tv CBS This Morning CBS January 4, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PST
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live weather camera. it's raining. this is the first in the series of three storms. >> oh, here it comes. >> bye. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, january 4th, 2016. welcome to cbs this morning. armed anti-government activists vowing a standoff after taking over federal buildings in oregon. >> we're in new hampshire where bill clinton will campaign for his wife today. donald trump escalate his personal attacks on former president. >> and president obama prepares to side step congress to take action on gun control. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's eyeopener. your world in 90 seconds. >> if the federal government decides to use force, will you respond? >> that will have to be determined at that time. >> you are prepared to? >> absolutely. >> a standoff in oregon with
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armed activists. >> the fbi says it's working to p bring' peaceful resolution to the situation. >> this morning, donald trump unleashing his first television ad of the campaign. he attacks hillary clinton directly. >> she caused death. she caused tremendous death with incompetent decisions. >> president obama is set to announce executive orders on gun control. >> this president wants to act as if he's a king, as if he's a dictator. >> floodwaters moving down the mississippi after killing more than two dozen people. >> you don't know if you're going to have anything to come back to. >> saudi arabia did you tell off diplomatic relations with iran after an attack on the embassy in tehran over the execution of a shiite cleric. >> isis released a video showing the executions of what they call five british spies. >> the terror group promised payback for the uk. >> the markets are open and it is already not looking very good. >> selloff in china, japan, europe. >> whoa!
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>> the behavior of bill stand trending on social media. >> oh, that? >> one more miracle attempt. can they do this again? no. >> they finally knock the champed off in this division. >> $95,000. >> and all that matters, new year's resolutions. the exact legal grounds between lying to yourself and to lying to other people. >> we're a few hours into the new year now, if you broke your resolutions, statistically, you are about to. >> this is water melon boy doing his thing. twitter made this kid a absolute superstar. >> i can't believe you got through the whole one. give us a bite of the remainder. >> this is great tv, isn't it? >> this morning's "eyeopener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. >> welcome to "cbs this
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morning." happen any why you near from all of us. an armed ma lish yilitia style in eastern oregon. this morning they're taking the lead to resolve the standoff at a national wildlife refuge. >> the group took over three to five buildings saturday in a protest of a federal judge's ruling to send two ranchers to prisoners. john blackstone is at the wildlife refuge in oregon. good morning, john. >> good morning. sunrise is still a half hour or so away here in eastern oregon. the american flag that covers the sign at the wildlife refuge is the signal from the protesters that they're in charge here. they intend to stay as long as it takes. they say until their demands are met. at the occupied compound, protesters are setting up camp and settling in for the long haul. this man is leading the occupation. he says they're fighting back against the government's expansion of the over
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100-year-old federal wildlife refuge at the expense of local ranchers. >> this refuge here is rightfully owned by the people. and we intend to use it. >> back in 2014, bundy's father was embroiled in a dispute with federal officials over grazing rights on federal land in nevada. that escalated into an armed confrontation. this group set up camp saturday after a march at a nearby town in support of two ranchers. dwight hammond and his son stephen were convicted of setting fires on federal land in 2001 and served jail time. they say it wasn't arson but controlled burns to protect their property. in october, a judge added four more years to their sentence. 73-year-old hammonds says this could be a death death sentence for him. >> this makes it over for me. it seems a little overreach for
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having burned 127 acres. >> reporter: in a statement the hammonds attorney reports they're not associated with bundy's group. saying neither bundy or anyone within his group or organization speaks for the hammond family. but protesters say they plan to stay put until all local ranchers reclaim land they allege was stolen by the u.s. government years ago. >> we'll be here as long as it takes, you know, and being as gentle as possible. this is important. >> reporter: outside the come pound, armed guards are standing around monitoring the property. dwight and stephen hammond are on their way to southern california to turn themselves into authorities and begin serving their prison sentence there's. >> john, thanks. the occupation leader is with us from the wildlife refuge. good morning. >> good morning. >> tell us what you're trying to do. >> well, we have a situation
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here where our federal government has come down upon the people. they've been doing it for some time now. and there's been some tremendous abuses. they've used the courts to prosecute and to basically take the land and resources away from the people. >> why are you armed? >> we are serious about being here. we're serious about defending our rights. and we're serious about getting some things straightened out. >> do you anticipate that this could lead to violence? >> only if the government wants to take it there. >> i saw an interview with one of your members who was heading there today and said he's prepared to die for this cause. do you feel the same? >> um, i feel -- absolutely. but probably not in the way that most people will take it. i am a family man. i have six children. i have a business. i'm actually own a truck shop with 25 employees. i have no desire to go out and
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to lose my life. i want to live free. i want to be able to prosper and i know that i need the land and resources to do that. >> what went into the planning of this? had you been planning this a long time? is this a spur of the moment move snt h move? the hammond family says you're not speaking for them. how did this come about? >> every one of the ranchers had to leave their land, leave their heritage and their hard work in order to make this refuge. that's what this is about. the people of this county are being abused and now prosecuted because they're not willing to sell to the federal government. and it's just one of those things that this cannot continue. the abuses and the damages will be -- it's too critical to allow it to continue. >> who is the enemy here? >> well, i don't really want to
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say there is any enemy. the federal government really is acting in the way that they were set up to act. the states have failed to protect the counties and the counties have failed to protect the people. now you have a situation where the people have to stand on their own to protect and defend their own rights. so really our system of our federal system has failed. we need the states to stand up and say, hey, you're not going to do this here. we need the counties to say you're not going do this here. so that people can go about and peacefully live and benefit from the land and the resources and prosper and regain their wealth across the country. >> would you define this as an armed militia who is prepared to stay indefinitely? >> absolutely not. this is concerned american citizens that are willing to stand for their rights. >> all right. amond bundy, thank you so much. >> presidential campaigns are using new tactics this morning
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as we get closer to the first votes being cast. the iowa caucuses are now just four weeks away from today. new hampshire's primary follows eight days later. donald trump's campaign this morning released his first tv ad set to air in both states. >> he'll quickly cut the head off isis and take their oil and he'll stop illegal immigration by building a wall on our southern border that mexico will pay for. >> hillary clinton has been one of trump's main targets. her husband, former president bill clinton will stump for the democratic front runner today in new hampshire. major garrett is a national community college where the former president will hold his first event. major, good morning. >> good morning. bill and hillary clinton have long had a love affair with new hampshire. and they 50sed eused to have a relationship with donald trump but the battle for the presidency left that relationship in tatters. bill clinton returns to the state where he first had to overcome his past. >> reporter: tabloid headlines
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have ab affair with gennifer flowers almost buried bill clinton's campaign here in 1992. but bill and hillary clinton closed ranks, campaigned doggedly and finished a respectable second. >> new hampshire tonight has made bill clinton the come back kid. >> reporter: hardly a kid anymore -- >> he is so excited about coming back to the granite state. >> reporter: terry shoemaker was clinton's new hampshire director in 1992. >> bill clinton loves new hampshire. it's mutual. >> reporter: things used to be mutual between donald trump and the clintons, golf tournaments, trump's third wedding and kind words from trump. >> the four, who is the best? >> well, bush 41, bush 43, clinton or obama? >> i would really say clinton probably. i would have to say clinton. >> reporter: not anymore. >> she wants to accuse me of things and the husband is one of the great abusers of the world. give me a break. give me a break. >> reporter: trump used infidele
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against sexism. >> what he did and gone through is terrible, especially if she wants to play the woman card. >> reporter: hillary clinton avoided responding to donald trump's personal attacks on her or her husband. she does challenge trump on policy, directly opposing the call to ban muslims from the u.s. >> shameful and offensive, it is dangerous and counterproductive. >> reporter: bill clinton is not expected to respond directly to trump either, vetting democrats here have as the saying goes, moved on. >> i think trump is going to do what trump is going to do. the people in new hampshire heard all this before. they're really not interested in it. >> reporter: shoemaker told us that bill clinton could make the difference for hillary in a race he describes as very tight and very close with bernie sanders. as for trump's first tv ad, the campaign says it will debut tomorrow and promises to spend $1.1 million in iowa and nearly as much here in new hampshire.
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>> all right, major, thank you so much. our cbs political director john dickerson is with us. happy new year. >> happy new year. >> laots to talk about. donald trump says he almost feels guilty he has to run ads. >> yes. >> he is feeling the heat in iowa . >> i think he's feeling a little bit. he would say nothing is wrong in iowa. if you look at the average of the polls, he is behind in iowa. i think also if you look at the ads which is about people streaming over the border and isis, he's trying to focus the race on what he's offering which is strength. you know, he keeps talking about strength. so the ad creates a sense of fear. he says these things are coming in to get you. i'm going to protect you. it kind of focuses the race on what he wants it to be about instead of the ideas as we get close to voting. >> has this race become a race for who will be in the end the person who opposes donald trump for the nomination? >> it has. so it's trump and the anti-trump. the question is who is
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anti-trump? is it ted cruz or somebody from this establishment lane. is the lane an actual lane or a tiny little bike lane and whether the party is really the cruz-trump part of the party. that is still left to be worked out. >> donald trump and ted cruz seem to have a bit of a bromance going. it's an unspoken thing. you don't talk about me, i don't talk you about. yesterday on your show that seemed to change a tad. >> they have the same -- they're going for the same voters. so if cruz attacks trump, he potentially offends those voters who he ultimately wants to get when he thinks donald trump falls. if donald trump attacks cruz, gets a lot of heat from radio hosts and the cruz voters. that's the reason they have this bromance wlchlt i talked to donald trump about immigration, he wanted to be clear that whatever ted cruz's position, is it is not stronger than his. >> in new hampshire today, we'll see bill clinton do two separate campaign events for his wife hillary clinton. he's known as the come back kid
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in new hampshire. what is the down side to this campaign? >> first, bill clinton is a huge upside among democrats. they love him. he can speak to that old time religion. nobody speaks as a campaigner the way he does. but bill clinton is a little undisciplined. we saw that in past campaigns. that is always a challenge. that is always separate and apart from the trump question. whether he engages. and there seems to be no evidence that he's going to engage in any fighting. >> he won't punch back with trum s -- trum snp. >> at this moment, no. it looks like a general lection but the down side you is get into a knife fight in an alley with donald trump and you don't want to do that. >> the question is how far will donald trump go? >> i think it's a warning shot. in other words, don't keep calling me sexist or this is how far i'll go. i don't think he wants to spend a lot of time talking about this. >> john dickerson, thank you. i know we'll see you again. rvelg . saudi arabia and iran have no diplomatic relations to day. angry demonstrators protested
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the execution of a shiite muslim cleric. they criticized the execution and the saudis sunni monarchy. now bahrain, sudan, and the united arab emirates are taking steps to cut their own ties to iran. holly williams is monitoring the situation from turkey. good morning, holly. >> good morning. there were protests here outside the saudi arabian consulate in istanbul an around the muslim world yesterday. the u.s. is calling for saudi arabia and iran to avoid he is escalating stengss which could destabilize the middle east. >> reporter: shiite cleric was mourned in eastern saudi arabia. after being executed on saturday. in a sunni muslim monarchy, he demanded equality for saudi arabian shiites and was shot and arrested in 2012. his death has enflamed a 1400-year-old conflict between
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sunni and shiite muslims. in the iranian capital, tehran, an irate mob, ran sacked the saudi arabian embassy. around 40 people were later arrested. but iranian officials also decided to honor the executed cleric by naming the street after him. iran's supreme leader koeshgs mai, khomeni, says they will face retribution. in bahrain, shiite protests threw molotov cocktails and police fired back with tear gas. in indian cash cashmere, they used rubber bullets and this crowd burned a picture of the saudi arabian king. the saudi royal family has opened the gates of hell for its rule, said this man. in lebanon, the protests were
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peaceful. but the shiite militant group, hezbollah, described his killing as an assassination. saudi arabia and iran are already fighting each other in a deadly proxy war in syria. the execution and the angry reaction will only fuel mistrust and hatred. nora? >> holly williams, thank you soeso much. the thread t of flooding is not over in the midwest. flood warnings are in place for more than half a dozen states along the mississippi. david begno is on top of the garage in alexandra county, illinois, with the high water threat. david, good morning. >> the family property is surrounded by wear the on both sides. they have 25,000 sandbags and eight pumps that have been going since earlier in the week. this should be land. the pumps and sandbags, it's dry
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on this property. but look at the property next door, flooded. the flooding in southern illinois is unlike anything people here have ever seen in january. nearly 14,000 acres of hard hit alexander county are underwater. a levee breach a quarter mile wide sent watt freer from the mississippi river rushing n the threat here will last for days. >> we've never seen watt they are high. it is significant pressure on the levees. we're asking people to stay out until we feel it's safe. >> reporter: so far, ten deaths related to the winter flood are confirmed in illinois. in missouri, president obama has signed a federal disaster declaration. hundreds there have been forced into shelters. >> the only home that i've ever owned right out is gone. >> reporter: in missouri, wanda
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ross and her husband are among 32 people refusing to evacuate. their home is now surrounded by water. >> this is our home. this is everything we've got. you don't want somebody to come in and loot the rest of the stuff that you worked your life for. >> overnight the water rose around the property about 2 1/2 inches and hypothermia is also a concern here. the temperature was 30 degrees this morning. with the wind chill, it feels like it's 18. >> wow. thanks, david. city offices in schools in portland, oregon are closed this morning because of snow and freezing rain. other parts of the west are bracing for a drenching from a series of el nino storms. first hit, san francisco and los angeles overnight. some parts of the state could see up to a half a foot of rain by friday. >> more than three months after the "60 minutes" shares the first look at the ship wreck
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good morning, everybody. let's get to it. high def doppler radar tracking the first of three storms this week. they are el nino storms that will impact your morning commute. right now, the heaviest rainfall is around 280 around the peninsula. delays at sfo and some arriving flights over one hour. east bay getting pounded around brentwood and antioch. heaviest rain, cloudy skies with a scattered shower during the day. 40s and 50s. storm number two later tonight.
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s. president a is president obama is back in washington with plans this week to stiffen gun control. ahead, the republicans who say his new rules will be gone if they're elected president. >> the news is back in a moment right here on "cbs this morning." cry-proof, stay-proof look? neutrogena® makeup remover does. it erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. need any more proof than that? neutrogena. our all-new beyond the scale weiprogram puts the focused. on you and not just the number on the scale. lose weight while eating healthier, with all new smartpoints. and move more by including fitness in ways that work for you. see how good you'll feel with the new weight watchers beyond the scale program! join for free now and lose 10 pounds on us.
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eve road rage. ahead the latest on the arguments are expected to b today in the trial of raymo i'm frank mallicoat. it's 7:26. here's what's happening -- closing arguments are expected to begin today in the trial of raymond chow. she's charged with money laundering. and some lane adjustments start on the golden gate bridge. the six-lane moveable deck is back to three lanes north and three lanes south set for an hour on thursdays and fry -- and fridays. straight ahead, road rain takes a life. a young college student died. and roberta will tell you about the rain -- coming up after the break. ,, ,,,,
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right shoulder. we're dealing with wet weather this morning. so that makes for a very slow and go monday morning commute. we've got busy conditions at the bay bridge. metering lights are on. 34 minutes carquinez bridge to the maze. east bay travel times, south 880 very slow and going. 238 down to highway 84, that will take 2u 2 minutes. almost an hour 680 to 580 down to 101. northbound 880 through the maze we're seeing slow and go conditions. here's roberta. if you have been waiting for el nino, wait no more. good morning, everybody. our live doppler tracking storm number one. right now the heaviest precipitation has moved off to the peninsula into the eastern portion of our bay area. from east palo alto marching into hayward, up the stream we go, north bay getting hammered all the way into rohnert park. we're in the 40s, yes, finally out of the 20s and 30s. today's highs into the 50s. for storm late tonight overnight.
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♪ the main problem with new year's resolutions is that we set our expectations way too high. for instance, lots of people say they want to exercise more but that is hard! exercise is like reading for your muscles, except you can't watch a movie of someone else exercising and get the gist of it. so instead of beating your health up because you haven't gone to the gym, simply lower your standards for what counts as exercise to anything that brings your heart rate up. that way, instead of jogging, simply try waking up late for work or taking a pregnancy test. that way, you haven't failed to keep your new year's resolution. you've just succeeded in a different way. >> taking a pregnancy test is an
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interesting one. >> whatever gets your heart rate up. >> what is new with this picture? we are all table for the first time and reunited and it feels so good. >> for two weeks. >> good to see you. >> how was your holiday? >> it was really good but it's always good to come back home. >> looks like you got a tan. >> you noticed? >> i did. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." i did! coming up in this half hour, president obama prepares new rules to regulate gun sales. he says they are worth it to prevent even one act of violence. ahead, prominent republicans push back. one says the president's act is the act of a dictator. plus we have new clues of the freighter that disappeared during hurricane joaquin. "60 minutes" gave us our first look what happened to the missing el faro but something is missing and that story is s nikkei fell 3%.
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european indexes are also down this morning. britain's "telegraph" a hong kong publisher has disappeared and it may be connected to reported plans to publish a book about the love life of china's president. protesters in hong kong want answers of that and abuse china of abducting the missingo workers. the other four van issued in october. "the new york times" says a deadly earthquake rocked northeast india. the 6.7 magnitude quake hit overnight near the border with knee myanmar. video from the remote area shows
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buildings collapsed into mounds of rubble. witnesses say the shaking lasted about a minute. san bernardino" sun" says inland regional facility is open for the first time since december's terror attack. 600 workers willg return to the complex where 14 people were killed. counseling will be provided for those who need it. the conference center where the massacre took place remains closed indefinitely. the new york "daily news" says the new powerball is one of it's biggest and estimated to surge to $400 million! wow! that is for wednesday's drawing. the odds of winning this top prize is about 1 in 292 million. the chances of being hit by lightning in your lifetime are far better, just 1 in 12,000. but it's worth a couple of dollars to buy a ticket. president obama is moving forward this morning on several new gun control proposals. the president is scheduled to meet with attorney general loretta lynch to review steps he
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can take without k the details, opponents are sharpening their attack. >> my new year's resolution is to move forward on our unfinished business. >> reporter: president obama teased his latest round of executive actions over the weekend. >> we know we can't stop every act of violence. but what if we tried to stop even one? >> reporter: he signaled the move last month in an interview with norah o'donnell. after 14 people were killed in san bernardino by terrorists using legally purchased firearms. >> there are steps we can make not to eliminate every one of these mass shootings, but to
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improve the odds that they don't happen as frequently. >> reporter: nearly three years after the president's side-stepped congress with 23 executive actions on gun control, advocates are urging him to do more. the white house is considering several steps to clarify existing laws and forcing more gun sellers to conduct background checks on potential buyers and making it more difficult for domestic abusers to acquire firearms. democratic candidates for president were quick to praise the president's upcoming action. >> most gun owners in this country are understanding that people who should not own guns should not be able to buy them. >> -- republican walks into the white house within the first day, the skuexecutive order wile reversed. >> reporter: the republicans immediately objected. >> on my first day behind that desk those orders are gone. >> the news president comes in, boom, first day, first hour, first minute rescind that. >> reporter: they attack the president once again for going
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around congress. >> this president wants to act as all is probably going to end up in court. >> jan, thank you so much. police near dallas are searching this morning for a group of suspects in a deadly case of road rage. one of the men riding in an suv shot and killed a college student in another vehicle. witnesses say the victim was driving friends home from a new year's eve party. don dahler shows us why police think she may have crossed paths with the suspects earlier that night. >> reporter: good morning. friends say sarah muslinger acted responsibly during the new year's eve party and had not been drinking because she was the designated driver. but hours into the new year, her life was cut short, struck by a bullet in the head.
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sarah, the university of north texas junior, was shot around 2:00 a.m. on friday. the car she was driving hit another vehicle before crashing into a utility pole. according to witnesses, she and her three passengers came under fire after a verbal altercation with people in a dark colored toyota or lexus suv that fled the scene. >> it's our understanding that the documents of the suv were all african-american males, five to six males. >> i want justice for her. i want someone be responsible for shooting her. >> reporter: police believe the shooting may have from this new year's eve party. >> they saw two of the suspects at the party earlier. it's my understanding they did not know each other. >> reporter: muslinger was a member of this sorority and writing on her linked-in page she hoped to major movies.
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hundreds attended a candlelight vigil on saturday one day after she was taken off life support. her mother said sarah was an organ don oar. >> she was always reaching out and to give. she lives on. >> she lived with joy and laughed with grace and didn't care about what other people thought. she was happy. and we all should be a little more like that. >> reporter: police in denton, texas, have not made any arrests nor released the name of the suspects but asking anyone who was at the new year's eve party and took pictures or videos to contact them. >> what a tragic story. >> so sad. >> so unnecessary. >> thank you, don. haunting new video shows the el faro nearly three miles under be here until 9:00.
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you don't want to miss the prince talking about fatherhood. that is coming up. i'm here at my house, on thanksgiving day and i have a massive heart attack right in my driveway. the doctor put me on a bayer aspirin regimen. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. go talk to your doctor. you're not indestructible anymore.
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♪ "60 minutes" brought you the first look last night at the wreckage of the el faro. the ntsb released a video on sunday as part of its investigation. unmanned device captures the images on the ocean floor. the cargo ship you may recall van issued back in october heading from jacksonville, florida to san juan, puerto rico. it steers into the path of hurr data roar recorder orange cylinder up there in the monitor and that could be key in piecing together the final moments of the ship.
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this video was taken three miles under water revealing the twisted and crushed and scattered remains of the el faro. the bridge the ship's command center investigators hoped to find the recorder. but lead investigate tom roth rothy told scott pelley on sunday's "60 minutes" they were shocked when it wasn't there. >> we got up to that level and to see just open -- openness is extremely moving and difficult to -- it was very big surprise for us to see that. >> reporter: moving in what way? >> just to see the violence and the winds that would have had to occur to cause that kind of -- to cause that kind of an event. >> reporter: they later found the bridge a half mile away from the wreckage, but with no data recorder to explain exactly what
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happened. on the morning of october 1st, el faro's captain sent a distress call from near the eye of hurricane joaquin. the ship had lost propulsion and was listing at a 15-degree angle as it faced waves forecasted at 30 feet high. to find the missing ship, the ntsb used sonar and a piece of equipment called the curl but finding the wreck hasn't answered the biggest question -- why did the ship's captain ends up on a collision course with a monster storm? >> we are looking at the oversight at the direction, the advice provided by the operating company to see what information was available to him. >> reporter: frank's son richard was the ship's cheap engineer. >> i guarantee you, they were injured, they were knocked out, and it was over. and they were all together. and that is how i want to believe it. >> reporter: the ship's initial
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plan to was to stay on the outskirts of the storm from jacksonville to puerto rico but joaquin intensified and shifted its path. cbs reached out to the maritime company that operated the ship but we have not heard back. >> thank you. such a tragedy. >> heart breaking piece on "60 minutes" last night with relatives wondering why was that ship allowed to go into that hurricane. "star wars" is a force to be reckoned with at the objection office. how "the force awakens" is pushing hollywood in awe direction. buffalo bills fan, the stunt he pulled, not once, but twice! >> all righty then. >> all righty then. >> time to go home. >> wouldn't you be proud if that was your son? >> no, i would good morning, everyone. let's get to it. the doppler radar tracking the first of three storms this week. they are el nino storms that will impact your morning
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commute. right now, the heaviest rainfall is around 280 around the peninsula. delays at sfo and some arriving flights over one hour. east bay getting pounded around the brentwood and antioch. north bay getting rain as well. heaviest rain this morning, cloudy skies with a scattered shower during the day. 40s and 50s. storm number two later tonight. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ♪ ♪ the all-new tacoma. toyota. let's go places. makes me feel stopped up.
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buffalo bills kicker dan carpenter may still have a headache this morning in spite of sunday's win over the jets. carpenter missed the extra point after a bills touchdown in the second quarter. he threw his helmet to the ground in frustration on the sidelines and it ricocheted back and hit him in the face! take a look at that. that hurts. >> you got that right. i hate it when that happens but always okay with mr. carpenter because he had three field goals after that. >> and the bills beat the jets. >> he did okay. take a look what they did outside the stadium. this happened, guys, before the game. a bills fan jumped on to a burning table and caught fire so either he doesn't know or he just doesn't care. because he went back for round two! fellow tailgaters tried to use beer to put out the fire. i ask -- what could go wrong
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there? >> yeah. i think beer was the source. you notice when they came to put the fire out with the beer? he went like this with his mouth! like, no, don't waste the beer! >> he was feeling no pain. >> i bet he is a really good student. >> really good. so proud. >> so proud! could you lose dozens of pounds by switching your medicine? obesity expert dr. louis romney said he has seen it and in studio 57 with a in plan to change your diet by changing your biology. you don't want to miss it. it's coming up. moderate to severe crohn's disease is tough, but i've managed.
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except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing. and when i finally told my doctor, he said humira is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible. soil is the foundation... for healthy plants. just like gums are the
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they fired jim good morning. i'm michelle griego. the 49ers are in the market for a new head coach. she fire -- they fired jim tomsula yesterday after he held the obfor a single season. ceo jed york will hold a news conference later this morning. today, two state lawmakers are proposing improvements to tour bus inspections. they include more funding for the chp and coordination between other agencies. a bus that crashed in san francisco last november had never been inspected by the chp. coming up on cbs this morning, has fatherhood changed prince william? stay with us. traffic and weather in just a
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good morning from the traffic center. dealing with a lot of wet weather which means busy road conditions. southbound 680 at andre. look for the accident. the damage is done. it has you backed up to 580. westbound 580 slow and go. it will take you 28 mips to get towards the dublin interchange and stop and go between hayward and foster city. live weather camera indicates we have a lot of raindrops. this is our radar. it's picking up the heaviest precipitation. out of the peninsula with the damage done with one-hour delays at sfo. it's raining from napa through fairfield, wrapping around to the 580, 680 corridor. sfo with delays. temperature-wise, 40s and 50s out the door. later today, cloudy skies, a scattered shower into the 40s.
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. good morning to our viewers on the west this first monday of the year, january 4, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead including the so-called affluenza teen's efforts to stay in mexico. rikki klieman looks at the strategy to keep ethan couch out of jail forever. first here is today's "eye opener at 8." the american flag covers the sign at the wildlife refuge as a signal that they're in charge here. you define this as an armed militia. >> this is concerned american citizens willing to stand for their rights. hillary and bill clinton used to have a good relationship
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with trump. >> he won't punch back? >> the opposite of punching back, is it creates a fight that looks like a general election. you get into a knife fight in an alley with donald trump, and you don't want to do that. >> 25 thousand bags and eight pumps going since earlier in the week. look at this. this should be a field, not water here. so far it's working. the u.s. is calling for both saudi arabia and iran to avoid escalating tensions which could dangerously destabilize the middle east. the president is focused on gun control, but already, before i even know the details, opponents are sharpening their attacks. >> we're all at the table for the first time. >> how was your holiday? >> it was good. always good to come back home. i don't care where you've been. >> almost look like you've got a tan. >> you noticed. >> there we go.
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showing skin this early in the morning, gayle. kicking off the new year. >> always a good way to start the new year. >> it certainly is. you're next. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. an armed militia group says it's willing to occupy a federal wildlife refuge in oregon for as long as it takes to meet its demands. the group is fighting back against a new prison sentence for two local ranchers and also wants to return land from the refuge to local owners. >> the anti-government activists set up camp on saturday in support of the hammonds who set fire to federal lands in 2001 and were convicted in 2012 and served their sentence. in october a judge added four more years. the hammonds' attorney says the protesters don't speak for the hammonds. earlier we asked ammon ud ask months in petitions and
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redresses and trying to get government to check and balance itself. they refused it and in most places just ignored us. we know there were intimidation efforts from federal government to the county of elected representatives, but basically the e tried that. they tried for many months. they tried for actually over a year to try to get some justice in the situation, and there was none offered. in fact, they were ignored. >> the fbi says it is taking a lead with local law enforcement to resolve this standoff. >> white house hopefuls are campaigning harder as the first voting gets closer. we're four weeks away from the iowa caucuses on february 1st. the first primary will be eight days later in new hampshire. that's where former president bill clinton starts campaigning today for hillary clinton.
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donald trump reacted on twitter saying, quote, does anybody remember when bill clinton in 2008 worked long and hard for hillary? she lost. now bill is at it again. just watch. >> at this time in 2008 barack obama had just won the iowa caucuses and was campaigning in new hampshire. these races can be unpredictable. on this date eight years ago clinton led obama in the polls nationally by more than 20 points, and the future republican nominee john mccain was behind rudy giuliani and barely ahead of mike huckabee who won the iowa caucuses. donald trump released his first tv ad to air in iowa and new hampshire. he repeats a call for a temporary ban on muslims entering the u.s. and also attacks hillary clinton. last night referring to a militant recruitment video twum tweeted, hillary and the mainstream media forgot to mention that hillary is in the al shabaab terror video. clinton is not featured in
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the 50-minute video released on friday by an al qaeda affiliate. it does include trump and his proposed ban on muslim entry. trump shook it off on sunday's "face the nation." >> does it concern you that you're being used in essentially a recruitment video? >> they use other people, too. what am i going to do? i have to say what i have to say. you know what i have to say? there's a problem. we have to find out what is the problem and we have to solve that problem. >> clinton inaccurately claimed that isis used video of trump in its propaganda. trump said despite the al shabaab video, clinton was still wrong since it was a different group. the texas teenager who pleaded affluenza is still in custody. signs are that ethan couch is not going anywhere any time soon. he was captured last week after missing a probation meeting two years after a drunk driving crash in which he killed four people. his family hired a high profile
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mexican attorney by the name of fernando bennie tez to help couch avoid deportation. his mother faces a hearing tomorrow in california. cbs news legal expert rikki klieman joins us at the table with the latest. i have so many questions about the mother's parenting skills, the new attorney that was just hired. this guy is a big deal in mexico. >> he's a rock star. he's the man. he's the person that you hire if you're famous, if you're infamous, if you have a case that is difficult to beat. how was he hired? the lawyers for ethan couch in texas cannot practice law in mexico, so they went to look for the best lawyer that i think people would say that money could buy. >> what's his strategy? >> he's saying, look, the u.s. government and the mexican government did an end run around the expedition process. the extra decision process takes
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a very long time. so what they did is the mexican government cooperated and simply decided they would deport him. how could they deport him? he didn't get a stamp on his passport when he was coming into the country. so what he is saying -- what mr. bennie tez is saying is this, stop, we have to go slowly now. we have to do this correctly by the numbers. what we have to do is let the process be due process. >> the reason he wanted to go slow, too, is because couch was convicted as a juvenile and something changes when he turns 19 which is in april. >> this is really ingenious strategy. if you get past couch's 19th birthday, the 120 days basically that he has left to do in the juvenile or adult jail, he will have run the clock. so if then he goes back after his 19th birthday in april, the
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only thing that may happen to him under texas law is he may have ten years' probation hanging over his head. so this strategy is really well thought out. >> four people died in this accident. i keep thinking about that. let's talk about his mom for a second. she's back in the states. what's her status? it's reported while she was on the run, she even picked up the tab while her son was at a strip club while he was on the run. >> i'm sure we can almost all agree that her parenting skills are not the best. whatever he did was okay. she went on the rode with him. a lawyer was hired while they were on the road. she enabled him all the way through this, and now she probably thinks it's just fine if she has to do the time rather than her son. >> we'll be back on this one,
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at chase atms. technology designed for you. so you can easily master the way you bank. ♪ ♪ the "star wars" franchise is headed for a new dimension. for the third straight weekend the force awakens is number one at the box office. the blockbuster brought in an estimated $88.3 million over the new year's eve weekend. that makes it the second highest domestic success of all time. the sequel is $20 million short of "avatar."
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we're inside a theatre helping to make hollywood history. vlad, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the latest installment of "star wars" is playing at more than 4,000 theaters across the country. charlie, as you said, it raked in another $88 million. it's clear the force is strong with this one. >> i need this. >> i think i can handle it myself. >> that's why i'm giving it to you. >> reporter: since the latest chapter in the "star wars" franchise hit theaters three weeks ago, it's attracted enough movie goers to sink "the titanic" and roar past "jurassic world." now star wars the force awake kens is climbing towards the top spot of the north american box office, surpassing "avatar" as the biggest grossing domestic
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film of all time. >> when "star wars" passes "avatar" it will be the first time in 18 years that james cameron film is not at the top of the list. >> reporter: it's the star power that helped make 2015 hollywood's biggest year yet, pushing it past $11 billion in total domestic sales for the first time. more than 20% of that came from the top 5 movies as the film industry battles competitors like netflix and on demand cable. >> there is concern that so much of the money was in so few of the big movies. i think as long as those smaller movies are still making money, i'm not as concerned about the top-heavy nature of the industry overall because i think those big films overperformed. >> reporter: along with the latest movie, the top ten of all time include two other films from the franchise, 1999 "a fanton tom menace" and the original "star wars," a
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phenomenon even critics of "the force awakens" can't deny. >> this movie is destined to make box office hit, not because of the quality, but because of the name. >> reporter: whether this latest installment will take the global record remains to be seen. >> not dr it's making so much money, that who cares. >> reporter: what is clear -- >> may the force be with you always. >> reporter: -- is that the force is here to stay. "the force awake kens" will get another big boost when it opens up in china. china is the world's second largest film market, norah. >> how many times have you seen it, vlad? >> i've seen it twice on opening weekend, two times. >> that's what happens with a lot of people. >> he's a grownup.
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>> we're in a good movie season i feel like right now. lots of good movies. prince william says he's embracing fatherhood and everything that comes with it. we'll show you why george and charlotte's dad admits to crying more often. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." [ julie ] the wrinkle cream graveyard. if it doesn't work fast... you're on to the next thing. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair has the fastest retinol formula to visibly reduce fine lines and wrinkles in just one week. neutrogena®. all the strength and freshness, andnow easy to lift! one week. half the weight, smells great. find the litter that works best for you. every home, every cat. there's a tidy cats for that.
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feely dad. >> i never used to sort of get to riled up or worried about things but now the smallest little things you well up a little bit more and you get affected by the sort of things that happen around the world or whatever a lot more as a father just because you realize how precious life is and it puts it in perspective. >> pop psychologists and royal watchers and they're often the same thing think they know where those feelings come from. william knows what it's like to lose a parent. royal writer -- >> william is talking about the fact not being around to see his children grow up and the fact that his mother was not around to see her children grow up.
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>> no public exposure of the royals happens by accident. william is extremely media savvy and doesn't say anything about himself or his family he doesn't want the public to know. a thoroughly modern prince and a thoroughly modern dad can these days be the same person. when william was a child, it was his mother who was the royal star, and william has learned from that, of course, that times have moved on to the point where the media no longer sets the news agenda. the royals write their own script and if today is any indication, the world still laps it up. gayle. >> we are lapping it up. hello, my name is gayle, i'm a big ole royal lapper. to mark's point, they only tell you what they want you to know. i think it's great that he wants us to know that about him. a modern touchy feely dad. >> i just like the kids. what's his name? george. >> charlotte and george. >> very cute. thank you, mark phillips.
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nba superstar hold a news conference to explain the firing of head h jim tomsula. the decision came just hours after the ns wrapped up a 5- and-11 seas. good monday morning. it's 8:25. there is a decision to fire the 49ers head coach. some adjustments on the golden gate bridge. the deck is back to 3 lanes north and 3 lanes south except for an hour on thursday and friday. straight ahead. what could help you lose weight for good. you will hear from a doctor
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northbound 17 we have an accident their blocking lanes. we are dealing with slick surfaces out there. use caution. a live look at the industry way. it's slowing down towards 238. extra volume southbound 101 towards san francisco. >>reporter: el nino has arrived. the rain is out of the peninsula. over the east bay definitely affected at this hour. fso definitely delays. notice how mild it is. 40s and 50s refreshing compared to last year. today's highs under cloudy
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mgm grand sponsors this half-court shot. $95,000! >> whoa. >> not bad. >> half-court, wasn't it? >> half-court shot. a dream come ftrue for los angeles lakers fan. he won $95,000. he wants to buy tickets for kobe bryant's final game. i wonder how much the tickets are for a kobe bryant final game. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is full of good ideas. this half hour, are you ready to lose weight? dr. louis arronne is in our
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green room. why you should think about food that comes in a box and the value of cooking all of your meals al dente. >> well-dressed men are head-over-heel for socks. the new designs that are leading a multibillion dollar phenomenon is ahead. "the boston globe" says it's journalists and staffers did something unprecedented. they delivered sun's paper after a new distribution company had problems delivering papers to everybody's home. they decided to improve service after customer's complaints. the employees volunteered to take over many of the 150 routes that had no drivers. despite the effort, up to 400 they are not sure when they will have enough drivers to deliver the paper.
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winter isn't coming. martin now says he is done with the deadlines and fans will just have to wait. "usa today" says facebook ceo mark zuckerberg wants artificial intelligence in a post. his first challenge is build a simple a.i. to help run his home. it would help monitor his daughter. he compares it from "ironman." i thought we already had that artificial intelligence in your home that would change the lights and change a lot of things. >> i think there are but artificial intelligence it would know its things on its own and have a mind of its own to turn off the lights. >> it is coming. >> it's already here. "the new york times" reports on the theft of a sculpture of
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abraham lincoln's hand. the police have no leads. they describe it as an eight to ten-pound hand. >> what are you going to do with that? ""the san francisco chronicle" says airbnb rental in oakland got trashed over the weekend. the renters had a party and had beer cans and cigarettes and other damage. the homeowners thought they were renting to an older man. turns out it was a teenager who threw an 18th birthday party. britain''s telegraph, a new restaurant will offer doggie bags to reduce the millions of tons of trash thrown in the trash every year. 70% of french diners have never taken home a doggie bag. i do like that. especially the sidewalk cafe. >> find plenty of that in new york.
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>> really good the next day. losing weight is a top new year's resolution and you may be struggling to keep it going. more than two-thirds of americans are overweig brains and fat cells and even your hormones. don't i know it. he is the director of the comprehensive weight college in new york. welcome back to studio 57. >> thank you, gayle. >> the forward is written by david letterman who says this book will make you look better and lose weight and make you look as good as alex trebek. i'm in. you say losing weight and willpower. you give the example of a swimmer going underwater and holding your breath. >> weight is controlled like other physical factors in the
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body. if you try to hold your breath for ten minutes, at some point you jump out of the water to breathe and something tells you you're drowning. when you try not to eat, there are physical forces that do the same thing. they tell you to eat. and we haven't really taken that into account when we develop diets and other treatments for weight problems. >> you say there are hidden fattening factors that we may not be aware of. what are they? >> there are at least ten of them. so in addition to eating too much and not exercising enough, things like the medicines we take. >> yeah. >> 20% of weight problems may be related to medicines you're taking. sleep disorders and shorter sleep. we are sleeping an hour or less than we used to. there are problems that we are not going to change like the temperature in the room. the temperature is controlled. you don't have to burn calories to regulate your body temperature any longer. >> let's go to the -- this book is called "change your biology diet a proven program for
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lifelong weight loss." give us the four things we ought to know. >> the most important thing is that weight is a physical thing. so that the environment, eating fattening food changes the nerves in your brain. it damages your brain in a way that makes it difficult for you to lose weight. so that we look at it as completely willpower, but actually you're dealing with a situation that becomes increasingly physical as times go pop the more weight you gain the harder it is to lose weight because you have more krarcravi and you don't feel fool. >> what dodd about that? >> several different factors and layers. number one, as far as eating is concerned, we find that eating in a certain way is the healthiest. so there are other factors besides what is going on in your brain that tell us the best thing to eat. >> you're talking about the order of what you eat? >> eat protein first in the morning, you say? >> eating protein first controls your appetite and blood sugar
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the best. eating lots of vegetables, olive oil and vegetable oil we know are healthy. i can tell you to do that, that would be great but people develop cravings for starches and sweets at some point in time. what we found and what the book discusses is when you should have carbs so that they have the least metabolic impact. >> eating carbs last? >> eating carbs at the end of the meal and the end of the day. that is is not something people know. >> haven't you been to the restaurant, doctor, where we put the bread basket out first and i've eaten two pieces of bread until the food comes. it's so hot! >> if you're trying to control your weight, having the bread first will raise your blood sugar. it drops later on. >> tell them not to put any bread on your table! >> i know! >> i thought this -- i really like your book.
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i think it's so brilliantly done and it's based on science and it's a real diet. you talk about the best way to lose weight is have a low glycemic or glow carb type of diet with plenty of protein. then you go through specifically what foods are low glycemic. can you rattle off a bunch so we know a bunch of things we should be eating every day to achieve that? >> the key things to the eating are healthy proteins, chicken fish and lots of vegetables. all of the vegetables you can, healthy oils like olive oil. starting with that is the base. carbs come in and the carbs you should have should like legunus and beans. >> is that what everybody tells us? even that diet of carbs late, fish, chicken. >> vegetables. >> be careful and eat smaller portions, isn't the essence of all dieting all of the best
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dieting about just that? >> the problem is, okay? people don't know how to do it. you can tell somebody to do it. the question is how do you do it? and that is what the book goes into, charlie, how you can accomplish this. if that doesn't work, we go into what you do next. we use medication, we use surgery. i run a comprehensive weight control cling. when somebody should consider to go to the doctor to consider these more advanced treatments. >> what you eat is more than exercise. you draw the extinction between exercise and movement. >> this is a big problem we see in january. people try to lose weight by going to the gym. it's virtually impossible to exercise your way out of your weight problem. >> somebody said to me this week, because i'm very much like to be in perfect shape. someone said to me, the most important thing you can do in
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2016 is nutrition. >> i think so. you can be more active. actually, that is a lot easier than people think. you don't have to do as much exercise as many people think you have to do to be in good shape. 15 minutes a day of brisk walking can do it. the problem is healthy eating. >> i love that you have a menu plan in here too that will really change people's ideas about what they should be eating. dr. louis arronne, thank you. >> stand up every 20 minutes. change your biology diet goes on sale tomorrow! jamie wax is in a trendy neighborhood today to talk socks. >> fashion is finding new footing. we will show you how an nba star is giving socks like this a stylish footprint. that is coming up on "cbs this morning."
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♪ the holidays are over. so many of us is are taking another look at our pile of presents. one gift that used to be thrown aside is now getting a lot more attention. jamie wax is inside a new york store where socks are standing tall. jamie, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. i'm at the stance flagship
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store. you can see around me are there are now shops dedicated almost entirely to socks. that is, in part, because socks are the fastest growing segment of men's fashion these days. a multibillion dollar business that is encouraging guys to wade knee deep, calf-deep or ankle-deep into style. >> very colorful. >> reporter: there is a revolution of food. >> wow. these are great! >> reporter: a resolution deep in the sole of men's fashion. a revolution in socks. >> oh, wow! banana socks! >> reporter: socks are an easy fix to spice up your wardrobe. i really love the gown. >> reporter: brad goreski of "e" fashion police is surprised. has it surprised even you socks have become such a big thing? >> it has, actually, in terms of this trend specifically. it's kind of like the gateway drug to men's fashion. i think anything that gives guys
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the courage to want to be more daring in their fashion choices, that is a really cool thing. >> reporter: one man driving the sock revolution is the always dapper dwyane wade. >> you think about socks and you think about black socks with a gold toe, you know? >> reporter: that's is what everybody used to have. >> right. >> wade, fade away. >> reporter: the 11-time all-star has his own line of fashion socks that he helped design. >> this is especially for men that we can have a cool moment underneath our pants, you know, on our feet. we feel a little extra about our outfit that day gentleman because all men have had for so long is a tie. >> yeah. >> reporter: maybe a watch. but now this is something that you can express yourself? >> yeah. i mean, you know, it's a cheaper, you know, expression as well. you're able to spend 14, $15 on socks than a watch is lot less
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expensive. >> reporter: wade's socks is from stance which john wilson helped found after surveying the bland landscape below men's knees. >> the category itself is just asleep. >> reporter: literally white space? >> literally white sox. >> reporter: white and black. >> white and black. >> reporter: stance filled that white space with bold colors and patterns. they made mismatch pairs a marketing tool. they went for fun and quirky and they just introduced a line for those looking to step into a galaxy far, far away. ♪ they are playing basketball >> reporter: and then there is basketball. ♪ basketball >> reporter: on the court where shoes have always been king, stance wants fans to see beyond or underneath the sneakers. >> it is literally a game changer. >> reporter: as of this season, stance is the official socks supplier to the nba, and though the details of the multiyear agreement aren't public, they will have their logo on all of
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the shins in basketball. how much has the nba represented to you in terms of a company in terms of sales? >> it's ahuge contributor to us and a good chunk of our overall revenue and something you want to stay together. >> reporter: the sock market is a multibillion dollar business. more than 5.5 billion worldwide. so entrepreneurs are dipping their toes? >> i think not a lot of people wake up on a certain morning and say i'm refreshing my sock draw. >> reporter: but they want to do that. phil and ricky only sell socks in bundles. the designs range from the subtle to the loud, and they urge customers to dabble in them all. >> for us it never really made a whole lot of sense to go and buy socks and just buy one because you go through at least five or six pairs in a week. so we bundled them and we sell them to customers. >> reporter: naturally, there are holdouts. not everyone has gotten the wear your fancy socks memo.
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which begs a question -- do you think this trend in men's socks is here to stay? >> oh, i hope it is. i hope so! you know what? i don't know. i mean, one thing about, you know, fashion is, you know, things come and go and some things surprise you and stays around for a long time. >> reporter: stance tells us they have sold millions of dollars of their "star wars" socks the fir few weeks they have been on sale, including 10,000 pairs of these darth vader socks alone. the best thing about these darth vader socks? they really breathe like this. gayle? >> got it. >> well done. >> i really like fashionista. i also wear not socks at all. >> bear called and wants his socks back. socks back. when w,,,,,,,,,,
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are working to identify a by found at point reyes nation sea shore yesterday. the remains may be those of a h who never returned from a n year's day trek. good monday morning. investigators are working to identify a body found at point range national seaside. it might be the remains of a hiker that never returned. yesterday a man brought in what he thought was a hand granade. tesla said they they sold 150,000 cars. let's check in with
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weather. >>reporter: first a series of el nino storms are moving in. this morning we picked up a full inch of rain. all of the activity is across the bay area it's mainly cloudy and breezy. we were mild in the 40s yesterday. we have a few high 50s. wednesday is the third system with more system likely on thursday. let's get a look at your morning commute coming up.
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wayne: yes! whoo! - money! wayne: hey! jonathan: it's a trip to iceland. - (screams) wayne: you've got the big deal of the day! - let's make a deal! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. this is our first show of 2016. welcome to a brand new year. that's why i've gone back stage. i made sure personally that every prize is brand new. nothing's been used. except the one car that i drove around in a little bit because mine was busted so i just wanted to floss a little bit. i looked good in it. right now, three people, let's go
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