tv CBS This Morning CBS November 1, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west. it's friday november 1st 2013. welcome to cbs this morning. inside the obama care debacle, cbs news reveals how tough the health care roll out really was. this morning what the white house is doing to turn it around. >> did vice president joe biden nearly lose his spot on the ticket to hillary clinton? chief of staff bill daley was there and takes us inside the oval office. >> this is certainly not your normal yard sale. only on cbs this morning, oprah winfrey tells us why she is selling off parts of her estate. >> today's eyeopener, your world in 90 seconds.
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>> water rushing like a river in front of our driveway. >> we lost everything. >> deadly storms sweep across the nation. >> a powerful system stretching from maine to louisiana. >> killing at least three people. >> the storm will hammer the area. >> a tornado or two. >> nearly a foot of rain leading to dozens of rescues. they released documents indicating how many americans enrolled for obama care on day one. hoping to sign up 7 million people. >> it's not going to work and it's exploding in front of our eyes. >> in 2011, they strongly considered replacing joe biden with hillary clinton. >> they are all okay after the bus tumbled off the bridge into a creek. >> a bomb threat forced a plane to make an unscheduled landing in phoenix.
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>> we went down fast. >> police have video of toronto mayor smoking crack. >> get off my property! >> a beluga whale has fun with a young boy. >> all that. >> straight finishes for griffin. >> happy halloween. a shirtless boy on a horse. >> celebrating halloween at the white house. >> he greeted ghouls and gob lips and handed out candy. >> on cbs this morning. >> the faa said they can start using cell phones and ipads in take offs and landings. in related news everyone was already doing that. >> this morning's eyeopener presented by toyota. let's go places.
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brought to you by toyota. let's go >> welcome to cbs this morning. good morning. >> good morning and happy friday. >> indeed. a month ago today the obama administration launched healthcare.gov. this morning we know how few americans were able to sign up for coverage at the start. >> as cbs news first reported last night, there were only six health insurance enrollments on october 1st nationwide according to government documents turned over to congress. jan crawford has done reporting on the story and joins us. >> good morning. six people, six enrollments on day and that number by the end of day two is 248 across the country. this time last month, i was in maryland. they had 40 appointments scheduled on day one and all the people so excited to sign up. at that clinic they were not able to sign up a single person.
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the promise of obama care for many was about the reality. >> this means a lot to me to be able to actually sign up for health care. >> the excitement quickly turned to frustration and it became clear the problem was widespread. no one could find anyone who signed up. "the washington post" listed it as an imaginary unicorn. they went into damage control even giving names to reports who enrolled. that's how we found phil cher bert this salt lake city. >> i don't know anyone else. >> they struggled to find affordable insurance because of a preexisting condition. after days of trying he broke through and enrolled at a savings of more than $700 a month. >> i was happy. ecstatic. wow. i'm finally insured. >> he is the exception. of 63 success stories from the
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white house, only nine went through the federal website. it's more than the website causing concern. the analysis shows three million people were told they would lose their current insurance because it doesn't comply with new standards. most of them have just policies that provide no real coverage. that's not the full story. bob has been in the insurance city for 40 years. >> my wife and i have an individual health insurance policy and the cadillac plan. >> he was new to the high quality policy and replacement comes with a higher price tag. >> the closest policy offered on the exchange in my state costs me 66% more. >> the white house announces the ongoing problems with healthcare.gov and said top experts from companies like google are finally fixing the problems. >> incredible. thank you. this morning a new book reveals what may be the biggest secret
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from last year's presidential campaign. the white house considers replacing vice president joe biden with then secretary of state hillary clinton. in april of 2012 secretary clinton was asked if she was ready to run with president obama. >> that is not going to happen. that's like saying if the olympic committee called you up and said are you ready to run the marathon, would you accept? well, it's not going to happen. >> i disagree. i think it's possible. unlikely. >> it's more than unlikely. >> bill daley was the president's chief of staff at that time and said he did ask them to look into the idea so good morning. >> how are you, charlie. i think if i may, there is a little bit of overhype with the book coming out. let me read you what the book said. they had been discussing the wisdom of replacing biden with
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hillary. more than discussing it, they were exploring in the campaign and focus groups and daley himself had been the most vocal exponent of looking into the merit of the idea. >> i think it was the job of the chief of staff to recommend a lot of things outside the box and look at things but not for a moment was there a serious discussion or a belief that joe biden should be replaced. period. that doesn't mean issues were not looked at. lots of issues in 2011 were looked at. even in the lead to be honest with you in the oval office anybody who brought this idea into the president in the oval office would have been thrown out immediately. in 2011 part of my job as i saw was to think outside the box is say what if and maybe we ought to look at this issue or that issue. it was looked at but it was never seriously looked at in the sense that there was a belief that it ought to be done or needed to be done.
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the truth is any research done to affirm the fact was not an issue that the voters cared about or thought should be done. the president in my opinion believed then and now not for a moment would he consider that. >> you acknowledge the what if and there was polling and focus groups done on whether hillary clinton would help the ticket? >> there was research done on all sorts of issues and people and whether or not this or that and that's a legitimate thing that campaigns do all the time. it was not done with the intent that this ought to be done and need to do it but in 2011 as you remember it was a very difficult political year. my sense was we have to look at everything. it was a very difficult period politically. not for a moment as far as i know any of the senior people including myself thought that was a good idea or needed to be done or should be done or
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whether the president would ever even seriously consider it. if you thought it was the right thing to do. nobody that i know of the senior people including myself thought at that point it would be a good idea. >> yet did hillary clinton know this would be done? >> not that i know of. >> the book reports she did know about it. >> she didn't find out from me. >> you said john heilman was the author was book and said he thought she knew. >> as i said that was news to me because this was not something that was kept a secret in organizations. that's rather difficult. i don't have any knowledge of whether or not she knew or anybody else. >> i'm looking for a short answer. you were there when the president was trying to work on affordable care. what surprises you most about what happened to it? >> the truth is i wasn't there when it was passed. when the bill was put together.
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what surprises me is the inability of the website which was the primary way that people were going to get into the exchanges is working. the complexity of it. they worked in government not as chief of staff, but secretary of commerce. there very few big major projects the government does anymore in a good way. the bigger they are and the more complex and the more costly the more challenging for the government to perform. that's a question that has to be looked at as separate. >> good to see ynd thank you for joining us. starting this morning, food stamp recipients will see benefits reduced. more than 47 million americans that include some 900,000 veterans. a family of four will receive $36 less each month and the cuts come with the end of the stimulus program. it almost cut $80 billion a
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year, but house republicans are looking at making more spending cuts. >> if you are applying expect see veer floods. storms dumped a foot of rain and water rose to the roofs of some homes. >> in nashville, a 9-year-old boy died after being electrocuted by a downed power line. tornado watches had been issued for the area. in arkansas storms slammed nearly a dozen homes, businesses and a church. carol erickson looks at what's in store. >> good morning. as you can see the wind and rain hit here in philadelphia and in many states up and down the east coast this messy weather has hit there too. the morning commute has been a mess in a number of locations. in the southeast severe thunderstorms from pensacola to charlotte and we are going to see showers from richmond
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through maine. the most serious this morning will be the wind. there high wind advisories from richmond virginia past new england. we are talking about gusts up to 60 miles an hour from buffalo and 40 miles an hour possible for philadelphia. with the high winds, a risk of downed trees and power lines which could lead to widespread outages. drivers need to take precautions. strong gusts make for accidents and at the very least make driving and steering very difficult. temperatures along the east coast will be higher than normal as a result of the wind system. 70 degrees in new york and boston and 76 in d.c. don't put away the jackets just yet. once the wind and the rain roll through, the temperatures are going to be going back down to normal and it will be feeling a lot more like fall around here come sunday. charlie? norah, back to you. >> in kansas a school bus
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toppled on its side into a creek. kids had to escape. it happened yesterday in douglas southeast of wichita. they had jackets on the children and got them out safely. the driver suffered minor injuries. >> now to the middle east the latest raid to syria is another example of how the civil war could turn into a regional conflict. margaret, good morning. >> good morning to you norah and charlie. they hit two military bases inside syria. the attack comes as allies warn that the conflict is spilling over. the israeli strikes hit two sites. in damaska and another around the port city. they targeted missiles headed to hezbollah fighters. the israelis found to prevent any weapons fight is at least
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the second military intervention this year. >> there is no strategy right now for the opposition. none. >> at a hearing in washington the u.s. ambassadors got an earful for republicans about the continued instability that led to the israeli strikes. tennessee republican bob corker said the obama administration broke its promise to support the rebels. >> you feel good about what our country is doing with the opposition right now. >> there is not a person on my team at the state department who doesn't feel frustrated by the syrian problem in general. >> ford said the rebels were angered by the u.s. decision not to carry out missile strikes and argued the u.s. is helping and according to a recent delivery with ten pickup trucks to the rebels. john mccain said that won't help them win. >> trucks. it's a great thing. trucks and ship loads of weapons come in as plane load after made
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load lands and providing all kinds of lethal weapons and we gave them trucks. >> members of both parties criticize the policies a human rights group reported the the death toll reached 120,000 people. >> can i say our efforts to create a political solution or contain the civil war are a success? no. >> u.s. inaction angered a number of u.s. allies in the region including saudi arabia. secretary kerry heads there next week and will try to reassure them that the u.s. is trying to stop the killing and is pushing for peace talks to begin this month. >> speaking of the secretary of state, what is he saying to allies about vying? >> secretary kerry spoke to a london audience and said surveillance has gone too far. he blames technology for being
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on what he calls auto pilot. he said he and the president learned about surveillance after the fact, but he defended the program saying that the surveillance prevented terror attacks. kerry in the next few days will have difficult conversations because he is headed to europe. >> thank you. airline passengers are celebrating this morning after years of debate. the faa is finally relaxing the rules for using electronic devices. flyers will use smart phones tablets and ereaders. they must be in airplane mode or connected to the plane's wi-fi. the travel editor is in abu dhabi this morning. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. here's what happens. probably the worst kept secret because the last months has been clear, not if they would relax the rules, but when. the new rules mean airline
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passengers can have a gate to gate experience using personal devices. blackberries and kindles and ipads meaning they can use them on the ground as long as they are in airplane mode and the old rules kick in with wi-fi on the plane, they can use it. the real problem is when is it going to happen? airlines have to apply to the faa to say they are capable of doing this. two airlines have done that. jet blue and delta. they have to weigh in as to whether or not they are concerned. the problem is they have to be sky cops. people are using their blackberries right now on the plane. how are they going to know whether they are on or off or in airplane mode. they have to go row by row and passenger by passenger and do a hand inspection some that's not going to happen. it will happen probably at the first of the year. >> thank you very much. time to show you this morning's headlines. the "new york times" said a federal appeals court blocked changes to the stop and frisk
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policy. they ruled that the practice discriminated against minorities but questioned impartiality and is off the case. >> the dallas morning news said a court reinstated restrictions in texas and take effect today as the legal battle continues. doctors who perform abortions are required to have admitting privileges in nearby hospitals. >> "the washington post" looks at aaron alexis and they learned he had been granted secret clearance even though no one looked at the police record in a background check. alexis was arrested in 2004 for shooting another person's tires in seattle. >> a chicago tribune said president obama is in damage control mode over leaks from edward snowden. he ordered the nsa to stop spying on the international monetary fund and the world bank headquarters in washington. the white house won't say if they eavesdropped on them in the past. >> the new york post looks at a speed demon who sed a record
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racing from new york to california. it took less than 29 hours and the old record was 31 hours. he did not get a ticket and averaged almost today likely to be the warmest day of the week. we are starting out a little chilly in spots this morning. out the door mostly clear skies. numbers in the 40s and the low 50s right now in most spots. by the afternoon, though, how about this? plenty of sunshine all the way to the beaches. some mid-60s coastside. maybe as high as 71 in san francisco. and about 76 degrees in san jose. next couple of days, big changes coming our way. a cold front more clouds and cooler temperatures for the weekend. >> this national report sponsored by wal-mart. wal-mart's got the season's hottest gifts at everyday low prices. come in and see for yourself.
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an unprecedented view an unprecedented view in guantanamo bay. we look at the 9/11 detapes. they say the biggest trial of its kind in more than a half century. >> new controversy for a man accused of smoking crack. toronto police said they have their hands on a video. s on a video. >> what don't you understand? get off the property partner. >> now rob ford faces more pressure to resign. and the collapse of one of the wealthiest people. >> what do you think your net
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your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald hi, everyone. and good morning. 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. get updated on some bay area headlines now. a woman is in critical condition after she was shot at a hayward apartment complex. it happened about 11:00 last night on sleepy hollow avenue. there are no witnesses and no suspects. a drunk driver is suspected in a deadly accident on 680 in milpitas at 2:40 this morning just south of the scott creek road off-ramp there. one highway worker was killed. another was injured. the driver was arrested for felony dui. here's liz with how that is now affecting traffic. >> it's a mess until 8:00 before they open the slow lane that's closed since early this morning. northbound 680 approaching scott creek road that's where the traffic alert remains in
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effect. right now we are seeing the backups extend past montague expressway. also, some new bart delays about 10 minutes right now. specifically at the oakland coliseum on the fremont line in all directions. and a bright spot, the bay bridge. while the delays are getting worths in the last 15 minutes, it is "friday light" only backed up towards the end of the parking lot. that is your also "kcbs traffic." lawrence has a check of your forecast after this break. female narrator: the mattress price wars are ending soon at sleep train. we've challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic versus beautyrest with big savings of up to $400 off.
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well it's halloween. putting on the halloween outfits, this was matt lauer on the "today" show. hoda and kathie lee. these are adult men and women making a living on network television. we do have schaffer on 60 minutes. >> it seems america is a country of hope. >> welcome back to cbs this morning. coming up in this half hour the mayor said he had no reason to resign, but police have a video that may show the man smoking crack cocaine. we have new information on the story that is shaking up canada's largest city. >> they call him the brazil yon
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air. how did he lose it all? anthony mason is in the toyota green room with the story of an oil magnet who lit it up high and dry. >> on 60 mondays, getting unprecedented access of the guantanamo bay knave base in cuba where alleged 9/11 terrorists will face trial in the biggest war crimes tribunal since nuremberg. we have general mark martin. >> general martin knows as lot is at stake. the 9/11 defendants must be seen as getting a fair and legitimate hearing. >> we are have to make sure what we do is justice and it can't be accused of being vengeance. that's a great challenge. >> we have talked to some of the defense attorneys and they have told us it's a charade.
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>> i don't think any system what the counsel says about it. har har hard as he tries to see that it's a fair trial, he keeps running into one obstacle after the next. starting with the reputation of guantanamo where 164 detainees sit in the cells, most for nearly 12 years. except for the 9/11 five, most have not been charmed. cried out when he saw our cameras. >> you leave us to die? let the world hear what's happening! >> 12 years. no charges. >> that's one of the reasons i have a sense of urgency to try everyone we can try. >> does this taint what you are doing? >> i don't believe it taints
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but influences perceptions. >> joining us this is remarkable. what defense will they raise? >> we are in pretrial hearings at the moment and they have been going on and on and will go for another year. at the moment the big issue is torture. all of the five defendants this is the 50 trial from 9/11. all of the defendants were taken to these black sites and submitted to harsh techniques and some were waterboarded. the defense lawyers are fighting to get some of that evidence into the trial. they are being blocked because all of that has been classified by the cia. they are not allowed to bring it up. that's the pretrial argument at the moment. >> take us inside. you were walking the halls some. >> i was. extraordinary access. you see that man yelling. he was speaking from such a depth inside. i have to say it shook me.
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it really shook me. i knew that everybody or i assume everybody had done some dastardly deed. i am not 100% sure but i assumed it and yet they were behind in cages. >> solitary confinement? >> they are on a cellblock so they can talk to each other, but they are behind bars in little cells and have been there for 12 years without charges. that's what he was screaming about. from the depths. you are a human being and he is a human being and had horrible emotions going through that. >> one of the defense attorneys said every day you listen to the national anthem in cuba and the constitution is the persona non-grata. >> well, as the general said to me, you can't always listen to what the defense attorneys say. they are putting out their best arguments. he is saying we should be
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allowed to present how our clients were treated. this goes back to the harsh interrogations and how they are being treated here locked up with the charges. they want that in the courtroom. they want that on the public. >> they say they are being listened to and don't have privacy. >> this is a part of our piece because they found there were listening devices when the lawyer was talking to the clients. the client-attorney privilege was in some way abused and that became a big pretrial issue. >> can't wait. a lot of stuff. there will be a second piece too. will this piece concentrate on the legal wrangling and the second would be in those cellblocks. we have a lot more. >> fascinating. >> you can watch the full report sunday on 60 mondays here on cbs. >> toronto's mayor has his job, but speculation about alleged
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drug use is reaching a fever pitch thanks to a key piece of evidence. >> good morning. he was accused of smoking crack cocaine a few months ago, but charged he vehemently denied. they have the smoking gun in the case. >> get off my driveway please. get off my driveway! get off my property, please. get off my property! >> an angry combative mayor leaving for work thursday morning as reporters pressed him on allegations that police had a video showing him smoking crack cocaine. all this before toronto police chief bill blair confirmed that police had that video. >> we are now in possession of a recovered digital video file that contains video images which appear to be those images that
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were previously reported in the press. >> the toronto star broke the story in may and allege ford made racist and homophobic remarks in the video. >> the allegations are ridiculous. another source. >> thursday afternoon ford faced the press again shortly after the police press conference. >> i wish i could come out and defend myself. unfortunately i can't. because it's before the court. all i can say is again -- again. >> you lied to the people of toronto. >> they arrested accused drug dealer alexander leasy described as a friend and occasional driver of the mayor. they released documents from the police investigation that points to at least 100 meetings between
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ford and leasy. reportedly they were clandestine meetings in gas stations and open feels. the lawyer said that ford was not smoking crack. he suggested may have been tobacco or marijuana. the attorney called on police to release the video. the mayor said yesterday he has no reason to resign. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> he is called the donald trump of brazil, but this billionaire just went broke. he saw his ford uniwiped out. next on cbs this morning.
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. >> the multibillion doctor group included oil mining and shipping. his company filed for bankruptcy on monday. anthony mason joins us. good morning. >> he was the embodiment of brazil's booming economy. he estimated his worth at $30 billion. his fortune would get bigger, much bigger. >> what do you think your net worth could become in the next years? >> $100 billion? >> you think so? >> yes. >> $100 billion? >> yes. >> where charlie was in 2010 he predicted he was going to be the richest man in the world. >> quite a view. >> when 60 minutes visited his palacious home in rio dejaneiro that same year he was just as brash about the future of his country. >> in the last 16 years, brazil
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put their act together. time for americans to wake up. >> now his investors are waking up to a nightmare. batista's business is collapsing and his fortune is gone. >> how do you lose $30 billion in a year? >> yeah. a few different ways. he borrowed a ton of money and he was overlever origined and when things started to go down his fortune went down and he had to pay back creditors. >> he uncovered the epic fall for the "new york times." >> he was the consummate salesman and it reminds you of a donald company. he put his name on everything. >> he named it ebx and the x standing for multiplication of wealth. the 56-year-old entrepreneur likes to show it off. he owned a 177 foot yacht, raced speed boats, and married and divorced a playboy center fold.
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in 2007 as brazil was getting ready to tap into massive discoveries of oil off the coast, batista started an oil exploration and production company. >> this all started with a trillion dollar story right in front of us. >> he paid more than a billion dollars to buy offshore leases from the government giving his company the right to drill for oil. >> we had 100% success. 100%. every well that was drilled since august of last year was a hit. we formed massive oil reserves already. 100% hit ratio. >> no one questions him. they thought this is the hottest economy in the world next to china. batista is the symbol of it. it proves to be a lot of thin air. >> much turns out to be uncoverable. too difficult or expensive to
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pull out of the ground. some had to be abandoned. then as batista's cash was running out, the brazilian economy began to cool. >> the currency plummeted and the stock market plummeted. that's what the fortunes were tied to. >> only last year he ranked eighth on bloomberg's index of world billionaires and now has fallen off the list. >> what are does he have left? >> a lot of debt left to creditors. stay tuned. it doesn't look like there is going to be a happy ending to the story. >> when the oil company filed phi bankruptcy it listed $5 billion in debt. >> it's a remarkable story. >> scary story. >> i went to brazil in sao paulo and friends of mine knew and i interviewed him and invited him to spend the weekend there. he had a mercedes. >> in his living room. a half million dollar mercedes.
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>> you look up and there is the cross and it's a spectacular view of brazil. he has fallen a very long distance. >> was it because he was more of a showman? >> i think he was betting in the right places, but he borrowed extensively and made a lot of promises that in the end they couldn't deliver on. the oil that they thought would be easy to get, he brought a lot of money in. it may be oil there, but he couldn't get it out. the fortune is estimated to be south of a half billion dollars which sounds like a lot, but with possible today likely to be the warmest day of the week. we are starting out a little chilly in spots this morning. out the door mostly clear skies. numbers in the 40s and the low 50s right now in most spots. by the afternoon, though, how about this? plenty of sunshine all the way to the beaches. some mid-60s coastside. maybe as high as 71 in san francisco. and about 76 degrees in san jose. next couple of days, big changes coming our way. a cold front more clouds and cooler temperatures for the
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weekend. >> 60 minutes gets a rare inside the nation's number one ranked college football program. alabama's crimson tide. we are in the toyota green room with dan crawford who is the biggest fan i know. he will give us a preview of his conversation with head chili's lunch break combos starting at just 6 bucks. served on a toasted pretzel roll our new bacon avocado chicken sandwich comes with fries and your choice of soup or salad. it's just one of chili's delicious lunch break combos. more life happens here. the secret is out. hydration is in. [ female announcer ] only aveeno daily moisturizing lotion has an active naturals oat formula that creates a moisture reserve so skin can replenish itself. aveeno® naturally beautiful results. pain. once you feel it coming, it's
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i'm nancy o'dell and oprah is auctioning off so many antiques including these bikes. she said she loves these bikes and ordered them in every single color but she discovered you can't ride them in hawaii. they're electric bikes. sit down and talk with oprah all about it coming up on "cbs this morning." "...three cat toys two hamster wheels..." ♪ "...and a rawhide enough for three." ♪ ho, ho, ho, ho... (female announcer) celebrate the season! right now, all specialty pets are on sale! and save up to 20% on select exoterra®
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your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. new details about a united flight from sfo to san antonio that had to make an emergency landing. officials say a threatening note was found on board. passengers were taken to a remote area of the airport. drunk driving is suspected in a deadly accident on 680 in milpitas. it happened at 2:40 this morning just south of the scott creek road off-ramp. one highway worker was killed. another injured. the driver was arrested for felony dui. >> let's check in with liz for more. >> the slow lane was supposed to be reopened here any minute for that fatal accident investigation. but it looks like it will likely be extended. the investigation into ongoing and you will notice those northbound lanes of 680
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approaching scott creek are really jammed up. the latest delays show the delays around alum rock so 880 is a better alternate in milpitas. unless the you're towards oakland where the commute is very slow going, there is a multicar crash southbound 880 approaching fruitvale. southbound traffic jammed towards the 980 interchange slowing in the commute direction, as well. that fruitvale accident is not helping the drive. very slow going from san leandro all the way up towards the macarthur maze. that is your latest "kcbs traffic." your forecast is coming up. female narrator: it's posturepedic versus beautyrest with up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years' interest-free financing. mattress price wars are ending soon at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ i love watching tv outside. and why
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can you move the tv out here? the wireless receiver. i got that when i switched to u-verse. but why? because it's so much better than cable. it's got more hd channels, more dvr space. yeah, but i mean how did you know? i researched. no, i-i told you. no. yeah! no. the important part is that you're happy now. and i got you this visor. you made a visor! yes! that i'll never wear. ohh. [ male announcer ] get u-verse tv for just $19 a month for two years with qualifying bundles. rethink possible. lots of sunshine coming to the bay area today warmest day of the week and a good start. cool in spots, beautiful and sunny skies over san francisco right now. all around the bay area a little cool in the north bay valleys. 39 degrees in santa rosa. 48 in san jose. much warmer by afternoon. upper 70s inland. 70s into san francisco. much cooler a little windy over the weekend.
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♪ good morning, to you, it's 8:00 in the west. welcome back to "cbs this morning." only six people signed up for insurance op day one of healthcare.gov but jan crawford shows us why the website is not the obama administration's biggest problem. alabama's nick sabe been runs college football's number one program. armen keteyian got exclusive access for "60 minutes." an estate sale where the whole world gets a chance to buy. a sneak peek inside oprah's california auction. first a look at today's eye opener @ 8:00. six people got enrollment monday after documents turned over the congress. >> not for a moment was there a
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serious discussion or a belief that joe biden should be replaced. >> flash floods killed at least two people near austin. >> wind and rain have already hit here in philadelphia and in many states. >> a dramatic rescue in kansas. a school bus toppled on its side into a rain-swollen creek. rescuers got them all out safely. >> they have to apply to the faa to say they're technically capable of doing this, then time for the airline pilots to weigh in. >> take us inside going forward. you were walking the halls? >> we are tired. >> you see that man yelling. i have to say it shook me. he was first accused of smoking crack cocaine a few months ago, but now police say they have the smoking gun in the case. >> no one really questions him. everyone thought, well this is brazil the hottest economy in the world next to china. and batista's the symbol of it. >> when his company filed for
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bankruptcy it listed $5 billion in debt. >> he's out there pushing it selling it. he's telling americans that you can keep your plan. and americans are telling him, no, you can keep your plan! so it's a two-way street. >> this morning's eye opener @ 8 is presented by benefiber. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the obama administration has been tight lipped when asked how many americans have signed foup for health care on healthcare.gov. but we know how many enrolled on the first day it opened. >> six people signed up on the first day. after two days the number was only 248. jan crawford is with us this morning. jan, everyone says that the launch has certainly been a disaster, but you say that's not the worst part for the administration. >> well, i think, yeah you could look at it that way. obviously a broken website. obviously they're going to fix it by the end of this month. it will be up and running so americans can access that
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website. the problem is this is not just about a website. if you look at some of the polling that was done this is what i think was most fascinating. earlier this month with the launch gallup did a poll asking americans, well you know how familiar or unfamiliar you are with the affordable care act. 71% said they were unfamiliar. this is not just the introduction to a broken website, but introduction to this law. what americans have been seeing and hearing is very negative. the concern is this becomes the perception becomes reality. >> how will the obama administration try to get beyond this? >> you can see. they're really pushing back very strongly in these daily briefings. jay carney is having with reporters challenging things that we're reporting, that of course, is out there. the president went on the road this week to try to defend it. a very sharp defense. >> help from people like oracle and some of the top companies. >> they brought in tech experts yesterday. they said somebody from google
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coming in. but again, the problem is the introduction for most americans to the affordable care act has not been a good one. and that is impressions have to change if this law is going to work. >> you pointed ot out the president promised if you like your insurance, you can keep your insurance. that's not true for those who get individual coverage. they're a small portion, but they're still about 3 million people. >> that we know so far. we think that number will be more like 10 or 15 million. >> what about the promise that the president has made that if you like your doctor you can keep your doctor. >> this is all again, it's not a broken website. that's not the only problem. americans are finding out about the affordable care act for the first time many americans, and kind of understanding it. they're hearing, wait a minute i thought you could keep your insurance if you liked it. didn't the president say that? they're finding out that's not true. >> intriguing thing they knew ahead of him that it was not going to work. >> we had documents, we had reportings showing there were warnings, there was no testing. they went ahead with the rollout
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anyway. what were they trying to do? were they trying to do too much? was the government contract that wasn't working? >> jan, stay with us. i know you love this upcoming story because you're a proud graduate of the university of alabama. >> roll tide. >> roll tide. >> sunday night on "60 minutes" armon armon keten keteyian profiles nick saban. he's responsible for the remarkable run for the record books. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, for the last eight months nick saban granted "60 minutes" rare access inside his program as the crimson tide chased a record third straight national title. the chant is "get your mind right." it's the mantra the man out front the heartbeat of the alabama crimson tide, head coach nick saban. this program has become the gold standard of college football. to get a sense of how saban has driven alabama to the top, we begin with an afternoon in early
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august. an energized saban couldn't wait to get to his favorite part of the day. >> blow the horn. let's go. >> reporter: to practice. a thunderstorm had forced his team indoors. >> set, go. >> reporter: but it didn't dampen saban's passion to teach his players the finer points of football. >> i want you to step step step. we're not getting much out of this guys because you guys won't do this stuff right. do it again. nope, nope nope, nope. bring it back. do it again. >> reporter: in demanding his players be as exacting as he is saban can be volcanic. >> i told you three times already today. >> reporter: why are you so tough on people? >> i don't know if that's fair that i'm really tough on people. we create a standard for how we want to do things. and everybody's got to buy into that standard or you really can't have any team chemistry. you know mediocre people don't like high achievers and high achievers don't like mediocre people. >> reporter: saban doesn't miss anything.
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on this afternoon a freshman caught saban's eye. >> hey, eddie. >> reporter: number 4, eddie jackson, who seemed lost. >> you're an offensive lineman or what? >> reporter: jackson, the defensive back was strefing with the offensive linemen. trying to master alabama's complex schemes was too much too soon for jackson. >> kick support. >> reporter: well, what one might call the education of eddie jackson is just one piece of a behind the scenes profile of a coach from coal country, west virginia, driven to live up to the standards set by his dad. >> i'm feeling bad for eddie. >> he comes around. it's nice. eddie jackson. >> what's the secret to nick saban? >> well short answer is he's a perfectionist. and he has everybody in that organization, and i mean organization because it's a $100 million football program, he sets that standard and expects everybody to live up to it.
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the really interesting part with nick is the mental approach to the game with alabama is very different than any other program in the country. he really teaches these kids how to play under pressure. >> from bear bryant to nick saban, jan, how big is football? >> loving it. >> i'm so happy to see you. >> i'm so happy to be here and watch this piece. >> we go to college campuses and everybody's excited about their team but i've never seen anything the way you guys do it. >> i could talk for about 20 minutes. first of all, you grow up in alabama, i grew up in alabama, there's not a lot going on. people make fun of your state unfairly. but football. and in alabama we do football right because of the legendary bear bryant with that tradition of excellence and the way alabama wins the right way, with the team tough defense, tenacious defense and team over individual. and nick saban is winning the way bear bryant did. if bear bryant was around today -- and a lot of fans think
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he still is -- it would be winning because of the way nick saban is doing it. >> give us your best roll tide. >> roll tide charlie. >> i really do think you can go on for 20 minutes. unfortunately, we don't have that today. good to see you both. you can see the full profile of nick saban sunday night on
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jan is soappy >> jan is happy talking about alabama. oprah selling some o jan is so happy talking about alabama. oprah is selling her things. too hard to let it go. >> i think i should keep this. >> nobody been bid on this. this is oprah's. >> i'll put this away. >> you can keep this. >> what am i going to look like this again? don't even try to buy it. that's right. favorite things. >> nancy o'dell shows us what's up for grabs next on "cbs this morning."
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this morning's eye opener @ 8 is sponsored by benefiber. better it with benefiber. sponsored by benefiber. benefit with benefiber. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. ...and so i bought it at walmart and then i see it on sale someplace else so i take my receipt and the ad back to walmart. and guess what? they matched the price and gave me the difference. amazing. right? woah! shop early with our new christmas ad match. even if you find a lower advertised price later we'll give you the difference on a gift card. walmart. [ male announcer ] you got to love the weekend. it's like everyone came together and said, "if it's good, let's save it for the weekend." so here's to the kfc ten buck weekend bucket. ten pieces, ten bucks. any recipe. just ten bucks every saturday and sunday. today tastes so good. ♪
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[ phil ] when you have joint pain and stiffness... accomplishing even little things can become major victories. i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. when i was diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis my rheumatologist prescribed enbrel for my pain and stiffness, and to help stop joint damage. [ male announcer ] enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections tuberculosis lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions 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. you should not start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doctor if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b have been treated for heart failure, or if you have symptoms such as persistent fever bruising, bleeding or paleness. since enbrel helped relieve my joint pain, it's the little things that mean the most. ask your rheumatologist if enbrel is right for you. [ doctor
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time. tomorrow she auctions off everything from guilded frames to chandeliers to electric bikes. entertainment tonight host nancy o'dell went to see her near her california home yesterday. nancy, did you see anything you wanted to get? >> gayle you know i saw about 100 items i wanted to get. there's so much excitement surrounding oprah's auction as you can imagine. bids are already pouring in from as far away as australia and india. this all happened because oprah decided to remodel her california estate. of course that prompted her to re-evaluate what stays and what goes. >> oh, my god, i love that bike. i need them in every color so when people come and visit me in hawaii, we will have the bikes. >> not just any bike. these are oprah autographed electric scooters. it's closet cleaning on an epic scale. three tents loaded with her belongings on the polo ground in santa barbara, california.
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>> this might be the world's biggest yard sale ever. >> it is my idea of a large sale. like everybody you start accumulating stuff accumulating stuff. i've been accumulating since 1985. it's too much stuff. i write about it a lot in the magazine, talk about decluttering. i realized i need to declutter my own life. >> it must be freeing in a way. >> it's very freeing. i'm downsizing. >> she's pulled personal treasures from her home in hawaii, california. there's a story behind every item. a 19th century doll expected to sell between $5,000 and $8,000. >> i have an extensive doll collection. >> they are beautiful. >> i have hundreds. i'm getting rid of some of the dolls because when people come to stay with me they say they get scared. you wake up and there's like 12 dolls looking at you. it's alfred hitchcock. i'm taking it down. i'm taking it down so i have a living room where the dogs will feel comfortable on the sofas.
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i was sitting in my living room once silk chairs somewhere down there. i was sitting there with the pillows in the back. this isn't even comfortable to me. i'm trying not to be attached to things. i'm trying to live the life i talk about not like letting things define you. it's hard. >> one of the hardest things to let go this 19th century set of library stairs. >> i love books and libraries. i have a library. i saw this i was -- i think i was in london and bought this. >> i love this. >> and then it's one of those things you buy in a moment of impulse and then it doesn't fit the room. so it never fit. >> the sofa so much. >> i recognize. >> i played many scrabble games sitting on this sofa. >> did you win? >> most of the time i don't. >> just the fact these are some of oprah's favorite things adds value to the price this.
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steamer trunk which immigrants use coming to america is now close to $1,000 simply because oprah stored her sweaters inside. oprah loves boxes collecting them from all over the world. this one from london dates back to the 1840s and converts into a chef's captain's desk. it was housed at her montecito estate. some items are expected to catch up to $50,000. the desk which stedman graham used to write. auctioneer tells me the louis xvi will be the most expensive sale. >> this is another item i had to twist her arm to get her to part with this. she loved this particular piece of furniture. >> this chest. tell me about it. >> 18th century french louis xvi but signed boudan. >> every house needs a 14 foot tall oprah "vogue" cover.
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>> i think we should keep that. >> nobody bid on this. >> i think i should have this. that's right. lets put this away. when am i going to look like this again. don't even try to buy it. that's out. >> oprah wants everybody to know they can bid online. the proceeds benefit her leadership academy for girls in south africa which oprah founded in 2007. >> as you grow into yourself you just want what's comfortable for you. so when you come to see me a year from now, i'm going to have a house that feels like pajamas. >> i like that. i'm waiting for my dinner invitation at the house. >> you will get it but you have to wear your pajamas. >> i will gladly wear my pajamas. >> i have my eyes on the library stairs, my eyes on a painting my eyes on a lamp as well as one of those bikes that i saw. gayle, i asked oprah, i said has gayle got her eyes on anything? she said absolutely she's coming out live for the auction
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saturday. i know you're going to be here. p she said you wanted one of her rugs. >> i did. >> i asked her to show me. we couldn't find it. have you already snuck in there and found it. it's a yellow rug and it's in a room called the gayle room. you're getting rid of that rug? i love that rug. i'll be looking for that tomorrow. i'll be looking for that. >> you haven't snuck in there? >> no i haven't. i'm catching a flight as soon as this show is over. i'm on american airlines and right to santa barbara. i'm going. >> i will see you there. >> all right, nancy. good to see you. i'd like to know when you get that big picture of yourself you can't give it up. you get it home and where do you put it? >> i love the proceeds will benefit leadership academy in south africa. >> that's the only reason she's doing it. >> nancy o'dell thanks. always good to see you especially this time of day. nancy will have more of the collection this evening on entertainment tonight. check your local listings for
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that. we'll sit down with oprah before and after the auction. you can see the conversation right here only on "cbs this morning." his morning" >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. lets go places. [ tires screech ] ♪ ♪ [ beeping ] ♪ ♪ may you never be stuck behind a stinky truck. [ beeping ] ♪ ♪ may things always go your way. but it's good to be prepared... just in case they don't. toyota. let's go places, safely. ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] just about anywhere you use sugar, you can use splenda® no calorie sweetener. splenda® lets you experience the joy of sugar without all the calories. think sugar, say splenda™
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vo: it's that time of year again. medicare open enrollment. time to compare plans and costs. you don't have to make changes. but it never hurts to see if you can find better coverage, save money, or both. and check out the preventive benefits you get after the health care law. open enrollment ends december 7th. so now's the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare ♪ ♪ [ chicken caws ] [ male announcer ] when your favorite food starts a fight fight back fast with tums. heartburn relief that neutralizes acid on contact and goes to work in seconds. ♪ tum, tum tum tum tums! ♪
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we're inside a wi > >> your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald it's 8:25. breaking news in the south bay. traffic is moving after a deadly accident on 680 in milpitas. it happened at 2:40 this morning just south of the scott creek road off-ramp. one highway worker was killed, another injured. the driver was arrested for felony dui. now let's get to elizabeth for the latest. >> and they were hoping to re- open that slow lane, wrap up the investigation, by 8:00 this morning. but at this point, that lane still remains closed and traffic is turning into a nightmare for milpitas and fremont commuters. check this out. this is northbound 880 by scott creek road. that's where the accident happened. and that lane has been slut down since very early this morning before 3:00. so the commute it looks like it is backing up now towards
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downtown san jose. it's kind of connecting with that 280 and 101 and that's where the backups really start to begin. also just getting word of new problems now in san francisco. three lanes are blocked northbound 101 approaching 280. this is an accident involving multiple cars and a big rig and we're learning that there's a dump truck stuck on the guardrail. they have already called out a heavy duty tow crew in the meantime traffic is jammed solid from brisbane. the accident in oakland southbound 880 approaching fruitvale finally clear. traffic is still slow in both directions. that's your "kcbs traffic." lawrence will have your forecast after this. "if it's good, let's save it for the weekend." so here's to the kfc ten buck weekend bucket. ten pieces, ten bucks. any recipe. just ten bucks every saturday and sunday. today tastes so good. u-verse was made for me. yeah, it's perfect for us tv fans. no...me. they made this for me. oh, and you've worked out a theory. this is exciting. what's the evidence? alright, evidence... u-verse has over 185 hd channels.
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i love hd. everybody loves hd. [ male announcer ] call now to get u-verse tv for just $19 a month for two years with qualifying bundles. and you can upgrade and get access to over 185 hd channels and more hd dvr capacity than cable. i also hate to delete episodes of my favorite shows. and? and u-verse has more dvr storage than cable. you think this is all coincidence? i think you need a new coffee table. you're probably right. [ male announcer ] call now to get u-verse tv for just $19 a month for two years with qualifying bundles. and ask about adding the wireless receiver, only from at&t. maybe u-verse was made just for you. yes! didn't you build this wall unit here and then realize the tv outlet was way over there? without the... [ both ] wireless receiver. yes! i would look foolish. i know. yes! that's the missing piece! [ male announcer ] rethink possible. female narrator: it's posturepedic versus beautyrest with up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years' interest-free financing. mattress price wars are ending soon at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪
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we are looking at mostly clear skies to start out the day around the bay area. looking good as we're going to see the warmest day of the week ahead on this friday. clear skies, looking toward russian hill, and out toward the golden gate bridge, a nice start to the day a little cool though in spots on mount vaca, plenty of sunshine up there. and looks like the temperatures 39 degrees and chilly in santa rosa. 47 livermore. 48 san jose. 54 clear skies into san francisco. this afternoon, though, how about this? the temperatures soaring into the mid- to upper 70s inland. you will find beautiful sunshine inside the bay with plenty of 70s. 60s and sunny at the coast. i think over the weekend though a cold front swings into town bringing a few more clouds cooling down temperatures and kicking up winds by saturday afternoon.
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." let's try that again. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour a mother leads a seven-year-long search for justice. "48 hours" looks at what she did to find the killer of her daughter even when the case went cold. jim nantz covers some of the biggest sporting events for cbs. now a role far away from the microphone. winemaker. how a chance meeting turned into a career. walmart isn't waiting to kick off holiday deals. they're offering online bargains starting this morning nearly a month before black friday. part of a trend this year. stores are dealing with six
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fewer shopping days between thanksgiving and christmas. "the l.a. times" looks at the legal victory for the hot sauce known as sriracha. we took you inside the factory on wednesday. the judge ruled the company can continue production at that plant. the city wanted a restraining order. neighbors complain that spicy emissions trigger asthma and burning throats. the company says it will continue working with the city on the issue. and "usa today" says lay's is mixing salty and sweet by rolling out a potato chip covered in milk chocolate. it's being offered for a very limited time. but if this takes off it could clear the way for dark chocolat, white chocolate and peppermint flavors of potato chips. how do we feel about that? >> chocolate covered pretzels are very delicious. >> where do you stand? >> i haven't read it yet. >> she just read it. there's nothing to read in. just chocolate. >> he says i have no comment on
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this. new details this morning about that mysterious barge on the san francisco bay. sources tell our san francisco station kpix it is indeed owned by google. it will play host to luxury showrooms and a party deck. part of a plan to market google glass and other gadgets to selected high end clients. the barge has interchangeable shipping containers. in washington state a murder mystery took years to unravel. investigators say the case would remain unsolved if not for a mother's persistence. tomorrow night on "48 hours" peter van sant talks to a woman who led the pursuit of her daughter's killer. >> months and years passed. i knew who did it. i decided to confront him myself. >> reporter: for seven years gail schneider was on a mission. >> i wasn't going to let her become another case in their files. >> reporter: her beloved
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youngest daughter nicole peete vanished in seattle in january 2006. >> we thought, well maybe somebody abducted her on the way to work. nicole's husband david who nicole loved very much went on television and asked the public to help us find her. >> i just want to know that you're okay. that i love you. >> reporter: nicole was just 32 when she went missing. nine days later -- >> a woman's body was discovered yesterday off des moines memorial drive. >> reporter: nicole's nude body was found near the seattle airport. detective jake pavlovich. >> interestingly enough the bottom of her feet were clean. no cuts no dirt no indication that she'd walked back here or been drug back here. >> reporter: her abandoned car was discovered 20 miles away. >> you always have to look at who would have opportunity and who might have motive. >> i said david, the police think you did it.
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and he said the police always think the husband did it. >> police say they've interviewed peete and he's not a suspect. >> reporter: gubut gail had a suspect. and even as the case went cold, she turned up the heat on the person she knew in her heart had killed her daughter her son-in-law david peete. so this is psychological warfare? >> yes absolutely. absolutely. i couldn't get to him any other way. >> reporter: gail would spend years going to his workplace. >> and when he saw me walk in it was not here gail not here gail. >> reporter: writing him letters. >> and on the note i said i just bought a house a couple blocks from here and i plan to make your life as miserable as you've made mine. >> reporter: finally in march 2012, gail awakens to the news she's been waiting for. >> this morning detectives with the king county sheriff's office major crimes unit arrested martin david peete age 34. >> raise your right hand
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please. >> reporter: this tiger mother would finally get her day in court. >> if he can't take being confronted by a 72-year-old woman, well i'm sorry, but it's not much of a man if he can't handle that. >> all right, peter van sant. >> i smile. it's a tragic case. but this woman was a pit bull. and she confronted her daughter's alleged killer. and i've never seen a case in court where, as a witness, you could stand with a microphone, look him right in the eye and basically tell him off. >> good for her. many people will admire her persistence. but did the officials not believe her? because she must have gone to them many times i knew he did it because of x, y and z. >> this is a case that when we started digging into this we wondered why there hadn't been an arrest sooner. but there was no csi moment no eyewitness nothing absolutely definitive. a murky motive. so at the time the prosecutors just didn't feel they had
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enough. and so gail schneider, the mom, she kept calling him once a month. >> why was she so convinced, peter? >> well because her daughter when her body was found, she was wearing her night guard that she would wear at night to protect her teeth from grinding. and she said her daughter would never have left the house with that night guard in because it affected her speech. and to her, that told her she was killed at home. >> peter, thank you. >> thank you very much. >> you can see peter's entire report, it's called "relentless" on "48 hours." italy is seeing a record drop in wine drinking but here at home a surprising name is finding success in the vineyard. jim nantz takes us along for a
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hi...david. i want you to return my emails. i want you to keep me doing this for another sixty years. at kaiser permanente we want you to choose the doctor that's right for you. find your perfect match at kp.org and thrive. cbs announces jim nantz is one jim nantz is one of the most familiar faces in sports. he's hosted everything from the supergoal the masters, but there's a side of him that many don't know about. >> it's not what you might guess. nantz is still broadcasting and will keep broadcasting but he's also found another job and a new home. >> hello, friends. welcome friends. jim nantz here. >> for 40 years familiar sports
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fans have heard a voice deliver some of broadcasting's most memorable lines. >> a tradition unlike any other. >> i've been in people's living rooms for more than half my life with a blue blazer on. i think people think i sleep in a blue blazer i go out to dinner with that cbs coat on. that is my life. and i'm so proud of that life. but this truly is my life right here. >> reporter: here is northern california, where jim nantz has found his second calling, making wine. you wouldn't think there's too many similarities between the two jobs. >> i think there are some. every time i go into the booth i have to have my research down cold. i want to be able to be there to tell the story of a big sporting event. >> who is going to make the history here in new orleans? now, on the wine side i was researched. i spent a good ten years combing through valleys and talking to
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vintners and meeting with people and reading all about it to try to understand this business. and i wanted our product to be something that was authentic. >> reporter: nantz's dream to create his own wines became a reality in 2009 after a chance meeting with peter deutsch. you say chance meeting, what does that mean? >> i was in a restaurant in greenwich, connecticut, and this towering 6'5" guy came over interrupted my dinner and said excuse me. he said, i'm peter deutsch. i just read your book about your father that you wrote, and just wanted to say hello. feel like i've known you my whole life. i said well thank you. and what industry are you in? he said, i'm in the wine business. i said really? >> reporter: deutsch, along with his father had built one of the most successful family owned wine companies in the country, responsible for more than 30 brands of wine including yellow tail. peter's relationship with his father drew him to a copy of
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nantz's book. >> if jim hadn't written that book, we wouldn't have been here today. >> absolutely not. >> reporter: the chance meeting becomes a chance to make a new product. just as soon as nantz answered one pressing question. >> i asked him point blank, does your name have to be on the label. and his answer was on the money, if it can help us let's do it. but i prefer that it stays off in the background. >> thankfully i knew enough about the wine business to know that could really lead to the disaster. you can be the beloved singer dancer, whatever but you put your name on the label and that's a tough sell. >> reporter: you knew from the beginning you had no interest in seeing your name. >> i'm not a vanity place. i always wanted to be working for cbs, i always wanted to be calling the great american sporting events. >> reporter: the name they settled on? the calling. along with nantz's wife courtney, they partnered with some of the best vintners and
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winemakers in california. last month in jim and courtney's newest home town of caramel, they launched a pinot noir. >> hear hear. >> reporter: starting at about $30 a bottle retail the wine is not cheap, but nantz believes the quality exceeds bottles that cost twice as much. >> i look at it like this. i didn't grow up with a family that had a limitless supply of money. i grew up in a loving modest family environment. i wouldn't want to put something on the market that my parents in their time couldn't go to a restaurant and afford to buy it. >> cheers. >> reporter: family ties are the reason this wine was launched in the first place and they're the reason nantz hopes it will last. >> this was an opportunity to try to take something that i taught myself a level of expertise and then could apply
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that passion and energy into something that could become a company that stays in my family for generations to come. >> one of the more challenging assignments i've ever had. >> it's just not scenic out there. >> just when i couldn't love him any more jim nantz. number one, he didn't want to put his name on the label. that speaks volumes to who he is. he talks about his love for his job, his love for his wife. i love any man who talks about the love for his wife. >> and his love for his father who passed of alzheimer's. they're donating 20% of the proceeds from the sales of the wine to alzheimer's research this month. >> where did you shoot that? >> in sonoma. just not that scenic at all. >> was it any good? >> it was very good. >> i don't know wine. >> the 2012 and 2013 harvest are some of the best winemakers have seen in decades.
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s a these age, expect better things. >> you know jim, charlie. you're good friends. >> and i've watched him do this. he's very passionate about it. he also has a lovely extraordinary new home. >> he took the time. he researched this looked into it. spent a lot of time on it. >> jeff thank you. >> sure guys. we'll look at the most memorable moments of the week coming up, that's next. so what can i get you? we'll take
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something tasty and healthy. ♪ ♪ ♪ if you wanna go and fly with me ♪ ♪ it's buzz the bee on your tv ♪ ♪ oh how did i get this way? ♪ ♪ hey! must be the honey! ♪ ♪ there's a party going on in your cereal bowl ♪ ♪ o's can help lower cholesterol ♪ ♪ oh why does it taste so great? ♪ ♪ hey! must be the honey! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hey! must be the honey! ♪ ♪ hey! must be the honey! ♪
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over the next 40 years the united states population is going to grow by over 90 million people and almost all that growth is going to be in cities. what's the healthiest and best way for them to grow so that they really become cauldrons of prosperity and cities of opportunity? what we have found is that if that family is moved into safe, clean affordable housing, places that have access to great school systems access to jobs and multiple transportation modes then the neighborhood begins to thrive and then really really take off. the oxygen of community redevelopment is financing.
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and all this rebuilding that happened could not have happened without organizations like citi. citi has formed a partnership with our company so that we can take all the lessons from the revitalization of urban america to other cities. so we are now working in chicago and in washington, dc and newark. it's amazing how important safe, affordable housing is to the future of our society. jo coming up wynton marsalis looks at the similarities between a quarterback. that's monday on "cbs this morning." >> i just like seeing them standing in the same shot. what are they talking about.
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that's pretty good. that's going be good. >> that does it for us. as we leave you, let's take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. >> yes. take it easy. >> i am as frustrated and angry as anyone with the flawed launch of healthcare.gov. you deserve better. i apologize. >> secretary sebelius apologized for obama care's faulty website. >> americans are surprised. not only are they being booted off their current plans but how much they're being asked to pay. >> the nsa told me the president was never briefed on angela merkel. >> sandy was the biggest and fiercest storm ever to hit new jersey. the recovery was slow and for many it's far from over. >> it's tough. you're looking at washington, d.c. that's sometimes not the easiest
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thing in the world. >> wow what a night here in fenway park. >> the red sox are world champions. >> best night of my life. >> of your life? >> pretty much. i have a pretty bad life. yeah. >> the young boy in the yellow shirt stole the show. he wandered on stage. >> i'll take your candy and my pope. >> that's magic. >> how many barrels are in this warehouse? >> more than 200,000. >> hot sauce called sir rah-rah eded sriracha. >> the sun touched down here. >> it has to be done right or it will burn your scalp, but we can stand with that. >> can we start with the chicken dance? lord knows you love doing that. >> i don't know if that's the -- >> unfortunately, peter, my family is having thanksgiving dinner on thanksgiving. >> i had no idea what was going on. neither did anybody else.
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you've got a 7 foot guy in a dog suit walking around. >> what is it? big, boxy, made outside of shipping containers. nobody as google knows what it is. >> nobody knows what it is. >> we have present for you, a phone charger. >> drawing a crowd. >> and all that matters. ♪ standing on the corner ♪ >> lou reed took rock nand roll in a new direction. >> he was for me what made it a pleasure to live in new york city. >> space flight itself is one of those things that turns out to be be etter than you dreamed it would be. an amazing ride. >> on "cbs this morning." >> oh, yes. one last thing. >> isn't that on your bucket list? >> it is on my bucket list. >> there's something i wouldn't want to do. >> finally. norah, you're the daredevil too. would you do that?
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your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald and good morning, everyone. it's 8:55. breaking news on the south bay after that deadly accident on 680 in milpitas traffic is slow- and-go around 2:40 this morning just south of scott creek road off-ramp there. one highway worker was killed, another injured. the driver arrested for felony dui. there's another accident here in san francisco. with more on that, let's check in with elizabeth wenger. >> it's been a rough morning commute in some spots. this is a major accident we're following in san francisco northbound 101 before the 280 interchange. traffic is really jammed on those northbound lanes. a dump truck veered off the freeway crashed through the guardrail. it is right now partially hanging off the freeway. this is all happening near paul avenue. only one lane is getting by.
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so that's why we're seeing the backups extend into south san francisco now. obviously your best alternate would be to use 280. it looks okay right now in both directions. this is a fatal accident that happened overnight that frank had just mentioned. northbound 680 approaching scott creek road. they had hope to get the slow lane open by now but in fact it is still closed that far right lane and so the backups continue to grow it looks like beyond the 101 interchange. it is a very heavy busy commute right now on northbound northbound 680 through milpitas and fremont. and earlier crash southbound 880 approaching the 23rd exit. it is just cleared to the right- hand shoulder. but look what it's doing to the commute. it is slow-and-go in both directions right now through oakland. we'll have more on all these accidents coming up at noon. in the meantime, we'll talk about your forecast right after this break.
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i want you to know stuff i don't. i want you to be kind. i want you to be smart. super smart. i want one thing in a doctor. i want you to be handsome. i want you to be awesome. i don't want you to look at the chart before you say hi...david. i want you to return my emails. i want you to keep me doing this for another sixty years. at kaiser permanente we want you to choose the doctor that's right for you. find your perfect match at kp.org and thrive.
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good morning. not a bad start to this friday weather-wise. a lot of sunshine coming our way and cool in spots early on. still plenty of blue skies over coit tower as high pressure strengthening overhead. 40s and 50s right now but by the afternoon, 60s out toward the beaches and sunshine. plenty of 70s inside the bay. and getting near 80 degrees in some of the warmer spots inland. cold front moves in over the weekend with some much cooler temperatures.
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wayne: you got $20,000! (scream) wayne: i got a monkey! i got a monkey! jonathan mangum getting his professional... oh! - you're wayne brady! wayne: yes. who wants to make a deal?! jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal.” now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to another episode of “let's make a deal,” where we make deals. you know what we do. i'm wayne brady and i need three people, let's go! let's go, let's go, let's go. let's go. disco queen, right there disco queen. let's see... aww, i'm taking you, sweetheart, come with me. come with me yes, yes, miss leona. you stay right there.
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