters were taken. innocent civilians, 46 days ago, they have been in the dark. we, as you understand information-wise, we are in the dark. but they are truly in the dark. and we wouldn't people to understand that these are 230 people. they are not numbers. so when we talk about ten coming out, ten coming out, these are ten people that belong to a family. the first ones will be children. later they will be parents and grandparents. and so this is just that reminder that this is real and for 46 days these people have been gone. >> you talk about putting this on in solidarity. how important has this unfortunate community you are now a community of families of hostages, how important have you been to one another over these 46 days? >> i don't think that anyone can understand until they are in this position the amount of difficulty, of torture, of terror that these families are going through, and we are able to be there for each other in these dark times and advocate for each other and our loved ones. >> remind our viewers who may not know your story, abigail, what she endured. both her parents were murdered october 7th by hamas. she is an orphan with her siblings, 6 and 10 years old, being cared for by other family members, hoping, to believing abigail will be released. can you talk about what that family reunion will be like and their lives going forward? >> well, i think the one light and hope that this family has now, including the 6, 910-year-old, the grandparent, the cousins, is gabigail comes home and is embraced and is part of their healing. i mean, like you said, they are 6 and 10. what they saw will be with them the rest of their lies. i mean, no 6 and 10-year-old should ever have to experience like that. but abigail coming home and this family that has been very close, they live together in the same community, the aunts, the uncle, the grandparents. so what is it going to be like? it's going to be hard. they are never going to have their parents again. but what they do have is love and they have warmth. this is -- we have a beautiful family. and so i look at the positives because that's all we have right now. and the most important thing is that abigail comes home. that she is part of the family. and she comes home really quickly and that her fourth birthday is with her siblings. >> on friday? >> on friday. >> we don't want them to lose anyone else. >> i'll add, abigail is like a symbol of this. we talk about it. it's easy. it's so easy to understand what a 3-year-old -- they are little, and what she has been enduring in the life. and there is 230 more that are all different ages. there is a 9-month-old child that turned 10 months. there are so many -- >> women in our 80s. our grandparents, our uncles and aunts. we need them back. >> that's why we're here. thank you for giving us this opportunity because we need people to really understand that this is about humanity. these are human lives. these are people like ourselves. >> we all pray we are sitting here tomorrow morning and there is a happy reunion that is already, hopefully, taking place for abigail. thank you. >> appreciate it. just ahead here this morning, the cofound irv openai sam altman we are living returning to the company as ceo days after being fired by the board of directors. more on that. also, rescue efforts in india entering their seventh day. crews are racing to save 41 construction workers trapped underground since sunday when a highway tunnel they were building partially collapsed. the workers are trapped about 200 feet underground. rescuers have been able to drill about halfway through the rubble to bring them food and water. officials believe they are on the brink of a breakthrough after days of uncertainty. . all right. the clock is ticking. maybe you are already brining a turkey as you prepare to sit down with your family tomorrow. maybe you will bechatting with injur u your loved ones. perhaps you steer clear of -- >> politics. >> shocking, isn't it? >> data reporter harry enten is here. no politics. that is the plan? >> yeah. things to avoid, folks. if you're thinking about talking politics, don't do it. don't do it. that's my one piece of advice. hope to avoid talking politics this year at thanksgiving. 61% of all americans. and a rare thing in which we agree bipartisanly, 64% of democrats, 57% of republicans. and i will note interestingly enough that talking politics at thanksgiving has become less popular. look at this. back in 2016, 43% of americans were for it. now just 29% that no one against at 53%, now up to 61% in 2023. and, guys, i think this part of a movement, a larger movement generally speaking, of talking politics with people you don't necessarily agree with. we don't want to do it. back in 2016, interesting and informative, look at that, 51%. you look now at 2023, it's just 36%. stressful and frustrating, up to 61% now. >> unsurprising. everyone needs to watch that "snl" skit do you remember last year with ait dell? we are going to play that for you tomorrow, okay? turkey, main course, people can agree on in? >> yeah. >> maybe? >> except for my vegetarian daughter. >> so what should the main course be on thanksgiving? 73% say turkey. 25%, your daughter included, 2%. don't know. i will point out that i am part of this 25%. so last week i decided to try to do something a little bit different. >> wow. >> i went out to brooklyn to this place, jive turkey. they can send you turkeys on thanksgiving. i tried a fried turkey here. you can see this. i thought it was decent to be perfectly honest with you. it's certainly something a little bit different. there i am. i am probably the only person eating fried turkey in a suit. eating that leg, i feel like i am on the football game afterwards biting into that turkey. i will note, here we go, how do you prefer your turkey cooked? most people say roasted at 63%, smoked, that's another option, at 22%. i come in with the fried. i think fried is the best way. you guys? >> i like it when someone else took it. >> you love to cook. >> i do love it cook. but i don't like to cook a turkey. >> cranberry tart. we will see how it turns out. >> inspiring america. >> i think we can agree, what is your favorite pie on thanksgiving? how about pumpkin? 34%. that's a pretty good one. but you know what? i like being a part of the minority here, so i'm going cherry at 4% or ice cream. >> he wants a ice cream cake. it's his favorite, everybody. >> it is. >> happy thanksgiving. ahead for us, openai co-founder sam altman is back at ceo of that company days after being fired by the board of directors. the board is out, board is in, guess who called it all? kara swisher. she sw is with us next. a landslide in alaska. at at least three have died, three others are missing after the mud and debris slid across a highway in a remote community on monday. it's actually believed three dozen people have been displaced. officials blame that landslide on heavy rain and 80-mile-per-hour winds. stay with us. we'll be right back. welcome back. another twist in the sam altman saga at openai, days after the board fired him, allowing him and some key deputies to be hired by microsoft, he is back at the top of openai. >> the company reached an agreement to rehire altman and has met demands to revamp the board of directors. cara swisher joining us now. she's the host of the pivot podcast. you called it. you saw this coming. you were reporting it was coming. the fact that we are in this place this morning, sam altman coming back, a new board, what does it mean? >> it's kind of a new board. one of the old board members who was a facebook executive is still on it. they brought in brett taylor, the chairman of twitter and sold that to elon musk. he was also at facebook, i believe. larry summers, i don't know where he came from, but there he is. >> harvard, treasury department. >> yeah. they replaced the board that was there, a small board, because they hadn't replaced previous people who had left. i expect it to get bigger. i expect microsoft to have seats on the board. they might try to find a woman, maybe. you know, three white guys is silicon valley. >> might be nice. >> might be. it will probably be a ten-person board or nine or ten at least. it changes it considerably in terms of who -- what kind of people are on it. it's much more professional, much more techie. >> that's fair. boards really matter to be a check, right, on companies? >> sure. >> we all understand what a debacle this was. my question is something you tweeted about last night. did the board -- previous board succeed in raising public awareness of its fear of how fast ai was moving or too rapidly in their view? yes, the cost was incredible. but was that important? >> i would say it was damaging. i would say it's damaging. it put more powerful companies in charge. it did exactly the opposite of what they were saying. it's going to accelerate quite a bit. there's ways to make points about this. leaving the board and making a statement or something like that could have been effective. i thought this was a ridiculous group of nonsense. it was a waste of time. they haven't said why they fired sam altman, who is now the ceo again. if you put allegations like that out there, you should have them. >> can i ask you about that? the"the wall street journal" is reporting that altman and the previous board have agreed to internal investigations into his firing, his actions, all of that. why is that important for humanity? >> i don't think it's important for humanity. i think it's just a cover. this board is lost. they will look at it. a lot of the stuff was well-known. it was a matter of someone said, is this a bigger issue or is it petty? it's more petty and egos. he was moving faster than they liked. instead of dealing with it, they did this dramatic thing. i don't know. i felt like there was nine other ways do this. they couldn't even decide on adding new board members previously. it was a dysfunctional board. now we have one that presumably, once it gets more bigger, will be more functional. >> once the women are added. >> yeah. >> appreciate it. thank you for being so helpful all week long on this story. >> happy thanksgiving. >> thank you. >> back at you. sources tell cnn the true in the israel/hamas war will begin tomorrow at 10:00 a.m. local time, 3:00 a.m. here on the east coast. the latest on the hostage deal, more of the breaking news ahead. s one grocery store will stop at nothing to make sure you save more on the brands you love. starring produce, and...... you... as the super saver, in....bargain bliss bliss, bliss, bliss todd we talked about this. our deals are just so epic. i know, todd. i know. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market