tv CBS This Morning CBS June 25, 2014 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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7:26. >> and we're back around noontime, right? >> what's that? >> we're back at noon. >> we are. >> okay. bye! [ laughter ] good morning to our viewers in the west. it is wednesday, june 25th 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." seven miles of fury. we're on the scene of tornado destruction in indiana. millions face more severe weather today. are drones turni into high-tech peeping toms? the legal questions after a seattle woman saw this hovering outside her window. and the world cup star with a taste for trouble, you could say. how the bite seen around the world could cost his team. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> oh, my god. >> what? >> it's a tornado. >> i was scared to death. i didn't know what was going on. >> summer storms march across the country. >> a tornado in central indiana
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damaged homes and knocked down power. >> heavy rain in texas and the flooding is getting worse in minnesota. >> a wild primary day. thad cochran won the mississippi senate primary over tea party challenger chris mcdaniel. >> the race to unseat charles rangel is too close to call but that didn't stop rangel from declaring victory. >> american special forces are now on the ground in iraq. >> you and the president seem to be in about the same place as to what we ought to do now in iraq. >> well i've never had anybody put it that way. >> if that was a bite then that's the third time that suarez has committed that particular crime. >> in world cup action fifa says its disciplinary committee has opened proceedings. >> at least six months to a year. >> this guy needs help. >> do you think with all the money he earns he could have those teeth fixed? >> actor eli wallace has passed. >> one of wallace's classic
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roles was as the villain. >> a man in new york is literally stabbed in the back at mcdonald's. instead of writhing in pain he seems calm. >> off the umpire and that's a foul ball. joe west gets drilled and he appears none the west for it. >> it took 22 firefighters to extricate the man from the vagina. you can add that to the list of things you won't hear charlie rose say at least on camera. on capitol hill, a moment of forced unity came across as just plain awkward. ♪ we shall overcome ♪ >> on "cbs this morning." >> i don't think we overcame anything based on that. it's like they were joining hands in a life boat just before they all drowned. this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "thbscbs this morning." as you wake up in the west the forecast calls for showers in the northwest but nothing like the east coast where powerful storms tlent 10hreaten tens of millions from boston to washington, d.c. the severe weather threat also stretches from the southern plains to the northern rockies administrator in administrator administrator. >> in indiana, a tornado already caused considerable damage. jessica is live. >> reporter: good morning. and good morning to our viewers in the west. today starts cleanup in indianapolis after a tornado tore through the west side of the city yesterday. we do have minor damage here and crews are here to clean this up but we also have major damage like this home here. this is just one example of what we're seeing here. this powerful tornado tore through central indiana on tuesday. winds gusting at 100 miles an hour. >> oh, my god! >> reporter: ripping through a seven-mile stretch. the heavy downpour that followed
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led to flash flood warnings. up to 4 inches of rain pounding the area. from above it was hard to miss the destruction the tornado left behind. >> scared to death. i didn't know what was going on. >> reporter: witnesses say the twister tossed around this rv lifting it up and slamming it into this home where don rackley was hiding inside his bathroom with his 6-year-old grandson. rescue crews were able to reach them and luckily no one was injured. >> when the guys come here and saved us and they said is anybody here? is anybody here? my blanket is in there. >> i saved your blanket. >> reporter: several homes were seriously damaged. the storm ripped roofs off houses, toppled trees and crushed cars. and even sparked this electrical fire. more than 1700 people were left without power. >> their window came flying into the side of our wall and punched a hole that big that you could fit your whole arm in. >> reporter: for people like francy robbins, she's thankful she wasn't hurt.
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>> blessed. very blessed. >> reporter: clearer skies are forecast for today. that will definitely help in the cleanup here and also allow power kroucrews to get that power restored, hundreds of folks are still doing without. >> jessica, thank you so much. there is severe flooding this morning in the cleveland area. last night's heavy storms left some major roadways under water. another downpour on tuesday caused flash flooding in ft. worth, texas. emergency crews handled 40 high water rescues. more flooding in minnesota is blocking roads and turning farms into lakes. the mississippi river is expected to crest tomorrow in stl st. paul reaching six feet above flood stage. megan glaros is tracking this morning's wet forecast. >> good morning, and good morning to our viewers in the west. there is a risk for organized severe weather again today from montana all the way down to colorado. but if you move to the east of that along the eastern seaboard anywhere from the carolinas up to maine, there is a potential for very heavy
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rainfall, for flooding and for isolated strong to severe storms. a very humid air mass as a cold front moves slowly eastward. but in the west no rain at all expected from san francisco all the way down to the mexican border. there may be some rain across parts of the pacific northwest. rainfall totals will not be high there. and heat is expected to build over the course of the next few days. 93 today in salt lake city. 104 las vegas, and los angeles coming in at 81. >> all right megan, thank you. and new primary election results so the tea party losing momentum and an important senate race in mississippi. thad cochran beat tea party challenger chris mcdaniel tuesday 51-49%. the six-term senator won the runoff vote after reaching out to democratic and minority voters. cochran is a heavy favorite against his democratic challenger former coopman travis childers. in new york charles rangel is claiming victory in his democratic primary. he leads adriano espaillat, 47
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to 44%. rangel says if he wins a 23rd term, it will be his last. this morning the irs is accused of not following the law. that claim comes from the nation's top government awe kooif -- archivist. nancy cordes is on capitol hill where republicans are investigating the failure of a computer used by irs executive lois lerner. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the head of the federal archives told california's darrell issa that the irs should have notified his office three years ago when lois lerner's hard drive crashed because some of the e-mails that were lost may have constituted official records, but he and a former irs lawyer also testified about just how antiquated the irs' computer system was. >> yes or no, please. you're a hostile witness. yes or no. >> reporter: jennifer o'connor was brought into the irs for six months last year to help oversee
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the collection of documents for congressional investigators. she says the team only discovered after she left that a swath of lerner's past e-mails were missing. >> you're telling us you did not have any inclination that a bunch of lois lerner's were lost? >> i did not know that her e-mails were missing and unrecoverable and there had been a laptop crash that caused that. >> reporter: david ferriero testified that technology at some agencies is so outdated they can't store important e-mails electronically so they have to print them out. >> the federal government has had significant and long-standing challenges with records retention, especially that of e-mails. >> from the very beginning of the government. this is not just an e-mail problem, this is a records management problem. >> you can't erase e-mails, not today. they have gone through too many servers. they can't say they have been lost. that's like saying the dog ate my homework. >> reporter: when george w. bush
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was president, it was democrats who were furious when the administration lost millions of e-mails related to several investigations. >> i will admit it we screwed up and we're trying to fix it. >> reporter: but republicans still insist the irs is hiding something, and after three fiery hearings in five days -- >> i'm not a hostile witness. >> yes, you are. >> reporter: house speaker john boehner pointed directly to the white house. >> he said that he would fully cooperate. they haven't done a damn thing to help us get to the truth of what really happened. >> reporter: the irs says it has spent nearly $10 million trying to get congress the information it wants, and its computer system has now been upgraded so that important e-mails are stored indefinitely. >> all right nancy, thank you. and there is new violence in iraq this morning. witnesses say sunni muslim insurgents now surround one of iraq's biggest military air bases. the so-called isis army and its
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allies control large portions of the country. clarissa ward is in baghdad where the first american special forces advisers are arriving. clarissa, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. that's right. nearly half of the 300 u.s. special advisers and special forces operatives are now here in the capital in baghdad. their role is to assist the iraqi army in its fight against sunni militants. iraq's army is determined to show it is fighting back against isis. in this amateur video, which cbs cannot verify iraqi soldiers are seen showing off the bodies of isis fighters on the hood of their humvee. today the iraqi army released new video that it said shows its forces taking control of the country's largest oil refinery in baiji, which militants have been attacking for over a week. government forces may say they're on the offensive, but most of their troops are reinforcing defensive positions
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around the capital. and there is no denying that they are increasingly relying on shiite volunteers who answer the calls to jihad by the country's top shiite cleric. we visited one of the holiest shrines in karbala. >> are you preparing for civil war in iraq? >> reporter: the order was for all iraqi people to defend their city against militants, he said who don't differentiate between religions. anyone who doesn't agree with them they kill. he believes iraq is in more danger now than any time since 2003, and he said that america has already waited too long to help. they should have helped when the fighters came to mosul, he said. but now they have already spread around. god willing, it will still be okay. already iraqis have paid an
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enormous price in this conflict. according to the u.n. more than 1,000 people were killed here in the month of june. the vast majority of them civilians. that is the highest level since u.s. troops pulled out in 2011. charlie. >> clarissa thanks. on wall street stocks are up this morning in spite of negative numbers on the economy. america's gross domestic product fell 2.9% in the first three months of this year. that is a much larger drop than economists predicted. the white house said it is a sign that the recovery from recession is not complete. analysts blame the rough winter weather for much of the decline. they predict the economy will rebound in the coming months. and there are calls for change this morning to the government's no-fly list. a federal judge in oregon says it's time to lift some of the secrecy to make it easier for people to clear their names. jeff pegues is at san francisco international airport with one traveler that was caught in the middle. jeff, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, and good morning to our viewers here in the west. there are about 20,000 u.s.
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citizens on the government's no-fly list. since 9/11 the list has been a key tool for the government in fighting terrorism, but many people on that list feel like they are being singled out unfairly and they haven't had a way to fight back legally until now. abe mashal is a husband and father, an ex-marine who was surprised to find himself on the government's no-fly list in april of 2010. >> i did not find out, had no warning or anything until i attempted to board a plane that day. >> reporter: mashal says he has no idea why the government singled him out, and there was no way for him to find out. the government won't reveal why it puts anyone on its no-fly list compiled at the terrorist screening center in virginia arguing that secrecy about the process is vital to national security. mashal says being unable to fly was more than just an inconvenience. >> my good friend from the marine corps i missed his wedding because he's in boston and i couldn't travel out for that. one of my friends passed away in
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southern california, i missed his funeral. >> reporter: he is one of 13 muslim american plaintiffs who filed suit saying they deserve the right to find out why they couldn't fly and be allowed to argue they should be taken off the list. on tuesday, a u.s. district judge agreed. in her 65-page ruling she said travel is a necessary aspect to liberties sacred to members of a free society. the plaintiffs were represented by the aclu. >> now our clients will have a meaningful process to challenge their placement on the list. >> reporter: the justice department tells cbs news quote, we are reviewing the case and weighing our options. >> this is seen as an important part of the post-9/11 security architecture which may not be perfect, but serves a very important function of preventing potentially dangerous people from getting on aircraft. >> reporter: mashal is no longer on the no-fly list. dropped from it just as mysteriously as he was added. but not, he says before federal officials offered to remove his
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name, if he became an undercover informant. >> and they would pay me under the table. this would not be money i would claim with taxes but i couldn't tell anybody about that position. at that point i told them i wanted to speak with an attorney and told them no. >> reporter: the government would not comment on that allegation directly but they do argue that their concern is revealing sensitive security information when people try to fight being on the no-fly list. >> jeff thanks. this morning a plan to transfer nearly 300 immigrants to a southern california processing center is on hold. the families who crossed the border illegally are being held at a texas facility. border patrol stations overwhelmed by the surge, homeland security planned to fly the immigrants for murrieta california, for processing but the mayor tells cbs news that city officials are concerned. >> as soon as they would have been released on our streets, we have a local obligation to tend to their needs, and we only have so many resources. >> a federal official says the transfer may still take place, but plans are being made to
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house the immigrants elsewhere. this morning researchers give the largest-ever study of 3-d mammography a big thumbs up. the study shows new generation mammograms find more cases of breast cancer than traditional exams. the new technology also has fewer false positive results. we'll talk to our cancer expert dr. david agus about how this could change the way cancer is diagnosed and treated. that's ahead. this morning four more countries are in the next round of the world cup. one of them is under a cloud after a stunning act of aggression. uruguay's luis suarez apparently bit an opponent during tuesday's 1-0 win over italy. >> this is the third biting incident of his career. elaine quijano is in rio de janeiro where it appears uruguay's most dangerous goal scorer will miss the rest of the world cup. >> reporter: good morning. fifa officially charged luis suarez early this morning. if found guilty the star player --
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been a sell bra celebratory afternoon in uruguay. their elimination was overshadowed by a biting controversy. late in the match with the score tied at 0-0, uruguay striker luis suarez appeared to bite into the shoulder of chiellini. uruguay scored a goal less than a minute later. after the match suarez >> suarez said there are things that happen on the pitch and you should not make such a big deal out of them. suarez, a star player in england' prestigeious premier league has an appetite for this kinds of behavior. >> he needs to get help. this is ridiculous. >> once is a mistake. three times you've got a problem. >> you have as a player been a
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role model. >> three times. >> reporter: in 2010 he was suspended for seven games after he bit a dutch player's neck. and in april of last year suarez was caught again. this time biting an opponent's arm. that incident cost the star ten games. he was also banned from playing eight games in 2011 for making racist remarks at an opposing player. peter walton officiated in the english premier league for nine years. >> for a world class player on a world class stage to behave in that manner is disappointing. >> reporter: early this morning, fifa confirmed that disciplinary proceedings have been opened against swaur suarezsuarez. with uruguay's next match days away this could be the last we see of suarez in this world cup. >> the totality of the punishment could be 24 games. he's a fantastic player. but when somebody does an egregious act similar to what we've just seen today, there's no pardoning that and unfortunately mr. suarez will suffer the consequences of it. >> reporter: a decision on
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suarez' future will be made by fifa sometime before saturday that's when uruguay takes on colombia in the next round of the world cup games. norah. >> all right elaine thank you. it is 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning" we'll check headlines around the nation plus backlash against the family accused so much for summer, a cold front making its way into california. some rain spreading in far northern california. might even see sprinkles here. we are seeing some drizzle this morning. looks like a lot of clouds early on. delays at sfo of an hour and a half plus on arriving flights due to low clouds. drizzle at the beaches. temperatures 70s inside the bay this afternoon, 80s in the valleys. clouds going to continue on and off through tomorrow. then more sunshine on friday. much warmer getting hot over the weekend. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by this national weather report sponsored by disney's planes fire and rescue in theaters in
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3-d july 18th. fire & rescue in theaters july 19th. drones get personal. >> that right. ahead, a woman says she was spied on in her own home. so is the law keeping up with cutting-edge technology? >> the news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by sleep inn.
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high speed chase that started in oakland.....and raced across the bay around three thi good morning. it's 7:26. two people killed in a high- speed chase that started in oakland and went across the bay bridge. it happened around 3 a.m. ending at 5th and harrison in san francisco. officials say the off-ramp is estimated to re-open sometime around 10:00 this morning. meanwhile, oakland police trying to figure out who shot and killed a woman in her 20s. this happened on douglas avenue in east oakland. it happened last night. you're asked to call police if you have any information on that. and hillary clinton coming to san francisco to promote her new book, former secretary of state and first lady will speak at the orpheum theater at 7:00 tonight and at a book signing at the ferry building on thursday morning. tickets still available for both events. got traffic and weather coming up right after the break.
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good morning. as you may have heard frank mention that fatal accident investigation continues into san francisco and the 5th street off-ramp is closed coming off the bay bridge on the skyway. so here's a live look at the backup behind the bay bridge toll plaza. it is pretty extensive. they are cycling through the metering lights relatively slowly as well and some of the approaches are beginning to slow. you can see 580 is now sluggish from the 24 interchange. and also pretty heavy delays from berkeley. san mateo bridge traffic good alternate even though it is slow now just past the pay gates. that is "kcbs traffic." here's lawrence. >> a lot of clouds out there this morning in fact let's take a look at sfo. look at our camera! it is covered with drizzle this morning. they are seeing delays at sfo on arriving flights at over an hour and a half due to low clouds. so drizzle this morning, a cold front coming to town here. bringing some rain in far northern california. slight chance of rain tonight into early tomorrow morning. temperatures will be cooler.
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hold hands again. >> but it's nice to see. peeps toms no longer have to climb the fence or hide in the bushes. drones with video cameras are opening windows into our private lives. jack ford looks at the legal batting taking flight. plus many war veterans are coming home with physical and psychological scars. one said marijuana
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crops by 14%. a methodist pastor who presided over his son's gay wedding is being reinstated. he was defrocked last year. a methodist appeals panel ruled the ruling was illegal according to church law. google has a set-top box. it allows you to listen to shows, listen to music and play games. it's working on several versions for its android software. a man walked into mcdonald's with a knife in his back and blood dripping down his back. he was talking on his cell phone saying good-bye to his family. he was stabbed trying to break up a fight yesterday morning. we should tell you this morning
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he's hospitalized and in stable condition. they said he was so calm and walked in. why is he walking into mcdonald's? >> he was walking into mcdonald's calling his family getting an egg mcmuffin. >> they are tasting. >> i wouldn't be think about about a hamburger at that point. >> true. there's no report that family was asked to leave kfc because of injuries byy siesy sies on their little girl. >> a 3-year-old girl captured america's hearts when a family claim they'd were turned away because of injuries on her face. she suffered the loss of an eye and injuries on her face due to a pitbull attack. she received more than $30,000
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in toe nations including a $30,000 pledge from kfc. it drew national attention after her family took to facebook accusing kfc of wrongdoing and then shared what happened with the media. >> the lady came over and she said they would have to leave, we were disturbing other customers. her face was dushing others' customers. >> they drop add bombshell claiming it never happened. >> the more and more i read, more and more it didn't add up. >> reporter: reporter sean murphy broke the story. >> it didn't match the description. >> reporter: in the days after the story went public supporters came to her aid, donating more than $130,000. but after monday's article, the backlash began.
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victoria's aunt fired back on facebook, i promise it's not a hoax. i never thought any of this would blow up the way it has. by tuesday afternoon the facebook page was taken down as was the fund-raising page that brought in donations. kentucky fried chicken and hannan's food service which operates the restaurant in question said they looked into the incident internally and hired a third party to conduct an independent investigation. after looking through hundreds of hours of surveillance footage, they claim there was no evidence that victoria and her grandmother were asked to leave any kfc in the area. the fast food chain now says the investigation is closed, though they will honor their $30,000 commitment to victoria which will go to her medical bills. an attorney for victoria's family told a jackson, mississippi, paper that he was
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disappointed that it may have been a hoax. he said the grandmother maintains her story but stopped short of saying it was true. the idea to use a drone by amazon may not take off any time soon. jeff bezos showdown us a drone that would drive customers' packages to doorsteps. but they said delivering a package for a fee is illegal. what if you looked out your window and saw a drone hovering outside. that's exactly what happened to this woman who snapped the picture from her 26th apartment on sunday. she was not fully dressed and she says she felts violated. >> it's one example of drones raising privacy concerns. jack ford is with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> is this illegal? >> depends on what they were doing. how's that for a lawyer's
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answer. if they're flying around in public space that's not a problem. if, in fact, they were running a camera and looking into her window then you could be talking about a violation of privacy. but this whole notion of violation of prief is kind of a fluid area. generally the standard is if it's an area where you have a reasonable expectation of privacy -- those are the magic words -- >> in your own home. >> in your own home. but what if you live on the ocean and your walls are floor-to-ceiling glass and it's a public beach and you happen to be walking around in whatever state of dress. the question is do you have a reasonable state of privacy and it's all glass. >> if you're on the 28th floor all glass -- sometimes i walk around buck naked. aren't i entitled to think i have privacy if you're that high up? >> absolutely.
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the standard idea is if somebody puts a ladder in they're not coming up that high for your win toe, but if a drone comes up to your window and starts taking pictures, yes. but it all depends on time and place and person. for instance celebrities don't have the same parameters for a reasonable sense of privacy. >> even in your own home. again, the illustration -- >> i lost track whether it's legal or illegal. all i'm thinking about is what gayle said is buck naked. please don't state what street you live on or drones are going to be flying around. >> norah, charlie, jack somebody say where you live. >> if they're doing this are you happy or sad? >> i'm pretty sad. i'm pretty sad. >> i'm just going to answer questions. that's all. >> okay. i live high for a reason.
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one group in colorado believes it has a simple answer to a big problem. 20% of our troops returning fro afghanistan and iraq suffers from post-traumatic stress. a new study finds that they lack good treatment despite spends billions of dollars on therapy and prescription drugs but barry petersen shows us how marijuana could mean a breakthrough for suffering heroes. >> ten months after i got back i attempted suicide. >> you attempted suicide because
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-- >> i was completely helpless. >> reporter: after two tours in afghanistan, matt kahl came home from injuries and on anti-anxiety medications for post-traumatic stress disorder or ptsd. >> i was probably taking up to 15 different medications. >> reporter: what were you like? could you even form a sentence? >> sometimes. >> reporter: until the day he tried marijuana. >> suddenly my extremely overactive hypervigilant mind started to calm down and my pain gradually started to go away too. i needed less of these other medications. and shortly afterward i determined that i absolutely have to move to a state that allows this so that i can get my life back. >> reporter: he moved his family to colorado and now works for a group called grow for vets.
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on this day he and other volunteers are putting together bags of marijuana products. given away at events like this one on memorial day. the marijuana is for war wounds both physical and the mental kind that doctors often treat with drugs like oxycontin. the group wants to replace pills with pot says veteran roger martin. >> anybody who has been on a narcotic medication especially wants to get off of it. i really have not miettinen who enjoys being in a drug stupor. >> reporter: but because marijuana is still illegal at the fed level, there's been little research. the house recently voted down a bill that would have allowed . patients about medical marijuana, even in states like colorado where it's illegal. but soldiers and pot have been together since the vietnam war
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as this woman knows well. her father comb home from vietnam suffering from ptsd. marijuana helped, but it was illegal but not always available. >> he struggled my whole life and when i was 14 he ended up committing suicide and i was dlegt i related to the post stress disorder. >> reporter: which is why she gives money from the marijuana and the tip jar. >> i believe in my heart of harts if he would have had access to can is s bycannabis he would be alive today. >> reporter: but critics doanet feel it's related. what would your answer be? >> my answer would be why the hell not. >> why don't we study it? why don't we run these clinical trials. >> reporter: you're committed it
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works. >> it does work. >> reporter: femme matt and his wife it means a second chance healing from afghanistan and that is nothing less than a second chance at life. for "cbs this morning," barry petersen, colorado springs. >> don't you think he raise as good point? why not study it. so much for summer, a cold front making its way into california. some rain spreading in far northern california. might even see sprinkles here. we are seeing some drizzle this morning. looks like a lot of clouds early on. delays at sfo of an hour and a half plus on arriving flights due to low clouds. drizzle at the beaches. temperatures 70s inside the bay this afternoon, 80s in the valleys. clouds going to continue on and off through tomorrow. then more sunshine on friday. much warmer getting hot over the weekend. only on "cbs this morning" you'll meet the millionaire some
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consider china's donald trump. ♪ we are the world we are the children ♪ >> i've never seen donald do, that but okay. he's launching a new stunt in the u.s. will it really help people down on their luck? that's ahead. myily >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. so when we packed up our rav4, i brought this. ♪ turns out my family likes dancing too. the rav4 toyota. let's go places.
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team usa's coach says his players get better every day and they'll have to be very good to beat germany at tomorrow's world cup. we're going to look at the preparations for the baggest game of their lives. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." go, usa. nothing feels cleaner. its helioplex formula provides unbeatable uva uvb protection to help prevent early skin aging and skin cancer. all with the cleanest feel. you won't believe you're wearing such powerful sun protection. it's the best for your skin. ultra sheer®. and for on-the-go, new ultra-sheer face & body stick. from neutrogena®. get more 4th of july at kmart. with 50% off family swimwear. and hundreds of camping items on sale. shop online and pick it up in store
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your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. two people were killed after a high-speed chase ended in a crash in san francisco. police say it started when they spotted a stolen car in oakland. the car crashed at 5th and harrison streets. some "occupy" protestors were arrested outside google headquarters last night. protestors are trying to pressure the company to do more about net neutrality. google developers conference opens today in san francisco. >> a state audit finds uc- berkeley is not prepared to handle sexual assault cases and the school is not trained to help student victims. the auditor is recommending changing state law to force schools to undergo training. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. unfortunately, it's a long slow ride trying to get into san francisco from the east bay. if you are trying to cross the bay bridge, fatal accident investigation continues, off- ramp closed on 5th street at 80 westbound. you can see the delays on the western span of the bay bridge, and the bay bridge toll plaza stacked up east of the maze and 580 is brutal through the 24 interchange. san mateo bridge also very slow as an all the national. with the forecast, here's lawrence. a lot of clouds moving in very gray over san francisco. delays on sfo of an hour and a half on arriving flights. a cold front sliding into the bay area going to bring with it more clouds and an enhanced marine layer with drizzle. slight chance of rain tonight and tomorrow morning.
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♪ >> good morning to our viewers in the west. it's wednesday, june 25th 2014. and welcome back to cbs "this morning". more real news ahead including high expectations as team usa prepares for tomorrow's crucial world cup game. go usa. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> clean up in indianapolis after a tornado tore through the west half of the city. >> half of the 300 special advisers are here in the capital in baghdad. >> a decision on his future will be made sometime before saturday. >> supreme court ruled the
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online company can't record over the air television shows and show them on the internet. >> is this illegal. >> depends if it's illegal. depends on what they are doing. >> looks like they are going ♪ how much longer do we have to sing this song ♪ >> you like seeing them do something together. >> what we have at the irs is a conscious decision to destroy all documents after six months. that's how are you irs does business. >> the government agency whose entire business model relies on focus americans to live like borderline hoarders. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. it will be a wet wednesday for tens of millions of people on the east coast. a strong storm front could dump heavy rain on several major cities. this system is blamed for a
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tornado that hit indianapolis tuesday. no one was hurt, but several homes are damaged. >> in the meantime, heavy storms in ohio flooded roads and homes in the cleveland area last night. and flash flooding in ft. worth, texas, left dozens of drivers stranded. more big storms are in today's forecast for montana to oklahoma. in baghdad this morning, the first of 300 military advisers are on the job. former vice president dick cheney says that's not enough to help iraq survive the new violence. last night on my pbs program, i asked cheney about his strong criticism of president obama's response. >> tell me one difference you have with the president in terms of what he has said he plans to do, wants to do. >> i see it as part of a much larger problem. >> i'll get to that. iraq today and the decisions that -- you're pretty much where he is. >> well -- i hope -- >> that's one. you've got 300 troops there.
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special forces. haven't ruled out air strikes although you're saying we have to make sure that we can hit the right targets because you're aware of complications. that's where the president is. >> remember where the military wanted to be on the advisory forces, 20,000. >> negotiation. >> in terms of -- no, well in terms of negotiation but in terms of the stay-behind force. >> that's what i mean. >> barack obama's for 300. big difference. >> cheney insists the 2003 invasion of iraq was just a fight and when we left office iraq was in good shape, and then a situation where obviously they've got another big problem. >> all right. soccer officials in brazil are collecting evidence this morning to decide if a star player should be kicked out of the world cup. look at this. uruguay's luis suarez is charged with biting an italian opponent tuesday one minute before his team scored the winning goal to advance to the next round. in the past four years suarez served two long suspensions for biting players, and this morning
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more than 100 gamblers in scandinavia are celebrating. they bet that suarez would bite an opponent during the world cup. the odds were 175-1. >> they knew their guy, didn't they? >> yeah. somebody won $8,000 betting on that. >> yeah. >> i'm surprised he still gets to play. >> i think it's going to be a nail-biter of a decision what they do with him. >> when you're a little kid -- >> planning on biting, aren't you. >> your mom always told you you did very well. four more countries will earn a place today in the second round. how long were you working on that? >> team usa is preparing for tomorrow's deciding game against germany, the toughest challenge yet for the americans. elaine quijano is in rio de janeiro with a look at their game plan. elaine, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. u.s. coach jurgen klinsmann has been blunted by his expectations for team usa and his opinion hasn't exactly been well received by fans. but the coach has managed to keep the americans in contention.
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despite that heartbreaking tie with portugal, coach klinsmann says team usa is improving as they prepare to take on the group favorite, germany. >> we are getting better. we are getting stronger with every game that we play, so it is exciting to see the team grow. >> that stunning last-minute goal from portugal's silvester varela may have felt like a loss for team usa, but klinsmann encouraged his team to remain focused on the road ahead. >> we come into the locker room, everybody was like a little bit upset, and he's positive, that happened, okay, finished, we have to look forward, we have to beat germany. >> reporter: but coach klinsmann hasn't always been as optimistic. heading into the tournament, he spoke of his team's chances on becoming world champions. >> for us now talking about winning a world cup is just not realistic. >> reporter: klinsmann's expectations sparked outrage, but now team usa has the second round in their sights and klinsmann's remarks have been overshadowed by fans' excitement.
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>> the support has been unbelievable. we feel it every game. we all see the messages from everybody, the youtube videos of fan reactions after we score. it's incredible. >> usa! usa! >> we have to be in there right now and take that energy to another level again against germany and then it's going to look good. >> reporter: now, conditions at kickoff will be uncomfortable. temperatures are expected to be in the 80s and with the humidity it will feel like 91 degrees. >> we know where we'll be on thursday, don't we. >> yes. >> charlie, that was so nice of you to invite gayle and i over to your house. >> gayle, explain to her. >> yes. in other words, you have to invite yourself, norah. that's how it works with charlie. >> and then take pictures, right? >> he loves that. >> does he really. >> yes, he does. >> i have not been invited back. just saying. but back to world cup soccer for a second, it is sort of like
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march madness, really. >> soccer has taken hold in america, number one. two, if they beat germany, the number-one team, many say, that will be the biggest day in american soccer history. >> what are you going to make, turkey chili or -- want us to bring anything? >> your sister. >> ha, ha! there she is. she's right there. dr. mary in the house. okay. we got to go. phew. >> i'm going to send out good thoughts to soccer and say welcome to mary o'donnell, who is hot. >> and a very good doctor. >> what about it about 8:00 with you guys? you get all riled up. a piece of music history, there she is, a piece of music history is a record setter this morning. ♪ how does it feel ♪ choked on her food. bob dylan's manuscript for "like a rolling stone" has a new owner. we first told you about the
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auction yesterday. the four pages of hand-scrawled lyrics sold for just over $2 million. that price shattered the record for pop music manuscripts. dylan wrote the working draft almost 50 years ago on hotel stationary. the buyer is staying anonymous. the auction house says the seller is a longtime fan from california. we said yesterday we thought it would be a record price. >> turned out that way. ahead on "cbs this morning," those little 100-calorie snack packs are big business, but are they really helping you cut back on calories? yeah, if you don't eat four packs.
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a whole new dimension in detection. the latest evidence that 3d mammograms are saving lives. one of the world's leading cancer experts, our own dr. david agus, looks at why it's not being used more. that's next on "cbs this morning." dr. agus with a haircut. >> he's got a summer cut going. looks handsome. summer cut going. looks handsome. >> that's right. >> he looks handsome.
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the new technology also reduced followup tests and increased detection for all breast cancers. our dr. david agus leads the westside cancer center at the university of southern california. he's in los angeles. good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> first let's talk about this. what is 3d mammography? >> well, a normal mammogram takes two pictures, like this and like this. 3d mammogram goes across the breast and every millimeter taking a picture and then building it up into a 3d reconstruction so you can see much higher resolution. >> why is it better? >> well, you can see better, and so when you look at a normal 2d mammogram you can start to see small little dots that could be cancer, but when you look every millimeter you see a lot more. in this study they found 41% more invasive cancers and 15% of the women who were usually called to come back didn't have to come back. at 38 million mammograms a year in the united states, that's over 5 million people not having to come back for a repeat
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imaging of their breast. >> let me ask you, doctor, do the risks outweigh the benefits? in other words, it's much more expensive and there is additional radiation. >> well, it's slightly more expensive, and so many centers are charging a premium, but a lot are charging a premium anywhere from $50 to $70. it is slightly more radiation, but the newer technologies will lower that. but picking up 41% more invasive cancers, which are the kind they're going to cause a problem, we hope and we think will have a significant benefit in the long run. >> so you think we'll have a widespread use of 3d mammography? >> well, right now 17% in the country are 3d mammography, and that number obviously is going to go up with this data, but i don't want us to kind of stand back here. x-rays are over 100 years old. and shooting electrons or energy through a woman's breast with radiation is not the be all to end all. we have to reinvent the wheel. the military can see a fish a mile away and describe it. why can't we develop a better technology to look inside the
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breast that's shooting radiation through it? >> and that doesn't involve mashing it as flat as a pancake because you probably never had one but it's extremely uncomfortable. do you ever see that technique changing? >> you know, i hope so. and right now this 3d is exactly the same kind of mashing of the breast. i saw one done yesterday. it's an advance, an incremental advance, but we need to do better. >> yes, we do. thank you, dr. agus. >> his business card says he's the most influential person in china. now a millionaire known for attention-grabbing stunts is offering an unusual group a free gourmet meal and hundreds of dollars in cash. that's right. only on "cbs this morning, we tell don dahler about his elaborate plan. what's he up to? that's next. >> "morning rounds" sponsored by lyrica. leer lyrica. up? >> announcer: this morning
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including many homeless are expected to descend on new york central park today. they ee being promised a free gourmet meal and $300 in cash. the luncheon is the brainchild of one of china's wealthiest men hchl's a familiar buoyant and controversial mogul who took out ads in "the new york times" to sponsor the event. don dahler has the interview you'll see only on "cbs this morning." don, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. no one knows for sure how many
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will come to the boathouse restaurant here in central park to cash in on his jern rossty but one thing's for sure. he knows how to get attention. he made his reputation with outrageous stunts that publicize his charitable contributions. he smashed his own mercedes to encourage people to ride bikes. he sold canned air to bring attention to the terrible air pollution. in 2008 he led 120 workers with heavy ma kreanrychinery to an earthquake hit zone. he's given away millions and now he's in america. >> translator: when i see there's a disaster in china, i see a lot of u.s. companies or
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government going to help china. when there's a disaster in the u.s. i do not see anybody helping the u.s. >> reporter: he's partnered with the new york city rescue mission, the oldest shelter in the nation. craig maze is the executive director. >> reporter: are you concerned that maybe you're being used for his own attentionsome. >> our thought if someone wants to treat them to an amazing convenient, maybe a kernel of hope life will be different we're in it for that reason. that's our motive. >> reporter: do you think you might get more respect for what you accomplish if you didn't make such a circus over these events? events. >> translator: i use my actions for charity. >> he's worth millions of dollars but grew up poor. he said this latest project was inspired by two of the greatest
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capitalists in history. >> translator: in order to todo some of what bill gates does i will leave all my money when i die. >> reporter: i understand you have a business card. may i see it? >> most influential person of china. >> yes. >> most prominent philanthropist of china. >> yes. >> most charismatic. >> yes. >> translator: these are not titles given by myself. it's titles given by the country. >> it's a shame you're so shy. >> i was not born is into a rich family or family of government officials. when i was 4 years old my brother and sister died of hunger so i achieved my success
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in my confidence and hard work. chin who loves karaoke will lead the crowd in a rendition of his favorite song. ♪ we are the world names of his entire family. >> we missed it. >> that's okay don. i don't care that he has a big ego and he can't sing. the fact that he's doing that to help others doesn't bother me at all. you in. >> no. >> absolutely. >> great story. >> most influential and charismatic. god it. thank you, don dahler.
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a woman out of your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. two people were killed in a high-speed chase that started in oakland. it happened around 3:00 this morning ending at 5th and harrison in san francisco. oakland police are trying to figure out who shot and killed a woman in her 20s. this happened on douglas avenue in east oakland last night. you're asked to call police if you have any information. and hillary clinton comes to san francisco to promote her new book. the former secretary of state will speak at the orpheum theater at 7:00 tonight. tickets are still available for that event. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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this has been a busy traffic day and it's no easier for drivers especially up and down the nimitz between union city and fremont. a series of accidents caused big backups. this is the latest one now. northbound 880 right there by alvarado niles, crash in the left lanes. it is jammed through union city. and southbound also is very heavy because of an earlier crash in milpitas. and here's a live look at the
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bay bridge. that 5th street off-ramp remains blocked on the skyway due to a fatal accident investigation. the accident happened overnight. in the meantime, it is backed up east of the maze sluggish between the east side and san francisco. westbound 4, that accident at railroad is now cleared. pretty slow though from antioch into pittsburg. that's your latest "kcbs traffic." here's lawrence. low clouds and fog around the bay area this morning, delays at sfo of an hour and a half on arriving flights. you can see a little drizzle on the lens there. also getting across the country numerous thunderstorms causing problems on the east coast over an hour delays there, as well. we are seeing some drizzle this morning, very wet toward the coastline and a cold front pulling into town will cool down the temperatures bringing a few more clouds to our skies today. 70s inside the bay. we'll see some 70s and 80s in the valleys, 60s at the coastline, windy through the delta this afternoon. slight chance of a couple of sprinkles overnight into tomorrow morning. more drizzle expected near the coastline. then warmer for the weekend. hey there. did you select these things on purpose?
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. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." you will meet a woman whose social media ended her relationship. see what she did to get her social life back into the real world. plus the hit cbs thriller under the dome last summer's number one program, the star is in our toyota green room. she will show us what to expect from steven king in the new season just ahead. right now, it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines t. chicago "tribune" says "star wars" creator george lucas, will house a movie museum that will include the darth vader costume. chicago beat out los angeles and san francisco. and if the city planning
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commission gives the green light, the museum will open near soldier field in four years. the new york times remembers veteran actor eli wallach. he died yesterday after a prolific career on stage and screen. in 1988, i asked wallach how he lived his life. he quoted tennessee williams. >> make voyages, aat the present time them. nothing else that is my philosophy. keep making the voyage, even though there may be a leak in the ship. keep sailing. >> stay on the journey. >> yes. >> that's the philosophy that served you so well. >> he may be best known for his rules in "the good the bad, the ugly" and the "magnificent seven." eli wallach was 98. >> all right. bloomberg fuse updates a story we shared yesterday about yahoo ceo marissa meyer. she is apologizeing for being
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late to a dinner with advertising executives. it happened in an event last week if france. shelves two hours late. she reportedly said she fell asleep. in her public comment, she said she did, quote, feel really badly. los angeles times says whole foods markets is paying $800,000 for overpaying customers in california. they operate 74 stores in that state. inspectors found the up scale chain included the weight of containers and put less food in packages than the amount listed on the label. >> 100 calorie packs, gluten-free food with less salt and fat the "wall street journal" is tracking surprising changes in the food industry and what people want. this new series is called howie eat. the business editor dennis berman is with us hi welcome. >> good morning. >> let's talk about the portion control trend, which means eating less. >> the idea of eating less at
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least. >> at least the perception of eating less. >> so the 100 calorie pack they were huge decades ago, lo and behold they found out they ate two, ate three, so sales of those packs are down significantly over 7% over the last four years, what we are finding in this series is what we say we want and what we actually do are two very different things. >> what do we say we want. what are we really doing? >> we say we want healthy. we feel good when we buy something that suggests we are buying something. in the end we want something that tastes good. >> very good. >> what is interesting is companies are trying to calibrate how we sort of do these things and make the emotional choices. >> the companies don't want you to know we are making these changes with ethink it will not taste as good. >> a fascinating story, boston market tried to reformulate its food, a lot had a lot of sodium.
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they tried to bring the sodium down. it took them about a year to take 18% of the sodium out of the packmacaroni and cheese. >> i understand mcdonald's received pushback when they announced they were going to take more transfats out of the french fries. >> that was a number of years ago, there was a huge brew-ha ha. oreos transformed them. it took transfats out. it was just a change in the package. >> can you talk about gluten-free? >> yes. >> a a friend said i look healthier, i look better. you say there isn't any research to back up that gluten-free is better? . >> a great story in the "journal." i was shocked. almost a 33rd of americans say they want to eat less gluten. tens of thousands of gluten-free products are sold except the people that are truly allergic. they say it doesn't make much
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difference. it's about telling ourselves stories that make us feel better. >> is it about health and weight? >> it's also about health and weight and economics, they have to find a low gimmick here and there. >> i read a tweet from a xedian is the better thing about -- by a comedian is the better thing about being on gluten-free is telling people are you gluten-free. these food trends, what do they del tell tell us about hour eating habits? >> we are more confused than anymore. the information we share with each other. we think we are getting better. we are really confused. so i went this one quick exercise. i went to the supermarket this weekend. i said what is this that i'm buying? what are they selling me? i think it's good exercise for people to stake step back and see the choices they are making and why. >> i am confused.
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we have people that come by different names. the only conclusion is exercise a lot, eat less period. >> calorie consumption up 450 more calories than 40 years ago. >> that tells something. >> that advice charlie, never changes, i don't care who the expert is. >> that never changes. >> what do you say, game put the fork down. >> get your tukas on the treadmill. >> stats what they are saying. >> i have -- i have foods. good to see you. now to a case of social media overload. 12 billion facebook messages go back and forth daily. twitter and instagram stay very busy and technology is altering the way we connect, date and break up. for one woman it led to an addiction. she writes about it which simon and discuss ter, a division of cbs. being plugged in can be at a price. >> i'd us as be someone my
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friends would say, oh there is kim with her phone again, are you the most socially addictive person we've ever met. >> reporter: to kim stolts habitually checking in on all her friends and love interests on social media was natural, a skill she'd perfected. but to those sfendz friends, it seemed like an addiction. >> i think my friends saying hey, can you promise to stay off your phone this time? >> how'd that make you feel when they would stay that. >> it made me feel like the first step is admitting, maybe i am a problem here i'm not hearing them say nato my other friends, they say that to me. >> kim's friends remember seeing her attached to the pool. >> i remember seeing her flt pool with her phone. she's in the pool with her phone? she's iticketed at a younger age. >> i think she's more addicted now than ten. >> reporter: hearing from her friends and parents was not enough to force kim to disconnect t. wake-up calm was
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getting caught. >> i had had a sort of very flirtatious conversation with an ex. it quickly turned from facebook chat to chat and we were texting. >> the person kim was dating at the time saw those texts and immediately broke up with kim. >> being in a relationship and having them say who are you talking to are you always on your phone? are you cheating on me what's happening here? >> that became the basis of unfriending my x and other things i will never do. she talks about a weekend long break from her phone to get away from her online obsession. >> you wrote something so interesting, i can't think of hearing about my own kid your phone was like a phantom limb. >> i would be sitting there, reading a book or article and i would see it see my phone or see something light up on the couch, oh great, nothing there. >> reporter: what kim learned
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from her online detox paid off in her relationships. she's moved on from her ex and is now married and for the cutsed on living in the role world. >> it's become the world is on one big reality show we're all contesting to compete to show whose life is the best. i think what's funny is we've stopped experience life for the experience. we now experience life for the post or the upload. >> reporter: for cbs this morning, lee woodruff bridge hampton, new york. >> a lot of people do that to have a moment with a picture as opposed to really enjoying what's going on in the moment. they're not living in the moment. >> truer words have never been spoken. >> charlie, i was taking pictures during a with the breaking bad" segment. i went to charlie's hoous house to watch "bricking bad." i wanted to document our first date charlie send what are you doing? i was trying to document. then i put it down. >> it was the experience.
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i have no idea where she came from. >> let me try. >> good thing you're here. >> that's rachelle lefevre helped to save a life. that's "under the dome." it's based on stephen king's 2009 novel. it tells the story of the world cut off by a huge transparent dome. >> last year there was an average 15 million viewers. i'll say that again. 15 million viewers. rochelle la fev wasachelle lefevre was one of those trapped inside. you guys did it. does america just want to be scared? >> maybe.
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maybe it wants to be scared fictionally from a good distraction. >> nobody's better than that that stephen king. >> right. and steven spielberg, who's our executive producer. between the two of them -- >> you couldn't be luckier. i heard he visits the set sometimes. >> he does. he has a cameo in our season premiere this season which because he wrote it, he finally did -- he does a cameo in all his things. he did a cameo. >> has your character evolved? >> she has, yeah. our theme this season is about transformations and i actually joke all the time that i did the first season to get to the second season because they told -- they promised me -- they promised me that i could kick butt in the second season as long as i did the first season. so i was very intellectual poised pragmatic the first season and now i get to kick
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butt. >> >> do you like to kick butt? >> yeah. let me blow somebody else. >> from the first episode, you can tell she's turning into a little bit of a badass your character julia, as reporters often do. here's the thing. i understand you were discovered in a sushi bar. is that true? >> it is true. i did anything i could get my hands on children's theater and then i had a regular customer who was leaving with his family and overhearing me tell a hostess i was going to be an actress. i did gnltn't get that one but it led to another. i got a role "big wolf on campus. "this is before everybody had cell phones. before my shift i would call in
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and dial. i think i was making rollups or something and got a message that i booked the job and i ran around the restaurant screaming i quit i quit i quit. it was super fun. >> now here you are? >> yeah. it's kind of wild. >> i saw you on david letterman. i'm thinking this is turns out to be a really good time for you. >> isn't that a true. >> you were doing the top ten list. did you ever notice the world dome really says what norah and charlie? >> cover. >> well forgive me but it's do me together. courtesy of the letterman writers. >> did you look at charlie when you said that? >> i sure did. i didn't want to miss my -- >> the way she did it too. >> can you do that one more time? >> be careful. >> also, guys you're a big
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foody. i knew i liked you. you're a big foody. you take pictures of your food. now you want to do something with that. >> i am. i'm doing a food blog called ed passthebutter.com. >> are you annoying? >> i am. i'm like, don't eat that. i have to take a picture of that. >> charlie loves that. >> all right. >> i have a deal with my friends, if we go to dinner and i take a picture of your plate, i will buy you dinner. >> row shoal lefevrer thank you for being here. >> love the show. >> thank you. >> you can watch the premiere of "under the dome" or "under the do me" right here on cbs. tomorrow on "cbs this morning" a namesake takes flight and traces the path of a
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your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, it's:55. time for news headlines at 8:55. two people were killed after a high-speed chase ended in a crash in san francisco. police say it started when they spotted a stolen car in oakland. the car crashed at 5th and harrison. some "occupy" protestors were arrested outside google headquarters last night. protestors are trying to pressure the company to do more about net neutrality. google's developers conference today opens in san francisco. a state audit finds uc- berkeley is not prepared to handle sexual assault cases and the school is not trained to help student victims. the auditor is recommending changing state law to force schools to undergo training. now with the forecast, here's lawrence. plenty of clouds out there now. we have seen dense fog at the coastline and heavy drizzle. delays at sfo of over an hour
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and a half on arriving flights. out the door we go, we have some cloudy skies looking toward coit tower. that is going to break up throughout the day. maybe some drizzle continuing near the coastline and a cold front moving into the state. that will bring with it some partly cloudy skies this afternoon and some cooler temperatures. highs in the 70s, still maybe some few heights in the interior valleys and 60s and breezy to windy along the coastline and the delta. next couple of days we are going to see this cold front moving on by. it will bring with it a slight chance of a couple of sprinkles. more drizzle likely early tomorrow morning. and then we turn things around. by friday, the sun returns, much warmer weekend, in fact some 90s in the valleys. even hotter on monday. we're going to check out your "kcbs traffic" when we come back. safeway understands you got to make every dollar count these days. that's why they have lots of ways for you to save. real big club card deals, the safeway app and gas rewards. celebrate the fourth with envy apples, just $1.99 a pound. rancher's reserve tri tip roast is only $3.99 a pound.
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these deals aren't just hot... they're explosive! sleep train's 4th of july sale is ending soon. ♪ sleep train ♪ ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ good morning. checking conditions right now through the pleasanton area, there's actually a stalled big rig blocking a lane westbound 580 right before the hacienda exit. traffic is still really solid through livermore so that's a giant drive time for this time of the morning especially. 52 minutes between the altamont pass and the dublin interchange. and we're also hearing about some bart delays now 10- to 15- minute delays at macarthur in the pittsburg and richmond direction. it's due to police activity. everything else is on time. golden gate ferries, caltrain and ace. and the 5th street off-ramp we're told may be reopened before 10 a.m.
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