tv CBS This Morning CBS October 5, 2016 7:00am-9:00am PDT
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is wednesday, october 5th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." hurricane warnings are up in florida. after matthew smashes haiti and movein the atlantic coast from miami to the carolinas prepares for the killer storm. the vice presidential candidates clash over taxes, russia, immigration and nuclear weapons. we'll fact check their claims. >> plus maria sharapova sits down with charlie for her first tv interview since a doping suspension was cut short. she vows a big comeback. >> we begin with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds.
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>> flooding rain, damaging winds, dangerous storm surge. >> it sights are set on florida. >> a deadly hurricane barrels towards the u.s. >> leaving a trail of death and destruction as it heads across the caribbean with an eye on the east coast. >> we have to prepare for a direct hit on the florida coast. >> will evacuate all coastal communities. >> i can't imagine how governor pence can defend the insult driven, selfish me for style of donald trump. >> you and hillary clinton would know a lot about an insult driven campaign. >> supreme -- >> i think i'm still on my time. >> that's a discussion -- >> she had a private server -- >> i get to weigh in -- >> in north carolina police released body camera and dash board recordings showing the moments before he was fatally shot. >> maria sharapova has won an appeal to have her doping ban reduced. >> this could have had incredible impact on your career. it could have been over. >> my career was never going to
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>> yahoo! has been accused of secretly monitoring customers' e-m e-mails. >> an explosion which knocked a new jersey neighborhood. two buildings were destroyed. twelve more damaged. >> all that. >> this is the 2016 awards. >> nothing can stop me. i'm all the way up. >> the ball game is over! >> all that matters. >> tonight is the debate between vice presidential candidates tim kaine and mike pence. >> they're going to debate the economy. foreign policy. and which one of them is tim kaine and which one is mike pence. >> on "cbs this morning." >> one of the things i noticed was how much the candidates were writing frantically while the other candidate was speaking. i believe we have obtained a close-up of what tim kaine was writing. i hate you. that makes sense. and mike pence. yes, okay, good. he did. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota.
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welcome to "cbs this morning." as you wake up in the west more than 1 million americans are being told to evacuate as hurricane matthew barrels towards florida and the southeast. the deadly storm has devastated parts of jamaica, cuba, haiti and the dominican republic. at least 11 people are reported dead. >> matthew weakened slightly overnight as it closed in on the it is now a category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds around 115 miles an hour. but the storm is expected to intensify and begin lashing florida tomorrow evening before moving up the coast. omar villafranca is in georgetown, the bahamas, which is in the bull's-eye right now. omar, good morning. >> good morning. the wind is starting to pick up, as matthew moves closer to the bahamas. the storm is expected to carve right through the island, after leaving parts of haiti, and
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powerful winds blew out windows in haiti. while torrential rains triggered raging floodwaters. the storm collapsed a bridge cutting off southern haiti from the rest of the country. throughout the country, high waters swallowed bridges, flooding neighborhoods with debris. downed power lines knocked out electricity, and trees littered roadki people used axes and machetes to try and clear the way. in the capital of port-au-prince bulldozers were brought in to try and clear debris. at least 10,000 people are still in shelters. matthew made a second landfall on the eastern tip of cuba tuesday night. a cuba civil defense official says the failure of a fiber optic cable has cut off
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it will have to wait until after the storm passes to evaluate the damage. here in the bahamas people in nassau boarded up windows and stocked up on supplies tuesday. >> my son tells me that this one might be bad. but we live in hope. and we trust that everything works out for us. >> the u.s. dispatched approximately 100 military personnel, and multiple helicopters to grand cayman island. rear admiral cedric pringle says they are standing by in case the caribbean on >> we will be to survive in the affected area, and just do whatever needs to be done in order to stabilize the conditions. >> matthew is expected to pummel the island later this evening. if there's one bit of good news is that by that time, the tide should be going back out but it's still the massive storm surge and the amount of rain
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>> omar villafranca reporting from the bahamas. we thank you. florida residents are already lining up for gas and other supplies. mandatory evacuations of some barrier islands will start later today. hurricane watches and warnings have been issued along the coast. president obama postponed a campaign stop to the state. he will visit headquarters instead. man well is just south of fort lauderdale where residents are getting redy. >> good morning. the u.s. has not had a landfall from a category 3 or greater hurricane since wilma hit florida in 2005. now, this state is preparing. and closely watching the forecast which threatens to put florida in the path of hurricane matthew. there were so many people fuelling up at this service station in pembroke pines, florida, last night. a man was directing traffic to the pumps. >> there were quite a few
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>> what about this storm in particular made you decide let's get prepared? >> the strength of the winds. and how big it is. >> been through wilma and katrina. and pretty much, you know, see what devastation it can cause. so not taking any chances. >> in addition to buying bottled water and batteries, people in south florida waited in long lines to refill propane gas canisters. and loaded up sheets of plywood. >> in matthew directly florida the destruction could be catastrophic and you need to be prepared. we're preparing for the worst and hoping for the best. >> states of emergency have been declared across florida, parts of georgia, and north carolina. and in all of south carolina where governor nikki haley is ordering more than 1 million people to move inland. >> we are not in stage territory yet. we're still kind of moving as the storm moves. >> like south carolina's governor, florida governor rick
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yesterday, an additional 300 will join them today, in staging across the state. >> thanks manuel. you can see how the wind is circulating around the massive hurricane. the gusts are topping out at well over 100 miles per hour. and the storm is on the move. meteorologist from our miami station wfor is tracking its path. lissette good morning. >> good morning, charlie. although matthew has weakened slly category 3 hurricane still drenching cuba, haiti and now the bahamas. it is moving to the north, passion sustained winds 125 miles per hour. forecast to move across the bahamas throughout the day and restrengthen back into a category 4 hurricane. tomorrow and friday could be just offshore along the east central coast of florida then right up the coast coast of florida as a cat 4. saturday and sunday we could see
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coast lines. watches and warnings in place for much of the northeast coast and central east coast. hurricane warnings continue for the bahamas, cuba and haiti, as well. still threat for all the southeast really we continue to watch hurricane matthew closely. nor norah? >> lissette, thank you so much. the only vice presidential debate focused heavily on the presidential candidates. the tone last night was sharp and a little heated. democrat tim kaine pushed donald trump's views and pence took aim at hillary clinton's performance in office. john dickerson, major garrett and nancy cordes are all at longwood university in farmville, virginia and we begin with nancy and the biggest moments from the debate. good morning. >> good morning. mike pence was a calm counterpoint to donald trump's debate performance last week. though he stayed calm by refusing to acknowledge some of trump's more shocking pronouncements. tim kaine, known as a happy warrior, though with his ticket
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wondered whether he had to go on an offense quite so much. even if he did it with a smile. >> i cannot believe that governor pence will defend the insult-driven campaign that donald trump has run. >> clinton's running mate went on offense within the first two minutes. >> you got to be -- >> you -- >> heavy -- >> reporter: repeatedly jumping in and pressing pence to justify trump's most contentious comments. >> when donald trump says mexicans are rapists and criminals i can't imagine how you coulef >> reporter: pence's strategy was neither to defend nor disavow but deflect. >> you whipped out that mexican thing again. >> reporter: or deny. >> donald trump had said all the things that you've said he said in the way you said he said them, he still wouldn't have a fraction of the insults that hillary clinton leveled when she said that half of our supporters were a disbate of deplorabdeplo. >> the very next day she said i shouldn't have said that.
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responsibility and apologizing. >> reporter: the two clashed over frp. kaine using ronald reagan's words to attack the republican nominee. >> he said the problem with nuclear proliferation is that some fool or maniac could trigger a catastrophic event. and i think that's who governor pence's running mate is, exactly -- >> senator, senator, that was even beneath you and hillary clinton, and that -- that's pretty low. >> reporter: pence slammed clinton's record. >> in the wake of hillary clinton's tenure a s state, where she was the architect of the obama administration's foreign policy, we see entire portions of the world, particularly the wider middle east, literally spinning out of control. >> when hillary clinton became secretary of state, governor pence, do you know that osama bin laden was alive? >> yes. >> do you know that we had 175,000 troops deployed in the battlefield in iraq and afghanistan. >> reporter: and with trump's taxes dominating the race this week, kaine brought them up, ten times. >> when hillary said you haven't been paying taxes he said that makes me smart.
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military. it's smart not to pay for vet advance. >> senator do you take all the deductions you're entitled to. i do. >> the last thing i want to ask governor pence -- >> reporter: joyful republicans were quick to declare that pence had won the debate. while democrats were more subdued. saying simply that kaine had done his job, and arguing that it's the job of a vp candidate, gayle, to get a little tasty. >> all right. tasty was the word. thank you very much, nancy. the presidentialdi last night. donald trump tweeted, mike pence won big. we should all be proud. hillary clinton wrote that she's lucky to have a partner like tim kaine who stood up for our shared vision tonight instead of trying to deny it. major garrett is in farmville. he's got a reality check of the debate. major, good morning. >> good morning. that hillary clinton tweet was a not so subtle attempt to drive a post-debate clinton theme, namely that mike pence simply did not stoutly defend donald trump. and the aftermath the trump
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pence's defense sufficient but persuasive measured and they believe ultimately helpful in the polls. in the end, the give and take, well, sometimes facts were among the first casualties. >> donald trump said here's what donald trump said, donald trump believes. >> reporter: throughout tuesday's debate tim kaine tried to tie mike pence to the often unscripted comments of his running mate including on nuclear proliferation. >> more nations should get nuclear weapons. >> but he never said >> reporter: but trump has suggested he would be okay with countries in asia and the middle east becoming nuclear powers. even saying it's inevitable. >> it's going to happen anyway. it's only a question of time. >> reporter: in defending hillary clinton's record fighting the spread of nukes, kaine overstated his running mate's successes. >> she worked a tough negotiation with nations around the world to eliminate the iranian nuclear weapons program without firing a shot. >> eliminate the iranian nuclear weapon program?
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2340erk9ed by secretary of state john kerry and while the freezes the iranian nuclear weapons program it leaves much of the country's infrastructure in place. >> so you like the 16 million -- >> senator, that's nonsense. >> reporter: on immigration pence denied that trump called for a deportation force to deal with undocumented u.s. residents. >> senator we have a deportation force it's called immigrations and customs enforcement. >> reporter: during the republican primaries, however, trump did suggest the need for more aggressive tactics. >> you're going to hav deportation force and you're going to do it humanely. >> reporter: on entitlements kaine accused his opponent of supporting an overhaul of social security. >> donald trump wrote a book and he said social security is a ponzi scream and privatization would be good for all of us. >> reporter: that book came out in 2000. but during this election trump has vocally opposed such a plan. >> i will do everything within my power not to touch social security, to leave it the way it is. >> it was also a good deal of
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vladimir putin. kaine accused pence and trump of supporting dictatorship over american leadership. it's the precise lack of white house leadership that has made putin a stronger force on the world stage. >> thanks, major. john dickerson joins us now from longwood university. john, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> yesterday you sited the hippocratic oath which says first do no harm. did the aggressiveness of tim do harm on conscience? >> he was aggressive, wasn't he? at times it felt like it was an interruption and occasionally a debate broke out. i think that it depends what your game was. clearly tim kaine's goal going into this was to keep the general election in mind. and keep driving the issues of donald trump and what he'd said and keep those in the forefront.
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interruption undoubtedly came across as just too much for viewers. mike pence was all the things that donald trump was not in his debate. he was clearly -- he clearly studied. and he was unflappable, pretty much, in the face of all those interrup interruptions. i think basically, you know, the big challenge for the trump campaign is not the style in the night, but mike pence's disconnect with his own candidate, he didn't rush to his defense when kaine attacked him. anth where pence said things that donald trump didn't say that donald trump indeed did say. >> yeah i mean there were so many times that that senator kaine tried to make mike pence defend donald trump and the statements that he has made. but governor pence succeeded in deflecting, rather than being held to count for them. right? >> that's right. i mean, he not only deflected but then went back at hillary clinton. so the question is, will the night be judged on what happened
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who wachd the 90 minutes? or the conversation afterwards in which the clinton campaign no doubt will bring up all the instances in which mike pence and donald trump disagreed and all the differences between the way mike pence behaves and the way donald trump behaves and all the differences between what mike pence said donald trump said and what he actually did say. >> -- performance trump -- >> right. exactly. and you know, in debate performance does trump when it's the people at the top of the ticket when it's the undercard basically everybody moves back to the general election conversation with four days to go to the next debate. we'll probably be through five or six other stories before we have that debate on sunday. >> yeah. gayle said something funny this morning. you said about getting those two to discuss you said it was -- >> we were talking about the interruptions this morning in the green room, i said it was like two cats in a bag. i felt forree lane quijano trying to say gentlemen please, gentlemen, please to no avail. >> i know, standing here i'm
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there were so many interruptions. >> tim kaine was no more mr. nice guy. thank you very much, john. >> thank you, john. >> sure thing. >> a reminder the second presidential debate is scheduled for sunday night. coverage begins at 6:00 pacific time right here on cbs. police in charlotte have released more video of last month's deadly shooting of a black man by an officer. attorneys representing the family shooting victim keith lamont scott say the body in the dash cam videos do not support police claims that the victim had a weapon. >> the world can now see to the last moments, there's nothing that we saw that changes our position in this. not aggressive. wasn't doing anything to threaten the officers. again there's no firearm visible in the footage. >> tomorrow's scheduled funeral for scott has been postponed because of hurricane matthew. federal investigators reportedly estimate a new jersey commuter train was traveling much faster than the 10 mile an hour speed limit when it
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associated press says the train was moving between 20 and 30 miles an hour thursday when it slammed into the hoboken terminal. one woman was killed and more than 100 people were hurt. the ntsb recovered a second black box along with the engineer's cell phone in his back pack. they're being analyzed at a lab. yahoo! reportedly searched through hundreds of millions of user e-mails at the request of the government, ahead the potential fallout from this apparent invasion of privacy and we hit a warmer 82 yesterday... and we should do that again today. ..... cooling off right now to the 60s... and some cooler 50s. staying dry. ............. plenty of sunshine today and nice and mild again this afternoon with low 80s. it's 7:26 ...
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hurricane matthew could make the zika fight morebreak ground on w break ground today on the practice facility for the city's new nhl team. it will be located in downtown summerlin near pavilion center drive and charleston boulevard. the team's gm bill foley along with the howard hughes corporation, are behind the new facility. we're still waiting on an official name for the team. /// ((sharie johnson)) match-up is happening this weekend after nearly 20 years in las vegas. the l-a kings and the colorado avalanche will hit the ice at the t-mobile arena. tickets are still on sale .. prices start around 40 bucks. by the way- the new las vegas franchise is hosting a 'fan fest' outside t-mobile before the games. there will be street hockey .. a q-and-a with the team owner and g-m ... as well as autograph signings with former players. it runs from 4:30 to 7 pm friday
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((sharie johnson)) las vegas city leaders are dedicating the plaza in front of city hall... in honor of former mayor oscar goodman. the ceremony will happen later tonight. goodman was instrumental in the planning and developing of the building in downtown ... which opened back in 2012. during his time in office, he made revitalizing downtown a top priority./// quick check on your commute ramp to southbound i-15. there are a lot of slow downs along southbound i-15 near lake mead. leave early, if you're heading out right now.
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and we should do that again today. ..... we have cooled off to extra cool 50s.. staying dry and the northerly breezes returning tomorrow and friday will keep us dry and reinforce the extra cool temps for a couple more days. ............. plenty of sunshine today and nice and mild again this afternoon with low 80s. it's 7:56 ((sharie johnson)) ((sharie johnson)) you have to work together in order to get things done. but in washington, too often joe heck has been part of the problem, putting his party and special interests before nevada. i'm proud of my work with the bush and obama administrations on homeland security. and every bill i sponsored as attorney general was passed by democrats and republicans. i'm catherine cortez masto. i approve this message because i'll work with anyone
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? the first and only vice presidential debate of this election season was held tonight. >> what a matchup it was. it was like watching a glass of whole milk do battle with a low calorie jar of mayonnaise. >> in fact, more than 40% of americans cannot name the vice >> so these guys are really running for commander and hey, chief? hey, big guy? what is up, buddy? >> let's see if they know today after the debate. you can certainly tell there were differences between the two men last night. >> no doubt. what were you going to say? >> differences in style and content. >> that's right. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, yahoo! reportedly scanned hundreds of millions of e-mails at the request of u.s. intelligence officials.
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very different from other controversies involving the government and tech companies. plus, two more women accuse baylor university for mistreating sexual assault. why she resigned and the action she is taking against her former employer. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the "miami herald" reports six new local zika infections and mosquitoes that carry the virus in florida. the mosquitoes were trapped near the miami beach gardens where infected mosquitoes were found in august. florida has reported 155 zika case not readily to travel. mat more standing water where mosquitoes can breathe. kremlin is offered a window of opportunity in syria.
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the kremlin today said it resent the negative way putin and russia are posterior trared in america's election. twitter is likely to received act was 6:00 bids this week. ceo wants to tap into data from twitter's hundreds of millions of users. alphabet's google and walt disney company may also make a bid. twitter could cost more than $20 billion. waco tribune says sexual. baylor said in a statement patty crawford was disappointed in her role in implementing the recommendations from an independent investigation and looked into the school's handling of sexual assault allegations. crawford is now speaking out for the first time in an interview right here on "cbs this morning." but, first, here is the latest on the scandal that engulfed the school.
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allegations it failed to handle cases of sexual assault committed by its students. one lawsuit called the school a hunting ground for sexual predators. back in may, a scathing report from private law firm pepper hamilton which was hired by baylor to independently review its past treatment of sexual assault, blasted the school's response to reports of sexual violence as wholly inadequate, with an overwhelming majority of cases not even getting a of a football program that was above the rules. but said there were institutional failures at every level. just this week, two women who say they were sexually assaulted while attending baylor joined six others in a lawsuit against the school. jasmine hernandez sued the university in march and she was raped by tevin elliott, a baylor football player, now serving a
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the university is aware of all of these instances and had the opportunity to do the right thing, yet they choose time and time again to do the wrong thing. >> following its report, pepper hamilton gave baylor more than a hundred recommendations which the school adopted as mandates. the fallout led to the demotion and later resignation of school president ken starr. he is art bri helped transform the baylor bears into a top ten team, was also fired. >> i made some mistakes. there were some bad things that happened under my watch. i was the captain of this ship. the captain of the ship goes down with it. >> joining us now is patty crawford, baylor university's former title 9 coordinator and her attorney. patty, why did you resign? >> i think baylor set me up to fail from the beginning.
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and i continued to work very hard and the harder i worked, the more resistance i received from senior leadership. i increased reports by 700% over my time and it became clear that that was not something the university wanted. and in july, i made it clear in writing that i had concerns and that the university was violating title ix and my environment got worse. >> explain what you were charged with doing as theor ix representative. >> just to ensure that students were not being discriminated against based on their sex or gender and that includes sexual violence. >> who specifically at the university prevented you from doing your job? >> senior leadership. a group of senior leaders that made sure that they were protecting the brand, i believe, instead of our students. >> pepper hamilton did this independent report and they accused baylor university to have systematically failed victims of sexual assault. you were trying to fix that.
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>> yes, i think it does. i filed a complaint to the federal government office of civil rights last week and to human resources and led me to a place on monday i had to make a decision, was i going to remain part of the problem or be part of the problem, or was i going to resign? specifically what are the allegations in that complaint? >> the allegations are that i never had the authority, the resources, or the independence to do the job appropriately which the department of education writes in its guidance for title 9 coordinators in universities. >> in august they talked about an interview you gave saying baylor had a good board and you had a good -- with the athletic department. i'm trying to figure out what went wrong and how it changed from august until now? >> there are wonderful board members, there are, and great partners across campus.
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with title ix and i was trying to be hopeful that the university was going to listen. and the more i asked and the more i tried, the more resistance i received. i was being retaliated against for fighting against discrimination. >> retall yated how? >> the university making decisions that only title ix coordinator should make based on more protection for the brand rather than protect are our students. >> when you lookck when you look back? >> right. i think i've learned so much about an institution, about trusting people, and i really trusted the university. i was loyal. but it came to a point where i couldn't have integrity with my work and i had -- >> patty -- >> a statement. >> i think is there a specific charge here that you should answer which is that two new women, as you know, are joining this lawsuit against the
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and one of them alleges that in june 2015, while you were the title ix coordinator that your office did not perform an investigation into her allegations of sexual assault. >> right. >> do you feel that you're personally responsible in that case? >> i don't know the case because i think it was a jane doe so i'm not sure. like i said we have had hundreds of reports. i can say that we do everything we can to oblige by what the student wants' usually i try to push, because i don't want to trigger them. >> if you are a student at a university and you have been sexually assaulted, what should you do and how should a university properly respond? what is the gold standard? >> i think the gold standard is a university trusting its title ix coordinator to do the right thing. >> every school has a title ix coordinator? >> any university or college that has financial aid should or
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>> baylor said they are surprised about her action she has taken and given the her command for $1 million and her e rights were very troubling. your response to that. >> let me say this. there was a mediation and texas law is quite clear that you cannot comment on what took place at the mediation or what was said at the mediation. >> but they have commented. it's out there she is asking for a million dollars and wants a book and movie deal it wou appear. >> a desperate attempt to smear patty. what they have done is violated texas law. believe me, there is nothing i would rather tell you what went on in that mediation because it's in favor of patty but the law says you can't do that and we choose to follow the law unlike baylor university. >> we thank you both. this story to be continued for sure because patty's story is a
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helped the federal government spy on e-mails. digital expert nick thompson is in the toyota green room right now what it could mean for your rose, before she spoke to an and now with victoza? a better moment of proof. victoza? lowers my a1c and blood sugar better than the leading branded pill, which didn't get me to my goal. lowers my a1c better than the leading branded injectable.
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narrator: heck says he "completely supports" trump. i would bomb the [bleep] out of them. narrator: and heck? reporter: you trust him having his finger on the nuclear button? heck: i do. reporter: why do you say that? heck: why wouldn't i? narrator: donald trump and joe heck. wrong for nevada. a surprising newor suggests that yahoo! spied on its customers e-mail accounts for the government. reuters reports the company last year used a secret surveillance program and allegedly scanned hundreds of millions of yahoo! mail accounts at the request of the national security agency or fbi. the report is based on the accounts of anonymous former yahoo! employees. the company says this in a statement to cbs news. yahoo! is a law abiding company and complies with the laws of the united states.
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the new yorker magazine's website new yorker.com. he joins us at the table to discuss. this sounds like a big deal and never happened before. how significant is it? >> this is a very big deal and intense and new and quite surprising. >> because? >> because what happened since the snowden revelations a couple of years ago silicon valley is contesting much of the government's effort to spy on it. what appears to happen last year the yahoo! went to say we want to spy on the incoming accounts and will you build something that makes it easy to do that? >> they created a special software? >> and it would scan any incoming yahoo! message for a certain phrase or key word. we don't know what the phrase or key word was and store those in a special place for the government and did it in real-time. >> the question is what was the government looking for that would make yahoo! do this? >> we have no idea. no information has come out on that. one has to assume it had something to do with terrorism
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company like this aiding and abetting the government in surveillance. >> the government must have come to yahoo! and said this is legal, you have to do it under our authority presumably under the foreign intelligence surveillance act. the yahoo! government said not challenge it, do it. very few people at yahoo! knew about it. in fact, yahoo!'s head of security didn't know about it. when he learned about it, he apparently resigned. >> he saw edward s tweeting about this yesterday people with yahoo! accounts should delete their e-mail accounts? >> this is very bad pr for yahoo! and comes at a bad time and after the news about the huge hack. if you have a yahoo! account it means should you be trusting company to work as hard as it can to protect our privacy? >> google and microsoft said they had never seen such a request? >> which is why the government specifically went to yahoo! >> we don't know what they are going to do with the information? >> we don't know what they are
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in yahoo!'s defense there are a lot of people who are fine saying we are willing to give up some privacy to help the government in its anti-terror operations. clearly, yahoo! believed that argument. did not think it was putting its users at risk or did not feel like fighting for the boards to defend them. >> good to have you, nicholas thompson. a toronto baseball fan should have been flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct. ahead, how an orioles outfielder nearly got "brained" by a beer can. we hit a warmer 82 yesterday... and we should do that again today. ..... cooling off right now to the 60s... and some cooler 50s. staying dry. ............. plenty of sunshine today and nice and mild again this afternoon with low 80s. it's 7:26 ...
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edwin encarnacion had a three-run shot in the 11th inning gave toronto 5-2 win over baltimore. earlier, a spectator threw a beer can at orioles outfielder and the man ran away before the police got to the scene. frank luntz got reaction from ohio voters after the vice presidential debate. this morning." it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen. which you are you? be the you who doesn't cover
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a special session next week ... one thing they'll consider .. is additional funding for police departments. murders in las vegas are up more than 25- percent over last year .. and metro says more officers would help with the increased caseload. sheriff joe lombardo has asked for ann he is asking lawmakers to approve a point -1 percent sales tax increase to hire more officers. metro's homicide lieutenant says he would take any help he can get-- whether on the streets or in his office: ((lt. dan mcgrath/metro homicide division: "we would expand for another squad, take the two detectives, and 3 additional, 4 additional, and make another group.")) ((sharie johnson)) >> it's been a tough go for the more cops tax.. lawmakers passed a half-percent tax increase in 2005...
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and then in 2013... among disagreement between county commissioners... a proposed expansion on the tax -- failed./// want to check on your commute the northbound i-15 ramp to northbound 95 will close tonight at 10 pm. use alternate routes. right now, traffic on southbound i-15 and lake mead is slowing down... leave early.
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y rosen, and as a computer programmer, i created apps... before they were lled "apps" and i learned there's always a smart solution. as president of my synagogue, we found a smart solution to rising energy costs... creating one of the largest solar projects in the state. in congress, i'll work with democrats and republicans to make all of nevada a leader in solar, to improve our schools, and create good jobs. i approved this message because i know we can
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is wednesday, october 5th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead including tough talk and sharp questions from the vice presidential candidates. we look at how one group of undecided debate. first, here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> the storm is expected to carve right through the island after leaving parts of haiti and cuba in shambles. >> the u.s. has not had a landfall from a category 3 or greater hurricane since 2005. >> could be just offshore, along the coast of florida and up the east coast as a cat 4. >> known as a happy warrior, but
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he had to go on offense quite so much. >> trump campaign said not only was pence's defense sufficient, but helpful in the polls. >> like two cats in a bag. i felt for elaine quijano. >> i wonder if they're going to interrupt me now as i speak. >> aiding the government in surveillance? >> this is very bad pr for yahoo! >> third party kennedy gary johnson appeared on news shows to explain his recent gaffes. >> what is go on with you and >> well, allison, it is five guys after the name your favorite foreign leader, i still can't do that. >> there is not even any evidence this guy can comb his hair. >> this morning's eye opener at 8:00 presented by liberty mutual insurance. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. millions of americans in florida and the southeast are bracing
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hurricane matthew. it is pummeling the bahamas right now. it has maximum winds near 115 miles an hour. it is expected to begin drenching florida tomorrow night, more than a million people in florida and south carolina are being told to evacuate. >> the hurricane is already blamed for 11 deaths. it devastated parts of haiti, jamaica and cuba. it collapsed a bridge cutting off southern haiti. >> focused on their running mates at first and only vice presidential debate. it was full of interruptions and cross talk but they were able to address some of the issues. >> donald trump and i have a plan to get this economy moving again. just the way that it worked in the 1980s, just the way it worked in the 1960s. and that is by lowering taxes across the board for working families, small businesses and family farms. >> first thing we do is we invest in manufacturing
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tomorrow. >> my faith informs my life. i try to spend a little time on my knees every day. but all for me it begins with cherishing the dignity, the worth, the value of every human life. >> we can encourage people to support life, of course we can, but why don't you trust women, why doesn't donald trump trust women to make this choice for themselves? >> a society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable. the aged, the infi disabled and the unborn. i believe it with all my heart. i couldn't be more proud to be standing with a pro life candidate in donald trump. >> donald trump recently said we need to do more stop and frisk around the country. that would be a big mistake because it polarizes the relationship between the police and the community. so here's what we'll do. we'll focus on community policing. >> we have to assure the public we'll have a full and complete and transparent investigation whenever there is a loss of life
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enough of this seekingi ievery opportunity to demean law enforcement broadly with implicit bias every time a tragedy -- >> people shouldn't be afraid to bring up issues of bias in law enforcement. if you're afraid to -- >> i'm not afraid to bring that up. >> if you're afraid to have the discussion, you'll never solve it. >> the republican national committee was a little too quick to declare pence the winner. it praised his performance on the rnc website about two before the debate started. that does happen every -- >> how does that work? >> after the debate, the committee tweeted, we told you mike pence would win. >> political contributor and republican strategist frank luntz gathered a focus group of 28 uncommitted and undecided voters in the battleground state of ohio. here are some of their thoughts. >> who thought tim kaine won this evening, raise your hands? only have four of you.
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describe tim kaine, because i want to understand what he was unable to do that hillary clinton was able to do a week ago? >> reactionary. >> small and condescending. >> trump-like. >> it seemed to me that tim kaine used the same tactics that donald trump used a week ago and didn't work for trump. >> exactly. so why would you use them if it didn't work for trump? >> i think that kaine was ru running for vice president, but of the united states. >> who did you think performed better, donald trump or mike pence? >> mike pence. >> the focus group used dial testing during the debate. the red line shows reaction from voters that are leaning toward trump. the green line shows clinton leaning voters and the yellow line is totally undecided voters. the higher the line goes up, the more that group liked a particular answer. frank luntz is with us from broad view heights, ohio, outside cleveland.
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>> i want to start with what the group found was one of pence's best moments, that was specifically on the issue when he attacked hillary clinton's basket of deplorable comments. listen. >> she said that half of our supporters were a basket of deplorables. that she said they were irredeemable. they were not america. it is extraordinary. and then she laid one after another ism on millions of amers can have a stronger america at home and abroad and believe we can get this economy moving again, who believe we can end illegal immigration once and for all. >> i'm looking at those lines there, it looks like it played well with just about everybody. >> yeah it was off the charts. voters are saying something very clear, which is stop the negativity, stop the personal attacks, give us some substance. there is a certain moment when they ask the question about social security, and our voters
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and they were furious, frankly, at both candidates for much more tim kaine for interrupting the moderator and interrupting themselves. something we found on cbs and the very first presidential debate. if you want to score points with the undecided and uncommitted, first thing you got to do is to listen to the question, listen to each other, and stop being rude. >> what was -- >> go ahead. >> tim kaine basically followed donald trump's strategy, it did not work for trump in the first kaine in this debate. >> are there lessons for donald trump in terms of watching mike pence? >> absolutely. number one, they want to know what you're for, not just what you're against. number two, lower the decibel level. you don't need to shout. you got a microphone. by the way, amusing to me you have a microphone, but may not have worked as well for trump in the first debate. and number three, they absolutely want to know what you're going to do on day one. so enumerate it.
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no generalities anymore. got to have specifics. >> okay, got it, frank. back to your dial test because they brought up trump's taxes, brought up ten times during the course of the debate. let's see how that went over with the voters and then we'll get your take on the other side. >> trump organization is an octopus-like organization with tentacles all over the world whose conflict of interest can only be known if donald trump would release his tax returns. he's refused to do it. >> all right. frank, those lines t story. what did you see? >> what we see is they are more upset over hillary clinton's e-mails than they are of trump's tax returns. this is something i did not know until this group. nobody wants to pay taxes. as long as he didn't break the law, as long as he didn't do something unethical, taxpayers are fed up with the tax code and did not hold him responsible for that. what they don't like is how employees were treated. the goal for the average
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reduce their taxes. the anger is if you didn't pay people that you should have paid. that's the issue that hillary clinton should have focused on and the same thing with tim kaine. by the way, that e-mail issue is going to continue, i think, into the next two debates. >> all right, frank luntz, we thank you for joining us this morning. >> we're excited to announce this morning that cartoonist liza donnelly has officially joined the "cbs this morning" team. hello, liza donnelly. thank you for joining the team. welcome. >> great t h here. she's our resident cartoonist. she is sketching the action here at "cbs this morning" from our toyota green room. she's quick, too. last night she was busy drawing the vice presidential debate and these are just some of the cartoons you can see, you can see more by following "cbs this morning" on facebook and instagram. liza in action. >> very good indeed. love that. smart home technology could help you keep you warm this winter at a lower cost.
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everybody's happy about that. >> yep. >> how to stay warm this winter. ahead, how products like high tech -- >> get adesert is so comfortabl we hit a warmer 82 yesterday... and we should do that again today. ..... cooling off right now to the 60s... and some cooler 50s. staying dry. ............. plenty of sunshine today and nice and mild again this afternoon with low 80s. it's 7:26 ... ((sharie johnson)) announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by liberty mutual insurance. see car insurance in a whole new
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maria sharapova is getting ready for her comeback in professional tennis. >> i was born and in tennis and in my life -- >> how were you born to be a warrior? >> because there is something when i've -- when i've had challenges in my life, i've persevered. >> i like a warrior. >> yeah, me too. >> you go, maria. all right. ahead, what the tennis star told charlie first after hearing her doping suspension was shortened. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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i'm catherine cortez masto and i approve this message. as a doctor, i see how decisions in washington impact my patients here in nevada. 't be voting for joe heck. joe heck's voted ten times to defund planned parenthood, which thousands of women depend on for cancer screenings. and heck opposes a woman's right to choose even when her health is at risk. for me and my patients,
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2006 to average 114 in 2014. a big jump. upgrades in home technology could help cut the cost. lindsey turrentine is a partner in cnet.com and joins us at the table. you're saying if you knew where the energy was coming from you could save money and you brought a handy dandy gadget? >> i did and it's plugged into the lamp behind me. a remote switch so think as a timer but it has smarts and app on your phone and load the app and do the app to control the lamp, basic stuff here turning it on and off. >> yeah. >> wherever you are. >> it worked! >> i'm magical. >> you can do this from anywhere. what is cool about this device it costs $50. plug it in anywhere so any product in your house you can plug into it. the app, itself, tracks your
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you can use this app to make really smart decisions. there is a riwriter for cnet wh found out his house was using more energy than any other house in nhis neighborhood. he identified some old appliances in his house and swapping them out and saving $850 a year and just using that can you control multiple devices with it and advanced timer and has cool features and randomize when your lights come on so you can confuse burglarers. >> and by the time you get home, you can raise the heat in your house so it will be warm? >> there are lots of ways to control heat from a distance. >> or reduce heat?
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distance. in the c net smart home we take a look at thermostats. there are other cool devices. the ecob 3 has a smart thermostat, remote sensors you can place around your house so you can see where your rooms are hot or cold. >> what is the biggest drainer we should get rid of? >> large, old appliances are a huge drainer. you've probably been to the store and seen the energy star those labels actually mean something. they mean that a gadget, a product, any device has been shown to save significant energy over time and that you should be able to recoup the cost of that new product relatively quickly. >> yea! new appliances! >> if you have an avocado refrigerator or something moon gold, it needs to go! i got you. >> in some cases, that could save you $50 a month by swapping out your appliances.
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warriors, a wounded former marine is getting a chance to live his dream. david martin shows us his story of hope. >> here at big ham and women's hospital in boston, a marine who lost all four limbs to an explosion in afghanistan has undergone a revolutionary surgery. it's coming up on "cbs this morning." we will meet him and see what his new life is like. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by rinnai tankless water
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as a marine combat veteran, i understand the sacrifices our military makes. our benefits are earned, and we rely on them. politicians like joe heck should understand that. narrator: joe heck voted to shut down the federal government, risking critical services for nevada veterans. and during that shutdown, heck continued cashing his congressional paycheck. his military record deserves respect. but back in dc, joe heck is putting politics before nevada. and that doesn't work for me. narrator: vote vets is responsible for the content
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? tennis star maria sharapova is preparing to return to the professional game in april. the world's top court for sport yesterday cut her two-year doping snndope ing suspension by nine months. she was punished after testing positive for a heart medication she used for years before i spoke to her yesterday for my pbs program. what is your reaction to this decision that came down in squirts? >> i was in my bedroom and screamed down to the first floor to my mother that i'm coming back. everything let go because something i wanted so much, i was having another opportunity at it. >> what is the lesson you've learned from this? >> i've learned that there are a lot of things that could have been done to prevent this. >> by you and your team?
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proactive, by speaking to my manager at the end of last year and saying, how did you -- did you check it? is it permissible? but then i've learned how much more other federations did in this case. >> yeah. >> around the substance and they did -- >> inform players and athletes? >> they inform players directly. we are not in hiding. we play over 20 tournaments a year. they knew that i was taking direct access to me. i was right there. they could have told me. >> there is an old saying, if it doesn't kill me, makes me stronger. does this make you stronger? >> i believe in that saying so much! i do. i do believe it. there are a lot of things in my life that have made me really strong and i've gone through a lot and this is part of my journey and there is no doubt in my mind that, as i said before, i started my comeback in march
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for her, charlie. >> she has called herself a ((sharie johnson)) the race to the white house returns to las vegas this week. republican nominee donald trump is holding a rally at the henderson pavilion ... before traveling to reno for another campaign stop./// ((sharie johnson)) and democratic v-p nominee tim kaine will return to las vegas tomorrow. he's expected to speak about his running mate-- hillary clinton's training center. for more information on these events... go to las vegas now dot com. /// ((sharie johnson)) 8 news now is your local election headquarters.. you can find all things politics both on air and online at las vegas now dot com./// ((sharie johnson)) new this morning ... we've learned a 30- year- old man was killed in a crash yesterday on jones near west edgewood circle. metro police say the man was jaywalking when he was hit by an
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temps will warm slowly through the day and reach for the low 80s like yesterday. ..... another system will slide through the pacific northwest today and tomorrow and that will pick up our northerly breezes for thursday and friday. and keep our temps below normal to finish the week. ............. plenty of sunshine today and nice and mild again this afternoon with low 80s.
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? >> i've been grieving for nine days, like a lot of you have. since we got the news. and it's been hard. >> can we give him one more walk and ovation for arnold palmer coming home up the 18th? would you join me? >> our friend jim nantz of cbs sports honoring golf legend arnold palmer yesterday at la trop, pennsylvania, palmer's hometown. emotional phil mickelson and bubba watson and palmer's family delayed the service until after
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trophy on sunday. >> everybody who knew this man loved this man. >> i wish i could have been there yesterday. >> a beautiful tribute by jim nantz. a beautiful tribute. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, the remarkable surgery to give a wounded warrior and improved life. he is learning to use new limbs after receiving a double arm transplant and only on "cbs this morning," how the painful recovery could help >> plus the rise of isa ray. she became a youtube star with misadventures of awkward black girl. ahead why her life experiences helped launch a new tv series on hbo. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the "los angeles times" reports on actor ben stiller revealing he was diagnosed with prostate cancer about two years ago. he first spoke about it this week on the howard stern radio
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to happen. so i was scared. you know? i was scared. >> sure. >> one thing that it does, it just stops everything in your life when you get a diagnosis of cancer. >> stiller credited taking a psa test and early detection saved his life. a warning to all of us. the 50-year-old actor has been cancer-free since he had surgery. >> wonderful. >> i think it's great that he is sharing that story. >> true. "the new york times" looks at the impact of google's new phones. the company, yesterday, unveiled the pixel and the she use google's android controlling the hardware and software positions google can directly challenge apple's iphones. new york city post reports on a study about squirrels that might sound familiar to some humans. researchers put tracking device on squirrels and found the females do more work as they prepare for hibernation! they get the supplies and care
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of time loafing around in the sun! >> oh, man. sometimes, i'd like to be a squirrel. >> the women are gathering the flut nuts! busy, busy. >> what are the men doing? >> they are watching! being pampered! >> they are organizing and saying, good job, honey, good job! >> i look at squirrels in such a different was i from now on. >> we should do a study dodominate parart of the c cult! >> indeed! >> saysys a utah father w was char nearlyly 40 dollars to hold his newborn son. it was itemized o on a hospitat bill of more than 1,300 dolllla. the family isn't mad, just puzzled. it starteded -- this happened i 200000. a joke.arted a go fundd me page- a nursee had to bebe paid for supervisining dad's hug. the hospitatal didn't for comme. >> wow.
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at this picture. junior cox is only 2month-old look at his real hair! he already appears to have a thick head of hair! >> how do they explain this? >> the paper says mom has to blow dry because it just takes too long to air dry! she says supermarket shopping takes two hours because of the attention junior gets. he started rogaine early. no, he was born like that. >> i want to see his dad's set everybody wants to know how do you get that hair? more than 1,600 united states service members have lost limbs in the middle east and in afghanistan. david martin this morning on "cbs this morning," shows us the extraordinary story of one service member. thanks to a team of doctors in boston his prospects of managing
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>> this dude, sergeant john peck. >> what, what? >> just got listed for a double arm transplant. >> reporter: that was two years ago when john peck, a marine who lost all four limbs to an explosion in afghanistan in 2010 learned he might not have to rely on prosthetic arms for the rest of his life. >> these things? they suck. i mean, they are horrible. >> reporter: this summer, peck was wheeled into an operating room in brigham women'os packed in ice chests and arms from a young man who had been declared brain dead 36 hours earlier, were rushed in to be attached to peck's stumps. the doctor led a team of 60 surgeons and nurses and technicians. is there a moment of truth in these surgeries, the moment you know you've succeeded in attaching that arm? >> there is a fabulous. flow into his hand and you see it turn pink. >> here we go.
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pulse. perfect. that is that moment you get butterflies and you know this arm is actually back on a live person. >> look at the thumb. still coming back. >> reporter: when peck woke up the next day, he had someone else's arms. >> i feel like these things are really compressing. >> reporter: before he uses them his nerves have to grow down to the fingertips and slow and sometimes agonizing process. >> as though nerves grow back sensations to people like electric shock or sensations like burning. >> one day in the acu, i was crying. i was in a lot of pain, even through all of the meds i was on. on contemplated calling the doctor, doctor, i can't handle this pain. you got to take these arms off me. >> reporter: he withstood the pain and in his second month of rehabilitation. with his medical team constantly checking for any sign his body might be rejecting his new arms.
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that's not clearing up. so that all looks good. >> let's not sugar coat this. you got a lot of hard, hard work to do with an uncertain outcome. >> yeah. >> reporter: it's pretty daunting. >> any day, my body can say nope. not having it. and then go back to brigham and get my arms reamputated even higher than i was before. >> feel okay or too snug? >> it's too snug. >> reporter: for now the arms are in braces to protect them from strain and year before he has sensation in his fingers. >> it's very different having to kind of relearn, right? because you learned with the prosthetic. you got that down. and now you got these arms back and you kind of got to learn how to reuse them. >> reporter: two years ago when we first met john peck he was looking in handicapped accessible house but just
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exercise in frustration. >> see prosthetics didn't really help with this. grabbing. come here. >> reporter: what he is trying to do here is scramble a few eggs someone else has already taken out of the shell. >> that's how i have to open it up. >> that's kind of a pain. >> yeah, it is. >> reporter: even with new arms, he has to learn how to sit up all over again. you're not able to push off with your arms yet? >> reporter: but you will be? >> oh, yes. as soon as those doctors give me that okay, i'll be sitting up like a pro again. that is the head of the bed. >> reporter: everyday tasks the rest of us take for granted are now within his reach, thanks to the arms of a dead stranger. you don't know who the donor is? >> i do not. >> reporter: but his family may be watching this? >> yeah. >> reporter: what would you like to tell the family? >> i'm just grateful that i'm
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hand again, to possibly be able to fulfill my dreams, my lifelong dreams. >> reporter: that dream, even when he had no arms, is to become a celebrity chef. >> i am going to compete on the next food network stars and i'm going to win it and then i'm going to open up a restaurant. >> reporter: if he never has enough dexterity to splice and dice, then he'll just run the place. for "cbs this morning," david martin, in boston. >> you know, a couple of things about that. one, david martin is one of the best friends american men and women who fight for us because he does pieces like this. secondly, it just remind you of the possibilities now for people to regain everyday strength. >> what i admire about john peck is his attitude. we are pulling for you! i believe he is going to do okay. >> he is going to be a chef. >> can't wait to have you at the
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actress isa ray takes her awkwardness to national television. >> my parents are really excited now. now it's on hbo. >> let's take a moment and look at the hbo sign! >> next, how the star of awkward black girl rose from youtube celebrity to hbo. first, it's time to check your locdesert is so comfortabl we hit a warmer 82 yesterday... and we should do that again today. ..... cooling off right now to the 60s. staying dry. ............. plenty of sunshine today and nice and mild again this afternoon with low 80s. it's 7:26 ...
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part of the problem, putting his party and special interests before nevada. i'm proud of my work with the bush and obama administrations on homeland security. and every bill i sponsored as attorney general was passed by democrats and republicans. i'm catherine cortez masto. i approve this message because i'll work with anyone to put nevada first.
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so you can imagine what i thought when i saw donald trump say... "i don't know what i said, ah, i don't remember!" "that reporter he is talking about suffers from a chronic condition that impairs movement of his arms." i don't want a president who makes fun of me. i want a president who inspires me, and that's not donald trump.
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maybe things are starting to look up for me after all. >> hey! i'm so glad you're here. >> awkward. is there any proper way to palau off waving to the wrong person? woo! woo! >> that is a clip from award winning online show called "the misadventures awkward black her episodes have more than 20 million views and her shows have more than 200,000 subscribers. that success landed issa rae a national tv show on hbo. her new show "insecure" premieres this weekend. we sat down with her to make sure why it makes awkward and why it speaks for so many people. i've heard from black women in particular you are telling their story. is that the best compliment you
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when i needed friends in middle school? we could have gone through this together. sorry i'm not looking for a relationship right now. sad face. >> he did not sad face you! i will slap you right. >> reporter: the other thing they like it's authentic telling of black female friendship. >> black women are like the best thing to happen in my life. >> reporter: but what do you think most black women think? >> because we fight all the time. like the rise of reali which, you know, we talked about, i'm guilty of watching, and i love watching. >> reporter: me too. >> but i don't know that life. my friends and i don't throw chairs at each other. the worse we do is curse each other out and that is out of the love. tired of being expected to settle for less. >> her outfit settles for less! >> reporter: insecure, she struggles to fit in just as they
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maryland, and los angeles. >> in potomac, i had a lot of white friends so i spoke properly and that was considered talking white. so when i moved to l.a., they were just like, you're not black. you talk white. this is not -- who are you? i said, i don't know who i am. i thought i was black! you know? >> reporter: issa, you are black. >> my name is jay and i'm awkward and black. >> reporter: when did you know, though, that awkward black girl, >> honestly, it was after the first episode. i was like nervous and anxious about putting that out. i uploaded it early in the morning and just went to sleep. i said i don't even want to know. when i woke up, it had spread and then i started getting random e-mails from people that week that said this is my story, i didn't know what i was but now i can come out of the awkward closet. i said i got to keep going with this. >> it's interesting that it's
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i sit sihere looking at you and there ain't nothing awkward about you. you can say, you don't know me, gayle! >> no, it is. it's just within me. like, it will never go anywhere. like, i've always related to just feeling uncomfortable and out of place. >> oh, my god. you're awkward! >> i know! >> reporter: awkward black girl got the attention of hbo who green lit it insecure. >> we are here. >> reporter: the show follows two friends working their way through romance, career, and everyday life in los angeles. >> are you concerned people think it's only relatable to black women or black people? >> no. i'm concerned for the people who are wanting to watch it. >> i want to talk! >> we are not about to be the black couple fighting in -- >> reporter: you're about to curb your enthusiasm.
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>> did you think i was jewish? >> yes, i did. >> because of -- >> reporter: that show a lot of jewish references. i would either look them up or figure them out by context clues and still laugh. and that was just like, you know, that wasn't an issue for me. i didn't see a show an old jewish guy, what am i supposed to do about that? >> reporter: larry david and i are the same age so i exception to old. we are not old, is sa! >> by old, i meant graceful. >> nice work. very good. the show focuses a lot on issa's love life. who is your number one crush? >> my number one crush is -- >> reporter: drake!
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>> reporter: you knew? >> i love him. >> we said black women don't fight, but i'll fight for for him right now. >> reporter: i will cut you off. >> all right. hands off. >> i got you this. drake would like. >> why you saying i would like drake? >> every black girl who went to college liked drake. >> are you texting drake right >> reporter: no, i'm not. >> were you texting drake at that moment? >> i was! i was! >> i thought so! >> you should meet her. >> oh, my god, that is so good, gayle! >> i first heard about her from larry willmore who said you should know this girl. she is smart and talented. >> played an instrumental role in her career. >> she was on your show. >> she was amazing but the two of you are even more amazing.
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a man is waking up behind bars this morning... after police say he shot and killed his grandmother... then barricaded himself for several hours. this happened over the span of several hours last night at a home near lake mead and rampart. police were called out after the 85 year old woman was shot and killed in the middle of the street. investigators say afterwards .. nearby backyard with a gun .... the standoff lasted several hours before he finally surrendered to police. 8 news now spoke with witnesses .. who say the ordeal: (( el conde luiz // witness: "when more police officers pulled up they had their guns drawn up towards the house that was right across the street." "when i went up the street, the cops were swarming already and helicopters were flying around.")) ((sharie johnson)) >> detectives don't know the man's motives yet..
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violence. /// ((sharie johnson)) retired boxing champ floyd mayweather now in a new fight. a las vegas jewelry company is suing him .. accusing mayweather of stiffing them out of nearly 1 and a half million dollars ... for a diamond- encrusted necklace he bought after his final fight last september. the company claims it's priced at 3- million ... mayweather paid 1 -point- 6 .. but hasn't given them any money since may. forbes listed the 39- year- old as the world's highest paid athlete in 2015 ... cool 300- million dollars./// ((sharie johnson)) people across the country will be signing up for healthcare in less than a month ... consumer advocate michelle mortensen is helping you navigate the process with our call 8 phone bank today! experts will be on hand from health care partners and other agencies.. to answer questions you may have about enrollment in the state or federal exchange.... as well as medicare and medicaid. this runs from noon until 8
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"i don't know what i said, ah, i don't remember!" "that reporter he is talking about suffers from a chronic condition that impairs movement of his arms." i don't want a president who makes fun of me. i want a president who inspires me, and that's not donald trump. priorities usa action is responsible for the content of this advertising. as a marine combat veteran, i understand the sacrifices our military makes. our benefits are earned, politicians like joe heck should understand that. narrator: joe heck voted to shut down the federal government, risking critical services for nevada veterans. and during that shutdown, heck continued cashing his congressional paycheck. his military record deserves respect. but back in dc, joe heck is putting politics before nevada. and that doesn't work for me. narrator: vote vets is responsible for the content
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>> announcer: it's "live with kelly!" today, he's one of our favorite guys, ted danson. and the new series "aftermath," anne heche. and a performance from singer-songwriter tom odell. plus, the "live with kelly and you" contenders. plus, cohost fred savage is back for another day with kelly. all next on "live!" and now, here are kelly ripa and fred savage! [cheering and applauding] ? ?
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