What's up, sunshine? Welcome to CNN 10. I'm Ky Wire here with your news for Monday, February 2nd. Pumped to be here with you to start the week and to start Black History Month. It's a time to recognize, learn from, and celebrate the stories of black Americans. Because for a long time, many of those stories were left out of history books, even though they helped shape our country in huge ways. Black History Month is about understanding how history connects to the present, and how the black innovators, leaders, artists, and inventors of today are inspiring the future. We are kicking things off with a feature of an incredible man I got to spend time with recently, Dr. Lonnie Johnson, a barrier-breaking engineer and entrepreneur who's one of the most brilliant inventors of our time, and his story is ready for a movie script. Dr. Johnson holds more than 100 patents, and he's worked on top secret projects for NASA and the US Air Force. But his most famous invention, one of the bestselling toys of all time, the Super Soaker. I met Dr. Johnson at his lab here in Atlanta to hear his story and to share it with you. I've always been an inventor and I think I think we're all inventors. You know, the human beings, creativity, problem solving is what we're built to do. >> And creating is exactly what Lonnie Johnson has spent his life doing while shattering stereotypes and breaking barriers along the way. >> People ask me all the time, what's my favorite invention? You know, it's like asking what's my favorite child, you know. >> Yeah. From aerospace engineer to inventor, he is a living icon and living proof of what a little ingenuity and a lot of perseverance can do. He has more than 140 patents, including one that might be one of your favorite toys. >> God just won't do. Introducing the Super Soaker 50. Dr. Johnson was born in 1949. He grew up in segregated Alabama during a time of rampant racial injustice. Take us back through your childhood. Um some of the challenges that you faced growing up. >> Well, I grew up um segregation uh was a very real thing. So there were certain things that you know as a black person in America I was not allowed to do, places I couldn't go. The colored versus white bathrooms, water fountains, the whole nine yards. And racism was just up out front. You know, if you were black, you couldn't. There's certain things you just didn't do. >> A cruel daily reality. But Dr. Johnson wasn't going to let that crush his creative spirit. >> By the time I got to high school, you know, I got interested in in in science and engineering. I watched President Kennedy make his moon speech in ' 62 and was all excited about that and getting into science and rockets and and um used to watch the Lost in Space robot on TV and and Robbie the robot. and I decided I wanted to have my own robot. >> He spent over a year building Linux. >> So you're like 16, 17 years old at the time. >> And this was back in the 60s. So nobody had robots back then. >> He took Linux to a science fair his senior year. >> Went up to University of Alabama in ' 68. This was just a few years after Governor Wallace had stood in the door and said no black students would ever attend this university. And um I was the only black student there with the project. and uh my robot uh won first place. >> After graduation, Dr. Johnson attended Tuskegee University, getting a master's in nuclear engineering and starting his career at Oakidge National Laboratory. >> I found myself working alongside students from Princeton and other graduates rather from Princeton and other uh universities in engineering. Um and I was, you know, solving problems and had seen things and knew things that a lot of them didn't know. So I felt that I might I was well very well prepared by Tuskegee and it really built my confidence. >> That confidence propelled him to the Air Force and then to NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab where one of his inventions flew on the Galileo mission. It was during that time and while he was trying to solve a different problem that led to probably his most famous invention ever, or at least for now, it started with tinkering with nozzles in the bathroom. and they shot this the um stream of water across the bathroom and I thought, geez, this is a really satisfying effect. >> Power to it. >> Yeah. And the curtains in the bathroom started swirling because of the air currents that were set up. >> And I thought, geez, a high performance water gun would be a lot of fun. So, I put down that project and started using my engineering insight to figure out, okay, how can I build a high pressure gun that a small kid could operate and could hold a lot of water? I knew it would be successful. I didn't know that it was going to be a number one selling tour in the world. >> Now, Dr. Johnson spends a lot of his time with one of the companies he created, J-Tech Energy, still on a mission to solve problems. I think your message is that luck is what happens when you perpetually prepare and persevere. Um, you've mastered that and now you're you turned it into this J-Tech. I mean, this is really exciting what you're doing here. It's where science and creation collide as the team searches for new clean ways to fuel the world. >> A lot of the conflicts that you see in the world are centered on energy oil. So if we could reduce our dependence on oil, we not only improve the environment, but we'd also have one less thing to fight about. >> Now, that was just a teaser of our mindblowing morning at Dr. Johnson's Lab. We have a special episode dropping later this month that includes one of his new inventions that's taking wasted heat from machines and factories and converting it to electricity. Look out. Today's top space story, potential concerns surrounding NASA's Orion spacecraft, the vehicle that's slated to help return man to the moon as part of the Aremis missions. Four astronauts are scheduled to head to space aboard the Orion as soon as next week for a 10-day trip around the moon as part of the Aremis 2 mission. But some experts say the craft has a known flaw and are urging the agency not to fly the mission with humans on board. The issue relates to a special coating on the bottom of the craft called the heat shield, which protects astronauts from extreme temperatures of up to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit as they re-enter Earth's atmosphere. The crucial component on Artemis 2 is nearly identical to the one that was used on the uncrrewed Artemis 1 mission in 2022. That shield showed unexpected signs of damage following its return to Earth, prompting an investigation by NASA. And while even those involved in the investigation of that shield say there could be some risk involved, NASA appears poised to clear Artemis 2 for launch. The agency tells CNN that they have spent years investigating the issue and believe they can ensure the crew's safety through a number of ways, including altering the mission's flight path. Pop quiz, hot shot. What is the role of sodium in your body's process of hydration, protein absorption, bone strength, water retention, or cavity prevention? If you said water retention, H2, way to go. Sodium directs water where it needs to go in the body, like your bloodstream or muscle tissues. If sodium is low, water can pass right through you, even if you're drinking plenty of it. A teenager has just set the world record for fastest indoor mile by an under 18 athlete. That team is Sam Ruth from New Zealand. He's 16 years old. He ran the mile in 3 minutes 48.88 seconds in Boston over the weekend. He kicked it into another gear in the last 100 meters to blast past the leader for the win. >> Record. OH MY GOSH. WOULD YOU BELIEVE THIS? His dad said he traveled about 50 hours to get to the race. And Sam said after the 9,000mi journey, he was just thinking this race would be a rustbuster. Instead, it was a record-breaker. The time also broke New Zealand's national mile record set by a 30-year-old more than 40 years ago. Ruth told CNN Sports he thought he wouldn't be able to crack that record for years, and he still says he doesn't believe it. Said he didn't even feel like he was going that fast. But now with more races in Boston to come, he said he has more in the tank and can probably go faster. Today's story getting a 10 out of 10 shows the power of believing in yourself when every second matters. 14-year-old Ryan Long was at home in Bemantown, New York, when a normal day suddenly turned into an emergency. His grandma began feeling unwell and before they could make it to the hospital, she stopped breathing. With his grandfather on FaceTime and nurses coaching him over the phone, Ryan started CPR, staying focused and pushing through the pressure. For nearly 10 minutes, Ryan kept up chest compressions until paramedics arrived, saving his grandmother's life. Ryan has since been honored with his school district's first Eagle of Excellence Award, named a healthc care hero. Inspired by Ryan's actions, classmates all signed up for CPR training. Nurses say just like Ryan, always called 911 first. Proof that knowing what to do and confidence can make all the difference. All right, I've got two shout outs for you today. This first one goes to Mr. Gro at Goan Central School District and Goan, New York. Go Dragons. Thank you for subscribing to our CNN 10 YouTube channel. And we have a very special shout out today to Mrs. Kuick at Chanderwoods Charter Academy in Belmont, Michigan. Rise up. Now, Mrs. Kuwick is making CNN 10 history today. She's expecting a baby soon, and she asked us to be part of her baby's gender reveal. So, without further ado, drum roll please. It's a boy. Congratulations. Thank you for allowing us to be part of Baby Kick's arrival. Have an awesome day, everyone. I'll see you right back here tomorrow. I'm Koi Wire and we are CNN 10.