tv CBS This Morning CBS February 12, 2016 7:00am-9:00am PST
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, february 12th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning". hillary clinton and bernie sanders battle for the minority vote in a heated debate. republicans sharpen their attacks before tomorrow's face-off. donald trump says the pope does not understand america's immigration issue. we're in mexico ahead of the pontiff's visit. and a controversy crashes a massive surf competition. why no women are paddling into these waves. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. the kind of criticism that we have heard from senator sanders about our president, i expect from republicans.
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>> democrats square off over president obama. >> have you ever disagreed with a president? i suspect you may have. >> senator. >> don't listen to donald trump. really. don't listen to donald trump. >> negotiating a deal in another country is not foreign policy experience. >> we have a front-runner candidate that disparaging women and hispanics. >> i do not believe he is a true conservative. these people are stupid. >> the united states, russia and other world powers have reached an agreement on a cessation of hostilities in syria's civil war. >> four people remain hospitalized this morning after a machete attack in an ohio restaurant. the suspect was fatally shot. scientists say they found gravitational waves or ripples in the fabric of space time. the discovery is being hailed as the greatest signs of a
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>> let's take a listen. hello >> the top half of the country in the northern states is affected. >> pope begins a seven day visit to latin america. finish preparations going on in mexico city. >> all that. >> that is donald trump signing a baby. >> look at these people. >> i also love going on red carpets and doing very cool poses. >> give me your blue steel. >> and all that matters. charlie rose received a big honor for excellence in broadcast journalism. >> you do not want to be on television as long as i have because you can see yourself aging right in front of your eyes. >> on "cbs this morning." this sunday is valentine's day. >> i don't always know what to do on valentine's day anymore. >> the day women all around the world wait eagerly to discover the new ways their husbands and boyfriends will disappoint them. this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this
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the democratic presidential race is getting tighter. hillary clinton and bernie sanders found more issues to fight about at last night's debate. this was their last showdown before the nevada caucuses and south carolina primary. >> the candidates reached out to minority voters who are about to play a much larger role in the campaign. nancy cordes is at the university of wisconsin-milwaukee where she covered last night's debate. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. everyone wondered whether hillary clinton would retool her message after her big loss in new hampshire. and the answer is she did. she embraced parts of the sanders' world view and she acknowledged that the economy is rigged in favor of the 1%. but she also went into detail about why she thinks that his very ambitious plans to fix it won't work. >> i am not a single-issue candidate and i do not believe we live in a single-issue country. >> reporter: clinton and sanders clashed over health care, wall street donations, and their loyalty to the president. >> and many people will actually
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now. >> one final thought, senator? >> i think that is inaccurate. let's not insult the intelligence of the american people. people aren't dumb. >> calling the president weak calling him a disappointment. >> have you ever disagreed with a president? i suspect you may have. >> senator -- >> one of us ran against barack obama. i was not that candidate. >> reporter: the debate was in wisconsin but the candidates were clearly focused on the next primary in south carolina, where african-americans could decide the outcome. >> so race relations would be better under a sanders presidency than they have been? >> absolutely. because what we will do is say instead of giving tax breaks to billionaires, we are going to create millions of jobs for low income kids so they are not hanging out on street corners. >> reporter: clinton argued she would be the best heir to the legacy of the nation's first black president. >> the kind of criticism that we
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about our president, i expect from republicans. i do not expect for one running for the democrat nomination to succeed the president of the united states. >> madam secretary, th was a low blow. >> i think once i'm in the white house, we will have enough political capital to be able to do that. >> secretary clinton, you're not in the white house yet. >> reporter: that exchange reminded a lot of people of that famous exchange from 2008 when barack obama told hillary clinton she was, quote, likeable enough. clinton was asked last night, gayle, why she lost among women in new hampshire. she said her goal was to empower women to make their own choices, even if that choice was to vote for somebody else. >> nancy, thank you. the republican candidates will meet tomorrow night in
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debate. most of them are already in that key state criticizing each other and pitching voters who will go to the polls a week from tomorrow. but donald trump was hundreds of miles away last night and he was speaking to about 10,000 fans at a rally in baton rouge, louisiana. julianna goldman is outside of the peace center in greenville, south carolina, the site of saturday night's debate. good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. the stakes are high here and republican candidates are certainly upping the ante ahead of tomorrow's debate. donald trump was in louisiana last night but set his sights squarely on south carolina. >> we have a big one coming up. great place. south carolina. i think we're going to do really well. >> reporter: from the campaign trail to the airways south carolina is looking like a slug fest. >> don't listen to donald trump. really. don't listen to donald trump. >> jeb bush has no foreign policy experience, period. >> jeb is spending all of this time being negative.
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going to washington is going to solve anything. >> bush says, i do not believe he is not a true conservative. these people are stupid. >> reporter: it's donald trump who is emerging as a primary target. >> i just hope you don't believe the crap because it's all crap, okay? they are lies! >> reporter: trump taking time to sign a baby at his baton rouge rally struck a softer tone yesterday. his campaign pulled an anti-ted cruz ad running in south carolina. cruz wasn't feeling the love. rolling out this minute-long ad here. >> yes, it's donald trump. it's you and your cronies and government. and and ant trump supper pack is distributing what they're calling a voter's guide, switching political parties and ask can we trust donald trump to stand strong on key conservative issues. >> it's bare knuckle politics and it's been that way a long time. >> reporter: chip is in south carolina where a local paper has set up a website to track underhanded tactics.
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if you come out of this primary and you're doing well, you can handle it on the national stage. that is part of it. it's a testing ground. >> reporter: so far at these debates, jeb bush has been the most aggressive in taking on trump. that is expected to change tomorrow night. former president george w. bush will campaign with him on monday. we have inside the peace center, john dickerson, a moderator for tomorrow night's debate and kim strassel will be one of the panelists. good morning. >> let me begin with the republicans and talk about the fights within the gop taking place now in south carolina. cruz versus trump. >> reporter: well that's right. so you've got cruz versus trump. then you've got the battle to be the alternative to cruz and trump. that is at least two fights. and then those who are fighting to be the alternative hope to take on trump or cruz. it's basically three fights and
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on issues from veterans to values. there is some talk of who has better christian values and then, of course, there is the competency question, who has the experience, who has been tested and who can handle the presidency once they get there. >> we keep hearing that george bush is getting ready to hit the road for his brother. is that an asset or liability for him, do you think, in south carolina? >> well, south carolina is a place george w. bush came back in 2000 against john mccain. there's a lot of history here and a bit of organization here. also the veterans here. there is a connection between him as a war-time leader. and also just the good feeling about the bush family. for the kind of voters that jeb bush is trying to turn out, it's a good thing. he was even bragging he's a member of the establishment because of his brother and his father. not something any candidate is doing this season. >> what impact has the previous debate and the new hampshire results had on the numbers in south carolina? >> right now, trump looks like he is still way up and way
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early for that impact to be fully known. but at least in one survey i looked at this morning, and you know how these things are quite volatile, he is still way up. >> kim, what are you looking for? >> well, i think down here, this is going to be a very different race than it has been in iowa or new hampshire, because south carolina is just a little bit more of a varied state. so there is a lot of talk down here because it's a manufacturing state, about jobs and the economy to a degree. you probably don't have in iowa or new hampshire. i think as john referenced, there is a big veteran and active duty military presence here. so foreign policy is going to play a big role, a bigger role than it has in the past. but, also, those values voters in the evangelical community, we are back in a place after new hampshire where that is, again, a very big focus and you hear the candidates going at it. but this debate will be slightly different than what we have had up until now. >> these are post-debate questions. post-debate from new hampshire and post-results from new
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what about marco rubio? has he been slowed down significantly? >> i think he has certainly been slowed down and he knows it. he admitted it. he is going to have to come down and look as though he is nimble on his feet. be able to answer questions and not sound formulaic. he has come out more aggressive down here and hitting at his competitors more harder, particularly trump. i think you're seeing all of these guys -- they had held back their fire on trump and gone after each other a lot but now training their guns on the top guy and he has a lot of incoming. >> thanks, john dickerson and kim strassel. they will question the candidate tomorrow night in the presidential debate we going at 6:00.
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the temporary cease-fire. john kerry says the pause in fighting in a week. the deal will allow food and humanitarian aid to be reached. margaret brennan has been told the deliveries could begin as early as today. holly, good morning. >> reporter: this is the first cease-fire agreed on by all of the countries involved in the syrian civil war, but its success is still doubtful, because the russians say they will continue their air strikes against terrorist groups, which they have said before, while also targeting american-backed rebels. meanwhile, isis and other extremist groups are not a part of this agreement. syrian civilians are, once again, paying with their blood as the regime claws back territory from rebel fighters
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russian air strikes, which only started in september, seem to have tipped the balance in syria's five-year-long civil war giving the regime the upper hand. this week, regime forces launched an assault on the town of talrifat, which had been a stronghold for the rebels, some of them armed by the u.s. we met abdul balul who runs a school in telerefat as he crossed the border into turkey. the shelling and air strikes are random, he told us. homes are destroyed and children's bodies lie in shreds on the ground. syrian regime forces, with help from their ally, iran, have also nearly encircled aleppo, syria's biggest city before this war began. if the cease-fire plan doesn't succeed, 300,000 civilians could
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the town of madia, under a siege by the regime. more than 40 people there have starved to death. tens of thousands of syrians have fled the new offensive and tried to cross this border into the safety of turkey. but turkey already has more than 2 million syrian refugees and is reluctant to take any more. charlie? >> holly williams along the turkish/syria border, thanks. the united states government is growing more concerned that isis is using chemical weapons. this is a rare interview for "60 minutes." >> we have a number of incidences isil has used chemical munitions on the battlefield. >> artillery shells? >> sure. >> isis has access to chemical artillery shells?
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precursors ammunition that they can use. >> the cia believes that isis has the ability to manufacture small quantities of chlorine and mustard gas. and the capability of exporting those chemicals to the west? >> i think there is always a potential for that. this is why it's so important to cut off the various transportation routes and smuggling routes that they have used. >> are there american assets on the ground right now hunting this down? >> the u.s. intelligence is actively involved and being a part of the effort to destroy isil and to get as much insight into what they have on the ground inside of syria and iraq. >> more of scott's interview sunday on "60 minutes." the cia director tells scott about homeland security, cyberattacks and how the u.s. is dealing with rogue states sunday here on cbs. sources tell cbs news that federal investigators are looking into whether a brutal rampage in ohio had any connection with radical groups. police say a man with a machete attacked several customers
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last night. four people were hurt here. officers shot and killed the attacker after a brief chase. jeff has more. >> cbs news has learned that the investigators have identified the suspected attacker as mohammed barry. investigators are reasoning down leads this morning, trying to determine if the attack is somehow tied to terrorist organizations. >> he came to each table and just started hitting them. >> reporter: witnesses describe the bloody scene at the middle eastern restaurant nazareth in columbus, ohio, last night. a man armed with a machete stormed in and marched from table to table striking diners. >> this was a brutal attack. the man walks in to people that are just there having dinner and starts attacking them. >> reporter: karen bass was there. >> there were tables and chairs overturned. there was a man on the floor
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there was blood on the floor. there were -- it was awful. it was just carnage. >> reporter: police say the suspect visited the restaurant and talked with an employee earlier in the day. police say it's not clear what the discussion was about. investigators say less than an hour later, he came back and began his violent rampage. >> the second time, nothing was said. he just simply came in and started the attack. >> reporter: four people were taken to the hospital. one person in critical condition is expected to survive. the suspect fled and after a five-mile car chase, investigators say he got out of his vehicle, armed with a machete and a knife. >> 2-5-1, the vehicle is stopped. he is trying to get out of the vehicle. >> he lunged across the hood at the officers. another officer and a cruiser fired a couple of shots at him and put him down. >> reporter: the suspected attacker has a somali background
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have traveled internationally to dubai in 2012. it is still early on in this investigation, but this morning, law enforcement is concerned that this incident has the hallmarks of the type of lone wolf terrorist attack that they have been working to stop. norah? >> scary, indeed. thank you, jeff. there was a major scare aboard an american airlines jet headed to phoenix. >> the smoke is starting to dissipate. we don't know what's going on? >> did you say the passengers were affected? >> yes. >> american flight 564 was forced to make an emergency landing yesterday at los angeles international airport. the airbus a-319 took off from san jose. american says the smoke was caused by a hydraulic fluid leak. eight passengers and crew were checked by paramedics but no one was taken to the hospital. millions in the east are bracing for the coldest weekend of the winter. it's already cold enough that a massive water main break in scranton, pennsylvania, quickly covered the road and the
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with a sheet of ice. a polar vortex will make temperatures plunge up to 30 degrees below normal. many low temperatures across the tomorrow, they say, will be even colder with lows expected to be in the single digits or below zero. so those of you who have pets at the table, you need to put on their booties and their coats when you take them for a walk. >> would you like to come over and take them for a walk? >> you're so good at it. i'll leave it up to you. donald trump is taking on pope francis on immigration to america.sunshine for your friday before valentine's day... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend.
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not a lot cooler into next week. .............. next week we finally see some heavier cloud cover but the temps don't seem to break all that much. back to mid 70s even next weekend. have a great holiday weekend!/// it's 7:26 ... announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by kay jewelers. every kiss begins with kay. do female surfers stack up to the men in the sport? >> ahead, the controversy sweeping through a massive surf competition. the news is back this
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morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by jcpenney. get what you love at the prices you love only at jcpenney! here at persil... the top notch team of stain experts has performed over ten thousand stain evaluations to prove persil delivers a premium clean. we've made a new stain with wasabi and goji berries. make that ten thousand and one.
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love can cost you big time.< sunshine for your friday before valentine's day... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high today of 76 today. not a lot cooler into next week. .............. next week we finally see some heavier cloud cover but the temps don't seem to break all that much. back to mid 70s even next end.ve a great holiday weeken/'s 7:26 ..((brian loftus)) > police have been on the scene of a barricade
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michael enis live near d-id maryland ray with thetest.chael?((miael stevens))lice say they're really trying get the man who barricadedmself in his home out. lice say this stand-off arted just before 9-last night. near marylandaway and desert inn.police say they responded to call of aan screaming forlp.peop therea also say theypossibly heard gunshots. en officers showed up... they started talking to the mand decided to call in swat cause they believhe is med.at negotiators are trying to get the man to come outside.while near sidentwho'veen evacuated wait to backinside their homes: course when that happens'll update you both on-air dline.quick check on your commute crash on westbound 215 and windmill is causing delays back to henderson. leave early, especially if you have a flight to catch. < > < > <
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sunshine for your friday before valentine's day... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high today of 76 today. not a lot cooler into next week. ..............
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temps don't see ladies and gentlemen, as you know, this sunday is valentine's day. if you're single, i'm sorry. that's a pain. if you're in a longtime relationship, i'm sorry. that is a pain. and if you are within someone you started dating three weeks ago, i'm really sorry. that's the worst of all three. >> you might get a card. >> or a dinner. >> it depends on how much you want the relationship to accelerate. >> maybe it's been a good two weeks. >> oh, yeah. valentine's day is about acceleration. >> we have been together four years. i ain't got nothing from you. just sayin'. >> welcome back. >> i know.
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welcome back to "cbs this this half hour, donald trump criticized the pope to push immigration. why the gop front-runner says the pope does not understand the politics of the issue. we are in mexico ahead of the pope's visit. >> always good to be with a giver. plus, surfers will ride 50-foot waves today in california for a competition but the women watch from the shore. we talk to the female surfers who say it's time to end a boys only club. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the washington post" reports on how long it will take to find vaccines for the zika virus. they say large-scale trials are 18 months away. there are at least 79 zika cases across the united states. the world health organization has identified 15 companies or groups that could take part in the search for a vaccine. the "new york post" reports on an nypd officer found guilty of manslaughter in the shooting of an unarmed black man in a stairwell.
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years of prison. a bullet from his gun ricocheted off a wall and hit a man in 2013. liang says it was an accident. >> a stopgap measure plugged the well near the porter ranch in l.a. enhanced time lapsed video showed the gas escaping from the well for nearly four months. it must now be sealed with concrete. new york's daily news reports on barry manilow being rushed to a los angeles hospital yesterday. the legendary singer suffered complications from emergency oral surgery following his concert in memphis on wednesday. manilow cancelled shows for thursday and friday night. the 72-year-old manilow is nominated for a grammy this year. the statement says it's now unclear if he will attend monday's ceremony. >> i hope he is okay.
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reports on millions traveling to mexico city ahead of the visit by pope francis. the holy father left rome overnight for his six-day trip. despite the enthusiasm, his plans to address immigration are drawing criticism from gop front-runner donald trump. man -- manuel is in mexico city where the pope is scheduled to arrive tonight. >> reporter: a quick stop in cuba to meet with the patriarch of the orthodox church, the pope will spend the week in mexico. he will address the major issues facing mexico and it's already becoming political. with a wave and a smile, the pope took off on his second trip to latin america as head of the catholic church. the pontiff, a child of immigrants himself, will address the issue of immigration with a mass at the u.s./mexico border. even before his arrival, presidential candidate donald trump played politics with the pope's approach.
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person. i think he doesn't understand the problems our country has. i don't think he understands the dang of the open border we have with mexico. i think mexico got him to do it because mexico wants to keep the border just the way it is because they are making a fortune and we are losing. >> reporter: michael olokland is the national reporter for crux, a catholic publication. >> the pope gets it and understands how the border works. of course he gets it. he wants the u.s. to have a more >> reporter: this won't be the first time the pontiff takes on a controversial topic. while visits the u.s. last fall, he spoke about climate change during an address to congress. a day later he called the drug war poorly fought. he will readdress the topic on this trip by addressing the heart of the mexico's problems.
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in the country will reinvigorate catholicism. >> it's a chance for the pope to celebrate on one hand but, on the other hand, try to save a church that is a little bit in decline. >> reporter: pope francis' two predecessors visited mexico but not all of the places he has chosen to visit. and as the first latin american pontiff, his trip has added significance here. >> thanks. one of the surf world's biggest events gets under way this morning under a wave of controversy. the titans of mavericks competition in northern california is a rare contest. it is held only when conditions are just right. but some question why women are missing from this year's lineup. carter evans is in half moon bay, california. >> reporter: these are the waves that call adrenaline seeking surfers from around the world. they come to half moon bay, california, just south of san francisco, the site of the
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competition. the riders are an elite group. they see waves up to 50 feet. they are invited at a moment's notice when conditions are prime. but in the 17 years since the competition was first held, only men have competed. >> it's not a gender thing. it's a performance thing. >> reporter: jeff clark was the first to surf the spot back in 1975. he went on to start the now classic competition. he says the committee and a poll of surfers determine who is invited. >> we have a really good understanding of who is performing the best, who is pushing the limits, who is going to new levels of performance. >> reporter: are women there yet? >> women just aren't there yet. >> reporter: bianca valentine disagrees. she's been surfing the waves here for eight years. >> reporter: big wave surfing has been seen as a boys club.
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those arguments saying there aren't enough women, they don't serve well, they maybe used to hold true, but now those excuses don't work any more. >> reporter: this surfer chases big waves all over the world. >> i think the message is women are completely capable and there's more than a handful now, and they deserve a chance. >> reporter: the california coastal commission, the state agency charged with overseeing public use of the coast, is demanding change. it recently voted to require clark and his team to come up with a plan to allow women in the competition by next year, or else they won't get the necessary permit required to hold the event. clark's current deal blocks anyone else from using this spot for competitions during the prime five-month surfing season. >> my understanding of what the coastal commission wants is more women involved in mavericks. we've had women judges, we've had women in our water patrol and water rescue.
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woman to be an alternative its very first year and did so again this year, but critics say it's not enough. >> i think it was a publicity stunt so they can say, oh, look, we always include women. it wasn't really genuine. >> reporter: both sides agree the more women get involved in the sport, the sooner they will get invited to contests like mavericks. they just disagree on how quickly that tide should turn. for "cbs this morning," carter evans, half moon bay, california. >> i don't know enough about surfing, but that just doesn't make sense to me. i don't know. >> yeah. it's a competition. let people compete. >> exactly. make it all about performance. love comes at an extra cost on this valentine's day weekend. ahead, the outrage over the soaring costs of the gifts and the meals this weekend compared to other days of the year. if you're heading out the
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somebody call the situation room, because things are about to get hot. michelle, this valentine's day, i'm going to treat you right. i'm going make you some zucchini bread, then i'll spread out some veggies on the plate, just the way you like them. then i'm going to give you a massage while you watch ellen's design challenge on hgtv? [ laughter ] because i love you so much, i obamacare about you more than you even know. >> a romantic message to the first lady from president obama from "ellen" show.
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boom box there playing barry white. >> i love the fact the president was reading from a prompter. >> cory booker is in the green room. let's see what his valentine's plans are for the weekend. he is like ugh. valentine's day is sunday! >> he is tweeting. >> got it. he is tweeting. tens of millions of other americans know what they are doing, finalizing their plans for valentine's day. an average of about $147 this weekend. now that adds up to nearly $20 billion. anna werner looks at the numbers that have many lovers seeing -- well, red. >> you know they say money can't buy love, but you're going to expect these roses to be more expensive than normal for valentine's day. according to bankrate's be my
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about $80 on average. how about the bubbly, cheers on average, that will set you back about $52, depending on the brand, of course. throw in another $15 for the chocolates and it all starts to add up. on valentine's day, more than half of men in relationships say they will buy flowers for their special someone. most of the year, roses would cost+ilittle more than $40. but this romantic day is different. >> the price of roses, especially red roses, goes up anywhere from three-fold to five-fold. financial website bankrate says a typical valentine's day celebration, roses, chocolates, champagne, jewelry and a nice dinner could set you back $512. it's the fourth most lucrative event on the retail calendar behind christmas and back to school and mother's day says tony case. >> we are going to spend $20 billion this year on valentines.
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year. >> seems like a lot of people say this is a setup holiday. it's a hallmark holiday. >> men hate it because they feel obligated to top themselves! women hate it because they always hate the gifts they get. or somehow doesn't live up to their expectations. so nobody is happy. >> should we call the doctor? >> no, it's the day. christmas, new year's day, she is fine. valentine's day, not so good. >> financial strain could accompany the emotional stress as restaurants take advantage to raise prices. valentine's day day at this restaurant in new york city is $175 per person. on other days, it's just $99. >> 75% of people said they do not want anything for valentine's day. but when asked again and in the same survey, 25% of them admitted they lied. >> so they really wanted something? >> if your wife says she doesn't want anything for valentine's day, don't believe her. buy it anyway.
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the men out there, including my boyfriend. the price of jewelry has been dropping but perhaps the most affordable option. curl up at home with the romantic dinner cooked in your own kitchen. i think your husband has the distinct advantage there. >> it does help to be married. >> will he be cooking for you or taking you out? >> i actually don't know. >> i bet he remembers, though. i bet he never forgets. >> you'll probably hear from him the next 30 seconds. >> i don't think that women don't like valentine's day. i like valentine's day. plus, it's my mom's birthday. happy birthday, mom. >> if it's about love, we love it. >> thank you, anna. one congressman wasn't just blowing smoke. ahead, why a lawmaker puffed sunshine for your friday before valentine's day... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high
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not a lot cooler into next week. .............. next week we finally see some heavier cloud cover but the temps don't seem to break all that much. back to mid 70s even next weekend. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by brookdale, bringing new life to senior living. and i had a gentleman stop me and ask me if i made his dinner. he had lost his wife recently, but i didn't know that. he made a remark to me about not sure he wanted to be there anymore, but he said something to me that has stuck with me to this day. after having your dinner, i think i want to stick around a while and that really meant something to me. i never had an experience like that and it just let me know that what i'm doing is much more important than just food. a leading consumer testing publication recently tested the top laundry detergents. the winner - persil 2 in 1, didn't only beat tide... it beat every single detergent tested. boom.
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> police have been on the scene of a barricade situation for nearly 12 hours. michael stevens is live near d-i and maryland parkway with the latest. michael? ((michael stevens)) police say they're really trying to get the man who barricaded himself in his home out. police say this stand-off started just before 9-last night. near maryland parkway and desert inn. police say they responded to call of a man screaming for help. people in the area also say they possibly heard gunshots. when officers showed up... they started talking to the man and decided to call in swat because they believe he is armed. swat negotiators are trying to get the man to come outside. while nearby residents who've been evacuated wait to go back inside their homes:
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we'll update you both on-air and online. want to check on your commute on your commute all lanes of westbound 215 at windmill are back open after a rollover crash. traffic is gonna run slow from gibson near the 95 interchange. < > < > ((sherry swensk)) great sunshine for your friday before valentine's day...
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warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high today of 76 today. not a lot cooler into next week. .............. in your weather now extended 7-day forecast ...we finally see some heavier cloud cover by later next week, but the temps don't seem to break all that much. back to mid 70s even next weekend.
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the world a president has to grapple with. sometimes you can't even imagine. that's the job. 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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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, february 12th, 2016. two days left to valentine's day. welcome back to cbs this morning. the rough and tumble republican campaign. we talk with republican chair reince priebus ahead of cbs. but first here's today's "eye opener." everyone wondered whether clinton would retool her message after her big loss in new hampshire, and the answer is -- she did. >> the stakes are high here and republicans candidates are upping the ante ahead of the debate. >> they've gone after each other but now they're almost training their guns on the top guy.
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by all countries in the syrian civil war. >> investigators are running down leads this morning trying to determine if the attack is somehow tied to terrorist organization. >> women just aren't there yet. >> big wave surfing has kind of been seen as a boy's club. >> yeah. those arguments don't work anymore. >> expect those roses to be more expensive than normal. >> depends how much you want the relationship to being a sell rate. >> we been together four years. i ain't got nothing from you. >> but you keep giving. >> i chipped a tooth last night. i really did. i bit into a twix bar and i lost a molar. >> twix is rubio's candy bar because you get to eat the same thing twice. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. tensions are rising in the democratic presidential race. hillary clinton and bernie sanders clashed last night at
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in nevada and south carolina. >> clinton called sanders' spendig plans unrealistic. sanders questioned why clinton would phrase former secretary of state henry kissinger. and both of them reached out to minorities and women. >> i have spent my entire adult life working toward making sure that women are empowered to make their own choices, even if that choice is not to vote for me. >> we have republican candidates for president saying "we hate the government." "government is the enemy. but, by the way, when it comes to a woman having to make a very personal choice, ah, in that case, my republican colleagues love the government." >> we talk about criminal justice reform and ending the mass incarceration, we have to housing. >> when you give low-income kids, african-american, white, latino kids, the opportunity to get their lives together, they
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they're going to end up in the productive economy. >> having medicare for all, single payer, you need to level with people about what they will have at the end of the process. based on every analysis that i could find by people who are sympathetic to the goal, the numbers don't add up. >> we have the courage to take on the drug companies and have the courage to take on the insurance companies. if we do that, yes, we can guarantee health care to all people in a much more cost-effective way. henry kissinger was one of the most destructive secretaries of state. help me in if somebody will not be listening to henry kissinger. >> i know journalists have asked who you listen to on foreign policy and we have yet to know who it is. >> well, it ain't henry kissinger. >> that's fine. that's fine. >> the republicans are also hitting each other hard. their debate is tomorrow night on cbs, one week before south carolina primary. most of the candidates' latest
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front-runner who won in p in. >> donald trump has zero foreign policy experience. nepg ating a hotel deal in another country is not foreign policy experience. >> i'm not for all that mass deportation. that's not america. >> i'm not sure a lot of voters are excited about having a president who when he gets rattled, when he gets upset, begins cursing an yelling vulgarities. >> you can push down donald trump a little bit while electing a solid conservative. >> he always says the same thing. i do not believe he is a true conservative. i'm i'm guy with common sense that's going to make us a fortune. >> rnc chair reince priebus joins us from washington. >> good morning, charlie. >> looking ahead, there is clearly divisions in your party. when will these divisions begin to show us who the real race is going to take place between?
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charlie. i think that you got to remember that february represents about 5% of the delegates. march represents about 60% of the delegates. four years ago mitt romney was the presumptive nominee in about mid-april, late april, and they started 30 days earlier. so i think we are a long ways out but i think you are starting to see the field whittle obviously. the stage on saturday is going to be a lot smaller than it used to be. i think things are starting to come into shape. >> what do you hope will come out of that debate? >> well, look. i think you're starting to see conversations in your clips about foreign policy, immigration reform. these are things that are important to everyone out there watching this right now. i think that you're seeing that. having six candidates on the stage is obviously a lot. but i think that we're offering the american people a varsity squad of choices. now it is up to the voters of
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which one of those is going to be the nominee of our party. >> donald trump says that the establishment and parties leaders like yourself are afraid of a trump victory. is that true? >> well, he never said is that about me. but i'm not afraid of any one of these folks running for president. so i think all of them can beat hillary clinton who's under fbi investigation, or a socialist from vermont. look, yeah, we've got some drama and some intrigue going on in the republican party, but fk look if you look at what's happening in the democrat party, it is a complete and total train wreck. at least we have people working really hard to fight and claw their way to the nomination. but ultimately we will win in november. >> so if donald trump is the nominee, the republican party will unite behind him as their candidate. >> we're going to unite behind whoever the delegates on the floor of the convention in cleveland unite behind. that's our process.
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than we've ever been before -- which we are. if you compare the republican national committee to the democrat national committee, i don't think anyone out there objectively believes we aren't crushing the dnc right now to be prepared to win this fight. >> but candidates running against trump have said his nomination would be a disaster for the party and it is said that party leaders are saying the same thing behind the scenes. >> you know, honestly, i don't hear that. in the competition, sure, candidates say, hey, look, i'm the best choice, this person isn't going to be great. that happens all the time. but i think ultimately if you look at where we are take at as a party, if you look at where the democrats are at, i think most people believe that we're in a pretty darn good place given the political situation that both parties are in, and also where electorate's at. >> but if you're not hearing that, what are you hearing? a lot of people are complaining about the language that's used on the stage. someone said to me the other day i never thought i'd see the day where the children have to leave
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candidate is talking. if you're not hearing that, what are you hearing? >> well, look, i hear things like that. of course, i do. but i hear a lot of things. after a while, when you've got six serious competitors out there every day on the campaign stump, of course, you hear all kinds of things. but my job is to be prepared for whoever the nominee is, to not get involved in calling balls and strikes among the candidates but to be more prepared to make sure we win the senate. we got about 40 targeted congressional districts that we've got to win. then we need to be ultimately prepared for a big cultural vote in this country which we've had a hard time winning which means we need to be even more prepared to do that in november. that's what i hear. >> you also hear the nominated party can control a both bodies
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>> i think that's true, charlie, but i don't think in february, char we can clearly understand what parties they're going to pick and ultimately analyze what's going to happen if had november. we just don't know. because a week feels like a month and a month feels like a year. i don't think anyone out there knows where this thing is going. ultimately i think if you look at the choices on the democrat side with hillary clinton, who has got all kinds of problems foundation, fbi investigation, and honestly, a socialist from vermont who's not even a democrat, just crushing hillary clinton with women, young people, and everyone in between. i like where we sit, guys. >> thank you so much, mr. chairman, for joining us. >> you bet. thank you. a reminder, cbs news will bring tomorrow night's republican presidential debate from south carolina. it begins at 6:00 pacific time right here on cbs.
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cam from studying psychology to becoming a country sturp staruperstar. >> you have a very atypical path. >> you know, you only know your own story so you feel like it is normal. >> ahead, jan crawford goes onsunshine for your friday before valentine's day... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high today of 76 today. not a lot cooler into next week. .............. next week we finally see some
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temps don't seem to break all new jers new jersey democratic senator corey booker has been canvassing early voting states for hillary clinton. but right now he's in our green room. his new book is about reaching across the aisle. we'll hear what he has to say about campaign 2016 ahead on cbs "this morning." the flu virus hits big. with aches, chills, and fever, there's no such thing as a little flu.
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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. children and adolescents in particular may be at an increased risk of seizures, confusion, or abnormal behavior. the most common side effects are mild to moderate nausea and vomiting.
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hey, jesse. who are you? i'm vern, the orange money retirement rabbit from voya. vern from voya? yep, vern from voya. why are you orange? that's a little weird. really? that's the weird part in this scenario? look, orange money represents the money you put away for retirement. save a little here and there, and over time, your money could multiply. see? ah, ok. so, why are you orange? funny.
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america's heroes have a message. if you've fought... you know picking a commander in chief is no small thing. you're looking for smarts... and guts. we looked at each candidate... we studied their record... we know... looked them over... we checked them out... and we chose one. there's only one. jeb bush. he's got a plan. he'll keep us safe.
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jeb bush. best prepared to be commander in chief. right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message. she goes by one name and one song and it changed her live. country music cam is her name and up for a grammy on monday night for her hit song called "burning house." jan crawford visited the rising star in nashville this week. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. for many artists, it takes years of writing and recording to be
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cam, it came on her first hit, "burning house" a song she wrote after a bad breakup. i had a dream about a burning house >> reporter: it's a song of regret. stuck inside and couldn't get you out >> reporter: for country singer cam, it came from a dream about an ex-boyfriend. love doesn't know it seems i did you wrong >> i broke with him in a not very nice way and i definitely hurt him. and like a year or two later, i was going to see him at this party for mutual friends and i thought this is like my chance, i can apologize. see you at a party you look so good >> the night before that party, i fell asleep and had all of that on my mind, how to do this apology. so i had this dream about a burning house. having sleeping
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achingly honest, the song "burning house" made cam a breakout star and grammy nominee, even before she released her debut album, a very different kind of dream coming true. does it even seem real? >> no, it doesn't seem real at all. we used to get the grammy nominations carbon dioxided, that compilation and cd and my mom went to walmart and bought it and my name is on. that's crazy! cam, short for camaron ochs is now singing. >> here a beautil, beautiful voice with an accuseoustic guitar and it's win. >> reporter: we followed her around nashville singing with vince gill and her singing for her upcoming performance.
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>> reporter: you have a style. >> this is worth more than me! >> reporter: it seems a little hard for her to process, it may be because it happened pretty fast. you have a very atypical kind of past too, your road to stardom. >> that's right. you only know your own story? you feel like it's normal? but he's my mistake to make >> reporter: she group up in california and summers at her grandparents ranch. singing was a dream, not a career. >> my parents said you should get a good job and go to college and get an education. i loved psychology because there basic emotions everybody has and we can all relate to everybody on those experiences. >> reporter: cam studied psychology in college and grad school and that dream of connecting to music never went away. so she started writing songs and in 2012, moved to nashville. she caught the eye of sonnyy and
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ago. but her debut performance at the grand ole opry that changed everything. she sang "burning house" and soon after, country music's biggest movie star asked him to perform it on his show. "burning house" became an instant hit, that feeling of regret, something everyone can relate to. >> because i got really vulnerable, now people will come up afterwards and, like, a lot of people and will have like tears in their eyes about like some relationship or a bad situation they have been in. >> reporter: for a former psychology student, music can be therapy, a way to connect. >> everybody has got issues! we are all working through them. those are how i see those stories and how i deal with those kind of emotions. hopefully, it's how people deal with their own stories and it resonates, i think. >> reporter: now you might have
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there are those who say we cannot defeat a corrupt political system and fix a rigged economy. but i believe we need to lift our vision above the obstacles in place and look to the american horizon. to a nation where every child can not only dream of going to college, but attend one. where quality healthcare will be a birthright of every citizen. where a good job is not a wish, but a reality.
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and a living wage is paid to all. an america where after a lifetime of labor, there is time for rest and grandchildren. a nation that defends our people and our values, but no longer carries so much of that burden alone. i know we can create that america if we listen to our conscience and our hearts and not to the pundits and the naysayers. i'm bernie sanders. i approve this message, and i ask for you to caucus for me. thank you. the world is getting its first look inside "apollo 11," the spacecraft that took america
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newly released photos reveal astronaut ((brian loftus)) > police have been on the scene of a barricade situation for more than 12 hours. michael stevens is live near d-i and maryland parkway with the latest. michael? ((michael stevens)) police say they're really trying to get the man who barricaded himself in his home out. police say this stand-off started just before 9-last night. near maryland parkway and desert inn. police say they responded to call of a man screaming for help. people in the area also say they possibly heard gunshots. when officers showed up... they started talking to the man and decided to call in swat because they believe he is armed. swat negotiators are trying to get the man to come outside.
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been evacuated wait to go back inside their homes: of course when that happens we'll update you both on-air and online. now we want to get a check on your commute < > slow downs all around town. there's a crash on westbound 225 at us 95 in the northwest. delays in henderson around green valley parkway right now, but things look a lot better than they did an hour ago after a rollover crash. lots of stuff happening downtown this weekend. chinese new year parade and the cupid undie's run after that. < > <
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sunshine for your friday ... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this valentine's day weekend with well above normal temps through president's day and into next week. ............ your weather now temps around town are a mix of 40s and low 50s... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high today of 76 today. not a lot cooler into next week. .............. next week we finally see some heavier cloud cover but the
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back to mid 70s even morning." coming up in this half-hour, millions of readers are moved every sunday by "the new york times." how those words about love, loss and a good weight loss program. it is hard to find online according to johns hopkins. 91% of the programs receive a low rating for receiving widely accepted medical guidelines, including tracking daily food intake. only 3% advise in taking part in
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physical activity. two marks the two-year anniversary of the sinkhole disaster at the corvette museum. is swallowed eight vintage chevrolet corvettes. it was sure good for business. the museum saw a boost in media coverage and visitors, too. after a big loss in new hampshire, hillary clinton is depending on her closest allies to galvanize support. senator cory booker of new jersey has been front and center states. he does not want bipartisanship to take a back seat. rand paul and chris christie, his partners on issue where they can agree. the senator is out with a new book with the formative experiences. "united." he writes, "i got my b.a. from stanford but i got my ph.d from
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senator booker, welcome back to studio 57. >> it is great to be here with you guys! >> you were the mayor of newark. >> my mom loves the show. i love show, too, but i'm a little biased. >> what makes you obligated? >> this is a long-standing relationship with gayle king. >> get that on the record. >> how do you think she does? >> i think she does phenomenal. >> we want to talk about your book. you endorsed hillary clinton in june 2015. you've been on the road every since then. she lost by such a wide margin in new hampshire. were you surprised that it was that big, and what's her path to victory moving forward? >> she said to me right away, this is going to be a hard-fought campaign. she said she is going to have to earn this nomination. quote, unquote.
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i am proud to be a part of it. we knew that vermont is bernie's state and new hampshire is his backyard and she would have a tough time, it would be a real stretch to win that. but now we're going into a very diverse part of our nation where the democratic bas is really represented in every element. i think she's going to be strong. >> the debate last night, both she and bernie sanders seemed to embrace barack obama in ways that people say i haven't seen that before. >> right. well, look. it's interesting to watch as a guy who's been working in the senate the last two years to see suddenly after you pivot away from new hampshire, bernie running to have photo-ops with african-americans and talk about those issues. for me as a guy who represented a major minority city who's working on a lot of really tough issues, in the last few years in the senate introducing beissues on mass incarceration, policing and
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conversations with hillary clinton on these issues than i have with bernie sanders. >> we saw in new hampshire with hillary clinton, 67 percentage points behind bernie sanders with votes under the age of 30. is that a warning sign for her? >> i think it is as re-affirmation this is not easy. the presidency of the united states is not easy. what i love about hillary, anybody that's had a tough political life from her days in arkansas, the vicious attacks and challenges she saw as first lady trying to push up versal health care, the senate, she's overcome time and time again and risen to the occasion. every time she's been counted out she's risen to a new level of service. i think this is going to be a hard fight and it has to be earned from every demographic
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successful. >> talk about "united," your book. i'm reminded of the speech the president made to the illinois state legislature and he talked about this growing gap between the imagine jessmaj imagine jessty tyty tyty tyty magets magesty and the challenges of our partnerships. >> we're all in this together. if you want to go fast go alone, but if you want to go far, go together. we've gone far as a country because we understood our disagreements and disagreements matter but our country matters more. >> your book is coming out at a really good time because we couldn't be more divisive in this country. ? that's not just about washington, that's about all of us. we have to start heralding and celebrating in our culture and communities this idea that we are different but we can reach
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actually that you courageous empathy, to work together and see each other for who we are. perm stories and heroes i hail in this really speak to the issues. >> you aud mittdmit you were brash, arrogant -- >> i wanted to write a booklet's be naked, in a sense, about my failings. when i got it completely wrong and when i met people that taught me how to get it right. we can't just point to a problem and say we're too divided. the reality is we have to take responsibility. if we want more hope we have to be engines of that hope. i really hope personalness of the story inspires that and others. >> your plans for valentine's day on sunday? >> i will be with my mother. just celebrating familial love.
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>> i will spread my love to all of new jersey. >> thank you, senator. united goes on sale tuesday. listening to love. meet some of the people behind the powerful stories of romance and redemption in the hugely popular "new york times" column "modern love."sunshine for your friday before valentine's day... and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got cool 40s around town... and the warm trend keeps the 70s coming today and right through the weekend. we could set a new record high today of 76 today. not a lot cooler into next week. .............. next week we finally see some heavier cloud cover but the temps don't seem to break all that much. back to mid 70s even next weekend. have a great holiday weekend!///
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this sunday, the this is under the morning "times" conditions a tradition it started more than 11 years ago. publishing first-person stories called "modern love." millions read it in print and online. "times" recently brought the articles to life in a podcast. in its first week, it soared to number one on itunes. just shows you what people are interested in. here's how the "times" picks these unlikely stories. >> a love story is kind of a promise when you talk about the kinds of feelings that tie us together, there's none that's more universal than love. >> my name is daniel jones. i am the editor of the "modern love" column at "the new york times." the potdcast was the idea of wbur
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>> reporter: stories of love, loss, and redemption. >> each segment features an actor reading a "modern love" column column. >> i knew this was my test, my life's worth distilled into a moment. >> there's never a good time to fall off your couch on to a martini glass, nick a major blood vessel and begin losing a dangerous amount of blood. >> jason alexander who everyone knows as george as seinfeld read a piece which was firstly about goldfish. >> my daughter's stupid fish is dying. >> it was really about mortality and losing our parents. >> it was the same with my father last year at the veterans home. >> we interpret modern love in a very broadway. both the word modern which means
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different today. >> the modern man has an iphone 6-plus and goes to coachella every year. >> also we can have children in different ways. we can form families in new ways. in terms of the word love, it is any way that human beings connect. >> if you look at any great love story you've ever read, there is hardship and difficulty, and yet there is the persistence of hope. i'm mary elizabeth williams and i am a "modern love" contributor. so like a lot of people in the world, i met someone and married pretty young. we were both in our mid 20s and have two kids and like at least half of all couples, we then broke up. >> it wasn't long after the split i realized the liked the
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this heartbreak was forging. i liked the person he was becoming too. >> we found each other again and started seeing each other again, and decided to commit to each other again and then a few weeks later i found out i had cancer. i'm so glad we broke up. i never once had a moment of doubt that he was with me because he wanted to be with me and that i was with him because i wanted to be with him, and not because either one of us were afraid that i was going to die. two years after finding out i was cancer-free, i wrote "the modern love," and it just felt like i was ready to tell the story. >> if you're lucky, you'll eventually come out of it a little braver and wiser. >> love isn't just a noun. love is a very active verb. love is something that you do.
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and you have to keep making and not just romantically. but everybody. everybody that you say you love, you decide to love, then you do it. you practice it. >> we are so lame. >> i love this column. now the fact that you can hear it, i love it. thank you. beautifully done. >> love it an active choice. >> i love this page so much. >> don't you feel warm inside? >> i do. i do. >> good. "the new york times" "modern day" column will take over our facebook page. join the conversation at facebook.com/cbs this morning. ahead, we'll look at all that mattered this week. what's coming up next on "cbs
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we'll be right back. they're one of the wall street banks that triggered the financial meltdown -- goldman sachs. just settled with authorities r their part in the crisis that put seven million out of work and millions out of their homes. how does wall street get away with it? millions in campaign contributions and speaking fees. our economy works for wall street because it's rigged by wall street. and that's the problem.
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. >> if my archive of engagement for 40 years stands for something, it is a passionate belief that if we define and debate, if we explore and expose, that what is best about us, it, it will be the front line of the argument against the forces that would defeat us and it will be the last best reason for a hopeful future. thank you so much for this honor. >> that is our charlie rose! he received an award for excellence in broadcast journalism last night in the national press foundation in washington. past winners were bob schieffer, charles osgood and sxem"60 minutes" and charlie rose! >> bravo! >> you certainly deserve to be there. >> that does it for us. as we leave you, take a look back at all that mattered this week. >> happy valentine's day! >> take it easy.
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shaking! >> the denver broncos have taken super bowl 50. >> lombardi trophy is coming home to the mile high city. >> i want to kiss my wife and my kids and -- >> they just played better than us. i don't know what you want me to say. >> do we love the people of new hampshire? >> historically it's a launching pad to the nomination of the presidency. >> all of these characters are going to give it up and we are going to run the table. >> thank you, new hamphire! >> it says it all. new hampshire was for bernie. >> not whether you get knocked down that matters, it's whether you get back up! >> i'm disappointed with tonight. >> this campaign is not dead. we are going on to win it! >> if you don't have a seat belt, go get one! >> oh, my god. >> the storm they ran into tossed this around like a paper cup.
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launched this? >> they are not good at feeding their people. >> up and down the south, they could experience a new pandemic, zika. >> mosquito repellant is a good way to try to avoid it. >> this dips will detect cancer before symptoms? >> it may. >> that's not what the video says. >> oh, my god. >> and you always travel in the middle seat. why is that? >> because we couldn't get the aisle or the damn window, that's why! lah-lah lah-lah lah-lah lah-lah >> welcome to my house. we can't slow down we don't have to go out >> is this like a joke? >> how do you top this? >> i don't think it's possible. >> job change, moving, first daughter going to college. which is most stressful to you? >> not even close. malia going off and leaving.
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talk about that on camera. >> i don't want you to tear up. >> wow. that is going to be on the surface of mars? that? >> absolutely. >> better call saul. >> let's start with tough love. you two suck at peddling meth! >> that sucks! better call saul! >> valentine's day is about celebration. >> we have been together four years. i ain't got nothing from you. >> but you keep giving and giving. >> thank you. >> and all that matters. sail on down the line >> he is one of the most down to earth megastars. >> on "cbs this morning." >> you can be ochingsfficial but what we are talking about here, if i didn't know you, i swear you had 126 teeth, you're smiling so big! announcer: this portion of "cbs
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nationwide insurance.((brian loftus)) > police have been on the scene of a barricade situation for more than 12 hours. michael stevens is live near d-i and maryland parkway with the latest. michael? ((michael stevens)) ((michael stevens)) police say they're really trying to get the man who barricaded himself in his home out. police say this stand-off started just before 9-last night. near maryland parkway and desert inn. police say they responded to call of a man screaming for help. people in the area also say they possibly heard gunshots. when officers showed up... they started talking to the man and decided to call in swat because they believe he is armed.
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< ((sherry swensk)) glorious sunshine for your friday before valentine's day... as we look toward the mountains from our boulder station camera. and mother nature will naturally warm your hearts this weekend with well above normal temps. ............ right now we've got temps moving back into the low 50s around town...
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michael: it's friday, february 12, 2016, and it is a very special day around here as you can tell from the set. today marks 15 years of kelly ripa hosting "live." [applause] yes. [captioning made possible by disney-abc domestic television] now, she's backstage and she has no idea. she has no idea we decorated the set. she has no idea we're dressed up in our finest. and she has no idea that we have a lot of big stars and a lot of surprises in store for her today. so hit the music. we're celebrating kelly's sweet 15 anniversary special. let's bring out the host, kelly ripa! [cheers and applause]
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