tv CBS This Morning CBS May 15, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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will san jose get sunshine? >> yes. >> see you at noon. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west it is friday may 15, 2015. welcome to cbs "this morning." a deadly discovery overnight. crews find the wreckage of a marine helicopter in nepal carrying six americans. new details about sudden acceleration before the amtrak disaster. plus ominous online rants from the engineer about safety. we remember the life and music of b.b. king. david letterman talks with jane pauly while paul shaffer comes to studio 57. but we begin with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> charred wreckage found high on the mountain east of
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kathmandu. >> nepal locates the remains of a missing u.s. helicopter. >> military teams on the ground inspecting that crash site. the american chopper vanished tuesday while carrying six marines. ♪ the thrill is gone ♪ >> the king of blues b.b. king died at his home in las vegas. >> the blues was the devil's music as far as the church was concerned and my mother head a left hook that rifled mike tyson. >> the eighth victim of amtrak 188 was discovered yesterday. >> and the first funeral is being held today for justin zemser. >> flash flood watches in - southern california. a virtual river floeing in hollywood. >> possible heavy tornados from nebraska down to the southern plain states. as suspected, tom brady's appealing his four-game suspension for will hear that appeal. >> at the white house, a california man was flying a small drone. >> the suspect is being charged with violating a federal order. >> and united airlines flight
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made an emergency landing at l.a.x. after reports of smoke in the cockpit. >> all that -- >> a tennessee fisherman jumped into action to rescue a man who was drowning. >> and all that matters. >> to be an innovator with longevity, i think the list is dave. >> david letterman was and is the gold standard. >> thank you for changing the game day. >> have a great final week my friend. >> wait, no, no okay. wait a minute. nope, nope nope. [ applause ] no, no. no. >> george, is this something left over from the bachelor days? [ laughter ] >> this morning's eye opener is presented by: welcome to cbs "this
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morning," officials in nepal say there are no chances of any survivors in the crash of the a united states marine helicopter. search crews found the wreckage and several bodies overnight about 50 miles northeast of nepal's capital, kathmandu. >> the helicopter carries six u.s. marines and two nepalese soldiers. they were delivering aid following two devastating earthquakes in that country. seth doane is tracking this unfolding story from beijing. many new details came overnight. seth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, the u.s. military is now confirming that that, indeed, is the wreckage of that missing huey helicopter. they've sent in a special ops parachute team to investigate further. after three days of searching with u.s., nepalese and indian aircraft supported by hundreds of troops on the ground wreckage of the helicopter was located about halfway between kathmandu and mount everest, not far from nepal's border with china. the wreckage was found high up
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in the mountains at an altitude of 11,200 feet. the u.s. marines uh-1y huey was last seen near the hard-hit region of charikot which nepal's prime minister visited thursday. the six u.s. marines and two nepalese soldiers on board were delivering rice and tarps on tuesday when they lost contact. u.s. troops were deployed to nepal to help with humanitarian aid and disaster relief following the april 25 earthquake. earlier this month, we watched a huey being off loaded at kathmandu's airport. they'd been used to reach remote regions. earlier this week, a u.s. military official said that an indian helicopter had picked up radio chatter from that missing huey that had suggested a possible fuel problem. gayle, the u.s. military says now a complete investigation will be conducted. >> seth thank you. the first funeral will be held this morning for a victim
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of tuesday's amtrak crash. 20-year-old justin zemser a naval academy midshipman from queens, new york, was one of eight passengers killed. he was an only child. the train's engineer has agreed to be interviewed with his attorney present. chris van cleave is near the crash scene in philadelphia with new information on the train's final moments. chris, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. amtrak train 188 began rapidly accelerating 65 seconds before the crash. the national transportation safety board says it was going twice the posted speed limit for that chunk of track and now we know a front-facing dash camera shows the instant the brakes were applied just seconds before the derailment. new surveillance video captures the flash and fire of the impact at over 100 miles an hour. amtrak 188 came barrelling into that curve according to the national transportation safety board's robert sumwalt. >> 65 seconds before the end of the recording the train speed
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went above 70 miles per hour. 16 seconds before the end of the recording, the train speed was going through 100 miles per hour. >> reporter: bruce phillips an amtrak employee, has filed a lawsuit claiming he was violently hurled about the rail car and sustained serious and permanent personal injuries. amtrak's president and ceo took us to the crash site. is amtrak safe? >> absolutely amtrak is safe. it's been 28 years to have a derailment like this where you have loss of life. >> reporter: brandon bostian was at the controls tuesday night. his lawyer says he suffered a concussion and had 14 staples put into his skull. an engineer since 2010 he submitted his blood for a drug and alcohol screening. bostian was often critical of the railroad industry for failing to implement safeguards against human error. one posting from 2011 read "at any point over the previous 80 years the railroad could have voluntarily implemented some
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form of this technology." on thursday cadaver dogs located an eighth victim bob gildersleeve, among the train's tangled wreckage. the federal railroad administration says this was amtrak's ninth derailment this year. in 2008, congress mandated a safety system known as positive train control be installed across amtrak by the end of 2015, yet only a fraction of the nation's lines have it. on thursday boardman said he's committing to meeting that requirement along the northeast corridor amtrak's busiest stretch, but needs support from congress. >> this is not a republican or democrat railroad. this is a railroad that everybody uses just like any infrastructure in this nation. >> reporter: the engine that powered amtrak 188 was a relatively new engine, it had only been in service over a year and had no reported history of unintended acceleration. this morning much of the wreckage has been removed from the tracks. crews are rushing to finish repairing the rails.
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amtrak's ceo told me he's looking at having normal operations restored on the northeast corridor by tuesday. >> chris, thank you. the engineer who was speeding when a new york city commuter train crashed in 2013 will not face criminal charges. that accident killed four passengers and injured more than 70. metro-north engineer william rockefeller fell asleep at the l kro s -- controls. he was found to suffer from sleep apnea. he says he's happy prosecutors found there was no criminal intent. >> the thrill is gone for mills ss s millions of music fans. b.b. king died last night in his las vegas home. he was 89. the man known as king of the blues was one of the most influential musicians of the last 50 years. anthony mason is here to remember the life of a one-of-a-kind artist. anthony, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. b.b. king was the last of the legendary blues men who came out of the michigan delta. the sunon of sharecroppers, riley
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b. king was born in mississippi at 22 he hitchhiked to memphis where he picked up his nickname blues boy, or b.b. how would you describe the blues? >> it's good for me when i'm feeling bad and good for me when i'm feeling good. ♪ it's 3:00 in the morning, can't even close my eyes ♪ >> reporter: the 3:00 blues was his first big hit in 1952. king famously named every guitar he played lucille after, he said, a brawl over a woman of that name caused a fire that almost destroyed his first guitar. he toured black clubs endlessly.% in 1956 you played 342 days. >> 342 one-nighters. >> reporter: but didn't play to a white audience until 1967 at
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bill graham's philmore west in san francisco. >> i was scared. the kids didn't know me they knew the music. and he said "ladies and gentlemen, b.b. king" and everybody stood up. that was the beginning of b.b. king in rock 'n roll. >> reporter: two years later he scored his biggest hit. ♪ the thrill is gone ♪ >> reporter: b.b. king influenced hendrix, opened for the stones and played with eric clapton and u2. when we met him in 2013 he was 88 and didn't walk easily. but on stage his fingers still flew. "rolling stone" ranked you number three guitar player of all time. >> i don't believe that. >> reporter: you don't no. >> no, but i ain't gonna tell them. [ laughter ] ♪ i'm gonna do this till i die, folks ♪
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>> reporter: he pretty much did. he said he didn't know the meaning of the word retirement. he toured right up until he fell nil april. "it's simple" he told me. "if i stop i don't get paid." >> wow. >> he once said anthony, if he didn't die on his stage he wanted to die in his sleep. >> his influence with guitars was what? >> buddy guy described it in an interesting way. he said it was the tone he got out of his guitar the way he shook his left hand and the way he squeezed the strings. it didn't sound like anybody else. >> influence sod many great musicians. >> nobody like him. this morning, the nfl says commissioner roger goodell will personally hear tom brady's appeal of this four-game suspension. the new england patriots star quarterback was benched after an investigation commissioned by the league. it found that he probably knew that team employees were deflating his footballs. anna werner is outside team headquarters at gillette stadium in foxborough, massachusetts. anna, good morning.
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>> reporter: good morning, gayle. that's right, brady will have to convince the league commissioner himself he did nothing wrong. he's hoping his appeal will put him back on the field for week one of the nfl season. >> i feel like i've always played within the rules. i would never do anything to break the rules. >> reporter: patriots quarterback tom brady insists he knew nothing about those deflated footballs. but the nfl decided brady's actions merited suspending him for a quarter of the season a punishment brady is now fighting. and the nfl players' association argues further that "given the nfl's history of inconsistency and arbitrary decisions in disciplinary matters, it's only fair a neutral arbitrator hear this appeal." but that won't be the case. brady will make his argument too goodell and top league executives and attorneys and the nfl says goodell will make the final decision. brady is entitled to have his own attorney at the hearing, as well as his agent members of the players' union and a union
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attorney. >> the appeal will be heard probably early june. so probably two or three weeks from now. after that maybe another week for the decision. >> reporter: bone ven volen covers the nfl and patriots for the "boston globe." >> it's going to take convincing to get tom brady's appeal bumped down from four to possibly two or zero games by somebody who handed out the punishment. >> reporter: on thursday, the patriots issued a 20,000 word rebuttal to the wells report challenging some of the investigation's findings. >> the patriots will poke many many holes in the science of deplate inde deflate deflategate. it's very convincing. >> reporter: the patriots also attempted to explain the deflator reference in a text between jim mcnally and equipment assistant john jastremski. the patriots claim mcnally is a larger man and "this banter and mcmcnally's goal of losing weight meant mr. mcnally was the deflator. there was nothing complicated or
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sinister about it." >> it makes the patriots look weaker. they think that the public isn't very intelligent. >> reporter: brady has hired lawyer jeffrey kessler to battle here. kessler has done this before. he successfully fought the nfl in previous cases. norah? >> anna thank you very much. drought-stricken california seeing more rain than it can handle. wet weather is moving through san diego this morning. floodwaters flowed down streets and sidewalks. people rushed to move their cars before they were submerged. there's also flooding around los angeles. an instagram video shows stars on the hollywood walk of fame all underwater. rising water continues to threaten homes outside of houston, more wet weather is expected in texas today. scott padgett of our dallas-fort worth station ktvt is tracking the threat. scott, good morning. >> good morning, flooding rains continuing through the weekend, possibly two and a half to four inches of rain falling as a cold front works its way into very warm air.
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so we're going to continue to keep our eyes on that as all these storms will be popping up into the afternoon hours ahead of a cold front that's working its way into the central plains. there is an enhanced risk of severe storms southern kansas through central oklahoma also in parts of nebraska for large hail, damaging winds and maybe isolated tornados and flooding rains with some of those supercell storms. for you folks out west we'll deal with a flash flood watch through the day today into the evening hours for rainfall rates of a half inch of rain per hour maybe mud and debris flows in the recently burned areas is the highest threat as we'll see more rain through the day today. >> scott thanks. jeb bush heads to iowa tomorrow after a week of scrutiny on his views of the iraq war. >> here's the deal if we're all supposed to answer hypothetical questions knowing what we know now what would you have done i would have not engaged -- i would not have gone into iraq. >> the comments in arizona thursday marked his fifth attempt this week to explain his
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position. bush was all but certain to run for president, explained why he hesitated to provide a clear answer. he cited loyalty to his brother, president george w. bush and respect for the families of fallen troops. this morning, many middle eastern allies of the united states are showing their unease over u.s. negotiations with iran. president obama pledged a commitment to the security of gulf nations yesterday during a meeting at camp david. margaret brennan is at the state department. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. president obama's claim to have arab support for a nuclear deal with iran appears far from certain as gulf allies fear it may come at their extent. it was meant to be a summit with heads of state from six key arab allies. but in a sign of their frustration with u.s. policy only two showed up. the others sent deputies. one no-show, the king of bahrain, was scheduled to attend a london horse show with the queen of england instead. president obama sought to reassure gulf allies that the
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u.s. commitment to them is ironclad, even if the u.s. signs a nuclear deal with iran their long-time adversary. >> the united states will stand by our partners against external attack and will deepen and extend the cooperation that we have when it comes to the many challenges that exist in the region. >> reporter: the u.s. pledged to expedite arms sale increase joint military exercises with the gulf states and integrate their missile defense system. but the president did not deliver what many of the countries wanted -- a written security pact pledging that the u.s. military would come to their defense if threatened by iran. on thursday iran's navy opened fire on a commercial vessel in the persian gulf. a similar incident happened just two weeks ago. it's the type of harassment that has countries like saudi arabia concerned. the saudi foreign minister spoke at camp david. >> i don't know if they're doing
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this in order to flex muscle i don't know if they're doing this in order to be provocative. for whatever reason they're doing it it's got to stop. >> reporter: saudis also concerned if sanctions are lifted as part of a nuclear deal, iran could use that money to fund proxy wars in syria and yemen. but, norah, the white house is betting iran's more likely to use that money to bolster its crumbling economy. >> all right, margaret thank you very much. a white house lockdown is lifted this morning after a new drone scare. secret service agents detained a california man. authorities say 39-year-old ryan mcdonald operated a small unmanned aircraft thursday. the drone hovered about 100 feet above lafayette park next to the white house. president obama was away at camp david. mcdonald is free this morning while he faces a court appearance just one day earlier the faa launched a new campaign the goal reminding people drones are banned hello, over the nation's capital. and especially near the white house and capitol hill. >> charlie, you're right, a bad
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of the world's chocolate in its hand and you are helping to pay good morning. here's what's happening around the bay area right now. san jose is expected to have hundreds of police officers wearing body cameras by next summer. the total cost is about $1 million. tonight, the warriors have a chance to advance to the western conference finals for the first time since 1976. golden state can close it out with a win against the grizzlies on memphis. >> next week is the last late show with david letterman. he sits down with jane pauley for a sunday morning interview and they have a preview coming up on "cbs this morning" next.
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good morning. we have some problems right now in los altos hills northbound 280 a boat came off a trailer. and that boat is in lanes blocking three of them. here's a tweet from "kcbs traffic." three right lanes are blocked. traffic is stacked up beyond highway 85 so use 101 as an alternate. they cleared the stall approaching downtown oakland but still seeing delays at high street. that's "kcbs traffic." here's roberta. good morning as you head out the door this morning, we have a combination of low clouds and patchy fog lining the coast. that is the scene looking out towards coit tower at this hour with temperatures in the 50s, santa rosa in the upper 40s. later today 50s to mid- to high 60s west wind 10 to 20. warming over the weekend.
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what are you >> what are you here to do on his last night? >> i will try and take away from dave's -- take some of the spotlight from dave. i'll do what i can. this is what comics do. i'm going to announce -- i'm going to come out on the air, i'm going to do anything i can i'll be naked that night. what i'd like to do is say something pretty much very nice about david letterman. >> i bet you will. >> and that i think comes from the heart and then we come on a little before he does and then tell people to turn the channel. >> that was conan o'brien on your show last night, charlie. i love how everybody wants to pay respects to dave. even his competition as he goes down the final stretch. >> think about it, there's only four shows left -- tonight, monday, tuesday, wednesday. oprah is on tonight.
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welcome back to cbs "this morning." coming up in this half hour, david letterman makes a surprising admission to jane pauley about the ed sullivan theater, home the late show. we'll have a preview of their wide ranging sunday morning conversation. >> plus backlash in austin after a training session on how to work with women. that's right, city council members are furious about a recent seminar where they were told women ask too many questions. >> how do you feel charlie, about working with women? >> i love it as you know love it. [ laughter ] time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. the "new york times" says isis released an audio statement said to be from its leader. it come amid rumors leader abu bakr al baghdadi was wounded and perhaps incapacitated in an air strike. he told muslims to join asis or to carry out attacks in their home countries. >> britain's "guardian" says an ancient syrian city is in danger of being destroyed by isis.
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it says fighters are within a mile of the gate of the unesco world heritage site the 2,000-year-old city holds important artifacts from greek, roman, persian and islamic cultures. this is terrible. isis has destroyed ancient sites in iraq. troubling. >> there's no way you can rebuild anything like that. it's extraordinary. >> terrible. the "los angeles times" says the california senate approved a controversial bill to boost vaccination rates. it does not allow parents to opt out based on their personal believes. parents who oppose the bill staged protests. this follows a measles outbreak that began in december. the san francisco cron kuala lumpur report-- chronicle reports that uber co-founder kalanick stole the idea. the plaintiff kevin halprin has a history of litigations. he released a self-made video called "grand theft uber."
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uber calls his claims baseless. and after women took the majority on the city council in austin, the staff was warned to expect more questions and longer talks. the warning came in a controversial seminar on working with women. a city official this morning is on administrative leave. elaine quijano of our digital network cbsn has the details. women, find something to bite hard on as you listen to this story elaine. >> reporter: that's right. the training seminar sounded innocuous enough called the changing dynamics in governance, women leading in local government. but things got dicey when the man addressing the group implied that women in power don't prepare for meetings and ask more questions than men do. this was a city council meeting like no other. a press conference by women who are part of a historic new female majority on austin's city council, angered that a training session was held about how to handle women. >> i have to question the culture that allows such a training session to be
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considered. >> they don't process things at the same way. >> this was the training session in question. jonathan allen was invited to speak because he was a city manager in lauderdale lakes, florida, where he dealt with an all-female city commission. he said women often don't bother to read the research they're given. >> so when they say "mr. city manager, could you tell me how much that capital improvement project costs?" my sarcastic response would be "madam commissioner, if you look at paragraph 4, you will be able to find that information." >> reporter: allen made a comparison to how he patiently answers his 11-year-old daughter's repeated questions. >> and then i said "ah-ha that's how i have to deal with the commission." >> we ask too many questions, we don't understand numbers. it was just ridiculous. >> reporter: celia garza was elected to austin city council in 2014. >> i would be just as offended
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if it was how to work with hispanics. >> i was stunned. i was speechless and stunned. >> reporter: mr. allen and his co-presenter at the seminar issued a statement. "if our overall intent and message was not clear during the presentation, we sinner is viely serner is sercerely apologize for any miscommunication. requests the city manager insists their intentions were good. still -- >> it was the wrong thing to do. wrong, inappropriate message and it failed meet up with our values. this is just -- we messed up. >> this wasn't the best training seminar. but what it's creating now is a discourse about gender issues so ultimately i think this is going to be a positive outcome from it. >> reporter: the city manager echoed those sentiments. he told cbs news this failed seminar can serve as a foundation for some really constructive conversations about sensitivity and about diversity. >> we certainly need that. but this is not the best way to get there, is it? [ laughter ]
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>> and they need better vetting for sure. clearly this was not something they looked at beforehand. charlie, you've gone through some lady training right? [ laughter ] >> charlie gets a plus-plus. he doesn't need any training. >> i have lots of questions for mr. allen. he is a "saturday night live" skit waiting to happen. someone remind this man it's 2015. please. >> you can always tell a lot about a man by the number of women he works with. charlie's always had a female executive producer he's worked with women. >> 75% of my staff has been women as long as i've had a program. >> and dare i say you're smarter for it? [ laughter ] >> and happier. thank you, elaine that was great. "the simpsons" may sound different next year, a prominent voice says he's living springfield. >> hello simpson. howdl doodley do. >> you're mine simpson. >> i've been writing a musical about the malibu stacy doll. >> we must never forget the real news is on locally tv delivered
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by real officially licensed newsmen like me kent brockman. >> harry shearer has voiced dozens of characters including mr. burns and his assistant smithers, he tweeted he's leaving the show after 26 seasons. i was shocked. he says he wants the freedom to do other work. one producer says he hopes shearer will change his mind. maybe there's a contract dispute there. everyone knows he's so iconic to that program. he does so much of the work voicing so many of the characters. >> i think you may be right when you say contract. i hope they can work that out. >> oprah winfrey shows us -- >> yay! >> do you know her? >> did i say that outloud 1234. >> do you like her? >> i hear she's great. >> she shows us what makes david letterman so special as his show prepares to end. and jane pauley is in our toyota green room to preview her sunday morning interview with the late show legend. that's next. you're watching cbs "this morning."
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>> we will miss on wednesday night a young man named david letterman who's signing off from his program. we will not be here for that and i just wanted to say what a remarkable honor it has been for me to have gone on his show. he was for me -- and i think many comics of my generation -- an incredible epiphany. there are so few people that can innovate that format. and then to have the kind of longevity. to be an innovator with longevity. damn, i think the list is dave. introducing lunch at outback every bloomin' day! hurry in for all your outback favorites. plus new aussie tacos, new savory ribeye melt and our delicious burgers. over 70 lunch combinations
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secret to connecting with an audience, whatever it is you are bringing 100% of yourself. i think every night that is what he did 100% of himself. >> wow. >> oprah sharing with "cbs this morning" the mixed emotions thahere is a preview of this week's candid conversation. >> you had me under an important point in my life when i was leaving the "today" show which was '89ish. i was a guest on your show. now you are having what i'm guessing is a profoundly vivid moment in your life. i'm grateful that you are sharing that. >> thank you very much.
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i'm naked and afraid because -- it's so cliche but i will share it with you anyway. any enormous uprooting change in my life has petrified me really petrified me. once i come through the other side the reward has been unimaginable. >> do you have a picture of yourself in the future? >> yes, i do. i can tell you the kind of feelings and emotions i hope will come of this. and that i'm looking forward to. now, getting back into television perhaps will not be as easy to accomplish. >> the late show with david letterman! >> i don't think i will ever be back in this building honestly. >> because? >> i think it's just too
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difficult for me emotionally too difficult for me. i just don't want to come back and see others living our lives. does that make sense? >> absolutely. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> tell us about this last conversation. >> i think you know charlie, and this is surprising. david letterman is a great interview. for someone who is famously kind of private and eningmatic when you talk to him he talks. he tells you and he is very revealing about -- >> it's like he is thinking out loud. >> and then he regrets it as soon as it is over. and i don't think he could see -- it doesn't matter if it
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came from anywhere else comic genius he won't accept that. that part of his psyche is just shut off to that possibility. it's not an act. >> did you get a sense that he is ready to go? when i was there with oprah i kept hearing this is the last time we will do this the last walk we make the last conversation. did you get a sense that he is ready to go? >> let's learn the definition of ambivalence. it doesn't mean i'm wishy-washy. i am so ready to leave. he snapshot. he wants to memorize what it was like, what it felt like what the audience looked like. and yet i asked if you are
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taking the desk no. he said he once had an opportunity to buy johnny carson's desk and he said if johnny didn't want it why would i? he is leaving the furniture. >> jane really looking forward to it. thank you for being here. you can see jane's full interview with david letterman this weekend on sunday morning. we won't miss it here on cbs. stick around because dave's musical director and side kick paul schaffer is going to be right here in studio 57. we will hear his post-late show plans. in mitt romney ready for a knockout fight? why the former presidential candidate is entering
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good morning. it's 7:56. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening around the bay area right now. a plane flying from san francisco to l.a. landed safely after the pilots reported smoke inside the cockpit. the smoke was caused by some sort of mechanical problem. no passengers were injured. in the middle of the state's drought thousands of gallons of drinkable water are being used to control dust at candlestick's demolition site. paul shaffer discusses his historic run on cbs and what's next in his music career on "cbs this morning." stay
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good morning. if you have been watching us for the last half-hour, northbound 280 in the last traffic report we mentioned there was a boat that came off a trailer. it's now out of lanes but unfortunately the backups are still really bad approaching los altos hills. it's jammed solid to downtown san jose. use 101 instead. bay bridge toll plaza improvement early and the 580 approach is still clear. some delays from the maze to the toll plaza but better than usual. we can call it "friday light." 880 a few delays approaching high street. mostly cloudy skies over some parts of the bay area at this hour. otherwise we'll begin to clear out and dry out after yesterday's storms. there you have the cloud deck over the city of san francisco. currently it is 53 degrees. it is 55 in san jose. so we have the low clouds and the patchy fog lining the coast with partial clearing there today. otherwise, partly cloudy and temperatures up to about 68 degrees. hey, check out the weekend. we
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♪ ♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday may 15 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including paul shaffer in studio 57. we'll talk to him about his 33 years with david letterman and what might be next for the music master. first here's a look at the eye opener at 8:00. >> they've sent in a special rescue team. >> this morning much of the wreckage has been removed. >> how would you describe the blues? >> it's good for me when i'm feeling bad and good for me when
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i'm feeling good. >> brady will have to convince the commissioner himself. >> we're going to be dealing with a flash flood watch. >> president obama claimed to have arab support for a nuclear deal with iran appears far from certain. >> they don't process things at the same way. >> the man addressing the group started implying that women in power don't prepare for meetings and ask a lot more questions than men do. >> i was speechless and stunned. >> david letterman! >> i don't think i'll ever be back in this building honestly. >> i want to wish a happy birthday to facebook ceo and hoodie aficionado mark zuckerberg. i got him something i know he really wants, my social security number. i'm charlie rose with gayle
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king and norah o'donnell. search crews in nepal found the wreckage of an american marine helicopter. they discovered the crash site about 50 miles north of kathmandu. they also found several bodies. local officials say there's no chance of any survivors. >> the search has been going on since tuesday. it was part of a relief mission to deliver aid after two devastating earthquakes. >> investigators say the amtrak train that crashed in philadelphia accelerated when it should have slowed down. new video show as flash as the train derailed tuesday night. workers are still repairing the tracks this morning. amtrak's ceo says he wants to restore full service by tuesday. the engineer of rain 188 will speak to investigators in a few days. >> b.b. king died last night but
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the sound of lucille will live forever. he kept performing until just a few weeks ago. in a 1996 interview, i asked king about coming to the end of the road. >> when they play the last song for b.b. as he's going to meet his maker, what do you want to hear? >> "peace in the world." it's a a song we do now -- "peace to the world" rather. i hope when they do play that last song for me i hope there will be peace in the world, i doubt it but maybe it can be more peaceful. >> i loved him. he was always right on right in the moment. >> lengthy kravitz said this morning he could say more in one note than hundreds of others could say. >> and he influenced so many
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chemicals. vinita nair is here with a look at conditions some salon works experience. >> the state of new york has the second highest number of nail technicians in the country. they can be found on every street corner offering manicures for about $10. but this bargain luxury comes at a price and it's not the customer who ends up paying the bill. it's just after 4:00 at this nail salon in midtown manhattan. we used this hidden camera to find out more about the woman sitting across from us. speaking in spanish, she described 11-hour work days with little pay and no overtime compensation. she told us wages are so low she relies on tips but if the tip is get on a credit card she doesn't receive it. new york governor andrew cuomo
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has promised to put annd to this announcing the creation of a task for that would shut down unlicensed businesses. >> many of the women in these facilities are desperate. they're not here legally, they don't have working papers they have to put food october table, they have to support a child so they have to do what what they have to do. >> nail salons are a $8.5 billion industry nationwide. according to a "new york times" investigation, workers from asia and south america can be paid as little as $1.50 an hour and pay up to $200 for training. technicians also face heath risks to exposure to dangerous chemicals and communitycable diseases from customers. >> somebody is baring the cost of your discount and it's always the worker. >> customers we spoke to said the investigation has left them conflicted.
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>> poor girls are barely survivingso it will change the feeling when you're there. >> i do what i can in terms of tipping as well as possible and making sure it goes directly into their pocket. >> there are 15,000 nail technicians who work in new york state. tuesday two workers filed a proposed class action lawsuits against four salons who say they don't meet minimum wage requirements. >> i will never put a tip on a credit card again. thank you. we're in the green room. look who is here paul shaffer. >> the thrill is gone. >> and this is your first time -- >> here. >> here here. are you as excited to be here? >> he's saying no it's not your first time. >> i meant your first time here. you've got a new documentary.
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i think people are going to see new a whole different light. was that the goal? >> ah -- >> hold that. hold that. when we come back these very two talented men ahead on "cbs this morning." there's a lot to discuss. we'll be right back. ♪ xidants, electrolytes, and b vitamins plus more vitamin c than ten oranges. emergen-c transforms more than just water. emergen-c. let your awesome out. you wouldn't do half of your daily routine. so why treat your mouth any differently? complete the job with listerine®. kill up to 99 percent of germs. and prevent plaque, early gum disease and bad breath. sfx: ahhh listerine®. power to your mouth™!
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i said this before paul shaffer and the band is the best thing about our television program. i would not have considered any change unless paul was eager and happy and willing to go with us. >> that's david letterman in a 1993 news conference about you when he announced his big move to cbs. only four shows left until america says good bye to the late show with dave. and there is paul shaffer. >> it's the longest funeral in history. we are lying in state over there as people come to pay their respects. >> from the president of the united states to bill clinton to george clooney. >> before we talk we will take a
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look back down memory lane. >> let's take that walk. >> say hello to our good friend paul shaffer. ♪ >> three, two, one, it's a new year's celebration. >> by sending check or money order. >> we are right in the middle of a show. >> we are? >> yeah. >> i thought the show ended hours ago. >> is it over? >> you look like you might be half a ventriloquist act. ♪ >> can i try it? >> yeah. >> here you go. >> enjoy. what do you think?
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>> paul? ♪ show right now is the most wonderful hour of the entire day. >> i'm very hot. >> i'm a little warm. >> television just doesn't get better than that. >> and paul schaffer you have had a rough road. how are you feeling today? >> of course nostalgic. i have gone through the kind of phases that one goes through. i have come around to a very zen place of gratitude. what else can one say? 33 years with the smartest hippest, quickest man in show
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business, with all due respect to you guys. but to work with dave totally spontaneous every night. >> when he first told you what did you think? >> it was nutty. we were about to go out and do our warmup. the band is playing. i'm about to go out and then dave comes out to say hello and says just come here for a second. we went in an al cove back stage and he said i told them i'm retiring today. and then the next thing you know ♪ everything felt different. >> was it as he said the best hour of the day? >> of course. of course it was. everything was in preparation for that. and it was a lot of fun every day. he kept it so real and so loose and spontaneous that it was different every day and i never knew what he was going to do.
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>> he recently called you a musical genius. >> he exaggerates, but he has been so supportive of me. he has heard every single note that i and my band have heard. you don't think he is listening but he is right there. >> what was that? >> the relationship between the two of you is something special. were you friends before the show? >> i hadn't met him. i knew who he was and i had seen his morning show and i just got a call from his management company to come in and have a meeting with him regarding the show. we hit it off and he claims that he never had anyone else in mind. he said that he had seen some of my stuff on saturday night live. i had done first five years. and he has just been the most incredible boss saying to me if you have anything i don't care if it is in the monologue or
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interviewing julia roberts jump in at any time. who wears an open mic for 33 years? i had that. what can one say? >> is there one moment that you remember more than anything else? >> well i think everybody remembers in the midst of all of the comedy i think everybody remembers the serious moments. who will ever forget? he was the first man in late night to go back on the air with a comedy show after 9/11 attack. when he did it he made it okay for everyone to come back. of course, that last show that she gave in the entirety and said you have to enjoy everyone. >> you think he has any regrets? >> he has been very honest and verbal about saying why did i
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say this? he has been a perfectionist all of these years. that is how he kept up that amazing level of perfection on that show. he never threw away a single show. so although he will always say why did i say that to madonna. he still on a very real level i don't see why he would. >> he said he will turn to a life of crime. what do you plan to do? >> kathie doesn't want me around the house. you got to keep working. >> have you thought about your next chapter? >> i'm going to keep on playing the piano. i think somebody will let me. i love to do the different things. dave would let me do comedy and improvise. i want to do all of those things, continue to do those things. maybe csi miami.
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i'm open for anything. >> is there a musical guest that you say i wish we would have had -- >> only we missed elvis and we missed sinatra. >> any other surprises? >> yes. and things that everybody wants to see and would expect. >> thank you. >> congratulations. >> thank you for having me on. the guests for the last episode include oprah tonight, tom hanks, eddie murray. we'll be right back. # . a haunting mystery in a long search for justice. >> i'm peter van sant. in the summer of 1979 the murder of a beautiful young woman stunned this pennsylvania town. five suspects hundreds of
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pieces of evidence. can a 34-year-old investigation your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. i'm for news headlines. vallejo police have few clues to go on in the case of a teenager found murdered on a trail near his high school. friends and family gathered last night to remember the teen who attended jesse bethel high school. the search over for a u.s. marine helicopter that had been missing in nepal. the wreckage has been found along with three bodies. google's fleet of self- driving cars will be out in traffic this summer. the search giant is using the streets of mountain view for the first-ever road test. stay with us. tr
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it is still bad on northbound 280 between san jose and los altos. there was a trailer that lost its boat. there is a boat in lanes on the freeway for a while blocking three lanes. it is long since cleared. unfortunately, it is still really backed up. major delays through downtown san jose. use 85. use 101 instead. even though they are slow they are better than 280. here's a live look at the san mateo bridge, which has cleared out early, yes, "friday light" out of hayward. no delay on westbound 92 or you can always hop aboard mass
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transit. so far everything is on time. no delays. that is "kcbs traffic." here's roberta. you said a boat on the freeway?! [ laughter ] >> a boat! i know there's some minor flooding in san jose yesterday but there's a boat on the freeway! okay, everyone. good morning. we have some areas of low clouds, patchy fog that's now saturated the sfo area so therefore, we now have delays up to 58 minutes on some arriving flights. 50 in santa rosa, 56 at this now concord. winds out of the west about 10 miles per hour. they will be blowing today west 10 to 20. there it is all that green on the screen across southern california. that's our rainfall yesterday. it's now out of here. we'll dry out partly cloudy skies 50s beaches low 60s bayside mid-60s peninsula high 60s inland. temperatures back into the mid 70s over the weekend.
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour a pennsylvania woman was found murdered at her moment more than three decades ago. the case went cold but investigators made a breakthrough thanks to dna technology. >> and alan iverson is in our green room this morning. he reflects on his life and the current state of the nba. that's ahead. >> the houston chronicle said a venture capitalist gave $50 million to his alma mater, rice university. it is the biggest gift in rice history and it will launch an
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institute to teach teachstudents to be better leaders. >> australian authorities threatened to euthanize johnny depp's dogs. >> the dogs are now safe. >> you remember this dress. the majority said it had blue and black stripes. most of them were men, younger people or so-called owls people awake more at night. those who said it was gold and white were more likely to be women, older and larks, people awake in the daytime hours. the small group switched between either color combination. >> a pennsylvania man spent more than 30 years agonizing over who murdered his sister janet walsh. in their tiny town near pittsburgh, it want hard to find suspects but police couldn't make any arrests.
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tomorrow night "48 hours" looks at how they finally unravelled the mystery. peter van sant reports. >> i drove up to the front of the house, run up to the door and pete janet's father, told me that she was she was in the back bedroom. >> reporter: it's 1979 in pennsylvania and rookie cop gall was about to go to his first homicide. >> there was no reason to check for a pulse. you can tell by her face and the scarf around her neck she was dead. >> there's nothing that could make my sister be dead. >> francesco was 20 years old. >> i had to go in and see for myself but my brother would not
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allow me to. he put me in a bear hug and would not let go. >> reporter: his sister janet, was getting a fresh start in life after recently separating from her husband and moving into her own place. janet had gone out with friends. the next day when she didn't go to work her family went to check on her. she was found tied up and strangled in her bed. investigators had a list of suspects. >> i have a plot like an old tv show "murder she wrote" where i have five suspects and can't arrest any of them. >> reporter: three decades passed. a cold case unit desightcided to reexamine janet's case. cops rounded up the suspects from a drifter --
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>> i didn't kill anyone. >> to her ex-husband. >> did you murder janet? >> i did not. >> assistant district attorney smith would get assigned to janet's case. >> in a way it's a time capsule. we're going back to the late 1970s, going to the death scene now. >> yes. >> reporter: using enhanced dna technology, this cold case turns white hot. they find dna on janet's sheets night gown and bathrobe tie used to bind her hands. it's a bombshell. the dna belonged to one of the original suspects. who we can now call a killer. >> wow. peter van sant is with us. amazing the dna was able to provide clues so many years later. >> that's the enhanced technology. there's even a dispute in that
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because there were several samples they weren't able to take. it's very expensive to get dna. the samples that came back one included an unidentified male. >> it does sound like a "murder she wrote" episode in some ways. >> eight out of ten times the hospital did it. he was at the top of the list. but there was also a local drifter in town whose checkbook was found a block away from the murder scene who failed two lie detector tests. i grilled him during the interview. >> eight out of ten times it's the husband? >> and investigators are so dogged. i don't care if you're across town on live tv you're the guy they're going to spend their time on. >> and that's "janet's secret"
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1996 nba draft, the philadelphia 76ers select allen iverson from georgetown university. >> al i don't know iverson sure lived up to his billing as a number one draft pick. his offensive skills and speed made him unstoppable, even for the all-time greats like michael jordan. the man called "the answer" was rookie of the year and made 11 all-star teams. iverson was mvp in 2001 and finished with more than 20,000 points. his bad boy image led to problems off the court. he was controversially jailed in high school and had other run-ins with the law during his nba career. now he opens up about his childhood, his arrest basketball and everything else in between in a revealing showtime sports documentary called, simply one word "iverson." >> i've never coached an athlete that i think more people wanted to know about, loved, than allen.
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little kids all over the place would always come up to me and say you're al iverson's coach. i want to be like allen. >> i got all his sneakers. >> he's the best player ever to me. >> allen was a role model. >> good or bad, he was a role model. >> he was a person that was so real the corn rows. this whole thing is like this is who i am. people loved him for that. but it's a gift and a curse. >> the way allen carried himself, the way he dressed, some people liked it some people didn't. >> allen is joining us at the table. he's still got the tats and the corn rows and he's still allen iverson. good to see you, allen. >> good to see you. >> before i looked at the documentary i had one judgment of you and after i looked at it i had another one. i love that it starts with the song "i'm just a soul who is trying to be good lord please don't let me be misunderstood."
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that sort of sums up your life right? you feel misunderstood? >> yeah. because people don't know who i am. i'm judged by the idiot box and the newspaper. i really wanted to do this because i wanted kids to see that, you know, they can make it regardless. you hit roadblocks in life but i'm living proof that you can overcome those roadblocks and become what you want to become. >> let's talk about your roadblocks because you were in prison. >> yes. >> from high school you were jailed but you were sentenced to 15 years in prison charged with maiming some people in the bowling alley. the videotape shows you leaving the bowling alley before all that stuff happened and you were sentenced to 15 years in prison. >> definitely. i felt like it was unjust. but i felt like i couldn't cry about it. all i prayed for and asked god
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for was another opportunity at life. >> you credit tom brokaw. >> yeah, tom brokaw did a lot for me. governor wilder did a lot for me by giving me the clemency and john thompson saved my life because he gave me another opportunity when everybody stopped recruiting me. i was recruited by everybody in both sports. once that incident happened, everybody went away. he gave me another opportunity. >> we were in georgetown at the same time. >> were y'all dating? >> that would have been a story. >> my girl now was my girl then. >> oh, good good. >> talk about the influence of georgetown and coach thompson. as you said had it not been for coach thompson what would have happened to allen iverson? >> who knows. like i said he saved my life. he gave me another opportunity. and all i needed was one, all i
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needed was one chance and god sent him to me. >> what do you want us to know about you? >> that i'm not the person that everybody make me out to be. >> then who are you? >> i'm a father. i'm a friend. i think i got the biggest heart in the world. a lot of times that's not a good thing. >> on the sports level, do you know anybody who had more skills than you did at your best? >> no. no. i mean i'm the biggest michael jordan fan there is. he made me want to play the sport. i always wanted to be like mike. i'm just like everybody else. >> watch this video. >> you still remember that crossover, right? look at what lebron james said about you, "pound for pound probably the greatest player who ever played."
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i saw julius irving the other day. he said "he's a great man, he's a hell of a player." he's talking about you. >> i'm getting chills running through my body because i have a lot of respect for both of those guys. >> larry brown said you could have been the most popular player in the league. >> yeah. i didn't realize the magnitude of who i was at that time because i was in the moment and i had to fall down a lot of times to be able to get back up. and, you know i just didn't realize that i guess at times i might have been too young, might have been too naive at times and didn't understand who i really was was. >> i think your basketball skills are unmatched and well recognized but a lot of controversy has been on your tats and jewelry and that you made $150 million and now you're struggling financially. is that true?
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>> that's a myth. a rumor. >> which part? >> the fact that i'm struggling in any part of my life. that's what the documentary is for as well. i really don't care too much about what people that don't care about me say about me but a lot of times, you know i get tired of defending myself and i'll be 40 years old next month and i'm so sick of defending myself. but the documentary does a lot because my fans care about me. they hear these rumors too. >> the documentary shows you in a whole new light. congratulations, allen iverson. premieres tomorrow on
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week that was. have a great weekend. >> this train never made it to new york. it met a violent end. >> we have train cars that are ripped apart. >> the busier corridor in the country, amtrak corridor in the country shut down. >> they literally teared up as they described the chaos. >> he got me out of the train. it was filled with smoke. >> an earthquake between kathmandu and mount everest. eyewitnesses report people running into the street. >> there are no chances of any survivors in the crash of a united states marine helicopter. search crews found the wreckage. >> tom brady's agent promises to appeal a four-game investigation. >> i thought it was a little bit of a sledge hammer killing an ant. >> i heard a loud gunshot. >> this is an impromptu memorial to the two officers shot. >> mrs. obama talked about how she's learned to ignore criticism. >> cable news referred to me as
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obama's baby mama. >> kiss me kiss me! >> no! >> kiss me now! >> no! >> ray ray, ray! >> why is your energy so low, ray? where do you work? >> over there at cvs. >> you don't want to work there man. it's the worst. >> one, two, three, four five six, seven, eight, nine. >> would you have been in favor of the iraqi invasion? >> not only would i not have been in favor of it president bush wouldn't have been in favor of it. >> should players who are known to have used steroids be in the hall of fame? >> no. >> even alex rodriguez? >> no. >> have you told him that? >> no. >> he be surprised to hear it? >> oh yeah. >> you're alive! >> are you ready to go back? >> yeah, i'd go back in a second i think. >> badass. what does it mean to you?
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>> it doesn't mean you have to be the most fit, the strongest or the fastest. you have to have the will to try. >> what were you doing 29 years ago? i was having a baby. >> i'd love to have kids right now but there's a process. >> i know some ladies that might help him with the process. ♪ what you trying to do to my heart ♪ >> i just saw him and all i kept at this i thinking to myself is there you are, where have you been? ♪ ♪ ♪ a little piece of my heart now baby ♪ >> did you happen to find out where steven got those pants? charlie was asking. >> $160 million. it's yours. >> you didn't touch it michelle. you didn't touch it. >> all that. >> how do you feel about working with women? >> i love it as you know. i love it. >> and all that matters. >> 75% of my staff has been
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female announcer: the mattress price wars are on at sleep train! we challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic vs. beautyrest with big savings of up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years interest-free financing. plus, free same day delivery set-up, and removal of your old set. when brands compete, you save! mattress price wars are on now at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪
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good morning. well, even as the commute is supposed to be winding down, we have a couple of issues going on now out in the east bay. oakland hills northbound highway 13 before you reach the 24 interchange, there is an accident there blocking one lane. you can see how backed up it is beyond park boulevard. and then if you are traveling on the eastshore freeway this accident cleared to the right- hand shoulder. westbound 80 at university. traffic is stacked up back to carlson. the latest drive time is 24 minutes from the carquinez bridge to
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you've got a car! - (screams) jonathan: it's a zonk pirate ship! - no! jonathan: bleh bleh bleh! it's a trip to hawaii! - whoo! wayne: jumpin' jehoshaphat! - i am out of my mind thrilled! - i'm going for that curtain, baby! 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. let's make a deal. who wants to three people, let's go. let's see, three of you. the banana, come on over here, anita. next up, gregory come here, gregory. and the workout girl all the way across, in purple. purple workout, come over here. stand over there, gregory. stan
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