tv CBS This Morning CBS October 13, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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7:26. happy birthday to jerry rice. 53 today. >> wow. >> i love that man. take care, everybody. we will see you at noon time. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." debate day for the democrats. hillary clinton's rivals target her while she warms up by attacking donald trump. cbs news investigates contamination of bluebell ice cream. workers tell us the company ignored sanitary conditions. playboy looks to the future by turning its back on fully nude photos. we begin with a look at today's eye-opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> these are other three, how hard do they go in attacking bernie sanders and/or hillary
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clinton? >> the first thing they need to do is show up. >> hillary clinton's private e-mail server was vulnerable. >> malaysian airlines flight mh-17. >> two firefighters were killed and two others hurt in a building collapse in kansas city. >> they saved two civilians. >> iran's parliament has passed a bill approving the nuclear deal. >> the royals have forced a game 5. >> that call was absolutely scorched. >> the mets embarrasses los angeles. >> they boo chase utley. >> a florida woman arrested while live on periscope driving drunk. >> in tennessee, a bride and groom took a detour on their way
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to their reception, both emts, responding to a wreck on their big day. >> he fights to the goal line! the steelers win! >> fans of "the price is right" may have noticed a brand-new absolutely breathtaking male model. needless to say, i crushed it. >> and all that matters. >> a national man is being called a hero after running into this burning home to save a dog moments before the roof collapsed. >> around here, dogs are family. >> on "cbs this morning." >> i can see a situation where he pulls in in that yellow corvette and says, let's do this thing. >> anyone could join in. why not jesse ventura? the reunited cast of "family meri matters"? >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places.
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welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is on assignment so anthony mason is here. >> good morning. >> the five democratic candidates will meet on stage for the first time. hillary clinton goes in with a clear lead in opinion polls. her challengers will try to convince voters she is not the inevitable candidate. >> nancy cordes is at the scene of tonight's debate in las vegas. >> reporter: good morning. it will be interesting to watch because up until now these five candidates have more or less taken a hands-off approach to one another. that will be harder to do on the debate stage. some of them may not want to do it. while clinton herself is looking to reestablish her dominance over the field and focus on the gop. clinton arrived in las vegas last night and headed straight to the trump international hotel. joining a labor protest outside. >> some people think mr. trump is entertaining. i don't think it's entertaining
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when somebody insults immigrants, insults women. >> reporter: just down the block she'll be joined on stage tonight by vermont senator bernie sanders, former maryland governor martin o'malley, jim webb and lincoln chafee. >> there will be big disagreements. >> reporter: appearing via satellite at a new hampshire event, sanders called for a reasoned exchange of ideas. >> let's treat each other civilly and not try to demonize people. >> reporter: in other words, let's not emulate the rep chance of. >> i never attacked him on his looks. believe me, there's plenty of subject matter right there. >> reporter: trump argued monday, no fireworks make for a boring debate. >> it's going to hard to watch. >> reporter: governor o'malley, who has struggled to break through, has called for more than the six debates that are scheduled. >> this race is really just beginning for the democratic party. by this time eight years ago, we
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had had nine debates. >> reporter: nine on the way to a total of more than 20. mo elleithee, a spokesman for hillary clinton's last bid, says she's sure to be asked about the conflict with syria. >> if it's an evolution of your thinking, say it. but if it's too cute by half, other candidates will remark on it. >> reporter: the associated press is reporting this morning that her e-mail server at her home in chappaqua, new york, was hooked to the internet in a way that made it vulnerable to hacking. >> "face the nation" moderator john dickerson is with us in washington. john, good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> is this debate hillary clinton's to lose? >> yes, because obviously she's at the top of the polls in the democratic also, but i think also because she has the biggest
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negative story lines that are out there. the reason that matters is if you look at the debates in the past, the candidates who have lost are the ones where there was a preexisting story line that was negative and they did something to fall into that. and so she among all of the candidates has -- there are those concerns that we saw in our poll about people that worried she's honest and trustworthy. if there's a moment that attaches to that existing story line, that could be a problem for her. >> john, you heard nancy cordes mention the e-mail issue. how big a role do you think that's likely to play tonight and what can hillary clinton do to finally put it to rest? >> it could play a role. there is that new information today about possible security breaches. it's one of those moments. she's given many different answers on that question. she's been contrite and not contrite. he's been tacking republicans for politicizing the issue. where will she be tonight? that will be one of those moments where it may have to do with the e-mail question, but it may speak to that larger question of honest and
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trustworthy. in our most recent poll, 60% of general election voters didn't think she was honest and trustworthy. that's not a good number for her. >> they keep showing this empty podium on stand by just in case joe biden decides to get in. everyone thinks that's high unlikely. do you think he will be watching the debate tonight and will that affect his decision on whether he gets in or not? >> i'm surprised they don't have a hole in the roof for him to possibly rappel down. the decision is still based on the reporting. it's what's in his heart, that's what's going to matter. down the road, if he were to get in the race, that emotional piece is important. but clearly if hillary clinton has a very bad night, that would increase calls for joe biden to get in. but, you know, one thing that's also in our polling that showed up, there's not exactly a groundswell right now for joe biden. he's only gone up six points since august in the polling. hillary clinton still beats him by 30 points among democrats
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nationally. bernie sanders has done more in the polls over the summer than joe biden has. so the polling doesn't exactly show that they're beating down the door for him to run. >> john, he spent the weekend in delaware meeting with advisors. all reports were that he was going to make a decision in the next couple of days. has that the been postponed? >> he's trying to see if there is a pathway for him to run. i don't know what the timeline is. you talk to people close to him and some of them have no idea, in fact all of them don't. we'll just have to wait for joe to make uphis mind. >> john dickerson, thanks so much. investigators in the netherlands announced they have determined a russian-made missile brought down malaysian airlines flight mh-17. the dutch safety board says a surface to air missile destroyed the aircraft. the shootdown over eastern ukraine on july 2014 killed everybody on
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charlie d'agata is in london with more. charlie, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. russia has already said it doesn't dispute dutch findings that a missile brought the plane down. the disagreement is about the age of the missile used, and that ukrainian forces, not russia, was responsible for the deaths last year. for months in a hangar in holland, investigators have been reconstructing mh-17 piece by piece. this morning the dutch safety board confirmed that the plane was brought down by a russian made buk surface to air missile. >> flight mh-17 crashed as a result of a detonation on the left side of the airplane. >> reporter: they rebuilt the cockpit and fuselage from the wreckage, deploying the same techniques used in the investigation of the plane that
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exploded over lockery, scotland in 2008. all 298 people on board were killed. the casualties of a war they had nothing to do with, being waged 33,000 feet below. the vast majority were dutch nationals, which is why that country has taken the lead in the investigation. most everybody except russia blames russia, that the missile was fired either by its own forces or the separatists it backs. but earlier this morning, the russian company that makes the missile believed responsible contended the plane was shot down by a missile launched by ukrainian forces from government-held territory. the dutch finding stopped short of naming which side pulled the trigger, bringing little comfort to these heartbroken relatives who may now know the what and the why but are still asking who. the answer to that question will
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be down to the findings of a separate criminal investigation also led by the dutch, which won't be complete until the end of this year or maybe the beginning of next. gayle? >> charlie, thanks. this morning iran's parliament approved the controversial nuclear deal struck with the u.s. and other world powers. the agreement still needs to be ratified by iran's 12-member guardian counsel of senior clerics in tehran. 161 lawmakers present voted in favor of the deal. it's designed to reign in iran's nuclear program. in exchange, global powers will lift economic sanctions. we're following a new wave of deadly attacks in israel this morning. police blame palestinians for shootings and stabbings. johnathan vigliotti is in london following the story. >> reporter: good morning. at least three israelis were killed and 16 injured in the four separate attacks, the most serious waves of incidents in the months-long string of
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violence in the region. two palestinians stormed a bus, stabbed, and shot at people, almost simultaneously there was a stabbing attack at a bus stop in another part of the city. meanwhile officials in one city reported two separate stabbing attacks this morning, also carried out by palestinians. both attackers were apprehended by police. since the jewish new year last month at least seven israelis and 27 palestinians have been killed in the almost daily violence. it was stirred in part by muslim anger over increasing jewish visits to the al aqsa mosque in jerusalem. israeli and palestinian officials have called for calm but the violence shows no sign of letting up. palestinians have declared a, quote, day of rage across the region. >> johnathan, thank you. two kansas city firefighters killed in the line of duty were outside an apartment building where the roof had partially collapsed. the men were trapped when more of the building gave way. they had just rescued at least
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two people. it was very hard for the fire chief to talk about it. >> the deceased firefighters are identified as 17-year veteran -- firefighter leggio leaves a wife and many immediate family members. firefighter mesh leaves a wife, four young daughters, as well as many family members. >> you hear the pain in his voice. other firefighters were hurt. the last time a kansas city firefighter died in the line of duty was seven years ago. this morning 15 members of a pro-confederate battle flag group are facing a trial after a georgia grand jury indicted them on terrorism charges. videos of a july confrontation involving a black family hosting a child's birthday party and members of the, quote, respect the flag, drew thousands of viewers when it was posted online. mark strassmann is at the county
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courthouse in georgia. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the 15 people indicted, ten are men and five are women. several of them have already been booked in douglas county. if convicted they all could face up to 15 years behind bars. cellphone video shows several pickup trucks flying the confederate flag. the trucks stopped near a home where a black family was hosting a child's birthday party. police received conflicting reports of what happened next but a heated argument began. partygoers say members of a group called respect the flag had weapons, used racial slurs, and threatened them. >> we'll see y'all again. >> reporter: a member of the group placed the blame on the people at the party, saying they started yelling at the convoy and throwing rocks. s douglas county district attorney investigated the incident. >> on friday, october 9th of this year, a douglas county grand jury handed down an
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indictment, charging members of the group known as respect the flag. >> reporter: friday's indictment charged 15 people with terroristic threats and violating the state's street gang terrorism and prevention act. according to the southern poverty law center, a civil rights group, respect the flag was formed over the summer to protest calls to remove the confederate flag from public spaces around the country. the outcry was sparked by a june massacre at a church in south carolina. nine people were killed in a church basement. a month later, the flag was removed from the grounds of south carolina's state capitol. >> have a good day! >> reporter: on monday, the host of the july party, described the altercation in a statement, saying, these people intimidated and threatened us just for being who we are. we tried reaching out to several of the indicted members of the group respect the flag but were unable to reach anyone for
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comment. >> thanks, mark. two giants in the beer industry have a huge takeover on top this morning. anheuser-busch inbev, which makes budweiser, made a series of offers to buy miller. if it goes through, the $106 billion buyout would create the world's largest brewer with nearly 31% of global beer sales. it comes one day after the tech industry's biggest merger ever by price, dell is buying data storage company emc for $67 billion. the "new york times" reports that dozens of merger deals this year already up to nearly $3.5 trillion. this morning new york mets fans are celebrating a statement convi victory by their team. it was a big old statement. this followed a controversy in game 2 when a collision knocked a mets shortstop out of the playoff.
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vladimir duthiers has more. people can't wait, vlad. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. last night's victory over the los angeles dodgers couldn't have come at a better time. if game two's loss was all about the dodgers adding insult to injury, game three's catch phrase would certainly be revenge never tasted so sweet. >> infielder ruben tejada. >> reporter: sporting a cane and an obvious limp, ruben tejada emerged to cheers. the same couldn't be said for the newly crowned villain of new york, chase utley. utley broke tejada's leg with this aggressive slide over the weekend and was suspended for it.
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the mets defeated the dodgers in a 13-7 rout that puts them a single win away from the national league championship series. over 700 miles away, on the north side of chicago, in a neighborhood starving for a world championship, the cubs launched six home runs by six different players, battering their midwest rivals, the st. louis cardinals, to take the series lead. in houston, the as tows were six -- astros were six outs away from advancing. the governor tweeted, congrats to the astros. later in the game, the astros collapsed, giving up five runs in a loss to the royals, tying the serious at two games apiece. now, the mets can close out the series tonight with a win right here at citi field. they'll have to get past
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three-time cy young winner clayton kershaw, one of the best pitchers in the game, norah. >> vlad, thank you. you stayed up to watch, didn't you? >> i was celebrating as i was falling asleep. >> those boos for mr. utley were intense. >> you don't mess around with new york fans. coming up, did an ice cream maker allow its factory to become a breeding ground for bacteria? new details in a cbs news inve good morning from the kpix weather center. it barely cooled down last night. we are still pretty much in the 50s and 60s after a record high yesterday of 98 in gilroy. 50s and 60s out the door and later today a degree or two warmer than yesterday with 88 in san francisco to 99 degrees in gilroy. winds will be variable at five to ten miles per hour, cloudy
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studio? oprah, right here in studio 57. he's talking about the golden gate bridge. tod, good tuesday morning everyone. i am frank mallicoat. at 7:26, here is what's happening. a step forward to build a suicide barrier on the golden gate bridge. bridge officials will start taking bids from construction firms. a contractor could be chosen as soon as march. >> three santa clara county correctional officers accused of beating an inmate to death are expected to enter pleas today. the three are charged with murdering michael tyre. >> an investigation, former workers at a blue bell ice cream plant alleged management ignored complaints about unsanitary conditions at the facility. jim axal rod will have more on
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good morning. let's jump to the bay bridge where traffic continues to be slow and go. it's just crawling along. coming off the east shore freeway, it is sluggish with 47 minutes on your drive time. we are backed up into the maze. north 101 at mckee, traffic alert is canceled. damage is done. you are really backed up. traffic is slow to the peninsula and drive times are in the red. >> good morning. we are taking a look at sun up over the tri valley. we are looking at people out of the livermore valley. the skies are clear and the air temperature after a high temperature yesterday of 95 in livermore, it is currently 64 degrees. the temperature today is going up again into the 80s at the beaches, 90s in inland areas, cloudy and cooler for your wednesday. ,,,,,,,,
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. you said a year ago the united states of america leads, we're the indispensable nation. mr. putin seems to be challenging that heardship. >> in what way? [ laughter ] >> did you guys see that face? i think he just got obama's stank face. can we see that in slow motion? >> the stank face. i like it. >> anything can look like stank in slow motion. larry will more, that was good. coming up, ice cream melting on
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the floor, water leaking from the roof, contamination that may have been trucked into some of the explosive allegations this morning in the massive blue bell ice cream recall. jim axelrod with new reporting in a "cbs news" investigation. plus "playboy" unveils a plan to make it more accessible and intimate. why that means it is turning the page on its most famous feature fully nude women, that's ahead. time to show this morning's headlines, coalition airstrikes killed more islamic militants since previously thought since the campaign began last year. 20,000 isis fighters have been killed. the u.s.-led bombing campaign has rattled the militants, but the size of their force remains about the same, between 20 and 30,000 fighters. charleston's post on the recovery from historic floods the southbound lanes of i-95 opened yesterday. northbound lanes could reopen as early as this morning. elsewhere, there is a whole lot of damage.
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the government is promising to rebuild roads and 94 bridges remain remain closed. the airlines is removing and inspecting devices from its planes. the alaska flight to seattle was diverted to buffalo monday because of the incident. 187 people were on board the plane. there were no injuries. the los angeles times covers the firing of football coach steve sarkisan, it followed a series of erratic behavior. earlier this year, he apologized after appearing to be drunk at a pep rally. he was acting strangely at a team meeting sunday and leaving before practice. and the state in columbia, south carolina, reports on a decision by football coach steve purchasier to retire. he told his south carolina team last night he is retiring immediately. it is not clear why. the team has only two wins if six games this season.
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spurriers and game cocks all time winningest coach with 86 victories. new information this morning in a "cbs news" investigation of blue bell ice cream. former workers claim management ignored complaints about dangerous conditions at their factory. the texas facility is linked to a wisteria outbreak that made ten people sick. three people died, jim axelrod spoke with those employees. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, blue bell was the number three brand in the nation sold in 23 states. after a wisteria outbreak was linked to the product. the company recalled the production recalling 8 million gallons of ice cream. we met two workers who believe it could have been all avoid. ♪ oh, blue bell the best ice cream in the country cftc. >> reporter: it has a devoted following. when it returned to shelves in
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after a recall do you wisteria contamination, the supporters rejoiced. >> i think it's a story that needs to be told. >> reporter: terry schultz who worked at the texas blue bell factory says there is another side to the story. >> a lot of things were overlooked and passed on in favor of volume and expansion. i think that's the part people aren't seeing. >> reporter: schultz worked this floor for seven months leading up to the shutdown. he says the machines there were old and would often malfunction. >> sometimes the machines would go haywire. the product would continually run through the conveyor belt and drop right off onto the floor. >> reporter: schultz says workers would leave the ice cream pooling on the floor, creating an environment where bacteria can flourish. he complained to supervisors, nothing was done. >> the response i got at one point is that all you are going to do is come in here and bitch every everything. >> what do you think his message
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was? >> it was more important of complaining. >> it was a culture of keep your mouth shut and do the job. >> it's all about the money. >> five year blue bell veteran operated a feeder in a different part of the plant. one way they saved money is reuseing cardboard packages known as sleeves. >> some of them you know would be in real bad shape. there's nothing for them to use them six, seven months before they got rid of them. >> they were shipped to blue bell centers across the country and returned to the production floor, oftentimes worse for ware. >> they come in off the truck and the humidity in the truck and from it being cold and everything, some of them would be wet when they come in and we'd still have to use them. >> reporter: water is hazardous in dairy production because it can harbor bacteria, especially on materials like cardboard that are difficult to sanitize and
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schultz and bland say water was everywhere. >> on the wall, by the three gallon machine. if would rain real hard and water set on the roof, it would just trickle down that wall. the whole place was balled up to the point where you couldn't see anything in the place. it was a really, really bad. >> reporter: this is the production line that made the ice cream, later went to five illnesss. remarkably, its wisteria condamnation was discovered not here in texas but in south carolina. >> it was unbelievable, actually. >> reporter: megan davis is the microbiology division director at the south carolina department of health. in january, one of her inspectors collected ten products from the break room of a local blue bell distribution center as part of random testing they conduct. >> one of my employees called me and she said, you are never going to believe this i think we have a positive. >> reporter: it was wisteria, a potentially deadly bacteria. it's uncommon in ice cream, so
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just to be sure, they went back an checked 30 more samples. >> all 30 of the samples that we tested tested positive for wisteria. >> stunning. >> yeah, stunning. a little scary that those products were going to consumers and that because we did random sampling we found it. >> reporter: for davis, the finding really hit home. >> i actually had blue bell products in my freezer for kid's birthday party we handed out along with their cake. >> reporter: that's when you realized, this isn't just in a lab, this is in freezers in people's homes? >> yes. >> reporter: blue bell shut down the line that produced the contaminated ice cream a few weeks after it tested positive for wisteria, but in other parts of the plant, production continued for more than two months. >> nothing changed. the last two weeks, that's when they changeds the wash-up procedures and they started retraining some of us. >> isn't that closing the barn
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door after the horse gets out? >> oh, i think all the animals got out by the time they shut the door. >> blue bell told us pending litigation prevented them from addressing our statement. in a statement they wrote, we are committed to ensuring we are producing a safe product through our enhanced manufacturing procedures, including increased focus on san takes and cleaning, ongoing evaluation from independent microbiologies, voluntary adreams with our state regulators and finally a test and hold procedure. >> that means they cannot distribute any product they produce until the test confirms it is safe that their flagship plant in texas is still closed. >> that's a big old ew after that report. we are dpladz they are talking, employees, why are they talking now? >> neither one of them have a job. they are a part of the 1,400 work force in brenham that was laid off. >> so is the barn door opened or closed now? everybody is out. >> blue bell is busy rounding up
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animals. >> everybody is out. >> thank you, incredible reporting there. and tonight on the cbs evening news with scott pelley, how the findings in south carolina helped investigator learn blue bell made people sick for years. next, playboy gets a what if there was another way to look at relapsing multiple sclerosis? this is tecfidera. tecfidera is not an injection. it's a pill for relapsing ms that has the power to cut relapses in half. imagine what you could do with fewer relapses.
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tumbling. when playboy was first published in 1953, featuring marlin monroe, it was left undated because the magazine's founder hugh hefner was unsure if there would be a second issue. for more than half a century, their countless images of eye catching erot ka and nude centerfolds made playboy the model for adult magazines, dom physical patton is very writer at deadline hollywood. >> if you look at playboy, it's influence upon america and the western notion of certainly sexuality are incredibly profound. here is a magazine that started literally when dwight eisenhower was president. now it's 2015 and it's still published every month and it's still something that people recognize. >> reporter: despite it's success, playboy has suffered from the internet explosion in which pornography is both free and easy to find. the magazine's cirque lakes has dropped. for more than five.5 million in
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1985 to 8,000 readers today. playboy's approach will scrap the nudity and increase the raw intimacy. when the magazine removed nudity from its website last year, web traffic jumped from about 4 million to about 16 million unique users per month. >> people who never even broke open a playboy magazine know who hugh hefner is, know what playboy is, that lifestyle is. it spoo exspeaks to them of an e of freedom they are looking for. >> reporter: playboy says its history of provocative articles and news making interviews will continue. something the magazine has also featured since its first issue as hefner explained to charlie rose in 2005. >> it was all there, pictures and it meant passion. but you wanted to do that from the beginning find good writers, that was the notion. >> hefner reportedly agreed to the redesign after it was presented to him by playboy's chief content officer cory
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jones. the first of the new issues will be unveiled in march. >> didn't your grandmother say it's better to leave things to the imagination? >> my grandmother never said that to me. >> they are still keeping the >> okay. thanks. >> you are welcome. >> she gave me all the playboy reads today, just say zbrg that's because i wouldn't have read them. >> i would have. i think it's a great story. >> i'm the hired help. a woman takes a drunken drive home after allegedly drinking too much. we'll show you how police found her. good morning from the kpix weather center. it barely cooled down last night. we are still pretty much in the 50s and 60s after a record high temperature yesterday of 98 degrees in gilroy. 50s and 60s out the door and
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later today, a degree or two warmer than yesterday with 88 in san francisco to 99 degrees in gilroy. the winds will be variable at five to ten miles per hour, cloudy and cooler for your wednesday. ♪ ♪ ♪ the all-new tacoma. toyota. let's go places. the keurig® k200 series brewer. big on features. small on size. the single serve-make-all-your- favorites-exactly-how-you-like- it-machine.
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>> the p pilot of this h hot ai balllloon carryiying five passes mamade a surprprised landing in virgninia neighborhood.. people c can be heard praying f ththose on board as the balloon narrowly misisses homes, pilot blames unpredictable winds for blowing the balloon right off course. it's like that song, wouldn't you want to ride in my beautiful balloon? who wrote that song? oh, i love that song. they're okay. >> journalist bob woodward isn't done and he is here in studio 57 is this morning with memos from a white house insideer that never saw the light of day until now. more on president nixon's ob sexes to henry kissingers dinner partners. that's all ahead on "cbs this morning". >> an attorney for aerosmith
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together, we're building a better california. francisco and marin county. spent their first night in e three good morning. it's 7:56. the drifters accused of killing people in san francisco and marin county spent their first night in the bay area. the three suspects are in san raphael and will appear in court tomorrow. >> san francisco bay twitter will part ways with 336 people. the ceo jack dorsey made the announcement in a letter released this morning. there is no word on which workers will be let go. >> coming up on cbs this morning, in a new book filled with secrets, deception, the untold story of nixon aid alex ander butterfield. stay with us.
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good morning. lots to get to, east bound 80, three left lanes blocked until further notice. on the flip side west bound is slow at least coming from the four connector. you see the bay bridge is locked up. it looks slow go positions along 880, south bound 280, look for an accident. >> we have a bird's eye view from the trans america building. you can see the shadow of the trans america pyramid pointing in the direction of the golden gate bridge saying look at that! lots of clear sky and gorgeous. we have 50s and 60s out the door. later today, numbers will be a degree warmer than yesterday with 88 san francisco, 99 degrees in gilroy, 90s away from the bay and mid and high 80s peninsula and bay side. cooler and mostly cloudy wednesday with a slight chance
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good morning to our viewers in the west, it is tuesday, october 13, 2015. from's more real news ahead including author and journalist bob woodward. here's a look at today's eye opener at 8:00. >> these five candidates have more or less taken a hands off approach to one another. >> it's surprising they don't have a hole in the river. >> russia has already said it doesn't dispute the findings that a missile brought the plane
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down. >> three israelis were killed and 16 injured in the four separate attacks, it's the most serious incident in the month-long string of attacks. >> two men were killed in the line of duty. >> more about the damaodgers adg insult to injury. >> the response i got at one point is that all you're going to do is come in here and bitch every afternoon. >> i'm gail king, charlie is on assignment. the democratic presidential
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candidates are facing off tonight. it will not look like the republican debates that there were so many candidates that they needed two separate events. all the candidates will be on the same stage trying to convince voters they are the right choice. >> if you're going to run for president, you should represent all the people of the united states. and evers said he wanted the ke debate to focus on all the issues. trump said that the voters will be bored and turn it off after 15 minutes. exploring other options for bringing hunter walter palmer to justice. palmer killed the beloved lion
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in july. why palmer could still face legal trouble in the u.s. nina, good morning. >> zimbabwe officials are reviewing how they prosecute palmer. the protesters who besieged his practice say the rage they feel remains raw. >> people continue to feel mad about this issue. the fact that palmer is getting off scot-free is going to make a lot of people an bring. >> reporter: according to government officials palmer broke no laws when he kill canned the world famous lion with a bow and arrow and then skinned and beheaded hill. he had been accused of taking part in an illegal hunt and wanted him to stand trial.
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>> i understand that the process has been started and we are looking forward to his extradition. >> reporter: palmer has always maintained that he did everything properly and relied on the expertise of local guides. he said if i i known this lion had a name obviously i would not have taken it. the task fofrs that documented see sill's killing saying there's political interference here, the government doesn't care about the wildlife. there are less than 20,000 lions left in the wild and conservationists say chose big cats could be spared cecil's fate if lions were put back on the protected list.
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>> palmer was cleared in zimbab zimbabwe. police arrested a 23-year-old woman who live streamed video of herself driving drunk. whitney behl was driving drunk using periscope to document the event, you hear her repeatedly say she's drunk and she doesn't know where she is. >> i'm driving home drunk. i don't know where i am. >> officers started getting 911 calls from people watching her stream. she hit a curb, she failed her sobriety test, she has been charged with dui and has been arrested.
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beyond his deception and crimes in watergate. we're learning new items from butter worth that lit the fuse that brought down the white house. >> butterfield is now sharing new details with legendary reporter bob woodward. david martin talked with butterfield for cbs this morning. >> another document details nixon's reaction to the massacre in which 504 vietnamese civilians. >> get backgrounds of all involved, all must be exposed, discredit witnesses. >> discredit, that rings a bell. we went to great lengths to discredit people all the time. >> he went into detail about the
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soldier who first blew the whistle and another about seymour hurst who broke the story. hurst received a grant from to the trust fund. another vulnerable spot is the possible involvement of a lib jew. >> if the guy was a liberal view, that was material with which to december credit somebody? >> you're asking things that are really difficult to explain about a really complicated man. >> the last of the president's men is published by simon and schuster. i think most people think nixon's story had been told, i imagine even you thought nixon's story had been told. >> i thought it was over and
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then butter field had 20 boxes of things we had not seen before and particularly on the management of the vietnamese war. the commander in chief has a kind of unwritten contract with everyone in the military to do his job expecting everyone to do theirs and you look at particularly one of these memos and you see the president of the united states in his own handwriting saying we did all this bombing three years of b b bombing while he was president. >> telling cbs that the bombing was effective. >> the lies, the deception, and when i first read that memo, i was really shocked that this is the other side of watergate, when you track and connect all the dots, you see that he's
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managing the vietnam war not to win the war, but because of the popularity of the bombing to win re-election, which he did. >> in fact as you point out, through pentagon records previous to that zilch memo, he had dropped 2,000 bombs on that election year. >> kissinger finds that when nixon does his most dramatic moves, the really intensive bombing on the recent tapes, kissinger tells nixon, that's the day you won re-election. >> it's so upsetting to think about the lives losted and knowing that he knew that it achieved zilch. >> it is the level of breaking that contract and manipulating the system, it's equivalent to
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the crimes of watergate. >> you said that it makes -- these documents make nixon seem both larger and smaller at the same time, which to me has always been the paradox of the man that he was always so petty as well. >> and he was criminal and he would do anything to be re-elected and that's the sabotage and spying of watergate and then we see it on the most sacred trust of the man in that role and he's also engaged in that deception and manipulation. >> this is alex butterfield saying it's like working in a cesspool but you can also do good work in a cesspool. >> so you've got a complicated portrait of nixon, but next
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year, we're going to elect a president again. and we need to, you know, this book is be about nixon, but it's really a warning that we better know who these people are and we didn't do enough work on nixon, lots of people think not enough work was done to really tell and explain bill clinton or george w. bush or barack obama and now is the time to really engage in that full biography so we understand who these people are because we missed nixon and when you look at this story, it kind of is mind numbing that that was president of the united states. >> this book is really interesting and alexander butterfield talking about nixon
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ordering the removal of pictures of president kennedy that were on people's desk. >> nixon says this is an infestation and then i was skeptical of this until i saw the document that butterfield wrote nixon saying there's a sanitizization of nixon offices. that would be like seeing a walter cronkite picture on the wall and ordering people to go in and sanitize. >> butterfield actually talked about walking out of the white house with these documents. be why did he take these
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documents home with him literalliteral ly? >> he said he could take as good care of them as anybody because this is the time when documents were being destroyed left and right, there was the cover-up going on and butter field wanted to write and tried to write a memoir and he shared it with me. >> on his last day, there's no good buy, there's no parting of the ways with the president and he just takes his bongses and goes. >> then there's this isolation of nixon, his loneliness, i really want to know who's going to be the next president and i think there's a journalistic obligation to find out everything positive, everything negative, a full excavation.
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>> bob woodward, as always, thanks so much. >> and the last of the president's men goes on sale today. >> alcatraz was supposed to be inescapable. but some people got out of the prison. we'll tell you how next. >> and how the commercial jet industry is reinventing itself. >> it's hard to imagine some of the world's biggest airplanes looking small, but in this building they do. we'll show you how boeing takes a plane from start to finish and makes it fly. makes it fly. ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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>> a surprising twist in the 1962 alcatraz prison break, one of the most elaborate escapes in history. on monday, they aired new information about the 1979 movie "escape from alcatraz" they said the men drowned. new details suggest they were successful in getting away. this photo was allegedly taken by a family friend who claims to have run into two of the escapees in rio de janeiro in the '70s. they had the photo since 1972 and turned it over to the investigators in the case. he said, quote, this is the best actionable lead we've had. >> that's a wild one. golden globe winner ruth wilson
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is here in studio 57 with a look at season two of the hit drama "the in the plan to build suicide barriers on the golden gate bridge. today, bridge offic will start taking bids a step forward in the plan to build suicide barriers on the golden gate bridge. bridge officials will start taking bids from construction firms. a contractor could be chosen as soon as march. >> three santa clara county correctional officers accused of beating an inmate to death are expected to enter pleas today. the three are charged with murdering michael tyre. >> new york times best selling author neal strauss is in studio 57 to discuss his new book "the truth, an
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good morning. we have delays in east san jose due to a fatal accident involving a vehicle that hit a pedestrian. lanes blocked on white between east hill and allen rock. expect a lot of activity there. bay bridge backed up to the maze. median lights remain on. 54 minute ride. on the flip side east bound we
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have the accident clearing at gill man. that has traffic backed up in the area. you can see some sluggish conditions in both conditions. across the upper deck of the bay bridge as well. we have a nice ride into san francisco. south 880 at industrial, accident blocking lanes. roberta. >> good morning. this is our live weather camera. as you look at this picture, keep in mind our average high at this time of year is 70. instead right there, we will top off at 88 degrees. that's almost 20 degrees above average. right now we are in the 60s except santa rosa is still cool at 53. we have sunny skies today, variable wind 5 to 10 miles per hour. everybody is in the 80s and 90s, 84 at pacifica to 99 in gilroy. that's up from yesterday which set a record.
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said he's the funniest guys he know, in the words of james cordin "i crushed it." you go. >> we are glad he is close to cbs family. coming up in this half hour,able tres bruce wilson plays the scandalous rule of allison in the hit drama "the affair." she's in our green room. is the role changing her view of marriage off screen neighborhood, also in studio 57, we mentioned him. there he is. best selling author, kneel straus, he knows the real fallout. he opens up how his marriage survived and the lessons for anyone in a relationship. that's ahead. now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines, "for kunis" reports on facebook testing, a new ad format to make shopping from your smartphone easier t. social network will allow users to browse products in their news feeds without leaving the site. facebook will also add a shopping section under favorites. >> usa today reports on actor leonardo dicaprio bringing the
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volkswagon scandal to the big screen. paramount pictures acquired the movie rights. dicaprio is an environmental activist. they admit they installed it in millions of cars to evade emissions tests. bloomberg reports on fantasy sports sites having their biggest weekend ever, all of this coming after a week filled with allegations of the cheating. that didn't scare customers away. draftkings and fanduel had a record number oftime people in the tournaments, they got more than 7 million entries to their guaranteed prize pools. >> that generated more than $43 million in entry fees. >> wow is right. the new york daily news reports on comedian tracy morgan reaching another comeback milestone after a deadly 2014 crash in new jersey. morgan tweeted about doing standsup at the comedy cellar in new york city last night. this was his first comedy job in 16 months, he said he was picking up the pieces, he is to
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return to "saturday night live" this weekend. "time" reports on ed sheeran setting a big spotify record. ♪ maybe we found love height where we are. >> his thinking out loud has become the first one ever to reach 500 million on spotify. she is second in strings only behind eminem. spotify says one in four users has a sheeran song in at least one play list. >> i believe that. >> it is a very romantic song. >> i know, i love it. >> 500 million. >> i bloo everybody that. >> you know a saying there two sides to every story in the "affair," there are actually four sides, the debut season of the hit show timed golden globe for best television drama and best actress in a tv drama for the lovely co-star ruth wilson. the season's lovers, allison and noah deal with the after math of their cheating and livering together. the story is told from each of the very different perspectives.
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now, fans are seeing the wreckage the couple left behind and they're also seeing the reviews of two more characters. here's a zmeek preview of next sunday's episode. >> i think we're making a terrible mistake. >> please don't say >> she's right. we're not even divorced yet. neither am i. everything is finds here and now. what happens when we have to leave. when we actually have to face the real world again. >> we'll figure it out. >> what if we can't? >> why are you asking that? >> because it's a possibility, noah. are you really so naive? do you really think things work out for the best? true love conquers all? >> true love conquers all, yes. >> she plays the conflicted allison. welcome to studio 57.
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so i jumped on the fair band wagon this summer. charlie rose was in here talking about it. i thought, let me watch a few episode, i watched the full season one. i was so conflicted it's almost allison be careful what you wish for. you are ruth. be careful. >> be careful indeed this season definitely plays around with that a lot more. it's about the consequences of this affair and how it affects everyone and their lives and the repercussions filter through to other people as themselves. and she's always, i find, she's a character that is constantly looking for happiness, looking for someone to save her from this awful grief she's gone through and escape from that world, noah was the person this season be careful what you wish for, he might be the souls of happiness for you. >> there is so much sneaking around and lying. how well did allison and noah really know each other? >> they don't. another theme of this season is
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how well do you really know someone? and they don't. they act impulsively and recklessly, now they're dealing with the consequencens and they're committing to this relationship because they really want to make it work. it has such, it's caused such damage in many ways. it's even more important to try and make it work. >> one of the concedes i love about this show, as we mentioned, it's now got four points of view. initially, it started with two. what's so interesting, you can have the same story line, two different perspectives, people view the events that happened in completely different ways. >> it's the idea that all truth is subjective. you are always saying everything you do in your life from your own experience, so how you have been brought up will shape how you feel about various events or things that happen to you. so everything is subjective. there is no objective truth. so that's the kind of theme of the whole show, itself. >> you are single. i realize you are acting the role of allison. i am curious.
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does it make you think about marriage? >> yeah. >> in what way? how so? >> every time you do a part, you have to dig into why these people do. and the characters. so of course it makes you question whether you see your marriage as something that is still relevant and whether we've got such high expectations of what marriage should give you. and i think that's where it sometimes fails, that we go into thinking it is going to be all sorts of happy inside and for life and actually you need to work at it. you need to find happiness within yourself first. >> both the women clarkters are strong characters in this story. neither one need the man to survive. which is also a very interesting point of view. >> yeah. in this season, it's interesting. when they both start to realize that slowly. certainly allison. i mean, it's the first half of the season, you will see she still is trying to make this relationship work and is very dependent on noah. by the end, she's starting to realize that happiness exists in other forms for her, in her work.
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she has a new child. so you start to see her finding that she is finding herself, they are going through a journey of self discovery. >> you have a british co-star. why is everyone so better doing the americaning a thanninginge americans doing british accents. >> the first time i saw an interview, oh my zbosh, she's not an american. you both nail it so well. >> we run around the playgrounds. you act out things from big american movies, blockbusters. >> you won the golden globe for this. >> i was there when you went. you seemed stunned. >> i was. >> were you? >> what was it like? >> it was amazing. i mean, it's, you know, i completely shocked that we won as the show won then i won and i was it was a brilliant evening. it was fun. i remember watching it. it was amazing.
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i felt very privileged to be there. >> well, claulgs congratulation show. >> i can't wait to sigh season two. >> who killed scotty? >> i predict it's cole. i don't know, but i predict cole. >> thank you. >> can you watch "the affair "sundays on "showtime." it is a division of cbs. is the game over for the men that taught women? we have a reality check on
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it's all a part of a technique i have been studying for picking up women who employ a visual display to make yourself distinctive and memorable. >> oh, yes, like the male peacock with brilliant plumage or the running ba boone with corners. >> or in this case the bar mitzvah boy with pink eye. >> the big bang theory may have learned a few 56 the from neil straus. he talks about churches that manipulate the women they want in his controversial bet seller 80 the game" he had big up artists revealing the secrets of seduction. one technique is niging. it's to actively interest in
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her, telling her she has lipstick on her teeth or offering her a piece of guam after she speaks. ten years later straus is out with the "the truth" the uncomfortable truth about relationships, cheating, monogamy and how he changed. >> speaking of uncomfortable. >> you have done basically a complete reversal in this book. >> yes and the game as i point out a culture was there, the 20s techniques that already existed. you will not popularize ideas. so it's kind of sad the contribution of the culture is people wearing ridiculous clothes. >>' huph had a clang of heart? >> bigger than that, a complete transformation as to who i was and how i felt what was important until now. >> what brought that about? >> i guess sometimes have you to have a real low. for me, it was someone i cared about being really in love with this person or so i thought. they are getting caught. you know, breaking the heart of someone who loves you.
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hurting her that much that i started to think, well, maybe i'm just completely wrong about everything. >> you said there comes a time in a man's life, he looks around and realizes he makes a mess of everything. for you, not only did you cheat, you were a cheater cheater pumpkin eater of extraordinary proportions, you cheated with a friend of hers. you say, how could i have done that? because you really did love this woman. >> exactly. i thought i was a good guy. how can a nice guy do this to himself and to somebody snow so that set me off on just all, it's hard to explain, really just trying to figure what was wrong. >> you the did work, though, you went to rehab. you were there, you spent five years trying to figure yourself out. trying to uncover your demons, trying to be a better person, you said to learn how to be a real good human being. >> yeah. and literally. i went to rehab. i found everything i was wrong with me. thought they were all wrong and went ahead and lived my life in a horrible way until you
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realized, you know what, man, you got to have probably humidi humility you can have to change. >> what is the truth as you title this book about relationships? written like a bible, by the way, considering the fact you make it look like a bible i think is interesting. >> the game is a black bible. it was a white bible t. book independent to it. so the truth is, two things, one is the opposite of the game, you were saying at the top, the game is manipulate manipulation. secondly what you need in a relationship if you look at the ashley madison scandal, you look at relationships. people are so scared to be honest with their partner because they're scared of what they will do to show their vulnerability. >> you said love is not about finding the right person. it's about becoming the right person. which i think is very powerful. what do you mean by that? >> exactly, everybody is trying to find the right person. they keep finding the same person. >> different paths.
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>> but they may seem different at first. they end up in the same situation every time because the relationship like as i learned, i would always blame the other person until i looked at it. it has nothing to do with them or the relationship, it's how i relate to them. >> so how do you feel about the rules changing forward in the game? >> again, because the game was me, i worked in a journalistic ap risc of the culture, so even then, i'd recognize there was a certain ludicrousness to them. but at a much higher degree now. honestly, it's 91 my to say, any type of reg lakes, whether it's bob woodward on earlier, talk object about butterfield, any kind of manipulation is into the good. >> i was with a person who i think was very much like you. >> right. >> and my mom used to say to me, a leopard doesn't change its spot a. tiger doesn't change its stripes. do you think it's possible for men to be monogamous, do you think wince you make a mistake
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like that, you can course correct? >> yeah. >> you did. do you think most people? >> it's a big question. first you have to put the word in, apologizing, saying it will never help is not enough. >> until it's uncomfortable. don't have a password on your cell phone. >> so basically trust is something you need to earn back. it takes time. you have to realize the person cheated on is hurt literally trauma advertised. it is a traumatic event. they have to heal, too. so it's a long healing process for both people. for ingrid and i, we can look back on it and the cheating was on for the betterment to happen to us, now we're in a real relationship. she knows everything about me. we worked on the mother issues i project on to her, i mean, the fatherhood she projectss on to me, it left us with a real intimate relationship we would not have had otherwise. >> i'm going to have you sign this book to my ex.
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>> one pumpkin stands alone as the winner of a california championship. this white pumpkin weighed in. that's not enough to break the world records. some contestants win the state's historic drought for supersize entries the largest can be found in rhode island, with more than 2,200 pounds. >> wow! >> it has a circumference of 18 feet. as they say, it's not a pumpkin, nor remarks what is it?
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hit and run. a little after 7 this morning, the truck ne walking good morning. it's 8:55. developing news, police in san jose are looking for a white chevy truck they say was involved in a fatal hit and run. a little after 7:00 this morning the truck reportedly hit someone walking at east hills and white road. anyone with information should call police. >> drifters accused of killing two people in san francisco and marin county spent their first night in the bay area. the three are in san raphael and will appear in court tomorrow. >> san francisco's twitter will part ways with 336 people. jack dorsey made the announcement in a letter released this morning. there is no word yet on which workers will be let go. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a
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are seeing slow and go speeds, 101 north sluggish near candle stick. you will see some delays. expect a back up all the way into the maze. >> good morning everybody. out the door we have wall to wall sunshine, not even a hint of any kind of fog. this is the scene looking towards san jose. skies are blue and temperatures are well above average for today. right now out the door, the numbers are in the 60s except santa rosa standing out at 53. it is 63 in san jose, 64 in livermore. later today, numbers are stacking up like this, 75 to 84 at the beaches, 80s and 90s peninsula, 93 morgan hill, 99 in gilroy up from 98 which was a record yesterday. the mid 90s in the tri valley, 70s, 80s, 90s north of the golden gate bridge. the extended forecast does call for cloudy cooler conditions on
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wayne: you've got the big deal of the day. jonathan: yeah, girl! it's a trip to bermuda! - bigger isn't always better. wayne: you won a car! - zonks are no fun. - big deal, baby! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal". now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. three people, let's go. who wants to make a deal? ernest, the army guy. (cheers and applause) jelly. with the green hat, with the green hat. stand right there. jelly, stand next to ernest.
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