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tv   Sunday Morning  CBS  February 7, 2016 6:30am-7:30am PST

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spotlight investigative unit of the globe. in good old fashioned shoe leather style, they knocked on doors. >> do you remember his name? >> church directories. every priest in massachusetts. >> dusty archives. >> they geeked out on the specifics of it, on the details, to good, solid investigative reporting. we shot in the "boston globe" library which looks exactly like that. going through the old clips and pulling clips and paper, paper, paper, paper. we can find out where any priest is. >> i got them here. >> in the bowels of the globe. >> the rectory. published. devicing way work backwards from them to locate priests. as they said it was very tedious and hellish work that they had to do. but it was fruitful. boots on the ground journalism.
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mccarthy put his own boots on the ground for three years traveling to boston with his cowriter, josh singer, interviewing everyone involved in the original 2001 investigation that won the "boston globe" a pulitzer prize. you really did do reporting. did you an investigative reporting job to write the screen play. >> we did. it was really -- we had no source material which is important to remember. the reporters hadn't written a book about their investigation. >> right. >> we had no where to go. >> like "all the president's men." >> boy. >> i'm angry at those guys. turn the chapter 20. >> documents, contemporaneous e-mails. >> the real head of the spotlight team, walter robinson, said mccarthy was as thorough as a star reporter. >> i swear to god some days, i think, as much or more research about what we did than we actually did in 2001. >> it was exciting, it was surprising. we thought, wow, this little bit
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is what reporters feel. >> he kept reams of his research in a cramp, unglamorous office on the lower east side of new york including transcripts of interviews he conducted with survivors. do not call them victims. >> that's something that they corrected us on early on. >> they like to be called survivors. >> because victims are the ones that don't survive. >> survivor joe croley was raped by a priest when he was 15 years old. >> one of the interviews i was getting ready to meet with him he was getting nervous. i didn't know what to expect. >> in the interview tom relaxed him by asking about his first meeting with spotlight reporters sash satire. >> someone you never met before. >> can you tell me specifically what happened? >> specifically he molested me.
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ultimately ex supposed more than 200 priests as molesters and led to the resignation of the cardinal in charge of the boston archdiocese. >> mark my words, if it takes a village to raise a child it takes a village to abuse one. >> the movie suggests that plenty of people in boston knew something terrible was going on and did nothing. >> they knew and they let it happen. to kids. okay? it could have been you, it could have been me. it could have been any of us. >> everybody conspired not just the church the community. >> right. >> because people knew -- lawyers knew. >> families knew. teachers knew. this is what our movie is about. why did it take us so long to stand up and say something. like look, i'm a big fan of the catholic community, my family is very catholic. i'm very connected to the church. the catholic church does a lot of wonderful things. i think the question is, how does this happen? how do so many good people allow this to happen? >> you were raised in the
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>> yeah. >> tom described himself as a lapsed catholic. >> that's an altar boy leading a procession. >> but his mom, carol mccarthy goes to mass every sunday. >> look at you. >> my pope dress. it was just perfect for that occasion. >> tom made a special trip home to hell his mother what he was working on. did you try to discourage it? >> no, i didn't discourage him. i just said i hope you think about it. i think a little bit of worry. >> when you finally saw the movie? >> i was excited to see it. i watched it and i was very uncomfortable for some reason. i thought, wow. >> she didn't warm to the movie until -- your local parish >> did he. he was very helpful because he said it was very well done. so i felt good about that. >> most of mccarthy's earlier films were easier for his mom to
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>> what is this one? peter dinklage. >> on the set of the station agent. i haven't seen that picture with the pony. >> the station agent back in 2003 was mccarthy's first film as writer and director. after, that mccarthy cowrote "up." >> so long boys! >> stay in this, okay? >> wrote and directed "win win." if you have feeling you've seen tom before, it's because he was, and is, an actor. >> i was "baltimore sun," can i talk with you a minute? >> the role that prepared him in a way for his work on "spotlight," was in the hbo series "the wire." >> you played a reporter.
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sleezy reporter. >> that's a judgment, leslie. >> what would you say? >> i would say ambitious. >> dishonest? >> i would say motivated. >> i would say cutting corners, telling falsehoods. >> every last word is in my notes! >> making up characters, making up dialogue. >> i would say i one a pulitzer prize, leslie, on that show. >> and now the multi-talented mccarthy may win a real oscar or two. >> i'm really excited not just for me but for everyone who works on the film, right? that said, look, there comes a point where i have to stop talking about myself and this movie and i got to get back to work. >> osgood: coming up -- you can have the top of the mountain to yourself.
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acadia national park. >> osgood: all this year we've asked our conor knighton to head out on the trail. in appreciation of our nation
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to begin he's at eastern most park, acadia near bar harbor, maine. >> it's the time of year when acadia national park on the coast of maine goes into a bit of a hibernation. bathrooms are locked up. 307 pew lar roads close down. lake freezes over. the beaches are an island, save for a few brave locals. i'm surprised that more people don't come in the wenter? >> we're actually, happy. >> stay away. >> in the summer acadia is packed. at just under 50,000 acres, it's one of our smallest national parks, but it's also one of the most popular. last year the park saw nearly three million visitors. and most show up between june
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>> those four months together about 75% of owl our visits occur in that sort of short season. >> ranger john kelly lives in nearby bar harbor, maine, in the off season the ice cream store is boarded up, most t totals close down a few restaurants that stay open cater to mostly local crowd. >> in the winter i think, a lot of the locals feel a bit relieved to have a change in pace and get to enjoy the park more of their back yard. >> a century ago a group of residents banded together to gift some of their back yard to the federal government for protection, making acadia the first national park created donations. summer resident john d. rockefeller, junior, gifted 10,000 acres to acadia and network of carless carriage roads. during peak season the road to cadillac mountain, the highest
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typically 5:00ed full of cars and tour buses. but when the road closes -- >> depending on the day that you pick you can have the top of the mountain to yourself. >> taking in a cadillac sunrise is one of the iconic experiences of the park. but it's only during the colder months when the mountain top actually takes top billing. >> from early october to early march is the first place where the sun hits the eastern united states. >> it's an early riser's dream. a chance to catch the first rays of sun in the country before anyone else. and while most days, the long hike and the cold keeps visitors away, new year's day at acadia has become a popular tradition. every year, on january 1st, a devoted crowd huddles at the
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peak at the year ahead. this year, marks the 100th anniversary of the national park service. which is why, on new year's day, i decided to wake up at 3:00 a.m. and hike a snowy mountain in the dark. all this year, i'll be heading out on the trail, traveling the country, telling some of the stories behind our national parks. i figured this was the perfect way and the perfect day to get an early glimpse at what 2016 might have in store.
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>> japan, of courses nobody for robots, sushi and cherry blossoms. but something else, too. >> you read about their toilets? >> yes. >> in tokyo we found visitors marveling at japanese toilet technology. >> i think they're the greatest thing in the world. >> wow, that's high praise. >> they're great. you press a little button. it cleans your bottom. then you walk away after it dries. >> the heated toilet seat is amazing. back where we're from, bostona heated toilet seat wouldn't be a bad thing. >> naturally our exploration of this topic took us to the museum of toilets. >> this is the history of it to. how the toilet evolved. >> exactly. starting from the squat types to western types. >> he was our guide at this futuristic 60 million dollar museum built by japanese toilet manufacturer, toto. >> i guess you know you're jane
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toilet for a sumo wrestler. >> opened in august, drew 30,000 visitors in the first three months. with attractions like general mccarer this' toilet he over saw the american occupation of japan after world war ii. all of these components are in a toilet? >> exactly. >> quite complex. >> it is. >> ikeda is international sales ex stoled the virtues of the technology. >> this is going to wash your bottom. and wash your bottom softly. >> in addition to the heated seat, the lid opens and cles automatically. >> no more leaving the seat up. >> yeah. >> there are deodorizers and antiseptic mist, a blow drier and bidet, ikeda admitted his favorite function is the water massage. >> you can change where it comes out, where it hits you. >> exactly. >> toto which dominates
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their factory. it takes a week to make one toilet and craftsmen can spend three to four hours per unit smoothing out the surface by hand. at the top end they can sell for almost $5,000 each. why is toilet technology so advanced here in japan? >> japanese people really like to clean everything. >> cleanly suns important. >> very important. >> for other ministers surprised that toilets was going to be an issue for you? >> that was surprising for first time. >> at the diet, japan's parliament, we met legislator haruko arimura who took up toilets as one of her political issues. >> you've been called the minister of toilets. is that a title you're proud of? >> partially. >> arimura argues they showcase japanese innovation and hospitality and advanced toilets are part of venue planning for the upcoming 2020 olympics.
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lead on issues of global sanitation and fighting disease. >> everyone, everywhere of the world, has to use restroom every day, every single day. beyond national boundary. beyond language, beyond religion. regardless of how rich or poor you are, you have to use a restroom. >> the japanese are quite open about this topic from a young age. youngsters donned subject-appropriate excrement caps at this tokyo exhibition. kids could climb into giant toilet replica and slide on in triggering a flushing sound. the problem is, japanese toilets can be so advanced they can bee willedder tourists. >> the seat is quite hot so like i jump off i'm like, oh, god.
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tried publicity stunts like this converted motorcycle toilet, but nothing may sell a toilet better than just trying it. >> you don't know japanese toilets if you haven't experienced one. you can only look at a picture but the real experience by far better than the picture will tell you. >> toilets may one day be able to check your health and vital signs. or even generate electricity. in most of the world, the humble toilet hasn't changed much in centuries. but that's hardly the case here. >> good, good. >> osgood: just ahead. >> if i have limited amount of time left why would i want to spend it feeling sorry for myself. >> osgood: steve hartman with a coach who doesn't know the word "quit." with 40 megs of internet speed from centurylink, a family of four can all be online at the same time,
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yeah, the internet's great, but i think hair and makeup went a little too far. yeah, that's not working. i much prefer the two-day beard, horn-rimmed glasses, just-slept-in-his-car kinda thing. yeah, i miss the rumpled crazy uncle look. okay. be "paul giamatti." that's the essence of this role. feel like a hollywood insider with high-speed internet from centurylink. congress doesn't regulate wall street... wall street regulates congress. it's a rigged economy that sends
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and it's held in place by a corrupt political system where wall street banks and billionaires buy elections. my campaign is funded by over two and a half million small contributions. people who know you can't level the playing field by taking more money from wall street. i'm bernie sanders, and i approve this message.
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>> osgood: the mr. lucky of this year's super bowl may strike you as an unlikely one. until you get to know him the way steve hartman has. >> all week carolina panthers' special teams coach bruce dehaven has been deflecting. >> refrain from answering a whole lot of questions. >> telling reporters after reporter -- >> this is not a story. >> more important things to talk about this past week than him. >> i appreciate your interest. it's not a story. >> in the one interview he did sit down for this week, i learned bruce dehaven knows a lot more about what it takes to win at football than what makes an important story. >> well, in terms of what's happened to me, if the i only got a limited amount of time left, why would i want to spend it feeling sorry for myself. >> last spring at the age of 66, bruce was diagnosed with an incurable form of prostate cancer. obviously that diagnosis would
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retirement, but not bruce. >> in the end i wanted to coach. >> why does coaching win out? >> i just love coaching. coaching is teaching. for whatever reason it's in my blood. i mean, i'll probably cry after this ball game just because we're not going to have another week of practice. >> in fact he loves practice so much he actually scheduled his cancer treatments around it. never missed a single day of work all season. >> some guys got to work for a living, don't they? i find myself lingering after practice. thinking about, i want to make a little picture here in my mind in case imminute doing this soon. >> he knows this could be his last year. and given that perspective, you'd think the super bowl itself wouldn't matter as much. but don't talk to bruce about the prospect of losing. >> i wouldn't even want to think about that. >> you're telling us the game still matters who wins answer loses?
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none of us are going to get out of this thing alive. >> you can get out with a super bowl ring all the better. >> that is way better, yeah. >> as you've probably figured out by now, bruces and always has been, one of the nicest guys in the nfl. players like wide receiver corey brown adore him. >> he's like a grandpa to me. he's a guy that i care about. >> the difference is, this season, everyone has been going out of his way to tell him that. >> when lou gehrig said, i feel like i'm the luckiest guy in the world, i can understand what he meant. you just have no idea how you've touched people sometimes. and it hadn't been for this maybe i would never have known this. >> so says the man with no story to tell. >> there's absolutely no evidence to support the statement that we're the
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>> osgood: coming up. actor jeff daniels. from "the newsroom" to the broadway stage. cer: get your smart on with a new scorpion.
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>> osgood: jeff daniels played it strictly for laughs in the 1994 film "dumb and dumber." op now he's on broadway. mason. >> with his name up in lights on broadway, jeff daniels is at age 06, busier than he's ever been. the past year it seems like you've been almost everywhere. >> yeah, there's been a lot of me. >> teddy. >> he plays the nasa director trying to bring stranded astronaut matt damon back from mars in "the martian." >> we'll do our best.
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>> the story of why and how you left apple which is quickly becoming. >> he plays ceo john scully forced to fire the apple founder. >> believe you're no longer necessary to this company. >> and in "black bird" which began previews on broadway this past week, he plays a middle-aged man reliving an earlier affair with a 1-year-old girl. >> you were looking at me, at the barbecue. >> no. >> i saw you. >> i wasn't. >> i felt you. >> i looked at you. i wasn't looking. >> it's a stunning turn around for an actor who only a few years ago feared he was finished. >> you were seriously thinking of quitting acting. >> i wanted to quit before i was fired or let go or dismissed or over. then air sorkin called, my career didn't die much to my
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>> the health care law hasn't taken effect yet. >> tarp was signed into law by george w. bush. >> in 2012, sore kin, the creator and writer of the newsroom offered him the part of anchorman will mcavoy in the hbo series. >> sorority girl. >> the pilot included this pivotal three minute speech. >> there's absolutely no evidence to support the statement that we're the greatest country in the world. we're 7th in literacy. >> were you nervous about that? >> on the way to the set, aaron said, just, important as this speech to you it's twice as important to me. i waited decades for that speech. and this is your shot. >> you nonetheless are without a doubt a member of the worst period generation period ever, period. when you have what makes us the greatest country in the world, i don't know what the -- you're
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>> daniels won an emmy for "the newsroom" and says he finally understood the advice he was given years ago. >> tommy tune pulled me aside one day and said, i know you can act. i need you to star in it. >> daniels' career began in chelsea, michigan, his hometown where he and his wife, kathleen, raised their three kids and still live. he started acting in high school, in 1976 he dropped out of college and bravely set out for new york. kind of overwhelming coming to new york at 21. >> yeah, i was ready to leave every single day. >> but he stuck it out. and in 1983 the turning point came when he landed a role in "terms of endearment." >> you have to take my word for it. you have no other choice.
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who cheated on debra winger while she was dying of cancer. that's a tough career thing to come up and over. i'm honest, dependable, courageous, romantic, a great kisser. and i'm real. >> daniels quickly gained a reputation as a versatile actor. but nothing prepared audiences for this performance in 1994. >> i hope you're not using the toilet, it's broken. >> in the surprise blockbuster "dumb and dumber." >> that's going to be the first clip that plays next to your name. how do you feel about that? >> well, there's a strange kind of pride. i love the choice. i took -- you. love the choice because everybody told you not to make the choice. >> everybody told me not to do it. we have you on the serious,
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and the one thing the agents said that made me want to do it more was that, jeff, be honest, jim's going to blow you off the screen. >> undaunted, daniels did a screen test with jim carrey. >> jim just looked at me and did that. and i said, oh, and then it was over. >> where did you pull that face from? >> off of jim. act, react. >> did it change your career? >> yeah, what happened because of "dumb and dumber" was they knew my name. i would go through airports and it wasn't -- what's your name? it's jeff daniels. >> that name is out r now on the march key of broadway's belasco theater with co-star michelle williams.
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other day, yeah, it's hard, brutal, we get to do this. this is the garden and we're springsteen. it doesn't get any bigger than this. >> actually jeff daniels has a little springsteen in him. for iv than that a decade he's been a touring musician in between acting jobs. >> it's a hard road i'm traveling but i've come too far to turn myself around i do enjoy it because there's no editor, no director, no anything else except me. i don't know where i'm going but i'm going where i've never gone before >> this past fall, daniels went out for five weeks with a backing band led by his 31-year-old son, ben, who he taught to play the guitar as a teenager. imagine going out on the road
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>> you never know how kids are going to turn out. it's prison, i mean, you just don't know. >> anything north of priss son good. >> anything north of prison. of all his great performances over the past year, none would mean more than this one on their last night in kalamazoo, michigan. it ain't the fortune, it april the fame >> jeff and ben daniels sang a dueta song the father wrote for his son. >> it ain't what i thought it would be. it ain't what i thought it would be it's in that young boy lookin' up at me >> it was -- i'll never forget it. the trip of a lifetime.
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matter of time to you grew up to me >> i told him that when i hugged him. the last show. just whispered to him, it was the trip of a lifetime. lucky me. [ applause ] c ahead. real panthers.
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about xeljanz. >> welcome to cbs sunday morning super bowl central. i'm mo rocca i've got the latest on the match up everyone's talking about. the broncos versus the panthers. wait, wait, wait, wait, stop, stop everything. who are these guys? i said broncos and panthers. that's more like it. a panther in western hemisphere is just another name for a black jaguar. a rarity among already endangered species and the fourth most popular team mascot in america. alan rabinowitz is an expert on big cats. >> i think it's the most powerful symbol a sports team can possibly have. because it's not just about
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aggression. it's about thought and cunning. >> everything about them says that i am the top predator in all of americas. these guys are the third largest cat behind tiger and lion. in america they are the biggest cat. >> farshid mehrdadfar is a curator at the memphis zoo where we met 13-year-old maya. >> when you see the tail kind of twitching a little bit, there's a little bit of excitement going on. she's a little bit excited but she's relaxed. >> she's a happy cat right now. >> she's a happy cat. >> would it ever be possible to go and stroke her? >> i would definitely advise against conany bodily contact with this animal. just like your house cat at home they need to sharpen their claws , because that helps them grab ahold of the prey. >> crushing your skull is just one injury you might sustain riding a bronco.
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bred to buck. >> can you walk amongst the panthers like this? no. that's what i'm sayin'. >> jim gay is the producer of the fort worth stock show and rodeo. >> horses are just superior athletes. the stamina they have, the agility. what conquered the west is a horse. >> these guys here aren't all guys. >> they are male, female, this get into a little difficult subject but there are some that are gelledded which would be -- >> castrated. >> correct. and they're -- they are the majority of the horses. >> why aren't they called the team the denver gelleddings? >> well, i don't think none of them football players are. >> when these animals go paw to move, how do they compare? when it comes to speed, no contest. the panthers will dance and prance past those broncos faster than you can say, glue factory. but what the broncos lack in horse power they make up for in
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don't buck with these guys. so what are the animals he'lling? the broncos keep it healthy with hay and grains. while the panthers eat, whatever they can hunt down. including horses. >> they will destroy them. turn around and kick them. >> don't count those broncos out says two toy time phreback evan jaynz kicked in the face. broken my wrist, boast of them. broke my back, ankle. that he, it's a long list. >> i'm a bronco. i'm trying to tackle this panther. what does it do to me? >> it goes for your throat here. or going to actually try to go for the bat -- for the cervical vertebrae. >> that's a penalty. >> the cat may be top dog here but alan rabinowitz hopes
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for the team's name sakes. >> ninja uses cats, uses any animal frankly, because those cats represent what's great. they have a responsibility to help the actual animal in the wild. a little flu. and it needs a big solution: an antiviral. so when the flu hits, call your doctor right away and up the ante with antiviral tamiflu. prescription tamiflu is an antiviral that attacks the flu virus at its source and helps stop it from spreading in the body. tamiflu is fda approved to treat the flu in people two weeks of age and older whose flu symptoms started within the last two days. before taking tamiflu, tell your doctor if you're pregnant, nursing, have serious health conditions, or take other medicines. if you develop an allergic reaction, a severe rash, or signs of unusual behavior, stop taking tamiflu and call your doctor immediately.
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>> osgood: whatever the topic, whenever an expert gives a ted talk, millions around the world want to terry what was said. which is why our david pogue is talking ted with us. >> every february, 1500 people travel to vancouver, canada, for one of the most famous conferences in the world. they sit in this custom-built theater for four days, listening to talks by famous or brilliant people. no talk is more than 18 minutes long. tickets cost $8500 and sold out every year.
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ted stands for technology, entertainment and design. the conference begins again next week, this time with speakers like al gore, norman lear and singer john legend. >> we are influenced by our nonverbals. >> if you've ever seen a ted talk it's probably not because you went to the conference, it's probably because you've seen one of the talk videos. >> imagine that you are a blood hound dog. >> today, three million people watch ted videos every day on ted.com, youtube, netflix and even on airplanes. about a billion views a year. it's all for free. >> these talks spread because people want to share them. they're excited by the ideas. >> chris anderson is the curator of ted, he owns and runs it. he's a believer in ted's slogan, ideas worth spreading. >> you celtic totes a conference now giving it away. >> that part was definitely scary.
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giving away our content was dramatically increase the demand for the conference. surprising and wonderful. >> but there's another ted affect, giving a talk has on the speaker. ted speakers come from all walks of life. they're not all household names. they just have ideas worth spreading. even i've given a ted talk or two. professor has spoken ted several times. >> are you recognized in public from somebody that has seen the talks online? >> yes. maybe once a day on average people come and they say i really like the research. >> or social progress expert michael green. >> we've got people who are saying, you are a serious partner we want to work with. because we know this is a credible idea. it's been on the ted stage. >> in 20 to 12 author susan cain gave a ted talk about the power
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online about 13 million times. >> you know, you give a ted talk then suddenly everyone's inviting you to speak. my kids have been to ten countries. >> where would you and your book and your life be? >> came out three years ago and it's still now on the best seller list. i don't think with ted -- without ted that that would have been the case. >> so relax your hands, what happens? >> if you're a ted speaker you're well aware that a great talk could catapult your career forward. so the pressure is on to put together an amazing talk. >> thank you guys for being such a good sport. >> people are now taking a week sometimes months of preparation time to really think hard about what you want to say how they want to say it. >> nowadays your staff works with them to do this preparation, right? >> yes, that's right. >> of course, if the ted staff
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that they will become formulaic. in fact ted talks have become so distinctive that they have been parodied by onion.com and "saturday night live." >> i grew up in a modest family. we are so poor my momma went to mcdonald's put a milk shake on lay away. now you know that ain't right. >> we laugh along with everyone else at the kind of cliche. let me move you. >> you're not still hearing that, that the structure is too similar. >> people who haven't looked at a lot of them recently. lot more variety than ever been. >> ted runs more than just one conference there's always ted global, ted td active, ted women, ted youth and ted india. >> giant fusion generator in the sky. we just need to tap a little bit that have energy. >> then there are the 6,000 conferences that ted has let other people run. that is called tedx.
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thoughts and add dudes. >> the next generation there are teded clubs, a free high school program including students to create their own talks. you watch the video of these talks it's so exciting to see some little wall flower kid come on with confidence and share something that they're passionate about. >> put together all of these talks and gatherings and videos you've got an outfit with a huge impact. but according to curator chris anderson, the teddy neglect still isn't big enough. there's still work to be done. >> the sharing of knowledge is as important a task as humanity has. and we want to continue to figure out how to help do that in whatever way we can. and that's a huge and he can sighting quest over the next few years. look jim, we've been planning
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and we'll keep evolving things. so don't worry. knowing what's on your mind and acting accordingly. multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors. it's a big deal. and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. when you're told you have cancer start with a specialist. start with a team of experts who treat only cancer. every stage. every day. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts.
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announcement: this storm promises to be the biggest of the decade. with total accumulation of up to three feet. roads will be shut down indefinitely. and schools are closed. campbell's soups go great with a cold and a nice red.
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>> osgood: time now to take note. the ocean liner ss united states may yet sail again. the pride of america's passenger fleet at its debut in 195t the united states has been idled and rusting at a philadelphia dock for years. this past thursday crystal cruises announced a tentative plan to refurbish it as a cost of $700 million. and we learned' well of death of the maury white. the founder of the band earth, wind and fire. named forl elements of white's own astro logical sign, earth, wind and fire mixed jazz and rock and blues and soul in a style all it's own. winning six grammy's along the
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maurice white was 74. he would hunt with them. and expand their territory. he'd form a bond with a wolf named accalia... ...become den mother and nurse their young. james left in search of his next adventure. how far will you take the all-new rav4 hybrid? toyota. let's go places. if you could see your cough, it's just a cough. you'd see how often you cough all day and so would everyone else. new robitussin 12 hour delivers fast, powerful cough relief that lasts up to twelve hours. new robitussin 12 hour cough relief.
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>> osgood: time to check win cbs sports for a preview of tonight's super bowl 50. >> it's super sunday morning here in santa clara the excitement is already building for the panthers and the broncos as super bowl 50 levi's stadium in the background. in the foreground nfl tailgate. will there be a party there. no bigger party welcome you to the set i'm james brown joined with tony, coach, bart and boomer. the big party. >> what a privilege it is to be here on super bowl sunday, super bowl 50 so many great story lines. none bigger than the two quarterbacks in my estimate make. peyton manning. an mvp, cam newton one his mvp last night i'm just telling you for cam newton, what a stage to be set here. there's been lot of controversy surrounding him. but i think we all appreciate the great player that he is, he does things that we just have never seen on the football field before from athlete like this. how do you stop cam newton?
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put so much pressure on his ability to make plays with his feet, where easy involved, easy involved the next step, really playing the position from the pack pocket. talk about try to drop that safety into the pocket, stop that running game he beats you down the field time in. he's a complete football player right now. >> that's new age, talk about old age, oldest quarterback ever start super bowl. he's the game manager he knows he is a great defense. not tushed the football over in ten quarters, right now as i will say most important thing for him be patient with the running game. they got to score touchdowns instead of kicking fees once they get dialed inside the 20 yard line. >> talk about payton all that good stuff right there. i'm soaking it up because this in my opinion will be the last time we ever get to see the sheriff in action, the last time we get to hear "omaha" at the line of scrimmage you have to be excited about that super bowl 50, what a way to go out if he can get this victory. >> all right. peyton manning of course classic
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excellence, cam newton the complete package. right now we take you back to new york. >> osgood: super bowl preview from cbs sports. reminder that cbs this morning with gayle king talks live with president and mrs. obama later today. right now, we head to washington and john dickerson for a look what's ahead on "face the nation." good morning, john,. >> dickerson: good morning, charles. we'll talk today to hillary rodham clinton and benders then have our own super bowl preview. >> osgood: we'll be watching. next week here on "sunday morning." songwriter, diane warren and lady gaga.ts like roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, the delicious taste of nutella takes pancakes to a whole new level. nutella - spread the happy! discover card. i missed a payment. aw, shoot. shoot! this is bad.
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this is your first time missing a payment. and you've got the discover it card, so we won't hike up your apr for paying late. that's great! it is great! (both simultaneously) thank you. at discover, we treat you like you'd treat you. get the it card with late payment forgiveness. >> osgood: we leave you this super bowl sunday a few miles south of the big game at california's moss landing state beach. among sea lions otters and pelicans.
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join us again next sunday morning. until then i'll see you on the radio. and if you have afib-an irregular heartbeat that may put you at five times greater risk of stroke they can pool together in the heart, forming a clot that can break free and travel upstream to the brain, where it can block blood flow and cause a stroke. but if you have afib that's not caused by a heart valve problem, pradaxa can help stop clots from forming. pradaxa was even proven superior to warfarin at reducing the risk of stroke, in a clinical trial without the need for regular blood tests. and, in the rare event of an emergency, pradaxa is the only oral blood thinner other than warfarin with a specific reversal treatment to help your body clot normally again. pradaxa is not for people who have had a heart valve replacement. don't stop taking pradaxa without talking to your doctor. stopping increases your risk of stroke or blood clots ask your doctor if you need to stop pradaxa before any planned medical or dental procedure. pradaxa can cause serious,
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don't take pradaxa if you have abnormal bleeding. and seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have kidney problems, stomach ulcers, a bleeding condition, or take certain medicines. side effects with pradaxa can include indigestion, stomach pain, upset or burning. don't just go with the flow. go with pradaxa, the only blood thinner that lowers your risk of stroke better than warfarin and has a specific reversal treatment. talk to your doctor about pradaxa today. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org (announcer) catch a live "late show" tonight after the game. it's gonna be a slam dunk. woo! (announcer) catch a live "late sho the world a president has to grapple with. sometimes you can't even imagine.
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and she's the one who's proven she can get it done. ...securing a massive reduction in nuclear weapons... ...standing up against the abuse of women... ...protecting social security... ...expanding benefits for the national guard... ...and winning health care for 8 million children... the presidency is the toughest job in the world and she's the one who'll make a real difference for you.
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