tv CBS This Morning CBS February 16, 2012 7:00am-9:00am PST
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next couple of days. cooling down, some showers unsettled weather for the weekend. >> caption colorado, llc comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west. it's thursday, february 16th, 2012. welcome to studio 57 at the cbs broadcast center. i'm charlie rose. congress cut the late night deal to extend a payroll tax cut as republicans see the political writing on the wall. also iran is sending mixed messages to the world when it comes to its nuclear program. we'll talk with former national security advisor steven hadley. i'm erica hill. g.m. is making a profit again. why is the company cutting off pensions for thousands of employees? you'll also meet a tv reporter now under attack by parents and teens for exposing underage drinking. i'm gayle king. when i see you at 8:00 dr. phil
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mcgraw talks about the tenth anniversary of his show. he's the star of the number one movie in the country, ryan reynolds stopping by studio 57. morning, we begin with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> we've reached an agreement. i'll call you back. >> here you have it. capitol hill negotiators seal a deal on the payroll tax cut with congress set to vote this week. >> i've learned to wait until i see the deal to know that there's a deal. >> this does bring back memories. any old girlfriends here? >> mitt romney looks to regain momentum in his home state of michigan. >> it's really funny that governor romney sort of attacked us as the insider. we're not. >> i swear this is real. this is a real political ad. >> this time romney's firing his mud at rick santorum. >> that was even fun i err in six weeks when santorum is endorsing romney. >> the legislation says life begins at conception. >> oklahoma debates a
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controversial anti-abortion personhood bill. >> the underwear bomber could be hit with five life sentences when he faces a judge later today. >> it's reported the taliban has begun peace talks with the united states and the government of afghanistan. >> video is being released of gang members setting fire to the offices of a newspaper in mekts could he. >> all of that. >> you have to see it to believe it. >> the 2-year-old became stuck in a game machine. >> and all that matters. >> continued win. >> on "cbs this morning" >> do you have to wear underpants anymore? i would think at this stage of your career you have people that could sit there and hug your groin for you. >> i have a little trouble along groin for you. >> i have a little trouble along those lines. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." just a few days ago congress was facing yet another deadline and deadlock over cutting payroll taxes. but late last night house and senate negotiators agreed to
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extend the tax cut until the enof the year. >> the deal also covers extended jobless benefits and medicare payments to doctors according to senator max bachus. >> a lot of folks have lost their jobs and have received unemployment benefits. seniors are going to be able to see doctors to get medicare. it's good for the country. >> congressional correspondent nancy cordes is on capitol hill. good morning. >> reporter: charlie, good morning to you. there were some last-minute disputes last night over how exactly to pay for the $50 billion package. it was quite tense there for a while because this is the kind of thing that has brought down so many bipartisan negotiations here on capitol hill lately. we understand the president made some phone calls. in the end they were able to push through, work it out, and that means that about 160 million americans will keep this payroll tax cut through the end of the year. that's the equivalent of about $1,000 in the average american
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family's pocket, charlie. >> so there's something for everyone here. does either side benefit more politically? >> reporter: well, republicans were the ones who made the major concession here, charlie, and that was giving up their long held insistence that this payroll tax cut had to be paid for with spending cuts elsewhere. that would have meant that negotiators would have had to find instead of a $50 billion in spending cuts $150 billion. they were deadlocked over how to do it. the negotiations were going nowhere. we were up against the deadline. when they let go of that insistance that paved the way. democrats feel they won. republicans feel they have neutralized an election year issue preventing the president and democrats from attacking them. >> nancy, thanks so much. in presidential politics the next big republican contest is the michigan primary at the end of february. rick santorum is surging there as he takes the lead in several national polls.
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>> this morning as mitt romney campaigns in the state he grew up he's calling himself the underdog. chip reid has more on that story. >> reporter: good morning, erica and charlie. michigan could be make or break for mitt romney. he grew up in michigan. his father was the governor. until recently his campaign was hoping for an easy win. not anymore. >> there's a lot of high schoolers here. >> reporter: mitt romney threw himself a welcome home rally last night in grand rapids, michigan. his campaign shifted into high gear, he seemed to acknowledge he has ground to make up. >> it's always a good thing to be seen as the underdog to be fighting hard. never take anything for granted. work very hard. >> reporter: romney hopes a victory in michigan will help him regain the momentum he lost last week when rivalries rick santorum won three states changing the dynamic of the race. >> thank you for the great welcome. >> reporter: in michigan where the unemployment rate is over 9%, santorum is highlighting his plan to revitalize manufacturing. several new polls have santorum ahead of romney in michigan.
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in one poll by 6 points. that has the ad war heating up with romney reminding voters it's his home turf. >> michigan's been my home. this is personal. >> reporter: the super pac supporting his campaign has already committed more than $600,000 to dry to do to santorum -- >> rick scrum, big spender. washington insider. >> reporter: what it did to newt gingrich in florida. >> have more baggage than the airlines. >> reporter: santorum is fighting back with a new ad of his own complete with a romney look alike firing mud at a santorum cutout. >> and in the end mitt romney's ugly attacks are going to back fire. >> today santorum speaks to the detroit economic club to lay out his manufacturing plan. romney gets an important endorsement from the governor of michigan, rick snyder. >> chip, thanks. john dickerson is here with us in studio 57. welcome. >> good morning. >> this could be a tough one. >> yeah, very tough one, also because romney's put all of his chips on michigan.
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they can't really lower expectations, but in that ad when you say this is personal, this was my home, it's really put the focus on michigan. >> where will the romney camp go after santorum? >> two places. one, washington insider. he's a part of the problem and romney will, of course, point out that he was never in washington. also on leadership. romney will say in my business career in turning around the olympics i have these attributes. the problem is he can't go after him too hard because his numbers have been getting worse among independents who he'll need for the general election. also it gets in the way of his message about the economy. if he's attacking all the time he's not able to talk about what people like about romney, which is hopefully his ability to turn around the economy. >> do social conservatives play a role in the michigan primary? >> they do. in the 2008 exit polls after the primary 36% said they were evangelical christians. that's the number to watch. evangelicals have gone for santorum. they've had issues with romney. so that's a key number to watch in michigan.
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>> is this now just down to these two? >> pretty much. newt gingrich would like you to think it's not, but if you look at the polling and cbs had a national poll, but the state polls gingrich is going down. the numbers are going down. that support is going to santorum. there are some places where the vote splits and romney would like that. he'd like the non-mitt romney votes to split between those two. rick santorum is the candidate who's got the grassroots behind him right now. >> when michigan goes to the polls to vote here, romney and arguing that he is from michigan plays how strong? >> it played pretty strongly in 2008. about 42% of the voters in the exit polls said it had something to do with their decision, but that was a totally different race. john mccain pretty much already had it locked up. >> romney was running as a conservative. >> romney was the santorum of his time. now he's got -- so he's playing on the family ties. we'll just have to see how it works here. i mean, the problem in this race
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is people who are looking for a candidate they can connect with at the gut, the guy they love is right now santorum. he's got that energy. the question is whether romney's ties and his family can kind of zap some of that energy. we'll see over the next couple of weeks. there are mix results from iran. the government is proudly announcing its advances in the nuclear program on wednesday and threatening to stop oil exports to europe. >> iran says it's ready to resume nuclear talks with the west. stephen hadley was george w. bush's national security advisor. good morning. >> good morning, sir. >> tell me where you think iran is and is this so much talk or has something changed? >> it's pretty clear that the sanctions are having a bite. it has pushed the iranian currency down dramatically. i think that accounts for iran's indication that they're willing to return to some conversations about its nuclear program. of course, iran doesn't want to
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show weakness so at the same time they say they're coming back to talk they talk about the progress the nuclear program has made and their willingness to cut off some of their european customers who have been involved in the sanctions. it's the kind of conciliation and tough talk that we've seen from iran before. >> you've seen that before. the fear has always been that while they talk or promise to talk, they're making further advancements. >> exactly right, charlie. the issue is is iran willing to give up its enrichment program? that's what all the fuss has been about. most of the people you talk to say iran is just never willing to give up its enrichments program. the international community has really made clear they can't settle for anything less than giving up that enrichment program. while the talking makes people feel good, the real question is is it going to lead to a solution or is it just really an effort by iran to shed some of the pressure and buy some time as it moves forward with its
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program. >> do you think the russians or the chinese can have any impact on iran at this time? >> i think they could have enormous impact if they would join with the sanctions and joining putting pressure on iran so iran is increasingly isolated. now china's said that they will cut their imports of iranian oil by about 50%. that's good. but basically in terms of the u.n. security council where a lot of the work of pressuring iran gets done, china and russia have been iran's protectors in many ways. >> the question always comes up as to how israel looks at the timetable and where they see the red line and where the united states sees the red line. is there a difference today and are the israelis becoming more nervous about where iran is and this new idea of immunity? >> i think they are becoming nervous about iran. they're worried about this second enrichment facility
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around coum which is an underground facility which would make it difficult to take military action against. so i think the israelis are concerned. i think the real question for israel, is the united states serious about using sanction and other options to, as the president has said, prevent iran from having a clear access to a nuclear weapon. i think if israel thinks the united states is serious about that and that really all options are on the table, then they're willing to give us, i think, more time. but if they think we are not serious about seeing this through, then the temptation comes for them to act on their own. that would be unfortunate. >> what would they have to do? what would the united states have to do to convince the prime minister of israel coming here this month that they are serious, that the obama administration is serious? >> i think part of it is to accelerate the sanctions. everybody has talked about the europeans willing to cut off oil, but that oil cut-off will
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not occur until july 1st. it will have some exceptions as i understand it for greece, spain, and portugal. it will grandfather existing contracts. that doesn't sound quite as serious as an effort really to cut off the central bank, cut off the access to the swift financial clearing facility in europe and really put all the pressure in terms of sanctions now. i think that kind of more vigorous effort to the pressure of the regime, and then the second question, charlie, is really how are the iranian people reacting to this? how are they reacting to what's happening in their region? will assad fall in syria? and if so, when the presidential elections in iran comes up in the middle of 2013 and the regime once again tries to fix the outcome of that election, will the iranian people stand for it? i think those are the kinds of questions we need to discuss.
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>> interesting. thank you, stephen. good to see you. >> nice to see you, sir. the so called underwear bomber will be sentenced today in a court. you march farouk abdul-mutallab said he tried to blow up a jet. 289 people were on board. he says he was on a suicide mission for al qaeda. he faces a mandatory life sentence. the oklahoma state senate voted 34-8 wednesday to establish that life begins at the moment of conception. the so-called personhood bill will give embryos and fetuses all the rights and immunities of other citizens. the state medical association is adamantly against it. doctors say it could make some reproductive medical procedures and some kind of birth control illegal. some controversy for the mormon church. it has apologized for having his parents baptized. he survived the holocaust. his parents were baptized in proxy last month in a mormon ritual that was officially
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banned in 1995. some church members still believe it's the only way for mormons -- non-mormons to get to heaven. and it appears whitney houston fans will get to see her final farewell after all. it will be private but we're learning the service will also be streamed live on line and will be available via satellite to broadcasters. they've issued subpoenas to get her medical and prescription records. this morning general motors says no more pensions for white collar workers. at the same time gm is announce being the largest one year profit in its history, $7.6 billion. business and economics correspondent rebecca jarvis is here with more on this. record profits but they're cutting pensions. what's really happening with this? >> what's really happening at general motors right now is that, yes, they have these record profits but they have future issues with their earnings. one of those future issues and one of the biggies is the
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pension plans. there are 500,000 individuals at general motors right now who are on pension plans. they're retirees. that's going to stay constant. what will change here are employees who have been on the payroll since 2001, 19,000 of those individuals will see their pension plan come to an end. they will be converted to a 401 k. that is far less costly for general motors going forward and that is a big issue that american taxpayers are going to be paying attention to because we do own a portion of the company. about 1/3 of general motors as a company is owned by our government. >> they can repay the balance on the bailout a little bit faster? >> there's a lot of political pressure here to get that money out of general motors, but in order to get the money out of general motors, the government contribution to general motors and come away without a loss, we need general motors' stock to be $53 a share. from this point that stock would
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have to double in order for american taxpayers to make back their entire contribution. >> doubling would be a significant to say the least. how is wall street reacting this morning, not only to the plan but also to this q 4 report? >> wall street was anticipating actually a stronger report. even though we got stronger than expected earnings out of -- rather, a big number out of general motors, that $7.6 billion, wall street was expecting an even bigger number for their profits so this actually could be read in a somewhat negative way. reining in those pension costs over the long term is something that they're going to be paying attetion to as well because it's been such a huge issue for the automakers in general, not just general motors. >> thanks. good to have you here this morning. a programming note for you. tonight the "cbs evening news" will have an interview with gm. >> we begin with the seattle times record reporting that a crime stoppers group has bought
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that funeral plot around the graves of josh powell's two children. powell set the fire that killed his boys and himself. his family wanted to bury him nefks to the children. the sacramento bee says a man and woman spent two days trapped in their car. the man hiked for miles through the snow until he found a spot where his cell phone will work. he is being treated for frostbite. >> niagara falls review reports that one of the legendary flying molindas will be allowed to walk across
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a lot of high school kids know where to buy alcohol, no questions asked. so when a reporter started asking questions, no surprise the kids got upset. but their parents also got mad and they took it out on the reporter and on her family. we'll talk with her. also, one of the top names in social networking, reid hoffman will talk jobs and show us how to invest in the startup of you. you're watching "cbs this morning." this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsoredmountain coff. a revelation in every cup.
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firefighters had to get the saws out in lexington, kentucky after this two-year-old was trapped inside an arcade game. she apparently crawled up the chute where the toy prizes come out. the good news, she's okay. not sure that she took anything with her. probably not. >> she has a lot of curiosity. that's her story. >> nice way of pufting it. no one expected this. a reporter from our washington affiliate faced huge backlash from a story she did on underage drinking. a lot of people were issuing threats on facebook. even her teenage children were bullied. >> it got so bad that andrea mccarren stayed off the air for a week. we're going to talk to her about that ordeal and find out what happened when she went back to work with more reporting. stay with us.
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president obama comes to san good morning. it's 7:26. get you caught up with some of the bay area headlines on this thursday. president obama coming right here to san francisco this noon hour. and he will stay here until tomorrow morning. he has no public appearances but will be doing three mighty pricy fundraisers. protestors plan to show up outside some of those events as well. some bar and restaurant owners are threatening to sue walnut creek. that's because the city is now forcing one bar to close early due to fights related to alcohol. and bart is ready to roll extra trains because of the weekend's bay bridge closure. bart will keep 14 stations open round the clock. westbound bay bridge lanes will be closed from tomorrow night until early tuesday morning. traffic and weather coming up right after this.
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towards the south bay it's a mess right now on southbound and northbound 880. we have been following this accident southbound 880 right there by the alameda. we have just confirmed this was a fatal accident. chp and caltrans are both out there with damage to the guardrail. they have to continue their investigation. so southbound 880 traffic is really backed up and they are saying close to 9:00 when they are expecting to reopen two of the southbound lanes in the meantime northbound 880 at bascomb a new accident just coming in. nimitz 880 through oakland there's a stall report near high street so traffic is stacking up behind it. here's lawrence. >> all right, elizabeth. a lot of sunshine coming our way, the offshore winds blowing temperatures all over the map right now but i think toward the afternoon what a day it's going to be. you can see clear skies right now all the way to the coastline. these temperatures something else today. well above average. 68 degrees in napa. 67 in santa rosa. about 66 in san jose. 64 degrees sunny skies in san francisco.
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heavens no, come on. >> do you have to wear underpants anymore? i would think at this stage of your career, you have people that could sit there and hug your groin for you. [ laughter ] just hold on. i got people for college credit for that. [ laughter ] >> jon, i had -- i had a little trouble along those lines. [ laughter ] jon, jon, two giants together. welcome back to "cbs this morning." this morning, we have a serious story about teenage drinking and the way it's accepted by teens and parents alike. >> a recent expose by our washington, d.c. affiliate got
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such a strong reaction, it forced the reporter off the air and put her family at risk. jeff glor has more. >> good morning to you. andrea mccarren did this to deal with some of the fallout. but now she is back refocusing on the issue of underage drinking. >> tonight a gritty look at the realities of destructive teenage behavior. she returned to the air last night after an unusual break that began not long after the veteran reporter from cbs' washington affiliate, w usa began filing a series of reports on underage drinking. >> weep watched and videotaped dozens of teenagers buying alcohol in northwest washington without being asked for identification. >> i'm 18. it is very easy. we've been buying here for like almost two years. >> following that, teens upset mccarren had blown their cover flooded the station's facebook page with angry message. you're now the most hated woman
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in the d.c. metro area 1 person wrote. the comments only got nastier after another report was delivered about a police raid on an underage party. >> hey, everybody clam. >> that bust took a surprising turn when parents arrived at the scene apparently upset with police and mccarren but not their own kids. >> why is there a camera -- >> because they're with us, ma'am. >> i told they were with -- >> after she says her own children were threatened at school, mccarren pulled herself off o the air. letting derek mcginty take over two of her stories. 99% of the feedback they got about her report was actually positive. mccarren herself says it's too big a problem and won't stuff. >> we do intend to pursue every aspect of this story. >> andrea mccarren is us from the wusa studios in washington.
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good morning. >> good morning. >> this is extraordinary. the level -- i mean, were you scared? were you surprised? give us a sense of how you felt when you read these messages and how bizarre and threatening they were? >> charlie, i was flabbergasted. at first i was frightened and then i became angry. it felt like an orchestrated facebook and twitter campaign of hate. people put my home address on the internet. there were calls for revenge and retaliation against my family. i'm now in about my 27th year as a reporter and i have never seen anything like this. it seems like these suburban affluent kids have simply never been told no. they have an inflated sense of entitlement. they feel entitled to cell phones, computers, cars and in this case, they appear to feel entitled to doing something illegal, which is drink underage of 2. >> andrea, one of the most surprising parts about that
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backlash from the outside is the reaction that you got from parents who were equally outraged as their teenagers were. >> one of the most memorable things, erica was at an underage drinking party that was busted by police, one of the parents showed up to collect his son and he said right in front of police, why didn't you run? i mean, why were they outraged, because their kids were identified on television, that's what made them angry? >> actually, we didn't identify them. we were very careful not to. we were on public streets. we could have legally shown their faces but as minors, we chose to protect them. they were outraged at the unwanted attention. it's also incredibly baffling to all of us how d.c.'s liquor control board has taken no action. as a bit of background, i should tell you that two months before we confronted that liquor store owner that has been sell for
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years to minors as young as 14 in plain sight, we brought this to the attention of d.c. police as well as the control board, yet they did nothing. and continue not to have taken any action. we just can't understand what is more pressing, what is more important than protecting the children of the district and surrounding areas in. >> jeff is with us here at the table. what's interesting to me is, did the parents know this was taking place? did they know their kids were drinking? did they know they were going to this particular place and simply said that's okay? >> they may have. but maybe they didn't care that much. andrea, i'm curious where the situation improved for your kids? >> it has. in fact, before i returned to the air last night, i sat down with my kids to talk about, i showed them some of the very kind viewer e-mails supporting what we're doing and i have their full support. but to your last question about whether the parents condone this, there's a disturbing trend
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in suburban washington and that is parents actually hosting these underage drinking parties. some feel it's safer to have them drink at home where they can collect the car keys and as some have said, teach their children to drink responsibly. >> this is almost as much about parents attitude about the children's drinking as it is about a fear that a reporter felt because of threats to her and her family. >> very much so. i think -- you would not believe some of the things we've heard from parents when we've been at the party busts. the first thing they do is threaten to sue. threaten to sue police. threaten to sue us. i mean, it all starts at home. i think that's why we want to get this message out. personally, as a reporter and i think all three of you can understand, i felt like i could not cover one more carload of drunk kids wrapped around a tree and interview one morissette of
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grieving parents without trying to do something with this extraordinary reach of the media to effect positive change. we will absolutely be staying on this story. what began as a week's worth of reports quickly extended to months and now there's no end in sight. >> we'll keep an eye on it too. andrea, appreciate you taking time for us and for doing the reports. >> thank you all. reid hoffman is called one of the sharpest minds in business world. here a few example. facebook, zynga, paypal, linked-in. lucky you. he's here to help you build a plan for success this morning. tomorrow, we'll show you five things that your hotel won't tell you about. five things. you're watching "cbs this morning." [ female announcer ] today is the day
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have you heard about that at the san diego zoo? some of his admirers in silicon valley call him yoda. he's co-founder and executive chairman of linked-in. he was also one of the first investors in facebook. he's shared that wisdom in his new book the startup of you. can i go for a moment to what we talked about when you sat down. you're in austria and you go to this place where you fast. >> you basically have small tiny din bers and small breakfast and lunch. >> how do you do that? a lot of willpower? >> and once you get used to eating less, you actually eat less. >> you have had a string of successes. you have been able to see the future and invest, including the great success of linked-in. what do you know that the rest of us don't know? i don't mean inside information. i mean an ability to look at a
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company and see its potential for an idea. >> the thing that like to invest in are things that defy human ecosystems. millions of people come together, a network, a platform a marketplace. ipt a combination of psychology and sociology. it motivates individuals to think about, this matters to me, whether entertaining or for work, like linked-in. how does the group come together and it's useful to everybody in the network? and then identifying those. that's the investment. >> you can tell us how to find the start-up in all of us? >> one of the things i realized after some number of years of doing linked-in, was that the world has changed in a way that we all need to be the entrepreneurs of ourselves, the ceo of ourselves. that's because of globalization, that's because of acceleration. that's because of competition. change by technology in industries. so the question is how do you adapt to the modern world and the key people who adapt are
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entrepreneurs. we need to be the entrepreneurs of ourselves. >> you said to me in another program, you said look at data. people who can understand and manipulate data are on to one of the big ideas of the future, right? >> yes. well, one. things happening, we all have mobile phones and more and more smartphones. and we're all participating in social network. a lot of data is being generated. what i did is gave a talk last year about data is web 3-0. i think that the -- data will help us maneuver or create applications, help us maneuver in life much better. that's part of one of the pieces of the future of the next generation of internet technology. >> web 3-0. >> what -- linked-in in the way people use it has evolved to help me find a job to help me keep that job and move on to the next thing. that what envisioned, that it would evolve in that way sm. >> yes. everybody needs to be investing in themselves.
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knowing what skills to be doing, what's going on with the industry. what information they need to know. how do they establish their own competitive differentiation. linked-in was designed to be the platform for that. in some sense, the book is actually the conceptual frameworks that are related to how to use the platform. >> when you look at ipos, you have experienced one and i know there's a period about facebook. but just put this whole thing in context. this huge facebook ipo. tell me how large it is, how big it is, what implications it has, not what the price is going to be and who benefits. >> clearly, some people think that the social web has been played, you have facebook, linked-in, twitter. i think that the notion of the social web is actually still at its very beginning stages and the notion of how we form these human ecosystems, these societies together, i think we've just begun to see the interesting apps by which people
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navigate sharing with their friends or managing careers. >> the question is, how are people going to arrive at social media. how will you provide applications that can do things that you never thought you could do with your friends? >> i think there's decades of innovations. >> games is one example. >> one quick question. there's so much talk about young college graduates needing to find
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good morning. it's 7:56. i'm grace lee. president obama will be in the bay area today through tomorrow morning. now, he is not scheduled it make any public appearances. but he will attend three fundraisers all in san francisco. there are protestors who also plan to greet him while he's here. pg&e has agreed to continue talks with san bruno officials over restitution for the deadly pipeline explosion in 2010. now, those talks are expected tomorrow. the utility contacted san bruno officials yesterday after the mayor held a news conference to complain that the talks were stalled. and in just a moment we'll check the weather and traffic. there is a fatal sig alert on the 880 in san jose. we'll have more details coming
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good morning. we have some video just coming into our newsroom of this fatal crash in the south bay. this is southbound 880 right there by the alameda. they still have two lanes blocked off. the coroner just arrived on scene. this accident happened just before 6:00 this morning. and we just got off the phone with chp. they say that traffic alert and lanes will be blocked until at least 11 a.m. so you can see those backups. they extend to milpitas at least in the southbound lanes of 880. again, fatal accident reported in the southbound lanes right there by the alameda. more traffic in a half hour. in the meantime, your forecast with lawrence. >> elizabeth, a lot of sunshine around the bay area, breezes blowing over the mountaintops. those are offshore winds which will bring plenty of sunshine to our skies. temperatures now mainly in the 40s and 50s. by the afternoon, temperatures soaring into the upper 60s in the warmest parts of the bay area. even sunshine and 60s toward the coast.
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do you like green eggs and ham? i do not like them sam, i am, i do not like green eggs and ham. would you like them here or there? i would not like them here or there. i would not like them anywhere. i do not like green eggs and ham, i do not like them, sam i am. would you like them in a hill? >> we all remember that book. the answer is, yes, we do. "green eggs and ham" was tim tebow's favorite book as a child and he's reading it for a program called book it. welcome back to "cbs news this morning." i'm gayle king along with erica hill.
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>> a lacrosse player is accused of murderer his ex-girlfriend. >> prosecutors rested their case after friends testified the defendant was out of control. whit johnson is covering this trial in charlottesville, virginia. >> reporter: good morning to you. the day before-year-old lee love's body was found, they said he was drinking all day long. that night he was worse, he came back, lying about where he was. in wednesday's testimony teammates of u.v. lacrosse player george hughly painted him as a menacing drug. on may 3rd, 2010, hughly was partying earlier around the same time yeardley love was beaten to death. when he came back one teammate said, there was no doubt in my mind there was a change in his demeanor. he had a blank stare on his face. instead, he never told what was
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wrong but gave a story he was visiting friends that the teammates new was a lie. attorney scott goodman practicing law here nor 34 years says the testimony hurts the defense claiming hughly was too drunk to plan a murder. >> if he was aware he had done something wrong, tried to hide, he had the ability to form that mind to say it. >> reporter: teammates say he was drinking all day during a father/son golf tournament. one saw him with a beer in hand about 11:00 a.m. by that night he was sloppy, incoherent, not speaking properly. he was later seen teeing peeing on the side of the building. but by now his friends said this was a regular occurrence, behavior that led to abuse, and had many wondering how it could take place between two successful, well-educated young people. experts of domestic violence are not surprised. >> it can happen to people of all ages, people of all walks of
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life. if you live in inner city or if you live in a very privileged background, it really doesn't matter. you could be a victim of this crime. >> reporter: tragically friends of the couple say they considered an intervention. even on that last night. but it never came. we have also learned that on that night george hugely exchanged text messages with three other women. those continued into the night and even after the attack. >> whit johnson in charlottesville this morning, thank you. we have heard a lot in recent years about parents refusing to have their children immunized. some worried that the vaccines could lead to autism. now more physicians are simply saying no to parents like that according to "the wall street journal." we visited one pediatrician who already sent some parents packing. at the northwestern children's practice in chicago, this is a
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familiar sound. that's because the practice requires parents of all their patients agree to have their children vaccinated. >> vaccines have done anything more than the past 100 years to help improve the health of children. >> reporter: with dr. greg goldstein announcing the policy last year, they knew some parents wouldn't like it and they would just have to go. >> if you don't believe in the fundamental thing we believe in, then you need to go somewhere else. >> reporter: but most like amy and peter agree on the importance of vaccination. >> it's good for her to keep her safe and healthy and also for the community and for, you know, some vulnerable populations out there who could get sick if she wasn't vaccinated. >> i think it makes sense, i just don't want my child to be around kids who aren't vaccinated. >> reporter: this practice isn't the only one. around 25% of pediatricians have fired patients due to vaccine refusal. but it remains controversial. according to guidelines from the
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american academy of pediatrics, quote, pediatricians should avoid discharging patients from their practices solely because the parent refuses to immu his his or her child. however, the pediatrician may encourage the family to find another physician or practice." while some parents remain convinced vaccines could harm their children, dr. goldstein says the real danger is in not getting vaccinated. >> most people my age have never seen a case of polio or measles, but when we ask our parents and our grandparents, they remember it very well. this is the best way to protect kids. >> it is all over. >> pediatrician dr. avana lavine is here. hello, doctor. we talked about you and your colleagues yesterday and most of us were surprised that doctors could do this. >> well, the issue is that the relationship between parents and a pediatrician is a collaboration, it's a
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partnership. and you really want me to see eye to eye on a lot of fundmental issues like safety and disease prevention. i hope parents that come to my office don't want me to stamp their school forms but they care what i have to say. >> can you see yourself saying to a parent, well, if you're not following my advice, maybe you need to take your business elsewhere? >> well, i'm upfront with my patients. on our website before they walk into the door, they see we are sworn advocates of the vaccines, we follow the recommendations by the cdc and we do a lot of prenatal consultants. it is important in my role to educate parents so i want to take the time to listen, hear what their concerns are and explain the science behind it. >> you are the spokesperson for the american academy of pediatrics. we heard what they said, but have you been in a situation where you said to parents, i don't think we are on the same page here, perhaps you are better off with another doctor. >> i have been with patients who have come to me and said, i'm
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uncomfortable, something is scaring me, this is what i read, i have a friend who feels this, but i find if you take the time to work and talk to people, for example, i have patients in my practice that come in once a month instead of every two months to get vaccines feeling more comfortable not getting more than one at a time. that's okay as long as the end result is the child gets vaccinated. >> what's the concern that some parents have is that children not vaccinated can increase their own children, their own risk of contacting an illness or disease. >> that's a true risk. the idea is you want to keep your waiting room in your community safe for your patients. look what happens or what happened in super bowl village. there were two confirmed case of measles. nobody thought they would be exposed to the measles. the problem with the diseases are there is an incubation period where you are contagious and don't know you have the disease putting other children at risk. >> what about the children too young to be vaccinated or children too sick to be
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vaccinated, you want the children to be safe in the community, that's our responsibility. >> and the link, too, that some parents have raised between vaccines and autism. don't some parents have the right to be concerned? >> there's an overwhelming growing body of evidence to show there's not a link between vaccines and autism. >> i see your passion with it and so many parents who say, listen, i have a child and think there's a link, but i hear what you're saying. >> i think when we make medical decisions we have to base medical decisions on science, not on emotion, not on anecdote or what some mother claims to be true for her child. if you look at the science, there's a safe and the most effective way we know to prevent illness. >> so you're saying vak vaccines. >> absolutely. i vabs vaccinate my children. my own father had polio. hear what it was like to be 13 years odd old, to think you're going to die, to watch the
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person next to you die, not to know how to treat it, the problem is vaccines are a victim of their own success. we don't see the diseases that much anymore so parents don't realize how devastating they were for a guy who grew up in the north texas oil field now has the post popular tv show on daytime tv these days. so you think you know dr. phil from his program? you might also be surprised at what you see in our next half
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hour. you're watching "cbs this morning." half hour. you're watching "cbs this morning." little trouble with the eyes. find eye popping savings at the sears president's day event right now, get up to 30% off all kenmore appliances and up to 15% off all other appliance brands sears. number one in appliances. so we made ocean spray cranberry juice cocktail with a splash of lime. it's so refreshing, your taste buds will thank you. mm... oh, you're welcome. what? my taste buds -- they're thanking me. uh-huh. he just showed up with his client unannounced. luckily, we've got kraft homestyle mac & cheese in the pantry.
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is the cbs 2 jumbotron where chicago can watch us on "cbs this morning" every morning. >> i like being on the jumbotron. hello, chicago. ryan reynolds is coming up next. this is cbs this morning. out my. [ designer ] enough of just covering up my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. i decided enough is enough. ♪ [ spa lady ] i started enbrel. it's clinically proven to provide clearer skin. [ rv guy ] enbrel may not work for everyone -- and may not clear you completely, but for many, it gets skin clearer fast, within 2 months, and keeps it clearer up to 9 months. [ male announcer ] because enbrel suppresses your immune system, it may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal, events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, and nervous system and blood disorders have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whether you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doctor if you're prone to infections,
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who do you work for? >> cia. i don't do anything. i sit around in an apartment all day. i answer the phone. i need you to leave. i need you do that for me, okay? >> ryan reynolds plays a cia rookie in the action thriller "safe house." his life is turned upside down by a rogue former agent played by denzel washington. ryan is in constant motion during the movie. but he's taking a breather to be with us in studio 57.
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i can say that we're thrilled you are here. hello ryan reynolds. >> i'm thrilled to be here. thanks for having me. >> can i say what erica and i learned about you, that you can drive while being choked. >> i can. >> he can drive while being choked almost to the point of unconsciousness. >> i have three older brothers. i can do a lot of things while being choked. i could chip you up a souffle. >> you got to be feel pretty good. $40 million weekend opening. what did you think when the numbers came in? >> i was shocked because you're always happy that the movie does well with such a vast audience so early in its release as well. i think i attribute that to a classic david and goliath kind of thing. the audiences love that and they love seeing denzel as a bad guy. he's like a hannibal lekter and james bond. >> i'm not complaining. i'm keeping good company in this
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one. >> can i read a good review about you? do you mind? if i share something about you. >> sure. >> this was in the san francisco chronicle. mr. reynolds rises here to meet mr. washington's challenge. investing your character, matt weston with a slow building believable vulnerability. when you heard you were working with denzel -- i like that. >> that's exactly what i was going for. >> you did it were you and den zen speaking. you gave him a couple black eyes. >> yeah. >> your cell phone went off at an inopportune time. >> the worst time it could go off in the middle of one of the most emotional scenes in the movie. we're there and his stunt guys around us that are dead. all of a sudden, the ring tone starts playing. >> francis -- come fly with me is playing out of my butt. >> you didn't own it at the time. you tried to pass it off. >> i did. i wasn't going out like that.
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when they finally called cut and said whose cell phone is that. denzel said whose cell phone is that. >> i look around and go whose cell phone is that? it could have been worse. my ipod could have played. i have pretty embarrassing stuff on there. we could have got who let the dogs out, all the single ladies. that would have been embarrassing. >> ryan, you do not have all the single ladies on your ipod? >> i do not. >> tell me something you do have that would surprise us. when i think about music, we just came from the grammys, music is all over the place now. i love adele. who do you have that might surprise us that ryan reynolds has? >> aaron neville might be surprising. his version of afterve maria. >> it's beautiful. that might be surprising. sensitive. >> were you and denzel still peeking? >> we're still speaking and are still speaking. he's actually -- he's a method actor. when you work with somebody who
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is going to play that type, a james bond, that can be a daunting thought. when he's off work, he's charismatic kind and open. when he's working, it's all business. >> let me say this about you, ryan reynolds. it this isn't your first rodeo. i've seen a lot of your things, mr. reynolds. i like watching you on the screen. >> thank you again. >> the thing is, here we see you as an action star. i'm thinking you probably know how to fight pretty well. i'm thinking, for instance, i would feel safe around you if i was your girlfriend. >> i would like to think so. >> did you do all your stunts? >> we did all of them. by the nature of the way it's shot, up close and you're meant to see our faces when it's happening. i'm not trying to be a hero. i love it when a stunt guy takes over. that's their job, they love to do it. denzel and i almost all the way. i come -- my older brothers are cops and my dad was a cop. i'm used to that kind of pretty
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physical household. >> did you call them -- you mentioned that you can do anything probably in a choke-hold because of three older brothers. did you call any of them too for the scenes? you're a cop, give me feedback. >> i went out with my brother on a ride-along and my brother works in serious crimes unit this canada and he's a mountie, a federal police officer. he says come out with me, see what it's like. you're working canada. are you going to bust someone from writing an illegal haiku. ha are we looking at here? i went out with him. it was nuts. what he deals with on a nightly basis, i could not believe it. canada, like any other country has social problems and issues. i was -- my eyes were wide open. >> what's your brother's name? >> terry. give terry reynolds a shoutout. >> thanks for coming in this morning. >> ryan reynolds, his movie is safe house. number one in the theaters nationwide. see what you can do america. >> we are ready to call on dr.
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set arrive in san franciscon good morning. it's 8:25. time for some news headlines here on cbs 5. air force one set to alive in san francisco in about four hours -- to arrive in san francisco in about four hours. president obama has no public appearances scheduled. protestors will show up outside some of his fundraising events. there will be traffic issues in the see so take note. today stayed regulators will be at two bay area schools forced to shut down. the institute of medical education is accused of operating without accreditation. it has campuses in both san jose and oakland. regulators will answer questions for the students today. and bart is set to run trains all night long this weekend during the bay bridge shutdown. 14 stations will stay open when
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wait, what? and only 3 likes? honey, it's embarrassing. carol's son got over 12 million views on that dancing squirrel video. don't you want that? i...i suppose. now go make your dad and me proud. try something funny. [ male announcer ] now everyone's up to speed. get high speed internet for $14.95 a month for 12 months with a one year term. at&t. good morning. well, we're continuing to follow this fatal accident in san jose. it's in the southbound lanes of 880 right past the alameda. this is some video taken by our news crews a little while ago. you can see the car there one
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of the cars involved in this accident. so a traffic alert is still in effect. they are saying until about 11:00 this morning. at last check they still had two lanes blocked off. it is really backed up in the south bay. you can see some of the backups there. it is jammed all the way to milpitas on southbound 880. in addition to the investigation, there was also some damage to the garrett rail so that's why it's taking so long to clear. let's get a quick check of 880 in oakland. it is also a mess here because of an earlier accident by 23rd. there was a stall in the area. 880 is jammed towards downtown oakland. that's traffic. for your forecast, here's lawrence. >> the weather looking good outside. sunshine all the way to the coastline. let's take you outside now over san francisco. looking toward the golden gate bridge. we have sunny skies just a couple of high clouds cruising by and that's going to be the worst of it for today. temperatures now in the 40s and 50s. still breezy especially over the mountaintops. but down below not too bad. and by the afternoon, near 70 degrees in the napa valley. 67 in santa rosa. 64 in san francisco. and about 66 degrees and sunny in san jose.
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one of the workers say that baby adopts almost everything. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i think baby looked a little rough in germ nary. i like that word, erica. >> the king of daytime tv can be a bulldog himself some say. dr. phil mcgraw is number one in the ratings after ten years of straight talk. >> what is your point, jeff? seriously, i'm trying to help you here. do you hear what you're saying? what gives you the right to imprison your wife in the basement? [ applause ] what gives you that right? >> that's a good question. this past weekend is visited dr. phil's home in l.a. this tough guy turns into a big old softie at home. >> every home we've had has been really a retreat where we could go and you kind of escape and able to kind of relax and -- here, even though we're in l.a., we're kind of living out in the
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woods. >> what's your favorite thing to do at the house. >> i love to hang. but i love to play tennis as you know. here we go. >> a tennis court is part of the hilltop hideaway that dr. phil calls home. >> go, go. perfect. >> he bought the family retreat a year ago as a surprise for his wife robin. >> i said the gates are open. let's drive in and look. >> she said no, no. we're trespassing. don't go up there. >> so i drove up there and i said the door is cracked a little bit. you want to look inside. no, i'm not going. get back in the car. phillip get back in the car. >> i got her on to the front porch and pushed the door open and then i scooped her up and carried her across the threshold. >> to say this is ours? >> this is your new home. >> and clearly, family is the subject closest to his heart. >> i love so much that you're a grandfather and what i really love is that you have a granddaughter. >> she's delicate.
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>> avery. >> avery is very delicate. >> what does she call you? >> she calls me pops. >> pops? >> yeah. >> there's a very soft side to you. >> you know, i basically don't like confrontation. >> you don't? . that surprises me, i have to say. >> when i was growing up, i would go in and out my bedroom window to keep from going through the house because i didn't like confrontations. there was a lot of that going on. i'd do anything to avoid it. >> but you're in -- >> i never confronting to be confronting. i never support just to be supportive. i assess the situation and if somebody is really headed for self-destruction, i am definitely willing to step up and give them a wakeup call. when the dr. phil show premiered in 2002. >> this is our first show. this is number one x okay? >> he made this promise to his audience. >> you're not going to have to guess at where i stand on an
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issue when i get through talking. you are in trouble. you're not even there. you just hair and a sweater. what gives you the right to imprison your wife in the basement? what gives you that right. >> not telling you the truth, you have such a unique ability of saying to them in a way that you still give people their dignity. i marvel at how you're able to do that. i'm at home screaming, they're lying. >> the truth is you have a drug problem. and they are offering you help. >> it frustrates me because i realize, if somebody comes to see me, think about it, they've written a letter. big threshold. then they get a phone call, they have to answer tons of questions. they go through all of this effort, that energy to get to that moment and then lie? are you kidding me? you lie to your father, you lie to your mother, you lie to
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everybody involved and then all of a sudden you're going to get self-righteous about the fact that you don't like what they explained to you and what they didn't. that's the pot calling the kettle black, my friend. >> that's why i tell them look, don't blow it, this is your time. this is your moment. this is the precipice. this is the moment. don't blow it. >> what is your point, jeff, seriously? >> it's that kind of honesty that carried the show through ten seasons and made it a powerful platform for social issues. >> the most dangerous time for any woman in an abusive relationship is immediately when she leaves that relationship. >> his messages were also heard in washington. lawmakers invited him to testify as an expert on cyber bullying. >> more than ten million children will witness their mothers, aunts, sisters being threatened, intimidated or beaten. >> i'm very proud that they say this is the guy with his finger
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on the pulse. we want him to tell us what's going on. >> is there anything that you think i'm not going there, i'm not touching that. >> i don't get into politic. >> because? >> it doesn't feel right for me. i think the reason is, i don't know enough about it to talk about it. >> do you ever look back an shows and have regrets for the way you've handled anything you've done on the show? >> i've never done a perfect show. so i would have to say every show i've ever done -- >> you don't think you've ever done a perfect show? >> gosh, no. >> he may be his own harshest crit critic. >> viewers embraced the show through 1,000 episodes. his audience continues to grow. >> i remember, phil, ten years ago, came to california we were sitting on the dr phil set. i said are you nervous. you said no, not a bit. how are were you able to be so
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confident. >> the thing that gave me such confidence, look, we're delivering commonsensical relevant action oriented mfgs to people's homes every day for free. come on. we're in a society where 40% of the people don't have any kind of healthcare whatsoever. they can't afford to go to a therapist, can't afford to ask the questions that they need to ask and here's somebody delivering that to their home every day, talking about parenting, marriage, family. all of the problem solving. how can that not work if you do it right? >> dr. phil told me he's excited to go to work today as he was ten years ago. he never gets bored, never tires of helping people with their problems and i asked him how long he'll continue the show. he said he sees no end in sight. you see shall he is a big softie. and i lot of that about him. he bought that house without telling his wife robin because he knew she liked it. he just didn't randomly buy this house. they have been married for 35 years and she comes to the
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taping of every single one of his shows. >> he walks out with her. >> every single day. >> listen, he is -- i have to say a romantic. i don't think people see that about phil because for their 20th anniversary. we like this as girls. charlie, i don't know if you're romantic guy. listen to this. he gave her a book of poetry representing every year of their 20 years together. if i could work through the garden, you're the flower i would pick for another 20 years spend. give you some ideas. >> i do like that. >> you're welcome. i had a great time. i had a great time. >> r pay spin around the neighborhood. >> it's a great success story in
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television. >> it is. >> he got his start and they make a ton of money. what does he mick a year do you think? >> i was raised in a house where it's i am polite to ask about money, charlie. i don't know. if i knew, i would tell you. i don't know. let's just say he's doing very well. >> he could buy a lot of those houses. >> when i was little, i would say mom, are we rich? no. it's i am polite. we're doing very well. >> including money. >> and relationships. >> more power to him. >> yes, yes. >> americans like to see people do well. >> they really do in that score, phil, mission accomplished. i had a good time. i think so too. i love a guy who loves his wife and doesn't mind saying it. he's definitely a family man. to see more of the visit, including dr. phil as a grandfather as you see, they call him pops, go to our website, cbs news.com/"cbs this morning." if you're wondering where the fountain of youth is, dr. daniel amen says teen your ears.
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♪ doctors tell us ha diet and he canner sies are the keys to staying young and healthy. what if it's in your head. dr. daniel amen says we need to think differently about our mental and physical health. his prescription is in a new book called "use your brain to change your age. requesting "welcome. >> thanks for having me. how do we do that? >> what we do at the amen clinics, i have four clinics. we do brain imaging. over the last 20 years, we've done 70,000 scans. what we see is, over time, the brain becomes less and less active. it's actually quite terrifying. >> yeah. >> but the exciting news is it doesn't have to. if you make good decisions about your physical health and your
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emotional health, you literally can slow down or even reverse the aging process. >> i was feeling pretty good, but i read -- was reading a chunk of your book and realized i'm doing everything wrong. for instance, dr. amen, i was in l.a. this past weekend and i disconndi discovered a new doughnut place. i'm thinking six is not a good dee significant. if you have a choice between something sweet or a vegetable, choose the healthier. we all mow that. >> i never thought about it. the point i'm making is that i never knew it affected my brain, i knew it affected my weight. >> one thing people don't know, as the weight goes up, the actual size and function of their brain goes down. we published two studies this year. it's really quite terrifying. >> your weight goes up, you get a little stupid? >> as your weight goes up -- the
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size, the physical size of your brain and how it functions and works goes down. with two-thirds of our country over weight, one-third obese, it's a serious crisis. but the exciting news, that's what i talk about in the book, is if you get on the right program, brain smart program, you can reverse it. so at the amen clinics, we did the nfl studies. we scanned and treated 115 nfl players. we showed -- and i talk about this in the book. the damage was terrible. but on a smart program, you can reverse that damage and i mean, how exciting is that. 70% of our players had improved memory. just by doing the right thing. >> speaking of memorynd alzheimer's and dementia, what are we learning? what's on frontier of understanding and being able to do something about alzheimer's had. >> you know, alzheimer's disease starts perhaps decades earlier
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than you have your first symptoms. you can't wait to try to prevent it or decrease your risk pour it. we need to really start intervening early to get people to have healthy habits and keep them. but you know, it's your brain that makes every decision. >> intervening early means to do what? >> it means to not be over weight. to be smart about what we eat. to not get a brain injury. having a brain injury increases your risk. in the nfl setting we did, we saw high incidence of early dementia and depression. so should you really let your children play tackle football? it may come to haunt them later in their life. >> you're saying to intervene early and alzheimer's, the thing you should do is not get fat and not have brain injuries? >> and avoid bad things, drugs, alcohol, injuries, environmental toxins and do good things.
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right diet, exercise, simple supplements, fish oil, multiple vitamin. vitamin d levels are low in two-thirds of us. it's a very simple fix. either get a little more sun or to take a vitamin d supplement. the exciting news and we've seen this, so i have a whole group of 80-year-old brains. as a group, they took terrible. but there's this small group that look amazing. >> because why in. >> 80-year-old people that you have imaging their brain, is that what you mean? >> right. so on the monitor you can see a typical 80-year-old brain which is not good. overall really low activity, and then a really healthy 80-year-old and her habits, throughout her life are what made the difference in her brain. >> if we have one thing to do today, i get the diet and exercise, is there anything that i can do today as i leave you, i want you to --
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>> play this game i play with my daughter. i i've played it since she was two. it's called chloe's game. anything i do, good for my brain or bad for my brain. when you're thinking about the six doughnuts, good for my brain or bad for my brain. you have to want to love your brain. it makes all the decisions that help you be the best you can be. >> i love what you said. everything you do involves your brain. i get it. dr. amen thank you very much. >> thank you. be careful what you ask for, speaking of healthy eating, so not. when you order the triple bypass burger. one man did. he ended up in the hospital. we'll show you why some of the customers thought it was a big fake thing. bay area !
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there while eating a 6,000 calorie burger, some patrons thought it was all an act. john blackstone reports. >> reporter: what happened at the heart attack grill in las vegas didn't stay in las vegas. the cell phone video went viral. paramedics wheeling a man having a heart attack out of a restaurant that advertises its food can kill. it's the kind of publicity other restaurants would run from. but not this one. >> we throw catchy slogans at you, like taste worth dying for. >> jon basso owns the heart attack grill. he calls himself dr. jon and his waitresses nurses. diners wear hospital gowns. >> i'm here to tell you straight up, i'm here to make a buck. >> basso says plenty of restaurants serve unhealthy food. he's just honest about it. >> anything that's legal that you can eat or drink, i'll sell it to you. >> every once in a while you have to indulge. we thought we would indulge
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today. >> who doesn't want to risk a little danger every once in a whi while. if i could put danger back into ham burrers, all the better. >> on saturday night, the reality of what that can lead to hit hard when a man eating a burger called a triple bypass suddenly seemed like he needed one. waitress tracy chamberlin called 9-1-1. >> i'm nowhere near a nurse. i play one when i come to work. >> the ambulance got there first. >> people were taking pictures. i had people asking me, is this a stunt? do you do this on a regular basis? >> no, it's not a stunt. this man is sick. >> we asked a cardiologist if one hamburger, even a huge one could cause a heart attack. >> i don't think hamburger bite or eating a whole burger can give you a heart attack. the victim would probably be okay but for medical privacy reasons won't release his name or condition. for those who suspect a publicity stunt, las vegas fire and rescue confirms a man with heart attack symptoms was picked
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up here and taken to the hospital. we have confirmed he left without paying for his triple bypass burger. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone x las vegas. >> gayle, tell me -- >> why did i think you were coming o me, charlie. go to erica on this. i know my eating habits need work. i get it. >> i didn't say that. >> what were you going to say? this will be good. >> we're ready. >> it will be very good. >> why were you going to eat six doughnuts? >> see. charlie -- >> no, no. >> i heard about the place and i heard it was really good. i have a terrible sweet tooth. >> you were just sampling them, weren't you? >> it's a place you found in l.a. >> what do you think are the lessons of the last two segments? simple. you want to be healthy, don't eat so much. not for you. i'm not preaching to you. but -- >> if now -- >> because i like you so much. >> this is awkward. >> i love you both. we're all going to get a salad
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mallicoat with your c-b-s fe headlines... big good morning. it's 8:55. i'm frank mallicoat with your cbs 5 headlines. checkbooks and protestors are expected to greet president obama with his bay area visit today. air force one lands at sfo in three hours. he is not scheduled for public appearance but will attend three fundraisers. the "chronicle" reports that the as would like to sign dh manny ramirez. he retired last season rather than sec a second suspension for -- rather than serving a second suspension for violating the drug policy. he would have to sit out for the first 50 games. they could sign him this weekend when they open up training camp. new report raising questions about the foreclosure process in san francisco.
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the "new york times" analyzed an audit by county officials. the report found almost all the foreclosures had some irregularities including suspicious documentation. it is a beautiful day. with more on that let's kick it over to lawrence. >> the nicest day of the week. sunshine to the coastline. a few high cloud overhead toward mount diablo right now but other than that, we are looking good. the offshore winds continuing to blow all the way to the coastline. that will keep your skies mostly clear. 60s at the beaches. but boy, some of these valley temperatures, something else with these down slope winds seeing highs of 68 degrees in napa. before 7 degrees in santa rose. and about 66 degrees in san jose. next couple of days changes in the works. more clouds on the way for tomorrow with a sea breeze and cooler temperatures. over the weekend chance of a few more showers coming our way a little unsettled through sunday. looks like it will be dry on president's day. we'll check your "timesaver traffic" next.
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good morning. 880 in san jose is still a mess. southbound 880 right by the alameda we have been following developing news all morning. a fatal accident. there was also some damage to the guardrail so they have two lanes blocked off and it will likely be out there those lane closures for another hour. jammed to milpitas. unfortunately, it's having a ripple effect on other freeways in the south bay. northbound traffic on 280 very heavy heading out of downtown san jose. and in the north -- east bay
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