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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 1, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PST

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of rain. >> thank you for watching. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, december 1st, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." the first major snowstorm of the season slams the midwest. white house conditions cause hundreds of crashes. only on "cbs this morning," hillary clinton outlines her plan to destroy isis and defends her relationship with wall street. and a cyber attack on a popular toy maker exposes photos and private conversations between parents and their kids. are you at risk? first, this morning's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds.
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>> record snow hammers the midwest. >> severe weather leaving behind an icy mess. some areas can expect to have a foot on the ground before it's over. >> donald trump is demanding millions to participate in the next gop debate. >> i won't do the debate unless they pay me $5 million, all of which money goes to the wounded warriors or to vets. >> president obama is wrapping up his trip to paris today after attending the climate summit. >> this is an economic and security imperative that we have to tackle now. >> atlanta police say a traffic stop turned into a pursuit and automatic weapons battle. >> robert dear, accused of a deadly shooting outside a colorado springs planned parenthood, making his initial court appearance. >> the initial charge against you is murder in the first degree. >> an officer charged with the murder of laquan mcdonald, out on bond. >> accused electronic toy maker
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vtech says hackers accessed the personal information of nearly 5 million customers. >> this dust devil formed during an outdoor music festival in australia. concertgoers started dancing around it. >> will hill runs down the sidelines. will hill is going to win the game on a blocked field goal! >> all of that matters. >> why do you want to be president? you've had a remarkable life. >> i have. >> you've been in the white house. there it is. >> i'm not doing it to move back in. >> on "cbs this morning." >> a senior running back at rice university played what will probably be his last game. >> the best people in the world. you can seece has been the best. >> when the camera widens out, you can see almost no one is
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there. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning" as you wake up in the west. the first major snowfall of the season is pummelling millions in the western united states. more winter weather is on the way. >> david begnaud is in minneapolis where drivers face harsh conditions. david, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it's the first big winter storm of the season. across the minneapolis metro area they've gotten about 4 inches of snow in the last 24 hours. in laverne, minnesota, near the south dakota/iowa border, they're gotten 8 inches. a r winter system is turning out heavy snow across the state of minnesota.
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it might be pretty, but it is messy. it's been an uphill battle for weatheracross the midwest as a powerful blast of winter weather made a mess of the roads from nebr nebraska to north dakota. in minnesota last night, a wave f snow barreled its way through the twin cities, blanketing the idents arering evening rush hour. repo perso 400 accidents were e wereed statewide. one person was killed, dozens injured. >> we're waiting for the snow to continue on the highway. >> i my eyes needed a rest. >> reporter: in iowa, this car flipped over. pa parts of nebraska saw record amounts of snow. this video was taken from inside a plane landing in omaha. you can see the white-out conditions. at the height of the storm, the city temporarily suspended olice responses to minor accidents. in south dakota, they set records for snowfall, nearly 9 inches fell in sioux falls. the good news about minneapolis
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right now, no wind, it's above freezing, and not terribly cold. but if you live in wisconsin, or iowa, get ready, it's going to be a snowy day. north dakota, south dakota, if you live there, you could get up to a foot of snow over the next 24 hours. president obama is leaving paris after pressing world leaders to support a climate change deal. the unprecedented summit is also giving leaders to tackle threats beyond global warming. margaret brennan is in paris where the president spoke about brennssues. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. here in paris, president obama has been juggling what he sees as two threats: the risk to global stability from climb change and the immediate threat from terror and the nice against isis. >> we have a common enemy, and that is isil. >> reporter: president obama tried to cool off a spike in tension between u.s. ally turkey and russia's vladimir putin, following the recent shootdown
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of a russian warplane that crossed from syria into turkish territory. president obama also met with putin yesterday and pressed him yet again to stop bombing u.s.-backed rebels in syria and focus instead on striking isis. but he was unsuccessful. >> mr. putin, i don't expect you're going to see a 180 turn on their strategy over the next several weeks. >> reporter: that's one of the pressing topics competing for president obama's attention here in paris, where he hopes to get around 150 countries to limit global warming to 3.6 degrees fahrenheit, the level scientists say would prevent natural disasters like floods and drought. >> necessity is the mother of invention. well, this is necessary. us getting a strong, high-ambition agreement in place, even if it doesn't meet all the goals we ultimately need to meet, sends a signal that it's necessary. >> we agree it's an urgent
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threat. >> reporter: on monday the president pressed the world's other top leaders, india and china, to sign on to his pledge to cut greenhouse gases. mr. obama is promising to help poor and reluctant countries like india to invest in clean he do. there are two big impediments to a deal. the cost of converting to cle leaner energy, and convincing republicans to fund it. hey, charlie, the white house rgues they can overcome both, and that other countries will cut back on pollution unless america does so first. to destr, margaret brennan in paris. hillary clinton talks about this plan to destroy isis on an interview only on "cbs this morning." her strategy includes a no-fly zone in syria. we spoke with the presidential fromdate at the hey-adams our conversarom the white house. to conversation began with a
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debate over sending combat >> i eroops to the middle east. >> i agree with the president's point that we're not putting amer american combat troops back into syria or re not goiraq. erstand ut going to do that. d under no circumstances would you not do that? >> at this point i cannot conceive of any circumstances thae i would agree to do that. known't know yet how many special forces might be needed, surveill trainers and surveillance and enablers might be needed. but in terms of thousands of combat troops like some on the republican side are recommending, i think that should be a nonstarter. it should be a nonstarter both beca smartesti don't think it's the is.rtest way to go after isis. a fewk it gives isis a new recruitment tool if we get back wethe fight. >> tell me how serious the iseat of isis is and at what leveldo we decide we'll do to stop we have to do to stop them. >> i think we have to have as feat.bjective their defeat. to have to fight them in the air, you have to fight them on
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the ground, and you have to now fight them in cyberspace. ba you're facing an enemy which has more money and controls more cerritory. g need to get over the false choice between either going talkingsad and going after isis. >> help us understand that, because everybody is talking about that. youdo you do both? clearedink you do both by making et clear, and bringing the russians in -- you know, the russians have paid a big price because of the bomb in their jet coming from sharm el sheikh. so they've lost people to isis, st peo think you say, look, we need f not your active help, your uiescencence in what we're going to do going after isis. .o that means you're going to have to pull back from this area after we go after their economic p and their economic infrastructure. o be a you want to be part of that, we would welcome you, and in have a dog in this hunt now because you're worried about about happening in the caucasus, you're worried about isis spreading its ideology.
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aght now we don't see a ilitary defeat of assad. that's not going to happen. it might have been possible a ew years ago. it's not going to happen now. ne,if there's a no-fly zone, which you're advocating, and the russians invade that no-fly rlie twould president clinton happenoot it down? >> charlie, that's not going to happen. we're going to put up a no-fly zone where the russians are clearly kept informed. taant them at the table. they don't have to participate nderstt i want them to understand that there has to be safe areas on the ground. >> is there some lesson we need to learn, and it may be applicable to syria, don't get rid of a strong man until you you somebody that can come in ndere, because you do not want the cior the kind of nircumstance in libya, because forceou have in libya now is an ?ncreasing force of isis. questiona totally fair question. qaddafi had american blood on his hands. addafi was a threat to the reoader region. ur european and arab friends
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andainly saw him as that. and as you say, he was promising to track down his own people and mill them like cockroaches. i think one of the ways we need to approach this is continue the to discussions about national unity, but as a precondition, ay, we need to join together r rightow, before they get a stronghold, and work to liminatee isis in syria. and it is something that is going to require a lot of cooperation. here are armed groups that are fighting for power within libya that are not in any way identified with or allied with isis. ion to td to form even a loose confederation to try to push y getliterally into the sea nghold they get a stronghold. ow the question is also how different is she from the president. of i of it is the same. she clearly says she wants to what we y what we're doing, more no ial forces. but there was no strong distinction other than the o-fly zone.
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the thing she kept emphasizing in every conversation, whether wheth climate, whether it was the middle east, whether it was ship, tos leadership, nadership, leadership. to which my question was, are we which sting. ting that leadership now, which she didn't get to. >> she was certainly very landid. > and engaged. we'll have more on my interview sh p th hillary clinton in the next wiur. ine addresses her relationship with wall street and explains why she wants to be president, ahead. after charlie's interview, the state department made more of hillary clinton's private e-mails public. they released them on monday. some of them contain information now labeled as classified. -mailcs say clinton put national security at risk while using a heivate e-mail server while secretary of state. this morning, the republican dlum tor isunner faces a new sriticism from ted cruz, the
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icans senator turning against trump as he picks up support. february walk1st is the date of iowa caucuses. in was in close second place here. fjor garrett is in washington, where donald trump is focusing on other concerns. major, good morning. orter: goor: good morning. donald trump tried to make the ay o of a private meeting yesterday with black pastors that yielded fewer endorsements night.riginally promised. or the first time, as you said, gayle, a republican who stayed close to trump now questioning his staying power. >> all of these dumbass oliticians said, oh, no, oh, no. that's what they are. >> reporter: trump stayed on the ffensive monday night, demanding $5 million for it ories or he would bug out of he december 15th debates. ruz nowpulled punches when he talked about texas senator ted
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cruz, tied with trump in iowa. me.at some point he's going to hit me. back,ll be a sad day, but we'll hit back, i promise. dy reporter: that day is already here. >> i don't believe donald trump pr going to be our nominee. i don't believe he's going to be echoedsident. reaeporter: cruz has echoed atump's contempt for the impleical class, but he parted reth trump about the attack on the planned parenthood facility in colorado. addressin new york, trump met meh black pastors to discuss racial lly insensitive comments trump has made in the past. >> i s weressage appealed to some, ut other were skeptical. ot it's very unfortunate the way e's talked to not just the african-american community but about women and mexicans and
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muslims. >> reporter: cruz is in a statistical tie with trump in s are charlie, if that continues, cruz ,ays it's, quote, game over. >> interesting. thanks, major. th deadlis morning the suspect in the deadly siege of a planned arenthood clinic faces a possible death penalty. obert lewis dear made his first appearance monday before a colorado judge. kil accused of killing three people at the colorado springs clinic. barry petersen is at the el paso county justice center with details of the attack. barry, good morning. >> reporter: going. dear faces first-degree murder charges. if convicted, the minimum penalty is life without possibility of parole. for the moment, he's being held in this jail behind me. pect e initial charge is murder in the first degree. >> reporter: shooting suspect robert lewis dear appeared before an el paso county judge
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via video link from jail. a law enforcement source says dear arrived at the colorado springs planned parenthood clinic last friday with duffle bags full of rifles and handguns. he's accused of fatally shooting ysnnifer markovsky, ke'arre stewart, and police officer garrett swasey. video taken by a witness appears to show swasey before he was gunned down. there will be formal charges next week, then the district attorney's office has time to decide if they will ask for the death penalty. this friday will be the funeral for slain officer swasey. >> thanks, garrett.
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gunsho de> gunshots and sirens aattered the calm last night stoide a hotel as police and a van,ect exchanged fire. ut acers had stopped a van but the people inside got out and took off. one of them ran behind the hotel shd then started shooting. that man was shot and killed. police arrested the other uspect. the chicago police officer charged with murder for killing 17-year-old laquan mcdonald is out of jail this morning. jason van dyke was released last night after meeting the terms of aged 1.5 million bail. the city's largest police union ts paying for van dyke's attorney. >> he believes he acted therectly. and at the end of the day, if a judge, a jury decides he didn't, well, i think's prepared to accept the consequences. iceprotestors claim police tried lsocover up the shooting. they're also asking why prosecutors took more than a ke.r to charge van dyke. in an editorial this morning, the chicago sun-times calls for police superintendent gary
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mccarthy to resign. says he says he has no plans to s to down. he says he watched a shooti recently-released dash cam video after the shooting and took away van dyke's police powers. people are trying to figure out how velasquez city's mayor died. police will not comment on reports that the 70-year-old was assaulted, but they say there is no sign someone broke into his home. e iestigators are waiting on results from an autopsy to learn how he died. investigators in indonesia on andeadly plane crash u.pened because of the pilot's response to a recurring problem with the plane. all 162 people on board died mben the airasia flight crashed ento the sea last december. the rudder control system sent repeated warnings to the pilots. investigators say the pilots
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reset to reset the system in id-flight and that made the ande stall and then crash. texas threatens legal action yrianep out syrian refugees. ahead, how nonprofit groups are ah ,,rced to choose between
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could your kids' toys expose your privacy? >> ahead, a hacker steals information for more than 5 million customers of a toy maker. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." every new toyota comes with the toyotacare no-cost maintenance plan.
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ahead, why some of the strongest voices for women posing in a calendar known for its nude
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clerk at 7-11 in antioch...t good morning, it's 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening. police are looking for the robber who shot a clerk at a 7- eleven in antioch. it happened around midnight at a store on lone tree way. no word on the clerk's condition. a man suspected of fatally stabbing his girlfriend at her san mateo home on saturday is in custody. last night anthony kirincic was arrested in redwood city after a standoff with the police. coming up on "cbs this morning," are high-tech toys tracking your children? from tablets to smart dolls were some devices are causing privacy concerns. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. k rampage of 2010. the sleep eating of 2012. and the babysitter makeout of 2014. gross.
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but now with nest cam, these guys can check in 24/7. so they can see the crazy things i see. hey ya little thief! did he have thumbs? okay, now i've seen it all.
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good morning. i'm liza battalones with your "kcbs traffic." it's been a long morning in the south bay several accidents for northbound 85. and delays at the bay bridge toll plaza extending through the macarthur maze. 580 jammed from highway 24. the metering lights are on and once you're on the bridge, traffic is sluggish all the way across the span heading into san francisco. so a tough morning there. meantime, the oakland commute southbound 880 has been held up from beyond hegenberger approaching san leandro because of an earlier accident. roberta? >> liza, i have a beautiful view of levi's stadium home of super bowl 50 on february 7 to be seen right here on kpix 5. good morning, everyone! see those clouds? it's going to be partly sunny today. temperatures in the 30s up to 40 right now in san jose. slightly warmer today into the 50s into the low 60s.
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. we asked a person who know a lot of greatest things of all time. we asked what is the greatest christmas special of all time. what he said. >> what you are talking about is a lie. it's peanuts for me. the cost of the world is peanuts. we're talking about peanuts. >> it's peanuts. >> it's peanuts. >> that's peanuts. that's peanuts. >> peanut, peanuts, peanuts. >> peanuts. >> peanuts. peanuts. it's peanuts. >> all right. >> thank you, donald trump. welcome back to "cbs this
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morning." this half hour, a car maker is hacked. it shares photos and private conversations involving children. plus a racy calendar takes a detour. this year's pirelli models are famous, but they don't fit the usual profile. we will talk to photographer annie leibovitz is focusing on the legendary pinups ahead. the usa today says the pentagon will consider sending more special op troops to syria to fight isis if there's progress. defense secretary ash carter set to testify today before the house armed services committee. last month, the pentagon announced 50 commandos would be sent to syria's advisers. the wall street general reports on an economic milestone for china the international monetary fund designated china as one of the world's elite currencies t.yuan joins the dollar the pound, the yen. it is meant to reform the
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world's number two economy. the "new york times" has a study out today, finds new cases of diabetes in the u.s. finally declined after exploding around 25 years ago t.cdc says last year the number of newly diagnosed adults was 1.4 million. >> that number fell by one-fifth between 2008 and 2014. now the experts don't know if efforts to prevent diabetes have finally started to work or it repeats on its own. ohio is holding on billions of dollars waiting to be claimed. it has about $2.3 billion in abandoned money. only 34 million has been returned this year. >> i have some money. >> let me check my records. it comes from old bank accounts or other forgotten money such as rent and utility deposits. let's hope they can do something great with that money. >> i'm trying to think, was i ever in ohio? >> do you have any relatives? >> all those bank accounts around the world. >> ohio, here we come.
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new orleans says an exploding hoverboard destroyed a home. these hoverboards are one of the hottest gifts of the season this one apparently became so hot. look at that, while it was charging, it started this fire t. state fire marshall is investigating. the hoverboard's inner's mother told the tv station it was like fireworks. texas officials threaten this morning to take over, to take a fight over syrian refugees to court. 31 governors say they don't want to accept syrian refugees because of security concerns. but the governor of texas is now refugees. >> that agency now says it's caught in the middle of a state wide and national debate. this family is among the almost
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2,300 syrians finding refugee in the u.s. since their country's civil war began four years ago. almost 1200 syrian refugees resettled if texas last fiscal year. many with the help of organizations like the international rescue committee or irc, a non-profit. >> that group is now under the scrutiny of texas governor greg abbott. >> we will be working to ensure that syrian refugees are not going to be allowed into the state of texas and given refuge in the state of texas. >> reporter: there ungovernors, all but one republican, say they oppose accepting syrian refugees, fearing terrorists may sneak in with them and carry out attacks similar to those in paris two weeks ago. texas is threatening legal action, sending a letter to the irc saying failure to cooperate, violates federal law and your contract with the state.
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anne marie weiss-armush runs a service organization that works in texas with syrian refugees. what about those security concerns, though? what would you tell people who say we should take a pause? >> prove to me that there has been one act of terrorism by a refugee since 2001? there have been none. >> reporter: many organizations have to follow state orders and federal law t. obama organization sent a letter to reorganization settlements requiring them that federal law requires them to provide assistance and services to refugees, without regard to race, religion, nationality, sex or political opinion. >> the organizations know very well they cannot exclude just syrian refugees and if they do, they're opening governor to discuss the
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resettlement of syrian refugees. norah. >> manuel, thank you. a popular toy maker admits this morning a data breach exposed examiner's personal information. vtech says the hack acts nearly 5 million people. profiles created for their children were compromised. isis online magazine motherboard says they talked to the hacker. the hacker says these photos of parents and kids were uncovered on vtech's server. dan ackerman is here on what could be a growing trend. how did this happen? >> it's kind of a double-edged sword. this company makes ties, a lot of companies getting into online space, smart refrigerators and dish washers, they may not have the security expertise needed to really 62 you are the databases. this was a fairly simple act t.
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database got compromised. it happens all the time. i feel like we hear about it on a daily basis. >> first, do you know who did it and why they did it? >> in this case, this appears to be a hacker that wanted to expose the shortcomeings of this company. he took this data and gave it to press outfits and said i will not do anything else with this. i want to expose this data about parents and kids is not being held securely. >> what should people do? williment the data to all these companies being hacked? >> that's something we do all the time who we trust to hold that data. secondly what do you do with data about your kids? it's difficult to collect information about children, especially under 13 legally. so what a lot of people do they have the parents make the account and provide in fill about the children. that's what happened in this case. >> that's scary. we had these data approachs in the past. it involves adult financial information. now we're talking about children's information. their age, where they live, i
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mean, vulnerable members of our society. >> and their pictures. they have pictures, too, right? >> how they link them together. they can say we're only collecting the first name and date of birth. in a database, it's linked to the parents' account. it has the e-mail address, now you have a full pro time of these kids, which is something you definitely don't want out there. >> so what steps is vtech going to take? >> they say they're going to take it seriously. as soon as everybody gets hacked, they take cyber security seriously. i'm sure they brought in outside consult ants and covered up that particular hack. will you see this continue especially as more and more devices like toys, and household appliances we don't think of online go online with user accounts and tuesdayer data. >> we need more information about how to protect our security and our children's security online. >> another wake-up call for a lot of people. thank you, dan. always good to see you. it is a sign of the times for provocative calendar, up next,
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how some of the most famous women in society are giving pirelli a new kind of pin-up model. and if you are heading off to work or out the door, maybe you are going to the gym, because you ate so much over thanksgiving, set your dvr. we'll be here until 9:00 and yo. .
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wow. >> right a-listers
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shot in seductive poses and published by a premium tire company, where tires are anything but the focus. this year the pirelli calendar is causing a stir for what it doesn't contain, nudity. >> turn your head slightly. >> in a dramatic shift, distinguished wimg of all ages, sizes and colors are showcased in a series of black and white photographs taken by photographer annie leibovitz. >> i thought the women should
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look good and strong and it should be simple. >> reporter: artist yoko-ono, fill philanthropisting aness dunn. cbs contributor mellody hobson is miss june. >> i thought, well, here's an opportunity to perhaps showcase a career and a story that is not common. i think that's what women like me have been dreaming of. >> reporter: only two women kept with the calendar's typical theme. serena pumps is pictured topless with her back to the camera. seam schumer had the back. she thought it would be fun that i didn't get the photo. great, let's do it. nudity.
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>> nudity has been a constance since pirelli did the problem in the 1954. it was legitimized by fashion's elite. but times are of a backlash if things do go back to the way they were and i think would risk a lot of people saying, this wasn't sincere. >> well, pirelli supports this year's change in direction t. company emphasizes it was annie leibovitz's supervision. >> i love mellody is in it. i love the amy schumer in it. somebody said they wanted to focus on brains not boobs. you can have both. >> this is the hero, the she-hero. more on tv. >> shero. you are our shero this morning.
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>> just for today. >> miss june. yeah. we have to tease her the next time we see her. miss june. check this out, a late night legend as far ass on a college campus. see what a santa-like david letterman brought to his a,, i don't want to live with
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>> you sort of recognize me. finally, none of them came up to me and said, you look familiar. i said, oh, really? who do you think i am? and the kid says, charles darwin? >> yes, america, that is david letterman. >> involving himself.
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>> looks a little like santa. >> that is old school. he came last night bearing gifts. letterman is donating much of his honors and memorabilia to ball university. >> that you includes all of his awards and letterman state. he graduated from ball state in 1969. >> clearly, he looks very happy. whatever he is doing. >> coming up, hillary clinton reacts to her critics next on "cbs this morning." .
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the wolf was huffing and puffing. like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies!
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together, we're building a better california. clerk at 7-11 in antioch...t good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. police are looking for the robber who shot a clerk at 7- eleven in antioch. it happened around midnight at a store on lone tree way. no word on the clerk's condition. today hundreds of events throughout the world are planned to mark world aids day. in san francisco, hundreds of people will gather at the aids memorial grove in golden gate park. world aids day began in 1988. coming up on "cbs this morning" more of charlie rose's conversation with hillary clinton and meet the man who donated his kidney to a woman who posted on craigslist. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. ,, i am totally blind.
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and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com.
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good morning. we have wall-to-wall traffic in the silicon valley. an accident on 280 the newest problem now new york 280 beyond 85 blocking at least one lane. traffic has been backed up clear towards the guadalupe parkway and northbound 101 still stacked up leaving the area and bound for santa clara into sunnyvale backed up to 237. meantime over towards the bay bridge toll plaza, traffic is crowded through the macarthur maze. all these delays began at the 5:00 hour because of an accident. roberta. it's live, it's our weather camera looking towards san francisco in the direction of the golden gate bridge. we have a few clouds lingering across the bay area all with yesterday's passage of a weak impulse. we're currently in the 30s and 40s out the door later today, a slight breeze out of the northeast at 5. temperatures inching up into the low 60s. otherwise, 61 degrees in oakland. 58 degrees around san francisco. rain on thursday with wind.
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the only way to get better is to challenge yourself, and that's what we're doing at xfinity. we are challenging ourselves to improve every aspect of your experience. and this includes our commitment to being on time. every time. that's why if we're ever late for an appointment, we'll credit your account $20. it's our promise to you. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around.
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, december 1, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including more of our conversation with hillary clinton. on "cbs this morning," she defends her ties to wall street. but let's look at today's eye opener at 8:00. >> it's the biggest storm of the season, across the minneapolis metro area, they have gotten more than four inches of snow. >> the big cost of the deal, the cost and asking republicans to funder it. >> you have to fight them in the air, you have to fight them on the ground and you have to night
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them in cyberspace. a black pastor yielded more comments. he faces first-degree murder charges, and the minimum penalty is life without possibility of parole. the leading agency that accepts refugees did not say it would stop accepting syrian refugees. >> it's linked to the parents account, that has the first name and the last name and the parents address so you have a full profile of his kids. the make america great again -- even more embarrassing for trump, his hair is made by syrian refugees. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. dangerous weather is moving across the center of the
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country. several states are under severe storm warnings. parts of the midwest are battling record amounts of snow. drivers face slick conditions from nebraska to north dakota. police in minnesota have reported nearly 400 accidents there, at least one person was killed and dozens more were hurt. nebraska saw record amounts of snow. this video taken from inside a plane, landing in omaha, you can see the whiteout conditions there. south dakota also set a snowfall record. sioux falls received close to 9 inches. president obama is on his way home from the paris g-20 summit. he said that he's confident that the leaders will come to an agreement concerni ining global warming. . he also said that the sere -- world leaders are trying to
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keep the world temperature from rising more than 6 degrees. president obama admits the u.s. is partly to blame and he says not acting is a financial and security threat. >> if we let the world keep warming as fast as it is, and sea levels rising as fast as they are, and weather patterns keep shifting in more unexpected ways then before long we are going to have to devote more and more and more of our economic and military resources, not to growing opportunity for our people, but to adapting to the various consequences of a changing planet. this is an economic and security imperative that we have to tackle now. >> the president says he is confident whoever succeeds him in the white house will uphold climate change commitments. we're going to talk to president obama about climate change and isis when i interview
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him tomorrow at the white house. you can see our conversation thursday morning on cbs this morning. front-runner donald trump rejected the president's statement the that climate greao the future. >> one of the dumbest statements i have ever heard in is history of politics as i know it, which is pretty good was obama's statement that our number one problem is global warming. >> donald trump says iran and north korea pose a bigger threat. candidate marco rubio says no reasonable person could say that climate change is the country's top threat. the florida senator says we can't predict the climate 25 or 30 years from now. >> there's never been a time when the climate hasn't been changing, and what percentage of that is man-made is not clear. i'm a policymaker and my job is to go through the different
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solutions they're presenting to us. even according to the scientists, that anything we do will not change how fast the planet is warmi inwarming. schools are keeping students indoors, parents are crowding into hospital s along with children who are having trouble breathing, pollution is 35 times above what is a safe level, the major problem is coal burning which is a major problem in china. we talked to hillary clinton with lahaie adams, clinton addressed criticism with her ties with wall street. she met with plenty of corporate executives and long-term donors. >> i worked really hard to increase exports from american businesses, i saw a lot of business people, i saw a lot of
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union leaders, i saw as many people as i could fit in a day who needed something from their government, you know, somebody like craig smith would call me up from craig smith and say the chinese government is taking away our permits, we have been in china for decades, corning, a company i knew well from my time in the senate. they're trying to put a tariff on us that is going to drive us out of business. i worked really hard to get more jobs for americans. that meant representing big business and small business and everybody in between. >> have you benefitted are the fact that people say you are too close to wall street, has that hurt your image in running for president? >> i don't think so, i have stood for a lot of regulation on big banks and on the financial services sector, i also represented new york, and represented everyone from dairy farmers to the fishermen.
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so, yes, do i know people? and did i help rebuild after 9/11, yes i did. >> and you took money from them is what some would say. >> many people think they can influence me on that ground doesn't know me very well. >> why do you want to be president? you've had a remarkable life. you've been in the white house. there it is. >> there it is, i'm not moving back in because it is a wonderful place. >> why are you doing? >> is it about history? is it about being the first woman. >> no, that would all be an extra added part of it. but for me, i really love this country and i think will be one of those water shed election where is we're either going to make the economy fair for everyone or increase fairness in a way that we haven't seen since the 1920s. wear either going to figure out to live together despite all of
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our differences, show respect for people and force human rights, civil rights, gay rights, workers rights, or we're going to have the balance shift against the kind of democracy that i think works in america. >> to the some people think that the biggest problem of the economy is the white house. >> look at how our founders set it up, they made the separation of powers and they made it really difficult to get things done. and there's this period where we have a minority in the other party that doesn't believe in compromise, doesn't believe in reaching consensus. >> but you're attacking them, that's not the way to do it. >> part of what you have to do
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is make it clear to everyone else who is in that party that there is room for negotiation. >> you can see the whole interview tonight on my pbs program. >> what do you think her biggest challenge is? what does she talk about as to what she sees as her biggest challenge? >> just to make the case that in the 21st century she is the right person to lead. she talks about leadership all the time and what the country needs to do and what we need to do as i mentioned in the early hours, so that's the challenge for her. and i think the challenge also is i talked to her about, is reaching out to the constitue y constituencies of the future. there's a difference between the support of young people, independents and latinos for barack obama than it is for hillary clinton at this moment. >> and she so much wants the job, no matter who's in office, somebody's always going to be mad at you, and she knows all the ins and outs and still wants that job. >> she's smart, the other thing
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you get is she's smart. >> uh-huh. >> moving on, are you getting fleeced at the pharmacy? consumer reports investigating how you could be paying 10 times too much for prescription drugs, that's coming up. and first on cbs this morning, look what's coming up on "cbs this morning." are you getting fleeced at the pharmacy, consumer reports investigates on how you could be paying too much for prescription drugs, that's ahead first on
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. a mistake on craigslist could lead to one woman a kid eany. see how love and loss brought strangers together. that's next on "cbs this morning."
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jamie wax is at the hospital of the university of pennsylvania. >> it was an ad on craigslist that connected the two strangers setting off a series of strange coincidences that helped a woman who needed a kidney to someone who matches. >> i wanted to be able to see my child grow, and i wanted to see him in the future. and i didn't want to die. >> reporter: in july 2013, 23-year-old nina sari faced an unsettling reality, she had a disease that caused her kidneys to fail and made her require dialysis. she would spend hours at the hospital. it made it hard for her to be there for her son. >> when he would ask me, can you
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come and see me read this book at school, i would say no, i have to go to dialysis. >> naina put her name on a lis list --- >> i just wanted a kidney for any waif. to make her normal again. >> the ad, looking for a brave person, mistakenly ended up in the building materials section. and the ad caught the eye of this man. >> you're on craigslist looking for marble slabs and you see a heading looking for a brave person. what actually clicked on that ad? >> curiosity at first. here i am in between marble and pavers and, i'm brave. when i read the ad asking for a
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kidney to save somebody's life, it stared at me. and i knew, i knew i was a match. from the second i saw that. >> you felt like it was there for you? >> it was there for me. and i'm going to have to blame jessica for that. >> jessica is glen's first wife, who shared a remarkably similar story. in 2004, she also suffered can kidney failure and went on dialysis while raising her young son. after more than a year waiting for a transplant, glen too looked for alternatives. >> i got fed up and i put an ad in the local newspaper. >> he got a few offers but says that hospital balked at taking a donation from a stranger. eventually jessica received a kidney from a donor who had died, but her body rejected the organ. >> the years of dialysis and the transplants and more dialysis,
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she really wasn't viable for another transplant. in 2011, she passed away. i'm sorry. >> glen says it was jessica, his angel now, who led him to the saria family. >> i remember once when she was in the hospital saying if i could be there, instead of you, i would. she's probably laughing, saying here's your chance. >> there's no way, there's no words for me to express how thankful i am. the only thing i can say is god sees all and i will never be able to repay him back, but i think god will. >> reporter: nina says she wants to honor glen and his gift by being the best mother she can and she already has plans to pay it forward. if everything goes well she plans to go back to school in january to become a dialysis nurse. >> i think that's my favorite
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story of the week. >> layer upon layer of goodness. that's an amazing story, jamie. we are certainly pulling for them. thanks, jamie, great story. one of america's bravest olympians pushes the limits once again. the inspiring video of a amy van dike in ruins. that's next on "cbs this morning." "cbs this morning".
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>> olympic championship swimmer amy van dykeen posted this video with her walking without an upper body brace for the first time in nearly a year-and-a-half. we have been following her battle after a accident, after an atv accident left her paralyzed from the waist down t. six time gold medallist is calling this a huge step. >> great news indeed. she is very, very strong. coming up, after a lifetime in show business, rita moreno returns to her old bronx neighborhood. all that and more after our local news.
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. looking for the robber who a clerk at 7-11 in antioch.t happened around midn good morning, it's 8:25. time for news headlines. police are looking for the robber who shot a clerk at 7- eleven in antioch. it happened around midnight at a store on lone tree way. no word on the condition of the clerk. a man suspected of fatally stabbing his girlfriend at her home on saturday is in custody. kirincic was arrested in redwood city after a standoff with police. coming up on "cbs this morning" you may be overpaying for common prescriptions at your pharmacy. the results of a new consumer report just ahead. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. come on in pop pop.
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happy birthday. i just had a heart attack... and now i have a choice. for her. for them. and him. a choice to take brilinta. a prescription for people who've been hospitalized for a heart attack. i take brilinta with a baby aspirin ...no more than 100 mg. as it affects how well it works. it's such an important thing to do to help protect against another heart attack. brilinta worked better than plavix. and even reduced the chances of dying from another one. don't stop taking brilinta without talking to doctor. since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers. a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. tell your doctor about bleeding, new or unexpected shortness of breath, any planned surgery and all medicines you take. i will take brilinta today. tomorrow.
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and every day for as long as my doctor tells me. don't miss a day of brilinta. >> good morning. highway 29 is shut down in the southbound direction in napa between tubbs and bradford. crews are on scene right now. it will be closed until 10:30 as crews try to upright a big rig which overturned earlier this morning. again, southbound 29 shut down for the next couple of hours. as we move to the rest of the commute, northbound 101 has been jammed still very crowded from hellyer. stays slow through san jose, santa clara into mountain view.
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traffic doesn't pick up, use 280 as an alternate. bay bridge toll plaza stacked up solid through the macarthur maze, 580 crowded from highway 24 approaching the toll plaza. there is an accident in san mateo south 101 just beyond 92. getting to that area very heavy traffic across the san mateo bridge. roberta. >> i got to tell you i have never seen this view from the mount vaca cam before. take a look at this. it's however live weather camera. it features a few wispy clouds a little bit of morning haze out there, as well. and mount diablo in the distance that's a beautiful view. temperature-wise in the 30s in santa rosa and throughout the tri-valley. it is now 48 in san francisco. and due east of the bay bridge it's 46 in oakland. temperatures on the rise today 50s beaches and 50s across the peninsula. 60s santa clara valley. settling into the 50s in the east bay. north bay numbers 60s. windsor 58. rain thursday.
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♪ >> get your dancing shoes on, charlie. he's back with a few album t. first single is called "daddy." the main character keeps getting odder. si almost broke the internet with that gangum video years ago. >> you don't have a potbelly. not that i've seen it. i just know. that's true. look over here. >> what are you doing, norah? >> showing off.
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showing off. >> welcome back to "cbs news" this morning. >> you know what she says, you think you got it? >> i don't know what is in the water today, guys. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." we're glad to be here. coming up, this half hour, sticker shock. we have sticker shock. which stores charge the most plus how soaring costs can help you even if are you insured. plus, rita more rena, honorees, how liz taylor inspired her that's ahead. right now it's time to show you the headlines, raleigh's news and observer says a north carolina woman is charged with animal cruelty, she posted a photo on facebook of her dog with its mouth taped shut. outrage spread on social media, as you might expect. which led police to investigate t. dog will stay with her for now, it seems the dog was well
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cared for. she was trying to stop the dog from barking too much. there has to be a better way to do that. the new york daily news says salt warnings, a salt shaker icon will appear next to any food item that contains at least 2300 milligrams of sodium. that's about one teaspoon of salt. >> that applies to 14 franchises nationwide. the birmingham news says 60 years ago today, rosa parks refused to give up her seat on a city bus to a white man. parks a role at that time was to desegregate the because system through a boycott and a lawsuit. they followed her arrest led by martin luther king, jr., helped launched the civil rights movement. >> it's important to talk to your kids about rosa parks. a couple dropped a half a million dollars in a salvation army kettle. they do nated the big check on saturday it is the biggest
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single donation the salvation army in the twin cities ever received t. couple wishes to remain anonymous, very nice on
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to get the lowest prescription drug prices and where to shop online. rita moreno is 83 and still heating up the stage. >> rita! wow! >> latin grammy surprise, she is now a kennedy center
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're a bow and arrow ♪ ♪ a broken guitar ♪ while the rainwater washes away ♪ ♪ who you are ♪ we go over the mountains ♪ and under the stars ♪ we go over the mountains ♪ and under the stars [♪] and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night,blind. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com.
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>> watching them celebrate entertainment legends this sunday as a part of the 38th annual kennedy center honors over the next few weeks. we'll introduce you to each of this year's honorees identified for a lifetime of artistic achiefment. >> we start which are that moreno -- rita moreno, she won an egot, an emmy, grammy and oscar and tony. moreno took michelle miller on a journey back. good morning. >> good morning. she is certainly best known for "west side story," but rita
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moreno, this legacy makes her most proud. ♪ da da da da. >> reporter: to fully appreciate the breaking career of rita moreno, you only need to spend a few minutes with her in the bronx neighborhood she first called home. >> oh my god, i need to get out of here and give you a -- >> oh my goodness, what an honor. >> here the puerto rican transplant turned hollywood starlet is still thrilling fans. >> oh my god, are you so beautiful. >> did you live around here? >> yeah. >> i lived down the block. i was here as a little girl. >> reporter: she moved here at the age of 5 is, traveling from puerto rico to new york on a ship with her newly divorced mother. >> he's got goose bumps. >> reporter: though revered now,
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moreno's earliest memories in america weren't so positive. her journey not so welcoming. >> i ran into racist stuff quickly even when i didn't understand what the word "speic meant, but i could see the hatred in these young kids, white kid, i grew up feeling very, very inferior to just about everybody in the world. >> reporter: dance lessons provided an escape when she was just 6. a natural performer, she was entertaining in nightclubs by the age of 9 and at 13, she earned her first part on broadway. >> i wanted to be a movie star, first of all. i wanted to be elizabeth taylor. >> reporter: moreno styled herself to look like the popular film actress in large part because taylor's dark hair rese"selma"bled her -- resemble
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her own. >> there was nobody in the movies that resembled me in anyway. >> reporter: after a talent agent spotted her in a dance recital, she landed a contract with mgm studios and moved to hollywood. but it didn't take long before moreno found herself being type cast. >> i played indian americans, polynesian. >> the american girl gets the fashion. >> every one of them without exception were usually characters with absolutely no education, who could comparely speak english, who had thick accents. >> i already speak english. >> it was limiting and humiliating and it was hurtful. >> reporter: was it a excise? >> of course it was. absolutely. but i always felt that somehow some day someone would see me and say, that girl has talent and i'm going to do something
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for her. [ music playing ] >> reporter: her some day came at the age of 26 when she was karst to play anita in "west side story." ♪ i like to be in america >> they finally found a role model. >> why would you want to go back to puerto rico? >> oh, it's so good here. >> it's so good there. we had nothing. >> the first time i had ever played a young hispanic woman who had a sense of dignitary, who had a sense of self-respect. >> reporter: she won ans a core for that performance, visiting the playgrounds where many of the movie scenes were shot. moreno remembered the significance of heroin. what did that night mean? >> oh, it's hard to find words for it, because as everybody who wins an oscar will tell you, it takes almost a month or so to really believe it. my winning the oscar had a huge effect on the hispanic
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community. >> reporter: ironically, winning an oscar did not widen the shift to roles. she shifted to the stage and the small screen. >> hey you guys. ♪ they call me broadway >> she won an emmy singing on the television show "the electric company." earned two emmys for appearances on the "muppet show" and the "rockford files." >> boy, you had me scared. here. ♪ everything keeps coming up >> and she won a tony for her performance at goofy gomez in the production of "the ritz" a role she reprised in the film version. >> i'm a person that perseveres, you fall down, you get up, you dust yourself off and keep move income that direction. >> reporter: now 83 with more than 40 films and just as many them le vision shows under her
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bell, she is not only getting respect, she is in demand. she recently guest starred in the peabody award winning tv show "jane the virgin." >> you know, inhail, exhale. >> i am now called the pioneer. which i think is kind of charming. >> reporter: it's been nearly eight decades since that 5-year-old girl lives i lived in an overcrowded tenement on this block, in that time, rita moreno has become the role model she never had. what is most rewarding for you? >> most rewarding, really, is just being here. now. and having all these wonderful things happening to me. particularly since i am one of the honorees for the kennedy center honors. and what's important about that kind of honor and recognition is that it's for a lifetime of
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work. >> are you pinching yourself? >> all the time. all the time. i just feel so fortunate and privileged and more than ever i feel very latinas. >> almost 84-years-old and no signs of slowing down, in addition to acting, she just recorded her first spanish language album with grammy winning producer emilio estefan, it contains in spanish the song with the somewhere" from "west side story." she serenaded me. i was goose bumps. she is so busy, just getting an opportunity to sit down with her, it's an act of god. >> what a career, though, "west side story" and i love the words, she bomb the role modem she never had. >> and in demand today. >> certainly is. >> like her. >> looking forward to her honors. can you see rita and automatic
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winners at the 38th kennedy center honors, tuesday at 6:00, 8:00 central right here on cbs. coming up next, how baby names are becoming more noble. are you watching "cbs this morning.",,,,,,,,
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pg&e is committed to clean energy and part of that commitment is our partnership with habitat for humanity. our mission is to build homes, community and hope. our homeowners are low-income families, so the ability for them to have lower energy cost is wonderful. we have been able to provide about 600 families with solar on their homes. that's over nine and a half million dollars of investment by pg&e, and that allows us to provide clean energy for everyone here. it's been a great partnership. together, we're building a better california.
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,,,,
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some parents are giving newborns the royal treatment. a new report on the most popular baby names sparks the gender neutral name royalty, up nearly 90% this year, duchess is 75% more popular than last year and reign is up more than 50%. the most popular names that
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remain familiar, sophia for girls and jackson for boys. >> that,, i guess i never really gave much thought to the acidity in any foods. never thought about the coffee i was drinking having acids. it never dawned on me that it could hurt your teeth. my dentist has told me your enamel is wearing away, and that sounded really scary to me, and i was like well can you fix it, can you paint it back on, and he explained that it was not something that grows back, it's kind of a one-time shot and you have to care for it. he told me to use pronamel. it's gonna help protect the enamel in your teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee
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and to eat healthier, and it was a real easy switch to make. and i've had some work done. in '62 they put in a conversation pit. brilliant. in '74 they got shag carpet. that poor dog. rico?! then they expanded my backside. ugh. so when the nest learning thermostat showed up, i thought "hmmm." but nest is different. keeps 'em comfy. and saves energy automatically. like that! i'm like a whole new house!
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nest. welcome to the magic of home. are displaced after a fire e out in their apartment comp it happened good morning. it's 8:55. time for news headlines. several families are displaced after a fire broke out in their apartment complex. it happened in el sobrante. no one was seriously hurt. a man suspected of fatally stabbing his girlfriend on saturday is in custody. last night anthony kirincic was arrested in redwood city after a standoff with police. today hundreds of events throughout the world are planned to mark world aids day. in san francisco, hundreds of people will gather at the aids memorial in golden gate park. world aids day began in 1988. bundle up. it's not as cold as 24 hours ago. we have 30s in throughout right
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there in the tri-valley from dublin looking towards mount diablo. you can see danville in the distance there. right now, we have temperatures into the 30s there. 35 napa. 34 in santa rosa. it's in the 40s around the peninsula. later today inching our way up into the low 60s from the 50s at the beaches. upper 50s peninsula to 60 degrees in campbell. low 60s morgan hill and in gilroy. mid- and high 50s east of the bay with the northeast breeze at 5. stinson beach at 56 degrees. sonoma in the high 50s. and we are flirting with nearly 60 from rohnert park back through cloverdale. we'll have rain and wind arriving right here in the bay area on thursday. dry skies on friday through monday. a look at traffic with our very own liza battalones up next. covered california is here to help californians who need health insurance get it.
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good morning, everybody. liza battalones here. it's going to be a long commute for folks leaving the bay bridge area heading to south san francisco. there is an accident in the city south 101 approaching silver avenue. this accident involving an overturned dump truck blocking at least one lane of traffic. we are getting word that there's debris scattered across all lanes. meantime, getting into the city by way of the bay bridge it's a long commute out of oakland backed up into the macarthur maze with the metering lights on. and remember, highway 29 will be shut down until 10 a.m.
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