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Doctor's Letter: Clinton Recovering Well from Pneumonia; Pastor Stops Trump from Making Political Attack in Church. Aired 7-7:30a ET

Aired September 15, 2016 - 07:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Secretary Clinton, how are you feeling?

[07:00:05] JEFF ZELENY, CNN SENIOR WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT (voice- over): Hillary Clinton's campaign releasing a two-page letter from her physician, Dr. Lisa Bardack, shedding more light on Clinton's pneumonia diagnosis. It says Clinton continues to improve after collapsing while leaving early from the 9/11 memorial in New York on Sunday. Aides initially said she overheated.

Dr. Bardack now says Clinton had a chest X-ray last week which revealed a mild, noncontagious form of bacterial pneumonia. She was placed on medication for ten days. It was her second visit to the doctor in a week. Dr. Bardack writing, "She is recovering well with antibiotics and rest. She continues to remain healthy and fit to serve as president of the United States."

DR. MEHMET OZ, HOST, "THE DR. OZ SHOW": Why not show your medical records?

ZELENY: Donald Trump taking to daytime TV to reveal his version of a doctor's note from a recent physical on the nationally-syndicated "Dr. Oz Show."

DONALD TRUMP (R), PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE: Well, I literally have no problem with doing it. I have it right here. I mean, should I do it? I don't care. Should I do it?

ZELENY: Trump handing Dr. Oz a one-page summary of his exam.

OZ: So these are -- this is the report? These are from?

TRUMP: Those are all the tests that were just done last week.

OZ: The document falling well short of calls for more detailed information on Trump's medical history.

TRUMP: I feel as good today as I did when I was 30.

OZ: Audience members say Trump acknowledged he is overweight, wants to lose a few pounds, and doesn't exercise. Trump also acknowledged he's on medication to lower his cholesterol.

But all this didn't stop Trump from taking a jab at Clinton's health last night in Ohio.

TRUMP: You think this is so easy, in this beautiful room that's 122 degrees. It is hot, and it's always hot when I perform, because the crowds are so big. I don't know, folks, do you think Hillary would be able to stand up here for an hour and do this? I don't know. I don't think so.

ZELENY: Bill Clinton, campaigning on his wife's behalf, dismissed the attacks against her.

BILL CLINTON, FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: It's crazy time we live in, you know, when people think there's something unusual about getting the flu. Last time I checked -- last time I checked, millions of people were getting it every year.

ZELENY: An aide to the former president said he misspoke when he said she had the flu. He meant to say pneumonia.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ZELENY: Now, Trump will release at least some of his details of his physical exam he received last week. But falling far short of full medical records here.

But, Alisyn, the campaign trail that Hillary Clinton is returning to this morning is a far different landscape than the one she left last week, suddenly tied or behind in so many battleground states, as well as nationally -- Alisyn.

ALISYN CAMEROTA, CNN ANCHOR: Jeff, thanks so much for all of that recording.

Meanwhile, there was this awkward moment for Donald Trump during a stop at a church in Flint, Michigan. CNN's Sara Murray is live at New York's Waldorf Astoria Hotel, where Trump will speak later today. What happened in Flint, Sara?

SARA MURRAY, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Well, good morning, Alisyn.

We saw Donald Trump continue the outreach he's been trying to do with minority communities. And he did that by visiting Flint, Michigan, yesterday, but he got a little too political for the pastor of the church he was attending. Take a listen at what happened.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

TRUMP: Hillary failed on the economy, just like she's failed on foreign policy. Everything she touched didn't work out. Nothing. Now Hillary Clinton...

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Mr. Trump, I invited you here to thank us for...

TRUMP: Oh, OK, OK.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: ... not give a political speech.

TRUMP: OK. That's good.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MURRAY: So, you saw the pastor interrupting him there, essentially saying they wanted him to steer clear of politics, just to talk about Flint, Michigan. And it was one of a couple awkward instances during that appearance. He also got interrupted by some hecklers.

And, of course, this is the risk for Republican presidential candidate when they visit some of these cities that don't traditionally see Republican candidates. Donald Trump has faced hecklers. He's faced protesters as he does this minority outreach. But he has gotten some credit from some folks who are happy to see him just appear in communities where they don't traditionally see Republican candidates.

As for today, Donald Trump will be changing gears entirely. He'll be here in New York City, where he's expected to give a speech about the economy. And while he's not going to be offering a lot of new details, he will be tying together some of the previous plans he's rolled out, whether it's paid leave, child care and also his tax plan.

And his aides originally said he would explain today how he's going to pay for all of this stuff. Now they're saying that's not going to come until Friday.

Back to you, Chris.

CHRIS CUOMO, CNN ANCHOR: All right, Sara.

Trump is also going in there in a place that, Flint, Michigan, that's so water quality sensitive. And his campaign had been kind of sideways on what to do with the EPA and the clean water rules. So that was playing into that, as well.

All right. Let's get some perspective right now. Republican Congressman Chris Collins from New York. He was the first member of U.S. Congress to endorse Donald Trump.

Congressman, always a pleasure. Good to have you on the show.

REP. CHRIS COLLINS (R), NEW YORK: Good morning, Chris. And go, Bills.

CUOMO: All right. You know, I was going to save that for last. I love the tie.

COLLINS: Got to start with it.

CUOMO: You don't feel any divided heart when it comes to the Jets and the Bills, because they're both New York teams?

COLLINS: Well, no. The Jets play in New Jersey. We've got the New Jersey Jets, the New Jersey Giants and only Buffalo is a New York team.

[07:05:08] CUOMO: You know what? That is the truth, and that kills me, because I am a Jets fan, but it's hard. It's hard. It's a tough game to watch.

It's good to have you here.

COLLINS: Good to be here with you.

CUOMO: Let's talk a little politics. You have said health records matter. Do you think that either of these campaigns are handling this issue the right way? I know that, in the past, we haven't gotten raw data from anybody except John McCain, because it was a unique circumstance, but isn't this a unique circumstance? These would be the two oldest candidates in the modern era that we have running in terms of when they'd enter office. Should they be giving out raw data, not a doctor's letter as we saw from Clinton, not a doctor's letter and going on "The Dr. Oz Show" as we saw from Trump?

COLLINS: Well, you know, Chris, from my perspective, I'm fine with a doctor's letter. You know, as a few people have said, do we need to know every little bit, every detail? We need to know they're fit. You know, tell us, you know, what medications they're taking, whether it's cholesterol or blood pressure and if they've had any operations, perhaps.

But I don't -- I don't know about most Americans. I don't want to deep dive every issue. I'm not a doctor. I just want to know a doctor says they're healthy and fit. Watching them on the campaign trail should tell you whether they're healthy or not.

CUOMO: Well, it's tough. They've both been keeping hard schedules. But it's just a question of how we get the information. And this will be evolving because there's no legal standard.

And that goes for a lot of the transparency, and that is a growing issue of concern on these campaigns. What do we know? What do voters deserve to know?

The Trump campaign won't put out their taxes, Congressman, and we've heard why about the audit. You know, we've asked about the audit letter, and the campaign accused us of saying that Donald Trump was lying because we asked for the letter. That's not fair scrutiny. Why not put out the IRS letter saying he's under audit? That's not a big deal.

COLLINS: Well, you know, you and I have talked about this before, Chris. I don't think he should release his taxes. I've always said that. There's no requirement there. And I really think today, with 50 some days left, which you've got the public wants to hear more about policy, which Donald Trump is delving into. They frankly, you know, don't care to review somebody's colonoscopy or the tax returns.

They care about the bigger picture: jobs and the economy, security and their own family's worries in this very difficult time. So...

CUOMO: All right. One more beat on that then, Congressman. Then I do want to talk to you; we'll talk about his child care plan a little bit and some of his financing mechanisms for his plans. You're right, policy matters. But, you know, conflicts have been a big issue. How they're going to

do the job. Will they be compromised? The Clinton Foundation is nothing that you're hesitant to talk about or the Trump campaign has been hesitant to talk about. That's not about policy. He now has these foreign ties that we know exist. He's a global organization. It's a private organization. We can't know about any of them unless he discloses them. There will be relevant information in the taxes. How do we know?

COLLINS: No, his personal financial disclosure is more detailed than any tax return will ever be; and that has been released. It shows everything he's involved in, invested in, every business that he's involved in, what monies are owed, what they're worth. The personal financial disclosure, which is required by law, has been filed. And I know, personally, when I file it, it tells people anything and everything they need to know.

CUOMO: Except that it is -- it's a deceptively one-sided document. He puts out what he wants to put out. And it...

COLLINS: No, you have to put everything out. You have to put everything out.

CUOMO: Right. But it's about the detail in which it goes out. I'm telling you, we've reviewed -- we've reviewed that thing. It's very thick; it's uncharacteristically thick. There's no question about that. But it does not give you the detail about what foreign governments he's involved with, which companies that might have compromised positions within their own governments.

Those are important pieces of information. Certainly, if Clinton had that going on in her past, you'd be all over it, wouldn't you?

COLLINS: Well, no, every business that he has is listed, and if you go to a tax return, it lists the same company. It doesn't tell you who the partners are in the business. If you have a business, and you have partners, the tax return doesn't tell you who the partners are. It just lists the name of the business. That name of the business is on his personal financial disclosure.

CUOMO: Right.

COLLINS: Every piece of information related to anything, every position he has, is on the personal financial disclosure.

CUOMO: Right. Except you don't know who's holding his debt. You don't know pieces of information...

COLLINS: Well, you don't know that on a tax return either. You know the debt. The debt is listed on the personal financial disclosure.

CUOMO: The debt is listed as an amount, not who holds the note.

COLLINS: That's correct.

CUOMO: Because it's been securitized by banks, specifically Deutsche Bank, and there are suggestions that there might be Russian entities that are now holding some of those notes.

COLLINS: Well, those notes aren't listed on a tax return either, Chris.

CUOMO: I know. But the tax return tells us other things. You're making it that that's all it would tell us. It would tell us information about that. It would also tell us about his...

COLLINS: No.

CUOMO: It would also tell us about what income that he has and from what sources. There's no question it's there. And there's useful information. He's chosen not, and you're saying there's no legal requirement. You're right.

[07:10:08] But I'm saying, you don't think that these questions about conflict and foreign involvement that's so important about the Clinton Foundation is not as important when it comes to Trump.

COLLINS: Well, it's not on the tax return. I don't know why everyone is so hung up on it. That information is not on a tax return. He has disclosed the personal financial disclosure. And as a private, I know myself a private interest. I don't want my competitors to know what each and every company I have makes or doesn't make. That's just competitive information that most companies would love to have on their competitors. I actually have always said he shouldn't release his tax returns.

CUOMO: All right. Now, on his child care plan. In similar fashion to a couple of his other paying mechanisms, it's we're going to do it through finding and stamping out waste, fraud and abuse. And that's specifically his main funding mechanism for doing his child care plan.

In your history in Congress, you've never seen anything paid for by stamping out waste, fraud and abuse. Everybody promises to do it. And then they task Congress with going out there and making it happen, and it never does. Is that enough of a description of how to pay for something?

COLLINS: Well, what I would say is you grow your way to success. A growing economy brings more revenue into the government. A growing economy takes people off of some of the entitlement programs. And when we do repeal Obamacare, the multi-hundreds of billions of dollars a year that are being wasted through Obamacare, both at the personal level and the government level, we're going to have plenty of money to pay for a lot of programs when we get rid of that, the monkey off our back, which is Obamacare.

So, I think it's growing the economy, getting people off of the entitlement programs because they've gone back to work. That brings more revenue in. Getting rid of Obamacare. It's all of the above that's going to pay for some of the programs Donald Trump is talking about.

CUOMO: Right. But when somebody puts out a proposal and says, "Here's what I want to spend. Here's how I'm going to pay for it," they usually show it balance -- budget neutral because of how they set it off. He said he's going to just stamp out waste, fraud and abuse; and that will pay for it.

COLLINS: Well, there's something called dynamic scoring versus static scoring. And dynamic scoring takes into account growth and the dynamics of growth and everything Donald Trump is going to do to bring our jobs back. We see now what Ford Motor Company is going to do. I think we can probably put Michigan into the Trump column.

Bringing the jobs back, manufacturing jobs, grows the economy. All of a sudden, we not only can fund infrastructure and other programs; we can start paying our debt down. We've got to get people back to work.

CUOMO: Congressman Collins, always a pleasure. Good to have you on NEW DAY. Good luck to your Bills.

COLLINS: OK. Thanks very much.

CUOMO: All right. Quick programming note: Be sure to join us tomorrow. We've got Clinton's former rival, senator Bernie Sanders, joining us live. We're going to go deep with him on what matters to you and what's going on in this race -- Alisyn.

CAMEROTA: Chris, a University of North Carolina football player surrendering to police, accused of rape by a fellow student. Allen Artis is now suspended from the team indefinitely. The move comes one day after sophomore Delaney Robinson went public, claiming she was sexually assaulted by Artis in February. Robinson says she came forward only after months of inaction by the police and the school.

CUOMO: The United Airlines plane getting the all clear after a security scare. United Flight 1243 was flying from Newark to San Diego. It was diverted to Denver Wednesday night after crews located a suspicious package. Once on the ground, the FBI and police bomb squads searched the plane, determined it was safe. Passengers re- boarded the plane and continued their flight.

CAMEROTA: Your next Uber may drive itself. People in Pittsburgh the first to take the self-driving vehicles out for a spin. This is a fleet of Ford Fusions. They're built with 20 cameras and seven lasers. It also features an iPad so you can let it know you're ready to ride.

Uber is hoping the move in part will make ride hailing safer and more efficient.

CUOMO: Does Cameronus (ph) get in an Uber that is self-driven?

CAMEROTA: I don't know. It's very "Jetsons" to me. The future is now. I want to believe it's safer, but it is so counterintuitive that I don't know yet. How about you?

CUOMO: No.

CAMEROTA: You don't like it.

CUOMO: No way. I've been in a couple of these fancy new cars that tell you when you're too close.

CAMEROTA: Yes.

CUOMO: I don't like it. I want to be in control of my own fate. I want a human being. I think there are a lot of reactions and things that it's -- the technology, to me, I haven't seen proof that it's as compelling. I guess over time it will prove that a machine is always better, but I'm not getting in there.

CAMEROTA: There you go. All right. Horse and buggy for Chris.

CUOMO: No. See, I knew you'd get...

Hillary Clinton gets a doctor's note, and Donald Trump gets a thumbs up from Dr. Oz. Will these disclosures suffice when it comes to what voters want to know about the health the candidates? Let's debate it, next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[07:18:58] CAMEROTA: We have dueling doctors' letters this morning. Donald Trump reveals a doctor's note to daytime talk show host Dr. Oz. This morning Donald Trump reveals a note to daytime talk show host Dr. Oz. An hour late, Hillary Clinton releases a summary of her health to the public.

So let's discuss this with senior political commentator and senior advisor for Priorities USA, a pro-Hillary Clinton super PAC, Paul Begala; and CNN political commentator and former Reagan White House political director Jeffrey Lord. Gentlemen, great to have you here.

JEFFREY LORD, CNN POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: Good morning, Alisyn.

CAMEROTA: Jeffrey, are you satisfied would the level of specifics that Donald Trump has offered about his health?

LORD: Sure, sure. But you know, Alisyn, I have to tell you, in all honesty, the average American out there, getting up and getting their kids out for school, I don't think they're paying any attention.

CAMEROTA: Voters don't deserve to know exactly what kind of health he's in or...

LORD: Sure, sure.

CAMEROTA: But he hasn't released the test results or any raw numbers.

LORD: He is going to release something, at least, that was my understanding from Kellyanne Conway here.

CAMEROTA: What is he going to release?

LORD: I have no idea. I don't know.

CAMEROTA: But what -- I mean, what are voters entitled to see? What level of disclosure would you like to see? LORD: Well, I don't think it has to be, you know, every last detail

if someone has had a colonoscopy. I just don't think we need to go there.

[07:20:07] CAMEROTA: I did read that word this morning. And I felt a little...

LORD: Yes. I was watching you do this, and I thought, "This is so brave. I'll just go along with it."

CAMEROTA: Thank you. But what, I mean, do we need to know their cholesterol level, their heart health, their history, and their family of heart history and health and cancer history?

LORD: You know, no matter who's elected, they're human beings. They're not perfect. Their health isn't perfect, because they're alive and they're almost 70 years old.

So, I just think, at a certain point, enough is a enough here.

One other thing, and I'd be interested to hear Paul's point of view on this. The fact that Hillary Clinton had this problem so visibly. I'm one of these people that think the old adage of a picture is worth 1,000 words. That that is going to be a problem for them as opposed to dueling letters...

CAMEROTA: But now we know that she had pneumonia. Doesn't that solve the problem for you?

LORD: It's just that that video keeps -- is everywhere. I just think that that's a problem for them.

CAMEROTA: But I mean, so you're not satisfied with just a pneumonia diagnosis?

LORD: I mean, I'll leave that to Dr. Gupta. I just don't want to be, you know, playing doctor on TV.

CAMEROTA: OK, Paul, are you satisfied with the level of disclosure that we've had from the candidates on their health?

PAUL BEGALA, CNN POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: Not both of them. Hillary has -- or really met, by now, with the letter she released yesterday from her doctor, exceeded the level of disclosure that we got from President Obama and Mitt Romney.

CAMEROTA: Has she? It's a two-page letter, and it summarizes. We're not seeing the raw results. We're seeing a summary from her doctor. Isn't this the same thing?

BEGALA: Look, she's got -- she has words in there I've never even heard. Of course, I'm -- seriously.

CAMEROTA: I have underlined some of them.

BEGALA: Great details about the hemoglobin, Vitamin B-12, triglycerides, blood pressure.

CAMEROTA: We're trusting her doctor to do this. So you're saying...

BEGALA: Of course. And by the way, this doctor is not -- you're not impugning her integrity.

CAMEROTA: Paul, I'm saying Donald Trump has also released a letter from a doctor, and I think you're skeptical of that one.

BEGALA: No, I think this guy -- I saw Drew Griffin's interview of that doctor. I find him charming. I really do. I think he's terrific. I like, you know, characters. I was partners with James Carville for 30 years. OK? So I like and respect this doctor to the extent that I've seen him.

But he's got to give us more. Trump has to give us more information. The doctor's letter just says he's, like, the bestest, most excellent, strongest, you know, he could beat up Superman.

CAMEROTA: He releases a two-page summary.

BEGALA: With lots of details. With lots of details. Like this, this is what we need to know. Look, I've worked for politicians all my adult life. They hate this. Not because they're hiding something nefarious, but because all of us like to keep that private.

Here's the thing. You run for president, you lose your right to medical privacy and financial privacy. I'm sorry. You lose it. Because we have a right to know. This country elected Franklin Roosevelt in '44 when he was dying and we didn't know. We elected John F. Kennedy, who had Addison's Disease and falsely denied having it. So we have a history.

By the way, when President Reagan was shot, we now learned he was much more grievously wounded than they let on.

LORD: Right.

BEGALA: It's not because Reagan was a liar. It's because he was kind of a big, heroic figure. But we need to know.

CAMEROTA: Times have changed. We certainly have a lot more 24-hour cable news channels that require more information.

BEGALA: This person is going to have her finger on the button or his.

CAMEROTA: Agreed.

BEGALA: By the way, if you ask voters, you know what they say, seriously? They say, "Well, we need a checkup from the neck up on our politicians." They think they're all crazy. But... CAMEROTA:

CAMEROTA: But I think you're both agreeing a two-page summary from the doctor would satisfy both of you for both of the candidates?

BEGALA: No. No. LORD: It would me.

CAMEROTA: OK. So Paul, what do you want?

BEGALA: In addition to that, what I want is a qualified doc who's a journalist -- Sanjay Gupta, for example -- to sit down with the candidates' doctors and review the whole thing. Not put it out to the public, but some qualified doc as an intermediary, who's in the media, not working for the politician.

CAMEROTA: John McCain put out...

BEGALA: McCain put out the gold standard.

CAMEROTA: ... 1,700 pages of his medical records, and doctors like Sanjay Gupta sat down and went through it. That's what you're calling for.

BEGALA: That's what Bill Clinton did. There's a doctor named Lawrence Kale (ph) who works for "New York Times," and he reviewed all of Governor Clinton's medical records.

But I think it's useful for privacy to have some intermediary. Not somebody provided by the candidate, somebody like Sanjay.

LORD: The reason Senator McCain is still Senator McCain is not because he released his health situation. You know. I mean, he did not become president because he put out this detailed health thing. I mean...

CAMEROTA: Are you comfortable with the model that Paul is suggesting? That they -- everybody disclose everything. A doctor, an intermediary sits down and combs through it, and releases the relevant stuff?

LORD: I just -- I just -- I don't particularly care, in truth, and I don't think most Americans care.

CAMEROTA: Should Donald Trump do that?

LORD: I think the candidates do what they want, and then they take the consequences.

BEGALA: Well, that's the thing. What are the consequences? Right? We have always in my lifetime had politicians running for president release their tax returns. Trump has -- no law; no law required it. But Trump has refused to do so.

CAMEROTA: Yes.

BEGALA: Is he paying a price for that? I don't know.

CAMEROTA: No, he's not. I have the answer to that.

BEGALA: Have we rewarded Hillary for setting -- the gold standard for financial disclosures, Hillary Clinton?

[07:25:07] CAMEROTA: Fine, but let me show you, Paul...

BEGALA: Thirty years of taxes.

CAMEROTA: There are new battleground polls out, and let's just tick through them.

In Florida, the battleground polls are now tightening. And here Donald Trump is ahead in this battleground poll, 47-44 Clinton.

Let's look at Ohio because, again, Donald Trump ahead in Ohio, Paul, 46 to 41. In Nevada, 44 to 42. It goes on. So, how do you explain that the battlegrounds are tightening?

BEGALA: It's a dead heat race.

CAMEROTA: Yes, but Donald has not...

BEGALA: And will be. Yes, I think we should all panic and wet the bed. The public holds us...

LORD: Not I.

CAMEROTA: I'm not a fan either.

BEGALA: I'm old enough -- I'm a very old man. I can remember four days ago when Hillary was ahead by ten in the "Washington Post" poll and five among likely voters in the "Washington Post" poll. Now there are polls where she's trailing him, because perhaps she is.

The "New York Times" poll out this morning had a dead heat.

CAMEROTA: So what's behind it, I think is the question. Why is Donald Trump...

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: It's a dead heat race. It was when we began. We had this lovely sugar high for the Democrats at the convention.

CAMEROTA: Sure.

BEGALA: I said so at the time.

LORD: Yes, exactly.

BEGALA: I said, "It's going to go right back."

CAMEROTA: Something is working that Donald Trump is doing with voters.

BEGALA: It's a tight -- it's a dead heat race.

LORD: I would suggest it's a change election. And when you're down to these two people, he's the change agent. And people see her as, for better or worse, and sometimes better and sometimes worse, as the agent of the status quo. You know, the Obama administration's designated handoff player. That's -- that's a problem.

When you've got, what, almost 70 percent of the people who think the country is going in the wrong direction, she is the representative of that wrong direction. And so therefore, it just makes it easier for him as he goes along.

CAMEROTA: Paul.

BEGALA: The thing to watch are those third- and fourth-party candidates, who have pretty strong appeal, especially with the two constituencies now I'm most focused on. College-educated white folks, which no Democrat has ever won. Hillary was winning. Now she's narrowly losing.

CAMEROTA: College-educated white?

BEGALA: College-educated whites. In the history of life, of polling, 50-plus years, no Democrat for president has ever won college-educated whites, ever. Hillary has been leading with them. That's why she was leading in the polls. Now, Trump is doing better with them.

The second is millennials. Many of them are swooping over to third- and fourth-party candidates. President Obama won them in a colossal landslide. Hillary has got to do better with them. She's got to tell them, "Look, you have to be strategic." They don't like Donald Trump. They're not -- a vote for Gary Johnson is a vote for Donald Trump. She needs to tell these young people that.

LORD: And remember, all this stuff that we've just been talking about in terms of her health and that video, et cetera. I don't think any of that has factored into these polls yet.

CAMEROTA: OK. Paul, Jeffrey, thank you very much. Great to see both of you.

Let's get over to Chris.

CUOMO: All right. So you see what Alisyn is hinting at there. Yes, the health is relevant, but it's also about the nature of disclosure by the candidates. You have Clinton puts out the doctor's letter, the traditional release. We have Trump with the doctor's letter but also the television interview. Clinton and Trump are using different tactics to release the same details of their health history.

How will voters see Trump's interview with Dr. Oz? We have some media experts. They'll tell you, next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)