tv CBS This Morning CBS March 16, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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news this morning. >> your next local update at 7:26. frank will be back tomorrow good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday march 16, 2015. welcome to cbs "this morning." an eccentric millionaire arrested for murder hours before a documentary airs and apparent confession. cbs news investigates the international donations to the clinton's family foundation. and dolce and cabana accused of beal old-fashioned. views like elton john demanding a boycott. and today's "eye-opener: your world in 90 seconds." the heir to a multibillion dollar family. >> killed them all, of course. >> robert durst under arrest on
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murder charges. >> his arrest over the weekend came before last night the stunning show about his life. >> the 71-year-old is accused in the killing of a close friend in 2000. the russian president appeared in public for the first time since march 5th. >> no one know the. >> a suspect in custody for the shooting of two police officers in ferguson. >> jeffrey williams fired at someone with whom he had a dispute and not the officers. interfering with these negotiations. >> john kerry in switzerland with nuclear talks with iran. and boston broke a record. >> all along the ohio valley rivers will likely stay above flood stage. the northwest is cleaning up after high winds and heavy rain. a cyclone ravaged a tiny pacific nation of vanuatu. >> 90% of housing there damped. >> a massive manhunt in l.a. for two suspects who shot at lapd
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officers. they were wounded sunday. all that -- the drag racing champion walked way from a jaw-dropping crash at 280 miles per hour. >> -- and all that matters. >> march madness is officially here. >> won the sun belt championship. >> sit down relax or his -- >> so many that i don't know -- >> -- on cbs "this morning." >> kentucky's alone ashley judd kissed on the lips. >> gave me a smooch. i didn't know anyone was taking pictures. my wife sitting here is mad at me. hon, i love you, lorraine don't leave me! this morning's "eye-opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs toyota. let's go places. >> welcome to "s th welcome to cbs "this morning." norah o'donnell is off. robert durst said he killed them all. this morning those words implicate the notorious millionaire in the murders of
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three people. he apparently said them to himself recording an interview for the hbo documentary "the jinx." >> arrested saturday the day before the shocking finale of that series. the "48 hours" correspondent followed durst more than a deck kate. erin, quite a surprise. good morning to you. >> oh, good morning. robert durst's arrest this weekend was a result of a lengthy investigation by multiple agencies including the fbi and police in new york and los angeles. investigators were concerned durst pose add flight risk. just hours after his first court appearance since his arrest hbo aired the dramatic audio recording. >> killed them all, of course. >> reporter: the multipart documentary, "the jinx"
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concludes with off camera audio of robert durst seemingly confessing to murder. he made the comments during a follow-up interview with filmmaker andrew durakki as the conclusion of the series. he presents durst with a letter he admits he wrote to his friend susan berman months before her murder in 2000. no one was ever charged. the handwriting on durst's letter is similar to an anonymous letter police received alerting them to the location of her body. both letters misspelled beverly hills. >> can you tell me which one you didn't write? >> no. >> reporter: while still wearing his microphone durst exits to go to the restroom. that off-camera recording follows. >> we have bob's bag nearby. >> there it is.
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>> reporter: on saturday afternoon, fbi agents arrested durst in the lobby of this new orleans hotel where he registered under an assumed name. durst'starian chip lewis spoke with us via skype last night. >> i never in a million years thought what we would be left with were mutterings of this elderly gentleman as he's in the restroom. >> reporter: but some people would say that was an admission. i killed them all. i don't know how else to interpret that. >> lapd is going to make it the centerpoint of their case as an admission. we are a very muni position just finding out this new evidence as the rest of the world is. >> reporter: well durst will waive extradition at a hearing this morning in new orleans, and could be transported back to los angeles as early as this afternoon where he will face murder charges. and as i said to you guys last week, i mean he was almost
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thumbing his nose by doing this interview, and he really only has himself to blame on this. >> so what do most legal authorities say about the admissibility of this? >> they're actually torn. i know the defense attorneys are definitely going to fight it. they are saying he had an expectation, a privs in thes sprivacy in the restroom and how involved with law enforcement. it looks like they were aware something was going to happen and arrested him the day before. concerned that he would go on the lam and certainly he has in the past which i think will make it very difficult for him to get any kind of bail in los angeles. >> the timeline is interesting. thank you, erin. >> one of the most dramatic moments we've all ever seen and thank you very much. and erin mentioned the filmmaker behind the documentary that may have just ended robert durst freedom will join us in studio 57. andrew durekki takes on the questions exploding across
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social media ahead. and prussian president vladimir putin made his first public appearance in days after a mysterious disappearance. today he meets with the president of kyrgyzstan in st. petersburg. how putin's absence sent rumors about his health and grip on power. >> reporter: good morning. never was a meeting so eagerly awaited. the meeting in st. petersburg was something of a coming out party for the russian president who hadn't been seen in public for ten days, possibly a modern record. in this absence the moscow rumor mill went into overdrive. where is putin? in st. petersburg turns out, for someone who was rumored to be either attending the birth of his love child or ousted in a coup or sick with the flu, or abducted by aliens he looked remarkably well. the meeting with the leader of kyrgyzstan was putin the first public outing since a march 5th
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press conference with the italian prime minister. for ten days the 62-year-old had been out of the public eye, fueling speculation that something was amiss. >> i think it sits very much into his character to go away and make us all wonder what happened to him. he likes attention. he thrives on attention. >> reporter: there was no shortage of attentiono twitter, the #whereisputin was trending. theories range from the outrageous. ukrainian school children suggested the alien abduction idea. to the salacious, that putin snuck off to switzerland to watch the birth of his love child. but his spokesman denied everything insisting his boss still has a handshake that could break your hand. >> his health is really perfect and everything is, he's okay -- is okay with him and he's working in accordance with his traditionally overloaded working schedule. >> reporter: still, the
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vanishing about the proved unusual even for putin, who despite being secretive rarely miss as photo op. carefully cultivating a macho, robust image. >> he cannot appear human. that's who putin is. sort of a james bond of contemporary russia. have you ever seen james bond sick? you saw him beaten up but he always gets up and always goes. >> reporter: when he showed up today putin joked about all of the speculation about his health saying what would life be without gossip? gayle? >> gossip indeed. thank you, mark at the gridiron dinner, russian ambassador at our table and i said to him, reports he's in switzerland with a baby he goes i cannot say that that story is true. i don't believe that's the case. so -- to be continued for sure. thank you, mark. in switzerland this morning the secretary of state john kerry resumes critical negotiations with iran limited to nuclear program. negotiators face a deadline for a deal just two weeks from now. john kerry is under intense political pressure back home.
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in lausanne and sat down with an interview. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. secretary kerry told me he hope as deal will be possible in the next few days. he met this morning for the first time with iran's top nuclear negotiator since that political firestorm erupted in the u.s. and that has added pressure to close what is already a high-stakes negotiation. secretary kerry has said he'd only accept a deal that guarantees iran will not build a nuclear weapon. but that assurance has not cooled the political heat back home. >> the administration is on the cusp of entering into a very bad deal. >> a bad deal. >> a bad deal. >> reporter: republicans slammed the emerging deal. among the most vocal hard-liners, junior republican senator tom cotton. a letter sent and signed by 46 other republicans charged that congress could undo any deal
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after president obama left office. >> we wanted to be crystal clear that iran's leaders got the message, that in our constitutional system while the president negotiates deals, congress has to approve them for them to be lasting and binding. >> reporter: iran's supreme leader called it a trick. in an exclusive interview with cbs news saying cotton was wrong and would tell iran to dismiss the outrye.cry? how do you clear the air? >> i'm not going to apologize for an unconstitutional and unthought out action by somebody that's been in the united states senate for 60-some days. >> reporter: but congress is making tough negotiations more difficult for the white house. chief of staff denis mcdonough wrote a stern letter to senate foreign relations committee chairman bob corker arguing his proposal giving congress signoff on a deal would have a profoundly negative impact on the policy. and kerry argued congress is
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fully briefed and should give him room to negotiate. >> we have been in full discussion with congress on this, we've been in full discussion with allies in the region. we have had our team go to israel or meet with israelis in washington or elsewhere to brief them regularly in this process. this isn't, you know a complete mystery. >> reporter: kerry said progress has been made on limiting iran's nuclear technology. a major challenge now is convincing hard-liners in iran to give access to nuclear sites and military bases and persuade them to pull back on research and development. a challenge for the u.s. is getting all of those assurances in place to convince congress to back off. >> margaret thank you very much. this morning israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu is fighting for his political survival ahead of tuesday's election. opinion polling show him trailing as he seeks a fourth term.
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what's at stake for israel and the u.s. good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning, jeff. well the voting deciding the fate of prime minister netanyahu begins tomorrow. and netanyahu is pulling out all the stops to keep his job. [ chanting ] supporters jammed downtown tel aviv for last-minute, some say last-ditch effort. he called this snap election expecting to win in a walk-away but missed the ugly mood of many israelis who blame him for high prices and high taxes. this woman and her husband are bitter their dream of buying an apartment is out of reach. >> i don't want bebe anymore. if he will stay we will go. we can't live here anymore railroad you'll. >> reporter: you'll go? >> yes. >> reporter: but he's the one who will protect the country. two weeks ago netanyahu spoke before the u.s. congress invited by republicans who didn't consult with president obama. instead of a boost back home it
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was a bust. his popularity kept going down. and it broke the tradition of staying neutral, says author ari shavit. >> when we had yiddish speaking prime ministers who didn't know where nebraska was, they realized israel must be a bipartisan issue in america. >> reporter: netanyahu has been a survivor of israeli politics for decades and i'm telling you, charlie, nobody around here is counting him out yet. >> thanks. this morning, missouri police are holding a man they say confessed to shooting two police officers in ferguson. jeffrey williams says police were not his target. the 20-year-old faces assault charges. dean reynolds is in ferguson with why the shooter says he fired his weapon. dean, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. while the suspect allegedly says he was not shooting at the police, the fact that the prosecutor has identifyied him as a demonstrators has worried activists here that the whole shooting incident may complicate their efforts at reaching change
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through non-violence. [ gunfire ] >> reporter: the two officers hit by gunfire early thursday morning in front of the ferguson police department. 20-year-old jeffrey williams allegedly said he pulled the trigger, firing from a vehicle. he told investigators the cops were not his target. >> he has akcknowledgement in firing the shots that in fact he did fire the shots that struck the two officers. >> reporter: the shooting happened after midnight on thursday as demonstrators gathered just hours after ferguson police chief thomas jackson announced he would step down this month. police said williams was at the protest before the shooting. >> he was out there earlier that evening as part of the demonstration. he's been out there on other occasions. >> he said a particular protestors tried to rob him. and that was the reason he shot. >> reporter: bishop derek robinson visited williams in jail on sunday and said the suspect told him he fired into
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the air. robinson told cbs news williams was not actively involved in the protest movement. >> he protested in august but as of the last six months has not been a protestors. we don't want our narrative as protesters to be painted wrong. we worked so hard to rebuild this community. >> reporter: now authorities say there could be more arrests. the suspect jeffrey williams was already on probation for receiving stolen property. he's being held on a cash bond of $300,000. >> thanks. this morning many in northern california are seeing rain, but nothing like what people along the ohio river in the east are facing. the river topped 57 feet in the cincinnati area yesterday. because of melting snow and rain. it reached flood levels not seen in decades sending roads and some neighborhoods under water. our cincinnati affiliate wkrc is on the banks of the ohio.
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good morning to you. >> reporter: many in the west are dealing with record drought, rains here in ohio have rivers rising to historic localsriverside drive in covington, kentucky. across the river. you can see the actual river right here on the street has risen up. things the same in many other low-lying areas along the ohio causing problems for local businesses who have had to shut down due to the high water. further south in kentucky much more of the same. flooding has already costs thousands of dollars in damage. one man went missing there after he was swept away by rising waterses. back here in cincinnati a flood warning is in effect until this thursday. water is expected to recede in the next few days. gayle? >> thank you adam. in portland oregon the problem was high winds. boy, scaffolding from a building yesterday, the debris tumbled to the streets. luckily, no one was hurt here.
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leaders in the country of vanuatu appealing for international help. this weekend a cyclone flattened much of the country. a storm damaged 90% of the capital city. winds reached nearly 170 miles an hour leveled homes and uprooted trees. six people are confirmed dead. dozens more are injured. the undefeated kentucky wildcats this morning are getting ready for the big dance. the team is the number one seed in the ncaa college basketball tournament. the wildcats top the midwest region. the other number one seeds are villanova, duke and wisconsin. first-round coverage of march madness officially gets under way. charlie keeps smiling at me. he wants me to acknowledge duke. i have already told him i believe duke will be in the final against kentucky. i don't know if they're win it. >> if there's a god in heaven. >> yes i believe that will happen. you can watch these second-round games starting thursday right here on cbs. charlie, you'll be watching
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good morning, breaking news and photograph alert in the -- traffic alert in the east bay continues in the scald cot opportunity. after a crash and a car fire and some of the people you see standing outside of there. they actually had to abandon their cars inside the tunnel and evacuate because the smoke you could see billowing out of the very far right tunnel. so right now there's two bores -- two bores available. the right bore is closed. the left bore remains open so you can still travel on eastbound 24. if you're trying to get out to the araneida area. traffic is backed up in the area. it is still pretty heavy from ability highway 13. it is countercommute. that's the only good news in some of this. i know they're working to clear it. the other hot spot remains the danville area. southbound 680 at the road. that crash there is still very slow. even though they were able to
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from the kpix weather center. good morning everybody. heading out door, getting ready for work or the kids off to school. we have mostly cloudy skies and a great start to the day. right now oakland 57 degrees and 58 in san francisco. it will be partly to mostly cloudy throughout the day today. a chance of a light shower across napa lake and sonoma counties, highs 60s and 70s. another chance of rain showers occurs on friday through saturday morning.
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nelly performed a concert and i'm glad he did. i always wondered in nelly was able to sing in that country it's getting hot in here so take off all your clothes. we have an answer. ♪ ♪ it's getting hot in here so take off all your clothes ♪ >> the problem is those edicts really change the meaning of that song because now it's just a man complaining about the heat and proposing know solution
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whatsoever. that's not sexy. welcome back to "cbs this morning." we are here fully closed. coming up in 48 hours investigates the funds. >> dolce & gabbana accused of being old-fashioned but not for their designs. a boycott from entertainer elton john. that's ahead. the hill said federal government hits the debt limit. it expired sunday. the current debt stands at about $18 trillion. secretary jack lew says he'll take extraordinary measures to keep the government from defaulting. today he'll stop making investments in a pension fund for government workers. >> today "the new york times" says they ee signing up for a powerful tracker. authorities want to keep the details about its secret. police must sign a nondisclosure agreement that technology works
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by intercepting cell phone signals. it can scan all cell phones in the area not just the target phone and that is raising privacy concerns. "usa today" reports harmful levels of ladyead ignored at thousands of playground fields. the two federal agencies are still promoting the surfaces as safe. and "the wall street journal" reports that ten american health care workers are returning to the u.s. after exposure to ebola in sierra ya leone. four of them arrived in nebraska on saturday but they have no symptoms.
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from at least one foreign government with close ties to isis. how hillary clinton's tee big decision could get more complicated. good morning. >> it prohibited foreign interests from investing. it's away of buying political influence here at home but those rules don't apply to the clinton foundation, the nonprofit that bears the make of a likely presidential candidate. >> i'm very proud of the work the foundation does. i'm very proud of the hundreds of thousands of people who support the work of the foundation. >> since its founding the clunton foundation has raised at least $42 million from foreign governments and according to analysis by cbs news at least $170 mill from foreign organizations, companies, and individuals.
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one donor, relin enterprises pledged $2 million in 20134. the company is a privately held chinese company and trade conglomerate who's a delegate to the chinese parliament. they've spent $1.4 million since 2012 lobbying congress and the state department. the firm own as extra gee jik port along the border of north korea and was one of the contractors that built the chinese embassy in washington. jim mann has bit a relationship with china and the u.s. >> you want to have the closest security and intelligence connections with and approval of the person or company that's going to build your embassy. >> thank you all and good morning. >> reporter: the clinton foundation largely stopped taking money from foreign governments when hillary clinton became secretary of state in
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2009. it resuming the practice once she left in 2013 but never stopped taking money from foreign companies or individuals. the foundation says if hillary clinton runs for president it will ensure the foundation's policies on international donors are promote just as it did when she served as secretary of state. >> if the point is you're not going to take money from foreign governments, then his construction company is as close to not just the chinese government but the administrative security as they can safely be. >> reporter: in a statement he said mr. weng has a long history of generous fill an trop ig giving and the clinton foundation is one of many that he's donated to. he was cited in 2013 for housing workers in safe and crowded
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conditions. the company says the charging in 2011 were settled and in 2013 the charges were dismissed. other donors have come under fire by u.s. agencies. barclays capital has given at least $1 million and last year hsbc holdings kbarch the foundation at least 5$500,000. both british banks are under investigation. asked about it last week hillary clinton defended the foundation's work. >> think people who want to support the foundation know full well what it is we stand for and what we're working on. >> but bill allison says the clinton foundation is a unique nonprofit that can't be separated from the u.s. system. >> if there's money coming in it will raise the question is the president going to be doing business for a foreign business foreign government, foreign individual, and you just cannot
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have that. the american system of government where the president's supposed to represent the american people. >> clinton foundation officials note that many major institutions have been under investigation but that should. stop them from giving. the big issue is when she was with the state department they could rely on the obama administration but they don't have that mechanism build into the campaign. >> thanks. let me bring in cbs political analyst john dickerson. good morning. >> good morning. the report shows how hard it foings be to draw that line. the goal is to keep foreign companies out of gaining access to u.s. policy but the standard that hillary clinton used alt the state department not to take money from foreign countries is a leak yg standard because some companies are respect actively
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arms of foreign government. that's the thing to watch. >> how much do you think voters care about this john? >> well they care about entities having influence in u.s. policy. now, nothing's been shown that that has happened yet and there has been a situation where you've had donations from american interests who have business before the government. lots of big, big donations that have gone to previous candidates and voters are not -- they've been irritated and asked questions about that but it hasn't swapped any campaigns. it will be a question of how the clinton campaign sets up the standard and how they go to the initiative raise any questions with voters. >> john one would think the donations from foreign countries would end, correct? >> you would imagine, yes. but this report shows are they going to end completely and if they don't end completely, if they come from individuals and company, who's going to vat that and the countries from which
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they originate. >> it's probably good, john that these things are coming before a campaign begins, isn't it? >> well, they are in the sense that it shows the clinton team how careful they have to be. but on the other hand it raises the question what are all these donations coming in now going for. it's the least best kept secret in america that hillary clinton is running for president. the increase in them what's that all about. >> did you notice mr. dickerson playing -- >> out of your mouth. he owned the stage saturday night. thank you, john. two of the world's most famous designers are accused of being out of style. ahead, the comments that have dolce & gabbana on the defensive. and if you're heading off to work taking the kids to school or going to the dentist, you don't have to miss us.
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fashion icons dolce & gabbana face a backlash and a boycott this morning. it comes after the designers' comments about traditional families. now the couple says they oppose same-sex adoptions. they describe babies born through saturday official insemination as synthetic. vladimir duthiers is here with the celebrities who criticize them for being out of style. >> good morning. dolce & gabbana are accused of being unfashionably old fashioned. john elton is calling for a boy caught accusing them of being closed minded.
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they've enjoyed a close relationship with celebrities and with each other, continuing to work with each other after ending their relationship ten years ago. in an interview with the italian magazine "panorama" doll yeah said the only family is a tray tra diggsal one and i'm not convinced by those i call the children of chemicals, synthetic children. womans firefighter rent, sperm chosen from a catalog. >> if you're working in an industry with heavily gay and female business, this is not a very smart thing to come out and say. >> elton john who is married to david furnish and has two children by in vitro fertilization responds by instagram. how dairy you refer to our beautiful children as synthetic. your archaic thinking is out of step with the times and i shall
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never wear good-bye again. ricky martin also echoed the same sent meant. your voices are too powerful. wake up, it's 2015. love your selves guys. >> go ba na it was never our intention to judge other people's choices. we do believe in freedom and love. >> they've made several apologies now but we know that these are their views, and it's possible that they have done great damage to their brand. >> now t pair were interviewed two years ago by "the telegraph" and they were asked if they ever believed in getting marriage. they said, no, they don't believe in same-sex marriage. i think that point about working in the fashion industry which has a lot of women and gays is a
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good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. a taxi passenger is dead and another is injured after their cab flew 100 feet off i-680. the chp says the taxi careened off the freeway in the area overnight. the driver is okay. and several other accidents are making a mess out of our morning commute and let's check in with liz. they are. we have a couple of hot spots in the east bay. first two a crash and car fire in the caldecott tunnel. the fire is now out bones are some pictures taken from chopper # a little while ago. you can see the smoke billowing from the far right eastbound boar. still remains closed and there were about 60 people that were actually evacuated from the
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tunnel. they had to leave their cars inside and they're still standing off to the side of the -- of the tunnel just kind of waiting for shuttle buses to let them back in so they can get into their cars. traffic is pretty bad. 24 is backed up beyond highway 13. and northbound highway 13 is also solid from park boulevard. let's go out to our other problem spot right now, it's actually this southbound lane of 680 in danville. approaching el pintado road. all lanes are now back open after a multivehicle crash. but it's solid from concord. that's kcbs traffic. we'll
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in the west, it's monday march 16th 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including the arrest of robert. we'll talk with the film maker. here's a look at today's eye opener at 8. >> just hours after first court appearance since his arrest hbo aired the dramatic audio recording. the meeting was a coming out party for the russian president, who hadn't been seen in public for ten days. authorities say there could be more arrests while the suspect allegedly says he was not shooting at the police. secretary kerry told me he hopes the deal will be possible in the next few days.
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for the first time with the nuclear negotiator. deciding the fate of benjamin netanyahu begins tomorrow and he is pulling out all the stops. rain in ohio have rivers rising to historic levels. his husband is calling for a boycott accusing the clothing icons of being close minded. >> i believe duke will be the final against kentucky. >> if there's a god in heaven. >> emerges from the three-man playoff with a birdie walk-off here. >> today's eye opener is presented day bsh. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. a real live dramatic ending to a
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documentary about a millionaire accused of murder. he will face a judge today. he was arrested over the weekend and charged with the murder of z his friend. >> durst spoke about the death, the disappearance of his first wife and the killing of his neighbor in 2001. he was still wearing a microphone when he went to use the bathroom after the interview. >> the director joins us at the table. andrew, good to see you. i watched it last night with my mouth open. even though the words were on
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the screen, i had to rewind it. when did you realize you had that recording and had did you take it to the authorities? >> we actually interviewed bob durst three times. the firgs was three three days in 2010. and we were surprised that he made a bunch of admissions and said things that were kind of shocking. and we thought we would go back to him again at some point. then we went back to them a couple years later to show show this evidence and e we thought we were done at the end of the interview. he reacted in a strong way and got up and said good-bye and we thought that was the end. but his microphone kept recording. he went to the bathroom and it wasn't until months later that we had an editor listening to material that we had left behind thinking now we have to listen to everything we've got. and e we discovered that we had the shocking piece of audio. >> "the new york times" said two
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years, you said it was months. later. >> it was obviously for us a shock because it was many months since we sat down with him. after sitting down with him, we thought we have this revelation, which is he was unable to determine which of the two handwritings we were showing him was his own. we think both were his own. after that he got up and not until months later that we realized that the more interesting revelation might have been the secret revelation. >> he does talk to himself. there are moments he's walking past his brother's house on the west side of manhattan and he's just talking openly. ridiculous, just ridiculous. >> even though there's no one with him? >> he says in his testimony in galveston when he was tried for murder of his neighbor he says quite openly for long periods in his life he spoke openly to himself and groups of people and he would upset. people would say are you talking
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to me because he said i would have long conversations with myself. perfectly out loud and people would think i was talking to them and they would be upset to hear that and i'd have to apologize. he's aware of that. >> it's clear to you he kill ued them all. >> that's certainly what he says. i have no reason to believe that's not the case. what's amazing to me is that he came to us knowing what he knew about his life. we didn't know that. all we could do was assume that some bad things had happened. we weren't sure what. he voluntarily called me around the time my film was come inging out and said i heard about the movie. he volunteered to sit for an interview. >> against the advice of his attorney who is suggesting you were in koordcoordination with the authorities that he's arrested on saturday and your finale is on sunday that it was preplanned between you and the authorities. >> the truth is we hoped robert durst would be arrested as soon as possible. we were sort of amazed ourselves
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that he hadn't been arrested for so long. the authorities were never communicating with us other than their normal way. they were going through their investigation. >> did you give that to the authorities before the finale yesterday? >> long before. they have had the audio for many months. >> what is the family saying? >> his family? >> yeah. >> they now say they want to thank everybody who had something to do with helping to get robert durst apprehended, so that's the most recent thing. >> what's your impression of him? you have known him for several years. do you think he's a crazy guy or just an accentic old man? >> he's such a bright man. >> i think there's a difference. when he does things, you're sitting with him in an interview and says bright and insightful and then you walk down the street with him to starbucks and he's sitting on a chair in the middle of starbucks tying his shoe and speaking to himself.
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both things can be true. >> a quick point. the use of the term crazy has psychiatrists, have they examined him? >> when he was in galveston, his defense got a psychiatrist, who was prepared to say he had asperger's syndrome and that's why he didn't understand certain thing things. they never put him on the stand because the psychiatrist wasn't necessary. they were able to acquit him without it. so whether he's crazy or not, he's a very very well organized, well financed person. >> who talks to himself in bathrooms bathrooms. thank you very much. secretary of state john kerry is in switzerland trying to complete a nuclear deal with iran. he's also looking to an end to the four-year-old civil war in syria. bashar al assad is dismissing comment. s made in an interview. over the weekend kerry said he's
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ready to negotiate with syria. >> the fact that there isn't something visible to the eye every day doesn't mean we haven't upped what we're doing, because we have. i'm convinced with the efforts of our allies and others there will be increased pressure on assad. >> you'd be willing to negotiate with him? >> well, we have to negotiate. >> the state department later clarified saying kerry didn't mean to direct talks with assad, but. another representative of the regime. what would you pay for a good night's sleep? businesses are taking advantage of the sleep epidemic. the measures that are
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it's called the biggest thing in cardiology in a decade. that's next on "cbs this morning." play clip one. stand by. fade to black. yet i'm so awake? did you know your brain has two systems? one helps keep you awake- the other helps you sleep. science suggests when you have insomnia, the wake system in your brain may be too strong and your neurotransmitters remain too active as you try to sleep, which could be leading to your insomnia. ohh...maybe that's what's preventing me from getting the sleep i need! talk to your doctor about ways to manage your insomnia.
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. in our morning rounds, what could be a powerful weapon against killer cholesterol. a new drug slashes bad cholesterol by up to 61%. it cuts heart attacks and strokes by more than half. our doctor is among the cardiologists watching the announcement at a san diego conference. good to see you with the blue water, you look great out there. >> thank you. >> let's talk about the numbers. they sound amazing. but you're saying don't call it a game.-changer yet. >> not yet, but they are encouraged by the study. the study took 4,000 individuals and put them on two different cholesterol lowering regimens. one was moderate or high dose. the other was moderate stattens
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plus a new class of drugs. and essentially what they did is followed them over a year and found within 12 weeks the patients on the new drug dropped their bad cholesterol from 120 down to 48. that's a very significant drop and lowered their cardiovascular events by 50%. very exciting. >> how? >> basically, this new class of drugs what it does is target the ldl receptors. if you imagine the liver is the workhorse of cholesterol production, on the surface of the liver, receptors like fishing nets trying to clear the blood of the bad cholesterol. when you have that receptor normally functioning, it clears and goes back out to the surface to continue doing its job. in the presence of the new protein, that redirects the receptor and targets it for
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destruction. so you're losing the ability to clear the blood of the ldl cholesterol cholesterol. so by blocking that protein with an antibody you're preserving your receptors. so it's a novel way of treating high cholesterol. >> so this is an injectable you take once a month? >> that's right, it's an injectable drug either once a month or twice a month. that's why it's going to be $7,000 to $10,000 per patient per year as opposed to stat ents that cost about $40 a month. >> when available? >> the fda is poised to approve two drugs in the summer. so hopefully by then we should see something. >> thank you very much. still ahead, she was declared dead by. the federal government and cut off from her money. >> for a time i lived in my car. and i couldn't get an apartment. i had my debit card which was
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no good. i used one without knowing the consequences and was actually taken to jail and questioned because they thought i was identity theft. >> lives shaken by mistakes made inside the social security system. moments you did not see in scott's report last night. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> cbs morning rounds sponsored by -- cottonelle. go cottonelle. go commando. how do you feel? i feel awesome! only cottonelle has cleanripple texture, so you can go commando. ♪ yoplait. with a smooth and creamy taste your whole family loves. it is so good all of the time. advanced design makes it easy to protect your dog or cat from fleas and ticks.
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washington lawmakers today take on life-and-death mistakes involving the social security administration. 60 minutes visited the so-called death master file. 2 million names are added each year, but the list is flawed. only on "cbs this morning," portions of scott pelley's report you did not see last night. he looks at the fallout, those who were victimized by the system and those who cheat when the kboft mixes up who's dead or alive. >> how many of you have been declared dead by the federal government. all of you. you're looking pretty well to me. this would be a seance except these are living breathing americans we conjured up around the country all declared dead by the social security administration. john pill jer passed away when he tried to report the death of
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his wife. >> this is a form from the social security administration. the idea was you were going to call this number and essentially report that your wife had passed. >> exactly. and that's what i did on the following monday. eight days later i went to access my bank account and it was -- they kept saying invalid pin p.i.n. so i went to the bank. i told the lady the probe i was having. she typed my numbers in the computer and she grabbed my hand and said mr. pill jer, i don't believe this. they reported you deceased and not your wife. >> reporter: judy river told us she had $80,000 in her accounts but when she tried to use her bank card at a store, they assumed she was an identity thief. >> you couldn't get access to your bank accounts or get money. how did you live? >> well, for a time i lived in my car. i couldn't get an apartment. i had my debit cards which were
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of course, no good. i use one without knowing the consequences and was actually taken to jail and questioned because they thought i was an identity thief. >> reporter: social security doesn't know how many retirement and disability checks are cashed by the relatives of the dead like sandra kimbrel. >> i'm a wife a mother a grandmother, and now a felon. >> reporter: like a lot of people, she took in her aging ill mother and had a joint bank account with her. when her mother died the disability benefits kept coming. >> so month after month the checks kept coming. >> yep. >> and you walked them into the bank. >> i walked into the bank signed my name and accessed the account. >> you signed your name. >> i signed my name. >> to the check in your mother's name. >> the account was in both of our names. >> i see. >> but i always signed my name as being the one who would access the account. >> sandy, you've pled guilt now
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to stealing government funds. >> i have. >> what exactly did you steal? >> the social security funds. >> what did it come to? >> over a 30-year period $16501 $160,000. >> was there any concern you had of cashing these checks of being caught doing something you weren't supposed to be doing? >> not initially. just up until recently when i was contacted and i explained that my moe was dether was key ceased an i was accessing the account and using it and i began to say, well, maybe i should not have used it. there's a problem here. >> the loophole costs billions. they'll introduce a bill aimed at stopping it. >> the judy rivers woman with the blond hair and glasses says she has to kaish around a letter from the social security
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administration that says i am alive alive, not dead and she good morning, it's 8:25. aim for some -- time for some news headlines, former 49er ray mcdonald is file a lawsuit in -- will file a lawsuit in santa clara county after against the woman two -- county today against the woman who accused him of rape. a 17-year-old boy is still in the hospital after being attacked inside valley fair mall in san jose. the victim's father says the attackers asked his son if he were in a gang, he told them no. that's when they knocked him backward and he hit his head. a gang investigations unit is on the case and looking at the surveillance footage. a rally is planned today in san francisco to promote a plan
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back inside their cars after being evacuated after a crash and car fire in the eastbound 24 right bore. well, the bore is going to remain closed so-cal trans can get out there and inspect and clean up. and we shut down until about 11:00 a.m. so the delays continue unfortunately out of oakland. it's still backed up to about broadway. trying to just get to a renda is going to struggle right now. all lanes back open southbound 680 at el pintado road this is at danville. out of concord straight past the road exit. that's the latest kcbs traffic. here's roberta. good morning everyone. heading on out the door, it's a very mild start to your day. we currently have temperatures in the 50s. going up to a high temperature today in the 60s at the beaches nearly 70 in san francisco. nearly 80 in san jose. but it is cooler than yesterday. partly to mostly cloudy skies today. we could see a smattering of a shower this afternoon in the north bay. otherwise the next chance of showers does return to the bay area on
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour arianna huffington is in our toyota green room. "the huffington post" will celebrate, can you believe this its tenth anniversary this spring. go arianna huffington. change the way you use video your honor phone or tablet. that's ahead. but right now time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. the "washington post" said president obama joked about hillary clinton's e-mails.
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take a look who's on the front page of the style section of the post. gayle and her daughter. >> look at that. >> my favorite daughter kirby. >> my first gridiron inta zbram. audience is told not to discuss the evening but charlie rose was there, so you know it's a big deal. >> it's a really big deal. seitz funny. kirby said to me mom, i think you're great but charlie rose is the man. >> you guys look tremendous. >> thanks consider by. >> nice. it was my firpt onest one. i was so blown away. i took pirs of the stage and chris licht said you know you can't post that. >> you're a rule breaker. >> not that one. "the wall street journal" says remarek is on the rise. older adults are leading the way. one in five americans has been married two or more times. it is driven by women age 50 and
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up and men age 60 and up. americans are also living longer which gives them time to enter into new marriages. a min store is taking the heat after asking for donations to buy a $65 million jet. he wanted $300 each. he wants to replace a current plane. it lost an engine during a recent trip. they have now taken down the request but people can still co-nate. >> i think this is so interesting is the word i'll use. he said like a shoemaker and a carpenter has a hammer for tools, he needs a plane for tools to fly around. >> yes he does. >> a g-650, guys. >> of course of course. >> london's daily mirror reports soccer to ron
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aldo on facebook disorders. they call it a public epidemic. gigi is with us this morning. gigi, good morning. >> good morning, jeff. this is the so-called rolls-royce of mattresses. the hestons, it costs between $70,000 and $100,000. it's an extreme example of the way consumers are empties their wallets to try to get better sleep. >> this is the zero gravity chair. >> yes. that's the same as the zero o'gravity chair. >> was it created by nasa? >> it was created by us.
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>> it's a place you can pay to sleep. at yellow spa it costs $1 a minute. you control the light color and intensity. and an artificial sunrise wakes you up more gently than an alarm clock. >> it's the color of the tee betten monks. >> does it strike you that people are paying for naps something that should be free? >> it does not at all. it's always an intriguing question. if you have a mortgage on your house, you pay for sleep f you pay for rent you pay for sleep f you go in a motel room you pay for sleep. >> panld we do. it's all part of a booming industrial complex known as the sleep asussistance industry with estimated revenues of at least $32 billion a year. there are temperature controlled pillows, high-tech gamts that track your sleep cycle and mattresses that cost more than
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100 $100,000. stuffed with genuine horse hair to help keep sleepers cool and dry. manhattan's benjamin hotel has a dedicated sleep program complete with a sleep concierge and sleep consultant. rebecca is a research krien stift at cornell university. >> you wake up fresh slim because the bedrooms are designed with the best designs available. >> this is the holy grail, right? everyone's looking for that perfect night's sleep. how do we get it? >> it's within our reach. 70% of our americans are sleep deprived. we don't have to be. >> the hotel offer as sleen menu with ten different pillows you can order. >> for a slide sleeper it offer as lot of comfort and supports our hips when you sleep on your side. >> oh, my gosh. who needs a husband when you have this. >> this is a water pillow. >> i think i'm seasick. >> this is a lull la buy piller
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so you can plug in your iphone. >> can i learn russian while i sleep? it's a $32 billion a year industry. is it a racket? >> in some ways it is a racket. >> he's an orthopaedic sur jn who helps patients sleep through aches and pains. there is no cure-all. >> no two necks are the same. like a fingerprint. this is a progression of life. the key is just be comfortable. >> medical experts say there are things you can do to get a better night's sleep. exercise go to sleep at the same time and keep computer screens out of your bedroom. of course, all of those things are free. >> gayle? >> all right. we like free stuff. therapy you, gigi. arianna huffington knows all of the challenges of getting enough sleep. she ee the co-founder and co-editor of "the huffington
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post." you know it well. she's the author of 14 books, "thrive condition third metric to creating a life of wellness, wisdom, and wonder." it's available in paperback now. i'd like to know how you've mastered sleep, arianna, because you're in 14 countries, soon to spread. you've written 14 books. you've got two kids and you say you would still be successful if you had slept more and worried less. >> absolutely, 1,000%. because the worry is draining and it duchblt add anything and it does stop us from sleeping. and finally now we recognize through all the new scientific findings that sleep is the biggest performance enhancement tool and for me the key is to take all of the devices out of the bedroom and charge them in another room. otherwise you're going to be tempted for whatever reason to
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check your texts and e-mails and then it's difficult to go back to bed. >> is that your key? >> i have no kindle or any len electronics and i read books not too difficult to work. >> how much? >> 8 hours of sleep 95% of the time. >> that's tremendous. >> i find it makes me much more productive and effective and in this course we're going to be launching with oprah, a six-week course to help people put all that into practice. one of the first steps is how do you get better sleep. and we actually filmed it in my bedroom, which is a device-free zone. and the whole idea. >> are you in there alone? >> alone. without my devices. >> i didn't mean that arianna. >> i wouldn't touch that line.
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>> no. >> as i was going around the world talking about strife the main question i was getting is i agree, but how do i make it happen? how do i implement all these changes. how do i change habits. and that's why in the course every week we're going have two new steps. a total of 12 steps to move from knowing what we want to do to actually doing it. and people can register now on oprah.com/life. >> i've known about it for a while. it's amazing how sleep is one of the hottest topics around. >> you're a pioneer. i quote you in the book. >> yes, you do. >> you famously get two nap as day. >> two or three, but it's all about performance. >> i stole a great line from you and it was if you had to do choose between doing more prep for your your show or 20 minutes nap, you'd choose the nap.
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>> she'd told me that. yes. i've never forgotten that. >> let's talk about "the huffington post." how many countries? >> 14. soon to be in the arab world. and now the latest numbers came out. we're at 214 million unique visitors and 50% of that is outside the u.s. now. >> sol where do you want to take it now? you've just experienced this ten-year milestone. where do you want to take "the huffington post" beyond being global? >> beyond being global we're moving toward modern and we're redesigned the sites of the priorities because that's how more and more people consume content. >> on their phones. >> on their phones. and what is great is that each country is asking more information around that and also acting like a lab. like in korea, 80% of our traffic is on mobile sew we're
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learning from them. germany is experimenting. >> tell us how mobile is change it. how does it change a when site p? what do you do to marek it more mobile? >> you have to present content more differently. the headlines are different. the video is present differently. >> how so? >> if you put the same headlines and presentation on mobile it doesn't look as good. it's not as attractive or friendingly. >> it has to be shotter? >> shorter, yes, different screen experiences. >> you want to do documentaries. what do you want to do? >> next week we're launching a new show. now we're moving into more specific programming. documentaries, satirical and political show, et cetera. >> did you ever think when you started -- >> we have to go. >> congratulations, arianna.
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the south by southwest festival is under way this morning in austin. it is a chance for companies to test new ideas and create buzz. the cell phone battery macker even mobilized a team of saint bernard dogs to charge batteries and drum up business. it's an event where twitter and foursquared took auchlt dan ackerman is here with us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. >> tell us about meerkat. >> this is one of those hot apps that didn't launch at south by southwest but it's popular. probably because you have a lot of people in different countries sharing the apps they're using. it's a leave video app that connects to twitter. people can you know watch what you're doing. >> so whatever i'm tweeting is also -- is it like face timing
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on twitter? >> it is. your twitter followers will send a message that you're doing it now. >> you're meerkating us right now. >> i am. this is about a 10 15-second delay there. >> there's definitely a delay. >> i was at the apple event in san francisco the other day. we were using this on the line snow people how we were lined up and it's interesting to watch. >> so e we've gone from my space, twitter, instagram, snapchat, is this another big one? >> it ties into it. instagram was a way to get cool pictures on twitter and facebook. this is a cool way to get it on twigger. can you turn that to jeff? >> gayle's getting uncomfortable with it. >> can i start? >> there you go. twitter has their own version of this.
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they just brought aought a company called periscope. now you can have some competition there. >> where is all this going? >> i think some of these apps are hot for a week you forget about them and two weeks ago we could have forgot about this completely totally. i think news gathering and things happening in real time is very interesting. i thought when they had the first protest in ferguson you could follow twitter. it was hours ahead of the news. if people were able to livestream, that was good to see. >> how woid should you be about privacy. >>? >> you have to be careful about what you stream. people can capture it and use it later but more importantly if you tune in, you're not going to see something weird. >> look who's joining us.
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it's in the upper corner. they're watching the meerkat now and they can send comments your way. >> wow. >> you've got -- >> say good-bye the meerkat, guys, or i'll be leave it it. >> bye, meerkat. a wow. sweet new subaru, huh mitch? yep. you're selling the mitchmobile!? man, we had a lot of good times in this baby. what's your dad want for it? ..like a hundred and fifty grand, two hundred if they want that tape deck. you're not going to tell your dad about the time my hamster had babies in the backseat, are you?! that's just normal wear and tear, dude. (vo) subaru has the highest resale value of any brand... ...according to kelley blue book ...and mitch. love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru. around here, we're all about fast. that's why xfinity is perfect for me. with millions of wifi hotspots all over the place including one right here at the shop now we can stream all things fast
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good morning. right now we're watching some breaking news in pittsburg just south of highway 4. railroad avenue is closed after a big rig hit a building. this was the tweet just sent out by the fire department there. it sparked a two alarm fire in the area. we'll update you at noon. also more delays continue for the caldecott tunnel. the right bore eastbound 24 remaybes closed -- remains closed until
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jonathan: it's a new jet ski. - what? wayne: oops. you don't know me, you're not my mama. you're not my mom! tiffany: oh, my god! jonathan: it's a trip to jamaica! wayne: lord have mercy. you've got the big deal of the day! - i pick door number one! 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, thanks for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? (cheers and applause) you on the end, yes, ma'am you right there. everybody have a seat. let's go. hey, allison. - how are you? wayne: nice to meet you. - i brought you a little gift because i just went and got some water in my pail. wayne's water. wayne: oh, thank you. thank you so much. - you're welcome. wayne: i appreciate it. - i don't believe i'm here. wayne: me ei
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