tv CBS This Morning CBS May 1, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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are going to take a live look from chopper 5 right now. this is why. look at the view. it . good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday may 1, 2015. welcome to cbs "this morning." new revelations about what happened to feg inreddie gray inside a baltimore police van. we'll ask the nypd's john miller about the investigation and the protest. dramatic new video of the nepal earthquake. we'll talk to an american doctor who flew thousands of miles to help victims. and vegas is ready for its biggest event ever. we're live at the scene of saturday's mayweather/pacquiao fight. >> protesters in philadelphia clashing with police. >> baltimore police deliver
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their report to prosecutors. >> officials say they have learned the van bearing feg made an additional stop. >> also the man in the same van with gray refuting claim he is told police gray was trying to hurt himself? >> why the [ bleep ] would he do that to himself? why would i a i he did that to himself? >> one, two, three. >> in nepal, a woman pulled from the rubble after being trapped for more than five days. >> i'm amazed by this lady. i don't know where she had the power from. >> the confirmed death toll has now reached more than 6,000. >> in the presidential race hillary clinton is being dogged by new reports about undisclosed foreign donations to the clinton foundation. first round of the nfl draft is in the books. >> with the first pick, the tampa bay buccaneers select. >> jameis winston. >> i'm so blessed man. >> reporter: officials a president oklahoma city zoo has recaptured a dangerous escapee. a tiger got out of her enclosure. >> reporter: a california man tells the tale of how he took on a bear.
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>> i cussed at him, get out of here you [ bleep ]. >> the clippers extend their season. steve ballmer looks like he's about to cry tears of joy. before he announced his campaign, vermont senator bernie sanders had a previous career. he was a folk artist. >> you have to get in the groove here. >> and all that matters. >> i think we should hang out together. >> don't say that if you're kidding. >> i'm not. we could do things. >> i would love to do something. >> i would help you raise your children. [ laughter ] >> on cbs "this morning." >> you had a good night? >> i loved it. i enjoyed it. in many ways i could say that -- ♪ i had the time of my life and i never felt this way before ♪
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welcome to "cbs this morning." new revelations in the freddie gray case lead to many questions what happened in the baltimore police van before he died. protests are planned across the country for this weekend. last night protesters clashed with police as they marched during the evening rush. >> police maintain add heavy >> reporter: police in riot gear are in this intersection, the city is on edge as the gray family is expected to be notified of the official cause of death. freddie gray's family will officially learn his cause of death soon as the autopsy report will be finalized. baltimore police have turned over their investigation to the prosecutor completing it a day earlier than anticipated, but with a new revelation -- the
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police van carrying the 25-year-old stopped more times than originally known. with an injured gray in the back, it made four stops instead of three over 45 minutes before gray received medical attention. captain eric kowalcyzk offered no explanation why this newly discovered stop had not been reported earlier. >> it would be inappropriate for us to further comment on the status of the investigation that is now in the hands of the state's attorney. >> reporter: the video of the newly-revealed stop was found at this convenience store. the owner told us police stopped by two weeks ago to look at his surveillance cameras. >> i don't know what he's looking for. >> reporter: donta allen was also taken into custody that day and held in the same police van. he denies reports that gray injured himself. he spoke with cbs station wjz. >> we got to the station all i hear is them like "we gave him a run for his money. requests that's what they said. >> who said that police? >> yes, and they're trying to
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make it seem like i told them that freddie gray did that to himself. >> reporter: late thursday night, police enforcing the 10:00 p.m. curfew in riot gear marched down the streets of the city meeting little resistance. unmonday on monday, rioters burned cars and buildings. the bureau of alcohol, tobacco, firearms is now offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to arrests. the case is now in the hands of the prosecutor here in the city of baltimore. marches and protests are expected through the weekend and the national guard will be here we're told until the situation fully calms down. >> thank you, jeff. baltimore city state's attorney marilyn mosby is the person who will decide whether to pursue criminal charges against freddie gray's arresting officers. the 35-year-old woman has held the job for nearly four months. it's her first elected office. mosby was an insurance company
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lawyer and spent five years as an assistant state's attorney. her husband is a baltimore city councilman. john miller joins us now, he is the deputy commissioner of spell intelligence and counterterrorism for the new york police department and our former senior correspondent here, john good morning. >> good morning. >> first the general picture of what's going on between police and young african-americans in one case and is it nothing new, just simply we're photographing it now? >> i think it's a combination of the two. you know this is a nation where you have 18,000 police departments with 850,000 police officers that make 11.3 million arrests just last year across the country. which is actually a low figure. you've got 500,000 violent crimes. but when you have these encounters and, you know, a moment of that is collected on videotape and it's played over and over again, particularly in a community where there's tension, these become flash
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points and i think while they're blown out of proportion in some instances, they become flash points because they're speaking to a larger tension in those communities. it calls for i think the conversation that it's starting is even where we're doing it right, 99.9% of the time there needs to be a new model of policing where the relationship changes, particularly in those high-crime communities. >> but right now all the focus is on baltimore and freddie gray. do you think, john, we'll ever know what happened here? it seems to me if we had cameras on the police from the very beginning we would have a better understanding of what happened and when it happened to him. >> i certainly think if there were body cameras deployed on those officers getting to take that question apart, yes, i think we'll eventually know what happened. the nature of an investigation is they're not operating on deadline and they're not going against competitors so they're not going to investigate it is way you all would cover it. they'll be methodical and it
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will take longer than anybody wants. had there been body cameras, that could be speeded up because they would have one more source of information about what happened and i think the direction we're going in this country is that you'll see more and more body cameras in more and more police departments because for the police officer, while everybody else is videotaping their actions on the street that's a camera that's facing out so it will capture their point of view what happened and i think it's going to be very help informal a case like this where you have those gaps. >> and we learned the justice department has announced they'll spend $20 million on a program to get body-worn cameras to departments throughout the country. so things are going to change pretty quickly. >> well, they're going to change quickly. but there's going to be a learning curve here. you can't just drop body cameras on police departments with a figure even as low as $20 million and figure out how are we going to store those videos? what are the policies around it? it will be complicated. but at the end of the day it will help in many different ways. >> i want to go back to baltimore and freddie gray because he was arrested for
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possession of a switchblade and then he ended up paralyzed and dead. we just got this preliminary report from the police department about what happened inside the van and they're calling it a rough ride. this is a tactic i guess that is known in several police departments. what does that mean? >> i've been around policing either as a journalist or working in police departments on and off for more than a decade for a long time and i've never heard of that. >> never? of a rough ride of something they do to suspects when they're inside the van on the way to the precinct. >> i can't make it up norah, i've never heard of it. now, on the other hand i know about police brutality, i know about a rough encounterarrest we all know the louima story about what happened in the cell block. does that mean it didn't happen? no. but i can't speak to it. >> so to button this up police
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officers around the country are looking at what's happening saying let's be very careful about what we're doing on the streets. those conversations are definitely going on. i know they go on all the time. >> i have to step back on that one because i think in a dedication where everybody shows up to work everyday sworn to protect and serve, taking a life is a terrible contradiction. i don't think anybody wakes up in the morning and says "we're going to lump some people up and kill a guy today." it's not the nature of the police officers i know. now, when you have 850,000 people, are there going to be people who are better worse? are there going to be the bad apples? there certainly are, there certainly will be. but i don't think it's a pall across the profession. >> john miller thank you. we are seeing dramatic new video of the nepal earthquake and the deadly avalanche it triggered on mount everest. >> whoa whoa! whoa! whoa! inside! >> those climbers took cover when the snow swept through
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their base camp. all of them did survive. in a new video from kathmandu shows the moment the ground started shaking and the destruction began. more than 6,000 deaths are now confirmed. holly williams is in kathmandu where people have come from all over the world to help out. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. nepal's hospitals have struggled to cope with the scale of this disaster and now there's a new threat infectious disease. we met an american doctor who's come here to help. >> on the back of her head. >> reporter: dr. christopher barley normally treats the wealthy and sometimes even royalty at his park avenue practice. but when the earthquake hit, he dropped everything and flew to nepal. >> it's going to take some anti-inflannelmmatoryies if we have some. >> reporter: dr. barley knows the country well he built a hospital in a remote nepalese village 12 years ago.
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>> it's heartbreaking to walk around and see this. for some reason some of the poorest places are often hit the hardest. >> reporter: in the small town of sanku, he checked this woman for fractures, she was hit by falling bricks when her house collapsed? >> she's been very lucky. >> reporter: and he cleaned lakshmi nakarmi's wounds. >> only a few stitches. >> reporter: she lost her home in the earthquake and is now living with ten other families in what used to be a chicken coop. the earthquake didn't just take housands of lives, it destroyed families entire communities, and centuries of history. but with clean water in short supply, what dr. barley is really worried about now is infection and disease. >> just about anything you can get in the tropics they'll be getting. so there will be several weeks of that and that can sometimes -- the number of people that die from that can be
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bigger than natural, original problems were the buildings falling down, i. >> reporter: over the last few days we've watched thousands of people leave kathmandu. they're worried the tent cities that have sprung up here since the quake could be a greeding ground for infectious disease. charlie? >> holly williams in kathmandu. jurors in the colorado theater massacre will get a break this morning. police officers became emotional on the stand thursday as they recounted the bloodshed. james holmes has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. 12 people were killed and 70 wounded. mark strassmann is at the courthouse in centennial colorado, with the first responders' testimony. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, dozens of police responded to the shooting and one after another has taken the stand to recall the chaos. a suburban movie theater became a killing field. >> we have another person outside shot in the leg, a
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female. i've got people running out of the theater that are shot. >> reporter: "shots fired" was the police call. mayhem became bedlam at the century 16 theaters. behind the building officer jason oviatt spotted the gunman james holmes dressed head to toe in body armor. >> i ordered him to lay face down on the ground. >> reporter: the gunman's 9 millimeter lay on the white car's roof. his assault rifle sat by the theater's rear entrance. officer justin grizzle was one of the first cops to step into the carnage of theater nine. bodies lay everywhere. he went from one to the next looking for survivors. >> of course the one that i'll always remember is the little girl. >> reporter: six-year-old veronica veronica moser sullivan lay lifeless on the floor. >> i had to step over her because i knew she was gone. i had to continue on which was actually the hardest thing i had to do. but going back on my training i had to save the ones that i knew
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i could try to save. >> reporter: in his cruiser, officer grizzle rushed a half dozen wounded people to local hospitals. one of them was caleb medley an aspiring comedian shot in the head and critically wounded. >> i could tell he was dying. i could tell he was gurgling in his own blood. i yelled at him "don't [ bleep ]ing die on me. don't [ bleep ]ing die on me." and he'd start breathing again. >> reporter: grizzle's heroics saved medley. he survived but with severe brain damage. grizzle wasn't the only one to cry during his testimony. jurors were passing around a box of kleenex. >> mark thanks. the first criminal charges in the new jersey bridgegate scandal may come later today. david wildstein arrived in court this morning. new york station wcbs reports he may plead guilty to the 2013 lane closures on the george washington bridge. they created a traffic might mare for several days in new jersey. the closures were allegedly ordered by members of governor chris christie's administration as political retribution. wildstein was a top appointee of
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the earn go. christie has repeatedly denied involvement in the scandal. presidential candidate hillary clinton faces new questions this morning about her family charity. the clinton foundation admits it did not reveal all of its foreign donors as promised while she was l secretary of state. nancy cordes is in washington where the newest questions focus on one of the foundation's charities. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, the clinton foundation says these omissions were just oversights and that they were sporadic. but clinton's critics say there was a pattern of non-disclosure that violated a very clear-cut agreement between the foundation and the white house. >> all contributors will be disclosed. >> reporter: clinton made that promise at her confirmation hearing in 2009 and it was backed up by this memo of understanding. "during any service by senator clinton as secretary of state, the foundation will publish annually the names of new contributors." >> that's how the clinton/ clinton/giustra enterprise partnership came to peru.
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>> reporter: but the foundation said it did not announce more than 400 donors to the clinton/giustra partnership based in canada where privacy laws face more restriction. another charity, the clinton health access initiative did not inform state department ethics officials when foreign governments increased their donatins. state department spokesperson marie hart. >> if there were things that should have been submitted that weren't, we obviously would have appreciated the opportunity to review them. >> reporter: clinton herself has had little to say on the topic. >> are you going to address those question mrs. fully? >> reporter: but foundation leaders say they are acting quickly to remedy past mistakes. >> one has the impression they didn't take this commitment seriously from the very beginning. >> reporter: louisiana republican david vitter raised the issue with clinton back in 2009. >> a lot of folks legitimately share these concerns across the spectrum. >> reporter: why was it important for them to disclose this foreign donation? >> well, it was a big potential source of conflict of interest.
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you had huge amounts of money coming in from foreign sources to an entity that's directly related to the secretary of state. >> reporter: the clinton campaign points out there is no evidence that secretary clinton was influenced by foreign donations to the foundation. but vitter and others say it would not have been hard for a big organization like the foundation to fully disclose its donors as it agreed to. >> nancy, thanks. we learned minutes ago that the great soul singer ben e. king has died. ♪ stand by me oh stand by me oh stand, stand by me ♪ >> you have to love that song. king recorded the classic "stand by me" in 1961. it was a hit then and returned to the charts more than 20 years later. king originally made his name in music as a member of the drifters on songs like "there goes my baby." he died thursday he was 76. a major volcano brings a new
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sin city's never seen an event like this. >> huh-uh. ahead, their big fight bringing really big bucks to las vegas. >> reporter: i'm carter evans at the hottest spot in las vegas right now. this is where floyd mayweather will take on manny pacquiao on saturday in what many are calling the fight of a century. tickets sold out in less than a minute and right now floor sews is backing in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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considering his case again. that's ahead. the 3-d technology good morning. it's 7:26. here's what's happening on friday. oakland police are prepared to deal with may day demonstrations today. the activity could affect traffic to so give yourself some extra time. freddie gray's autopsy report is in. he died from a traumatic injury to his spine and head. and a higher minimum wage takes effect in san francisco today. workers will make at least $12.25 an hour. that will go up to $15 an hour in 2018. it was
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bridge to the toll plaza. unfortunately, we' still becomed up east of the maze but the eastshore freeway is a better drive time than normal even though it's starting to slow now. heaviest between richmond and berkeley. bart so far on time. we are watching for delays with may day protests. in fact, ac transit buses are rerouting around the macarthur bart station. everything else is on time for caltrain and ace and 880 in oakland is also moving at the speed limit. that's "kcbs traffic." here's roberta. >> from the kpix 5 weather center good morning, everybody. tgif! this is your friday wow visibility pretty much unlimited at this hour under the influence of high pressure and a pretty big offshore flow. temperatures very mild. 50s and 60s out the door. 60s and 70s across the bay to the peninsula today. 82 mountain view. 90 degrees in
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>> i'm retiring in a few weeks. >> no kidding. [ laughter ] i think we should hang out together i think you'll have -- >> are you kidding? don't say if you're kidding. >> i'm not. we could do things. >> i would love to do something. >> i would help you raise your children. [ laughter ] i could walk you through it. i can take you down that road that grumpy cat road. i could get you out on the other side. you're going to be fine dave. i'm here because you're leaving and you've been just a tremendous support to me to my family, but mostly to our men and women in uniform and our veterans. we decided to pay tribute to you. we have here with us today the president's own united states marine band. >> whoa. >> in honor of you, dave.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> that's a nice salute to david letterman. >> isn't that so nice? nice to have the u.s. marine band. >> terrific. >> don't you recognize that guy in the middle charlie? he was at the white house correspondent's dinner on saturday. that's the president's band all right. the two of them together, that's nice. a very nice tribute. welcome back to cbs "this morning." coming up in this half hour new video of an erupting volcano in chile. it shows plumes of ash shooting into the sky. thousands are forced to evacuate. we'll explain why nature poses another threat to the area as soon as today. plus people are paying tens of thousands of dollars to see the biggest boxing match in a generation. we'll take you to vegas for the economic boom from the mayweather/pacquiao fight. the "wall street journal" says the united states navy has
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begun accompanying american ships in the strait of hormuz after iran took control of a marshall island flagged ship tuesday and detained the crew. tensions in the persian gulf could jeopardize nuclear talks with iran. the chicago "sun-times" updates us on former congressman aaron shock, it says he can't be found. he resigned amidst allegations he misused campaign funds. he even decorated his office to look like down on theton abbey but a lawyer cannot track him down. the "new york times" says hundreds of scientists want to limit the use of a common class of chemicals. that signed a statement voicing concern about pfass, they're used in a wide range of items like pizza boxes. studies show they appear to increase the risk of cancer. >> the "washington post" says the largest outbreak of plague in the united states in nearly a century started with a dog in
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colorado according to an investigation by the centers for disease control. four cases of pneumonic plague originated with an infected pit bull last year. all of the patients have recovered. the "los angeles times" says tesla is expanding into the energy storage business. ceo elon musk says homes and companies can be free from the electric grid. it relies on battery technology developed for electric cars. the first product will store enough power to run a home for ten hours. >> this morning, a cloud of thick dangerous ash is hovering rather over parts of southern chile. a volcano erupted for the third time in a week. this ash has forced the evacuation of people in a 12-mile radius around the mountain. anna werner shows us how the region faces another threat from mother nature today. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. for most of the week the volcano was relatively quiet but geological officials have warned it was still unstable and could erupt again.
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on thursday those predictions came true. the calbuco volcano refused to let up thursday spewing another supersized plume of smoke and ash miles into the sky. some villagers hadn't even finished cleaning up from last week's back-to-back eruptions when they were ordered to leave their homes once again. "it's tough" this man said "because we had already removed all the volcanic material from the houses. so now to evacuate again is kind of hard." the volcano roared back to life last wednesday after lying dormant for more than 40 years. over the past week, a blanket of volcanic ash has coated nearby towns, choking the area's salmon industry and disrupting flights all the way to argentina. so far, at least 6,000 people have been forced to evacuate along with some pets. many gathered at this shelter, unsure of exactly what they would go back to. "we are a bit scared" this woman said. "but as soon as this situation
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improves, i believe i'll be able to return to my house, god willing." officials said this latest eruption wasn't as powerful as the first two. still, they warn heavy rain expected today could lead to devastating volcanic mud capable of destroying anything in its path. the eruptions have threatened to cause widespread and lasting economic damage. some volcano experts say it could take the soil more than a year to recover and the volcano could still erupt again. charlie? >> anna thanks. tomorrow night's mayweather pacquiao fight is the most anticipated boxing match in many years and it's expected to make more money than any bout in history. carter evans is inside the mgm grand hotel and casino where the fight will take place. >> carter, good morning. 50,000 people bought tickets for up to $150 to watch this fight but they won't be in the arena, they'll be watching it on tv in
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various viewing parties around town. they just wanted to be here in vegas when boxing history is made. when these two world champions meet in the ring for the first time, it will be the biggest boxing match in a generation. you're still in the game? >> yes. >> reporter: what's the goal? >> the will to win. >> reporter: what are you doing to prepare? >> work out and focus on the fight. >> reporter: the long-awaited showdown between floyd mayweather and manny pacquiao has drawn people from around the world. why is it so important to be here? >> biggest fight in history isn't it? >> reporter: this father and son flew from south africa and will be among the lucky few to sit ring side how much did you pay for the tickets? >> $44,000 tickets a piece. >> reporter: and that's considered a steal. >> we got them cheaply. >> for some people it's a once
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in a lifetime experience. it's priceless. >> reporter: ticket retailer stubhub had tickets listed for more than $3,000. there are only about 16,000 seats at the rena at the mgm grand so the vast majority of the more than 300,000 fans who came to vegas to see the fight will actually be watching it on tv. >> i've waited for this fight for, like -- six, seven years now? >> reporter: but you won't even see the fight in person. >> i'm not. i tried. i really did. >> reporter: ultimately they'll watch it on tv. why are they coming here? >> the party atmosphere this i went to say they were in las vegas for the pacquiao/mayweather fight. >> reporter: rossi ralenkotter is president of the las vegas visz or thes s -- visitors convention. what kind of economic impact does this have on the economy? >> over $150 million. >> reporter: nearly all of the hotel rooms in vegas are booked
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even the once glitzy riviera set to closed monday for demolition is booked solid at five times the usual rate. >> we're talking about big dollars. >> reporter: jayed radiomanage rood manages the sports post on mgm. >> i've had several inquiries on million dollar wagers. there will be a lot of money on this fight. an epic night in las vegas, that's for sure. >> reporter: this fight is expected to generate $400 million from pay-per-view ticket sales and sponsorships. charlie, even the ads on pacquiao's boxing shorts sold for $2.25 million. >> wow. >> a lot of people going to make a lot of money. >> yeah. i was reading he's a councilman in his hometown pacquiao is. >> oh yeah. >> actual congress, i think. >> i'm very curious. gayle, you're going. >> so is charlie. we're not going together but we're going. find out your room number later.
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[ laughter ] but it's my first and probably last boxing match because i don't like seeing people get hit but i'm all caught up in the hype, though i am. >> reporter: who are you rooting? >> floyd may weather. >> charlie? >> who am i rooting for? pacquiao. i've interviewed him and i know him a little bit. >> you meant to say played in the mayweather didn't you? isn't that what you meant to say? norah, ask him again. >> i hope it goes 15 rounds and there's a knockout in the first minute of the 15th round. >> i don't know much about boxing but it says mayweather is the best pure boxer of his time and pacquiao is the best fighter of his time. >> that's why i like pacquiao. >> go floyd. >> show time will carry the fight live on pay-per-view. showtime is a division of cbs. >> yes it is. a new york man is on trial for the third time in the murder of his wife. the defense team's new tactic to get its millionaire client off the hook is next. and if you're heading off to work catching a plane to vegas, maybe, you can set your dvr so you can watch cbs "this morning" any time you feel like it.
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ago. will this give the jurors enough reasonable doubt to acquit cal harris? >> bodiless prosecutions are also difficult. but also what makes this case so unusual is how cal harris has spent most of the past eight years since he was first convicted of murder in 2007. he's been out free on bail home with his family for more than half that time.
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while interviewing him. he shared his thoughts of reading. while growing up. his name is osman ya-ya. he said it was time for lunch. they needed to get to the cafeteria. >> he told politico, most students were hungry and that's why he had to wrap it up. >> he did it very politely. millionaires. how they could launch a space race among the super rich. you're watching "cbs this morning." but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza. he said victoza works differently than pills and comes in a pen. victoza is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once a day, any time. and the needle is thin. victoza is not for weight loss but it may help you lose some weight. victoza is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise.
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tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need... ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza. it's covered by most health plans. body pain? motrin helps you be an unstoppable, i-can-totally-do-this- all-in-one-trip kind of woman. when pain tries to stop you, there's motrin. motrin works fast to stop pain where it starts. make it happen with new motrin liquid gels. hey! have an awesome vacation everyone! thank you so much! you're so sweet. yummy! key lime pie at 90 calories. it is so good for not giving in.
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good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. the golden state warriors have some new opposition over the team's plans for a new basketball arena in san francisco. people sounded off at a community meeting yesterday. a group called the mission bay alliance says there are many problems with the proposed 18,000-seat facility. among the biggest issues a lack of parking and the effects on traffic. tesla ceo elon musk has announced his company is making batteries to store solar electricity. the hope is to eventually use those batteries to power homes and businesses across the u.s. the so-called power wall would
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sell for about $3,000 each. palo alto-based tesla expects to start shipping the product this summer. and just in the state's attorney in maryland has just announced there is probable cause to file charges in connection with the death of freddie gray. he is the man who sustained fatal injuries while in police custody in balti
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good morning. current conditions at the san mateo bridge, beginning to slow down a bit on the flat section now just past the pay gates. at least there's no wait at the toll plaza. bay bridge the metering lights quickly and not quite backed up to the maze. so better than usual at the bay bridge. bart on time no delays but ac transit is rerouting around the macarthur bart station for later plans for may day protests. that's "kcbs traffic." here's roberta. out the door just a mild start to your morning. hi, everybody. currently we are in the 50s and 60s. later today we're talking about
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good morning to our viewers in the west. if is friday may 1, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." new concerns over the connection between stress and heart attacks. d dr. narula will show us who is at risk and why. but first a look at our "eye opener" at 8:00. >> coupled with the determination with the evidence that mr. gray's death was a homicide lead us to to file criminal charges. >> dozens of police responded to the shooting and one after
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another has taken the stand to recall the chaos. >> clinton's critics say there was a pattern of nondisclosure that violated a very clear-cut agreement. >> geological officials have warned it was still unstable and could erupt again. those predictions came true. >> talk about money, this fight is expected to generate $400 million. >> gayle, you're going. >> and so is charlie. >> we're not going together. i'll find out your room number later. >> this saturday is a big sports day, huge sports day. with the kentucky derby, the nfl draft, nba playoffs this for a toddler's birthday party. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the city's chief prosecutor said moments ago a city police officer will be charged with
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second degree murder in the death of freddie gray. >> the findings of our comprehensive, thorough and independent investigation coupled with the medical examiner's determination that mr. gray's death was a homicide which we received today has led us to believe that we have probable cause to file criminal charges. >> marilyn mosby told reporters that police illegally arrested gray and ignored his repeated cries for help. besides the officer charged with second degree murder five other officers face charges including involuntary homicide and assault. jeff pegues is live in baltimore. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the chief prosecutor coming out saying the death was a homicide and announcing charges against the six officers. these are the officers who were involved in the transport of freddie gray over that 45-minute
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or so route to the precinct. according to the chief prosecutor marilyn mosby, the officers even though he had opportunities to render aid and help him, they did not. she filed several charges against the six officers assault charges, manslaughter charges, also official misconduct charges in addition to murder charges against at least one of the officers. we're still going through some of the information that she has released, but she has announced the result of her investigation. it has been about a two-week or so investigation. here in this intersection a large gathering of police who are now in riot gear prepared. we have not seen any clashes with police. we have not seen any celebrations in the streets, but police are watching this corner. nora? >> jeff thank you. >> this morning the unrest over freddie gray's death is taking an economic toll on baltimore. several businesses have been damaged or destroyed. the 10 p.m. curfew is costing
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bars and restaurants thousands of dollars. the city's top cop says the curfew will remain in effect through the weekend. at least three upcoming conventions have backed out of the city in the wake of this week's protests. and the baltimore orioles postponed two games this week and banned fans from a game wednesday. this weekend's home series against the rays has been moved to florida. >> the orioles had a very unusual week. it began last saturday night. that was when camden yard was locked down. some fans expressed frustration they could not leave the ballpark until police determined it was safe. but the orioles executive vice president and son of owner peter angelo defended the protesters and those living in economic devastation. >> in a series of 20 tweets, john angelos wrote on saturday there's a far bigger picture for poor americans in baltimore and everywhere who doesn't have jobs and are losing economic and civil and legal rights and this makes ball games irrelevant.
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good morning, john. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. >> share with us why you felt compelled to write this at the moment. >> charlie, it's a tweet that i wrote for a very few people ended up being shared by a few million. i think i wrote it because i believe that the difficulty that people have in certain communities in baltimore, which i think reflects the difficulty people are having in communities around the country is a byproduct of some failed policies on a national level that have transferred american jobs to foreign countries and policies that have reacted to the stress in these communities by seeking people out and putting them in jail in large numbers. >> what do you hope it will accomplish? >> well, at the time i was really trying to move a specific dialogue towards a wider picture, that baseball games and football games are fun thanksgiving and they're
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entertainment, but they're not important relative to the grand scheme of things. the grand scheme of things what's important is how are people living in all of our communities and not just some. if our system is leaving some of our friend and neighbors behind then our system is really failing all of us. >> john, there's been a lot of conversation and a lot of debate over the use of the word thugs to describe the people who were rioting. what are your thoughts on that? >> i don't think that's fair. i think there are 2.25 million people in the baltimore metropolitan area. there were a few hundred arrests. i similarly think it's unfair to demonize all of the police officers. police officers are not from another planet they are baltimoreans who live here just as the residents do. it's unfair to sensationalize things and call all of the protesters unfortunate names and all of the police officers
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unfortunate names. >> john unemployment in the zip code where those riots broke out is 20%. in one of your tweets you blamed the american elite who have shipped american and working class jobs away from baltimore. what did you mean by saying that? what do you hope that achieves i guess is the question. >> well i -- what i meant by that is if one were to take away from the people who have embraced these ideas or from what i wrote originally in expressing them, that i was targeting that at a specific group, say republicans or democrats, that would be the wrong takeaway. i think both groups have embraced policies over the past many decades that have said well, we're a democracy but we're comfortable with shipping our baltimorean jobs to countries that aren't democracies and couldn't spell the word election in any language and they've also been comfortable with enforcing crime bills and laws that have put a
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lot of people in jail for what are described as lower level drug crimes and by warehousing people that don't have jobs and by passing that through to generations, you're getting nowhere. >> all right. john angelos, thank you for joining us here this morning and our best to your city. >> on average one woman suffer as heart attack in this country every 90 seconds. dr. tara
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waking up from a bad dream becomes the start of a real nightmare. >> waking up from a bad dream becomes a bad nightmare. >> a florida mother of two said she had a deadly vision of murder not far from where i'm standing right now. was she clairvoyant or the killer? that's coming up on "cbs this morning."
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talking about? >> researchers looked at different kinds of stress, marital, employment health. they followed women and broke them down into two categories 267 who had a heart attack and 281 who didn't and they looked to see if there was an association between the risks and whether they had a heart attack. if a woman's income was less than $50,000 a year, they were particularly vulnerable to having stressors impact risk for a heart attack. if they had financial troubles they were double the risk of a heart attack fannedand if they had a traumatic life event, an illness, death of a loved one or child or suffered a physical assault, they were at a 65% increased risk for a heart attack. >> do women talk to you about
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stress? >> when they come to thet the cardiologist, they don't often bring it up. but when you ask, then they open up, yes, i'm under a lot of stress. as doctor, we need to be better about asking our patients about this and patients need to recognize that this is as big a risk factor as the things they know about like blood pressure and cholesterol and diabetes. >> what is it that stress does to the body that causes a heart attack in. >> stress increases the blood pressure increases the heart races are it can construct blood vessels in the body it increases inflammation so if plaques are stable, it disrupts them. you don't sleep, you eat poorly, you might drink or smoke. >> did the results surprise you? doesn't it stand to reason if you've had a traumatic event it could be stressful and lead to a heart attack?
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>> most of the prior research had been on men or people who had prior heart attacks and this study focused on women. this is an evolving area for us how gender interplays with cardiovascular disease and stress. we're not sure if women are physiologically different. some suggest a man might raise his blood pressure or heart rate, a woman night restrict her blood vessels. do they react to stimuli, are they under more stress because they're care givers a lot of times? a lot of unanswered questions. >> this is something we need to pay attention to. >> absolutely. >> thank you, dr. tara narula. good to see you. >> he's transforming play time into an action-packed blockbuster. >> you forgot your lunch! >> you forgot your lunch!
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the dad who turned his 4-year-old son into a super hero! that's ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: by pronamel. protect your enamel against the effects of everyday acids. our enamel from everyday essence. me your enamel is wearing away, and that sounded really scary to me and i was like well can you fix it can you paint it back on and he explained that it was not something that grows back, it's kind of a one-time shot and you have to care for it. he told me to use pronamel. it's gonna help protect the enamel in your teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee and to eat healthier and it was a real easy switch to make. why am i so awake? did you know your brain has a wake system... and a sleep system? science suggests when you have insomnia, the neurotransmitters in your wake system may be too strong, which may be preventing you from getting
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a florida mother woke up from a nightmare back in 2010. in vivid detail she describes seeing the face of her friend surrounded by darkness and drama. on tomorrow night's "48 hours" peter van sant investigates whether this woman is a clair volatility point or a killer. here's a preview. >> to me i thought it was a dream. i woke up and it just startled me. >> reporter: sheila trot will never forget about waking up from a dream about her friend. >> i could see she was hurt. >> reporter: sheila said she could see her friend in the midst of an argument in the heat of a argument with a stranger. >> she was arguing with somebody. >> reporter: so disturbing she told her two teenaged sons crayton and graham. >> i couldn't piece it together but i knew something was wrong.
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>> reporter: hours later 46-year-old's bludge oned body was found on the beach, the very place sheila had seen in her dream. >> this is where kelly ended her life. >> right here. >> kelly was a well respected nurse. she had been sheila's friend for more than 20 years. >> what was kelly like? >> we had the type of friendship where we wouldn't see each other for four or five years and something would bring us together. kelly was a great girl. >> reporter: a great girl who authorities believe was having an affair with sheel la's husband dan trot. for him, that seemed a potential motive for murder. does this case have an affair. >> yes. >> sex. >> sure. >> jealousy. >> on both sides. >> and a nightmare and visions and who knows what. clairvoyance. >> of course that's our suspect
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saying she's clair foye yant. for us that's somebody who's going to kill jim. >> i'm going to take that away or hurt her as much as she hurt me. >> she la filed for divorce and claims she encouraged the divorce. >> the fact that i set him up with him. >> you assetset them up. >> yes, absolutely. >> wait a second. >> she was my ticket out of a bad marriage. god's honest truth if i was going to kill anybody it would have been here. >> the prosecutor isn't buying one word of sheila's story or her dream of murder that apparently came true. >> you don't believe that she had some supernatural ability that all these facts came to her in a dream. >> no i don't think she's clairvoyant. i think she's a killer. >> peter van sant joins us at the table. e i'm fascinated by sheila's sons. i can't imagine how difficult it
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must be to testify against your mother. what role did they play? >> they were eyewitness to her when she woke up and mumbled in this dream state. they were called to the stand to testify what they heard. but they're absolutely convinced of their mother's innocence. >> how old are they? young men, little kids? >> late teens. >> old enough. what evidence do the prosecutors have against her? >> it all focuses on the family what they heard. because the case itself is circumstantial. there are no eyewitnesses no murder weapon, no dna. it's all what happened when she woke up and told the family what she had -- what this vision was about. >> now you've left us with a very strong bite. she's not clairvoyant. she's a murderer. >> we shall see. >> we shall see on saturday. that's right norah. i've got to clarify. we shall see. you can watch the full
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your relate real . your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego. baltimore state's attorney says six officers are charged in the death of freddie gray. his death was ruled a homicide today. san francisco has a new minimum wage in effect today. workers will make at least $12.25 an hour. that will go up to $15 by 2018. voters approved it last november. plus oakland police are prepared to deal with may day demonstrations today. the activity could affect traffic so give yourself some extra time for the commute. and elizabeth is going to have ♪ you should shop at grocery outlet first, ♪ ♪ because their prices are up to 60% less than what you'll ♪ ♪ find at regular stores. ♪ ♪ but wait - there's more! ♪ shop here first and you'll always find more bargains.
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good morning. if you are about to head into san francisco along northbound 101, you may want to be aware of an accident approaching cesar chavez blocking one lane. it's slow right now from third and northbound 280 slows near ocean. that was the tweet from "kcbs traffic." let's take outside show you what current conditions look like now. this is a live look in oakland near oakland airport. northbound traffic begins to slow right around 238. maybe a little north of that. then continues up by high street. bay bridge better than normal as long as there's no accidents or stalls, i wouldn't be
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surprised if they clear out early at the toll plaza. it is backed up almost to the maze and the eastshore freeway is a little slow near berkeley. that's "kcbs traffic." with the forecast, here's roberta. good morning, everybody from the kpix 5 weather center. heading on out the door, what a mild start to our dare. day. here's the scene looking over the city of san francisco currently where it's 56 degrees. look at san jose. 67 degrees after a high of 88 degrees yesterday. we'll still see some 60s and 70s at the beaches today. 70s across the bay. 80s across the peninsula. mid-80s across the silicon valley. and low to mid-80s across the north bay. the warmest temperatures of all will be found east of the bay up to 91 degrees and discovery bay pleasanton, danville, blackhawk, also in antioch. we will cool down significantly by tonight leading into your weekend with the return of the onshore flow. then a stagnant benign weather pattern each day monday through thursday. make it a great day, everyone. enjoy!
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour the new space race. amazon found are jeff bezos launched his test rocket this week. why bezos and other billionaires are battling to get into the space business. >> and we'll have a preview of our sunday morning profile ahead. >> now it's time to show you some of the headlines around the globe. "roll call" looks at incidents of weapons being left.
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in two instances guns were left in the u.s. capitol and in a third instant, a gun was found in plane site at the capitol headquarters. >> george w. bush kicked off the warrior 100 k, that's a 100 kilometer bike ride at his ranch in crawford yesterday. >> britain's "guardian" says an italian man hung up with the pope called twice. he thought it was a hoax. the pope often calls people who are sick. he said the pope laughed it off and said it was funny. >> can you imagine? no, this is the pope.
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sure, sure. >> another mom is showing tough love in georgia. she called police on her son after he was disrespectful to his teacher. she asked officers to pretend to arrest the 10-year-old to scare him. pictures posted to facebook show it worked. a baltimore mom was lauded this week for pulling her son off the streets. >> bet he won't be rude to his teacher again. >> and jeff bezos launched a new test rocket. it blasted off in texas. it went 58 miles into the air before returning to earth. amazon founder is competing with other billionaires like richard branson and elon musk. what's going on with all these people thinking that they got to go into space? >> there's a lot of excitement. a lot of people want to go into space. it's a goal of a lot of people
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to go into space. >> is it just their passion to do this or are they saying a gold mine at the end of the rainbow? >> it's a little bit of both. there's an interview with bezos in high school where he said he wanted to take on space tourism, so he wanted to do this for a long time. but it's also said the world's first trillionaire will be made in space. >> when? >> we're still years ago. virgin galactic was doing good and they unfortunately had an incident where they had a crash and lost one of their pilots and the goal is to make this affordable. if you have $20 million, you can go to the russian space agency and buy a ride up to the i.s.s. that's not something i can do. >> what's your definition of
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affordable? clearly 20 million is not. when you say affordable what does that mean exactly? >> the first commercial space flights will probably be in the tens of thousands, perhaps the million dollar range. the goal is to get it down under the cost of a nice car, something someone could reasonably afford. it's going to be expensive but we're talking about a ride 100 kilometers up. >> how did the blue origin test go? >> it went well. the goal is to get to 100 kilometers they got to 93 kilometers so that's pretty close. they want to do this prepeatrepeatedly and do it again and again. and safely. >> who is ahead? >> it's a tight race between virgin galactic and blue origin.
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the crash set virgin galactic back. blue origin is doing well but they've been very secretive. >> both go hand in hand secretive and competent. >> i've heard charlie say he wants to go. do you want to go? >> i would go if i knew it was safe. i'd want to go absolutely. >> no thank. >> what about you, tim? >> i want to go but not as bad as my wife who would cash in our mortgage and everything else. >> up your insurance policy. thank you very much. this weekend we're going to take you behind the scenes of youtube. we showed you how the video site celebrated ten years of creating online sensations from around the world but it faces challenges in an ever-expanding industry. you're going to meet the man in charge of tracking what's hot. >> does youtube create trends or do you just keep up with them?
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>> i think it's both. youtube has become this sort of mirror of our culture. >> kevin allocca is head of trends at youtube, on constant lookout for the next clip to go viral, whether it's youtube's all-time most watched video the k korean video gangham style or video games. videos of people playing video games are some of the sites biggest draws. >> do you ever look at a video that's really popular and say i just don't get it? >> all the time all the time. there are so many different things that become popular. after a while you start to understand this may not be something that i understand but the people who are into this kind of thing love it. so you get used to that
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happening a lot. >> i'm hungry! ♪ >> youtube claims to have a billion users, which is to say 1 out of 7 people on earth making it a global stage open to virtually anyone. >> there's 300 hours of video uploaded to youtube every minute. it's an incredible amount of things. anyone anywhere can have their voice heard. that can be a very telling thing about where we are. >> can you watch the full report this weekend on sunday morning. you'll meet two of youtube's biggest start, plus youtube's ceo since coming back from maternity leave. she'll tell us why she believes paid maternity leave is good for business. we'll talk to her about whether youtube is making any money and their next steps in that business. youtube is what my kids use in my house.
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it's redefined the way people watch tv and consume media. >> it is interesting. >> i use it all the time. >> me too. >> for mainly sort of instructional videos. >> like how to tie a bow tie or fry an egg? >> no. how to serve a tennis ball. >> do you really? you look at that? >> absolutely. >> looking forward to susan, you talking to susan. i think she's fascinating. she's on to something. you just saw the power of youtube over the last decade and that clauseincludes a dad, father and son who we think will blow your mind. >> i'm john blackstone. it looks like a normal suburban back yard but it is actually the headquarter of "action movie
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jock john blackstone shows us how that turned into ""super action kid." >> reporter: he's pretty much your typical 4-year-old with super powers. the "action movie kid" videos have blown up on line. they're created by his dad, daniel hashimoto, a special effects engineer who has worked on films, too. >> i'm climbing! >> i know your mom's going to kill me. >> real moments at home not directed by dad are captured on a smartphone and then turned into movie quality magic. >> you forgot your lunch! >> he's pretending to be iron man in blasting through the
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kitchen, i thought it would be so fun to add graphics to these and show them to him so he could see what it was like being a super hero. >> what was your reaction when you saw it james, blowing the kitchen apart? >> oh sorry. >> mom has her own outlet for creativity preparing custom chocolates for parties and events from her home kitchen. >> he has a daddy who makes cartoons and he lives basically in a chocolate factory. he's a lucky kid. >> in a twist on the old hollywood success story, "action movie kid" is coming to a store near you. the cover of course animates thanks to an app called blipper. amazing what you can do with an old fashioned book now. >> it sure is. >> you had the video ideas but when it kams tocame to writing the
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book, you became the brains of the book? >> mostly. >> reporter: combining his heroic deeds with his love of sci-fi, the book has the kid taming a slime monster. >> slime monster is no match for action movie family. >> hopefully part of the lesson of the book is as a apparent if you engage in your child's imaginative play you can kind of create these really fun memories for them. >> reporter: and fear not, action movie kid is not bidding farewell to the small screen. >> what are you exploring right now? >> reporter: new episodes are in the making. >> graveyard hours. >> a graveyard house? >> yes. >> that sounds dangerous. >> i know. >> the kid will be back with his 7-month-old sister sophia getting in on the action. >> i believe she has some true
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superpowers. i believe she has the ability to move things with her mind. i have the feeling that some sibling rivalries are in order. >> for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, los angeles. >> that's absolutely adorable. >> that's a very cool dad. what a creative house. we were playing monopoly at my place. good job. >> we'll look back at the most unforgettable moments of the week. that's next on "cbs this morning."
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one of new york's major museums is moving downtown today. the whitney museum of american arts, beautiful new home opens to the public this morning. the whitney, by the way, is taking over our instagram account over the weekend to show off their new digs. >> that does it for us. as we leave you, let's take a
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look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. >> i ask you go home. >> it's not a war. we want our rights. >> this was the intersection that was the scene of the largest clashes with police. >> it's idiotic that by destroying your city you're going to make life better if anybody. >> they just outnumbered us and out ranked us. we needed to have more enforcement. >> seeing my son across the street with a rock in haze hand i think at that moment i just lost it. >> there could be many more dead and injured where help still isn't getting through. >> the effect of the quake on the mountain was dramatic. >> the sound of this was bigger than anything i'd ever heard. >> as the sun comes up here in texas we're starting to get a better idea of all the damage. >> biggest hail i've ever seen. >> this is the civil rights issue of all time. >> sue love ss gerald.
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-- >> he's shooting he's shooting. >> he risked his life for everybody. >> time to get out. >> we do need to take focus on climate change. >> california is bone dry. do you think bradley cooper came here because he wanted to -- he needed a glass of water. ♪ >> are you nervous? >> no. i think i'm more excited than nervous. >> floyd mayweather. give it up. >> are you excited? >> i'm black, i'm rich i'm outspoken. >> why did it take five years for this fight to happen? >> i believe that it's god's plan. >> gayle you're going. >> and so is charlie. we're not going together but we're going. i'll find out your room number later. >> can you measure over this last year what the damage was to the reputation of the nfl? >> we have a very high standard
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for our own conduct. we didn't meet the zarnd because we didn't get it right. ♪ >> charlie, don't you like a girl in wings? >> i like a girl in victoria's secret. >> okay. >> you say you should have your listening face. >> yeah, you need to be paying attention to what you're doing with your face. >> no. this is my listening face. >> charlie rose i have a bit of a crush on you. you make me laugh. you're a perfect cloup and the great clowns don't know when they're being funny, and that's what you are, charlie. >> let's see where the salmon ends up. >> all that -- i watch the show. i know what your signature is. >> i spoke to charlie. he accidentally face timed me. >> i don't even know what face timed is. >> and all that matters. >> i was talking to her on the phone and i didn't even
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good morning. if you are heading into san francisco, northbound 101 seeing delays. there was an earlier crash at cesar chavez now on the right- hand side shoulder but the backups are on 101 and 280. 101 begins to slow down around candlestick. bay bridge better than normal "friday light" even though it's slow on the approaches. but again, the metering lights are on. a relatively fast pace on since 5:36. you're backed up beyond the overcrossing to the foot of the maze. here's the nimitz in oakland heavy from hegenberger to 66 delays northbound. bart still on time. female announcer: get three years interest-free financing on brand name
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you won a car! - yeah! - ahh! wayne: you're going to miami! man, how you doing? jonathan: it's a designer watch! - (screams) - oh my gosh you're so beautiful. - i'm gonna go 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 america, welcome to “let's make a deal.” i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. three people, let's go! three of you, let's hit it. in the green, i think you're an a eel or something, yes. stand right there for me. stand right there, go ahead, go ahead. in the pink, in the pink with the pink hat. last but not least the barbarian. the guy in the barbar-- kyle.
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