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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 5, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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>> we have all of the details on our website. two maybe officers two maybe officers downstairs will good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, october 5, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." torrential flooding only seen once every thousand years. the deadly downpour forces hundreds of rescues in south carolina. the coast guard confirms minutes ago that a cargo ship with dozens of americans on board sank in the bermuda triangle. patrick kennedy is in studio 57. his famous family fuming over what he talked about on "60 minutes." but we begin with a look at your world in 90 seconds. >> we haven't seen this level of
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rain in the low country in a thousand years. that's how big this is. devastating flooding slams the southeast. >> south carolina is hardest hit. the state of emergency has been declared. >> did you grab anything when you walked out the door? >> no, we grabbed two totinos pizzas out of the refrigerator and my dog. and they search for a cargo ship and have found massive amounts of debris. the fbi is warning colleges in philadelphia about a social media-businessed threat. no specific school named. >> they gathered for a prayer service for the victims of the shooting at the college. >> we will not be defined by evil. new polls show ben carson and carly fiorina are not too far behind donald trump. >> if you no longer have an interest in trump because he has no chance, i'll go back to my
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business. you don't just give an automatic promotion to the existing leadership team. that doesn't signal change. a teenager in florida attacked by a shark. the 14-year-old bitten on the hand underwent surgery at the hospital. a dog in california stood up to bears who climbed the gate and entered her yard. >> she turned into a wolverine. all that -- >> he's going to go all the way! what a way for drew brees to get touchdown pass number 400. >> -- and all that matters. >> i think he definitely had a problem with alcohol. i still right now, leslie, have trouble talking about this. >> on "cbs this morning" -- >> all he wants to talk about is donald trump? >> donald trump? you don't mean the one that's like, ugh, you're all losers. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places.
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welcome to "cbs this morning morning." gayle king is off. vinita nair is with us. torrential rains forced hundreds of rescues in south carolina. the flooding has killed thousands of fethousanmany in the carolinas. >> several cities have broken rainfall amounts for october. mount pleasant, south carolina, received more than two feet of rain in the last few days. david begnaud is live with more. >> reporter: i'm standing in a sinkhole created as a result of a dam break. when the water got to here, it didn't go around this building, it went right through it. there are scenes like this all over the area of columbia, south carolina. when the water began to rise, so
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did the calls for help. this morning search and rescue crews are going door to door looking for people who may need help. people in the city are without water and those who have it have been told to boil it. it's a disaster. >> oh, my god, the truck is sinking. the truck is sinking. >> reporter: the devastating flooding hitting south carolina has reached catastrophic levels. at least five people have been killed in the state and officials are worried that number will rise. several days of relentless rainfall have left roads so saturated on sunday with many of them giving way. >> we haven't seen this level of rain in the low country in a thousand years. that's how big this is. >> reporter: crews rescued hundreds of people from fast-moving floodwaters. >> yep, he just made a mistake. >> reporter: the driver of this pickup truck tried to drive through a flooded street, but his car was quickly overtaken. a man swam in to try to rescue him but moments later he, too, was trapped in the high water. both men were rescued by emergency crews in a scene that
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is playing out across this state. this is gill's creek. we are told the water has risen ten feet and there's concern of another dam failure right up the road. we have learned at least five dams have failed in lexington and richland counties. flooding those communities and prompting county officials to issue a curfew. 600 national guardsmen have been activated. 8,000 are on standby. the coast guard rescued this woman and her 15 month child after they became stranded in their home in charleston. >> this is an incident we have never had before. because it is water and is slow moving and sitting and we just can't take the water out. >>reporter: we were there with ronald who retrieved medicine for his father. >> this is a god-send right there. for somebody to give you a ride there, you know, that was -- just almost like an answer to a
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prayer. >> reporter: back here in columbia, i want to show you right behind me, that's a vehicle overturned in the water. there are scenes like this scattered throughout the city. the governor saying this is a 1,000-year flood and the worst is not over. they got 18 inches of rain in 24 hours, that's a third that the city sees in a year. >> thank you, david. hurricane joaquin is weakening and going out to sea. it spared the east coast but slammed bermuda sunday. heavy rains and wind whipped the island. our new york station wcbs is tracking the storm. lonnie quinn is here with us, good morning. >> good morning. you have to get right to the numbers. i have never seen numbers like this before. yes, more rain in the forecast for today, which is another bad situation. this swath of yellow, it's about 130 miles long, that's a foot or more of rain. charleston, 16.2 inches. mount pleasant, over two feet.
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24.2. dalzell, 21.6 inches. columbia, 11.9. well west to griar, 6.3. this is joaquin off show. this entirely different system is pushing rain onshore. unfortunately, there's going to be more rain today. it looks like possibly three to five inches, so not the devastating totals, but you put that on top of a devastating situation. this is joaquin. it stays out to sea and is north of bermuda, so no longer a threat to anyone. to put all this in perspective, charleston set a record not for a four-day total, but for the month they got more rain in that event. guys, back to you. lonnie, thanks. breaking news on the search for an american cargo ship that disappeared during hurricane joaquin. about an hour ago the ship's owner told family members that the 800-foot vessel sank. the debris field was located on
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sunday. this morning searchers found a body. it was sailing through the bermuda triangle. 33 crew members were on board including 28 americans. mark strassmann is in jacksonville, mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. a relative of a crew member confirmed to us what the ship's owners told family members this morning. the ship is gone and sank during the hurricane. the searchers also found one unidentified body in a searcher suit, but hold out hope they may find someone alive. search and rescue crews also found a heavily damaged lifeboat, but no survivors were on board. the debris field stretches 225 square miles. and the search is on for a second lifeboat. but the window for survivors is rapidly closing. >> when we rolled up on the debris field, we were very optimistic and were searching very thoroughly in the hopes that we would find the
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survivors. >> reporter: on saturday the coast guard recovered one of the ship's life rings while flying over an area inside the bermuda triangle. >> the captain established a plan, he has been observing this weather system for many days prior to this voyage. >> reporter: the 790-foot vessel packed with containers set out last tuesday for san juan from jacksonville, florida. at that point joaquin was still a tropical storm. but its intensity crew quickly and on thursday at 7:20 a.m., the ship aired a distress call from the eye of the hurricane. >> at that time he indicated that the vessel was the main propulsion of the vessel was disabled. >> reporter: family members cling to hope their loved ones are still alive and out there somewhere. danielle randolph is a crew member and e-mailed her mother last week. >> there's a hurricane out here and we are heading straight into it. category 3.
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last we checked, winds are super bad. love to everyone. >> reporter: the coast guard is about to give an updated briefing. the survivor window in the water is five days. this is the fifth day since the ship went missing. >> tough story, mark. thank you so much. oregon's community college reopens today not for classes but for grief counseling. authorities are still investigating thursday's mass shooting where a gunman killed nine people as they search for answers, relatives mourn the victims. 59-year-old kim dietz was killed taking a class on the campus where her daughter shannon is studying theater. >> i feel like -- tomorrow i'm going to wake up and we should just get ready to go to school. like always. and she'll have to wake me up
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early. and i'll say no, i want to sleep in. but i'll get up, we'll get breakfast and go. but i have to tell myself, no, that's not going to happen. >> a local pastor whose daughter survived the shooting preached on sunday that the community is saying we will not be defined by violence. presidential candidate hillary clinton will unveil new gun control proposals this morning in the wake of the oregon college rampage. her plan includes expanding background checks for gun shows and internet sales, blocking gun sales and background checks are not completed within three days and holding dealers and manufacturers accountable for crimes committed with the guns they sold. >> a new poll this morning shows the democratic presidential race tightening in two important states. the nbc wall street news/marist survey finds hillary clinton leading in iowa. but in vermont bernie sanders is
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ahead by nine be points. both candidates lose votes if vice president joe biden is in the race. he has 22% support in iowa and 18% in new hampshire. the vice president will tell us soon whether he's in or out. julianna goldman, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. several people familiar with his deliberation say his decision could come within the next week to ten days. two of them say he's leading toward entering the presidential race, but over the weekend biden gave no hints and laughed off calls for him to run delivering the keynote at the human rights campaign dinner. the vice president made no mention of his own political future saturday night. >> a number of you have said to me over the last three to four years, thank you very much -- no, didn't say that. >> reporter: but certainly sounded like a presidential candidate speaking at a dinner for the largest gay rights group in the u.s. and reminding them
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he was ahead of the president on same sex marriage and prompted the white house to support it. >> some of you credit with me taking a political risk or thought i was doing something special, but folks, i was just answering in a straightforward, direct way what i have known my whole life. >> it is great to be back with the other hrc. >> reporter: hours earlier hillary clinton gave a rousing speech to the group of prominent activists and donors. neither she nor biden mentioned one another. instead, they took aim at the gop field. >> there's homophobes still left. most of them are running for president, i think. >> ben carson says marriage equality is what caused the fall of the roman empire. >> reporter: clinton declined the keynote address to appear on "saturday night live." >> you are really easy to talk to, bill. >> oh, thanks. you know, that's the first time i've ever heard that. >> reporter: clinton's "snl"
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appearance comes as she struggles to appear authentic, that created the opening for the vice president. >> we are watching hillary's campaign come unwound. >> reporter: earlier he said he was raising money for biden's campaign. and now they are trying to lock in support of donors who may jump in to help biden. as soon as the clinton campaign heard they met with biden, they immediately were contacted by aides. if biden decides to go, he'll still probably skip the first democratic debate next week. >> what's the most important thing in his deliberation? >> family. family is the top consideration right now. and everyone who we're speaking to says that if he decides it is not a go, it will be because different members of family are in different stages of grieving
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the loss of beau biden. on the republican side, the new poll shows donald trump's numbers are slipping. he's lost seven points since september. he's still ahead in spite of the drop. carly fiorina is in second place wi and ben carson is there with 19%. military investigators are not saying why the hospital and the city of kunduz was bombed. 22 people were killed. the united nations human rights chief called the attack inexcusable and possibly criminal. mark phillips is tracking the story from london. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, the damage done to the hospital is catastrophic. and the damage done to the reputation of the u.s. air campaign and support of the government in kabul is in pr terms, catastrophic as well. the question is no longer whether the msf hospital in
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kunduz was hit by u.s. air strikes, the u.s. admitted. but the question is how and why. doctors without borders who runs the hospital say the government in kabul and the united states knew where it was and that the air raid continued even after they raised the alarm that the facility was being hit. the afghan government line of talibanigers were inside and shooting from the hospital. msf's u.k. director says that is a lie. >> the comments coming from the afghan government are outrageous. they are to an extent justifying the destruction of a fully functioning hospital. >> reporter: the u.s. air force general john campbell now says it was afghan units to call the strike in. >> the afghan forces called in for fire to support them because they were under direct fire. we have u.s. special forces that continue to train, advise and assist at the tactical level. >> reporter: the federal
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investigation is underway but msf says that's not enough. >> we want an independent investigation and then we'll be in a position to make decisions about the future. >> the u.s. story has changed. the fact the pentagon now says it was afghan forces under attack from the taliban who called the air strikes in, not u.s. special forces, has raised the issue of what checks are in force to regulate those strikes and what the rules of engagement are that control where that fire is directed. in the meantime, the u.s. is offering condolences for those who were injured and killed. norah? thank you. reports from syria this morning say isis destroyed another ancient ruin. the arch of triumph was nearly 2,000 years old and one of the city's best-known landmarks. this morning the u.s. defense secretary accused russia of escalating syria's civil war. holly williams is in istanbul, turkey, where panic has been
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caused. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the government here in turkey says a russian war plane operating out of syria violated turkish air space prompting it to scramble f-16 fighter jets. that news comes as russia continued its air strikes in syria. the russian defense ministry released this cockpit video, which it claimed shows its fighter jet hitting isis posiions in syria, including a command center, a training camp and an ammunition depot. but many of the locations that russia said it hit are in areas where there is no isis presence. the u.s. and its coalition partners say what russia is really doing in syria is propping up the syrian regime by launching strikes on those who oppose the government. the syrian president bashar al assad makes no distinction between the moderate opposition
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and isis, describing all of them as terrorists. in his first interview since moscow began launching air strikes, the syrian dictator said the russian campaign has to succeed or else the entire region faces destruction. but the u.s. says that peace in syria can only be achieved if assad leaves office. the four-year-long syrian civil war has now claimed more than a quarter of a million lives. many of them killed by their regime's indiscriminate bombing. president assad also claimed in the interview that u.s. air strikes have been counter productivity and helped to spread terrorism. norah? >> holly williams in turkey, thank you. a dentist is gunned down in her parking garage. ahead, how a new arrest has intensified the search for the
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woman accused of a,, announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by listerine. power to your mouth.
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good monday morning, i'm frank mallicoat. it is 7:26. here's what's happening. a man suspected of killing his own mother in fremont set to be arraigned later tomorrow, omar pettigan was arrested yesterday in kensington, it was tuesday when authorities found a woman dead in her apartment. release video shows a violent home invasion from san francisco, images last monday show a man struggling with an armed robber inside a garage on la playa street. the robber ran off. traffic ,,,,,,,,
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good morning from the traffic center, a couple of new problems to report, that you updated on this accident northbound 280 at saratoga, very busy conditions, northbound 101, reports of an action, to the south side slow as you work your way northbound 101, brake lights through morgan hill and through san jose to the peninsula. westbound 80, cartoonist bridge to the maze, 48 minute ride, you are backed up at the me to bay bridge, but sex and matteo pretty slow and go between 880 and 101. here's roberta. good morning, everyone, we have a look now at our live weather camera, nothing but sunny skies, albeit a little bit hazy there as the sun is official making an appearance. temperatures in the 50s and 60s as you head out the door, temperatures miles, the way they should be, except in the bay slightly below average, 62 the low ,,,,,,,,,,
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♪ they say it's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog and that certainly applies to jules. the 20-pound french bulldog showed no fear when these bears wandered into her front yard. one of the bears was estimated to weigh 100 pounds but they all ended up turning tail. jules owner says she is tougher than he ever thought. >> extra bark is what it's all about. >> i love two angles. we can watch the whole tape. >> thank goodness for security cameras. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, patrick kennedy is right here in studio 57 making some people
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uncomfortable this morning, starting with his own family. we will explain why because we are going to look at the former congressman's personal battles and the secrets he revealed about his parents' hidden struggles and why he hopes this may change things. plus new developments in the shooting death of a dallas dentist. police make another arrest but say the woman who hatched the plot is still on the loose. how a smartphone may play a role in the murder. that's is ahead. "wall street journal" reports on record atm feeses. a new survey says the average for using an atm is not tied to a customer's bank rose to $42.52. the higher fees are blamed, in part, on banks facing pressure to reduce other fees like overdraft charges. "the washington post" looks at the new supreme court term starting this morning. the court faces a string of political cases during an election year. some of the issues ahead is it legal to use racial preferences to encourage diversity?
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how far must government go to accommodate religious liberty and how far must a government go to restrict abortion right. ben bernanke thinks more should have gone to jail after the 2008 recession. he said people, not companies, were responsible for illegal actions. he said if regulators hadn't propped up the financial system, a good chances we have gone into a 10930 style depression. "the new york times" says the vatican dismissed a priest after he revealed he is gay. in an interview, the monsignor said he has a vatican partner. they say that is irresponsible and it came before a meeting with the bishops. the "new york post" reports on the mysterious death after doctor and mother found in a new york city doorway. one was found dead in an apartment building in manhattan
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chelsea neighborhood. it is unclear how she ended up at the building. right now, they are thinking the marks around her neck were from something previous. maybe not related to any of this. >> what a mystery, indeed. the kennedy family does not usually want to talk about its from post-traumatic stress after two of his brothers were for last night's "60 minutes." >> because you said nobody talked about this you were like zombies. you used that word, zombies. >> we were living in a limbo land where all of this chaos, this emotional turmoil was happening, and we were expected
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just to live through it. >> reporter: this is the first time a kennedy has been this open about the family's secret, these particular secrets. are you worried about how the family is going to react? >> i know how some of them are going to react because i've already got. >> reporter: have they seen the book? >> yeah, i showed them the book. >> reporter: they are not pleased? >> no. >> reporter: they are angry? >> they are angry. >> patrick kennedy's new memoir is "a common struggle." welcome to studio 57. >> thanks, charlie. >> some say an act of courage for you to do this and you understood some people in the family prefer these things not be said. where were you motivated to say this? >> well, we are at a point in time in american history and addiction and it's absolutely crucial to change public policy. look at the tragedies in umpqua. look at all of the other tragedies, all of them are a result of a failed mental health system. why is that allowed to continue? because we are all silent about
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these issues. how many people could have said that that shooter needed to get treatment or stay in treatment? nobody. because no one talks about these issues, charlie. how many of the other shooters should have been brought into treatment and made to stay in treatment? because they had a severe mental illness. no one said a word, charlie. there are consequences. we have 41,000 overdoses a year. we have nearly 42,000 suicides a year. this is a public health epidemic, and i'm telling my story. it's just a small story, in light of what most families face and that is you know someone in your family is suffering from alcohol addiction. you don't say a word. you know they have had psychosis but that is their personal issue. that is why i told this story so that others could tell their story. >> the irony is that your father was suffering and had made
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health care his primalegislativl and yet did not seek treatment. >> charlie, he came from a different generation, no offense. it was just not spoken of in his generation and it's tough for my generation to even break the silence, but we have to because i want to make sure for my children, and i'm having another child in about, you know, a couple of weeks. that they don't have to grow up with this fear that someone can talk to them if they have an issue. >> i applaud you for talking about this so let's talk about your own family's scenario. you write in the book your dad ted kennedy was probably an alcoholic. you confronted him and what did he do? >> well, he didn't want to talk about it. that's the common struggle. all of us want to talk about this with our families. our families don't want to talk about had
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happened? >> it was upon an anniversary and he really didn't want to talk about it, but he knew he had to say something. and what he said was very little. and that was the message i got is that we shouldn't talk about it. >> i want to talk about this. you talk about so openly and honestly in this book sort of the shame and the silence surrounding this. you open the book with 2006 the episode you're in your mustang convertible and you crash it on capitol hill. he had no idea you were so out of it. >> no. i was out of it on so many levels. >> you were on -- >> i had been to rehab five months before for opiad addiction andself medicated with other drug and alcohol after that. i thought i was okay. that is the delusion of this illness. >> you say -- you woke up in the morning and you were worried you might have killed someone. after you realized it was just a car crash, your father called you and you write in the book your father said i saw a picture of the car and i don't know
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where ythey are making such a big deal of this. it looked to me like it was july a little fender bender. >> it was a physically seeking a little fender bender, but it didn't speak to the larger truth. the matter was i was in crisis and i needed to deal with it in a way that wasn't sufficient to my earlier treatment. >> so when you came out publicly and admitted everything, i mean, that day, that next day admitted you're dixs, your father didn't want to talk to you, right? he was angry at you? >> yeah. he didn't feel good about me talking about my issues because it reflected poorly on everyone else. >> it's not you and your father. what i found interesting you bring your mother into this conversation. there is an episode you talk about where she is so high in a terry cloth robe and dignitaries are walking in and out of the house. what is the hardest revelation from this book their family has had to dealt with and what has hurt them the most? >> i think all of had is hurtful because it's the shame we don't want to discuss. that is the bottom line. so what i talk about is what we
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all know, but we don't say anything about. and so when you do say something about it, it ends up being hurtful. and i don't know what is more hurtful, because there is hurt in keeping this secret. it eats away at you. it will kill you if you don't talk about it. in fact, we say therapy is about speaking about the things that are post-traumatic stress. if you don't talk about it, you're in trouble. and my dad was in trouble because he was never given an opportunity to talk about the brutal murder of his two brothers. it's shocking to think that no one went up to him and said, ted, you suffered incomprehensible pain. if we went through what he went through today, he would have had a battery of mental health officials say, ted, listen. no one would have held it against him. in fact, they would have celebrated it. but he came from a different time. >> right. >> and he paid the price for it. >> we thank you so much for your candid answers, congressman
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kennedy. thank you. we will hear more of your story in our next hour. a common struggle goes on sale today. ahead a woman of accused of plotting for murder in dallas. she and the victim had a man in common. that is next. we will be right back. did you know only 1% of supplements have earned the usp mark... an independent certification for quality and purity? i recommend nature made because they've earned the most of any brand. nature made. the number 1 pharmacist recommended letter vitamin brand. ththere's no easy, way to do your job when you're sick. tough symptoms need alka-seltzer plus cold & cough it's four cold symptom fighters put you back in control. stay unstoppable. alka-seltzer plus. if you're an adult with type 2 diabetes and your a1c is not at goal with certain diabetes pills or daily insulin, your doctor may be talking about adding medication
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one month after 35-year-old kendra hatcher was executed in the parking garage of her luxury dallas apartment, authorities say they know who orchestrated the hit. >> she is a fugitive. wanted at this point for capital murder. >> reporter: according to an arrest warrant, 33-year-old brenda delgado hired love to kill the pediatric dentist and love is being held on 2.5 million dollars bail after being charged with capital murder on friday. >> mr. love rwas released and found in possession with the weapon believe to have killed dr. hatcher. >> have a shooting and looking for a black jeep cherokee swroo hatcher was gunned down on september 2nd as she parked her car. elene velazquez spoke up a friendship. >> she was happy with her life, her practice. everything was good for her. >> reporter: two days after the
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murder authorities arrested 23-year-old krirs tall cortez who told police delgado paid her 500 dollars to drive the get-away vehicle. delgado dated hatcher's boyfriend two years before the relationship ended this year. did it ever come up about him's his possible ex. >> no. nothing ever came up and why it was such a surprise. a shock to everybody that this happened. >> reporter: authorities are now on the hunt for delgado who faces charges of capital murder. >> i won't discuss or speculate as to where she might be or -- lent the vehicle to cortez.
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>> omar, thank you very much. a trick play at a college football game brought many to tears. we will show you the surprise on announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota, let's go place. ♪
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♪ this family was watching a video of a military dad on the big screen at saturday's florida gators football game. a few seconds later, chief warrant officer kristopher dinkins revealed his surprise. back from his fifth tour of duty in afghanistan and reunited with business family in front of 90,000 people on the swamp. the tears flowed from on the field and in the stands. >> look. . the son doesn't want to let him go! glad he is home safe! he is a true gator! >> they got to watch them win after that. >> i know.
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that's right. >> coming up, mars is finding plenty of life at the box office. ahead a reality check on matt damon's new movie "the martian." neil de grasse tivyson is with in studio 57. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ won't you see is in your heart ♪ ♪ oh, darling i would love to let you know ♪ adapt. and get smarter. every soldier. every unit. every day. not to keep up with change; but to drive it. nobody knows what problems tomorrow will bring. but we do know who will solve them. we love, love, chocolaty, creamy, with a little something extra.
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good morning, it's 7:56, i'm michelle griego. a setback for the city of san jose's efforts to get a major- league baseball team. this morning the u.s. supreme court said it would not look at the city's antitrust case against major-league ace ball. mlb has allowed the a's to relocate to the city because the san francisco giants claim santa clara county of its territory. a police officer is recovering after a burglary recovering after a burglary suspect paint in between c,,
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the drought is affecting all of us. recovering after a burglary suspect paint in between c,, at pg&e we've definitely put a focus on helping our agricultural customers through the drought. when they do an energy efficiency project and save that money they feel it right in their pocket book. it's exciting to help a customer with an energy efficiency project because not only are they saving energy but they are saving water. we have a lot of projects at pg&e that can help them with that and that's extremely important while we're in a drought. it's a win for the customer and it's a win for california. together, we're building a better california.
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good morning. busy as you work your way southbound 680 through pleasanton, stop and go conditions going away from 580. also southbound 680, before an accident blocking lanes, looks like you are still sluggish on 880, nimitz freeway pretty busy headed into hayward, northbound, then exiting cleared over to the right shoulder. looks like a lot of condition sluggish as you head westbound 192 between 880 and 101, 30 minutes out of your way from hayward toward foster city. taking a live look at conditions at the bay bridge. roberta? beautiful start to the day in san jose. good morning, everyone. currently nothing but blue skies and 57 degrees, winds are calm, humidity at 83%. 51 degrees in san francisco and livermore in mid 50s. later today across the north bay into the 70s, 70s common across the peninsula. in fact everyone is going to be so mild today, equally as mild tuesday, southwest ,,,,,,,,
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♪ esday, southwest ,,,,,,,, good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, october 5th, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including historic and deadly flooding in south carolina. but first, here is a look at today's "eye opener at 8." >> that's a vehicle overturned in the water. there are scenes like this scattered throughout this city. the worst may not be over yet. >> we are still out there searching, focusing more on potential people in the water, life boats and life rafts. >> the ship is gone, the altera sank during the hurricane. searchers found one identified body. >> authorities are investigating thursday's shooting as they search for answers, relatives
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wa mourn the victims. several people familiar with his deliberation say it's nearing a decision and it could come as soon as the next week to ten days. the damage done to the hospital was catastrophic. the damage done to the reputation of the u.s. air campaign is catastrophic as well. >> you came out publicly admitted your addiction, your father didn't want to talk to you, he was angry at. >> he didn't feel good me talking about his issues because it reflected poorly on everyone else. >> the secret service is wondering why we're investigating them and their shenanigans. >> the secret service leaked chaffetz's -- you only hate us because we won't let you sit with us. >> i'm charlie rose with norah
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o'donnell and vinita nair. gayle is off. south carolina's governor says this amount of rain comes around once in a thousand years. several cities have already broken rainfall records for october. one town received more than two feet of rain. floodwaters have killed seven people in the carolinas. david begnaud is in columbia where nearly a foot of rain has fallen. >> reporter: good morning. when we were hear about 12 hours ago, there was a football field size of water. the water was about four to five feet deep. the water has started to recede, but the road is starting to give way. take a look behind me. that's a car, wheels of a vehicle that has flipped into the river. as the water started to rise because one of the dams failed, the roof started to collapse and a sinkhole has formed. we are in a safe area, but
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already disaster zones all over the city that look just like this. the relentless rain that has fallen over the last 24 hours has led to what the governor has called a true catastrophe in town. the flooding has destroyed roads, people's cars and homes. people in columbia says the water isn't safe to drink for days if they even have water. a man trying to drive through streets failed. another man tried to rescue him but was also swept away. they were among 200 final who had to be rescued sunday alone. the national guard has been activated. more than 600 guardsmen are on duty right now and another 8,000 have been told to stand by. here is what's happening as the sun is starting to rise back out here in columbia, search and rescue teams are out and about looking for people who may need help, and they are going
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door-to-door. as the water is starting to recede, the calls for help are still coming in. about that water i told you, the governor says people here might not have it for four to five days. >> coast guard officials say a missing container ship sank in the bermuda triangle during hurricane joaquin. 'em faro had 33 crew members on board. searchers are still trying to find survivors. >> we have to assume as search planners, if the vessel did sink and the crew was able to abandon ship, they would have been abandoning ship into a category 4 hurricane, you're talking up to 140-mile-per-hour winds, seas at 50 feet, visibility basically as zero. those are challenging conditions to survive in. >> the ship disappeared thursday on its way from jacksonville, florida, to san juan puerto rico. searchers have located one body and a battered life raft.
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democratic presidential candidate hillary clinton will lay out new proposals this morning in new hampshire. her new rules would require high volume gun dealers like those at gun shows to follow the same rules as gun stores. she also wants to close a loophole that allows gun sales to be completed even if background checks are still under way. republican front-runner donald trump was asked sunday about gun control in the oregon college shooting. >> the gun laws have nothing to do with this. this isn't about guns, it's about mental illness. politically correct, we'll solve the problem, they'll be no problem, et cetera, et cetera. you're always going to have difficulties no matter how tight you run it. >> vice president joe biden also brought up gun control in a speech at the human rights campaign. >> the silent minority is stopping the passage of rational proposals, everything from limiting the size of a magazine
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to background checks. the president and i were told not to speak of this because we can't get it passed, that we shouldn't talk about things that won't pass in this congress. but i will continue to speak until it is passed. >> the vice president keeping quiet about his presidential plans. sources tell cbs news that biden could make an announcement within the next seven to ten days. family considerations remain one of biden's main concerns. some donors who recently met with the vice president told cbs news they get the impression he is going to run. a biden spokesperson had no comment. a 2-year-old ohio girl missing since friday night is safe this morning. a volunteer found rain peterson last night about half a mile from her home. the little girl was wet and cold but otherwise okay. >> i found baby rainn and she's alive. she's got flies all over her but
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she's okay. you're okay, sweetheart. i swear you're going to be okay. >> is that her i hear? >> she's crying. >> okay. hair her. oh, i just got goose bumps. >> oh, me, too. i couldn't give up on this kid. >> rainn and her two older brothers were staying with great grandparents. they noticed she was missing friday evening. she was taken to a hospital to be checked out. >> i have good bumps on that one, too. >> thank goodness she's okay. the new movie "the martian" had a huge opening weekend. its story could be planted in science non-fiction. birthday boy neal tyson is in
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emmy winner emmy winner claire danes tells us about her empowering role. >> i love she's such a
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protagonist and drags the action forward. it's very unusual to have that chance as a woman. in most fiction out there, most projects, it's really not the woman who -- >> and, therefore, this is really wonderful. >> right, right. >> that's ahead on "cbs this morning." ing." ♪ ♪ take a minute to concentrate ♪ americans. we're living longer than ever.
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♪ believe me just watch >> when i ♪ >> i've got to figure out a way to grow three years' worth of food here on a planet where nothing grows. lucki luckily, i'm a botanist. >> matt damon stars in "the martian," strapped on mars after his crew is hit by a sandstorm. the movie was number one at the box office, reaching ticket sales of $55 million. is the drama realistic about science? >> neil degrasse tyson is here.
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welcome back to studio 57. >> thank you. >> this movie gets the science right? >> it gets enough of the science right so that where it doesn't give it right, you give them the space to do it. >> what is the science they got right? >> a couple of things you might not have even noticed. it was subtle. there are occasions where matt damon, the lead character, he drops things to the ground, it actually falls to the ground more slowly because gravity on mars is only 40% of that on earth. they could have ignored that. i might give it to them because they're filming in a studio somewhere, how will the studio have 40% less gravity? that would be hard, if not impossible. but, in fact, they figured out how to film that. a couple other things, matt damon is lifting these heavy tanks. he's physically fit in the movie and they make sure you know that. there's always the ab shot.
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>> don't knock the ab shot. >> got to put in the ab shot. i'm okay with that. he's lifting the heavy things, you might think it's because he's physically fit. if it's a 200-pound tank, it weighs 80 pounds on mars. so they put thought into it. i applaud that effort, yes. but now, the sandstorm, a dust storm that kicks up and it terrorizes their spaceship. but the martian atmosphere is less than 1% the thickness of our atmosphere. so when the wind kicks up, it doesn't pick up heavy things. it can't. it picks up only very light dust. that's why they're called dust storms, so they exaggerated the impact of the dust storm on mars. i give that to them. we know mars has dust storms, even dust devils kick up mini tornadoes. i'm a fan of mark twain's edict,
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first get your facts straight and then distort them at your leisure. >> what's fascinating, no one pretends to be you, well, this detail is wrong? what struck you as something they really got wrong? >> what they got wrong, they did their homework on other things to get right to have earned -- i don't think of it as wrong. i figured it would be let's be a little loosey-goosey so it can be told in a more fun or intriguing way. they have the jet propulsion labs in pasadena, california, sharing control over a man's miss with houston. no, that doesn't happen. they're purely, purely space probes at jpl. but it enables two nasa centers to have this conversation. it's a geek culture, the mathematician and the orbital mechanics and the engineer all trying to solve problems.
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one of my favorite aspects of the film was that science is its own character in a sense in this film because of the drama, the suspension, the emotions, the pride, envy, all the normal characteristics we think of human dynamics, all happen through the lens of science. >> last week nasa announced that there was flowing water on mars, same time this movie is coming out, the significance of that? >> we've always known at some time there was water on the surface through these dry meandering river beds, river deltas and floodplains. the question is there water ground or is it froze then if it's liquid, that's great to know. nasa has irsu, if you know there's water on a destination
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planet, you don't have to bring any with you. that greatly improves your -- reduces the launch costs. >> does it increase the likelihood there's some kind of life there? >> that's clearly the next question. one of nasa's mantras is follow the water. what's driving us is the search for life, be it microbial or otherwise. if you have liquid water oozing out the side of a crater wall on mars, you want to go digging in there and see if there are microbes. >> what does that mean? >> one of the great secrets that biologists don't share with you behind closed doors is in spite of the diversity of life in the world, we all have dna in common. in fact, we are a sample of one. can you really understand your subject if you're dealing with a sample of one? that's why the beginning of every biology book, what is life? does it require sunlight or energy, does it require liquid water or just a liquid? you can't answer those deep questions until you have another
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example of life. if we found life on mars, it would completely transform biology. even as an astrophysicist i consider the search for life in the universe to be one of the greatest and highest goals in all branches of science. >> thank you for spending your birthday with us. >> yeah, happy birthday! >> my assistant cleared the whole day and then you guys has to call and ask about mars. >> what a way to start the day. hillary clinton goes behind the bar trading jokes with her saturday nightlife alter ego. you don't want to miss it. that's next.
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♪ we know campaign 2016 is in full force when the first presidential candidate shows up on "saturday night live." hillary clinton appeared in a full sketch this weekend with indicate mckinnon who plays hillary clinton on "snl." they had fun playing the gop front-runner and his wife. >> okay, because i hear your numbers are down a little this week. >> mexicans are stealing our children. >> tell us your plan for the
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economy. >> i get in there and taxes go down and everybody gets a job. salaries go way up. we build a wall. it's huge! over in china, they are going to say, now, that's a wall! >> all anyone wants to talk about is donald trump. >> donald trump? isn't he the one that is, like, "ugh, you're all losers"? i'm just an ordinary citizen who believes the keystone pipeline will destroy our environment. >> i agree with you there. it did take me a long time to decide that, but i am against it. >> it really is great how long you've supported gay marriage. >> yeah. i could of supported it sooner. >> well, you did it pretty soon. >> could have been sooner. >> fair point. >> it's fun to see that, you snow fun to see politicians making fun of themselves. about time for that. >> they did it very well.
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>> they did. coming up, with we will talk more about patrick good monday morning, everyone. it 8:25, i'm frank mallicoat. some headlines at this hour. a police officer hospitalized after a car burglary suspect pinned him between cars in san francisco. happened this morning. the suspect was arrested. two other people were taken in for questioning. a man suspected of killing his mother in fremont to be arraigned, omar pettigren was arrested, it was tuesday when police found a dead woman in her 60s while doing a well check in her apartment. coming up in the next half hour, a conversation with emmy hour, a conversation with emmy award actress, ,,,,,,,,
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hour, a conversation with emmy award actress, ,,,,,,,, it took joel silverman years to become a master dog trainer. but only a few commands to master depositing checks at chase atms. technology designed for you. so you can easily master the way you bank. welcome back to the kpix traffic center, delays at the golden gate bridge, police wrapping up an accident causing a bit of a delay, traffic and flow better, extra volume but looking at conditions in and out of san francisco itself, delays along 280 extension as you head toward kings street, also 280, accident involving a central, watch out for that
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extra delay. metering lights on coming off the east shore freeway, northbound 880, the nimitz freeway to oakland backed up and southbound, we have reports of an overturned vehicle possibly blocking lanes, keep your eye out for that as you head at the door westbound 92, stop and go as you head toward 101. very busy, roberta? i have a beautiful you this morning, check this out, our live weather camera looking out the direction of the golden gate bridge. blue skies, currently temperatures in the 50s and 60s, 61 degrees in san francisco. later today, temperatures spot on for where they should be this time of year, should be 81 in concorde, 77 degrees, 70 san francisco, up to near 70 in pacific a period into the santa clara county, good morning, east bay, number stopping often the high 70s and a few low 80s, 80 degrees in black hawk. 60s and 70s across the north bay
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, more from former congressman patrick kennedy. he's in our toyota green room and we will talk about his family's reaction about the secrets he revealed with the struggles with addiction. >> claire danes takes us inside the new season of "homeland." can she find peace for nonstop excitement? >> a former teenager injured by a shark and bitten in the left hand while surfing in new smyrna beach on sunday. the boy was able to punch away the shark. he is the second one bitten by a shark there in two weeks.
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bradley tillden admitted his bag disappeared on a trip to washington last week. alaska air guarantees to deliver your luggage 20 minutes of reaching the gate. if it's not there you get 2,500 reward miles or a 25 dollar credit toward a future flight. tillden did not say whether he took either one. >> put a tracer on your bag at a minimum. "the new york times" says the daughter of president obama is narrowing down colleges. obama said he told malia not to stress too much about getting into one particular college. >> his other piece advice was keep your grades up until you get in and after that, just make sure you pass. >> my guess is she won't have too much trouble getting into .
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it is a story most of his family members did not want him to tell. >> i am an addict and israeli always be an addict. i'm an addict in recovery. i count my days. it's one day at a time. >> reporter: is it hard? >> yes. >> reporter: every day? >> oh, yeah. some somedays more than others but today is a good day. >> reporter: welcome, patrick kennedy. >> thanks. >> i want to technology this conversation. your brother ted kennedy has come out saying he is heartbroken you have chosen to write what inaccurate and unfair portrayal of family. what is your reaction to his statement? >> so i told this story about my life, which i can't separate from my family's life because it's important that we -- all of us break the silence and the
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shame surrounding these issues. now i don't pretend it's going to be easy. as and you've seen, it definitely provokes a reaction and that is what most people are fearful of when they speak out, is they are worried about breaking the family code, they are worried about being disloyal, and nobody wants to be that. i think my portrayal of my father is very loving. i talk about an ark and, frankly, talking about his challenges does not take away from the fact that he was the greatest united states senator in modern history. it's not the lifetime of this country. as testified by all of the senate colleagues, senate democrats. the notion that i'm somehow at all challenging his place in history is just so far-fetched but i can understand personally, it can be difficult to hear these things. it was difficult for me to write these things, norah, you know? >> irreparable damage or something that can be cured by
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time, splitting the family? >> no. i think that time -- i'm expecting, as i said, my wife and i are expecting a fourth child in december. i think time moves on. i think there is too many other things that we really feel good about our relationship over and i think, like my dad -- you know, my dad, first, was not happy about my speaking out when i did the mental health parody and bill. when he came over as we were passing the bill, he came over to the house floor and tapped me on the leg and he said, "patrick, keep going and you're doing something important. >> this is after he talked to me, quote/unquote, about family issues that i shents have been talking about. yet, at the end, he helped me pass this mental health parody and mental health addiction act. >> lots of americans watched your dad living with brain cancer knowing he was going to guy and wonderful pictures sitting on the porch with his dog next to him. did he talk at that time, knowing that the end was not
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that far away, about regrets, about choices, about dreams? >> well, he shared something really personal to me and that is what he said to me, patrick, i hope you don't feel like you have to run for office. -- to be okay. i mean, that is -- charlie, not -- when it's okay for you not to run for office and still be okay? >> a lot of members of the family chosen not to run. >> that's true. >> or pulled away from politics. but about his own life, i mean, here was this man considered by many to be the greatest united states senator, thought about the presidency, had chappaquiddick. had lived with the agony of his brother's death. >> that's right. >> did he talk about that? >> no. he talked about how great it would be to have us go out for a sail and to be around when one of the priests would come over
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and say mass, to be at dinnertime. he said to me at the convention, could you come and stay with me for a while? >> wow. >> after. i knew that i had would be cutting in my time in congress. he said i would just like to have you around. that meant more to me than anything else. he shared with me in my life, because i never imagined that he would actually kind of -- not only physically need to lean on me because he was, obviously, being affected by his willness but that emotionally he could say i need you around me and that really moved me, charlie. i didn't have a family at that point in my life and i knew how important to my dad having his children, his wife, his best friends around him at the end of his life made all of the difference in the world. all of the laws in the world did not keep him company. knowing all of the celebrities in the world did not fill his soul. at the end of his days, it was having his family and friends around him that made all of the difference. >> you wrote this book with stephen freed.
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not just to break a family secret or code but you write it because there are legislative issues at stake. sflan how ha explain how harder it is to get the care you want. >> charges for mental illnesses, as compared to other mental illnesses, what we need to do is make sure how we monitor insurance companies limit care through utilization management. that is the secret disguise of how do we keep people from getting the treatment they need. when they still do that, they know they can do that because we are not going to stand up to the insurance companies because we feel so ashamed to have these illness to begin with. that's what we need to go after. the administration needs to call on the insurance companies to disclose how they do utilization management in the practice of medicine. it's required by federal law but she hasn't done it yet. and we are going to continue to knock at her door and say she must do it if she is to
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implement the federal mental health parody and acquisition act. >> how do you want the conversation about addiction to change? >> it's about treating the whole person. body, mind. so far as the body is concerned, we are ignoring what we know for treatment that will give people a chance to get the mental health care and, ultimately, the spiritual conditioning to stay in long-term sobriety. but when health care refuses to reimburse adequate stays for eating disorders and all other kinds of addictions, substance abuse and alcoholism we are doing a disservice to ourselves because we are all paying for this. suicide rate is twice the homicide rate in this country. we are asleep in this country. we have to break the silence. >> thanks, patrick. >> thank you. >> thank you. coming up, claire danes tells charlie why her
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complicated homeland character is so much like herself. plus the unusual way the good morning from the kpix weather center, nothing but wall-to-wall sunshine, clear skies from the beaches into the eastern portion of our bay area, looking out at mt. diablo, wow, lots of great visibility. currently we have air temperatures in the 50s and 60s, 60 in oakland, 61 in san -- highs today from the high 60s all the way to the high 70s, even of the low 80s. warm-up begins on wednesday. my name is jamir dixon and i'm a locate and mark fieldman for pg&e. most people in the community recognize the blue trucks
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as pg&e. my truck is something new... it's an 811 truck. when you call 811, i come out to your house and i mark out our gas lines and our electric lines to make sure that you don't hit them when you're digging. 811 is a free service. i'm passionate about it because every time i go on the street i think about my own kids. they're the reason that i want to protect our community and our environment, and if me driving a that truck means that somebody gets to go home safer, then i'll drive it every day of the week. together, we're building a better california.
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they are throwing their weight around. hostage taking. it's kind of scary. >> let me guess.
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[ inaudible ]. >> honestly, no. it was a big adventure. but i was different then. >> that is a sneak peek at the next episode of "homeland." season five this morning is off and running on showtime, a division of cbs. claire danes plays carrie mathson. we spoke with emmy winning actress did the show's longevity and her role in its success. so, "home land" season five is back. >> yeah. we are old! we get around for a while. i can't, like, believe how many years in we are but it still feels very electric and vital. >> reporter: so where is carrie now? >> carrie is actually happy. amazingly. >> i'd like to you meet my head of security, carrie.
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>> she is in the private sector and she is working for benevolent billionaire, philanthropist and she has a lovely boyfriend. >> who is a lawyer? >> who is lawyer in the same firm and they are living together and she is very connected to her baby. yeah, there is about, you know, five minutes of domestic bliss. >> reporter: what do you love about her as a character? >> she's just so incredibly dynamic. she is so many things. >> reporter: vulnerable? smart? >> vulnerable, smart, assertive. >> reporter: promiscuous? >> promiscuous, brave. kinds of a super hero. >> reporter: sure. she seems to be smarter than everybody else. >> she is always right! it's very enjoyable to say that! it's so very far from the truth in my own reality. so incredibly intuitive and has these amazing insights and she
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can connect faster than anyone else. the green pen is what i want. >> and blue is what is available. >> green! green is necessary. it doesn't make sense if it isn't green and it's really not an unreasonable request. i thinker condition is really relevant to her general character and the show at large. >> you're out of line. it's my home. >> i'm going to ask you with or without your approval. >> take your boxes because you will need them when you clean out your desk. >> reporter: what does it bring beyond the character to you? you've talked about how great it is the past -- >> yeah. well, he is such a powerful performer, mandy. >> you're suggesting planet intelligence? >> when we did the first reading of the pilot, obviously, we were all very new to each other and as soon as we started our first scene, it was just clear that there was this relationship there already that we just kind
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of walked into! it's so fun, because, obviously, carrie is a fast talker. you know, she is the kind of very high frequency and she is the opposite of that. >> here is what is interesting. one of your doctors said when you were 13 it was so scary for them. >> it's sort of like when you're letting me drive your car, i loved it! that is very nice to hear. >> reporter: you don't know what it is about you that makes somebody scary? >> no. >> reporter: it was a commanding presence even then. >> it's funny because, yes, i was a kid actor but i never thought of myself as that. >> reporter: he thought yourself as a regular kid? >> i was an actor who happened to be a kid. >> reporter: oh, i see! not a kid who happened to be an actor? >> exactly. >> reporter: and in your heart and soul everything about you was an actor. >> yeah. >> reporter: how does this, being where you are, get better as an actress, other than simply doing it? >> i think there is -- i mean, there is no other on way to get
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better than to do it. >> reporter: at your level? >> yes. it's really important to experiment with different genres. different styles. are you happy? >> yeah. >> different mediums. >> move or i'll do it! i swear i'll shoot you! it's essential that you work on stories that are layered and dynamic and can take you places. >> reporter: what is the relationship between carrie and claire? >> the differences are more obvious than similarities. we both love our work, it sounds ridiculous, but, you know, we both have this gift of being equally attracted to our respective lines of work, although a lot of role playing involved with those. a lot of travel. >> reporter: that's right. >> and i think i have a kind of
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linear focus in general. i can be quite driven and i can be very hard on myself. >> reporter: really? >> and i think she also does things too. >> what do you want? >> your help in getting food and medical supplies to people in the camp. i love that she is such a protagonist and has to drive the action forward. it's very unusual to have that chance as a woman. and most fiction out there, most projects, you know, it's really not the woman who -- >> reporter: and, therefore, this is really wonderful? >> right. >> reporter: right? >> right. it is. it is. i cannot believe my luck. i cannot believe my luck that i have this much room to play. >> wow! what a great interview. she is terrific. >> she is. god, i love her. >> i never would have thought about her character in that way but so true, she really does drive everything. >> right. the character does and so does she. she drives her life. people were intimidated by her when she was a 13-year-old
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actress. she was that confident. >> all right. new season of "homeland." i still got to catch up from last night. oscars a man with win the prize. that is next in scruff on "cbs this morning." ,,,, ♪
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♪ do not expect these guys to shave this morning. 65 americans took on facial hair photos from nearly two other countries at the world's beard and mustache championships. >> look at that one! >> a third of the prize is categories like best mustache, whiskers and beard and goatee. one of those winners just happened to be beard. wow. different things for amusement. there you go. >> you can see more of my
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conversation with claire danes tonight on my pbs program.,,,, this is the dawn of an old day. because at&t and directv are offering yesterday's technology, today. tv from space. [whispered] space as long as it's not too rainy. [whispered] rainy or windy. [whispered] windy or there isn't a branch in the way. [whispered] branchy welcome to the moment no one's been waiting for. the fastest internet and the best tv experience
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is already here with x1. only from xfinity. san fwhile this parking loting lies still. life, proposition d and mission rock will create a new neighborhood right here with 40% affordable housing, 8 acres of parks and open space, all connected to public transit, and generate $25 million a year in revenue for san francisco. vote yes on d to turn this into this.
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♪ get a major league st a short time good morning, everyone. i'm frank mallicoat, 8:55, here's what's happening around the bay. a setback on the city of san jose's effort to get a major- league baseball team in town, a short time ago the u.s. supreme court said it would not look at the city's antitrust case against major-league baseball. mlb refused to allow the a's to relocate because the giant claimed santa clara county. a police officer hospitalized after a car burglary suspect pinned him in san francisco this morning, the suspect arrested, two other people taken in for questioning. fleet week and you can't ask for better skies and we've got today. >> that's right. for the past 20 years, we would have one day that is foggy, the
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other day sunday, this entire week, blue skies for the blue angels flying and tour ships, we are going to be fog free, nothing but blue skies as we take a birds eye view of alcatraz and angel island where currently the temperatures are in the low 60s. 68 degrees santa rosa, 57 san jose, 57 concorde. later today numbers taking up where they should be this time of year, 60s and 70s across the beaches and bay, 70s peninsula, high 70s away from the bay into our inland areas, high temperature 81, similar conditions tuesday, southwest win 5 to 10 both days, and warming trend kick starts wednesday and it's fleet week with nothing but sunny skies all the way through sunday. enjoy your day. before you go, gianna with traffic up next.
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good morning from the traffic center, still busy on 880 northbound heading into oakland. lots of red showing on the sensors, speeds dipping under 15 miles an hour in some spots. northbound 880 will take you 35 minutes to go from 238 to the maze, southbound at 80, still a struggling to hayward. looking at the golden gate bridge, had some police activity, they cleared it up quickly and you can see traffic moving nicely in both directions through the golden gate. the san mateo bridge still back up 880 to 101, at least a 30
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minute right as you work your way out of hayward. have a great day.
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wayne: yes, whoo! - money! wayne: hey! jonathan: it's a trip to iceland! wayne: you got the big deal of the day! - let's make a 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," thanks for tuning in. it's me, wayne brady, and we're about to make a deal. who wants to make a deal? let's go! (cheers and applause) who wants to make this deal? erin, erin, come here, everybody else, have a seat,

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