tv CBS This Morning CBS January 30, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PST
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yes. our next local update is 7:26. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to viewers in the west. it is friday january 30 2015. welcome to cbs "this morning." the fate of two hostages held by isis hangs in the ball this morning. how negotiations could impact the fight against the terrorist. notorious music mogul surrenders overnight after a deadly hit-and-run following a confrontation on a film set. and inside stubhub's biggest weekend. armored cars and former secret service agents protect the super bowl. >> and "eye-opener" in 60
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seconds. we have not heard yet. >> surrounds the fate of two isis captives. >> the deadline for prisoner swap passed. waiting for proof the pilot held hostage is still alive. the nationwide measles outbreak is spreading this morning. there are at least 98 cases in 14 states. pilot and lockdown. >> a delta air lines flight to las vegas had to make an emergency landing after the pilot got locked out of the cockpit. >> united airlines flight from l.a.x. diverted after the cabin filled with a burning smell. >> rap producer suge knight turned himself into police following a deadly hit-and-run in california. >> looked intentional. we're handling it as a homicide. >> from the southwest, actually quite a bit of rain in and around the super bowl. >> and once again, dealing with more wintry weather. >> a 19-year-old stormed tv news stations in the netherlands using a fake gun tos for himself
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in. >> senator john mccain. >> you're going to have to shut up and get out of here you low-life scum. a wedding party, a hot air pa loon making a forced landing. >> done some crazy things. >> really? nothing coming to mind. i don't know. how many of you here just so you won't be fined? >> hey look i mean all week i done told y'all. >> i'm just here see i don't get fined. >> on cbs "this morning." >> the winner of super bowl xlix is -- >> prediction your sunday? >> i will be drunk by the -- >> this morning's "eye-opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome tocb welcome to krz krz. waiting to find out this morning if two hostages held by isis are
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dead or alive. the deadline for jordan's possible prisoner swap expired at sundown yesterday. jordan wants assurances an air force pilot say live before handing ober a famed female suicide bomb perp isis is also hadding a japanese journalist. >> big changes were supposed to happen near turkey's border with syria. isis threatened to kill at least one of the hostages if jord didn't not comply. charlie dag taata is with us. >> reporter: they refused to hand over the pilot, they won't talk about a deal until they know for sure he's alive. if they are still alive, japanese journalist kenji goto and jordanian pilot, they're on borrowed time. there is no sign of them or their isis captors at the syrian
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border with turkey believed to be the location of a prisoner swap. the pilot's wife broke down in tears as the deadline passed at sundown. isis is demanding the jordan release would-be iraqi suicide bomb er bomber she's been on death row since her arrest almost ten years ago. she and her husband target add packed wedding reception in the jordanian capital. he blew himself up. but al rishawi's explosive vest failed to detonate. nearly 60 people died that day in simultaneous attacks, a day jordanians still call their 9/11. al rishawi came from iraq anbar province, the heart of the insurgency. her first husband and three brothers all reportedly killed in fighting with u.s. forces in 2004. her family was close to the al zarqawi, the al qaeda leader
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killed in an american air strike in 2006. zarqawi's band of extremists were the forefathers of isis. jordanians officials have said they're ready to hand her over but only in exchange for their captured pilot and they want proof he's alive first. that was never on offer. only that his life would be spared. isis hasn't shared what might happen to kenji goto if the deal fell through. japanese officials today declined to say whether negotiations have stalled or if there is any progress at all to report. there's been no official response from isis since that deadline passed at sundown last night. charlie? >> charlie thanks. the hostage negotiations are raising questions this morning about the way countries deal with terrorist groups. cbs news national security analyst is in washington. juan, good morning. >> good morning. >> convention's wisdom has always been if you negotiate with terrorists it will lead to more kidnappings. are we looking at different
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circumstances and trending to more negotiation? >> i think you are, charlie. i think isis is realized the hostages can be used as strategic pawns to not only add to their propaganda value, to give themselves more legitimacy and see them now negotiating with countries directly but also to create tensions in capitals of those countries that are engaged in the fight against isis itself. this has created tension not just in jordan and japan but between coalition members. so i think what you're seeing here is strategic use of hostages as a part of the war plan, the game plan for isis moving forward. >> why have we not heard from them? >> well, it's hard to tell, charlie. i think isis probably is trying to figure out what they want to do with these individuals. they're trying to probably figure out what the greatest propaganda value is and unfortunately you may have these individuals lives in danger. so who knows. i'm not quite sure why we haven't heard anything but isis clearly wants to take full
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advantage of the situation to get attention tuned build their legitimacy. >> juan, there was news yesterday that of course, in the exchange where the u.s. exchanged army sergeant bowe bergdahl for five terrorists that went to qatar, one of those terrorists held by the u.s. has trying to be in contact with terrorist organizationsdoes that set a dangerous precedent? >> i they is so norah and one of the risks of that exchange was not only were we releasing high-level taliban operatives who would likely re-engage and reconnect with terrorists groups and potentially a return to afghanistan after the year moratorium in qatar, but that we were setting a precedent. that terrorist groups like the taliban, isis would see that you could begin to negotiate with the u.s. and other countries for strategic value, to get high-level prisoners back and i think that really was a dangerous moment and i think you're seeing some of the effects of that in the current situation with jordan.
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>> all right. thank you very much. nfl commissioner roger goodell has a lot of questions to answer today, two days before the super bowl. he'll give his annual state of the league address. he speaks at the end of the season full of controversy on and off the field. jan crawford is at the university of phoenix stadium in glendale, arizona. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. even if you didn't have a calendar you would know that the super bowl is right around the corner, and the anticipation is building. people are coming into town from all over the country. there's just an excitement here now that we haven't seen and the players at their press conferences, they are singlerly focused on the game. 73,000 fans will pack inside and an estimated 184 million americans will be watching on television. with all eyes on the game the nfl is determined to avoid a replay of the deflated football
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controversy. the referees will handle the super bowl footballs differently than a regular game. >> we are reviewing our protocol. the officials do have the footballs up until about ten minutes prior to kickoff and then they're brought out to the field. >> reporter: each team provides 12 footballs for a normal game. for the super bowl the seahawks and patriots hand over 15 balls heech, turned over to officials today. turned over and reinspected three hours before kickoff. last night on "jimmy kimmel live" some of the patriots most recognizable fans came to defense of their quarterback tom brady, dogged all week by lingering accusations of deflating footballs before the afc championship game. >> i deflated those balls myself. i did it. i'm the perpetrator it was all me. >> i am the locker room guy. >> i'm the locker room guy. >> tom brady had nothing to do with this. he was too busy.
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>> the nfl going to such lengths to monitor the super bowl footballs, air pressure likely won't affect the game but what could have an impact whether seahawks superstar cornerback richard sherman will miss it. he and his girlfriend are expecting their first child. >> he's going to do as father, his first favor and stay in there another week or two. i would not like to miss the birth of muy first son. >> reporter: teammate marshawn lynch boy caught led to fines by the nfl had an interesting week of media available. on tuesday -- >> i'm sheer so i won't get fined. >> i'm just here so i won't get fined. >> reporter: and wednesday. >> you know why i'm here. >> reporter: and thursday lynch had his most honest and engaging session of the week. >> y'all shut off the cameras and microphones there, so now for this next three minutes, i'll just be looking at y'all the way that y'all looking at me. >> reporter: now commissioner goodell will be talking to the press just a couple hours, about
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11:30, here in phoenix, and you can be sheer he'll get questions on deflate-gate but i don't think he'll answer that. the investigators warned no one to make public comments. and hype alert measles ahead of the super bowl thousands head for the big game. the state is trying to keep track of 1,000 people who may have been exposed to the virus. health officials want any unvaccinated person exposed to measles to stay home for three weeks. >> measles is considered one of the most contagious diseases there are. at least 98 cases in 14 states and many connected to an outbreak at disneyland. health ish tos expect a visz etter from overseas may to be blame. our dr. holly phillips is with us. with the super bowl sunday this is a real concern, because you have so many people in close contact and measles is incredibly contagious. >> it really is. if you're lucky enough to have tickets to the super bowl, absolutely enjoy it's.
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>> thank you. >> i will say -- >> you're welcome. i will say, it's a confirmation. the super bowl brings thousands together in really close contact, just like disneyland and we see how quickly measles spread there. a lot of people don't realize measles is one of the most contagious diseases we know of. >> because it's airborne. >> and if you're unvaccinated and in close contact with someone who has it, there's a 90% transmission rate. not only can people cough are and sneeze it on you, but it lingers in the air for up to two hours, lurks on surfaces up to two hours. you can be exposed and not even know it. >> how do you know when you have it? >> another thing it's not that easy to know in the early stages of the illness. an up to 21-day incubation period without symptoms. in the first three or four days of symptom, it's hard to distinguish from a cold or flu. it's not until you get the white spots in your mouth and that reddish-brown rash that spreads
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down your body you can really recognize it. >> everybody, if concerned, go to their doctor and find out if they've been vaccinated. if not, be vaccinated? >> if you're not sure whether or not you've been vaccinated a quick blood test will say whether or not you're immune. most people in this outbreak were either unvaccinated or had no idea whether or not they were. if you're not immune get the two vaccine protocol. if slightly inmun, not immune nudge, just get a beastooster shot. >> what if you got it as a child? >> most peep are safe born brn 1957, considered safe likely exposed. but if there's any question you can do a quick blood toast see if you're immune. >> thank you holly. it is snowing again this morning in parts of the northeast. that is not what eastern long island needed. many towns are still digging out from tuesday's blizzard. another storm could follow sunday night into monday.
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from our boston station, wbz, tracking conditions for us. danielle, good morning. >> good morning, and good morning to our viewers in the west. the craziness on the east coast continues here. another storm coming in. more like a coating today of two inches but eastern maine clobbered with over a foot of snow. the snow not wrapping up until tomorrow evening. at the same time we on the west coast dealing with our own system too bringing as much as a foot or more in the highest terrain stretching back from utah, back down to portions of new mexico through the day on saturday. that same storm is going to spread east and drop a swath of snow, 6 to 12 inches from eastern iowa across the interior and heading into sunday and monday time frame, thankfully, all is quiet on the west coast other than that temperatures in the 60s and 70s today. 50s from portland back up through seattle this ank. wung of the biggest names in rap music in jail this morning. producer suge knight could face
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murder charges. a pioneer work wig artists like mc hammer tupac shakur. earlier he was arrested for a deadly hit-and-run in compton, california. it happened after a confrontation on a film set. our report says knight was driving a pickup truck that ran over two men. >> reporter: notorious rap mogul zoog knight turned himself in to police ten hours after fleeing the scene of a deadly hit-and-run in compton. >> so far people we've talked to be looked like it was an intentional act. we're handling it as a homicide. >> reporter: in this video posted by gossip site tmz paramedics attending to a victim. knight and two men were involved in altercation at a fast food restaurant where knight allegedly struck both men with his car killing one and injuring the other. >> went forward and backwards. >> reporter: knight, according to his lawyer was trying to escape after being attacked. when he accidentally backed into the two men.
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one of whom was reportedly a friend. detectives say earlier that day, knight was also involved in a confrontation on the set of the upcoming biopic "straight out of compton" centering on the early group of the rapper group mwa. knight, co-founder the def row records worked with others like tupac shakur but known for a record of serving 4 1/2 years of 9-year prisons sentence for assault and been on parole and several run-ins with the law. last summer shot six times as a los angeles nightclub. his attorney says we are confident once the investigation is completed, he will be totally exonerated. for cbs "this morning," in los angeles. this morning delta air lines is trying to figure out how a
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pilot got locked out of the cockpit in a plane that he was flying. it forced the copilot to make an emergency landing. in washington good morning, how could this happen? >> reporter: good morning. this was a bit of a scare for many of the passengers onboard for several minutes they didn't know what to make of the plane's captain, locked out of the cockpit during one of the most important legs of a flight. the landing. delta flight 1651 with 168 people onboard originated in minneapolis. before making approach in las vegas, the captain couldn't get back into the cockpit as this cell phone video shows, he had to explain to the passengers what he was doing. air traffic control received the emergency call 13 minutes before landing so the first officer who was in the cockpit took control and was able to land the plane safely. in a statement, delta told cbs news the landing happened without sflnt and a commercial aircraft can be landed with one pilot at the control and delta piltsz are fully trained to do
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so if the situation were to occur. that statement perhaps to reassure its passengers. there were no injuries in this and it's not clear why the pilot left the cockpit in the first place. gayle? >> must have been unsettling seeing the captain not able to get back in. seven babies in intensive care ar a deadly gas explosion at a maternity hospital in mexico city. [ explosion ] >> that's a big one. the blast ledged much of edleveled much of the building. workers were fixing a broken hose on a propane gas truck when it blew up. rescuers found everyone who was trapped in the rubble. this morning a man who burst into a dutch tv studio and demanded airtime is in police custody. [ speaking in foreign language ] language ]. >> when he stormed into the empty studio thursday with guns
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drawn, ordered him to lie down. the 19-year-old was wearing a black suit and tie, and carrying what looked like a pistol. he claimed to be part of a hacker group and threatened to detonate explosives. police say the gun was a fake and there were no bombs. no one was hurt. and it is 7:19. ahead on cbs "this morning," an elite college known for partying launches sobering new rules. we'll show you how it's this national weather report
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stop ticket fraud. good morning, 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. uc-davis medical center in sacramento is testing a patient for ebola. in december the federal government designated the hospital as one of 56 priority treatment centers. health officials say the patient is at low risk for ebola but did meet the government guidelines to be tested. rap mogul suge knight was arrested and surrendered to police in connection with a deadly hit-and-run in compton. knight's attorney says his client struck two men with a car while being chased by someone who attacked him. one of the men was killed. knight had repeatedly run into trouble with the law over the past several years.
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good morning. take you out to san jose. first we got word of this from a member of the "kcbs phone force" and now it's confirmed with chp. there is a crash coming out of downtown san jose. it's northbound 280 around the 880/17 interchange. and it's backing up traffic. for a while the middle lanes were blocked. looks like they just cleared to the shoulder in the last few minutes. bay bridge stacked up to the maze but the 580 approach looks okay. much better than usual. you can see the fog moving in, as well. let's check your forecast with roberta. >> we do have some very dense fog in throughout san jose this morning. santa rosa with visibility down to a quarter of a mile because of the fog. and we also have some pretty foggy conditions around vallejo. 39 degrees there. 50 across the santa clara valley. later today, hazy sunshine. temperatures all up to about 70 degrees above average for this time of the year with near or record warm temperatures this weekend. we begin to cloud up on monday, tuesday. that will lead to the potential of rain showers
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who has the ball? where's the ball? see the ball? >> this golden retriever just can't get enough of the exciting action at the australian tennis open. the dog, you hear name george. saw him. he was going crazy, just like this, as the nfl season kicked off. >> that's a male dog. >> definitely is. so excited. >> sayre poev virginia. sayre poev virginia i was thinking looking for the ball. not sarapova. typical male. he was cute. welcome back to cbs "this morning." coming up in this half hour the telemarketer who calmed at exactly the right time. police say she helped stop an
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attack on a woman nearly 1,000 miles away. this morning we'll hear exactly what happened. plus, meet the woman who feels like she's living in the middle of an air show. fighting back bence changing flight paths all over the country. and "los angeles times" says mitt romney will have a phone call. he's expected to say which wail he way he is leaning. >> the "wall street journal" highlights the debut of shake shack on the new york stock exchange. the hamburger chain said its initial public offering $20 a share opened a few minutes ago. >> a lot of burgers but hair good. really good. go danny meyer. and am zone posted higher
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than expected profits. the online retailer in the final moss of last year shares opened higher after yesterday's announcement. amazon stock jumped $38 in after-hours trading. the "new york times" shows china's latest crackdown on access. scientists and others use virtual private networks to get around china's internet restriction. those restrictions are known as the great fire wall. china had tolerated them, but this week began closing them. they are outraged saying it's stifles. and fined, john kir, for not shoveling. failed to clear the snow from front of his home. kerry was overseas when the storm hit. a spokesman says kerry will promptly pay the fine. >> i don't expect he's out there shoveling his walk even in-town
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but will make arrangements to have something go grab a shovel. >> you don't think he -- >> no i don't think so. one of the nation's most prestigious colleges proposes sweeping changes to combat sex assaults. each year students go through a mandatory program to prevent sexual violence. jericka duncan is on the campus in hanover, new hampshire, with the tough, new policy. jericka, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. dartmouth looks like the ideal campus. over the year an increase of the number of reported sexual assaults. 35 reported in 2013. >> now facing an avalanche of criticism, the school's president says, it must stop. >> we will lead in saying no more. >> reporter: dartmouth college president philip handen told sunds no one will be permitted to possess hard alcohol on campus. break the rule you'll face strict new penalties. if fraternities and sororities
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don't comply he'll shut the entire greek system down. >> what is the environment enable dartmouth to fulfill our potential? an environment where students are free of extreme behaviors and part of a safe and happy campus. >> reporter: the ivy league school long ranked among the high ranks of student learning but students also had a reputation for partying hard. ♪ >> all right, keg, you're in. >> reporter: a staple at football games is keggy. the unofficial mascot. a keg of beer. the college in one of its oldest fraternity chapters the inspiration for the 1978 film "animal house." >> ah! >> reporter: dartmouth's reform come after years of accusations that the college wasn't doing enough. debbie gooseman is a senior back in october, she announced why she left her sorority in an open letter to the school newspaper. >> we are through, greek system.
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i'm escaping your grasp and you won't hold me back. >> reporter: what can you tell us about that culture having been a part of the sorority on this campus? what was your experience? >> my experience has been that my friends suffered from sexual assault, and it has been often a situation where there's no communication, and then some other times when it's just blatant rape. >> here's very hard to tear apart because the only social system really on this campus is greek life. >> reporter: joe kerry is also a senior. was this needed? >> yes, absolutely. >> reporter: why? >> we valuate of problems at dartmouth has are going to require dramatic change to address. up until now nobody's taken steps that are, in my opinion, dramatic enough. >> reporter: beginning next year, freshmen will be required to take a four-year sexual violence prevent program. it's the first of it's kind in the nation as for those new
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guidelines pertaining to the ban, that will go into effect in the spring term. gayle? >> thank you jericka. sending a strong message there. >> i agree. a needed change. >> i do, too. >> yes. >> i like what the student just said. it hadn't been strong muffenough. a phone call from a telemarketer at a wrong time is the last thing anybody wants. a sales call turned out to be a lifeline for one woman in lebanon, oregon. our affiliate klas reports, the woman's cell phone picked up that call while she was being beaten. >> americare health and nutrition. how are you today? >> reporter: a las vegas telemarketer makig a routine sales call. >> the young lady never said hello. >> reporter: the woman who answer md the phone wasn't ignoring the telemarketer crying for help. >> help! help me! oh, please -- please -- >> reporter: workers at the call center could hear the woman being attacked.
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>> get up! >> reporter: you could actually hear the blow as if he was hitting a punching bag. >> reporter: the call center kept the line open and police tracked her location. the county deputy ace riveding on the scene and found walter holding the woman's neck as she gasped for air. he was charged with fourth-degree assault, menacing and strangulation. >> as far as i was concerned and the people in that room we were the only lifeline, even though we were states and states away we wanted to get this young lady some help. >> reporter: for cbs "this morning," vanessa murphy las vegas. >> wow. what an incredible story. >> indeed. >> and they did something about it. stayed on the line and called authorities. the government could be sending you a noisy neighbor. >> up next, why efforts to make air travel more efficient are running into a wall of protests from angry homeowners.
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america's antiquated air traffic control system getting an upgrade. designed to keep up with increasing air travel and the push for on-time flights. ben tracy shows how parts of the country including the area hosting this year's super bowl are paying a steep price for progress. >> and this is now our sleeping cav. >> reporter: nicole marquez just moved her bedroom into the middle of her house, and put plexiglas on all of her windows. she lives in phoenix so it's not to keep the heat in -- but rather, to keep the sound out. >> you can imagine yourself at an air show -- that's what it would sound like. >> reporter: except you live at the air show? >> i live at the air show. >> reporter: she says there is now a constant barrage of
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airplanes flying over her home in this historic neighborhood near downtown phoenix. every 30 seconds for hours at a time. >> you want to rip your hair out. 6:00 in the evening, you're ridging your hair out trying to eat dinner. am i angry? absolutely. i'm furious. >> reporter: this is the unintended consequence of the faa's next generation air transportation system. known as nextgen. it uses at satellites instead of old-fashioned radar to guide airplanes allowing for more planes in the air, safely spaced closer together burning less fuel because flight paths are more direct, but in phoenix, that change means planes that used to take off and turn nine heils out now make that turn at two to three miles, flying oh over heavily populated neighborhoods. noise complaints have taken off, too. soaring from 221 in all of 2013 to more than 3,300 in just the
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past four months since the flight paths were changed. >> so for those neighborhoods, they got hammered by this change. >> reporter: greg stanton is the mayor of phoenix. he says the faa did not hold a single public hearing notifying neighbors of the change nor did the agency ever meet with him. the faa says it did notify the airport as far back as 2012. >> do you feel like you were blindsided by the faa? >> yes. i think that the choice was made to have such a disproportionate impact over such a small number of people is really fundamentally unfair and unacceptable. >> reporter: have you since found out by the faa did what they did? >> no. this is still a mystery to us. >> reporter: turns out the faa can do what it wants, because it has a big backer congress. a 2012 congressional faa authorization bill fast-tracked the rollout of nextgen exempting it from environmental impact rules and public hearings. the faa declined our request for
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an interview. >> not the federal arrogance administration. >> reporter: steve israel says nextgen is also causing problems for people in the northeast as flight paths as jfk and laguardia airports are also changing. he wants the faa to start meeting with homeowners as it rolls out nextgen across the country through 2025. >> not asking for nextgen could be rolled back and reduced. asking for the faa to be sensitive to community concerns and ensure not just one community bears the noise but there's a fair and common sense distribution in the vichbt airports. >> reporter: nicole marquez says nextgen may be good for the country and the airline industry, but the pain should be shared. >> i don't think that the airlines should be able to bank on other people's misery. >> reporter: for cbs "this morning," ben tracy, phoenix. >> boy that's tough. you don't love that sound especially like 6:00 in the morning, if your plane is taking
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off above your head. >> interesting mishgs opinion, changed in the middle of the story. nicole you bought near the airport. but it's different when you change the rules. i think they can work something out. ahead, why that next glass of wine may increase the risk of a stroke. new research on how much is too much. yes. >> oh, no. >> what, charlie? oh, no. plus marshawn speaks. see what it tooks to get seattl
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woolite darks. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me and you're talking to your rheumatologist about a biologic... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers including lymphoma have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com
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this is humira at work at chili's, fresh is now. now chicken smoked in-house, and no more waiting for the check. new smoked chicken quesadillas on chili's lunch combo menu, starting at 6 bucks. fresh is happening now. . it don't matter what you all think, what you all say about me because when i go home at night, the same people i look in the face, my family that i love that's all i really -- that really matter to me. >> has anybody said anything mean to marshawn lynch?
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that's what i want to know. >> i'm okay with marshawn. >> i agree. >> agree with what? >> you know what? he gets paid to play football. >> and he does well. >> he's saying i don't like to talk to the press. >> he's made no secret about his dislike for the reporters. >> that was a large crowd. >> really large crowd. >> last night he said wehe was fine about opening up. >> what do you like. >> toad. >> do you want to be like toad? >> that's what toad do. i feel more like donkey kong. >> i could run over you. >> you need a mushroom osh that little blimp you know what i'm talking about? >> i know what you're talking about. >> look at conan.
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he's like what are they saying? he faced off with rob gronkowski. that's the secret guys. just don't talk about football. talk about games. >> only on "cbs this morning," behind the scenes of stubhub on this super bowl weekend. >> i'm carter evans and these are super bowl tickets. they're selling for thousands of dollar as piece right now on stubhub. coming up on "cbs this morning," we'll show you how workers aet the worldest laencht ticket makers say this is the real dedeal and keeping them out of the wrong hands. next.
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linda macdonald is captioning for you in real time. good morning, it's 7:56. i'm juliette goodrich. tenants at the apartment building that burned in san francisco's mission district say the fire escape didn't work and the smoke detectors didn't sound. authorities are investigating their claims. one person died in the fire. a corte madera doctor is back in court today to face new charges in a road rage shooting. the incident happened last july. dr. james simon claims he was scared for his life and only shot the other driver when he was followed home. and palo alto is considering raising its minimum wage. city council members have proposed raising it above the $9 mandated by the state.
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good morning. companies are already improving a bit over at the bay bridge. we never saw the huge backups we sometimes see 580 approach still looks clear all the way through 24. if you are traveling on the eastshore freeway, some delays around the berkeley curve on interstate 80. better news for san jose drivers. they cleared that accident northbound 280 at 880 so we are seeing some improving conditions through downtown as well but it's very foggy outside. let's check the forecast with roberta. >> foggy at the golden gate bridge also equally foggy in san jose. good morning, everyone. and with the fog, the air temperature is currently 51 in san francisco, 38 degrees in santa rosa with visibility down to about a quarter mile. it is 50 in san jose climbing to 65 today. as you look at all these temperatures they are well above average. we will see near or record warmth again over the weekend. and our temperatures remain above average for the next 7 days. enjoy your friday.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday january 30th 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead including a new warning about middle aged drinking. dr. tara narula looks at the risk of a stroke. first here's a look at today's "eye opener at 8." they refused to hand over the prison unless they get their pilot back. they're not going to talk about a deal until they know he's alive. >> why have we not heard from them. >> isis is trying to figure out the greatest propaganda value. >> you would know the super bowl is around the corner. the anticipation is building. >> the super bowl brings thousands and thousands of people together in really close
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contact, just like disneyland. and we see exactly how quickly it can spread there. the craziness continues on the east coast. >> the west coast dealing with their own system as well. bringing as much as a foot or more in the highest terrain. this morning he was arrested for a deadly hit and run in compton, california. dartmouth beginning next year, freshmen will be required to take a four-year sexual violence prevention program. it's the first of its kind in the nation. you have to understand how intimidating super bowl is to the rest of the world. when you've been around the world, everyone else is thinking if they're capable of this, what else could they do? i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. this morning, the highly contagious measles virus is sparking new concerns ahead of the super bowl. the outbreak has been growing all week right now there are at least 98 cases in 14 states. california has the most with 82.
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>> arizona is on heightened alert today as thousands head there for the super bowl. the state is monitoring more than 1,000 people who may have been exposed to the virus. this morning, arizona has 7 confirmed cases. >> we have some breaking news about the race for the white house in 2016. mitt romney is telling supporters right now that he will not run for president again. in a statement obtained by cbs news romney says he's decided against a third campaign. romney was the republican nominee in 2012 but will not run again. on sunday we'll talk with senators lindsey graham and dick durbin, plus former secretary of state james baker, when i fill in for bob schieffer on "face the nation." we'll have a super bowl preview with james brown and jan crawford is still in arizona. watch "face of nation" right here on cbs. on stubhub, the tickets for the super bowl start at more than $,000.
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the top seats go for more than $40,000. stubhub is the world's largest source for secondhand tickets. only on "cbs this morning," carter evans shows us how far the company is going this weekend to protect buyers. for more than 90 years, the guards at dunbar security have protected and delivered everything from bank deposits to priceless jewelry. today they're carrying paper, but it might be the most valuable paper they'll ever get their hands on. >> howi'll have you sign right here. >> reporter: gary runs the super bowl operation for the online ticket marketplace, stubhub. >> tickets are coming from all over the world. tickets have to get to this one place where we collect all the tickets so that on sunday people come in to collect their ticket they're getting the right ticket. >> the super bowl put a hologram or black light uv. if you get in close, you can see the red lettering that says
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super bowl. >> reporter: it's not the usual process for stubhub. the san francisco company does 80% of its regular business these days connecting buyers and sellers of event tickets electronically. >> super bowl has no electronic tickets. it's all what we would call hard stock. >> reporter: noah goldberg is the company's ibt rum president. in many ways stubhub was built for events like the super bowl where the average person has a hard time getting a ticket. >> i think in a lot of cases, people assume it's not an option. in some cases people took their chances out in front of the venue with whoever is out there. >> what's the difference between those people selling tickets outside a venue and stubhub? >> part of it is the process. right? and part of it is the safe ten and the trust. >> reporter: goldberg believes his company paved the way for popular sharing economy sites like uber and airbnb. and like those companies with be stubhub has detractors. >> what do you say to critics who say stubhub is a form of digital scalping. >> to me scalping happens when
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either somebody doesn't get what they paid for. >> right. they got taken advantage of or they don't have a choice in transparency around what's available. for us we've been all about trying to make that possible. >> reporter: on stubhub buyers can usually pick their seats and shop for prices they're willing to pay. while the company gets an average 25% commission. >> there are people who say that these secondary markets make tickets so expensive that the true fans are priced out. >> the secondary market makes the market available. makes the tickets available. the prices get set by the supply and demand. if there's a lot of demand and very little supply prices are going to be really high. >> reporter: as they are for the super bowl. just days before the game most tickets on stubhub had selling for more than $10,000 apiece. and goldberg estimates 10 to 15% of the stadium crowd will get their tickets through his site. >> how much money are we talking
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about? >> millions and millions of dollars worth of tickets. >> reporter: they're more than their weight in gold? >> yes. >> we do forensic investigations. >> reporter: making sure the transactions are legitimate is the job of joseph fesaro. >> the folks here in this room are going to see it. >> yes. >> they have the ability to look for abnormalities? >> yes. >> >> reporter: the team is made up of former cops prosecutors and even secret service agents. in the case of superboping with they're helped by ticket stock that is virtually impossible to count counterfeit. >> these tickets are made better than the standard the federal reserve uses for cash. >> reporter: here in arizona, they're guarded the same or better than cash. >> we'll make sure overnight
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those tickets are safe and they'll be back here tomorrow morning and we'll start the process all over again. >> reporter: the process that doesn't end until fans pick up their tickets here this weekend. for "cbs this morning," carter evans, glendale, arizona. >> i can't imagine paying $40,000 for one game. >> yes, we were saying -- >> supply and demand. >> for $40,000 you can get yourself a brand new tv build yourself a tv room. >> invite friends. >> get a new outfit and a pair of shoes to serve everybody weenie dogs with. >> or chicken wings. >> sounds like a good option to me. >> $40,000? >> no, all the things you suggested you could do with $40,000. >> or go to drew katz's house. he's having a super bowl party. on "cbs this morning," staring into the future the mirror that lets you try different looks without changing your outfit. i like this idea. you can also shop with your friends. >> charlie is so jazzed about
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are you are you drinking yourself into a stroke? dr. tara narula is in your toyota green room with new research, see where the risk begins and how some booze might actually be good for you. we'll try to explain this new study. that's next especially as we're about to hit the weekend. >> just saying. >> just saying. >> that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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plus, get three years interest-free financing. sleep risk-free with sleep train's 100 day money back guarantee. and of course, free same-day delivery. are you next? announcer: make sleep train your ticket to tempur-pedic. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ they booed the backup can be kurt. rock the house. oh, no. he put the hydraulic brakes on it and he gets booed, ladies and gentlemen. he got booed for backing off the first shot with his 9 iron then he got booed for a layup putt. harsh critics ear in phoenix. >> why boo him? at the phoenix open a tough
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first round for tiger woods. he was board on the 16th. he had to back off a shot twice because someone shouted. of course he's notorious for rowdy fan behavior in only his second tournament in six months he shot a 2 over 73 including four bogeys. ryan palmer has the lead with the 7 under 64. >> i've never seen anybody booed in golf. i've never seen that. >> i knew there were some circumstances. >> it's inappropriate. really inappropriate. >> no matter who you are, it's painful. you have to act like you don't hear it. >> power through it tiger. in our morning rounds alcohol and stroke new research finds that people who drink heavily in middle age have a one-third higher risk for stroke compared to light drinkers and heavy drinkers are having strokes younger. dr. tara narula is a cardiologist. good morning. >> good morning. >> how much alcohol is too much when it comes to risk of stroke. >> in this particular stroke more than two drinks a day was
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too much. researchers looked at 11,000 individuals, followed them for 40 years. what they found was those people who drank more than two drinks a day, compared to light drinkers had a 34% increase risk of stroke, had their stroke on average five years erlgier and that it seems like alcohol was the more relevant risk factor for them before the age of 75. and things like hypertension and- diabetes. >> that's a lot. >> yes. >> that's a huge number. >> yes. >> any difference in terms of the kind of alcohol? >> not in this study, whether it was wine or beer or forms of hard alcohol. >> it was two drinks for men and one drink for women. >> the recommendations are two drinks a day for men and one drink a day for women. >> the study also founded if you don't drink at all it doesn't lower your chances of a stroke. they're thinking alcohol has two different faces t. does. they're talking jekyll and hyde. studies have shown this
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"j"-shaped curve with alcohol. if you're at either end of the spectrum, no drinking heavy drinking, you have higher rates of mortality and catastrophic events. it depends on the amount. >> one of the question some of the young people on the show had, they don't drink during the week but they drink a lot on the weekends, does that increase their risk? >> the amount and the pattern matter. >> the young person was charlie rose. norah is being kind. she didn't call him out. >> she's trying to camouflage. >> you have to drink regularly and in the amount prescribed. it's not okay to go for five days without anything and binge drink on the weekend. >> you got that. >> yes. >> really important warning. thank you. just before the super bowl. >> with a broad exception for the super bowl. >> and dr. narula answered more questions on our facebook page this morning find the
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highlights at facebook.com/cbsthismorning. coming up next eternal vows shrouded in evil. >> i'm troy roberts "48 hours." a holly wood romance turns horror story when a millionaire hires a hitman to murder his model wife. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." cbs morning rounds sponsored by tums, fights heartburn fast. sponsored by tums. fights heartburn fast. ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum...♪ smoothies! only from tums. what if your morning routine... weren't so routine? try one a day vitacraves chewybites... complete multivitamins with nutrients like... b-vitamins... and vitamin d... in chocolatey flavors.
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tomorrow night "48 hours" explores the case of a billionaire businessman who falls out of love with his beautiful young wife. she was a former model. he was used to having his way and he wants her gone with the help of a hit man. here's a preview. troy roberts reports. >> the one thing i've learned in this job is that anything is possible. people will do anything. and if you have $80,000 to throw around you can absolutely find someone in los angeles county to kill your wife. >> reporter: when this millionaire met and married monica olson, no one would know it could turn so dark. >> she was a model and ran a skin care company. he was a businessman in los angeles. he was the lead singer of a rock
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band. this story is definitely ripe for made for tv. you have the model and millionaire who is cheating on his wife and trying to hire a hit man because he's not winning his divorce. >> reporter: but she said it was love at first sight. >> monica and dino they were married for about seven years and it looked to be a pretty happy marriage. they had two really beautiful children. >> but dino's older brother gino said he saw cracks in the facade from the start. >> i think she really wanted to have a career and i think he wanted her to be a mom. >> i think dino was scared of
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losing control over by monica. >> reporter: in 2011 the marriage ended. fear of losing half his assets and custody over his daughters drove him to drastic measures. >> ultimately he decided that not through legal proceedings, he wanted to kill his wife. >> my name is richard fehrman and he hired me to murder his wife. >> reporter: he reportedly had an extensive military background. >> what were his instructions to you? >> she's got to go. >> reporter: what he didn't know is he was wearing a wire. >> you're positive. you want her dead. he didn't care how it was done.
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beat her up, cut her head off, bury her in the ditch. is she alive? >> yes you can. >> i can't. i have to wait until tomorrow. >> i have to tell you his deep seated hatred toward his wife took my breath away. over conversation over lunch about kill his wife, he wanted to plant drugs in her car to set her up and have her deported or have her infected with the hiv virus. rick fehrman made a story line and he did work with the prosecutors. >> i'm amazed anybody can find a hit man. >> it's pretty easy. >> listen to this title
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"millionaire: the model and the hit man." that's at your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. time for news headlines. uc-davis medical center in sacramento is testing a patient for ebola. in december, the federal government designated the hospital as one of 56 priority treatment centers. health officials say the patient is at low risk for ebola but met the government guidelines to be tested. and rap mogul suge knight has surrendered to police in connection with a deadly hit- and-miss in compton. his attorney says he struck two men with a car while being chased by an attacker. one of them was killed. knight has repeatedly been in
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the drive time is up to 31 minutes between 238 and the maze. and they just cleared an accident in santa rosa. we still have some slow traffic though northbound 101 at todd road. that crash was involving a work truck and a couple of other vehicles. again, everything is now cleared to the shoulder. and bridge traffic across the golden gate looks okay out of sausalito. but the fog continues to move in across the span. let's get an update on your forecast. here's here's i love that view taking a look at the golden gate bridge. here's roberta. >> take a look at san jose foggy this morning. we have visibility down to quarter mile in many locations from santa rosa through san francisco into san jose. temperatures are in the 40s and 50s and later today climbing to the 60s with hazy sunshine. then we get breezy tonight with northerly winds and that should blow out the fog for your saturday and sunday with near or record temperatures. turning mostly cloudy on monday. we have a slight chance of rain showers on thursday.
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measles outbreak is spreading. have you read that? yeah, yeah health officials are saying the number of measles cases that originated at disney disneyland continues to grow. yeah. which is why this year after the game the super bowl mvp is going to say, no friggin' way am i going to disneyland no friggin' way. >> they have to find another location. that's friggin' f-r-i-g-g-i-n. coming up in this half hour the super bowl players who almost did not make the cut. jan crawford joins us to introduce us to players who were
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almost looked over in the draft. mirrors get a new look at you. see how a big-name retailer is tapping into virtual reality. first on "cbs this morning," a look at the technology that is macing the future fit. that's ahead. it's time for the headlines from around the globe. britain's guardian says the natural museum in london is replacing dippy. the 85-foot replica has been on display for 35 years. fans of dippy started a petition to save it. dippy will be replaced by the skeleton of a blue whale in 2017. >> bye dippy. >> now we have the blue whale. a meditating mummy found in mongolia, they believe it's the remains of a buddhist monk who remained 200 years ago. it was discovered sitting in the lotus position all this time covered with some kind of cattle
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skin. britain's daily mail who says the runner who won the last two boston marathons was handed a two-year doping ban this morning. rita jeptu could lose her marathon titles. she denies doping. >> the runner who came in second might be irritated when you hear news like that. "time" looks at fun and quirky super bowl prop bets this weekend. you can put your money down on pants, shorts, skirts or a dress. i'm thinking katy will change clothes and wear color lots of color. another wager, how often will the phrase deflated balls be mentioned on air during the game? more than three times or less? what are we thinking? >> people will gamble on anything. >> super bowl xlix will feature many of america's most famous athletes. some of those players were never expected to reach the highest
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level. jan crawford spoke to them. she's in glendale arizona, the home of super bowl xlix. good morning. >> reporter: it might sound weird to be talking about cinderella in the same breath as you're talking about an nfl football player but this is very much a story of people who have been overlooked, you know beaten down and still somehow managed to find a way to rise to the top. they are future hall of famers. key playmakers. >> tom brady. the kick up into the air. >> reporter: heroics on the field sent their team to the super bowl. >> chris matthews. >> reporter: they all have one thing in common. in the beginning, no one is convinced they could cut it in the nfl. >> what is that like when somebody says we don't want you? >> i think it's exceptionally motivating. that's part of the game is trying to prove your doubters wrong, play with a chip on your shoulder. >> reporter: patriots fullback james develin who scored a
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touchdown in the afc championship game was completely ignored by nfl teams after college. undrafted, the patriots finally signed him to the practice squad. develin took the opportunity and ran with it. his story is more common than you can imagine. especially with the two teams that will square off on sunday. in seattle's dramatic victory over green bay undrafted players made some of the seahawks most pivotal plays. >> toward the end zone. >> reporter: including jermaine kearse with the game-winning touchdown. >> seattle's going to the super bowl! jermaine kearse. >> reporter: what is it in you that got overlooked. >> you can't measure the heart of the player the determination or motivation of a player. i mean you can't grade that. >> reporter: those stars who were drafted started at the bottom of the heap considered slow and skinny out of michigan future hall of famer tom brady with a 199th pick in the 2000
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draft. six quarterbacks some you've never heard of, went ahead of him. that memory which brady discussed in a documentary 11 years later was hard to take. >> it was a tough day, you know. i just remember being there with my mom and dad. sorry about that. >> reporter: that's a feeling four-time pro bowler arian foster undrafted in 2009 knows well. >> i had my pillow i was crying. >> reporter: were you crying? >> yes i shed some tears. this is a dream since you were -- since i was 7 years old. >> reporter: coming out of the university of tennessee, foster also was considered small and slow. after the draft, the houston texans gave him a shot on their practice squad. two seasons later, foster was the leading rusher in the league. >> i'm not the biggest. i'm not the fastest or strongest running back in the nfl. but i work extremely hard which
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is why i lasted so many years and i'm in the upper echelon. i work my ass off. excuse my language. >> reporter: we asked brady whattic mas the difference. >> everybody has hope and promise when they start their career but you have to earn it. it's a big commitment to do that. >> reporter: nfl teams spend millions on scouting. evaluating players, going over stats, size and speed. but they often get it wrong. >> you always have a tendency to choose talent over everything. and this is where you have to be careful because sometimes the best talent will also be the biggest mistake. >> reporter: pat rule is an assistant offensive line coach for the seahawks. >> the first thing that defines everybody is talent then after talent, you're looking for that magic piece of that guy's heart that makes him different. >> it's in here. >> that's right. we have to find that. >> reporter: sometimes teams don't immediately know how right they were. >> caught by sherman. >> reporter: in 2011 the seahawks used the 154th pick in
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the draft to select an unheralded player out of stanford. two years later, richard sherman was leading the nfl in interceptions. for all these overlooked underappreciated players, rejection drove them to prove their doubters wrong. they knew they had game. >> i believed it 100% and there were still people telling me i couldn't do it. i just wanted to prove them wrong. and you know what, i did. i did. >> reporter: and i heard that over and over from these guys. they said they worked so hard because they knew that they could do it. and fletcher told me if you think about it, that's true in life, too. if somebody says you can't do it, you're not good enough, just go out there and show them you can. >> sounds like good advice from a mom who has kids in sports, jan. i love that. it's true. it is true what jan says though, if you look across
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business and other fields, grit and perseverance is more important than ability. >> the so-called x-factor. >> yes. >> i've interviewed people for 25 years about achievement. not one has ever said i'm here because i was the most talented. they all said i i'm here because i worked harder than anybody. >> i like what jermaine kearse said about heart and motivation you concern measure that. great piece. thank you. reinventing our reflection. >> i'm ben tracy in san francisco. have you ever gone shopping and see how you look in a bunch of different outfits in a same time? now you can. it's called the memory mirror. we'll show you how
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. ♪ strikeose strike a pose in your dressing room mirror. your next trip to the mall could really blow your mind. first on "cbs this morning," ben tracy reveals the technology behind a high-tech mirror that could transform your shopping experience. >> and look into your own eyes to start recording. >> this is not your mama's mirror. >> you can do a 360. >> reporter: it's actually a join the video screen and camera. the shopper we asked to try it out got to see her outfit from 360 degrees and compare clothing options side by side. it also remembers what you've already tried on. that's why it's called the memory mirror.
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>> you tried out the memory mirror. what did you think? >> i think i need one of those in my room. that's what i think. i love the memory mirror. >> reporter: you could get dressed every morning with that? >> yes. >> reporter: technology changed everything in terms of the shopping experience. karen katz is president and ceo of neiman marcus. 80% of its customers are women. which is why the company is embracing the future by testing these very modern mirrors in their san francisco stores. somebody could come in and have to try on five outfits. they get to the fifth outfit and they say i forget what the first outfit looked like. are you short-circuiting that process? >> yes exactly. to save the customer that time of having to retry on outfits. equally important is that ability to share the outfits with friends and family. that social part of it is as important as the editing part of it. >> reporter: the mirror records an eight-second video. it's password protected and can be e-mailed allowing you to instantly share and solve any shopping situation with the help of your friends and family.
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>> reporter: basically you can still go shopping with your friends even if your friends don't have time to go shopping. >> exactly. for those important decisions in women's lives, buying a mother of the bride dress or an outfit for a special event, she can have her entire bevy of girlfriends around her, even if they're not there physically. >> reporter: the mirror was created in niemann's top secret innovation lab in dallas. our cameras are the first to be allowed in. this is where the company is experimenting with the future of retail. >> you can get a 360 view of by simply dragging this icon to rotate the product. >> we're constantly looking for new innovations that would appeal to our customer and make the store come to life in a different way. >> reporter: it's blending the virtual world with the real one, from displays that are activated when a customer picks up a product to interactive tables that work like a joint ipad. >> we 3-d scanned a bride and we printed her in the actual dress.
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>> reporter: scott emmons beamed in remotely to explain a project for the bridal salon. >> we did full-color figurines. that michael is holing now. we printed the dress as a flower vase. >> reporter: they created ceramic figurines of actual brides. back in the store, the memory mirror is solving one of shopping's most important questions. this cuts out the question, how does my butt look? >> you asked it. i won't answer that. >> reporter: this shopper didn't have to be asked. what's the best part of this for you. >> the best part is being able to see the full 360. every girl does want to know does this make my butt look big? >> reporter: any good man doesn't need a mirror on the wall to tell him the answer to that question is always no. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, san francisco. >> excellent point. >> there's only one answer to
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as we wrap up all of us want to say best wishes to our beloved colleague bob orr who's retiring after 40 years. he led cbs news coverage of most if not all of the major stories in the last two decades. we wish him and we know where to find you. you can watch new 24/hours a dagg on cbsn by logging in to
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kreb cbsnews.com. as we leave you, we take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. >> it's dangerous situation down here. >> suddenly snowing in boston. this is the main drag. >> the gronk of maine has declared a state of emergency. >> i don't do snow. >> the crossroads have been looking more like the crosswalks. >> right now the wind sounds like this. >> the nfl obviously would like to put deflategate behind it and robert kraft is furious at how things have unfolded. >> i'm disappointed in the way this matter has been unveiled. >> this is a sticky situation. >> it's okay to use epoxy on it now? >> it seems weird that epoxy and art tact could be used in the same sentence. >> people are not going to be able to do weird things at 3ing in the morning. >> put it in gear and walk.
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>> i woke up in the street in the ghetto. >> he never flinched. >> miss universe is colombia. >> we want to do a mani cam to see your jewels and manicure. >> no, i don't. >> bad idea. i wanted to be a quarterback, i wanted to be tom brady. if only i could deflate that ball i'd be the perfect quarterback. >> who are you guys? >> salk seahawks. >> i'm here so i won't get fined. >> i'm here so i won't get find. >> i'm here so i won't get fined. >> are you going to beet the game sunday? >> charlie, are you kidding me? of course, i ee going to be at the game. >> did you deplate the ball. >> i told you. >> did you deflate the bomb? >> you're damn right i did!
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>> i really thought i was going to be the heir apparent to joe dimaggio. the young map threw me a kufb bawl and that was it. >> he was playing game you were not familiar with. >> you're exactly right. >> valentine's day is coming up. what are you and jill going to do for valentine's day? >> a lot and i'm not going to tell you. >> why is everybody afraid of love? >> love! >> when they brought the duck out there were instructions that said it's great to pick it up and suck the brains out. >> our green room is a dump. the green room where paul and i were it was so nice. and then they take us out of the studio. if there were a harp, it was like that. >> it feels like a harm when you
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a remarkable thing has happened. over a million californians have gotten something that's been out of reach for far too long. health insurance. how? they enrolled through covered california. it's the health insurance marketplace where you'll find a range of plans from leading health insurance companies that offer you the best combination of quality, rates
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and benefits. you can compare plans side by side choose the one that best fits your needs and enroll online. coveredca.com is also the place to find certified experts in your area who can answer your questions for free, and help you enroll. and, through covered california, you may get financial help to pay for coverage. it's based on income, and 4 out of 5 people who have enrolled qualified. if you don't have a health plan, or you do, but you want to make sure it's the best plan for you, now's the time to visit coveredca.com. but to get covered you've got to get going. open enrollment ends february 15th. visit coveredca.com today.
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good morning, checking the commute into santa rosa jammed up in the northbound lanes. we had an earlier crash. it was a multi-vehicle accident approaching todd road. everything is gone but you can see the backups in that area. southbound actually looks okay. and if you are traveling on the nimitz freeway, it's a live look what it looks like currently near oakland airport. it's the northbound lanes that are still back up. southbound traffic is pretty quiet until you reach san leandro, hayward. then we see some delays on the approach to highway 92. and the bay bridge was improving there for a while. and it's still not too bad but it is still backed up into the maze. it got crowded suddenly and the 580 approach is slow from 24. mass transit is also on time. have a great day.
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(wayne screaming) jonathan: it's a trip to fiji! wayne: old school and new school! jonathan: wayne! - i'm taking the money! wayne: jonathan, come here girl... i mean... go get your car! you made my dreams come true! - i'm going for the big deal! jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal!” now, here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to “let's make a deal.” i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. let's do it... who wants to make a deal? monkey man, the guy with the ape costume. how are you doing, sir? - good. wayne: you are fausto? - fausto. wayne: fausto, wow. - i'm actually known by xavier. nobody knows me as fausto. wayne: then why did you... it's my first name xa
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