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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 8, 2016 7:00am-9:00am MDT

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captioning funded by cbs 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? donald trump and hillary clinton clash over foreign policy on the same stage. and a reveals colin powell's advice to clinton on using a personal account. will donald trump make a profit off of his presidential bid? how his own company is benefiting from campaign spending. a "playboy" playmate could go to jail for taking this pirp of an older woman at a gym and then posting it on snapchat. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. . they are not going to get
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we are going to defeat isis without committing american ground troops. >> the candidates battle over the military. >> under the leadership of barack obama and hillary clinton, the generals have been reduced to rubble. they have been reduced to a point where it's embarrassing for our country. >> democrats released correspondence between clinton and secretary of state colin powell on her e-mail server. somebody who doesn't know much about technology scares me. >> congress failed to pass a bill to fight zika. >> this is the fear for floridians right here. >> remnants of tropical storm newton drenched the southwest after twice making landfall in mexico as a hurricane. >> say bye-bye to your headphone jack. the reason to move on really comes down to courage. >> where do they find the courage to charge people $160 for new headphones?
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lochte will be suspended ten months. >> a little girl tries to stop an ax-wielding robber to protect her family's business. >> all that. >> a crosses the line between brave and foolish. >> dos equis introduced the most fascinating man in the world. that coconut wowed me, all right? >> after seconds of takeoff, >> did you ever think in a million years you would be doing a water landing? >> no, or being on this show. >> on "cbs this morning." >> are you support ago candidate or are you engaged in this presidential election? >> i'm a private citizen recognizing that hillary clinton needs to be the next president of the united states? >> so you have endorsed her? >> he just did. >> starbucks howard schultz endorsed hillary clinton. at least we think that is who he meant.
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toyota. let's go places! ? welcome to "cbs this morning." president obama fired back this morning after donald trump attacked his policies at a foreign policy forum in new york. trump and hillary clinton appeared back-to-back on the same stage last night to answer questions. >> trump accused president obama of ignoring intelligence experts advice and he called russia's presidenbe our margaret brennan asked the president about that this morning. >> i don't think the guy is qualified to be president of the united states. and every time he speaks, that opinion is confirmed. >> major garrett is here with the key moments from last night's forum. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it was, in effect, a warm-up for the three presidential debates to come, including the part afterwards where both sides said
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and veterans. hillary clinton appeared at time eager to tackle and at the top, the two sides agreed to kind of a rhetorical cease-fire and throughout tried to persuade an apprehensive nation they have what it takes. at the time a forum last night, donald trump and hillary clinton appeared separately, but agreed to avoid harsh attacks that have dominated the campaign. >> i think that is an exactly right way to procd. absolutely. >> reporter: the focus? foreign policy on iraq, clinton again admitted supporting the war was a blunder. >> i have said that my voting to give president bush that authority was, from my perspective, my mistake. >> reporter: the republican nominee denied backing the war when it first started, which he did, before turning against it months later. >> i was against the war in iraq because i said it's going to
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>> reporter: as commander in chief, trump promised to be more cautious than clinton. >> i think i would be a lot slower. she has a happy trigger. >> reporter: for her part, clinton tried to smother that line of attack by arguing in the battle against isis she would not add troops already on the ground. >> we are not putting ground troops into iraq ever again and we are not putting ground troops into syria. >> reporter: when asked to clarify claims that he knows more about fighting isis than the generals, trump said what they really need is new leadership. >> i think under the leadership of barack obama and hillary clinton, the generals have been reduced to rubble. >> reporter: despite his relationship to regional adversaries syria and iran, trump warmed up as a potential ally against i circumstances. >> wouldn't it be wonderful if we could work on it together and knock the hell out of isis. >> reporter: and even praise the vladimir putin's authority. >> the man has very strong control over our country. it's a very different system and i don't happen to like the
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system, he has been a leader far more than our president has been a leader. >> reporter: trump was asked about sexual assault in the military and stood by a tweet he sent out three years that read, in in part, what do these gen geniuses expect this they put men and women be very careful. i got around it all but nay saying much. nancy is covering it. >> good morning. this was a national security forum, but questions about clinton's e-mails took up about
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released just as she was taking the stage and indicates he and she shared similar motivations for using a private account. >> had i communicated this information, i would have possibly been in prison. >> reporter: the material she sent and received on her private e-mail system wasn't sensitive enough. >> there were no headers, there was no statement. top secret, secret or confidenti material on a totally separate system. i took it very seriously. >> reporter: it came on the same day that house democrats released a long 2009 e-mail from clinton to colin powell describing an approach to e-mails clinton would go on to emulate. what i did do was have a personal computer that was hooked up to a private phone
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wide range of friends directly without it going through the state department's server. >> secretary powell and close aides to former secretary rice used private e-mail accounts. >> reporter: clinton has always argued that she was just following the lead set by others. >> my predecessors did the same thing and many other people in the government. >> reporter: powell thought to distance himself from the controversy last month telling "people" magazine that her people have been trying to pin was using her private server for a year before i sent her a memo telling her what i did. but the newly released e-mail was sent just days after clinton started her new job. in a statement, maryland democrat elijah cummings said if americans were concerned with transparency, they would be attempting to cover secretary powell's e-mails from aol. powell has said he didn't save those e-mails, but there are a
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actions and clintons. the state department was a technological backwhen he arrived in 2001 with a clunky e-mail system. the rules governing were much more rigorous. >> thanks, nancy. john is managing editor and co-host and it returns to showtime this sunday. john, good morning. >> good morning. awesome to see all three back here at the same tiable. it feels like school is back in session. >> you look pretty snappy. >> thank you. i take all my cues from you. >> have an impact on the clinton campaign or this presidential election? >> i think probably not in the long run, but i do think there is a lot of people in brooklyn who have been insisting for a long time where headquarters are that feel they get some indication from the e-mail because she insisted that she
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seems to suggest in various conversations that they were hanging him out to dry. this e-mail was delivered the exchange took place the day after she became secretary of state. it at least gives some credence to the notion that she was following powell in her mind. >> but he also did be very careful. >> it does not vindicate if you think she was handling classified material, which i think people do by setting up this home server, she went way fa make up this colin powell thing. >> look, technology was different then. >> all the things colin powell did. the server in his home, which raised a lot of questions which you talk about on this show and others. >> i keep hoping this campaign is more about hillary clinton's e-mails and more about donald trump's position on immigration is from day taday. >> more than those two things.
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education policy and economic policy. they tried to have a discussion about national security last night. did that happen? we have a good the two candidates? >> the e-mail issue is a legitimate issue and took up an awful lot of her time and she was defensive. it was brought up by one of the audience members so you can't avoid that. the veteran who brought up that issue and challenged her, put her on the defensive. you can't get around that issue. but -- >> but not in that forum last night but yesterday, donald trump sa automatic sequestration cuts. >> we should spend more time on that. it's interesting. because she answers and because she answers in full and she answers in a more lawyer way, not only did you have that e-mail topic take up a lot of the discussion but she didn't get to cover much ground with her. trump, he covered a lot of ground but mainly because he does not have all of that much to say on a lot of these issues. his answers are very, very tight.
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were problematic in a variety of ways. he continues to insist he did not -- he was against the iraq war from the beginning and ample evidence that he was for the iraq war when it started. i think we need -- we need to keep saying that over and over again because he is lying about it repeated. >> are you saying he should be called on that? >> yes. i think all politicians should be called when they lie. he praised vladimir putin and talked about how american generals had been reduced to rubble and said some things that were highly controversial. both sides will come away with attack each other and i can't imagine a lot of americans are great, more attacks. >> gayle said a preview of the debate. thank you, john heilemann. president obama is on his way home from a six-day trip to asia on his lasted day in laos, he met with southeast asian leaders and sled a dispute with a u.s. ally who threatened him with some foul language. margaret brennan is in laos. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. at a closing press conference, president obama attempted to
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sensitive issues that have disrupted this final visit to asia. despite scuttling a meeting with fooep president rodrigo duterte following an anti-american rant where he called president obama a son of a -- can you tell us if president duterte offered an apology to you? >> i don't take these comments personally because it seems as if this is a phrase repeatedly, including dredging of the pope and others. >> reporter: mr. obama also tried to smooth over his botched rival in china days early when a missing airline staircase forced him to exit at the belly of air force one. he disputed that it was somehow symbolic of his frustrated efforts to refocus american power toward asia. >> this theory about my reception and my rebalanced
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the short stairs in china. yes, i think that is overblown. >> reporter: but it was a tense trip for the president. nuclear north korea rattled nerves with hits launch of three ballistic missiles. and his lengthy meeting with vladimir putin to broker a cease-fire in seyria was a failure. the president is leaving with a win. he convince the china to sign on to a and repaired a vietnam era rift with this first visit to laos. >> thank you, margaret. a russian fire flew within ten feet of an american surveillance jet, the pentagon says. it happened yesterday over the black sea. the pentagon says the navy was a russian official says the american aircraft was flying toward russia's border. >> law enforcement nationwide on heightened alert this morning
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a recent joint bulletin by the fbi and homeland security said 75% of homegrown extremists attacks the past 12 months were focused on civilian targets. jeff pegues is in washington with how the terrorists are changing their tactics. >> reporter: almost 15 years after 9/11, federal law enforcement officials released this bulletin which highlights how much the threat from terrorists has evolved over the years. j by cbs news, officials are once again warning that isis-inspired terrorists have shifted their focus to target attacks on civilian venues, such as restaurants, theaters and sports arena with less focus on law enforcement and government facility. >> do we know why the government believes the shift is happening, jeff? >> isis is now and has been instructing its follower to go after what it believes are soft
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and has been aware of and tracking for sometime. they have been tracking this change and approach by isis and believe that law enforcement sources have told us that there is still this need for a continued vigilance among law enforcement and military as well. even though there has been this change in tactics. now the bulletin was recently distributed last week. we are told that its release is not meant to coincide with the upcoming anniversary of the 9/11 aerial spraying of a controversial chemical to fight zika in florida is delayed after a public outcry. there are know more than 650 cases in florida and 56 are nontravel-related. 80 involve pregnant women. protests in miami beach forced officials to push back today's scheduled spraying until tomorrow morning. david begnaud is there. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that aerial spraying the plane is coming right through this
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mosquitoes. it was a public outcry yesterday that led city official to nearly beg the county mayor who authorizes the spraying to give them another thing to convince the, owe residents this is a good idea. >> you're lying! >> please, this is information! >> reporter: over and over an anry crowd shouted at the mayor that the insect eyed to humans. >> i will not get sprayed here! >> reporter: many people doubted evidence from the cdc stating zika can cause babies to be born with devastating head injuries. >> raise your hand if you're skeptical about the link between the zika virus and microcephaly. >> a lot of people are still denying the fact that zika and devastating birth defects are linked. >> reporter: after that heated
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>> we will do it friday to give them more time to notify their residents. >> reporter: the record in miami beach echoed what is happening in washington where partisan discord over obamacare and planned parenthood have stymied the zika funding bill. >> we need a zika bill. no poison, just a bill. >> i arrived with a hundred mosquitoes straight from florida. they are capable of carrying the zika impasse was affecting tourism, 127 hotels and state tourism offices, and travel organizations september a letter to congress urging emergency funding be approved immediately. >> in florida, it's viewed as a miami issue. and around the world, it's viewed as a u.s. issue. we would hate for people to get the impression that it's not safe to travel when, in fact, it is. >> reporter: earlier this summer, flight bookings to miami
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were up about 11% from last year. but, gayle, as soon as zika was announced here in south florida and the miami area, it turns out travel data now reveals the flight bookings are down about 10%. >> people are scared. thank you very much, david. some iphone users are upset that apple is "cutting the
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by weightwatchers, beyond the scale. join today! donald trump's presidential run is pumping cash into his own businesses. >> ahead, how millions of dollars of campaign money circulates back to the billionaire's companies. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ?
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s of corn are picked a day here in olathe, colorado. and i'm glad we have a senator who uses his ears to listen to what's most important to colorado farmers. michael bennet asked what he could do to help, and then worked with republicans to make a farm bill that's making a difference to all farmers in colorado. the thing that impresses me most about michael bennet: we don't always agree, but he values our input. and i do trust michael bennet to look out for us. i'm michael bennet and i approve this message. the new smithsonian african-american music of american occur tewell opens its doors and giving perspective on the past to help us understand the presence and our future. take an extraordinary first look when "cbs this morning"
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rney. this is cbs4 morning news. >> good morning. 7:26 right now. i'm alan gionet. breaking news this morning we have pictures this morning where two people are dead after being hit by cars. police tell us a car hit one person who was standing outside their car in the dark before 6:00 a.m. the other help and that is when they were bolted by another car police say. both of them are dead. police are investigating a number of possibilities including road rage but nothing is certain yet. those road closures are causing some traffic headaches joel. >> reporter: yes. you're not able to access. 56 remains closed under pena boulevard. you will have access from green
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take tower road up to the north if you're heading to the airport to get around that, but you have to take chambers to tower. across the denver metro area, 285 and wadsworth. we had that earlier accident southbound. that has been cleared out of the way. i-70 and washington accident.
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oel hillan and taking a look at the temperatures 56 denver. 56 grand junction. we still have the fog on the eastern plains and it is thick akron to burlington so it is a half mile in some spots. satellite and radar and quiet right now. we have a chance for thunderstorms. we could see bigger storms this afternoon and evening but here in denver were dry and clear with 89 degrees. 70s in the high country and 80s
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tomorrow we're cooler and windy. sunny skies saturday afternoon
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sir, what do you think of james corden? >> this is about you, not me. >> what are you going to wear for the launch? >> planning just wearing what i've got on here. >> this is a big deal. i'd be entirely of apples and you just walk on and you just go, this is it [ bleep ]! get in line! ? sweet home alabama ? where the skies are so blue ? >> that is a special carpool karaoke where james corden is with apple ceo tim cook to talk about the controversial ear
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sight of tim cook. he likes to play. >> he knows his song. >> he is very clever. "sweet home alabama." nicely done, james corden. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? this half hour, donald trump finds running for president is good for business. he is spending millions of campaign funds on services of violating an older woman's privacy. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" says olympic swimmer ryan lochte was reportedly suspended for ten months about a gas station robbery in rio last month. he first said he and three teammates were robbed at gun point but he later admitted he exaggerated. his teammates face shorter sentences reportedly.
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olympic committee on swim. tropical storm newton targeting the southwestern u.s. the storm has weakened but could dump more rain on parts of new mexico and texas. heavy flooding where parts of arizona saw more than 5 inches of rain yesterday. >> rampant fraud in the seafood business. seafood products by a conservation group found that 1 in 5 were mislabeled. the fraud rig was higher in the inaccurately labeled fish. >> donald trump's presidential candidate to run and make money on it. julianna goldman looks at how some of trump's campaign money
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candidate himself. >> reporter: good morning. unlike any other candidate in modern history, donald trump is using his businesses for his campaign, his headquarters is at trump tower. presses conference often at trump properties. he has to pay fair market value so we crunched the numbers to see how much he is essentially paying himself. >> i didn't need to do this, folks. i'm spending a lot of money. >> reporter: donald trump has contributed more than $52 million to his presidential campaign. but the republican nominee has offs 7.2 million dollars or just over 8% of the money his campaign has spent through july into his own businesses. since trump moved into the general election phase, that spending has increased. during the first year of his campaign, he spent on average 500,000 a month at his own companies, but as his campaign ramped up from the end of june through july, he spent 1.2 million at trump businesses. >> there is a good chance that donald trump is the first candidate for president who
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endeavor. >> reporter: charlie sisez is an election lawyer who was mitt romney's cfo. >> the difference with the romney campaign he is a numbers guy that is very cheap, i think, in terms of how money is spent. so we were looking to save as much money as possible. >> reporter: like with travel. campaigns typically split about half the cost of flying with the president corps who fly on their planes. a practice clinton started this week. >> welcome to our big plane! >> reporter: on monday, trump allod it's unclear if they were charged, but he told them it wouldn't be a regular occurrence. throughout the campaign, he has paid his own aviation company 5.6 million dollars to fly his multiple planes like this luxury 757. he spent more than 423,000 dollars to rents out his private maralago club and he paid
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by comparison holding an event for thousands of people at the nearby westchester county center costs about $10,000. the campaign has spent over $830,000 for office space at trump tower. in july is paid over $169,000 up 1 33% from may. they expanded into more office space they say in anticipation of additional staff. >> so as much as it looks like he is putting money into the campaign, he is filling space i his building that otherwise there would be no rvevenue off f so it's absolutely circular. >> reporter: he says it's not illegal but discouraging big dollar republican donors to give money to their nominee. >> when they say things like buying trump brand products and flying on the trump plane, it doesn't inspire them to give. >> reporter: the spending on trump brand is still well below what the republican nominee has personally invested in his campaign, but it also comes with
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the campaign did not respond to our requests for comment. >> julianna, thank you so much. apple is causing a stir with its decision to pull the plug on the traditional headphone jack in the new iphone 7. critics of the decision fear the company's wireless headphone technology will be inconvenient, expensive, and easy to lose. apple ceo tim cook revealed yesterday the so-called air bodies won't use a cord. nicholas thompson is editor of "the website. the new ear pods don't come in the box with your iphone. you have to pay how much? >> $169. what happily has done they have gotten rid of the headphone jack and make you plug your headphones into the old charging cord, the lightning port. you can plug the old headphones into the port and you can buy headphones and they will sell you these expensive wireless
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have to make this change and pay for it too? >> it's absolutely risky and alienating people and we will lose the adapters and confusing. how many headphones you go through a year? 10, 15? >> i've bought three the last three months. >> this is risky. the advantage for apple and the reason they are doing is to get rid of the headphone jack soed a more features and make it thinner and make it waterproof. if they can sell you new ear apple devices than with anything else and they think it's a way to get you to seamlessly put the ear phones in and talk to your computer and siri and other products and locks you into the system. >> one of the executives called it a courageous decision. >> it was hilarious. it's only apple that would do this! we are going to take away a thing you love and you're better for it! you know? take this now! >> bigger question is what about the sales of iphones and whether
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overall company? >> this is another interesting thing. this is the first time what they did is set the iphone 7 up during the announcement as a competitor to the iphone 6 saying this is so much better than the 6! it wasn't about samsung or anybody else. they want you to upgrade because they know the way to get big money. will this sell? probably. the camera seems great. a lot of enhancement and sell well but i think we are in a period where apple sales no longer blow you away andhe which we have started to see and never seen before. >> why do you think that is happening? >> do you need to upgrade your phone? >> i'm holding on to the 6. >> there aren't things that people absolutely need to do. for them to green sell more phones they need to expand to china which is hard and india where they don't have any traction and it's getting harder and harder and the competitors are better and better. >> did anybody talk about battery life? that's what i would like to see.
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hour to two hours better from the 7 to the 6. that is an enhancement. >> color changes? >> two shades of black? >> they are very excited about the color changes. a new black color on the iphone. they are pumped. i'm not as excited about it, but, hey, some people love it. >> all right. nick thompson, thank you so much. >> thank you. a picture taken in a locker room could send a playboy playmate to jail. ahead, why police are and if you're heading out the door, watch us live through the cbs all-access app on your digital device. you won't want to miss our interview with the ceo of the social network next door who is taking a stand against racism. we will be right back. scalpel. i have no idea what i'm doing. i'm just a tv doctor. i never went to college. (scream) i don't do blood.
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a playboy playmate accused of body shaming a woman could now face criminal charges.
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woman changing in the gym locker room. now that woman has been identified. mireya villarreal is in los angeles with how the investigation began. good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. the gym first alerted police after the post. now the city attorney's office is reviewing the case after lapd has been investigating since july. the woman is in her 70s and willing to testify against mathers. >> this is dani your 2015 placemate of the year. >> reporter: the 29-year-old captured an unsuspected elderly woman on camera changing in the locker room of an la fitness gym and she captured the nude photo, if i can't unsee this, then you can't either, before posting it to snapchat. >> there is no question that by her own caption that she
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>> reporter: if charged, mathers could face up to six months in jail for violating california privacy laws. >> you are not permitted in california to take photos in specific rooms where a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy. there are bathrooms, dressing rooms, changing rooms, tanning booths, and other rooms like that. >> reporter: in a statement, an attorney for mathers said the at any time and never intended to violate any law. >> i know that body shaming is wrong and that's not what i'm interest. >> reporter: after the incident, mathers apologized on a snapchat video and on twitter. >> the photo was taken to be a part of a personal conversation with a girlfriend. because i am new to snapchat i didn't realized i had posted it and that is a mistake. >> for heaven sake, this elderly woman, we should be applauding her. she's at the gym trying to make
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cause deterrents not only for the person who took the picture, but also for others. >> reporter: following the incident, mathers was banned from all la fitness gyms and made most of her social media accounts private. the city attorney hopes to decide whether or not to file charges very soon. >> wow. banned the gym? >> such a mean girl move. you look at that mother, she is somebody's mother and maybe the explanation i meant to send it to my friend makes it okay? not nice. >> not nice at all. jumping off a cliff requires nerves of steel but, ahead, the dare devil who took it to a whole new level. first, it's time to check
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a masked man went to extremes to get to california's crystal cove. the dare devil didn't stay long before leaping over the edge. he scraped some rocks on the way down but he survived. he got a minor scratch on his back. >> i like how you say it required quick trespassing before you almost kill yourself. >> yeah. pretty going down. a corporation is valid at more than 1 trillion dollars. first on "cbs this morning," "fortune" magazine reveals the 50 most powerful women in business. who is that? you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. the first person to survive
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the new smithsonian museum opens its doors and giving perspective on the past to help us understand the presence and our future. take an extraordinary first look when "cbs this morning"
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oxfield. good morning. 7:56. i'm alan gionet. we have breaking news this morning. let's take a look at live pictures from 56th and pena. two people are dead after being hit by cars this morning. police tell us a car hit one person who of their car in the darkness before 6:00 a.m. the other person stopped to help apparently and that is when they were both hit, both of them, by another car. they are investigating a number of possibilities including road rage. joel hillan watching the traffic situation. >> it will be a mess. we have 56 which is closed as you get underneath pena
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curiosity slowing. the alternate routes, you can take green rally ranch or 40th if you need to get underneath pain y or access on to pena boulevard. let me zoom out. slowing in the westbound directs of i-70 and eastbound. accident eastbound along i-70 at washington. backups almost to i-76. the side streets, southbound has been cleared out of the
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59 and denver right now and 36 gunnison. 58 in grand junction. we have really thick fog near burlington. some areas down to zero visibility. besides the fog we're quiet and
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? ? good morning, it is thursday, september 8th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead including the presidential candidates dueling over foreign policy and the military.we donald trump and and hillary clinton made at last night's forum. >> it was a warmup for the three presidential debates to come, including the part afterwards where both sides said they won. >> this was a national security form, but questions about clinton's emails took up about a third of her time. >> technology was different then. >> it was different although again, all of things that colin powell did, he did not set up a server in his home. >> president obama attempted to
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disrupted this final visit to asia. >> my reception here as far as i can tell has been terrific. >> almost 15 years after 9/11, federal officials released this bulletin which high lights how much the threat has involved. >> it was a public outcry led city officials to beg the county mayor who authors the spraying to give them another day to convince thes reresidents this say good idea. >> how much do you pay for them? >> $169. apple haste phone jack. people are upset. >> isn't that a risky move, we have to make the change and pay for it, too? >> risky, completely alienate customers. >> i always wanted to pay for $160 for something that will immediately get lost in my backpack. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. hillary clinton and donald trump laid out their commander in chief credentials at last
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inaccurate statements. >> classified material has a header which says "top secret, secret, confidential." nothing, and i will repeat this and this is verified in the report, by the department of justice, none of the emails sent or received by me had such a header. >> i happened to hear hillary clinton say that i was not against the war in iraq. iraq. again, she made a mistake on libya. she made a terrible mistake on libya and the next thing, i mean not only did she make the mistake, but then they complicated the mistake having no management once they bombed you know what out of gadhafi. >> clinton's claim about the classification headers is misleading. there were no headers but fbi director james comey said three emails were marked with a "c" meaning confidential, classified
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person in secretary clinton's position should have known that an unclassified system was no place for that conversation. >> donald trump said back in 2002 he supported the invasion of iraq. he came out against it after the war began. this was what donald trump said about libya in february 2011. >> gadhafi in libya is killing thousands of people. nobody knows how bad it is, and we're sitting around, we have soldiers all over the stop this horrible carnage. now, we should go in, we should stop this guy, which would be very easy and very quick. >> that was more than five months before libya's dictator was overthrown. in los president obama said every time donald trump speaks he becomes more sure trump is not qualified to be president. he was answering a question from our margaret brennan. >> this is serious business. you actually have to know what
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actually have to have done your homework, and when you speak, it should actually reflect thought-out policy that you can implement, and i have confidence that if, in fact, people just listen to what he has to say and look at his track record or lack thereof, that they'll make a good decision. >> major garrett has covered the trump campaign from the beginning. major, good morning. >> good morning. >> so last night, trump said that he has a plan to defeat isis. what do we know about that plan? >> for the first time trump said i'm going to ask the general to give me a plan in 30 days. whether that's a real timetable or not, the most important thing trump is trying to do is give the american public the idea he will be held accountable through his own timetable and get him imagining he's commander in chief. that decision is part and parcel of what this election is about.
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military people than she does? >> some surveys indicate that for sure and there is a dissatisfaction within some elements of the service ranks of the military with president obama's leadership. they don't believe the wars have been prosecuted effectively or aggressively enough. trump talks about strength that's what he's driving at and they are receptive to that part of the message. >> he was asked a question about a confidential security briefing earlier in the day and shared information about that. were you surprised he was so open? >> part of the briefings but talking to people who have been, they are exactly that, informational, not about policies recommended to a president, and they are driven more by the questions that the nominees ask about underlying security or intelligence information than what the briefers bring in. and what trump said is, i know now that the president's not doing what they're recommending. i'm not exactly sure either what he means by that or if the
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briefers came in with some things the president hasn't done. >> he was asked about it, major, how can you say that? he said i can read body language. >> which also puts him i guess partially qualified to be a jury consultant. >> my understanding of the briefing it is to brief the president on the options he has rather than to recommend a policy. >> exactly. and usually what the candidates ask is where the real information is derived. your level of curiosity actually determines extensive the breachings are. >> what did we learn yesterday in terms of defense? >> wants to be the next ronald reagan, grow the military in every dimension, spend a lot of money and not use it very much. that's the kind of inherent contradiction. trump said i want a larger military and fewer ambitions as far as creating nation building or trying to build more democracies. it's a bigger military with an uncertain purpose. >> major thank you. good to have you here. >> good to be here.
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morning" democratic vice presidential candidate senator tim kaine will be here in studio 57. first fortune magazine
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national museum of african-american history and culture, when it opens this month, it will highlight a small new england town with a rich history. coming up, the rise of oak bluffs. you're watching "cbs this morning." ? ?"all you need is love" plays? my friends know me so well. they can tell what i'm thinking, just by looking in my eyes. but what they didn't know was that i had dry, itchy eyes. i used artificial tears from the moment i woke up... ...to the moment i went to bed. so i finally decided to show my eyes some love,... ...some eyelove. eyelove means having a chat with your eye doctor
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companies who worked through. the problem is more in the startup industry. you would think it would be better because so many younger people running those companies, but it's just not coming up through the kind of traditional
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have a problem. >> marissa meyer off the list will be a shocker for people. did it surprise you? >> it did surprise me but it's fair to say she has not been successful in the company and the company is pretty small at this point. no longer on the fortune 500 and it is now being sold and it's very unclear what her future will be. >> who are the other people who dropped off the list? >> well, one is sherry mccoy the ceo of avon, an accomplished executive who took a job that was possibly very d we called that the glass cliff when women in particular and we have numbers on this, are encouraged or perhaps don't have any other choice but to take the job that is the riskiest. >> did you put marissa in that category? >> i would, with i is not to say she didn't necessarily fail in the job. her strategy did not work. it's not an excuse for what she did and didn't do. it is a fact she was the fifth ceo in a row and the other four
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>> just because. beyonce is our extra bonus pick. she has rocked it this year. i think it's fair to say politically musically from a business standpoint. >> she came in 51. >> right behind the vice chairman, ann finnegan. >> and mary erdos from jpmorgan made your list, two women in finance. >> several women in finance. >> great stuff. thank you so much, jennifer reingold great to have you here. >> go to our website for the women list. that's cbsthis jng morning.kop. generations of black gland a americans have within drawn to in picturesuresque town settled by freed slaves and laborers. we'll introduce you to oak bluffs. we'll be right back. the new smithsonian african-american museum of
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open on the past and understand our future. take a first look monday on "cbs this morning." "cbs this morning" at the new museum of african-american history and culture is brought to you, in part, by toyota. for complete protection all day and night
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? as we count down to monday's special broadcast from the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture, four days now, . power of place we will destroy areas in the u.s. with a distinct african-american identity. one of those places is a small new england town on the island of martha's vineyard. margaret brennan shows us how oak bluffs became a popular obama and many others. >> reporter: the charming new england cottages of martha's vineyard have been a summer get-away for the african-american elite for more than a hundred years. drawn to the harbors of oak bluffs in the late 1800s, freed slaves and laborers began settling there. charles share, the son of a slave and her white owner, turned this cottage into the
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share's great granddaughter. >> african-americans came to visit and not able to stay tes home and not welcome there because of segregation. he opened the inn. >> reporter: the cottage soon attracted the african-american elite, including actor paul robson and edgeal waters and harry t. buehrle. >> it really was the beginning of the expansion of the african-american communities on martha's vineyard. >> reporter: adam clayton powell jr., one of the first ri writer dorothy west, and coleman considered the dean of boston's black theater purchased homes nearby. today, they are featured along the island's african-american heritage trail. historians elaine winetrip and carrie tanker founded it. >> why is the sharer house the first stop on this tour? >> we felt the contribution that has been made to the island should be celebrated first. we had an ambitious plan and in
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now we have 26. >> 26? >> 26. >> reporter: the sith sewnisith took notice. shearer cottage will be feature at the new museum. author jessica harris donated artifacts from her family's historic home. why did you think it was important to make a donation to the exhibit? >> things are changing. this is not the oak bluffs i grew up in, but as it changes through things, through artifacts, one can maintain a connectiit african-american community here on martha's vineyard has expanded beyond oak bluffs. >> the bottom line is whatever anybody says, one way or another, the nucleus, the bedrock, the beating heart and soul of the african-american community on this island is and will always be oak bluffs. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," margaret brennan, oak bluffs, massachusetts.
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vineyard and other players might disagree but oak bluffs is very special place. >> why? >> they say we have got soul, we have got a beating heart. that's what i mean. >> oh, okay. >> we have something to offer too. a great place. i love it. as we prepare for our broadcast on monday from the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture, we are featuring the amazing architecture and design on our instagram page. follow "cbs this morning" on instagram to see the inspiration historic museum. >> it really is amazing. the architecture, how they put that whole thing together, a great story. >> he is a great architect. a chemical ban in your soap is showing up in your
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good morningment about 8:25. i'm alan gionet. two team are dead after being hit while out of cars at 56 near pena around 5:00 jamie leary is live there right now. >> reporter: good morning. they are just working on clearing the scene as we speak. an officer earlier told us this could be road rage but there is not enough evidence to main that as the main cause of the crash so they are still investigating a number of possibilities. this happened around 5:00 this morning. one man pulled over along 56 underneath the underpass here
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and he was struck as well. the first victim struck a second time. both of the men died. this is not a hit-and-run. everybody involved remained on scene here. dpd said the time of day this happened likely made it difficult to see somebody on the roadway. lots of if traffic, a lot of glare from the headlights so both people were struck as a result. everyone involved remained on scene. the investigation is on going. jamie leary, cbs4 morning >> a look how this is impacting your traffic. joel. >> you get along 56 there. that investigation continues. take green valley ranch boulevard your best road or alternate to use this morning. here we are across the denver metro area. we have a a lot of accidents.
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$%c1 59 in denver. 61 boulder. 62 out in burlington. 58 grand junction. we still have a lot of fog on the eastern plains. down to zero visibility near burlington down to 2 miles near it is bad in some spots. be extra careful because it may take awhile especially at burlington to mix out. our highs today it will be a warm one. 89 dep ver. 88 boulder and greeley. a great night for the broncos'
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libertarian presidential candidate gary johnson is getting attention this morning for an answer to a question he was asked about syria. he was here in studio 57 yesterday. take a look what he said just this morning. >> what would you do if you were elected about aleppo? >> about? >> aleppo. >> and what is aleppo? >> you're kidding? >> no. >> aleppo is in syria. it's the -- it's the epi center
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got it. >> okay. >> later, johnson said he was incredibly frustrated with himself. he admitted it would be a big flap for his campaign. >> yeah, that's very difficult. very difficult. >> this is called a newspaper. i'm telling you, you don't have to do anything other than read the newspaper every day. it's one of the most brilliant things in the world and watch "cbs this morning." >> it's been on the news many, ms time welcome back to "cbs this morning." this half hour, keeping racial profiling out of the online neighborhood next door ceo is in our toyota green room how his social network is responding to the criticism about racially tinged posts. >> the star of the new cbs series "mcgyver." my favorite series of all time.
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mcgyver? >> no. just mcgyver. how the action hero is ready to save the world again for a whole new generation. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. president obama tells "the new york times" he thinks the trend in climate change are terrifying. during an interview, he called the world's most serious long-term threat. >> part of what makes climate change difficult is that it is not an catastrophic event and slow moving experience that on a day-to-day basis, the people don't see.
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m luck. >> me too. all golfers can't wait to see him come back and hope he is healthy. "the washington post" reports on never before seen photos of captain sully sullenberger's miracle jet after he landed it in the hudson. they show the moldy and water damaged cockpit of the us airways flight and there are photos of the cabin. imagines were taken nine days after captain sullenburger landed the jet on the river more
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my interview with him as a movie about him opens and we will on the hudson river where the plane splashed down. >> i bet that is the first time he has been back there, in that spot, i mean? >> i don't know. >> i think so. >> you were out on a boat with him? >> yesterday. it it was a beautiful afternoon on the had you had river and he was quite remarkable talking about every aspect. >> the movie is very good. >> it takes you there. tom hanks is great in it. >> it's amazing. he talks about what gone wrong. for example if he didn't have the wing perfect and if it tipped down, they would have gone down. hello! >> we have a guest at the table! you are? let me properly introduce you. we digress for a second. sorry. next door is a private social network that connects people in neighborhoods and communities. the site can be used to track down babysitters and report crimes and find new homes for unwanted items. last year they faced criticism that it was a home for racial
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implemented changes to address this issue. next door says those changes led to a 75% drop in posts containing racial profiling in certain test markets. the ceo and founder is here and joins us at the table. really good to see you again. your second time back at the table. >> thank you for having me back. >> when it was first brought to your attention that people were using your site for racial profiling, you thought what and you did what? >> we were surprised and we were deeply saddened. the mission of the company is ts people together, to improve neighborhoods. and something like racial profiling is completely counter to that mission. so we knew we had to do something about it. >> what happens now? >> a well-intentioned neighbor in many case would say something like a dark-skinned man is breaking into a car. the problem is by using the term "dark-skinned" but not giving a fuller description it was possible to stereotype a race with that entire post.
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you have to do west side a fuller description to make sure that profiling doesn't occur. >> how do you block that profiling? using an algorithm that blocks certain words? >> nextdoor is a social network and works like other social networks. you have open text box and you type. we created that was the way neighbors post crime and safety information. the first thing we are trying to do is make sure that when they post, they are actually observing criminal o potentially criminal activities. so we first say stop and think before you post. algorithm that helps with that. >> are there people in the community enthusiastic about these changes? >> we haved overwhelming
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we are not blocking anything. this isn't about censorship but it's better for the neighborhood and it's truly a win/win:you're considered a person of color. people could call you a dark-skinned man that is breaking into a car walking in the neighborhood. did it feel personal to you, this particular attack on your website? >> it's a personal issue for me and for all of our employees. we joined the company and created the company because we believed in bringing people together. in terms of racism, i mean, it's one of the most in our society today. we want to be a part of the solution. >> you say people originally profile and not aware they are racially profiling? what do you mean? >> this is about unconscious bias and invoking race without a fuller description and not realizing when you do that, an entire class of people can be held subject to that description. >> conscious and implicit bias? >> exactly right. it's a nuance thing. >> i don't think -- >> nextdoor is not the first organization to come into
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i think airbnb had the same issue. >> this is not a tech company issue. this is a societal issue. we need to create ways online for us to be our best selves and what these changes are designed to do. >> quickly. explain what nextdoor can do? if you haven't used nextdoor, what would you use it for? >> well, thank you. it turns out less than 1% -- nextdoor is about bringing your neighbors together and in an using technology to create stronger and safer and happier places to live. >> like what? >> whether it's finding a great babysitter or finding a great plumber or coming together in times of a flood, a tornado, national disaster. the people around you can help. you need an easy way to connect with them. >> not in a neighborhood but in an apartment building? >> your apartment could be conceived as your neighborhood. wherever you live, you want to connect with the people around you because there's so much they
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camera 3 next door. >> i'm glad to know we have at least one member. >> you have more than one. thank you. >> great to have you here. thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. mcgyver is saving lives again on the small screen in a new cbs series. the star lucas till and george eads are in studio 57 and they will tell us how the mcgyver caught up to the digit age. >> love it!
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? gosh! this is just like the movies! >> the only way i saw it to be ahead of this game is work up some kind of highway hazard. that's where the host comes in. -- hose comes you see diesel exhaust is loaded with mixed hydrocarbons and you get what scientists cause e m miscible liquids. that means oil and gas don't mix. >> he used science and ordinary objects like a swiss army knife or a paper clip to solve tough problems. now the classic show is getting a reboot as a new series on cbs.
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and his team are on a mission to recover a missing bioweapon that could kill hundreds of thousands of people. >> where is mr. wizard going? >> i think he is going south with that thing. >> how is he going to stop an airplane? >> yeah. i know what you're thinking. this is insane! and guess what. i'm afraid of heights! but i moments in my line of work that sometimes can't be avoided. >> wow! the stars of the new "mcgif" lucas till and george eads joins us at the table. so exciting. i watched "mcgyver" growing up and thrilled about the series is back on cbs. lucas, you did not have a stunt double for that scene? >> i didn't, no. but i need to be clear that was
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>> says no man has done more with less but he is with me. >> so you really were not hanging from that? there is a fan making your hair blow? >> correct. i am hanging but it's about this high off the ground. >> that is really funny. when they first approached you, both of you about joining the cast, had you seen the old "mcgyver" had you remembered it? you're probably too young. >> hey you're right, though. >> i was not too young. so, no, i was very familiar with the show. and i just think that idea, the concept still really holds up. you know? this guy kind of uses his imagination instead of guns. >> it goes back in the day, there were no guns. but this time, there will be guns? >> i'll be the gun guy. >> lucas won't have a gun.
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>> for days. we have him do the gun stuff and another character that does the technological stuff. because we live in a day of technology. we have another character do that so i can just do the mcgyver stuff. >> he must get a kick out of you doing this? >> my dad is in the military. my mom is a chemist. growing up with hearing that all of my life, chemical terms really helped. >> what did they say when you got this part? >> you can't manual how stoked they were. i think my dad never really paid any attention to any movies i did until about when i got "mcgyver" now he is super stoked. >> he didn't see you in the taylor swift video "you belong to me"? >> you were in that video? >> you're excited now! >> took you on a hampton trip?
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yeah. >> it was a camping trip. we stayed on a boat with no motor. >> so we couldn't go anywhere. >> what was the point? >> bonding. >> bonding? >> yeah. >> did you bond? >> oh, surely, yeah. in spite of the both -- >> telepathy. >> unfortunately we had to -- >> so you slept on the boat? you slept on the boat? was it a getting to know you kind of wanted to get one last good rhyme before we started working again. >> we had realized pretty early on how out of shape we were, especially for these roles. so we started exercising and hanging out and getting to know each other. >> george, you're playing an action hero type part so you have to be in shape. i think it would be every boy's dream to be an action hero. >> it is. >> that's what i was thinking.
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i'm happy as clam. >> you play a former cia agent, right? jack dooalton? what is the key to the relationship? how do you work together? >> bickering. >> i think jack is more or less his metaphorical swiss army nice, human in form. >> yeah, no. that's what he does. he kind of comes in. i mean, you got a bunch of dudes shooting at you with guns. i can't use the gun because i can. >> he asks questions. >> you know what i heard about the show? people would say you could learn stuff from the show. tricks and stuff that they do, that it's a family show and that people really got to enjoy it at all ages. i think that is good. >> i think it has a little bit of something for everybody. it's got some hard -- you know, it's got some drama at the same time. >> romance? >> action. romance! >> i like romance. >> i like romance. thank you so much. great to have you guys here. >> thank you. >> we are cheering you on. >> thank you.
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the name of the show is "mcgyver" and premieres on cbs. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. the new smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture opens. take an extraordinary first look when "cbs this morning" broadcasts from the museum, monday. "cbs this morning" at the new smith sewn yam national museum of african-american american history and culture with limited
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(vo) we went to hollywood to ask if america's favorites - burgers, tacos and chili could taste just as great made with turkey. thousands stepped into the jennie-o tasting booth to find out. with just one bite, they knew. now it's your turn to make the switch. ? that does it for us. tune into the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight.
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good morning. it is 8:55. i'm alan gionet. two people are dead after being hit while out of their cars at 56th near pena before sunrise >> reporter: well, the scene was just cleared. that happened about five minutes ago so everything is back up and open at this point. police trying to figure out what the cause of the incident is. initially they said it was road rage but they cannot call it that. it is under investigation. the incident happened around 5:00 this morning just under the i-70 underpass. one man pulled over outside his car for unknown reasons when he
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him and he was struck by a passing car. that car also struck the first victim so that first victim struck twice by two different cars. both men died as a result of their injuries. that second victim was transported to the hospital and he died a short time there after. again this incident is still under investigation. we'll follow the story. here is joel hillan with a look at the traffic situation. good morning >> reporter: good morning jamie. you're able to access on to pena boulevard once again. the earlier accident on pena and airport boulevard and 40th has been cleared out. a great drive out to dia. denver metro area, a couple accidents on highway. one along i-25 at 6. then a car fire. that is this icon, the yellow icon is that car is stalled.
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still a bit foggy on just be cautious. it will take another while for that to mix out, so it may not be until later this morning. satellite and radar, skies are clear and we stay that way throughout the day across the front range and to the western slope. far eastern plane inns you may get thunderstorms this afternoon. 64 boulder. 64 over grand junction. 83 in burlington.
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[cheers and applause] >> announcer: today on rachael ray... >> rachael! >> announcer: an entire hour of million dollar ideas you can pull off at the dollar store. >> rachael: that is awesome. >> announcer: get a makeover without breaking the bank. >> ready? >> let's go. >> announcer: diy tips almost anyone with do and get a great meal on the plate. >> rachael: i mean, hello. >> announcer: now, are you ready for rachael! [cheers and applause] >> rachael: today's show is going to be so much fun and save you money, too. we are saving everybody big bucks shopping at the dollar store. [cheers and applause] >> rachael: i love -- i love a dollar store and i'm upstate new york girl. my mom and i have been going to dollar stores since back in the

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