tv CBS This Morning CBS September 21, 2016 7:00am-9:00am MDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, september 21st, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? violent protests overnight in north carolina after police shoot and kill a black man. block a major freeway and property. >> new details about the bombings in new york and new jersey unfolded. we are getting new information about the attacker's family including a wife overseas. >> we test the new technologies sdiped designed to make sure airlines never lose your bags again. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener."
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ca calm after the fatal police shooting of a black man. >> this is not a good scene here. >> protesters clash with police in charlotte. >> he is armed with a handgun. because of that, at least one of our officers fired. >> hands up! he got a gun, he got a gun. pow pow pow! that's it! he had no gun! >> a man suspected of setting off explosives in new york and >> rahami is facing state and federal charges in connection with the incident. >> arrest of a police officer who shot and killed an unarmed driver. >> president george h.w. bush say he is going to vote for hillary. >> he didn't say that but i wouldn't be surprised. >> the president used his final address to the united nations general assembly to take some not so subtle shots at donald trump.
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would only imprison itself. >> reporter: a spy plane crashed in california killing one pilot and injuring another. >> a terrifying close call for a stunt pilot in nevada. the man almost decapitated after another plane hit him. >> all that. >> one last shot. he is sniffing everything. >> man! that is la lot of slobber. >> it is deep. good-bye! his first major league hit and his mom and dad getting to see it. >> it has p face. >> and all that matters. >> i have to report some devastating news. >> brangelina says it's all over. >> said one ? ? i told you life would be this way ? >> you called him swag licious? >> yes. >> how is that achieved? it's a person that has a lot of swag, and if you don't know what
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ? welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is off so jeff glor is with us. good to have you here. >> good to be here. angry protests rocked charlotte, north carolina, overnight after a police officer killed an african-american man. cars and blocked a major on the highway and threw rocks and bottles at police and officers fired tear gas at the protesters. >> the trouble began at the scene of yesterday's shooting. david begnaud
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protesters showed up. officials say some agitators arrived and it got violent. police cars were vandalized. officers were hurt. protesters stormed an interstate and some arrived at this walmart in charlotte. they smashed through the front door. the manager tells us they stole some electronics. people stacked palettes out front to keep protesters away. overnight protesters in charlotte clashed with police. hours after the deadly shooting of keith lamont scott. several demonstrators smashed out windows of squad cars and hurled rocks at police. officers dressed in riot gear fired tear gas to break up the crowds of people who shut down interstate 85. several police officers were hurt. all with nonlife-threatening injuries. seven were taken to a local hospital. conflicting versions of tuesday's story have now emerged. police satisy they were lookingr
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but police say he got out of his vehicle with a weapon and got back in and exited again with the weapon. >> as they engage him, he is armed with a handgun that we found on scene as well. make some eminent threat to them and because of that, at least one of our officers fired. >> the police just shot my daddy both times for being black. >> reporter: a woman claiming to be scott's daughter streamed the aftermath of the shooting live on facebook. >> they tased the first shot. r viewed more than 500,000 times and shows the frustration building from members of the community looking for answers. >> a life have been lost today. a life was taken and y'all want to do that? >> reporter: scott's sister claims he was unarmed and was reading a book while waiting for his son to get off the school bus when police approached him.
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fired that fatal shot has been identified on as brently vincent. he is a >> reporter: attorneys for terence crutcher's family say he didn't pose an imminent threat to officers when he was shot. they are disputing the allegation that he tried to reach inside his vehicle and hammered home the point that no weapon was found inside that
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terence crutcher's sport utility vehicle was idling in the middle of a tulsa road friday night. his hands were up and he was walking. >> this guy is walking. >> reporter: tulsa police say crutcher failed to obey officers' commands. he was tased by one officer and shot by another. >> shots fired. >> this is clearly a case of excessive force. >> in an attempt to refute the i deadly force, still images show the driver's side window was up. >> how can he reach into the car if the window is up and there's blood on the glass? >> reporter: according to kotv, a police sergeant said officers found a vial of the drug pcp inside crutcher's vehicle along with his wallet and school books. scott wood, who is representing officer betty shelby said she
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>> it wasn't from, hey, man, is this your car all of the way up to literally screaming at him to stop what he was doing. >> reporter: while the department of justice has opened a civil rights investigation over allegations of excessive force, officer shelby is on paid administrative leave. >> my soul hurts. my soul hurts. that's why i'm here. justice. it's not we saw the tape. everyone saw the tape. >> reporter: none of the police officers wore body cameras that day. the tulsa police department did receive nearly $600,000 in federal grants earmarked for body cameras last year but the department still doesn't have them. norah? >> thank you. them. >> thank you. new york and new jersey bombing suspect rahami faces federal charges this morning that includes using weapons of
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materials online. we are learning about the wife's overseas. his father called his son a terrorist two years ago. jeff pegues is here with more. >> reporter: the court papers offer a detailed account of what investigators believe ahmad rahami was doing leading up to the bombings. video recovered from a cell phone which prosecutors say shows rahami setting off what appears to be a pipeom backyard. department of justice lawyers will try to prove it shows the 28-year-old was doing a dry run before putting his plan in motion. the bomb that ripped through manhattan saturday night was made from components purchased on ebay. federal prosecutors say ahmad khan rahami bought the following this summer. they also believe the cell phones used on the bombs in manhattan in seaside park, new jersey, can be trade to rahami
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the explosion in chelsea was so powerful, it threw a 10 100-bumpster 420 feet and shattered window feet away. 41 people were injured including a driver knocked unconscious bill the blast and a woman who had wood shards embedded in her neck. on saturday night a car left rahami's home and arrived in manhattan surveillance video shows he was walking down the street 40 minutes before a blast ripped through the block. a short time later, he later turned up on 27th street where an unexploded pressure cooker bomb was found. the 28-year-old was taken into custody monday after a shoot-out with two police officers in new jersey. >> i think it's a good sign that we found him in doorway.
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>> reporter: prosecutors also believe they found rahami's youtube account. when he was arrested, he was carrying a journal with handwritten praise for ft. hood shooter nidal hasan and anwar awlaki and osain he wrote god willing the sounds of bombs will be heard in the streets. >> two people have been released from the hospital. officer pete hammer was released yesterday with support and cheers from his colleagues as you hear. he and other padilla are
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new jersey, where we learn more about rahami's past. >> reporter: good morning, rahami moved from the united states to afghanistan when he was just a baby. as we well know, he lived here in elizabeth with his family above this fried chicken restaurant which was owned by his father. but folks who knew him growing up say he was shy, which makes the events of this weekend even more shocking to them. wasn't captain of the football team or prom king or anything like that. >> reporter: classmate chris says ahmad was quiet and didn't cause too much trouble. >> he didn't speak much. he wasn't the center of the attention. >> reporter: he had a child who is now in elementary school. the estranged paper haven't couple since january.
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native of afghanistan and he worked to bring her to the u.s. >> he wanted to know what the problem was with his wife's passport and visa to get her into the country. >> reporter: new jersey congressman sira says his office denied rahami's wife a visa. she was found 35 weeks pregnant and would have needed pakistani passports for herself and her >> it was a routine inquiry. nothing for us to suspect anything. >> reporter: his wife entered the u.s. but left in june. she was scheduled to return this week and is cooperating with authorities. but some >> i called them years ago. >> what did you tell them? >> you got to question this man.
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argument in the family's home in 2014, a senior law enforcement official tells cbs news ahmad khan rahami stabbed his brother in the leg and neighbors her his father call him a terrorist. the fbi never spoke directly to ahmad but they said their investigation did not find any ties to terrorism and ahmad's father recanted the story he told, saying he spoke out of anger. jeff? >> michelle, thanks very much. new information highlights questionable spending by donald trump's foundation. figures first reported by "the washington post" show trump used his charity's money to pay his business expenses and make personal purchases. a trump campaign statement says the post has, quote, gotten their facts wrong and that mr. trump is generous both with his money and his time. cbs news reached out for clarification and has not yet received a response.
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the day is there. major, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. in recent years, donald trump's charitable foundation has spent more than 225,000 to settle lawsuits brought against trump's for-profit companies and most of the money came from donors not named trump. last night in north carolina, trump bragged about using other people's money in business deals, sort of the way the charity has operated and utterly without irony he would bring that fphilosophy to at least on >> we cannot have these people come into the united states. we don't know who they are. we know nothing about them. >> reporter: campaigning across north carolina, donald trump offered two remedies to terror threats. tougher screening of immigrants and safe zones to syrian war refuges. the latter paid for by wealthy gulf states. >> it's called opm. nothing like doing anything with other people's money.
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description of his foundation which used funds for personal benefit and business gain. >> $30,000 he spent combined on a couple of large portraits of his own face. >> reporter: david feherty has investigated trump's charity for months. >> i talked to tax experts say they have never seen anything like he has done the last few years and used money in his charity to basically pay off the legal settlements of his for-profit businesses. >> reporter: trump hasn't given to his own foundation since 2008. nearly all of the ne tax documents show trump's foundation wrote a $100,000 check in 2007 to fisher house, a veterans housing charity to settle a local zoning lawsuit over an oversized flag pole at his mar-a-lago club. and $8,000 to a charity of a money sued after he scored a hole in one at a trump golf
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in 2014, it paid this portrait of trump, himself. last night, trump's running mate mike pence repeated campaign claims "the washington post" story was riddled with inaccuracies. when pence was pressured to name those inaccuracies, he could not come up with a single example. >> the first presidential debate is monday night and we will bring it to you live at 9:00/8:00 central here on cbs. in northern syria, overnight air raid hit reportedly killing four medical reports and nine rebel fighters and follows the bombing earlier this week of a humanitarian aid conv
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nce of a cease-fire in syria's civil war. u.s. officials say a russian su-24 aircraft was tracked over the convoy southwest of aleppo at the same time down to the minute that the strike occurred on monday. it was the first aid convoy to be allowed into syria as part of a cease-fire plan. but the syrian regime had already declared an end to the its own strikes against opposition fighters in aleppo. russia denied hitting the convoy releasing what it says was video taken by a drone. the video allegedly shows a rebel vehicle armed with an artillery fpiece. it would have end. up in this area of qatar which serves as the headquarters for the air campaign against isis.
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aircraft flying over syria and when "60 minutes" went there last year, the craft's track was clearly visible on the wall. a strike by u.s. and allied aircraft apparently hit a syrian army carve by mistake. that incident is now under investigation. but the u.s. says it thought it was striking an isis position gayle? >> thank you, david. the epipen controversy
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new technology could remove the anxiety from the airport luggage carousel. >> how the airlines are investing millions to make sure they don't lose passengers' bags. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by persil pro clean laundry detergent. experience premium clean! consumg publication recently tested the top laundry detergents. the winner - persil 2 in 1, didn't only beat tide... switch to persil proclean 2 in 1. #1 rated. i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler
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. live from colorado's news channel, this is cbs4. >> good morning. caller of state patrol wants your help to try and find a deadly hit and run suspect. they say the driver hit a bicyclist last night. the bicyclist hit by a second vehicle. th victim as 43-year-old jason holden of birthen. in the hospital for a problem with his di jestive system. doctors admitted him for surgery yesterday. he will spend the next few days in the hospital before he goes home later this week. his wife is thanking the community for an out pouring of support. here's joel with the latest. we've had trouble. >> yeah, that trouble continues
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eastbound direction of i-70 we have an accident off the shoulder. flashing lights as you travel westbound. looks like that may be clearing as you see the yellow along there. these are the back ups to the exit we had there. that's at 17th and we have another accident under the bridge blocking off the left side of the roadway.
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. 65 in denver. 72 out in ray. 62 in grand junction. satellite and radar has rain in southern parts of the state. a little bit in parts of grand and jackson counties. the rest of us cloud and sunshine. rain in the south west throughout the morning hours and it will move more to the central mountains. couple of showers possible in denver and the evening. still on the warm side.
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? kellogg's recalled eggo waffles. it may give our news ancho chance to cut loose a little and have fun with it. >> let go of your eggo. >> let go of your eggo. >> let go of your eggo. >> let go your eggo. >> let go of that eggo. >> let go of your lego! i said that wrong. let go of your eggo. >> we had that story yesterday, too. >> we did not use that.
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recall! sounds good when one person says it but when you put it altogether, it's like, okay. creativity, there you go. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up this half hour a new controversy over the epipen who hiked the life saving prices. how the ceo's mom reportedly pulled some strings to establish a near monopoly for epipens in school. new efforts to solve the problem of misplaced and lost luggage when you your bags no matter where they are supposed to be. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. huntsville time reports on a gasoline pipeline set to resume operations today after a leak was fixed. the pipeline in shelby county, alabama, spilled about 336,000 gallons of gas nearly two weeks ago. the leak triggered supply disruptions from alabama to virginia and price hikes. one says it will take four weeks to return to normal.
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city's police department plans to hire 1,000 more officers the next two years and to tackle a spike in homicide. the move is expected to help detectives' abilities to solve crimes. the biggest hiring surge in the depth over 30 years. >> the "los angeles times" reports on replacements to samsung's note 7 phones and in stores today. 1 million samsung smartphones weec the changes. the company says it will
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virus. the plan is to turn cells into living computers that could be reprogrammed back to health. microsoft has built a biological computation unit to sift through the cancer research. the head of a national education group. gayle manchin helped lead an effort to require schools the fight against severe allergic reactions. manchin released a statement to cbs news this morning saying, in part, my only concern and motivation was and always will be how we can protect as many children as possible. the company's ceo is set to testify today on capitol hill about the massive increase in the cost of the epipen.
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hearing could get heated. >> reporter: the price increase led to an investigation. it has brought together different politicians on different sides of the aisle in an effort to get some answers. >> i think it's about reason. that's why i call it blood money. >> reporter: there are very few things that republican congressman jason chaffetz and elijah cummings have agreed u cost of the epipen. >> i think when you're talking about life and death. if you cannot bridge a divide then, you'll never bridge it. >> i think we are very united on the concern. i mean, i can't even begin to imagine a parent who is forced to take a risk with the very life of their child. >> reporter: both congressmen will question mylan's ceo
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injector. a two pack is over $600 today. after "cbs this morning" reported on the epipen's price hike, myla nrvetle would increase the value of coupons from many customers and launch a cheaper, generic version of the device we were excited to see we weren't paying the full price of the insurance. >> reporter: we met this family last month. since then, they have been able to purchase their epipens for half the newly released coupons provided by mylan. >> it wasn't quite what we were looking for from the company. we were hoping they would lower the overall price. >> reporter: they tell us their worried that their costs could go back up if mylan's coupons disappear. em i didn't university health economist david howard says another concern about future costs. >> consumers still have to pay the full price. they may get some of that back
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premiums. >> reporter: he is prepared to tell lawmakers the following, quote. saying we never intended this. that likely won't be enough to quell the criticism on capitol hill. what is the number one question you want her to answer tomorrow? >> i'm not telling you yet! ha ha. >> reporter: do you both enter, though, with something -- >> why. why? and what would you suggest we do? because we have to do something. >> reporter: lawmakers today will also question a representative of the food and drug administration. they should about ten months to get a new drug on the market. right now it could be as long as three years and why drugs like this have been able to have near monopolies. >> and drive the price up. >> exactly. >> a lot more to come today.
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is facing new fallout after appearing before angry lawmakers on capitol hill. he testified before the committee yesterday expressing regret that employs created fake bank accounts to pad sales numbers. >> i am deeply sorry that we have failed to fill on our responsibility to our customers, to our team members, and to the american public. >> massachusetts senator elizabeth warren had s his gutless and encouraging him to step down. >> this is about accountability. you should resign. you should give back the money that you took while this scam was going on and you should be criminally investigated by both department of justice and the securities and exchange commission. you know, this just isn't right! >> wells fargo is already paying
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fraud allegations that date back to at least 2011. investigations have been opened by federal prosecutors and the house financial services committee. >> that's what you call being on the hot seat in washington. she went at it. airlines say they are ready to end the problem of lost luggage for good. ahead, the new solution being rolled out. we will put the technology to the test. if you're heading out the door, take us too. you can watch us live through the cbs all access app. there it is on your digital device. see it? don't miss more of anthony mason's interview with bruce springsteen. you'll hear how he compares himself to prince and james brown. what does he think they have in common? anthony knows. we will be right back. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment
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in one door - a member of congress. out another - a high-paid lobbyist. 131 former members of congress are now lobbyists in washington, dc. it's just considered business as usual. i consider it wrong. that's why i'm fighting for a new law to permanently ban former members of congress from ever becoming lobbyists. i'm michael bennet ove this message because congress should only work for you. ? lost luggage could soon become a thing of the past. last year, roughly 2 million pieces of luggage were reported mishandled on domestic flights. now one of the nation's biggest
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lose fewer bags. at the same time, new devices are coming out for flyers who want to keep track of their bags at all times. kris van cleave is here with more on this. >> good morning. a lost bag is something a customer doesn't forget and the airlines know that. but it happens. we have been trying out these devices that aim to tell you if you're luggage is coming to that baggage claim carousel near you or, if not, where it is. the rate airlines mishandle bags, meaning they were lost, later damaged, is on the decline. but around 1 in every 300 passengers will have it happen to them. on this day, that passenger was ron mullenix. the feeling when you and your wife are standing at the baggage carousel and everything stops and you're still a bag short? >> yeah. you're disappointed. but we know it happens. >> reporter: delta airlines is spending $50 million took try to make that happen a lot less often, installing a baggage system that puts a tag with a
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identification chip on a piece of luggage instead of a bar code and that should allow near real-time tracking of a suitcase as it winds its way into the handling system and is loaded on to or off of an airline. american alerts their flyers when a bag is on off a flight. others are working on this system. henry hartaffeldt is an airline industry analyst. >> every time an airline loses a suitcase and can't get it delivered to you at the baggage claim, it costs them about $100 to bring it to your home or office or hotel. so that's a big expense that the airline would like to avoid. avoiding a lost bag is becoming a business for tech companies. we tested these three luggage tracking devices and this 450 dollar suitcase. it can charge your phone up to six times and weigh its and remotely locked but it is small
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providing a list of our places our bag had been complete with a map and worked best within the relatively short range of a smartphone blue tooth connection. lugloc and trackdot sophisticated located our luggage via smartphone app and beats the hours this lady spent looking for her luggage. >> definitely, frustrating. frustrating, annoying. >> reporter: the device costs $40 to 80 plus the subscription fees. delta's system will go on in the coming months and they believe they will reduce lost lugga 20% which is around $20,000 a year. >> i think that is terrific. what if you're with your three kids like me and you leave your bag on the plane and walk right out? >> guilty! >> where is my bag?
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tent and then first lady talked about what happens at the dinner table. >> do you do an impression of your husband? >> all three of us have good impressions of barack. >> would you mind sharing them? >> it's usually at the dinner table and malia starts it. she asks the serious question. dad, tell us about your day and what about your that conversation on the global warming? >> sasha and i get him started! i'm glad you asked that. let me just answer that in three points. one. then 1a and then 1b. sasha and i are like, ah! because sasha and i went to start about our on favorite song on the "lemonade" album.
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she's the only one that can make that kind of joke. very funny. >> absolutely. she does have jokes. that is one of the best shows colbert has. worth watching if you missed it last night. angelina and brad pitt pray for privacy about their divorce. what angelina told charlie rose. that interview is coming up next. in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose
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. live, this is cbs4 morning news. >> good morning. 7:56. today opening statements scheduled to start this morning for the man accused of hitting and killing a car length cool state patrol cadet. that crash happened in may of last year. prosecutors say 28-year-old traffic stop and caused the wreck. tyler tifo was the cadet at the time of his death and promoted to rank. students and staff have a tough day ahead with the death of a senior in a crash yesterday. the 17-year-old crashed near the school. investigators say she was driving on the wrong side of the street.
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>> just as we get the old accident clean up, we get new ones. this one is traveling south bound i-25 and under the bridge we see faintedly there's flashing lights. after you get past the accident it's south bound along i-225 there's an accident south. we have an accident westbound i-70 as you get on the ramp to
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. taking a look at the temperature 63. also 69 in burling ton. 55 in avon and 52 in aspen. taking a look at the satellite radar, we have a mix of cloud cover and clear skies. there's a little bit of rain in northern parts of the state. still down south we'll see some rain in the south western part of the state.
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? good morning. good morning. it is wednesday, september 21, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this mornin morning". there is more real news ahead including bruce springsteen on the challenge of reaching the top and how depression hit him anthony mason has more of his interview that you didn't see sunday morning. but first, here is today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> quickly after the shooting tensions rose. officers were hurt, vehicles vandalized. >> and crutcher's family hammered home that no weapon was found inside the stalled suv. court papers offer a detailed account of what
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makes the events of this weekend more shocking to them. >> bragged about using other people's money in business deals and would bring that philosophy to one aspect of foreign policy. >> u.s. officials are stopping short of accusing russia of carrying on you tut the attack. nearly 500% price increase prompted widespread public >> these devices aim to tell you if your luggage is coming to that carousel near you or if not where it is. >> what happens if you're like me and you're with your two kids and you just leave your bag on the plane? >> as long as you don't leave your kids. >> president obama gave his final speech before the u.n. general assembly today saying, quote, well, they're your problem now.
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norah o'donnell and jeff glor. hundreds took to the streets to protest a police killing of a black man. some threw rocks at police. >> about a dozen officers were hurt. the family of keith lamont is strongly quiiestioning the poli version of why he was shot. david, good morning. >> reporter: gmt. in the midst of the chaos, protesters stormed this walmart behind me smashed through the front door, stole some electronics pl manager pallets to try to keep people out. this event went on for more than six hours ever since the man was initially shot and killed, it started off as peaceful and then authorities say agitators showed up and it got down right violent. officers dressed in riot gear fired tear gas into the crowd at one point to try to break them up and move them off of a public roadway. seven police officers were taken to a hospital and this morning the investigation is already under way into the shooting of keith lamont scott.
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searching for a suspect with an outstanding warrant. the 43-year-old scott was not the man they were looking for. but police say he was spotted exiting his vehicle with a gun and then getting back inside and then back out again and that's when he was shot. a woman claiming to be his daughter streamed it live on facebook. members of his family say he was unarmed and reading a book while waiting for his son to be dropped off from a school bus. the officer who fired that fatal shot has been identified vinson and is on paided a minute straight difference leave. and some in oklahoma are protesting the killing of an unarmed black man by a white police officer in tulsa. >> we are sick and tired of -- >> terence crutcher was killed on friday. video shows the 40-year-old walking toward his suv with list hands in the air. he was tasered by one officer
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shelby. she is on paid administrative leave. >> police say crutcher failed to obey commands. our tulsa affiliate reports a police sergeant said officers found pcp inside crutcher's vehicle. no weapon was found. the department of justice has opened a civil rights investigation into the police department over allegations of excessive force. hillary clinton reacted to the tulsa >> a horrible shooting again? how many times do we have to see this in our country? in in tulsa, an unarmed man with his hands in the air? this is just unbearle and it needs to be intolerable. >> donald trump has not responded directly to that shooting, but campaigning this north carolina, he used strong words to describe black americans lives.
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inner cities because our african-american communities are absolutely in the worst shape that they have ever been in before, ever, ever, ever. you take a look at the inner cities, you get no education, no jobs, you get shot walking down the street. >> president obama said on saturday that there are still challenges to be sure, but that trump, quote, missed the whole civics lesson about slavery and jicr tougher than what we're facing today. anxiety about super bugs is running high and the united nations is doing something that has happened only three times before, it is holding a meeting of world leaders. they will gather in new york. a major report says word wide deaths due to antibiotic resistance could surge from 700,000 to 10 million by the year 2050.
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secretary burwell, good morning p. what specific action are you advocating in terms of antibiotic use? >> number one, we need to stop overusing them. i know it's a temptation. but we need better tests to dwerm when you need antibiotics. and third thing is new antibiotics because we have so much resistance as they said. with 23,000 people in the united states dying every year and 2 million getting illnesses that are resistant, we need new antibiotics. >> so what will you say to make sure that they hear you today? >> fortunately this is the first time that we've had this global
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that we all need to do together. i'll focus on those three points and as well as make sure people are talking about it in their country. the attention at that time thats u.n. will give the issue will raise it around the world. >> can we talk about zika funding? what problems do you think that that is causing? >> for us at the department of health and human services, we're working hard on a vaccine. we're working hard on tests to make it faster and easier to determine whether you have had and we need to do things like support states like florida where there is local transmission which means that the mosquito in florida is passing zika. many of the cases in the united states in the 50 states, there are over 3,000, come from people who traveled. but in florida, it's where mosquito is biting people, so we need to help with control of that mosquito. that's what that funding is information and it's exception th essential that we have it by october 1st. >> was some of the alarm
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essential that we have it by october 1st. >> was some of the alarm perpetrated by government officials that -- it hasn't turned out that bad in florida, has it? >> actually in the united states if you count puerto rico, we have 20,000 cases. in puerto rico alone, there are 1,000 women who have tested positively for zika and are pregnant. in the continental u.s., we have high numbers, as well. and right now in the u.s., 19 babies have been born with mike yoe sever hike crow severally. >> dr. fauci says that they have been having to use funds from other diseases about is it a funding problem be? >> it is. we had to take money there ebola. as recently as in the last month, we've had to accepted teams fr oig teams back into west africa to make sure that they won't have it. we had to take tons from the ebola first because congress condition give us funding before
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fauci reflected what i did, which is i had to take money from other disease research to make sure that we could continue to make progress on the vaccine for zika. october 1st, we're at the end of the line. and so for all of those reasons, the congress needs to act. >> let's discuss opioid overdoses. overdose deaths remain at a record high. is there a point believe this may get better, do you think we're turning any sort of a corner with all the attention on it? >> the attention is making a difference in tim terms of peop foe using on the problem. and there are three areas that we need for focus on. number one is in prescription and prescribing. i think you've seen the numbers. in 2012 along in the u.s., there were 250 million prescriptions for opioids.
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get funding for medication assisted treatment. in the u.s. now we have so many people that suffer from abuse. these are the steps we need to take. progress is being made. the funding for that will be very important. >> whether it's the painkillers or antibiotics, overprescription remain as big problem. >> that's right. and that's why we put out new guidelines to try that, you probably saw that the surgeon general announced a pledge and asking for a pledge for health providers to take a pledge about whhe to that issue. and right now we've already had -- he just did it recently and already 17,000 have signed up for that pledge to help with but individuals need to do it, too. if you're in your home, if you have any of these drugs, you need to get rid of them. that is part of what happens. some are prescribed, some are taken from others. >> and what is the position of your office on the breakup of angelina jolie and brad pitt, were you talking about that
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couple going through that, i think giving them their space and their children their space is probably the most important thing we can all do. >> you are absolutely right about that. thank you. and you have good sense of humor. >> ending on a light note. >> good luck with your address today. >> thank you very much. thanks for having me. >> sylvia matthews burwell at the table with us. they were told you can't do that bullpen they did it anyway. five of the country's most notable by nears reflect on the power in breaking down barriers in their field. but first, it is 8:11 and time
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angelina jolie hasas filed for diverse from her tuesdayay brad pitt and they have been t toget children and became known for their dedication to charitable causes and jolie's attorney says the divorce is, quote, for the health of the familiy. lee cowan looks back at the couple known as brangelina and what many believe was a modern hollywood love story. >> reporter: they were the defiition of power couple. the like the hit was like splitting of the app. met on the set of "mr. and mrs. smith." something pitt told me a while back was at part in the urging of their children to get married. they have six in all. >> yeah, it means something to them. you know, they have questions when their friends' parents are married and why is that?
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>> we will someday and that is a great idea. get mommy a ring. okay, i will, i will. >> reporter: in the end it lasted a little over two years. the rumors reasons for their divorce vary but, obviously, it means the media microscope wasn't one of them. on the frenzy that accompanied them everywhere was a constant jolie told "60 minutes" back in 2012 she did her best to ignore it, especially the stories in the tabloids. >> they are not who i am and not what i spend my day carg about. i find them quite shallow and very wrong when i often do their what they are. >> pitt ignored it too. >> when it first hit, it was very discombobulating and i would repel from it and now i see it as something that could be used for -- for good things. >> reporter: the brangelina magaziniving glass had a power to do enormous good. it did. pitt's make it right foundation,
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rebuild the lower ninth ward after hurricane katrina. >> we have an inescapable moral duty to help refuges. >> reporter: jolie became a goodwill u.n. ambassador and later special envoy for high commissioned refuges. >> this is my first trip to jordan since the conflict began. >> reporter: she even made headlines by writing one for herself and revealing her choice to have a preventive double mastectomy but the children they fuel much of the work they did apart. as jolie told charlie rose back in 2011. >> i want to be more successful. i don't want more money. i want my kids to be healthy and i want to have great family and i want them to be great people. that is my ambition. >> reporter: both are now asking for privacy. something the couple rarely enjoyed when the news was happy. and even less when it wasn't.
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cowan, hollywood. >> i think divorce is always very painful, but it's got to really be hard when it's all on the front page of every newspaper in the country. i doubt that they are going to get the privacy that they want right now. >> i wish them well for both of them. >> the first thought, the right one is the kids. >> exactly right. >> from the big wood to the big stip. ahead, the curious bear that had police trying to keep up with this urban adventure.
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good morning, everyone t is 8:twoefb, i am britt moreno. -- 8:25, i am britt moreno. douglas county sheriff's office hopes to find whoever lost a bag several hundred and the person remains anonymous but it hasn't stopped people from trying to claim the loot. >> someone said, you know, santa claus called and said he wanted her to have it, we have gotten calls from people claiming they, a spirit has told them to call, it was their money. crazy, stories. >> if no one claimathize money in-- claims the money in 30 days
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say goodbye to a staple in the bonnie brae neighborhood, been there 40 years, the campus lounge will serve the final customers sunday. the owner, jim, former nhl player said it is time to move on. it will reopen as a new restaurant and bar. lets check on morning drive. good morning, take a look, i-25 near university, just slow as you are making your way soutnd northbound direction too through the tech center. we had an earlier accident cleared out of the way. most trouble spots off to the shoulder and we are starting to see traffic drainage in the southbound direction of i-25 into town, westbound along i-70 still 1ing slow as you-- running slow as you get through the
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63 now in denver, 70 in boulder, 72 in ray, 55 in avon, 52 in aspen, 53 in craig and 61 grand junction. satellite and radar, few showers in the southern part of the state, larimer county. the rest have a mix of sunshine and cloud cover and we will se throughout the afternoon and later morning hours, in denver, couple showers possible this evening, isolated. overnight tonight we could see rain, it should be sunnier
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stunt pilot came inches stunt pilot came inches from death at the air races in reno nevada. he was stuck on the ground with engine trouble and another plane came ration down the runway. it's hard knocked pieces of the aircraft. richard suffered injuries to his hand. good news here. he walked away and the other pilot wasn't even hurt. there's nothing you could do but sit there and wait. looked like he could have been decapitated it looked like. he's okay. everybody is all right. >> i don't know about you. when i saw it -- >> if the wing was four or five feet to one side there. >> physically makes you jump. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up, black americans who
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space. we'll hear from the most important pioneers in their own worpds. what they overcame and their tremendous achievements. >> bruce springsteen opens up about coming from jersey rocker to global superstar. he talks about the challenges he faced along the way. it's part of the sunday morning interview you haven't seen. >> it's time to show you headlines from around the globe. remembering curtis hanson. he died yesterday from natural causes in his home. which earned him an oscar. he directed the eminem movie, 8-mile. wonder boys and in her shoes. he was 71. "the new york times" reports on how fitness tracks may be undermining your weight loss efforts. women ages 18 to 35. they were put on a low calorie diet and told to exercise. after two years, guess what?
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pounds lighter than those who were. researchers think the monitors gave a false sense of security and people ate more. you can't -- you have to do more than just wear it. you have to eat right and exercise too. >> i wear a fit bit. i don't have it on right now. >> report on science picks as the world's happiest song. ? >> don't stop me now by queen was chosen from 126 songs. the list was compiled after a survey of 2,000 people in britain. the lyric, key and beat were studied. the scientists say feel good songs have about 30 beats per minute more than an average pop song. >> anything that makes you feel good. >> i wish i knew the song. >> i'm going to play it now. i'm not feeling so happy. we'll see. got to listen to it. >> keep it playing.
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smithsonian museum of african-american history and culture. you saw several exhibits at first. the first black head of joint chiefs and later secretary of state and jackie robinson who broke major baseball league color barrier. memorabilia from president obama. the country's first black president. in that spirit, we spoke with five people in their respective fields to learn about that pioneering spirit in their own words. woman of color in the world to go into space. >> i'm ernest green and i'm one-ninth of the little rock nine. >> i'm bob johnson, the founder of black entertainment television. >> i'm admiral michelle j. howard and command u.s. nave forces europe and africa and jfc naves. >> i'm eric holder. i was the attorney general from
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taker. >> you're going to go through some pretty rugged country. >> it has to be a leader. >> you're going to have to learn to be self-sufficient. you're going to find out that some people are going to shoot at you, so you better learn to shoot back. ? >> this was a period in which change was beginning to occur. change in terms of race and race >> your name is green, isn't it? >> ernest green. >> ernest green, yes. >> and i wanted to be a part of that. >> liftoff at 34 minutes after the hour. >> growing up in the 1960s, it was really sort of impossible not to imagine yourself in space. at least for me. i thought it was wrong. i thought it was ridiculous that -- that women weren't involved. i never doubted myself as a little girl. >> and liftoff.
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>> we want you to know how proud we are of you being the first african-american woman in space! >> why was there a need for b.e.t.? african-americans didn't have a television voice to allow them to share their dreams and their stories. >> i, eric holder, solemnly swear." i was the first african-american attorney general but i was also a black man who grew up in this country. documentary on the service academy award, i thought that's what i want to do. >> i certainly was profiled on a new jersey freeway pulled over as a young man on two occasions for reasons that were purely almost harassment. >> and i talked to my older brother and ed, well, you can't do that. the service academies are closed to women. >> i remember thinking to myself, never think because of
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your position, in the eyes of some people, you're still just a black guy. >> so i went to talk to my mother and she had, no, your brother is right. wait, wait. you're just 12. you might change your mind. but if you still want to go to a service academy when you get older and then if you're rejected, then we will sue the government. >> the paratroopers came three weeks after we attempted >> i remember a time when i thought, gosh! what will happen with the aliens seize this capsule and the only thing they see going are up weight males? what are they going to think about the world and about earth? >> i mean, it was all no nonsense military, jeeps in front, jeeps behind. soldiers with. we marched up to the steps and i
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of the nine. i said, "i guess we are going to get into school today." it was something i'll never forget. >> being the first you have a unique responsibility. both to those who made my appointment possible. older black folks, for instance, who i would see in churches or public events. i could see in their eyes a sense of accomplishment, a sense of pride. >> to be a leader of any organization, you should understand the benefits diversity. the homogeneous teams have different strengths but if you really want to soar, you probably will build a diversity. >> i also felt a responsibility for those who would follow, to make sure i did the job in such a way that their path to the job might be easier than mine was. >> it's a great feeling to have played a role, the nine of us. >> b.e.t. was the first
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>> to be able to turn around to our children, to our grandchildren, to other students and have them applaud what we did. >> and one of the things that i am most proud of, of anything i've ever accomplish, that in business, i've created more african-american multimillionaires than anybody in this country who is african-american. >> and to symbolically, all of this has made this country, i think, a better place. >> you know, when we look at this country, so much of what we have done has been from contributions of everyday people, it's been contributions of people who have been downtrotted and it's been contribution of people who actually were in privileged positions but saw that they needed to do something better. that's the history. that's what we need to understand. >> boy. i look at that and i can't wait to go back.
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it's like that drake song, started from the bottom, now we are here and it takes you from slavery all the way up to the inauguration of barack obama and beyond. >> as was said, the contributions to american history have gone so unrecognized. i think the museum does a beautiful job of highlighteding them and celebrating them and sharing those stories. >> tears and smiles. her best line -- i never doubted myself beautifully done. the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture opens to the public on saturday. i sure hope you get a chance to go interprat some point. we will talk to oprah winfrey on
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is featured on "chapter and verse." that is the audio accompaniment to brispringsteen's upcoming biography. here is what you haven't seen before with anthony mason. >> reporter: he was 16 when he recorded that. springsteen's the river tour was recently named the highest grossing tour of the year so far. . brought him to stadiums and arenas across the u.s. and europe but we caught up with him in the town wheret so this was your hoold hood? >> yeah. i knew everybody in every house on this street. >> reporter: bruce springsteen's musical aspirationed took root here in freehold, new jersey. how old were you when you were in your first band? >> 15. >> reporter: his passion was apparent early. ? >> reporter: you were very
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going after. >> i wanted to be great. you know? that was all that mattered to me was how good can i get? >> reporter: right. >> and i was ready to sacrifice everything else to find out. >> reporter: speaking at the recording studio on his new jersey farm, springsteen said there was a ruthlessness to his ambition. >> i needed to express myself as a musician. you know? i was so caught up with my identity, my sen o self-respect. it was primal and it was a very unforgiving force. >> reporter: unforgiving? in what sense? >> i was just going to run through whatever i had to run through, you know? and if you couldn't keep up with me, you were, you know, gone along the wayside. >> reporter: "my voice was never going to win any prizes." he writes. in "born to run" his newest
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shuster, a division of division, that that was my fireworks. he had another underrated talent. >> i was an excellent band leader and very rare skilled. not a lot of good band leaders. it's a lost art. >> reporter: what makes a good band leader? >> prince. james brown the ultimate band leader. >> reporter: what is the skill you need to have? >> the skill is the band has to be at your fingertips so that if you go like this, they move. you got to an entire show. ? trambaby we were born to run ? >> had to start way up here where people think you can't get any higher. ? baby we were born to run ? >> and then take them way up there where people can't believe they have gone. ? baby we were born to run ? >> reporter: on the tour he just
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played fours hours a night but three years ago, felt the mileage capping up to him. >> every tour, my arm was weakening, weakening, weakening. finally it got to a point where i realized toward the end of the night, it was just difficult to play joot cause? a damaged disc in his neck so he underwent surgery. >> basically, they cut your throat. they take your vocal cords and tie them off to one side and guy gets in there with titanium and new tools and build you a new disc and seal you back up again and takes you about three months before you can sing. that is the nerve wracking part, you know? >> reporter: more worry for springsteen was the attack of depression that hit him in his early 60s. do you see it coming? do you feel it coming? >> not really. you know?
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i couldn't find anyplace to be. you know? you just don't like being. it's fraught with too much confusion and despair and you got a lot of bad thoughts. it lasted for a long time. my 60s. it was last for a year, and then slip away. then it would come back on for a year and a half. >> reporter: springsteen says therapy and anti-depressants gave him his l >> you know, it's certainly not funny when it's happening, but i go back and i go, now it's like, i'm talking about somebody else. it's like i'm not -- it's like i'm not even talking about myself. >> reporter: you couldn't see it in his shows. the remarkable part. springsteen was still able to write music through his depression. he says he has a new album actually already completed and on the shelf.
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and says it will probably be released next year. >> whenever it comes, i want one! anthony, your interview on sunday was so good! >> 67 on friday, he is. >> anthony, your interview on sunday was so good! i'm not going to let you ignore that! it was so good! >> thank you, gayle. >> you had paul and ringo but bruce so rarely gives interviews. that interview was so in >> he wrote the book himself? >> most of it, he wrote the book himself. >> "born to run" goes on sale september 27th. tune into friday with stephen colbert's extended interview with bruce springsteen on "the late show with stephen colbert."
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good morning, everyone, it is 8:55, i am britt moreno. we start with a developing story, police want to find at least 3 more people involved in a violent home burglary that happened yesterday. a home garage, they attacked, one pointed a gun at him and then they took off. police came across one of the suspects and they say the man brandished a weapon at them. that is why they had to shoot and killed him. colorado state patrol needs help finding a deadly hit and run suspect. the driver hit a loikest near the carter lake-- bicyclist year carter lake entrance, the bicyclist was hit by a second
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the scene. officials identified the victim as 43-year-old jason holden from birthed. the city of charlotte is calmer after hours of protest overnight following the deadly shooting of a black man by a black police officer. what the chief told reporters about that shooting this morning on cbs4 news at noon. a cadet with colorado state patrol died after being hit by a driver last year, today opening statements are under way in jurors about the deadly wreck. what to expect as congress asks questions about the price hike of the epipen. this coming up at noon. joe hillan is standing by with a look at the roads. >> i think i get to share good news, look, cars are moving, i-25 and university, i know it seems novel but we had so many accidents, most cleared off the highway, now a accident in
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67 i 71 burlington. 57 avenue onand craig. 63 in grand junction. we do have little rain still down in the southern part of the state and a few showers rolling through parts of larimer county right now but looking at futurecast, some rain building into the southwestern corner throughout the morning hours and into the mid afternoon, it clears more towards the denver area we may get a couple spotty showers today and tomorrow
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[ cheers and applause ] >> announcer: today on rachael ray! blast off with emeril for the 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 show! get rach's easy five-ingredient fritatta. and three cheers for clinton kelly. and play what's in my mouth. there's gonna hear this! >> rachael: bam! >> announcer: and now, are you ready for rachael? [ cheers and applause ] ? ? >> rachael: hey, everybody, welcome. today's show is all about the numbers. today's show is a 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 episode! the one being a really fabulous giveaway, at the end of the show for one person in the studio audience.
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