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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  January 1, 2016 7:00am-9:00am CST

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>>good morning, it is friday, january 1st, 2016. happy new year and welcome to "cbs this morning." the first votes for president are just one month away. our political round table looks at a potential upset in iowa. las vegas is betting on a new strategy. casinos are replacing slot machines with a game of skikis. >> meet the action kid who became a super hero. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. the world welcomes in 2016. >> in paris, thousands marched down down the champ. >> millions of weather.
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it's not even cold. hey! >> it's still not clear what caused a hotel in dubai to go up in flames. >> at least 14 people were injured. >> the mississippi river and a tributaries s e at or near record levels. hundreds of highways and roads are still closed. >> been out here 15 years, and never seen it like this. rochester, new york, the fbi says emanuel lutchman planned an attack to prove he was a member of isis. >> alabama booking a spot in the national championship game opposite clemson. >> they are still undefeated. 14-0. >> i told them, you ain't favored to win the damn game but we ain't no underdog! >> and all that matters. >> what is your resolution for our 2016? >> i tell you what, my resolution is to make america great again!
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ladies and gentlemen, anderson cooper has bee spraytan. we have live in reno in the hot sun. announcer: thihiportion of "cbs this morning" spspsored by toyota. let's go places. we hope you're enjoying the first mornrng of 2016. we recorded parts of this broadcast in the days leading up to the new year. >> and here we are. >> yeah. >> another year all together! >> i like it! >> i like it. >> i like it. >> new year's is a great day for me. you think about what you want to do in the new year. >> really? you're usually a little bit tired. >> no. but it does make you think what a great year we had going last year and now what to accomplish in the new year. >> and this year will be better. >> don't you remember when you were younger they said time
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i really do believe that. >> we e ve lots to reflele on this morning. first, let's head into the newsroom for a check of this morning's haents headlines. good morning. >> the year welcomed in 2016 without serious trouble under a canopy of colorful fireworks. about a million people packed new york's timim square to watch the ball clop. some events in yur were scaled back or cancelled because of terror concerns. police in munich, germany, said they got a concrete trip that islamic militants from syria and iraq were planning a suicide bombing near midnight. nothing happened and the terror warning has now been called off. rochester, new york called off its new year's celebration because of a man planning to
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the mississippi and ohio rivers. david begnaud reports, the impact is likely to last for several more weeks. >> reporter: southwest of st. louis, missouri, towns are under wateand roads look like vers and homes, some of them are nearly submerged. >> we are still at a flood stage of 41.2 feet and it will go down but a lot of water the levee is hoing right now. >> reporter: in arnold, mimiouri, people are withoutut homes andemperatures are dropping below freezing. >> until this goes down and they can come and check our homes and make sure they are safe, we can't live in them, so we are going to be out of a place to stay probably a couple of weeks at least. >> reporter: the thorn family has lost their home in arnold due to the flooding but for linda thorn this new year --- >> oh, my lolo. it's a new beginning. i've got a great grandbaby
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this baby, if it comes at midnight, it is definitely goingng to be a fantastic many people who were inside say they never heard a fire alarm. at least 14 people were jured. top ranked clemson stayed undefeated. second seeded alabama shut out michigan state in the cottoto bowl 38-0. the tigers and crimson tide play in the title game coming up on
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it's 7:06. time for a check of your local weather.aafternoon. afternoon.football this of college players in all of the
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to fense says one month from today, actual presidential voting will begin at the iowa caucuses. by the end of 2016, americans will elect a new president. but we still have miles to go in this campaign and we have an ace to guide us this morning. "face the nation" host john dickerson is also cbs news political director and "wall street journal" peggy noonans abs news contributor and the author of "the time of our lives." nancy cordes has traveled the country covering the campaign. welcome hereen this new year's day. let me ask peggy, what does this signify now that we have gone to a new year in the politics and this race to be the next president? >> it m mns things finally get really and substantially exciting. we are, right now, going from the past 18 months where
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feelinand i think this isis going to happen, there is a new poll, dah, dah, dah. now things are really going to happen. the voters are going to get together and there is really going to be caucuses in iowa. new hampshire is going to ve soon after. we are actuallllgoing to find out if the donald trump phenomenon is real and lasting, and if it is not, we are going to find out what is coming up and who is going to take this thing ovov. >> nancy, february 1st is iowa. february 9th is new hampshire. this is the latest these caucuses and primaries have been in 20 years. what does that mean? >> it means thatt not only is the presidential race kind of frozen until we see what happens with donald trump, if he can maintain this lead, but alsowill races below the presidential election is frozen as well. house republican candidates are waiting to see how they are going to run their races. theenteresting thing you ask
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republican strategist, they have no idea what is going to happen. we have never seen anything like this before so they don't know if trump's lead will entirely disappear when folks in iowa and new hampshire head to the polls. >> john, haven't some of the polling out of iowa show there is extreme fluidity in the race? >> there always is. the cliche about iowa is organize, organize, organi, and get hot at the end. we are at the end now. we are in the moment of excitement for underdogs because this is what they have been saying. they said after the new year, then my moment will come as the voters you say norah, beingery flfld, will turn to me when they are going to pick a president. that has happened in the past. remember, rick santorum out of nowhere to win the iowa caucuses. the challenges for that undedeog, sticking with oogiowa, the last two winners of the iowa caucuses have not gone on.
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it and didn't go on and bob dole won it and didn't go out in '88. >> but it's suggesting on the democratic side, we have seen surprises of barack obama in 2008 and john kerry in 2004. a late starter to organize and kick off the momentum then. >> john kerry the long hotot candidate. all of those one or two or three in the polls, they won't say this outloud but say i'd like to be like john kerry who was 3% in the polls and in part because of hiss rivals went after each other he rose when they fell and that is the hope for a lot of those republican candidates. >> the other thi that concerns me when we get tthe convention, if, in n ct, it is hillary clininn who will she choose as a running mate and if, in fact, she is the nominee. will republicans feel like they have to choose a woman as a running mate?
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i'm not hearing that among conservatives and republicans. i remember the dream team was marco rubio oflorida and john kasich of ohioio it was like florida and ohio, my gosh, put that together. i'm not sure they will feel they have to have a woman, but i am sure that conversation will come up. why wouldn't it? and there is a lot of good women to choose from there.e. >> who are those republican women that would be at the top of the list? >> well, i think the first person you will have to think of is carly fiorina who is not huge in t t polls right now, but who has made a rather valiant try and who is, on some level, won some of the heart, i think, of the party. so she would certainly be first nsideration, i would think. i would think nikki haley and governor@- >> kelly ayotte?
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lot of reasons they would want. >> could we look at this day a figure out what the grt debate is about for amemeca in 2016? >> i think you have tossume it's going to be a mix of economy and foreign policy. you know, in 2008, obviously, the economy. the economy and that really helped barack oboba, but i thihi we are going to see this ping-ponging back and forth over the course of the next year between economic concerns and then when something happens, hopefully, it doesn't, but when we have terrible things happen either here at home or abroad like san bernardino, that is coming to the forefront. when you pole republican voters o you think iss strongest on the economy, they say donald trump. when you ask them who do you think is strongest on foreign policy, they say donald trump. at least for right now, he is sort of rising above everyone. and normally you would think, okay, he has got this huge lead he is up by 15 points.
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well in those primaries, but he doesn't really have a traditional organization, he doesn't have people, staffers working for him in these states, precinct captains, things like that. >> the alternative narratate, draw that, which is given republicans changed, not only the number of debates this election cycle, they made less. they changed the primary schedule. they made it more compact. how will that change and impact a potential trump candidacy or others taking trump out? >> well, let's go to fewer number of debates. it's true that donald trumum doesn't do as s ll in debat as he does in other venues because he is not as detailed-oriented and lesser for a candidate to not get hi shars of maritime to get in froro of the voters. yoyowould think they would want more debates a chance to shine and take him down. that's the way in which it's changed. i think another way wt will be interesting to watch, we are
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presesential pick, it is still possible that because of the way the delegates are proportioned and i the field stays large enough, you could,his is wishful thinking on the part of all political reporters but you could have a situation you get to the convention and the nominee is not -- >> yeah. >> then you have an exciting situation of republican party hasn't had since '76 with reagan and d rd. you have a situation you go to cleveland and we don't know. >> there are people who have watched the unfolding in 2015 and they say that ted cruz really studidi past presidential campaigns, has been a real student of it. everybody think he is a very bright guy and the lessons he has learned in terms of organization, organization, organization. >> organization.n. and also tacktical restraint. we saw him stay away from donald trump in a lot of fights he could have had. and that worked well for him. so he had not only the organization, but also one of
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candidates who say have run before is the thing they say theyave learned is not to swg at every pitchch which iss to say youou need some discipline and the fact that cruz is able to stay out of a lot of those fights, that may be the thing that really benefits him. >> donald trump was not in school that day, was hehe >> he swings at pitches, the umpire, the opposing team. >> one of the amazing things abt trump is that discipline is exactly the word. when you get i i and you start to win, you start to look like you're winning, you start to look like you're really possible, if you are, if you've goyour head screwed on right, you develop discipline. you show respectct for everybody by being disciplined. you can have colorful programs and colorful ideas, dramatic on but you put them flrward in a thoughtfull and wee can talkk about this way and you're not unnecessarily insulting. it is amazing to me that donald
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him, has enforced him to exhibit the kind of discipline that a winner must have. >> who is that person who could do that? i don't know who that person could possibly be. >> oer than donald trump. >> that is s e answer but n't see how you do it without discipline. if it goes for the convention, a fight of a hand-to-hand fight on the convention floor is about discipline and having -- you really need it. >> peggy, thank you. john, nancy, thank you so much. las vegas is battling to heat things up in 2016. casino revenue dropped on the strip. sin city is luring the next generation of gamblers by rolling the dice on a new era. ben tracy got a look at what could be vegas' best chance for change. >> reporter: las vegas as we know it was built on the back of the one-armed bandit. slot machines with their 60% profit margin are cash cows.
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put them out to pasture. >> 45 and under are not going to play slot machines. theyeyre just not. >> reporter: if he sounds like a guy with something new to sell, well, he is. >> we are going into a brand-new world. >> reporter:reg heads one of the companies thatatre betting on a very different kind of gambling. >> welcome to vegas pinball! >> reporter: a casino that looks mu more like an arcade and a nightclub, filled with games that require skill, not just games of chance. this is much more like a video game than gambling to me. >> yes, it does, doesn't it? i'm fighting for my life over here right now. i want tourn a casino into where you have a fighting chance to win some money. use your skill. shoot a target. >> reporter: i can't imagine that your sales pitch too the casinos, they don't want a fighting chance to give money to people. >> the base will change.
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have to be prepared fororhe next generation coming? >> reporter: that generation is the millennials. they head to las vegas in droves and head past the casino and into nightclubs. st 63% of millennials who visited las vegas in 2014 gambled, compared to 78% of thfir parents' generation and 87% of thehe grandparents. >> young people come to vegas for nightclubs and partying and dancing and no longer for gambling. you alcays have to keep your eye on the prize. >> repororr: darian loewenstein is the steve marketing officer for gambling. >> reporter: you won $3.20! their idea is take the games people play on their smartphone an add gambling. you can also compete not against a dealer, but against your friends. >> as opposed to the focus of did i win or lose money, they start playing and get more invested in did i beat the boss? am i getting to the next level? yoyoknow? how am i doing at the game play
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>> reporter: the flip side of that they are not reizing how muchchoney they are losingng >> right. absolutely positive.e. >> reporter: a change in nevada gaming regulations in september now allows for skilled players to potentially win more money by advancing further into the game. but the downside is if you aren't gd at the game,ou could loseven more often than a game of chance. these new skill-based games are expected to hit casino floors this year. >> we are now treading into a new territory. and, agaga, we are trying to attract a different generation. they don't play poker or blackjack but they play arcade games. >> reporter: those clots, no matter how much manufacturers try to keep them relevant, may be on theieifinal spin. >> ten years from now, those will be empty slot machines that dad used to play. >> reporter: for "cbs this momoing," ben tracy, lasasvegas. >> not your grandma's vegas any more. there is a booming wine region already larger than napa valley
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seth doane takes u to the vineyards of china. jillll schlesinger is here and looks at the changes in the economy for 2016 and what it all means for your money. she made marathon history at 92. the inspiration that helped her cross the finish line. >> and this is what got you to the race? >> yeah. and then very fast things too. >> the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." [music] no, no, no, no, people are both soft and strong... yey! which is why our products are too. angel soft.
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your local news is next. days after the paris attacks, senatorsrsame together for a top-secret briefing on the terroriststhreat... marco rubio was missing - fundraising in california instead. two weeks later, terrorists struck again in san bernardino... and where was marco? fundraising agagn in new orlrlns.
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rubio has missed important national security hearings and missed more total votes than any other senator. politics first: that's the rubio way. right to rise usa
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>welcome back to "cbsbshis morning."" on this new year's day, happy new years to you. coming up in this half hour, the grandmother of ten who is a rathon runner and traveled down tough roads in her life. we will introduce you to the 92-year-old. repeat that. 92-year-old. she refuses toet somom of life's greatest challenge slow her down. that is ahead. when you think of wine, france, italy and california likely come to mind but wine makers in china a2e determined to win global recognition. meanshaw west of beijing is home to 50 wineries and seth doane went there to see how itt becamam the fifth largest wine producer. he is beijing. >> reporter: with a population of nearly 4 billion people,
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would be the world's fifth largest consumer of wine but unbelievably it's the fifth largest producer of wine. the industry is growing fast. the desert in this part of china is being transformed. it's taking billions of gallons of water to irrigate these fields each year. and hundreds of millions of dollars of investment to make this china's wine country. >> i've been to every other wine region in the world and i thought the desert? impossible, right? unththkable! but, boy! wine in the desert? it's a reality and it's a big reality. >> reporter: so big that wine expert and author karen mcneil knew she had to come to china. she was updating her book "the wine bible" writing for magazines and trying to understand these really new worlwines. >> i taste 3,000 winin a y yr and have for 30 years.
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>> that is a lot of wine. some woman has to do it! seth, don't try to take my job! >> reporter: just thinking, that is pretty good. >> so o think i have a good understanding of when a wine has potential and when it doesn't. >> reporter: we first met her in the tasting rooms where she kept taking notes. >> he never tasted a cabernet like this. >> reporter: wine importer hung re says china producers are now developing their own flors, not just copying others. we are influenced by western and bringing back winecultures. >> i thought one thing is buying all of the great wine in the world. that just takes money. but making wine takes expertise. >> reporter: seeing that took mcneil to the vineyards here where she totoed. >> what is your total production? how many bottles?
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>> reporter: and,tasted. sometimes right from the barrel. >> 2013 a great vintage. >> reporter: if the name doesn't soundfamiliar, it will. >> oh, man that is really good. our grandchildren wilil probably notice, as they know every other wine region in the world. @ >> reporter: there are about 80,000 acres of vineyard planted here. by 2020 they plan to have more than 160,000 res. that is more than three times amount in the napa valley. napa did it in a century. here, a decade. >> it's fruity. not as cplex as french champagne. >> reporter: this is part of a 28 million dollar coinvestment between the chinese company and luxury goods giant lvmh.
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of money here is a big thumb's up in terms of its confidence about the chinese market. >> so we start from scratch and we build up the winery, the vineyards. everything. >> reporter: this is the general manager here. he is chinese, but his english has the slighghst french accent. >> i learned while making friends. so i want to bring this affair in china. >> reporter: out in the fields, he shohod us there are very specific challenges here. >> we have to bury the wines every year, every winter, and t bury the wines -- >eporter: you're coveveng them? >> cover all of the wineries with dirt. >> reporter: so protect them from the wind? >> to protect from the wind and coat. >> reporter: covering the vines each winter is done by hand, which drives up costs. then there is the question of sustain sustainability sustainability.
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can all of these wines be sold? >> it is really a risky bet, but i thininthe chinese philosophy has been built it and they will come, and if you build it well, they will come. so we will just have to see. >> reporter: her journey to china in a wordrd karen mmeil says she is incredulous. >> you know, we thought we knew all of the great winery regions in the world, you know? we know bordeaux and napa and tuscany. the idea that somewhere in the chinese desert might be the next great wine region in the world? it's astounding. >> reporter: chinese wine producers are saying they are focusing first on selling to the domestic chinese market, but say down the road, you should expect to see chinese wines in the u.s. too. charlie? >> wine in china? they will try anything. >> something to think about. >> that was a great piece by seth. >> why can't with we make wine, they say. >> make wine? make happiness? >> and they do.
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>> and they do. >> seth doane in beijing, $% things. americans believe they will be better in 2016.. people are makingg finances a priority in their new year's resolution. the top three goals? saving more. spending less. and paying off debt. cbs news business analyst j jl schlesinger is here how to make that happen. how do we make that happen, jill? >> think those three goals are pretty good goals becau they are the basic concepts of all financiall plannini. obviously, saving more and paying down the credit card debt and living within your means are lofty goals. another pa of this which is paying attentiwn and being engaged. whether that meaea figuring out which app to download on your phone or which investment is going to be the best for your 401(k), we really want people to focus on this, especially now that it feels like the recession is behind us. time to normalize our lives. >> what one that the recession is behind us is what the fed's decision on the interest rates.
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the market, the economy this % whole year? >> this is going to be a huge year for investors, becauses the federal reserve continues to increase interest rates, markets are going to react. and, right now, based on the futures, thatis the bond market, it's predicting four rate incncases this year of a quarter point each. we end the year 1% higher rates. great news for savers. maybe you can get some ambassadorcd rates b b not good news for borrowers who may see the cost of loans start to increase. for investors i think it is a dicey year, though. >> if you have a mortgage, what should you do? >> if you have a mortgage you should be psyched because you have a nice 30-year fixed rate mortgage. that is terrific. if you have an justifiableadjustable rate mortgage this is key. as the rates start to go higher your cost willl increase. rates are low now so now may be a good time to adjust that
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fixed rate. no concern if yououo from 4 to 4.5%. we want to make people understand what the next 30 years of payments will look like. => i never thought an ajustifiable rateadjustable rate mortgage was a good thing. >> if you know you're leaving within five to seven years, fantastic. i'm going to a different place. i'm a doctct. i'm going totoe mobile. i'm not staying in this house. that is fine. but for most people, a fixed rate. >> is this a good year to buy a buying one? >> i think this is the year more peoplelere able to buy a house. look. we had a problem last year. we didn't have a lot of houses for sale. the inventory was quite low. houses coming on to the market now for 2016 should be good n ns and hopefully prices stay reasonable and with rates low i think a good thing for most homeowners. >> what about irs changes for retirement in 2016? >> no#changes. still at 18,000. howw about that? a lot of people said to me they
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very few people are putting ,000 a year away. if you can, try to put that retirement account up by a percentage or two. t the accouou on auto rebalance. make this automatic and stop thinking about it and make sure you don't let your emotionet away from you. >> jill schlesinger, thank yoyo we have great news to share about a 92-year-old marathoner who is planning to set another record. that story is next. right when you feel a cold sore, abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days whensed at the first sign. withououit the virus spreadsds from cell to cell. only abreva penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. you could heal your cold sore, fast, as fast as two and a half days when used at the first sign. learn how abreva starts to work
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that choice matters. because strengthening the economy, making healthcare more affordable, raising incomes. all of that depends on us s ing both secure e home and leading the world. i will get up every single day and do whatever it takes to make sure our country is safe and strong. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. you're unbelievable finishing a marathon take special grit and willpower. 2015 saw one amazing competitor at san diego'o' rock 'n' roll marathon. a woman broke a record at age 92.
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this new year's day, he brings >> reporter: runners usually race against the clock. but in san diego's marathon, harriett thompson defied time for more than 26 miles. >> and kept hearing, go, harriet! go, harriet! i mean, i don't think there was anybody there who didn't know who harriete was. >> reporter: they cheered her at the finini line after she ran for seven hours, 24 minutes, and 36 seconds. at 92, she is the oldest woman evero finish a marath. >> i remembereeing this stuff falling down. they had confetti! i had a ticker tape! and the response, that was a complete surprise. >> reporter: harriette didn't
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she played music in her head. this is what got you to the race? >> yes. very fast and crazy, too. like this. >> reporter: shea is is a classical pianist who performed decades around the world and playings harder than distance running. it takes mordiscipline, even whwh you set the record as the oldest female marathoner in history. does that matter to you? >> not at all. >> reporter: this csn't a story abiut running. it's really a love story? >> yeah, iis. >> reporter: dididou think about him during the race? >> he's with me all the time. yeah. >> reporter: he is sidnor thompson, her husband of 67 years. but cancer runs in this family. sid died from pancreatic cancer last summer and their son was
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harr rreitte is a cancer survivor herself. since 1999 she has run this marathon six times and raised money for the lymphoma society. >> i don't think i can't do it but i'm going to do it. it helps to be positive. >> reporter: you're still running marathons? >> well, one a year. >> reporter: i'm going to have a hip replacememt next w wk. some people would say what is wrong with this picture? >> in a couple of weeks, you'll be all ririt. >> reporter: if i g g the hip fixed, will i be running marathons at 92? >> absolutely. never fails! >> reporter: if she is still able, her goal is to race again in san diego next year when she 93 and set another marathon record for the ages. for "cbs this morning," mark
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>> i'm betting on harriette! she has won 16 times and i feel like a slacker. norah, you're a runner. can you imamane running that marathon? >> i can't. it's 26 miles. great piece, mark. great piece. the new year changed the way you eat while catching a vie. something else is nowlaying in theaters. it's healthier choices at the aafternoon. afternoon.football this of college players in all of th
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to dffense says i don't have like a pair of jeans i'm trying to get into; i've been down that road honey child. and i don't have like a dress or some big red carpet thing i have to do. im really just looking at 2016, as the year of my best body; that's what i want for you t t. lets let 2016 be the year of our best bodies. when heartbubu hits fight back fast tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue and neutralizes stomach acid at the source tum, tum, tum, tum
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it is new year's day, friday, january 1st, 2016. are you ready? get out of bed. welclme back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news aheaea including eating healthier at the movies. how your new year's resolution could mean skipping the candy and the popcorn. oh, no. but fist here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> it feels really g it's going to be a good year. >> the world welcomed in the new ar under a canopy of colorful fireworks. >> record-breaking flooding is happeninin along the mississippi, ohio and arkansas rivers. >> a fire in dubai left a luxury hotel skyscraper in flames. at least 14 were injured. >> you ask any republican strategist and they have no idea what is going to happen. we've never seen anything like this before. >> this is going to be a huge year for investors. as the federal reserve continues to increree interest rates, markets are going to react. >> we're trying to attract a
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they don't play poker or blackjack but they play arcade games. >> yououe still running marathons. >> yeah, one a year. >> i'm going to have a hip replacement. some people would say what is wrong with this picture. >> the world's fifth largest producer of wine and the industry is growing fast. >> i think the chinese philosophy has been build it and they will come. if you build it well, they will come. >> n n year's is always a great day for me to think about all the things you want to do in the new year. >> really? usually i'm a little bit tired. i'm charlie rosee with >> i'm'm charlieie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. we hope you're enjoying a wonderful new year's celebration. we recorded part of this broadct in the days leading up to the holidays.
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a new year, aren't we, norah o'donnell? >> very excited. >> i just want to make sure everything is all good as w celebrate 2016. right now let's h hd to the news for a check of the morning headlines. >> good morning and happy new year, i'm don dahler. the world rang in the new year peacefully. about a million people p ptied in new year's times square. security was tight there and in many cities overseas. munich, germany, closed its train station over a tip that a suicidee attack was planned. the fbi arrested a man for an alleged terror plot in new york. chuck schumer warned against lone wolf atckers. >> these are individuals, disaffected. in the case of rochester, some mental illness, who are encouraged and persuaded by isis over the internet. >> therrest led rochester to cancel last night's fireworks. two hours before midnight a
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dubai. the blaze they 63-story total is mostly out this morning. dozens were treated for smoke inhalation. thousands had gathered nearby to celebrate new year's eve in the middle eastern financici capital. major flooding continues today in parts of the mississippi river valley, already hit hard by deadly storms. midwestern flooding is blamed for at least 22 deaths. in hard-hit missouri, the mississippi river crested nearly 12 feet above flood stage on thursday. the water shut down busy highways and covered neighborhoods. >> we're just fighting the water and it's up to o e red line right there. just trying to keep the pumps running and make sure the wall doesn't fail and hope the water goes down in a hurry. >> as the floodwaters move downstream, expepes more trouble along the lower mississippi river into mid-january. president obama reportedly plans to sign an executive order next week expanding background checks for gun sales.
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president'ss pleas t t tighten federal laws. the order reportedly would set new rules for gun sellers. in his weekly radio address, the president says he can't, in his words, sit aroundnd do nothing. a massive fire in the philippines has destroyed hundreds of homes. it broke out after midnight in a manila shanty town. two people died and another is missing. the fire is blamed on a lit firecracker in an abandoned hut. and m.a.s.h. fans are remembering wa_ne rogers this morning. the actor who trtre trapper john mcintyre died thursday in los angeles. he co-starred with alan alda in the first three seasons of m.a.s.h. he builtlt a h hhly successful business as an investor and money manager. wayne rogers was 82. a spokeswoman says he died of
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afternoon.football this of college players in all of the
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to defense says got room for one more? >> i ain't too anxious to be handing out rides. >> real trusting fella, huh? >> not so much. >> quentin tarantino's new movie debuted last night nationwide. other top box office contenders incle "concussion" and "joy." as vinita nair shows us,, some theaters hope you will notice a plot twist at the snack bar. good morning. >> good morning, guys, and happy new year. big crowds are expected but twtwthirds of movie goers off expected to skip the snack line. that's why they're expanding menu, offering healthy choices and making every efforto changeerception of thee concession stand. popcorn has always been addictive but the finger food that never seems to last through
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>> a aually venenorors outside the movie theater were selling snacks to people before they came in. so the theater owner said, okay, we don't need people outside our door selling this to our customers and bringigi it in, we'll sese it within the theater itself. >> this has been here since the theater opened. >> reporter: amber represents showcase cinemas, a movie cin that shares its parent company with cbs. here t t lobby has a mini food court featuring hot dogs, pizza, ice cream and starbucks. >> coming to the movies is still an experience, so the food aspect is still a really important part of that experience. let's all go to the lobby to get ourselves a treat >> sales of snacks account for up to 40% o o a movie's revenue. but the calories make many wonder whether it's wor it.. iasmall popcorn weighing in at
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>> i think it definitely makes you stop and think. >> it has entrepreneurs like ron law thinking too. he's eda movie is 150 calories, but he'd rather not call it healthy. >> it needs to convey that this is good for you subliminally but that is a fun food to eat. >> theater owners seem to agree. the shell showcase cinemas are stocked with options like nuts d rice crackers, but so far healthy hasn't been a hit. >> the movie theater for sure is a place where people, you know, may want to treat themselves. >> ye, they can hide under the darkness of the theater and eat whatever they want. >> exactly, yeah. and of course people when they go to the theater, it's a special occasi, it's a special event, so i think the concessions piececgoes along with that. >> the fda ordered to post calories was supposed to go into effect today but the deadline was postponed one more year so there's no reason to stop
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weekend. norah. >> thanks. >> i think that's a good idea. >> i think it's a really good idea. i love popcorn and raisinettes together. >> and i admit i go to o at butter bar. who knows what's coming out of that pump. >> i wouldn't have thought that about her. >> no. i don't do that either. i don't ever eat butter at all. >> you don't put butter on breaea >> no,o,no. >> you don't? >> nor salt. >> we're going to work with you. >> charlie, there are some things in life that are worth it, bacon. >> a little pat of butter is okay. >> beer goggles -- you like beer goggles? >> i don't drink much goggles, no. >> a beer degree could look a lot more promising. we'll show you how college students are tapping into the kep chemistry of a new career. that's next on "cbs this morning."career.that is next on "cbs this
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hire some of them, craft beer. he takes us to this school in colorado where students get a lesson in libations. >> there are beers oper there. >> beer and college have gone together for a long time. >> don't lose the phone, that's a common technique people have problems with, especially pouring off a g. >> but not like this. of several colleges now offering a major in beer. >> is this fun? >> it is fun. and it's a lot of work as well. >> jeff callway would know. he left the cutti edge world of biotech to teaea about a beverage that man started brewing seven7,000 years ago. and beer, it turns out, it complicared. thissn't brewing beer in your garage, there's a lot of science that goes with this. >> absolutely. before the students even think about brewing beer, they have to learn biochemistry, physics, organichemistry. there's a lot you have to do to
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something a something. >> a lot of students work with craft beers. >> america is the best place in the world to drink beer right w. is is where the innovation is happening in beer. >> ceo kim jordan and her former husband started making beer in a garage in 1991. today new belgian craft beers are shipped across america and even to sweden. but little breweries are doing big business. in 2014, the craft beer market was $19.6 billionstrong. stilll smaller than the $101 billion until sales of beers overall, but craft bwery ses still brew 21%. >> m me jobs for those students. >> yeah. we -- at this point the craft brewing industry employs about 115,000 people. to give you some perspective, anheuser-busch and miller coors together employ about 24,000
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>> so to help train more future beer makers, new belgium donated $1 million to the csu program. it's a career with a beverage that has a philosophy all its own. as benjamin franklin lovingly put it, beer is proof that god wants us to be happy. for "cbs this morning," barry petersen, ft. collins, colorado. >> i know there's a lot of people that graduate from college sayingnghey got a degree in beer. >> that's a good line. beer is proof god wants us to be happy. what looks like a normal ckyard is really the headquarters of an action movie kid. see how a father and son create awesome adventures together. that's next on "cbs this morning."" it's easy to love your laxative when that lax loves your body back. only miralax hydrates, eases and softens to unblock naturally, so you have peace of mind from start to finish. love your laxative. miralax.
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acquired more wealth in two years than the bottom 100 million people combined. i'm bernie sanders, and i approve this message. my plan -- make wall street banks and the ultra-riri pay their fair share of taxes, provide living wages for working people, ensure equal pay for women. the middle class will continue to disappear unless we level the playing field.
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hey, buddy. thanks for helping me with this. okay, now, just like we practiced. now, remember to start -- >> i love that. hollywood special effects wizard really loves play time with his young son as you see. he's got a wild imagination. that got his dad thinking, what if he could use his skills to record video of this little boy and give him super hero powers? john blakestone showed us how
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>> reporter: james is pretty much your typical 5-year-old with super human powers. the action movie kid videos have blown up online, scoring millions of views. they are created by his dad daniel, houshi to his friends. special effect wizards whoho hasas worked on films such as "kung fu panda 2." >> i'm flying. >> i know. your mom is going to kill me. >> reporter: real moments at home not directed by dad are simply cptured on a smartphone and then turned into movie quality magic. >> you forgot your lunch! he is pretending to be ironman and blasting up the kitchen. i thought so fun to add some graphics to them and show them
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super hero. >> reporter: what was your reaction you first saw james blowing the kitchen apart? >> i guess i thought, not again! >> reporter: mom mandy h h her own outlet for creativity and preparing custom chocolates for party and events from her home kitchen. >> he has a daddy who makes cartoons and he lives basically in ahocolate factory! so he's a lucky kid! >> reporter: the couple has teamed up to write their first action movie kid book. the cover, of course, animates thanks to an old book called "flipper." you clearly have the video ideas but when it came to writing book, mandy, you became the brains in the operation? >> mostly. i think became is the right word. >> i will give her brain for the operation overall. >> reporter: c combining his
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sci-fi, the book has the kid taming a slimging monster. >> action movie family. >> reporter: action movie family? whoa! >> let's go. >> hopefully, the lesson of the book as a parent, you engage in your child's imaginative play, you can kind of create these really fun memories for them. >> reporter: and fear not! action movie kid is not bidding farewell to the small screen! >> what are you exploring r rht now, indy? >> reporter: new episodes are in the making. >> graveyard house. >> graveyard house? > yeah. that sounds dangerous! >> reporter: and, now, his baby sister sophia is getting in on the action. >> i believe that she has some true super powers. i believe she has the a ality to move things with her mind as her emotions dictate.
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rivalries are in order. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," jojo blackstone, los angeles. >> da-da! >> ha, ha, ha! >> that is so terrific. >> that t what you call a funun dad. >> you can ignite the passion of someone. lewis hamilton told us at age 5 wanted to be a race car driverl driver. >> i love when you hear a man say, nice job, buddy! i love the love of that. so nice. >> well done, well done. from natural to nairobi. country music finds its soul. see how kenya is finding the south down to a real-lif elvis.
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the iowa hawkeyes will finally step on the field this afternoon, making their long-awaited return to the rose bowl. bowl.the hawks take on n e stanford cardinal, at 4-pm in pasadena california.iowa hasn't appeared in a rose bowl for 25 long years.be sure to tune into our evening shows tonight for highlights of the big game.. but the rose bowl will be just one of a long list of high-profile bowl games today. you're looking at a list of the match-ups right now.three of iowa's fellow big ten teams will square off, including northwestern, ohio state and michigan. a johnson county man is safe
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falling through ice yesterday in the hawkeye wildlife area in oxford. oxford.25-year-old jared bushell walked over what he ththght to be ozen wetlands. fire officials in north liberty say he called 9-1-1 when he became stuck in mud and waist deep water.two sheriff deputies broke through ice an inch and a half thick to get him out.thth tell cbs 2 news that ice needs to be four inches thick to walk on and at least five for a-t-vs or vehicles.if you have questions about whether of not you should go out on icecethe fire department says to check k the iowa d-n-r's fishing reports and check the ice yourself. an allegiant air flight making it's way to cedar rapids on thursday had to make an emergency stop at a tennessss airport. airport.t.the flight was traveling from orlando and had a reported engine problem.no injuries were reported.150 passengers were on boara and were returned in a replacement flight.this was at ast the third flight from orlando to make an emergency stop this week alone.
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*not stand in the wayf the pls to revamp the privatization of f wa's medicaid program.iowa's hospital association claims the governor's plans to turn the four-billion dollar- program to private companies illegal.the changes were supposed to go into effect day, but the federal government forced the state to put the plans on hold until march.the judge says it's too early for the court to step in becae of the federal delays. that's a quick look at your friday morning news.get more news anytime online - at cbs 2 iowa dot com!have a great day.
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welcome back too "cbs this morning." it is the new year. i'm excited about the new year. >> i am too. anything in particular? >> my birthday. >> oh, okay. >> january 5th i'm writing it down. >> norah o'donnell, january 23rd. >> and your birthday was over the holidays. >> i turned a year older. >> i i thinking youou look betetr and better. >> i think we're off to a really good start. >> i'm very excited about this year. >> birthdays aside, i think we have a lot of fun sitting at this table. >> it just gets better and better. >> m m that not change. >> here'e' to more music too in 2016. kenya may seem unlike a place for a hot music scene but on a july trip to nairoro with presesent obama, our major garrett saw the include of an american king on a popular local
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>> reporter: a daylight drifts away, bonfires crace, long necks stand guard and -- country music makes the twilight feel right. is is nairobi, kenya, a city of 4 million, 8,000 miles from the grand ole opry. but for a reporter traveling % with president obama, the country music and feel of americana is unexpecteded real, right down to the performer, elvis. i spend my life not knowing >> reporter: sir elvis, as he's known in these parts. he is not an impersonator, he's as country as johnny cash. >> my mom and my dad loved elvis
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birth to me, that was the year elvis presley died. mysteriously i became a musician. rock me mama like a wagon wheel >> repororr: elvis was born in rural kenya, the son of a preacher. >> tell me about country music in nairobi and in kenya. is there an audience for it? >> a huge audience here in kenya. way baba then from'50s and '60s, there has always been a country music on theair. >> repororr: there still is. strings of country runs three times a week. david hosts the show and said country took over after kenya freed itself from british colonial rule in 1963. >> kenya was exposed to country music a long time ago. >> reporter: he calls sir elvis aphenomenon. >> the songs sound like the original.
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there's a huge following. >> reporter: like flash and sara who follow h h wherever he goes. >> we love country. >> his voice is just amazing. >> reporter: elvis sometimes shares the stage with an up-and-comer on the country scene who styles herself after an american country legend, dolly parton. >> i really love singing her songs. most people say i sing like her, or she sings like me. country has likeke family values, love, god, and country roads. >> reporter: those timeless themes, elvis says, give country music universal appeal and
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like leaping from an outdoor stock exchange in stage from my roby to a honky tonic. >> it is a dream but i put myself in a spot where if it doesn't happen, i don't think it will be a really big story for . i keep it simple. >> just like country. >> yes, that's right. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," major garrett, nairobi, kenya. >> i tnk major did like thaha piece.e. i'm thininng who knew there was a kenyan country singer. major garrett, that's who, and found it. >> it just shows you the power of a lot of things american everybody loves. country y sic. >> musicicnd culture. >> music and culture. and on this holiday we'll take a look at ouraafternoon.
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college players in all of the best do to stop one they have to defense says you got people working incredibly long hours. median family income today -- $4,000 less than it was in 1999. the bottom line of this economy that it is rigged. what this campaign is about is to demand that we create an economy that works for all of us rather than a handful of bilonaires. if you work 40 hours a week in america, you should not live in poverty.
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later this month, "cbs this morning" b bins its fifthth year of our commitment to bring the news back in the morning. can you u lieve it's going on year number five? i really can't. it seems like yesterday. >> i think i'm the luckiest man in t t world to be right here every day. >> i think you are too. if i do say so myself. i think norah and i are pretty fabulous. >> i do too. >> no, i love sitting at this table every day.
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appreciate your viewership, your follows on social media and for spreading the word about this broadcast. we know you don't get to see our entire team every day. we know you're dying to know what does tony look like, what's patty doing in here, there's i could go on and on and on. >> it's like a party every morning. >> i love these guys. so we'd like you to meet the people we are very proud to call our colleagues at "cbs this
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this does it for us. we look forward to seeing new 2014 every day. join us here and we will share
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the iowa hawkeyes will finally step on the field this afternoon, making their long-awaited return to the rose bowl. bowl.the hawks take on the stanford cardinal, at 4-pm in pasana california.iowa hasn't appeared i ia rose bowl for 25 long years.be sure to tune into our evening shows tonight for highlights of the big game. allegiant air flight making it's way to cedar rapids on thursday had to make an emergency stst at a tennessee airport. airport.the flight was traveling from orlando and had a reported engine problem.no injuries were reported.150 passenrs were@on board and were returned in a replacement flflht.this was at least the third flight from orlando to make an emergency stop this week alone. the cedar rapids school district is pposing a schedule chahge that would include late starts every wednesday of theheear.under the plan, elementary students will start class at 10:25 and
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students at 9:20. district leaders say supervision ill elementata students. they wouldldlike to h hr from parents and caregivers.we've posted the email information to cbs 2 iowa dot com. in cedar rapids, a major effort is paying off in a big way. more than 27-hundred dollars was donated during the month-long forget the fine supply drive. park cedar rapids accepted donations in return for forgiveness of parking tickets. ththdonations went toward area homeless shelters and family services. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects ( with you - call cbs 2 if you see news happen.800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, pictures, an ) surf, stream, download, and play on multiple devices at once, with centurylink internet. get up to 40 megs for $2$2a month for 1 year when bundled with qualifying home phone plan. just call... ...rig now.
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[ deep voi ] get ready. 40 megs is only $20 a month. [ normal voice ] or drama? [ melodramatic voice ] get up to 40 megs for $20 a nth. [ normal voice ] only from centurylink. speed may nonobe available your area.
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on average, it takes three hundd americans working for a solid year to make as much money as one top ceo. it's called the wage gap. and the republicans will make it worse by lowering taxes for those at the top and letting corporations write their own rules. hihiary clinton will work to close the wage gap. equal pay for women to raise incomes for families, a higher minimum wage, lower taxes for the middleclass. she gets the job done for us. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. wayne: i'm on tv! jonathan: a trip to napa! wayne: (high pitched gibberish)
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