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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  May 12, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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hair spray today? >> big sexy hair. >> there you go. >> see you everyone. >> have a go good morning to our viewers in the wecht it is tuesday, may 12, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." another massive earthquake hits nepal. the aftershock causes buildings to chance and panic in the street. tom brady suspended for four games. did the nfl go too far in punishing the super bowl mvp and patriots. a picasso sells for $179 million. up close with the world's most expensive painting sold at auction. today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> 42 people reported dead people running for cover and
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evacuating buildings. >> nepal hit with another massive earthquake. >> magnitude of 7.3 followed by powerful aftershocks. >> quake felt by those inside. >> crisis in new england. >> incredibly unfair. it's way too steep. >> tom brady will be suspended four games after the deflate-gate scandal. >> i don't think it tarnishes their leg circumstance but i think it impacts it. >> another day of owepotentially severe weather in the southern plained. >> people cleaning up after ef-3 tornado touched down in van, texas. >> a deal worth $4.5 billion. >> george zimmerman involved in another shooting in florida. the alleged triggerman had a previous road rage. >> this is your opportunity to get out of my face now. >> l.a.x. a jet makes a perfectly executed belly
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landing. two people shot near the uc santa barbara campus. >> it's scary. i don't feel safe at home. >> a bus exploding in flamans the massachusetts turnpike. >> we pulled over and she was screaming, you're on fire you're on fire! the picasso painting auctions for record $179.4 million. >> it's yours. sold! >> and all 0 that matters. >> chris christie spent a cool $82,000 and change that's a lot of hot dogs not to mention chur res. >> christie defended himself saying, hey, both of those games went into overtime. >> on "cbs this morning." >> come here. is this our final time together? >> no! no! >> kiss me now! >> no. >> kiss me now! >> we'll be right back. >> howard! >> this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota, let's go places.
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>> welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is off. jeff glor of cbsn is with us. >> good be to here. >> as you wake up in the west nepal is grappling with another major earthquake, 7.3 magnitude followed by several aftershocks this morning. reports say 42 people are dead and hundreds injured. >> this quake caused panic in nepal's parliament as a lawmaker was speaking. people ran for the exits. it comes less than three weeks after a 7.8 magnitude quake killed more than 8,000 people. seth doane covered the aftermath of that disaster for us. he's in beijing tracking the latest developments. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this earthquake struck a remote mountainous region between kathmandu and mt. everest, even 50 miles away in the capital, eyewitnesses report people running into the streets. we just got off the phone with a local journalist visiting the epicenter of the april 25th
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quake, when the earth started shakinging he describes scenes of people running out, panicking, screaming, "earthquake, earthquake another earthquake" things looking as though they'd collapse but some regions hit so hard simply nothing left to collapse. we visited that district the area so hard hit that saw the greatest loss of life during the april 25th earthquake that was the epicenter of today's quake. we visited these high up remote mountainous villages where we saw so many villages where nearly every single home had been damaged or destroyed. people were waiting even a week after the earthquake and still had not yet received any aid. that is one of the things that we kept hearing from relief groups, this is such a difficult country to try to get aid to those in need because the infrastructure is so weak. jeff? >> seth doane in beijing, thank you very much. the new england patriots are
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standing behind tom brady. his agent promises to appeal a four-game suspension for brady's alleged role in deflate-gate. the nfl says the star quarterback damaged the league's integrity. don, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. tom brady wasn't the only one punished. the league also fined the team that beat the seahawks in last year's super bowl $1 million and took away two of the future draft choices. today, tom brady's teammates are rallying around him. >> i think it's incredibly unfair. >> reporter: even with the nfl season four months away tom brady's punishment is big news. >> the envelope susnfl suspends tom brady. >> go after the golden boy. can you say appeal? >> reporter: on monday the nfl said the two patriots employees accuse of deflating footballs at the afc champion game in january likely would not have acted without brady's knowledge. the league also faulted brady
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for failing to cooperate with investigator ted wells. in a letter to brady, nfl executive vice president vincent wrote, your acts cons constitute conduct detrimental to football. the nfl insider says the four-game suspension indicates the league's belief brady deserves some of the blame for deflate-gate. >> at the very least, he didn't stop it. they're taking this as a serious affront to the game as suspending someone for a quarter of the season. >> reporter: brady's agent called the discipline ridiculous. we will appeal and if the hearing officer is independent and neutral, i'm confident the wells report will be exposed as an incredibly frail exercise in fact-finding and lodgic. >> no knowledge of anything. >> reporter: brady vigorously denied any wrong doing in january and addressed the controversial last week. >> certainly i accept my role and responsibility as a public figure. >> reporter: some of brady's
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current and former teammates criticized the punishment on twitter. bob kraft added, tom brady has our unconditional support. our belief in him has not wavered. but giants' quarterback, eli manning, who calls brady his friend, was conflicted. >> it's about integrity. if someone's breaking rules i understand you're going to get punished for it. >> reporter: those two staffers jastremski and mcnally were suspended indefinite by the league without pay. the nfl says they cannot come back to professional football without the league's approval. >> peter king writes the monday morning quarterback column for "sports illustrated."." >> good morning. >> four games, the biggest team fine ever in nfl history, too tough? >> i thought on behalf of especially against the patriots themselves, i thought it was harsh. i thought it was a little bit of a sledgehammer killing an ant. i mean in the ted wells report there is the acknowledgement
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that yeah we find fault with brady here we find fault with two club employees but everybody connected with the patriots was cleared, and that's why i thought that the especially the two draft choices money is the money, but the two draft choices, that's harsh. >> what's the message being sent? one of the messages seems to be we have no favorites, the nfl has no favorite children here. >> gayle that was a vital thing that the nfl did. 31 other owners were watching this. i think a lot of owners in the nfl felt for a long time the patriots enjoy most favored nation status in the league. and this was an attempt not only to try to on the nfl's behalf try to get it right in terms of fair play, but try to say, we play no favorites. >> we flew brady was going to appeal. we thought the patriots would accept the punishment. but the statement last night from bob kraft said or indicated at least, they were going to appeal potentially because they said the punishment was too much. what do you expect will play out
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there? >> i think when bob kraft went to bed last night he went to bed a guy who was carefully weighing his options. i don't think he's made any decision whether he will appeal. my bet is that he will go rogue on this and my bet is that he will try to appeal this penalty in a court of law. there's no way that he can appeal this as an owner because owners have to take the sangtss that the league sends them. he'd have to go outside the league. >> do you think the suspension is ultimately upheld or changes? >> i think the suspension of brady is probably going to be changed. he could win and it could be eliminated altogether, or it could be reduced. >> if brady appeals, does he not then have to produce some sort of evidence to back up those appeals, potentially phone records that he refused to turn over before? >> there's no question if this gets into a larger court and away from the auspices of the nfl, that the nfl i'm certain, would push for him to produce
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his cell phone and to just say, listen, if you've got nothing to hide, show us your phone. >> but if the suspension is upheld, when they come back they're playing the indianapolis colts here. >> are you saying the fix was? >> do you think it's a coincidence? imagine that. >> look at the patriots' schedule they have a jillion marquee games i'm understand it ends right in time for them to be facing the indianapolis colts. it's kind of a coincidence. >> all right. thank you, peter king. always good to see you. more violent weather in texas caused a scare for a plane's passengers and crew. lightning struck the flight from houston next cope themexico. the plane diverted to san antonio. >> i got we were hit by lightning and you've lost some instrumentation. >> everybody made it off the plane safely. on the ground many in a community outside dallas are picking through the rubble from a deadly weekend tornado.
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in van, texas, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i'm standing on the steps of a home that was torn apart by the tornado, that devastated this community. today, electrical crews are trying to restore power after the twister tore through here and killed two people and sent more than 40 others to the hospital. the deadly tornado damaged an estimated 100 houses here in texas with winds up to 140 miles per hour. this house was swept up into the air, and moved 12 feet. >> the house picked from its foundation and then it landed back again and debris and stuff falling on us. >> on monday community members combed through the ruble. >> i lost my wedding ring but they found. the rest of it we can -- we can take care of. >> reporter: in arkansas scraps of wood and belongings litter yards where homes once stood. michael and melissa died protecting their 18-month-old daughter from the ef-2 tornado
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that ripped through their mobile home park in nashville. back in van, texas, red cross volunteers distributed supplies at a shelter. >> it can be replaced. >> reporter: cam and donna stood what's left outside their house and told us it looks look a war zone. >> my bedroom was in the back. >> reporter: what point did you know your home had been ripped apart like this? >> when we looked up and could see the sky. >> reporter: what do you do at a moment like that? >> pray. >> yeah. >> reporter: two of the city's five schools were also battered. this is a cafeteria at the elementary school. >> we feel very blessed. this did not happening during a school day and i'm not standing up here talking it bykids. >> reporter: classes are skill canceled today. the eight people who were missing have now been found. >> thank you. two communications giants
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come together in a huge deal. verizon will buy aol for $4.4 billion, that's $50 a share. aol stock jumped as wall street opened. verizon will use aol's advanced video technology to launch he its own cell phone video service. funerals set for two mississippi officers gunned down over the weekend. officer dean will be buried thursday. funeral services for his colleague tate will be saturday the two were killed last weekend during a traffic stop. anna werner at the hattiesburg police station with a grieving community. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the four suspects charged in the case had their first court appearance yesterday afternoon. meanwhile, police are still investigating this case. but yesterday the community came together to remember their fallen officers and honored them as heroes. law enforcement from across mississippi helped escort two of their own monday bodies of officer dean and tate were
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transported to their respective hometowns as their families prepared to lay them to rest. it's a trip tate's father is dreading. >> one of my brothers texaskted me, you in mississippi yet? i said well you know and i said when i get there, my son going to be dead. when i get there my son's going to be dead. as long as i'm here he's not dead yet. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news dean was shot in the face after he pulled a vehicle over saturday night for speeding. tate hit in the side of his back as he tried to take cover. monday a judge denied bond to marvin banks the man accused of killing the officers. murder charges against his girlfriend were downgraded to accessory. one other passenger in the car was also arraigned along with another person.
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♪ as the suspects appeared in court, more than 1,000 people many fellow member of the hattiesburg police department packed the convention center to honor the two officers. >> dean was proud to wear the badge. he never dishonored it. >> i believe tate's passion and dedication to be a cop was part of his ultimate dream. >> reporter: u.s. attorney general loretta lynch called the police to offer condolences and offer any possible aid. >> i'm thinking of the words of the father very difficult what he had to say today. secretary of state john kerry arrived in russia to meet with president putin for the first time since the ukraine crisis. the u.s. wants russia's help to end the war in syria in cooperation with global hot spots. margaret brennan at the state department with the new diplomatic push. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is secretary kerry's first
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face to face meeting with putin in two years since the military incursion into ukraine. russia-u.s. relations at their point sense the cold war. the administration believes it was russia behind the recent hacking of the e-mail accounts. but today, kerry's towing make a long-shot push and ask for a pullback from ukraine where russian troops are amassing at the border in a sign of how difficult this is going to be the russian foreign ministry rehe leaseiri leased a statement staying it was provoked by the united states but despite the acrimony russia and the u.s. have to work together because washington needs moscow support for any nuclear deal with iran. and with that impending june deadline, u.s. officials say the real value of this visit is the
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chance to speak directly to putin himself, because he is russia's sole decision maker. >> thank you. there is an investigation this morning into what forced a plane to make a belly landing. omar villafranca shows us what happened on the landing gear when it would not deploy. >> rescue. >> going to be the left main. >> reporter: landing gear problems forced flight 5316 to skid down the runway at l.a.x. smoke trailed from the commuter jet as it leaned to one side. but the pilot managed to keep the plane under control. dennis was among the passengers flying from monterey california. >> we were nebbous. was very fast. as soon as we missed the airport the first time we knew they'd dump the fuel. >> reporter: all 43 passengers and crew members got off the plane safely.
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ralph took the cell phone video after getting off the plane. >> great job, man! great job. >> reporter: passengers credit the two pilots and flight attendant coaching them through the tense moments. >> they were very calm and cool and they told us exactly what we into should do how we should put our heads down how we should brace. >> much smoother than i expected. i thought we were in more trouble than we ended up. great job. >> reporter: safety expert "sully" sullenberger says the pilot's ability to control the landing was crucial. >> they were able to keep the wing intact which is where the fuel tanks are, prevent a fuel spill, and prevent sparks from igniteing that. >> if you have to be a plane crash, that's the one to be in to tell you the truth the. >> reporter: national tpgs transportation safety board and faa are investigating what caused the mechanical failure. for "cbs this morning," omar villafranca, los angeles. >> a dramatic bus fire near boston, all of the nearly 50 people on board got out okay but check out what happened while a
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local tv news team covered last night's fire. >> traffic continues to go by and one lane of traffic -- oh my gosh! >> oh my goodness. >> wow. explosion blew the windows right aust that bus. passengers were heading from new york to boston on the mass turnpike when the fire broke out. >> so they got off, sent another bus, everybody was okay. >> yes. >> very quickly. midsized suvs do not make the grade when it comes to certain front-end clithss. ahead, modelled that perform badl
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a fresh start turned into a nice mare when a moving company failed to deliver. >> it's devastating, things we find every single day that aren't here that we know we'll never get back. >> ahead the new efforts to help americans fight back against movers who hold furniture hostage.
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>> the is in back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." american back aga movers who hold furniture as hostage. >> the news is back here on "cbs this morning." stop in for lunch and tap, swipe, and go. chili's. fresh is happening now.
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enough to touch the world's highest priced painting sold at auction. >> norah, i am tempted to touch it. the price on this picasso masterpiece kept rising. $1
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good tuesday morning everyone, it's 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening right now. today california lawic take up a plan to -- lawmakers take up to plan to impose a state tax on sugary drinks. similar drinks and supporters say it would add up to $3 billion a year. and the western conference semifinals shifting back to oracle. tied up at two games apiece, the warriors seened the series -- evened the series the with the grizzlies last flight in -- night in memphis in a big day. game five tomorrow night at oracle 597:30 -- at 7:30. got your traffic sk
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good morning, we have wrecks on northbound 280 and northbound gad law pay parkway all around san jose. and they're cause some traffic jam ups all way around downtown. you notice the guadalupe parkway packed up to 280 and it's also slow all the way through past bird exit. you can see over at the bay bridge, the east shore freeway is really our hot spot right now. 47 minutes from the carquinez bridge to the maze. it's because of an earlier wreck approaching university at berkeley. and then the rest of the commute is just stacked up east of the maze metering lights are on. and it's very slow going right now. trying to get onto the span. and here's the approach to richmond-san rafael bridge also very busy to richmond parkway. here's roberta. good morning out the door 0s and 50s and we have wind gusts up to 30 miles per hour. later today 50s coast side and
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♪ the nfl has suspended tom brady for four games over deflate-gate. [ applause ] >> yeah. yeah, you're going to punish him by making him stay home in his mansion with his supermodel wife. [ laughter ] and think about what he did wrong. [ laughter ] >> that's awesome. that's really funny. >> kind of a nice way to be punished, i think. >> absolutely. you wouldn't mind being punished that way would you, jeff? >> i'd take it if it came to that. >> except your supermodel wife is nicole. >> i have my own supermodel wife. that's right. coming up in this half hour keeping you and your family safe on the roads. we'll have the results. latest crash tests.
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for midsize suvs ahead. plus a picasso masterpiece is the all-time booming. that story is ahead. >> michelle there with the artwork, wouldn't you just touch it? >> i would just touch the corner, the frame. >> you totally would, gayle. >> i would. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. "the washington post" says christianity is declining in america. a survey found adults who describe themselves as adults dropped 8% to 71%. the drop is due in part to unaffiliated americans. "the new york times" says a judge rules against two banks in the 2008 crisis.
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she said freddie mac and in the representation. >> and "usa today" says obama administration approves arctic drilling plan. environmentalists say it could lead to a catastrophe for wildlife. shell will start work after receiving state and federal permits. major league baseball pumped up the security for game balls in the wake of the nfl scandal. the clubhouse assistant carries them from the umpires to the field. that was the ball boy's job alone. >> not bad to be careful. and cbs new york says drug seizures in the bath room at the airport. agents found 12 pounds of heroin in one of the bathrooms after a dog picked up the scent.
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two days later, they discovered heroin and cocaine packages stashed behind a toilet. so far, no arrests have been made. >> stuffed in the bathroom. >> yeah a new way to smuggle it in. safety ratings are out there this morning for the latest crash tests of midsize suvs. they focus on offcenter crashes which are the most dangerous crashes. wyatt andrews with the details. good morning. >> reporter: of these four tests, four of the seven suvs tested rated marginal or even poor and that includes the dodge journey. the collision they tested is right here essentially the spot in front of the driver. front end collisions that happened off-center in front of the driver are now a priority in insurance industry tests because the spot in front of the driver is among the most
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vulnerable. the crush zone here has got to do a better job of protecting -- of absorbing energy. >> reporter: david zubi is the chief officer for highway safety. >> a quarter of the deaths that are in crashes are in crashes that look like this. >> reporter: one of these off-center crashes happened to this mom in 2011 when an suv crossed the center line and slammed her car with such force she suffered extensive injuries to her legs back and its. a life long equestrian she doubts they will ever return to high level competition. >> the driver's seat was twisted sideways. the dashboard came in it pinned my knees against the back of the seat. >> reporter: in the latest round of the crash tests called small overlap front crashes, the industry studied.
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midsize suvs and gave a top rating to the nissan murano. but four of them tested mar eded marginal. the dodge journey rated poor because of multiple failure. >> mastiff tests on the dummy. high forces around the left leg. the parking brake pedal ripped through the simulated dummy's leg. >> reporter: you're projecting serious deaths in that car? >> we think a number of people experienced a similar crash will experience a possibly fatal injury. >> reporter: chrysler responded with the statement saying the dodge journey has the highest possible safety rating in any other test including top crashes. and more front end collisions which focuses more algiers"
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version o sold for nearly $180 million last night. michelle miller is at christie's auction house with a record setting bid. >> reporter: good morning, bidding actually started at $100 million. christie's tells us there were nine other pieces at last night's auction sold for record prices. >> so many people in the day. >> $19 million. will you give me 160? $160 million. >> reporter: it took just 11 minutes and 34 seconds for a phone bidder with a weighty pocketbook to make history. >> $160 million -- it's yours. >> reporter: including the auction house premium. this pablo picasso oil painting sold for an all-time auction record of $179.4 million. when you looked at this piece
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coming in did you have any idea just what it would go for? >> behind sussus is a masterspiece. this is the highest point. >> reporter: it's considered to be one of the picasso's most important works. >> 500,000. >> reporter: the chief auctioneer is the global president of christie's auction house. >> it's a great, great collection previously that was sold here at christie's. >> reporter: this vibrant depiction of nude and semi nude women, version "o" is the final painting in a series of picasso from 1954 to 1955. >> $16 million. >> reporter: in 1997 the picasso work sold for $39.9 million. last night's auction showcased more than two dozen 20th century would of art. the pointing man, a bronze by
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alberto gioclemente sold for $2 million. what's behind this boom in the art world? >> it's culture. it's global culture that goes across continents. >> reporter: he says the globalization of the art market makes the world feel a bit smaller. >> when you're asian or russian or american or european you're into each other's culture. >> reporter: the head auctioneer at christie's the high global market where high price, driven by investment is showing no signs of slowing down. and new york's series of art shows, or art auctions we should say continues out there the rest of the week including another one right here at christie's later on this morning. gayle, norah. >> and you didn't touch it
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michelle. you didn't touch it. good job. >> how far away are you from it michelle? >> i'm like a centimeter away. >> wow. >> they're watching me. >> wow. it was interesting to see how the price went when it started at 500,000 and it went so much higher. >> in 11 minutes. >> in 11 minutes. i want to go to that person's house and see that on the wall. very nice. and it's called a hostage right back. we got the new tempur-flex and it's got the spring and bounce of a traditional mattress. you sink into it, but you can still move it around. now that i have a tempur-flex, i can finally get a good night's sleep.
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♪ the warmer weather means you'll see more moving trucks but this morning, the government is launching a new campaign warning of fraud by moving
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companies. you can move property and see your things effectively held hostage. chris van clearkris van cleave is in washington. >> reporter: 36 million americans move every year. the hostage load, that's when the movers pick up your stuff and say you have to pay up. it's not been easy to settle into her new home after she says the travel from california to texas turned into a nightmare. >> i'm still missing a significant number of items. and the majority of what i owned is either damaged or missing or broken. i don'
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ultimately delivered her family's belongings weeks late. many items were damaged and she says more than two dozen boxes are still missing. >> it's devastating and ongoing. we find things every single day that aren't here that we know we'll never get back. >> reporter: o'connell filed a complaint with the federal moving safety administration. the agency received more than 8 complaints per day. florida leads the nation in complaints followed by california, new jersey new york and texas. >> moving problems are a big problem. >> reporter: the deputy administrator. how important is it for consumers to do their homework before they hire a mover? >> it's critical for consumers to do their homework. they have to understand that's their best information, understand their rights.
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>> reporter: to help consumers do that, the agency is launching a new campaign aimed at educating people before they move. >> it's embarrassing i'm an educated adult. i picked the wrong organization. and i didn't do enough homework. if anybody is hearing my story and learns from it so it doesn't happen to them i'm embarrassed it happened here. >> reporter: o'connell did file a complaint with the government and managed to get that $4,600 back from the moving company. that company denies any wrongdoing in all of this. the government protect your move website is allows you to check complaints against movers and helps you walk through steps if there is a problem and you can check in with the better business burroweau as a great resource. >> like your mom told you, do your homework. it always comes back to that. >> thank you, kris. there's new evidence pouring in about coffee and the health benefits. you have heard? which diseases it may protect
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you from? plus, a wearar pair of waitresses learn the price of royalty after >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. camrys are so reliable. yeah... and you gotta love that bold new styling. here you go. whoa! wow. those balloon towers don't make themselves. during
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>> oh. >> her niece claims she used the money to save for a wedding. donohoe has her eye on a boat. her niece is also named maureen. they weren't expecting anything. they were clearly touched by how she took such good care of him. >> at a steakhouse. revving up efforts to get driverless cars on the road. new details about a crash that could challenge the technology behind the ride. chili's. fresh is happening now. if your purse is starting to look more like a tissue box... you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec® for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin®. because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. zyrtec®. muddle no more™ . ♪ ♪ it may seem strange, but people really can love their laxative. especially when it's miralax.
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it hydrates, eases and softens to unblock your system naturally so you have peace of mind from start to finish. love your laxative. miralax. 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 the sleep you need. talk to your doctor about ways to manage your insomnia. ♪ "smash me. dear god, smash me into a million pieces" little miss puffytail thinks every time someone enters this room. for while the people who come in here can use quilted northern, a toilet paper that works so well they can completely forget their experience... ...little miss puffytail can never forget. she can dream. dream for the sweet, sweet swing of a careless elbow. quilted northern. designed to be forgotten. people with type 2 diabetes come from all walks of life.
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if you have high blood sugar ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women
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and men, low blood sugar, kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections changes in urination and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life♪ ♪yeah, you do the walk of life♪ need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga. and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free.
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good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. one million people in the south bay are facing mandatory water rationing. businesses and homeowners will be given a month by month allocation cutting usage by 30% of the 2013 average. more potentially serious problems for the new bay bridge. leads to a $4 million investigation. one involves saltwater flooding at the base of the tower. the other relates to an anchor rod that failed a key test. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning, a couple hot spots to tell you about before you head out door. first to the macarthur maze. westbound 580 has been a motorcycle wreck blocking two
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lanes wright before the 80 split. it's the motorcycle wreck traffic is really stacked up on 24 and 580. 24 backed you were to concern's hospital and look at -- up to children's hospital and look at the san mateo bridge. superslow going right now out of hayward. there's a high wind advisory in effect for both sides of the span and earlier dents on 280 and -- accidents on 280 and the guadalupe parkway have traffic really backed up on both freeways. here's roberta. a wind-swept blue sky loosening like? this is -- looks like? this is it for the mount vaca area looking past lake curry but boy right is there we have winds up to -- there we have winds up to 25 miles per hour. currently we have temperatures in the 40s and 50s. hey, sfo, winds west 25, gusts up to 33 today with the westerlies 10 to 20. occasional 35-mile-per-hour gusts, 50s up to upper 60s and few low 70s. cloud up on wednesday, that will lead to a quarter inch on rain on thursday and a chance of a lingering shower on friday. make it a great day
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♪ it's tuesday, may 12th it's tuesday, may 12 2015. what were you doing 29 years ago? i was having a baby. happy birthday kirby. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more renews ahead, include tom brady's suspension. we'll ask jim if the punishment is fair. firks here's a look at today's "eye opener at 8." >> the earthquake struck in the capital, people running into the street. >> brady wasn't the only one punished. they also find the team $1 million and took away two draft
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choices choices. >> if the suspension is upheld they're playing the colts. >> are you saying the fix is in? >> huge deal verizon will buy aol for $4.4 billion, that is $50 a share. >> this was secretary kerrey's first face-to-face meeting with vladimir putin since the incursion into ukraine. >> it was a smoother landing than i've had with all the landing gear down. >> bidding started at offerver $100 million. and there were nine other pieces that sold for record prices. >> his energy is so low, he's falling away. >> why is your energy so low, ray? >> i've been working ten hours already. >> where did you work? >> over there at cvs. >> you done want to work over there, man.
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>> go on six. ready seven. >> i was waiting for "cue charlie." >> dozens of people are dead and hundreds more injured in nepal this morning after another major earthquake. the 7.3 quake was centered 50 miles east of the capital of kathmandu. >> lawmakers ran for exits when nepal's parliament building started shaking during a debate. people all over kathmandu went outside to protect themselves. the country is still recovering from last month's quake that killed more than 8,000. >> drenching rains are moving into areas this morning as dozens pick up after storms. van, texas saw a tornado sunday that leveled a third of the town and two people died. dozens of homes were damaged or destroyed. rivers swelled throughout texas because of the weekend's heavy
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rains. the storm system dumped 11 inches of rain in some places and there was flooding in northern colorado. some managed to drive through cars covered with water. there is threat of more flooding. >> the death toll from gm's faulty ignition switches has hit a grim milestone. 100 deaths 184 others were hurt. the automaker knew about the ignition problem for more than a decade. it finally agreed last year to recall vehicles with those problem switches. >> this morning tom brady's agent says it's ridiculous for the nfl to suspend the super bowl mvp. he said the new england patriots star quarterback will appeal this punishment for using deflated footballs to gain an advantage. the nfl ordered brady to skip four games. the patriots were fined $1
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million and stripped of two draft choice including next year's number one pick. team owner robert kraft is backing brady's appeal saying in part, it was based completely on circumstantial rather than hard or conclusive evidence. tom brady has our unconditional support. our belief in his has not wavered. >> this morning -- we should mention showtime is a division of cbs. good to see you jim. >> good morning. you. >> say brady was overpunished. what do you think would have been the appropriate punishment? >> well based on that report there was no proof and nothing conclusive found. so i don't know what the appropriate punishment is when there's no proof. probably no punishment or if you want to fine the club because the impression has been left
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that something has gone wrong, fine the club maybe a draft pick. they're a repeat offender spygate comes into this positions of the past has to be considered. to take down the reputation of somebody who has been nothing but stellar over the course of 15 years in the nfl and apply what they've applied to him and impugn his integrity, i think it's wrong and i don't believe it will hold up upon appeal. ray rice's appeal was not upheld it was thrown out. same with adrian peterson. i think the nfl has overpunished and they can't really recognize the difference between a minor infraction and major crime. >> there may not be a smoking gun but there is a lot of circumstantial ed is there not? >> yes, there is. a lot it have looks bad. again, let's go back to brady. i think the four games is at the crux of this. i don't see how the four games
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will be upheld. there is absolutely nothing in there that points to tom brady having ordered, requested or asked these balls to be deflated. >> let me ask you, jim, because i've read through troy vincent's letter to the patriots and he points out it's significant that none of the key witnesses, mr. brady, mr. jastremski and mcnally were cooperative with the investigation. this is the organization that they're part of. >> i'm not sure what "fully cooperate" means. the patriots say that they made them available four times. tom spent a day plus talking to the investigators. if you're talking about turning over your e-mail your cell phone and your texts, i mean there was no jurisdiction here there was no civil suit there was no deposition there was no criminal activity. so does that mean that any employer at any time because they're having an investigation can now demand your cell phone? i mean tom and his wife are major superstars. she's a model, the top model in
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the world. do you really want somebody going through your cell phone and sifting through it no matter what the circumstances are? i don't think that's the standard that any american wants for their employer to be able to do. >> i hear you. just to point out, troy vincent did say they offered extraordinary safeguards to protect unrelated personal information so they would only look at the stuff that was relevant to exactly what happened. >> well, that's fine to say until then they say, hey, you didn't provide it all or what about this or what about that. so i just think it's wrought with peril. i think that the nfl players association pressured brady tremendously not to do that because that would have been a press didn't and had they gone forward with that everybody going forward would have said hey, tom brady turned over his cell phone, why don't you turn over yours? >> many people saw the event when you talked to tom brady. at one point you said what are you, a slow reader? because he said he hadn't even
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read the report. how do you think he'll respond now in have you talked to him since this latest ruling has come down? >> i'm not sure how he's going to respond but i do believe he will absolutely appeal this and the patriots and tom brady will now go to war. they will not let this continue in this fashion. they will appeal this. they will come out guns ablazing and i believe that they will have a ferocious fight. i think this is the seventh round of a 12-round fight. it's just the beginning. the nfl could have done away with this within 36 to 48 hours. instead the commissioner went down this path where he hired a special investigator and, you know, they're bringing on their own trouble once again to themselves that's going to cause a tremendous tremendous fraction amongst ownership and the nfl office will now be bogged down in the appeal of a superstar like tom brady. it really to me is just the beginning, not the end. thank you, jim gray. >> thanks.
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good to see you. >> the barack obama foundation confirms the president's official library and museum will be built on chicago's south side. there are two potential sites near the university of chicago. in a video statement the president says the location makes sense for him and the city. >> with a library and a foundation on the south side of chicago, not only will we be able to encourage and effect change locally but what we can also do is attract the world to chicago. >> the president started his political career on the south side and the obamas own a home there. that will certainly bring a lot of development to that area. >> the people in chicago were saying should it be built anywhere else? no. but new york was vying for it and so was hawaii. >> now the decision is made. >> rahm emanuel is doing the hula. >> in a tutu!
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>> ahead, we look at the magic number of cups of coffee that
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they are celebrating more than 35 years of making music together. pat benatar and her husband neither spyder giraldo will show us why they don't get sick of each after decades on the road. ♪ what you going to do to my heart ♪ ♪ you better run, you better hide ♪ ♪ you better leave from my side, yeah ♪ americans. 83% try... ...to eat healthy. yet up to 90% fall short in getting... ...key nutrients from food alone. let's do more. add one a day men's. complete with key nutrients we may need. plus it helps support healthy blood pressure with vitamin d and magnesium. one a day men's.
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...and the wolf was huffing and puffing... kind of like you sometimes, grandpa. well, when you have copd it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... doctor: symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
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i'm really psyched subway's bringing the flavor with this new guacamole made from creamy hass avocados... people really love it. guacamole guacamole guacamole see? try it on sandwiches like the new chipotle chicken melt with guacamole. subway. eat fresh.
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♪ ♪ ♪ it took tim morehouse years to master the perfect lunge. but only one attempt to master depositing checks at chase atms. technology designed for you. so you can easily master the way you bank.
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♪ in our "morning rounds," a brewing debate that goes back centuries could really finally be reaching a turning point. clear pictures emerging that coffee could keep a range of illnesses at bay but only if you drink the right amount. what's that number? dr. holly williams is with us at the table. there's so much contradiction coffee is good for you not good for you. what's the bottom line? >> this has been a really
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confusing issue because there's been so much research about coffee but it seems like every week the studies are contradicting each other. that's shifting. there are a few now meta and and -- analysis. for most people moderate coffee is not harmful. >> how do you describe moderate? >> moderate is between three and five cups a day. there's a growing consensus around the benefits that the benefits are real everything ranging from a decreased risk of alzheimer's disease to a decreased risk of diabetes and death from all rises. >> can't moderation be different for different people depending on how much you weigh, what your tolerance is? >> sure, it can. when we're looking at the benefits, we're sort of looking
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at the overall body of research and what we're finding is that an 8 ounce cup of coffee and there's a "u" shaped relationship, meaning if you have less than one or two cups a day the benefits are weaker but it also drops off if you have more than five or six cups a day. by cups we mean small 8 ounce cups of coffee black or almost black. we're not talking about the 32 ounce mocha frappuccino situation with the high fructose corn syrup. >> decaf? >> decaf is interesting. most of the study are done on caffeinated coffee. we say it's not more harmful than decaf nated coffee. >> we forget the coffee bean has 100 different compounds, tons of anti-oxidants. some studies show americans get
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more anti-oxidants from their coffee than from fruits and vegetables. i don't know if that's a good thing. >> we need a comparison which is better, coffee or tea? >> tea, coffee water. we have all the bases covered here. >> thank you, dr. phillips. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs morning rounds sponsored by lyrica. rounds" sponsored by lyrica. that moving more helps ease fibromyalgia pain. he also prescribed lyrica. for some patients, lyrica significantly relieves fibromyalgia pain and improves physical function. with less pain, i feel better. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing
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rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. fibromyalgia may have changed things. but with less pain, i'm still a doer. ask your doctor about lyrica. ♪ to you, they're more than just a pet. so protect them... ...with k9 advantix® ii. it's broad-spectrum protection k ills fleas ticks and mosquitoes too. k9 advantix® ii. for the love of dog™. are you so congested... it feels like that brick's on your face? try zyrtec®-d to powerfully clear your blocked nose and relieve your other allergy symptoms. so you can breathe easier all day. zyrtec®-d. find it at the pharmacy counter.
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♪ tech companies want to change the way we drive by having cars drive themselves. it makes them safer but testing means driverless technology doesn't come without fender benders. ben tracey shows us the new information on test car collisions. >> reporter: more than half a dozen tech companies are now testing their self-driving cars on the open road. but new data shows there have been some bumps along the way. the california department of motor vehicles says 4 out of 48 approved test cars have been involved in accidents in september. when the agency started keeping track. according to an associated press court, one involved a delphi automotive test vehicle, the other, a suv. >> even if it's a fender bender
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which the company says it should show problems with technology that could lead to more serious accidents. >> reporter: both delphi and google said the cars were not at fault in eye of the events. in a statement posted online in google it acknowledges cars were involved in 11 minor accidents over six years in 1.6 million miles of testing. he said not once was the self-driving car the caution of the accident. but critics from consumer watchdog want google to release the report. >> we're very concerned about what went wrong and what has the potential to go wrong. and if we don't have the details, we haven't really trust this company to share this information. and to help us understand the limits of the technology. >> reporter: safety is the main selling point of driverless technology. >> my role as driver is first and foremost to keep myself and everyone around me safe. >> reporter: advocates say cameras and radar makes
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self-driving cars safer to their surroundings. >> over 90% of conditions on the road are caused by some form of human error. and technology doesn't fail nearly as frequently as humans do. >> reporter: the companies funding driverless cars with the idea to eventually take off, safety can take a backseat to technology. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, los angeles. we are in our toyota green room with -- guess who? you meet the nicest people in the green room. pat benatar and her husband is here too, neil "spyder" giraldo. we want to talk about your marriage, we want to talk it about your career. what makes the two of you work so well. >> oh that's a question? >> it's not a battlefield? >> well, not every day. >> no but it's 35 years. they have music. out on the road.
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and it's still a high, isn't it spyder? >> abso and good tuesday morning everyone, i'm frank mallicoat, it's 8:25. some of the best cyclists in the world will be riding through the bay area today. stage three of the amgen tour of california kicks off in a few hours in san jose. and robbers caught on camera wrecking into a san jose house. armed with knives the would-be robbers searched bedrooms upstairs until they got into a room where three family members were hiding. they called police which scared off the robbers, this morning the thieves are stilt on the run loose.
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good morning. if you plan on hitting the bay bridge, trying to get into san francisco, we have some major delays because of two separate accidents, one in the macarthur maze and then another one on the span itself. so this is the latest one it's in the final clearing stages now. motorcycle wreck. it was near treasure island for a while blocking one lane. still solid from the toll plaza as you can see there. and then we finally got the all clear with another motorcycle accident westbound 580 before 80 and it is still really, really heavy. i mean that 580 approach is solid as you can see there through the 13 interchange. 24 is backed up now beyond children's hospital all the way
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to broadway. looks like 880 is probably the best approach but still slow through downtown. on the san mateo bridge, it's probably a better option than the bay bridge. but it's slower than normal because of a high wind advisory issued early this morning. that's kcbs traffic. here's roberta. it sure is windy out there and in fact we have wind-swept blue skies from mount vaca looking out past lake curry. good morning everyone. our current air temperatures are pretty much in the 50s across the board. but it is the winds that are problematic. in fact at this particular time we're picking up wind gusts at 35 miles per hour at sfo. we have a sustained wind there at 24. 17 in novato. it's blowing in the fairfield area and west winds 10 to 20 throughout the day today and occasional gusts to 35 miles per hour. temperatures in the 50s and the high 60s. few low 70s well inland. and increasing cloud cover later on wednesday. that will lead to about a at the point or quarter inch -- tenth or quarter inch on
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♪ love that "hit me with your best shot." welcome back to "cbs this morning." we're going to do that said sally mann's controversial photographs appear in america's galleries. she opens up to charlie about making art without apology. and pat benatar showed everyone that a woman can be a rocker. she and her long time husband neil "spyder" giraldo will tell us the secrets behind 35 years of making music. >> i know all the words. >> fire away! it's time to show you the headlines.
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"wall street journal" looks at when you should choose advil and tylenol. it says for a headache take tylenol, sports injuries reach for motrin and advil. >> between caffeine and ibuprofen and acetaminophen. >> "the new york times" says stay away from sweetened calories. and beware of brady and go for eggs at breakfast. >> where is bacon? >> number one. >> sprinkled on top a little bit. the los angeles times said "american idol" will end its run after next session. it launched careers like kelly clarkson. executives decided to pull the plug amid -- let's try that
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again -- pull the plug amid steep ratings declines. but they brought us carrie underwood, jennifer hudson. >> i know. it's amazing when you look back at the stars that they launched. sally mann soared to fame in the 1990s. the world renown photographer released a series of images. but with controversy, some of the pictures showed her young children not wearing clothes. 25 years later, mann looks at a new memoir out this morning "hold still." she met with charlie rose at the gagosian gallery surrounded by her iconic work. >> you seemed to always be interested in life and death and memory and history and place. >> yeah. that would be because i'm a southerner, you know about that. >> i do.
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we like the south. >> yeah we do. >> reporter: the south is more than a place to sally mann it's home, family. and her inspiration which began with her father. >> he was a doctor. he was a medical doctor but he gave up the devoted one, he gave up a great deal yeah. >> reporter: he gave up what you are? >> he gave up literature and art. and those are the two things he loved. >> reporter: did your dad give you your first camera? >> he did, he handed it to me with virtually no explanation, this is how you handle the film and the light meter. you remember all of that stuff. >> reporter: yeah, i do. >> i just started taking pictures. it was an instant love affair. >> reporter: what was it? >> it was ecstatic, the joy of looking at a negative and going down your arms at other times i've said it's almost sexual in
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its intensity. you're just ecstatic. >> reporter: sally took that fire and ran with it but never far from home. she's photographed and worked on her family farm for almost 50 years. she has an unflinching commitment to the past in approach and process. >> and you like home? >> i do. i do. it's harder. that's not why i like it. but it's harder but it also makes you get right to the essence of what you're taking the picture of. you're not distracted by the color. color is just an entirely different process. a way of thinking. i see everything in black and white now. i also see things, i see you in a little 8 by 10 rectangle. >> oh god. >> but yeah you start blocking out things and that's a really important part of taking a picture. the ability to isolate what you're concentrating on.
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>> reporter: for ten years she concentrated on her children. she photographed them playing and living. and she made art out of the ordinary. but the nudity and mysterious nature of the print outraged some. did you know what you were doing? >> no i was just taking pictures with the kids around. and gradually, a concept built around that. >> reporter: that's what the immediate family was about. >> it was a documentary. >> to have americans around them metaphorically. they got much more complicated. >> reporter: now, they're all successful adults. how do they see the photographs? >> i usually answer that by saying you should answer them. . >> reporter: so we did. tell me what it was about. >> sally's youngest she was
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just a toddler when the pictures began. >> i think one of the things that you may not appreciate about the pictures is that we were incredibly happy to have a mother who was home all the time. we got to work with her. she somehow found a way to make her work something that we did with her that was positive. we were proud of her. >> reporter: as the children grushgs grew, so did sally's fascination with the world around them. so she began to photograph southern landscape. the series are haunting romantic and sentimental, all at once. after landscapes, it was death. in her 30s, she watches her father die fearlessly. it infired a decade of jarring and thought-provoking images
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about the reality of life within. it is a reality all too familiar now. her husband larry has been the love of her life for four decades. now in his later years, he's battling muscular dystrophy. together, they're facing it by documenting it. >> maybe one of my favorite bodies of work. i wanted to tackle this in so many ways. it's harder for him, though. i mean it's hard for me but it's harder for him. when you have a subject who's willing to put themselves out like that. there are pictures that i've taken that made me just ache for him. and i would say, are you sure you want me to show these pictures? he said, yeah. he believe what is we make together is important. >> reporter: over a long wonderful life sally mann has woven an honest and fearless tapestry of work.
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how did you know you were getting better? >> i think it's sort of like a thrill thing. i think the difference is that i used to be taking pictures to save things. the impulse was to either take pictures to save something. or to try and see what something would look like on the photographs. now, it's a lot more important to me to actually say something. i don't waste anytime. i don't waste time. i work all the time. i never leave home. i mean i just stay home and zoom in on what's ahead. i'm sure you do. >> in the end, it's love and work. it's love, family. friends. it's love of the world around you. >> right. >> you know at the same time it's work to find your place. >> and leave your mind. >> thank you for this. >> thank you. >> thank you.
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thank you is right. her work is so good. my goodness. >> absolutely gorgeous. >> powerful beautiful. look at this. >> this is her book that's out. look at this great picture. not only for her children to see pictures of them growing up but it's you're moved by her images. it says something. >> and i love the title. by the way you can see the entire interview on charlie's pbs program. >> yes, he does have another job. he does leave home. >> so do you, miss gayle king. >> they are enjoying romance and rocked more than 30 years after music ahead, '80s icon pat benatar. there she is. and who's that cute guy next to
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♪ it is your classic rock 'n' roll love story. girl with a microphone meets boy with a guitar. pat benatar and her lead guitarist turned husband neil spyder giraldo, they managed to navigate through life producing 25 world recordings and 19 top
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singles. ♪ hit me with your best shot ♪ ♪ >> pat benatar embodied the '80s. with rebellious songs, a sexy stage presence and a whole lot of spandex. but while all eyes were on benatar, she only had eyes for her lead guitarist neil "spyder" giraldo. ♪ the innovative musician songwriter and producer led benatar towards a more progressive sound. ♪ i need a lover who won't drive me crazy. ♪ >> featuring the hit "heartbreaker." ♪ ♪ break heartbreaker, dream maker ♪ >> reporter: and in 1981 the powerhouse cemented a new era.
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>> pat benatar was the second video we aired on mtv, spyder was the first guy to play guitar. ♪ >> she does some of her most famous videos that we ever played on mtv. some things that are sort of etched in all of our memories. ♪ we are heartache to heartache we stand ♪ >> reporter: after three decades of marriage and more than 25 million records sold the couple continues to make music together. ♪ ♪ making love together ♪ >> okay. they belong together. pat and neil celebrating their 35th anniversary of making music together with a new cd and dvd collection. good morning to you. >> good morning.
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>> i have to resist all the cliches like "hit me with your best shot." how many times do people walk up to you? >> there was an operator of a roller coaster of an amusement park said he would go home and shoot himself in the head because everybody says "here we go." >> i love the two of you together. what you do professionally and personally. neil, when you first met him, you thought, girlfriend you met the man of your life. >> i did. >> what was that like? >> like blinding white light. i thought to myself -- >> where was this? how old were you at the time? >> he was just turning 23. i was just turning 26. so we were really young and i just saw him. >> so you like older men?
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>> yes -- >> younger men. >> what did you think, neil when you saw her, both of you were other people at the time? but you felt something for each other? >> undeniable. >> that's a loaded question after hearing that. that was my line. as soon as i saw her, where have you been? >> yeah. >> and the remarkable thing was she was so normal. all the girlfriends in the past were pretty crazy. she was pretty normal. still is normal. >> in this case i have your taste, i could sing them over and over again. it marked my '80s in knowing the songs. how did you maintain a relationship through this massive stardom? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well we had each other, first of all, and that was the most important thing. so anytime one person fell back the other person lifted them up.
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and i'm the annoying one that never stops work and writing. in the morning, i'd bring the guitar in and start playing. my wife would say get away from me. then i'd sneak a song and start playing a little bit. she'd say, all right, that's pretty good. let's try doing it. >> a lot of that. >> it doesn't have a formula do it, it depends then we just go off and do individual parts. it wasn't that hard to be together. i really wish i had a better answer. it kind of just rolled along. >> she's the grounded one. >> she's the grounded one? >> oh yeah. >> oh yeah. are you kidding? he's like the lunatic. >> i'm not a lunatic, but i'm -- >> pat, you've been open about a lot of sexism that you dealt with in the music industry. >> yeah. >> has it changed? >> our daughter has said to me mom, it's like 2015 i don't have to be that anymore --
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>> at the time together anymore, they were worried about your image as a wife and mother. they said i don't know if this is such a good idea. >> it was kind of like that hollywood weirdness, people married to each other and things like that. it was shocking it was so late in the game. first daughter in 1985. it was shocking to me this was still going on in retrospect. >> 35 years later. >> it's odd when you do the true love video, they said you're going have a baby in the video. >> they didn't want the baby. >> it was a great quote from the manager. >> make it stop. >> yeah. >> congratulations. the 35th anniversary tour collection is on sale now.
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well that does it for us. we'll see you tomorrow on [♪♪] ♪ i'm gettin' out ♪ ♪ i'm gettin' out ♪ ♪ i'm gettin' out ♪ ♪ gonna have a look around ♪ ♪ now is the time ♪ ♪ i started flyin' ♪ ♪ both
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feet off of the ground ♪ ♪ head in the sky ♪ ♪ eyes open wide ♪ ♪ happy to look around ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪
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you won a car! - yeah! wayne: you're going to miami! man, how you doing? jonathan: oh... it's a designer watch. - oh, my gosh, you're so beautiful. - i'm going to 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, everybody. welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thanks for tuning in. i need a couple. is there a couple in the house right now? you've got to be in love. you've got to want to make a deal. the boa and the airline captain. come here. how are you doing? why are y'all standing? sit down, sit down. it's not church. sit down. and the congregation be seated. mr. anthony and miss... - latishia. wayne: latishia. nice to meet both of you.

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