tv CBS This Morning CBS July 21, 2014 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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is about 7:26. >> birthday gill. robin williams hold today? >> 85. >> 63. bye everybody. [ captions by: caption colorado, llc 800-775-7838 email: comments@captioncolorado.com ] good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday july 21st 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." confusion and conflict at the crash scene of flight 17 plus russian president putin fires back this morning in the face of mounting pressure. >> americans among the casualties in the gaza violence. the death toll tops 500. and seven people survive a hot air balloon explosion. what the pilot was facing when disaster struck. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> international anger is mounting over reports that the bodies of the victims of the downed malaysian airliner are being treated disrespect fully. >> the u.s. ratchets up the
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pressure on moscow. >> new evidence to accuse pro-russian separatists of firing the missiles that brought down the jetliner. >> russia's president putin saying he will ensure international experts have access to the site. >> two americans are among the 13 israeli soldiers and as many as 100 palestinians killed sunday in the deadliest day yet in gaza. >> civilian casualties which we regret. they all are on the responsibility of hamas. >> in washington state nearly 400,000 acres are burning. the carlton complex fire has destroyed up to 200 homes. two grate trains collided. two members of one crew were injured and homes were evacuated. >> the new york city police department is under fire after an officer was caught on camera apparently applying an illegal chokehold to a suspect who later died. >> i was very troubled by the video. there will be a full and thorough investigation. >> texas governor rick perry preparing now to send 1,000
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national guard troops to our southern border today. >> sinkhole opened up underneath a florida neighborhood 120 feet wide and 30 feet deep. >> all that -- >> hollywood is mourning the loss of james garner. >> come to hollywood and make some money, have a wonderful family. i wouldn't change a thing. >> danielle posted pictures wearing stolen clothes. >> -- and all that matters. >> it is a mcilroy major. >> ten years ago dad bet $340 his son would win the british hope before he turned 26. >> gerry mcilroy winning a share of $342,000. >> on "cbs this morning." >> this is 105-year-old agnes mcgee, threw out the first pitch. good for you agnes. i liked the full windup. >> i did too. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places.
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welcome to "cbs this morning" and welcome back norah. how was your vacation? >> it was excellent. good to be back. we begin as you wake up in the west we're following new developments in the investigation in the downing of flight 17. ukraine's prime minister said this morning there is no doubt the boeing 777 was shot down by professionals. armed rebels continue to control access to the scene. russian president vladimir putin is facing more pressure to persuade insurgents to clear the way for investigators. >> and families of the victims are horrified by how the bodies are being handled. mark phillips is in grabovo where international experts are finally making some headway. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. there's still a lot of work to be done here. investigation crews have been collecting the bodies. there's now some movement perhaps those bodies will be moved out of here later today. there are forensic experts finally on site to start the examination process.
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but as i say, there's still a lot of work to be done here. it's a grim business and it's getting grimmer. the more accessible bodies were the first to be recovered. now it's become a matter of separating victims and parts of victims from the airplane in which they died. the remains are being stored, like so many carcasses, in refrigerated rail cars in a sad little town in a little town. observers from the osce the european security organization were brought to view the bodies for the second day running, but its spokesman says they're not here to count or examine the victims. >> when will the investigation begin? >> we're not operating on that level. we're here on the ground as a monitoring mission so again, as alexander said we're here to observe, report and those findings get pushed up to participating states. >> reporter: the dutch who lost the most people have sent in two body identification experts,
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but there are no facilities here for proper examination. for now, the bodies sit. this is a weigh station on a voyage of tragedy, a freight train with a cargo of death, filled with victims of a fight that was not theirs. there is no competent investigation yet at the crash site either and the integrity of the site has clearly been compromised. it remains under the control of the breakaway moscow-backed rebels who are suspected of having shot the plane down. the world's biggest crime scene controlled by the prime suspects in the crime. and who now also have they say, the data recorders, the plane's black boxes. and there's now a promise from the rebel leadership here that the bodies will be moved, they say, later today, perhaps to somewhere more accessible. but promises and reality here norah, are not always the same thing. >> mark thank you. the u.n. security council is set to vote today to demand
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international access to the crash site. secretary of state john kerry says there is overwhelming evidence of russia's involvement in the downing of the passenger jet and he is urging action. >> because of russia's linkage to these separatists, they have a greater ability to exert influence, and we need russia to become part of the solution not part of the problem. >> clarissa ward is in moscow where president putin issued a statement this morning and he is not backing down despite that growing anger. clarissa, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that's right, president putin really staying on message with this latest statement, reiterating the need for an international investigation, calling on all parties to stop pointing fingers and to stop quote, politicizing this tragedy. clearly putin here is trying to cast himself in the role of the rational, reasonable leader. he said that more international experts are needed to immediately get access to the site and take part in the investigation, but of course actions speak louder than words
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in these situations. so far we've seen no indications that the kremlin has done anything to pressure those rebels into allowing the investigators in and giving them free and unfettered access. putin also repeated his assertion that this never would have happened that this crisis never would have taken place had there been a cease-fire in place. that is a not-so-veiled criticism of the ukrainian government. and if you watch the russian tv channels here and you watch the news, it's clear that russia is really trying to push the responsibility for this tragedy onto the ukrainian military and the ukrainian government. charlie charlie? >> clarissa, what do the russian people think happened? and are they hearing all those questions about how russia may be complicit? >> reporter: well they are not hearing anything. secretary kerry's remarks were not aired on russian tv at all. as for what they think happened some people who are more moderate will say it's too early
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to say, there are a lot of holes in the ukrainian government narrative. but some people you talk to have no doubts at all. they say that the ukrainian military downed this passenger jet and that they did so to force nato to come in and take military action. >> thank you clarissa. the white house is joining international leaders calling for an unimpeded and transparent investigation into the disaster. cbs news senior security contributor mike morell is in washington. mike, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> so here you find president putin issuing somewhat of a conciliatory statement saying we need more investigation, but what kind of situation is he really in now as western leaders are raising questions about russia's participation? >> charlie, he's under an awful lot of pressure and i would imagine that that pressure is going to grow in the days ahead. in his statement he also said something interesting, which is
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that he called for negotiations between the separatists and the youukraineian government. this is something that he has been calling for for some time and it's exactly what he wants. he wants a set of negotiations that result in autonomy for eastern ukraine that would allow eastern ukraine to veto any ukrainian attempt to join nato or join the e.u. so right now the card he's playing is the card that he has wanted all along. and i don't think we should allow him to get away with that. >> and do you see increased western pressure and western acceptance of the fact that they have to do more to get him to come around? >> across the globe the pressure is growing to take tougher action against russia. and i think that tougher action can come in two forms. one is is a significant ratcheting up in sanctions. you see discussion about that. and the other is moving from nonlethal support to the
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ukrainian government to lethal support. those are the two things i think that are on the table being discussed and that really have the potential to push putin in the right direction here. >> mike how culpable is president putin, if at all, in the downing of this aircraft? >> really hard to say at this point what he knew personally. my guess would be that he was aware of the significant support being provided by the russian military to the separatists, but whether he knew about the specifics, whether he knew about this particular anti-aircraft system whether he knew about the particular training is hard to say. i would bet one of the things that is going on in moscow right now is president putin trying to figure out exactly what the truth is regarding their complicity. >> mike, thank you so much. >> you're welcome. two-thirds of the passengers aboard flight 17 were from the netherlands. some relatives claim the bodies
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are being held hostage for politics. elizabeth palmer reports ahead on "cbs this morning." now we want to get to the crisis in the middle east. this morning two americans are among the latest victims of the fighting between israeli and palestinian forces. in gaza city this morning, israeli forces hit more targets. heavy fighting since the israeli offensive began now puts the palestinian death toll above 500. barry petersen is in gaza city where tens of thousands are out of their homes and hospitals are overwhelmed. barry, good morning. >> reporter: the israeli offensive shows no sign of letting up. there's shell still going on right now, and the palestinians are answering with rockets fired into israel. here in gaza one neighborhood in particular has been targeted. with concentrated fire the israelis pounded the eastern neighborhood
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neighborhood. [ speaking foreign language ] there were brief humanitarian cease-fires when the extent of the devastation and the death were clear. somehow some survived rushed to the city's main hospital. the cease-fire lasted long enough to get some of the wounded out and then it was broken. nobody knows how many wounded are still trapped. doctors were determined to save as many as they could, but they were overwhelmed. >> o.r. is not enough for the patients. we have been operating in the corridors actually. >> reporter: sometimes it was not enough. this father faced the sad reality that his daughter was gone. and in the hospital's morgue the same scene over and over. the identification of a loved one and then the grief.
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but even in this hell there are miracles. out of this rubble amazingly a survivor. 7-year-old bison, cared for by the doctor. >> she has contusions around her body and she'll recover we hope. >> reporter: there's another crisis developing. gaza depends on israel for its food supplies. now that's cut off. chicken is hard to find and the basics cooking oil and rice all but gone. charlie. >> barry, thanks. 20 israelis have been killed in the conflict including 18 soldiers. among the dead two americans with dual citizenship. they fought in the israeli army. they are 21-year-old sean carmeli of south padre island texas, and 24-year-old max steinberg of california. a vigil was held in los angeles sunday for steinberg, who joined the israeli force last year.
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holly williams is in tel aviv with how the americans were killed. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. max steinberg and sean carmeli were both siding with the golani bridgade. it has seen some intense battles in the gaza strip. 13 of its members were killed yesterday, including seven who died when their armored personnel carrier was hit by an anti-tank rocket. now palestinian militants also claim to have taken one israeli soldier hostage yesterday. they have named him as shaol aron. israel's ambassador to the united nations denied that report but the israeli military told us today they are still looking into it. also today israel claims to have foiled two attacks by palestinian militants who sneaked into israel via underground tunnels. they say they killed at least ten of those militants. norah, charlie. >> holly, thank you. and president obama is back at the white house this morning to deal with both the mideast and ukraine.
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major garrett is at the white house. major, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning, norah. the message from the white house to the israelis is these hamas rocket attacks and the tunnels into your territory are legitimate military targets. you have a right to defend yourself. but to do everything possible to minimize civilian casualties. secretary of state john kerry is heading to cairo to try to negotiate a longer term cease-fire with israel and the hamas rebels. that's been difficult because of options for a cease-fire. that gave israel an incentive to take the fight even more aggressively to hamas, conflicting more civilian casualties. that's something the administration is quietly becoming more exasperated with. >> major i want to turn to the crisis in ukraine. we saw putin put out the statement overnight in moscow. any reaction from the white house yet? >> reporter: the administration's point of view
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on this let facts speak for themselves. the facts of this tragic downing of the civilian airliner are being established, that the russian-enabling militarily speaking of these separatists is the probable cause of this tragedy and the goal for the administration is to build global revulgs against russia and the separatists for the way this crash scene is being mishandled, the bodies are not being respected and the lack of a cease-fire. the earlier comment about whether ukraine participated in a cease-fire they did for a period of ten days. the separatists did not adhere to the cease-fire. the administration intends for the facts to speak for themselves. texas governor rick perry is expected to put troops in position at the mexican border. the republican will announce his plans to mobilize some 1,000 members of the texas national guard. their mission is to beef up security. this comes amid the growing problem with imgranting children crossing into the southern states. perry told republicans in iowa
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this weekend if the federal government won't secure the border, texas will. in the pacific northwest, the wildfires are so bad this morning more than 1,000 national guard troops are on standby in washington state. officials say the military could be called in as well. two dozen wildfires in washington and oregon have burned almost one million acres. nick mcgurk is near the badly damaged town of paterros washington. >> reporter: homes, narkds neighborhoods, even train tracks turned to ash. the carlton complex fire has burned more than 150 structures. the state's governor jay inslee, toured the devastation on sunday. >> this is a very active fire. it is extremely dangerous. >> reporter: on the front lines, more than 2500 firefighters have spent days trying to control the flames. dangerous winds whipped four separate wildfires into one fast-moving inferno. its size and speed gave
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homeowners little time to re >> boy, it's just coming through like a blow torch. >> reporter: one death has been connected to the fire. a 67-year-old man died of a heart attack while trying to save his home. >> he was a good friend of mine. a really great man. >> reporter: the fire wiped out the power grid in four nearby towns. even those whose homes survived may not have electricity for several weeks. >> between mother nature and the lack of resources, everything going on in the region it's very challenging. >> reporter: drought-like conditions have created an early and active fire season, but cooler temperatures and lighter winds are expected to help firefighters today. >> our state is up to a very dangerous situation where every year we are getting more drought conditions, more fires. they're expected to quadruple in the years to come. >> reporter: with more lightning in the forecast this week any ground gained could just as quickly be lost. for "cbs this morning," i'm nick mcgurk brewster washington.
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rory mcilroy is one step closer to a milestone in golf history this morning. the 25-year-old from northern ireland won the british open championship at royal liverpool in england by two strokes sunday. he becomes the third youngest golfer in history to win three of the four majors behind only jack nicklaus and tiger woods. his father gerry, made a bet ten years ago that rory would win the open by his 26th birthday. his bet earned the elder mcilroy more than $170,000. >> i had the tournament on every morning watching. it was a great victory for the irishman. >> what confidence of the father and son. >> indeed indeed. it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning" we'll check headlines from around the globe. plus a mother arrested for from the kpix 5 weather center. good morning everybody. check this out. we actually have a few rain drops on the camera lens looking out towards the transamerica building.
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so yes, few sprinkles heading outdoor and most precipitation is north of the golden gate bridge. it's fallen apart very quickly. that's all monsoonal moisture and currently we are in the 350s and 60s and later today numbers from the 60s to the low and mid- 80s. outside number will be 87 degrees and that will be in gilroy. this national weather report sponsored by dreamworks new movie "the hundred-foot journey" in theaters this august 8th. dreamworks "the hundred-foot new journey." in theaters august 8.
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good monday morning everyone, it is 7:26689 i'm frank mallicoat -- 7:26. aim frank mallicoat. a $72 million water purification plant in san jose finally opened for business. the water will be used for things like industrial cooling, and watering highway median strips and golf courses. court hearing set for today for ryan chamberlain. he's accused of having a bomb in his knob hill apartment and if convicted he could get ten years in prison on bomb and gun possession charges. and the city council will have foster city will vote on a new smoking restriction under the proposal smoke willing not be allowed -- smoking will not be allowed in outdoor seating areas and also restrictions near retail space and multifamily residences. got your traffic and your weather coming up right off the break. stay -- after the break. stay there.
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right now. seasoned lanes of 880 -- ad the lanes of 88 # -- the southbound lanes of 880. now we have a stall. the combination of those two things has traffic backed up now beyond 238. you can see speeds there averaging about 24 miles per hour. b.a.r.t. though on time. that would be a great way around bay area. system wide no delay. bay bridge still stacked up through the maze and a little bet clearing though closer to the pay gates and the left lanes and carpool lanes also look great. more on the forecast. good morning everybody. this is the scene looking out towards coat park. sprinkles, 60s from santa rosa all the way to san jose and later today no clearing at the coast in the low 60s and partial clearing bayside. and through the 70s to the low and mid- 80s in the inland areas with the sunshine. southwest breeze 10 to 20 miles per hour. warmest days of the week, thursday and friday.
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>> the sommer cup, germany won. singapore produced a powerful anti-gambling commercial. see if you can spot its one fatal flaw. >> i can't wait to win the world cup. >> i bet you they did. >> i hope they win. >> why? >> because i bet all my savings. >> germany won. why the long face? that kid is the richest person. now, clearly -- >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour the new york police department faces growing scrutiny after a man
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dies in custody. officers apparently used a> plus, the mother arrested for letting her child play alone at the park. legal analyst rikki klieman is in studio. she looks at the case generated about good parenting and police your reach. that's ahead. now it's time too show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. starting this morning you'll pay more for the airlines security fee. the new fee will be $5.60 for all flights and any connection longer than 4 hours will be considered as a separate flight. >> the "south china morning post" says mcdonald's kfc, and pizza hut stopped buying from congress congress accused of selling rotten meat. they're apologized and launching
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a probe. the supplier is accused of falsifying deadline dates. >> the verdict shows the public still blames the toe bea co-company for illnesses and deaths relating to smoking. people in florida filed more than 2,000 claims in the last eight years. a mavis sinkhole is threatening homes in the central part of the state. it measured 25 feet wide. it's grown expanding 40 feet wide. the sinkhole is creating cracks. authorities are keeping an eye on the hole this morning. >> and a psychist cheated death twice. he was supposed to fly on both of the doomed malaysia airlines but in each case he changed planes aet the last minute. 193 of the 298 people killed on flight 17 were from the netherlands. the delay in getting their bot back home is only compounding
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the dutch see it the victims of the crash are being held in standoff created by russia. the dutch are leaving flowers and notes of condolences. this one at the amsterdam airport just yards from where the passengers boarded flight 17 last thursday. but, of course it's not enough. the families want the bodies sent home i want to arrange a funeral. i can't. i don't know where they are. i don't know. i want them back. i want my children back. look at those people.
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how beautiful. >> oh my god. >> they have to come back. >> give the bodies back. >> mr. putin, send my children home. send them home. >> reporter: 17-year-old grieving for his friend min puts the blame squarely where most dutch people do. >> i do think mr. putin helped the terrorists. i think he delivered the arms and the people necessary to utilize them. >> reporter: european governments have told president putin he has until tomorrow to help international forensic teams have just arrived at the crash site. >> you get choked listening to the mother say send my children home. i wonder if they'll get to see
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the video in russia. that's the thing. will he ever get to hear that? >> he's been out of sight for the past several days but pressure is building. it's interesting to hear the secretary say it's putin's last chance to act. >> i hope so. this morning two police officers are off the streets days after arresting a staten island man. he was placed in an apparent choke hold. michelle miller is here with a second video. >> good morning. there's question as to why the officers are still using choke holds. the maneuver has been banned by the nypd for more than two decades. eric garner's violent arrest shocked new yorkers. and now a second video is sparking more outrage. it shows the 3-year-old who
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appears to be unconscious lying handcuffed on the ground. officers check for a pulse and empty his pockets but give no medical kafrmt paramedics arrive about four minutes into the video. >> sir, it's ems. you're getting help. >> reporter: garner was later taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival. on thursday garner was con frothed by police officers responding to a call that he was selling cigarettes illegally. >> you want to harass me for selling cigarettes. i'm minding my business. >> >> this officer was seen with
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his arm around him. >> it's an enormous responsibility the responsibility of keeps ugg safe but also the sponlts of making very difficult split-second decisions in trying circumstances. >> reporter: the officer seen waving to the camera has been in court twice. on saturday he was stripped of his gun and badge pending further investigation. a second officer was placed desk duty. >> this appears to have been a choke hold but the investigation by the district attorney's office and the internal affairs will seek to make that final determination. >> garner a father of six suffered from as ma. police say he went into cardiac arrest but the medical examiner has not yet determined the cause of death. his grief-stricken family wants justice. >> he didn't die because he stopped breathing on his own. >> that's right. >> somebody took his brekts away
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from him. how senseless was that. >> on sunday the fire department also put two paramedics and two emts on modified desk duty pending the completion of an investigation. according to police, garner has 31 prior arrests including one for drug charges and selling untaxed cigarettes. >> all right. michelle. thank you. and another controversy this morning. how young is too young for a young child to play outside without parental supervision. a south carolina mom deborah ha really was arrested for letting her 9-year-old daughter go to the park while she was at work. there's a heated debate. some sail she placed her in danger. others say it went too far. the mother is now facing felony charges and a possible ten-year sentence? >> well, that's the ultimate punishment. i don't think anything like that
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is going to happen. but it does all put us on notice about what a parent is and is not able to do. we need to look at the facts here. this is a working mother. she works at mcdonald's. the daughter was put three days in a row in a park. the daughter had a cell phone. the daughter is 9 years old. but the mcdonald also is not next to the park and the daughter is at least 6 minutes from the home. you have a good samaritan who says, god, i see this child in the park where you're mom, and the police were called. >> some may say, my child is 9. i know they're mature they can handle the situation. others would say my child is too young. >> ultimately if you're talking a 10-year felony, the punishment does not fit the crime.
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if you're talking about taking a mother away from a child and putting her in social services, that does not. however, you cannot in today's. what you have to look at is the solution. >> charlie, you look troubled. >> what's the question. >> i think question is what do we do as a society to create situations where we another interfering with every decision that a parent makes about that pressure relationship of raising a child. but at the same time we want to keep children safe. so i think if you have a working mother and you have state law that is vague, we've got really vague state laws that is, that we're supposed to supervise as parents, whatever that means. that what we need is communication and collaboration. if you're a working mom, we need to be able to talk with other
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moms. we need to talk with social services so that children just aren't scooped away. >> just quickly, it varies state by state that you leave your children alone? >> there really is no black letter law. is it 12 16 we don't know. >> i can guarantee you a lot of mothers at home are going i have to check what the law is. >> leaving at home for a couple of hours may be one thing. leaving one in a park where people come and people watch and people may grab plus she could lose the phone, plus she could get injured. >> a lot of people feel sympathy for this mother. >> of course of course. ahead, seven people survive. a new scare aboard a hotz air balloon. what happened in the moments before the explosion. we'll show you next on "cbs this morning."
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look for answers this morning after a hot air balloon explosion. >> he's going to hit it. he's going to hit it. >> he hit it. >> oh my gosh. >> everyone survived. don dahler is here to show us what happened. don, good morning. >> good morning. the hot air balloon tour ended in a dramatic collision with power lines. as the balloon floated across onlookers took out their cameras to capture the explosion. as it slowly descended -- it hit a series of power lines. neighbors looked on as the basket landed in this yard. >> i heard this bang and the hot air balloon went down. >> you thought they were gone? >> we thought they were gone. >> three passengers sustained electrical burns but no life-threatening injuries were reported. the pilot was fighting high winds at the time of the crash
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and overshot his landing. young, who's been giving hot air balloon tours for more than 35 years had to land in an unfamiliar neighborhood. this is the third accident this year involving hot air balloons and power lines. two months ago in virginia three people died when a hot air balloon hit power lines and erupted in flames and in april seven people were in this balloon when it drifted into power lines. hotary balloons accounted for 48% of accidents. like the crash saturday reports show the majority of hot air balloon accidents happening during landings. the ntsb has been urging the faa to inject further oversight. earlier this year they called for hot air operators to
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from the kpix 5 weather center. good morning everybody. check this out. we actually have a few rain drops on the camera lens looking out towards the transamerica building. so yes, few sprinkles heading out the door and most precipitation is north of the golden gate bridge. it's falling apart very quickly. that's all monsoonal moisture and currently we are in the 50s and 60s and later today numbers from the 60s to the low and mid- 80s. outside number will be 87 degrees and that will be in gilroy. he is not quite 1 years old yet but prince george is showing his independence. he's taking it one step at a time next on "cbs this morning." then my rheumatologist prescribed enbrel. i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. enbrel helps relieve pain and stop joint damage. i've been on the course and on the road. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections.
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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. enbrel helped relieve my joint pain. but the best part of every journey... dad!!! ...is coming home. ask if enbrel, the number one biologic medicine prescribed by rheumatologists, can help you stop joint damage.
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connection with a bank r good monday morning everyone, it's 7:56. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening around the bay area right now. a teenager will be charged later today in a connection with a bank robbery and shootout in stockton. to suspects and a hostage were killed last week. jaime ramous will be a-- ramos will be arraigned today. and two people are found dead inside a sausalito home over the weekend. they responded to reports of gunshots on san carlos avenue yesterday morning. inside they found the bodies of a man in his 50s and a woman in her 40s. and a new water purification plant is now open for business down in san jose. the facility will recycle waste water for things like industrial cooling and outdoor watering. the plant is purifying some eight million gallons of water each and every day. traffic and weather coming up right after the break.
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good morning, checking conditions right now in westbound 580. through the love love. we've seen this -- livermore valley. we've seen this drive time drop by about ten minutes in the last half harasser so. about 30 minutes or the westbound lanes between the pass and 680. the heaviest traffic is the approach to vasoco. and look at all the delays southbound 880 from hayward straight on down into fremont. you can see red sensors meaning speeds below 25 miles per hour. if you're crossing the san mateo bridge though, things still look good out to the peninsula. that is traffic. here's roberta. gee drain drops across if area this morning. a look out to coit tower. it's gray and cloudy and we have a little bit of sprinkles there. meanwhile, overcast in livermore in the mid 60s and few rain drops in santa rosa. clearing out away from the bay today. 60s coast and 80s in the inland areas. well, it will be muggy today. less muggy on tuesday.
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>> good morning to our viewers in the west. it's monday july 21st. and welcome back to cbs this morning. more news ahead. including crash investigators fooirnl getting access to the flight 17 disaster scene. and first here is a look at the eye opener at 8:00. >> bodies will be moved they say later today. >> russia is trying to push the responsibility for this tragedy on tthto the ukrainian military. >> it lasted long enough to get some of the wounded out and then broken nobody knows how many are still trapped. >> wild fires so bad this morning. more than one thousand national
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guard troops in washington state. >> raised questions about why police officers continue to use choke holds. >> now i fwoert check the law because i have a mature nine-year-old or eleven-year-old sometimes i leave at home. >> and onlookers took out a cameras to catch mature the massive explosion. >> rory has won his open. >> a bet ten years ago that rory would win the open by his 26th birthday. earned him more than $170,000. >> today's eye open are at 8:00 is presented by comfort inn. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and yes we're all together. it is summer but we're all together here. for the first time since the downing of the flight 17 they
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began work at the crash site. 298 people were killed in thursday's disaster. >> russian separatists who control the area have been limiting access to the debris field. mark phillips is at the scene where there are concerns over how the bodies are being handled and when they will be returned home. mark, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. well, for if first time four days after this disaster there is some prospect of movement on the treatment of the victims of this crash. those victims are being held or most of them have been recovered so far in a series of refrigerated rail cars in a town about 10 miles from here. and for the first time today outside forensic experts from holland have viewed the bodies. they are part of an advanced team. holland of course lost the most people of any country on that flight. and the rebels say they may now in fact move the train to a more
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accessible area. there have been complaintsterritory and no facility to begin the process. on the crash site itself no formal investigation has begun. and no sign of any international aviation experts on the scene as yettet nora. >> mark, thank you. and this morning russian president putin is defending his role. he's under increasing international pressure to push the rebels to cooperate. senator kerry said on face the nation sunday there is evidence linking the insurgents suspected in the shootdown to russia. >> we have intercepted voices documented from our people through intelligence as being separatists, who are talking to each other about the shoot down. and we know that we have a video now of a transporter removing an
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sa-11 system back into russia. and it shows a missing missile or so. so there is enormous amount of evidence. even more evidence than i just documented, that points to the involvement of russia. >> this morning putin said the finger pointing needs to stop and the downing should not be used for political gain. learning more about 19-year-old quinn, the only u.s. citizen aboard the flight. his grandfather spoke to cbs this morning about his family's loss. >> you always hope that you will be the first one to leave this land instead of one of the children or the grandchildren. that's the only worry, of course. missing a child or a grandchild is the most horrible thing. we have to accept the facts. there is no other way to do it.
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>> the business student was traveling from his home in amsterdam to meet his family for a week long vacation in bali. >> every storying is heartbreakings on this case. malaysia airlines made another questionable choice yesterday. rerouted from kuala lumpur to london. it could not use the usual route. so it rerouted over syria that is, you know, another war zone. but this flight was able to make it safely to london. >> israeli air strikes continue hitting gaza the number of palestinians killed is now more than 500. secretary kerry will be in egypt today to try to work out another cease fire. >> 28 israelis dead in the conflict. two civilian 18 soldiers. two americans fighting have also been killed. 21-year-old shawn carmelli and
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24-year-old max stein berg of california. steinberg was a sharp shooter in the israeli defense forces. his family least for israel today, where he will be buried. >> movements for obama to end discrimination against gay and transgender workers in the federal government. signed two amendments. both updates to existing lawsst. the first prohibits employees hired by the government to dprimt. the second prohibits discrimination against gender identity. some religious groups want exemptionings exemptioningses. is president is declining. >> walking ahead of his first birthday tomorrow. prince william says his son charges around the palestine opening -- palace and opens doors.
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38-year-old american standing on the surface of the moon. on this july 20th, 1969. >> on this july 20 1969. >> one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. >> i'll never forget that night. it was amazing. some people weren't even born 45 years ago and didn't have a chance to see this remarkable evening. 45 years ago apollo 11 astronaut neil armstrong became the first mab to walk on the moan.
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the president is also likely to address criticism of russian president vladimir putin. for his part today, putin said his country is doing everything it can to allow the u.n. agency to investigate the scene. the probe has been hampered since the boeing 777 was shot down thursday over eastern ukraine resulting in the deaths of 298 people. for the first time this morning, rebels allowed investigators to view the bodies. many are kept in rail cars ten miles from the disaster site. let's bring in our chief white house correspondent major
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garrett. we heard from president pew tin tin -- putin. >> the white house has tried not to personalize this between the u.s. and russia. the white house would like to bring to bear to lean on the separatists to do everything they can to make sure this investigation hampered as you said already by tampering with the evidence. put that on track, a track to lead to conclusive evidence and conclusive definitive conclusions about what happened to bring down malaysian airlines flight 17. the president will address hostilities in the middle east. israel efforts to quail the gaza rockets coming from hah has, fire from gaza city and surrounding areas. secretary of state john kerry is due to arrive in cairo egypt later tonight to begin the process of obtaining a prolonged cease fire between the two.
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ukraine will be the top of the president's remarks, putting pressure on putin to get him to do more. here's the president. >> i want to make a brief statement about the tragedy in ukraine. before i do i want to note secretary kerry has departed for the middle east. as i said many times, israel has the right to defend against rocket and tunnel attacks from hamas. as a result of this operation, israel has done significant damage to hamas' terrorist infrastructure in gaza. i have said we have serious concerns about the rising number of palestinian deaths and loss of israeli lives. that is why it now has to be our focus and focus of international community to bring about a cease fire that ends the fighting and that can stop the deaths of innocent civilians. both in gaza and in israel. so secretary kerry will meet
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with allies and partners. i've instructed him to push for an immediate hostility based on return to november 2012 cease fire agreement between israel and hamas in gaza. the work will not be easy. obviously there are enormous passions involved in this and some very difficult strategic issues involved. nevertheless i've asked john to do everything he can to help facilitate a hostility. we don't want to see more civilians getting killed. with respect to ukraine, it's now been four days since malaysian airlines flight 17 was shot down over territory controlled by russian backed separatists in ukraine. over the last several days our hearts have been absolutely broken as we've learned more
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about the extraordinary and beautiful lives that were lost. men, women, children infants who were killed so suddenly and senselessly. our thoughts and prayers continue to be with their families around the world who are going through just unimaginable grief. i've had the opportunity to speak to a number of leaders around the world who citizens were lost on this flight and all of them remain in a state of shock. but frankly also a state of outt rage. our immediate focus is on recovering those who were lost. investigating exactly what happened and putting forward the facts. we have to make sure the truth is out and that accountability exists. international investigators are on the ground. they have been organized.
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i've sent teams. other countries have sent teams. they are prepared and organized to conduct what should be the kinds of protocols and scouring and collecting of evidence that should follow any international since didn't like this. what they need right now is immediate and full access to the crash site. they need to be able to conduct a prompt and full and unimpeded as well as transparent investigation. recovery personnel have to do the solemn and sacred work of recovering the remains of those who were lost. ukrainian president poroshenko has declared a zone around the site. international teams are in place prepared to conduct the investigation and recover the remains of those who have been lost but unfortunately the russian backed separatists that control the area continue to
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block the investigation. they've repeatedly prevented international investigators from gaining full access to the wreckage. investigators approached and they fired weapons into the air. the separatists are removing evidence from the crash site all of which begs the question what exactly are they trying to hide? more over russian backed separatists are removing bodies from the crash site. often times without the care that we would normally expect from a tragedy like this. this is an insult to those who have lost loved ones. this behavior has no place in the community of nations. now, russia has extraordinary influence over these separatists. no one denies that. russia has urged them on. russia has trained them. we know russia has armed them with military equipment and
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weapons including antiaircraft weapons. key separatist leaders are russian citizens. so given its direct influence over the separatists, russia and president putin in particular has direct responsibility to compel them to cooperate with the investigation. that is the least they can do. president putin says that he supports a full and fair investigation. i appreciate those words, but they have to be supported by actions. the burden now is on russia to insist that the separatist stop tampering with the evidence grant investigators who are already on the ground immediate full and unimpeded access to the crash site. the separatists and the russian sponsors are responsible for the safety of the investigators doing their work. along with allies and partners we will be working this issue at
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the united nations today. more broadly, as i've said throughout this crisis and the crisis in ukraine generally, i've said this directly to president putin as well as publicly. my preference continues to be finding a diplomatic resolution within ukraine. i believe that can still happen. that is my preference today and will continue to be my preference but if russia continues to violate ukraine yaes's sovereignty and back separatists. separatists become more and more dangerous not simply in ukraine but the broader international community, russia will further isolate itself from the international community. the cost for russia's behavior will continue to increase. now is the time for president putin and russia to pivot away from the strategy they've been taking and get serious about trying to resolve hostilities within ukraine in a way that
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respects and brings sovereignty and respects the ukrainian people to make decisions about their own lives. time is of the essence. our friends and allies need to recover those who were lost. that's the least we can do. that's the least that decency demands. families deserve to be able to lay their loved ones to rest with dignity. the world deserves to know exactly what happened and people of ukraine deserve to determine their own future. thanks. >> and a very stern warning from president obama from the south lawn right there indicating that given its influence that russia and russian president vladimir putin have direct responsibility to direct those separatists to cooperate. he says he preerktappreciates the words by president putin overnight, but those must be supported by actions. those include immediate, full
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access for international investigators to access the site of the downed plane and to deal respectively with many of the victims there. and our coverage is going to continue throughout the i day on this cbs station and online at cbs news.com. we'll have a full report tonight on the cbs evening news with scott pelly. those of you in the west will return to cbs this morning. this has been a cbs news special report. i'm and play golf at riviera, which is a great golf course. so this is one more time you regret what you didn't do rather than what you did. great man, a funny man, loving man. >> and to say he had no regrets. he has no regrets in his life. >> i read a nice tribute by sally field. she said he was a diamond, the most wonderful person in the world. >> and cute too. sets the standard for romantic comedies.
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we'll look at the legacy of purification p good monday morning everyone, it's 8:25. i'm frank mallicoat. he's what's happening around the bay area right now. a $72 million water purification plant in san jose set to open up. the water will be used for things like industrial cooling and watering highway median strips and golf courses. court hearing set for today for ryan chamberlain. he's the man accused of having a bomb in his knob hill apartment. if convicted he could get up to ten years in prison on bomb and gun possession charges. and the city council in foster city will vote on new smoking restrictions there. under the proposals, smoking will not be allowed in outdoor seating areas at restaurants, there would also be restrictions near retail space and multifamily residences as well. got your traffic and your weather too coming up right after the break.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour can men and women be just friends? it's been 25 years since billy crystal and meg ryan debate thad question in "when harry met sally." we'll look at what's changed in relationships. the four-time emmy winner will tell us about husband know role radon van. that's ahead. "usa today" says he's fighting to keep his therapy ducks. he said they help his back injury and his post-traumatic
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stress but the village of west lafayette say the ducks violate an ordinance banning farm animals. he's been cited with a misdemeanor. he goes to court wednesday. "the boston globe" has looked at sitting. the study warmed prolonged sitting increased blood pressure and cholesterol but exercising can erase those. get this. the sony wallman costedmakes a comeback. sells for $700. they said don't worry about the cost. >> mission accomplished. and the seattle p.i. says a western teenager with cystic fibrosis got a chance to play alongside a big zoker star. the make-a-wish foundation
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arranged for him to play alongside clint dempsey. of course, dem circumstance as you may recall was capital of team usa in the world cup. bailey didn't score but that didn't seem to matter to him or anybody else who was cheering him on. >> that's too bad. we like clint dempsey. >> subprime lending is hot again, but instead of home mortgages, now the loans are being handed out to car buyers. subprime boroughs are the least creditworthy and often the most predatorial to credit practices. jill schlesinger with what's at stake. good morning. >> good morning. >> is i got doing be another lending bubble? >> it sort of feels that way. we receive car loans increase 130 rp 130% in the last five years. we're talking people with credit scores at or below 640.
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what we're seeing is we're not back to the peak. in 2006 36% of all auto loans were subprime. i end went down to 20%. now we're up to 27%. it seems like a big increase but we're not back to the peak. i should also note the mortgage department, that could potentially bring down the whole system. the market system, not the same. it's a fraction of the impact on the overall economy. >> what happens to people who accept a loan make a loan and the people who get the loan knowing they can't pay it? what happens to them? >> well, you know it's not clear that we know that there are loans being extended to people who can't pay. what usually happens is the borrower -- what you do is look at the monthly loan amount. you think you can do it but something bad happens and you can't do it. what's interesting is very drnt than the mortgage department where if someone is delinquent it takes a long time to get the
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house, go into foreclosure. with these, they can literally shut down your ignition repo says the car, take it back. in some cases the lenders are going after these borrowers for the unpaid amounts. >> is there any regulation from the government on this kind of stuff? >> this is kind of a thorny issue. if you look at the dodd/frank reform the cfpb was tasked with protecting consumers, but these awe though loans were pulled out of the cfpc. that's too bad. it hasn't been as straenously policed as perhaps it would have been. >> how you do make sure you're not going to be a victim of this predatory lending? >> you've got to get information. you've got to say what is the total amount of the lope. you have to say what is the interest rate of the loan. you want to know what are any extras i could be paying. some are buying insurance and they don't realize it.
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don't get caught in a monthly payment trap. you've got to look at the overall level of this debt and make sure you can afford it. >> read the fine print. jill schlesinger, thank you. always good to see you. and on july 21st, 1989 "when harry met sally" opened in theaters. anthony mason shows us how it was a quintessential romantic comedy. >> the original script was titled "boy meets girl." the idea came from rob reiner who was single and frustrated at the time. it was turned into "when harry met sally." >> a discuss began how men and women relate to each other. >> what i'm saying -- and this is not a come-on in any, way, shape or form. men and women can't be friends
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because the sex part always gets in the way. >> reporter: the romantic comedy grossed $92 million. written by nora ephron and written by rob reiner it remains on one of the best. film and culture critic julie class never. >> reporter: 25 years later it shows how romance endures. billy chris tells us why. >> because it's real and honest. a wonderful script. great director. great pairing. >> we loved what we were doing, it was new york romantic leaves change. what could be better. >> reporter: and the movie's climatic scene shot in katz's
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delicatessen became one of the most remembered scenes. >> what are you saying that they fake orgisms? >> yes yes, yes. >> sari cooper is a sex therapist. >> to this day it's an extraordinary scene. >> right. >> what do you think about this scene captivated people? >> it challenged the belief system of mainstream america and mainstream men in america about how women's sexuality really works. >> what do you think women saw in that scene? >> i thought it was like a call to break out and start talking you know and asking for what you want. >> it's funny how huge that scene's become. >> well, no reaction could be better than rob reiner's mother who in my opinion is the real star of that scene. >> she had one line in the film. >> i'll have what she's having. >> crystal recalls that the cast and crew knew they had something unique. >> you knew it was something
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good. you never know it's going to hold like this where lines are quoted 25 years later. it's kinded of special. >> i guess we're not going to be frejdss then. >> guess not. >> those lines may be so quotable thanks to the style of the screenplay. >> nora ephron had one of the most distinctive voice whether it was in her prose or in a screenplay. >> i came here tonight because when you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible. >> reporter: a generation later the relevance of the film and the chemistry of the on-set screen couple live on. >> you say things like that and you make it impossible for me to hate you. and i hate you, harry. i really hate you. >> the american film institute ranked "i'll have what she's having" on the list of 100 most memorable ranks, they had ranked
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it 33. it was estelle reiner's only line. billy crystal wrote that line. >> he wrote it. what was the number one line. >> i knew you'd ask that question. i think a big part of the films the ability goes back to that scene. everybody knows that line and everybody knows that scene. meg ryan was not the original change. >> there's a line in "a few good men." >> and "gone with the wind." >> "you can't handle the truth." >> every time you hear that line it's nervous laughter or craiks you up. >> it still makes you comfortable 25 years later that and norah efron's. >> number one, "frankly my dear i don't give a damn." chris had that. >> this little piece of information right here. thank you. what a great piece.
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excuse me. hello. ooh. hello. >> what do you think? >> you look like lucy's stunt double. >> no. i'm a combination of lucy and ricky. >> and terrifying. >> all right. that was hilarious. hank azar yas stoeld the audience's heart. he's voices dozens on the show "the simpsons." now he co-stars in the new season of "ray donovan." he plays a los angeles bureau chief of the fbi. >> so sullivan comes to the marina and i think he's getting on the boat to mexico with false passports. now, he's cagey bastard, you know that. but we were ready for him. when he drew his gun, the
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special agent drew his. when it was all over my guy was still alive. i told him to his face frankings you're a hero. he said, boss i'm just doing my job. >> when can i talk to him? >> i wish i could make him available. i just can't. >> welcome to studio 57. >> thank you. >> you go to a museum. instead of painting, every actor stops and stairs aet a spectacle. that is uniquely fascinating. is it the singing you get to do or the sex scene that i'm still waiting for? go ahead, hank azaria. impress me. >> i certainly made a speck tack cal doing both of those things i promise you. >> had you watched the show before? >> when i was called about the role, i had never seen it yet. as many of us do i binge
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watched to see whether i wanted to join or not. i was hooked about halfway through. it's a good show. >> you're known more for your comedic roles. >> yes. >> was this a difficult switch? >> it's interesting i'm promoting "ray donovan," but the clip you show is from 20 years ale ago. i'm most familiar with kwm simpson." he wouldn't let me be funny. he wanted me to work on the emotions. i'm ready to do it but it's not that often. >> how did you get into the fbi character. >> i spoke to allen jackson, a consultant on "ray donovan." he's a law enforcement guy. he helped create this character. he consulted on the writing of this character and i spoke to him a bunch about what's -- how
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these guys really conduct themselves, what they'd be thinking in certain moments? >> what did you learn? >> i learned an interesting thing. he said these guys -- because my guy, he starts out as kind of a conservative boy scout and the layers of the onion starts getting pealed and he gets a little out of his mind. i said does this really happen.? he said guys are so ego-driven they look eight as works of art. as creative as text actors and directors get, they get so as directors. i get pretty intense about it. >> they say this is the golden age of actors because so many actors are going to television whether it's hb oo or cbs or so many places. is that the reality you see? you get more opportunities? >> i think it's the golden age
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of television. i love it. i have a 5-year-old son. i look forward to whatever is good. you can watch them all. you don't have to record them even anymore. so i think for actors it's harder because, you know now movie stars are coming in to television. there's less -- you know there's a lot more more shows, a lot more good shows, more opportunity in one way. you know what's hard to do is make money. i mean the only in tremendous success do these stores start to pay a lot. >> meaning the tv shows. >> yes. >> mm-hmm. even for the movie stars they don't start out making a lot of money on these shows. >> but, hank you were known to be one of the best voice artists in this business. >> yes, i am. >> for $10 you would prank somebody. if you were to prank call charlie rose. >> it's like a sidenot like a side
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business. i did it for charity. oh, yeah i want to promote my auto business while i'm here. >> if you were going prank charlie rose in a mo character, thing this would be really hilarious. what would you do? >> how would mo prank charlie? he'd probably say, yeah charlie, mo the bartender here. i saw your interview with hillary chintop there. why don't you ask the tough questions like is she going to run because you know what? looking at her sitting in the chair looks like she needs to do some running. you know what i'm -- >> oh, come on. you're all thinking it. >> hank azaria. (vo) ours is a world of passengers. the red-eyes. (daughter) i'm really tired. (vo) the transfers. well, that's kid number three. (vo) the co-pilots. all sitting...
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a teenager is expected to be charged today in connection with a bank robbery and shootout in stockton. two suspects and a hostage were killed during last week's incident. jaime ramos will be arraigned today on three counts of murder. two people are found dead inside a sausalito home. sausalito police say they responded to reports of gunshots on san carlos avenue yesterday morning. inside... they found the bodies 's and a woman heard on san carlos avenue yesterday morning. inside they found the bodies of a man in his radios and a woman in her -- his 50s and a woman in her 40s. a new plant will open up in san jose. the facility will recycle waste water for things like industrial cooling and outdoor waltering. the plant is purr fying some eight million gallons of water a day. speaking of water a rarity. we had rain right? >> we did.
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.01 reported across the north bay today. good morning everybody. few sprinkles still across the bay area. this is the scene looking out from dublin to the mount diablo area under mostly cloudy skies. right now number wise, upper 50s in pacifica and 60s across the bay and into the inland areas we will have a southwest wind today. pretty breezy. no clearing of the coast. partly cloudy across the bay. and sunshine with a few high clouds in the inland areas. it will be another muggy day. ditto tuesday. the warmest days coming up this week will be on thursday and on friday. that's a look at your monday weather. we have traffic with elizabeth up next. tillamook sharp cheddar is naturally-aged for nine months for that creamy delicious taste that makes even the most impatient, patient. dude! tillamook sharp cheddar, tastes better because it's made better.
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good morning, two separate accidents in the east bay. causing some big gridlock right now in westbound 24, straight into oakland. this is the latest accident. it's in the new bore of the caldecott tunnel and you can see it's slow from at least is. stephens it. remains heavy in the mcarthur maze. westbound 24 before 085 thomas now cleared but traffic is obviously very slow and still seeing the delays from that earlier accident. if you're heading to the bay bridge, it is still backed up into the maze. even though it looks like the 580 afro thinned out somewhat. and the nimitz still slow here. still seeing the heaviest theys just north -- delays just north of the oakland coliseum into downtown.
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wayne: let's go! you've got $20,000. (screaming) wayne: i got a monkey, i got a monkey. jonathan mangum, fitness 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: welcome, welcome, welcome. it's “let's make a deal.” i'm wayne brady. you know what we do, right? we make deals. first deal up, i need a couple. let me get a couple. i'll take you two, i'll take you two. yes. either you're a couple or that's a huge coincidence. nice to meet you, everett. - that's right. wayne: and jameelah. - yes. wayne: and what do you two do? - i'm a united states sailor. wayne: give this man a round of applause.
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