tv CBS This Morning CBS May 17, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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player there. >> aha. >> all right. thank you for watching. the latest news and weather, always on cbssf.com. your next local update is 7:26. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com welcome to "cbs this morning"." donald trump a little to launch character particulars in a clinton showdown. >> angry travelers with epic lines across the country. tsa promises new measures to beef things up. >> why the director of "iron man 3" says he was forced to change a female villain to a man. >> we begin with a look at today's eye-opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> this is pout transformabout transforming
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our lives. >> democratic candidates square off. hillary clinton spent most of her time talking about trump. what is your answer to creating jobs? i'm going to create them, they are going to be great, but i'm not going to tell you what it is i'm going to do. >> people are looking at this race thinking it's just going to be scorched earth. >> both of use negative tactics, no doubt about it. try to beat the other down. >> extreme west in the west damaging thunderstorms, occasional tornado. tsa plans to try and ease the marathon security lines at the nation's airport. >> people are missing their flights. >> president obama presented the medal of valor to 13 police officers. >> we could not be prouder of you and couldn't be prouder of your families for all the contributions you make. >> due to the massive wildfire burning out of control in canada, about 8,000 oil workers told to leave the area last night. >> a man strips naked at a metrolink station after a bus
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driver thought he had a grenade. >> israel discovered statues and thousands of coins in a shipwreck said to be over 1600 years old. >> tigers manager thrown out. he didn't go quietly, though. >> he covers the plate. >> i would hate for anyone to think your success is related to his hostility toward you. >> on "cbs this morning." >> sing in the car and oh, gosh we should form a band. i never hear from them. harmony on this ♪ it's not your fault no disrespect it's my right to be still can't cherish ♪ >> this morning's eye-opener is presented by toyota let's go places --
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welcome to "cbs this t runne morning." in we begin with front-runners in ntial race the presidential race already on november focusing on november and sharpening their attacks.rump and hilla donald trump and hillary clinton are slamming each other in a preview of their likely matchup t in november but there are still primary contest toss come in several states. clinton still has to think aboutsanders. bernie sanders.s she needs another 144 delegates to climpbl her party's nomination. >> there are two democratic candidates, 70 at stakes in oregon, 60 in kentucky. nancy cordes is at a school in lexington, kentucky, where the polls are open.ing. nancy, good morning. >> good morning.ume that both campaigns assume sanders ll win t will win the very progressive state of oregon. but in the absence of much polling, kentucky is harder to on predict.hand on the one hand, this is a close primary, meaning the independent voters who often favor sanders ha can't vote.
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on the other hand clinton did poorly in neighboring west ee virginia last week a loss she's been trying to counteract here. >> i am hoping and really looking forward to debating donald trump in the fall. final >> reporter: her final kentucky event last night, clinton treated supporters to some debate prep anticipating trump's lines on jobs. to do it >> one answer is i'm going to do it, i know how to do it i'll get it done but i'm not going to tell you what i'm going to t do. >> reporter: she did mention the man who is likely to beat her today in one and possibly two states. sanders sanders spent the day in puerto rico, which doesn't vote for about three weeks, a signal that he intends to go the distance. >> if elected president of the h united states you will have an val ally in the oval office. >> his tenacity in the final linton stretch has forced clinton to states campaign in primary states that likely won't be competitive in fall the fall. still, democratic leaders won't
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pressure sanders to drop out. >> right now we have two great orter: the candidates. >> they are being careful not to alienate his millions of f people supporters. >> bernie sanders is broadening the universe of people paying hink he's attention to the political nomine process. >> do you think he's hurting your likely nominee?e sanders >> no i think bernie sanders and hillary clinton and the ats democrats have a message focused >> reporte on helping the middle class. st >> to help clinton one of the biggest democratic super pacs schedu has begun first anti-trump ad ee there ahead of schedule. of >> you could see there was bloode, coming out of her eyes blood coming out of her wherever. of >> one features women leap syncing some of his more divisive lines about women. >> does she have a good body? no. >> reporter: no accident this first group of ads focuses on r: in women. women made up 53% of the electorate and right now hold
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ov overwhelmingly negative views about about trump.those if the democrats can submit those views now, it means clinton will have a much easier time in the fall. >> thank you, nancy. new national poll shows hillary clinton leading donald trump by just three points. that online tracking poll shows women prefer hillary clinton by a 15-point margin.oters but independent voters go for donald trump by eight points. looking major garrett is looking at trump's no holds barred strategyood for november. >> major, good morning. >> good morning. donald t donald trump under scrutiny for n his own actions around women actions knows how to counter-program specifically personal scandals that plagued bill clinton's presidency. trump told "new york times" monday he will raise these issues throughout the general is election including on stage withding on hillary clinton during this fall's televised debates. hat >> in just about all cases i've been responding to what they did tonight, to me. >> in a lengthy interview donald trump pushes back against those y. who may characterize him as a
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bully. >> i have seen bullying. bullying doesn't have to be as a40. child. i know people when you're 55 you got t years old. >> can happen at 45. fi >> you've got to get over it. fight back. >> but do whatever you have to do. >> in a conversation with the "new york times," trump outlined women how he would try to avoid alienating women going after real hillary clinton. >> he will remind voters she has been ugly trying to destroy her husband's mistresses and power. pandering to women for power. for >> it poses some problems to they clinton campaign in a unique way. >> chen, policy director for ign mitt romney's 2012 campaign says the trump may be ignoring the fire. possibility his strategy would backfire. >> it would stand to reason there isn't much farther down donald trump can government his reasoning is i'm just going to throw everything at this and we'll see what stikts.
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>> republicans weary of trump's style may be running out of been options. monday, no thanks. >> never been open. >> it was a ridiculous effort so i passed. to it. >> i just think running third party doesn't feel right. i think it's not constructive. >> the trump campaign and still h republican national committee agreement are haggling over raising for hundreds of millions for trump and congressional republicans. the sticking points how much ts tru control over rnc expenses and how many events he must headline. rnc is discovering trump and his a lawyers drive a very hard th bargain. >> thanks, major. cbs news cbs news political director and "face the nation" moderator john, good mo dickerson in washington. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. is trump's aggressiveness smart well or stupid?rt in >> well it's smart in the sense and he that he gets the press to talk about this and he doesn't have alk about
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to. involvement he gets to talk about bill clinton's personal life and bri hillary clinton's involvement in that. then the press talks about it up and brings it up and asks whether it's a problem or not. then it gets a big airing a biton of a chilling effect on the ne clinton campaign perhaps, and also one step away from him. he in the end if he has to actuallye's bring this up as he's already aign done several times in his as w campaign, he has that option as r well. >> what are the the risks here john? >> well the risks are that they had to offer optimistic vision alking of the future. ca right now on both sides we're a talking about a campaign that's de. going to be a referendum on the cam other side.l be the trump campaign will be about hillary clinton and hillary clinton's campaign will be about gets donald trump. the downside is everybody gets thoroughly turned off more than they already are. n >> whose campaign will be about t the future. >> one of them has to grab it.uld of course they would both say
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their campaign is about the future but what comes through. clinton campaign sticks to the issue, personal attacks. they will try to wrap it in t's a issues that face regular people. if it's about women, family and medical leave, that kind of thing, leaving attacks to super goi pac. when it comes to voters they attack f won't distinguish between what'sew poll an attack from super pac and from campaign. >> a recent poll shows extremely sup tight in election matchup, already a super pac supporting hillary clinton as nancy cordes pointed out, going to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on his comments about women.n could that hurt him severely in unfa september. >> based on his polls now and d to unfavorable view among women, it hard to imagine it hurting him any more than he's hurt with women voters. what they want to do is lock in o that opinion early and define
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him before he can redefine himself. so the downside for hillary he clinton that they know about, which is that women will think, runni well, she's just running on her gender, so gender. so that's why they are going to he c try while the super pac is make making character attacks on t trump, they will make policy hilla attacks to clinton that say this is why hillary clinton cares out about you and lay it out in d policies so people don't think she's trying to get my vote vot because she's a woman. >> john dickerson, good to see you as always. d thank you so much. dangerous weather threatens parts of the southern plains. i texas could see severe thunderstorms and flooding.he overnight the storm brought and heavy rain winds and hail to the texas panhandle, toppled nd power lines and flooded streets.nadoes wer at least two tornadoes were reported. at least one other tornado was oma seen earlier outside oklahoma city, no damage or injuries wered, reported. in new england snowfall -- ll bro that's right, snowfall -- broke
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records two weeks before ribou, memorial day. 4 1/2 inches in caribou, maine the most ever in the season. i think mother nature forgot it's may, parts of new york vermont, new hampshire also got hit. ts >> new government showed h complaints about long security lines at airports have increasedmore t more than ten fold over the last year. security delays this week at chicago's o'hare airport caused hundreds to miss their flight. tsa blames those delays on an tra increase in travelers and a of shortage of screeners. chris van cleave is at los angeles international airport with the outrage over the problem. chris, good morning. >> good morning. lines at lax started very early this morning. this is an airport telling people to be in security lines two to three hours before their flights and that's well before the summer travel rush starts. still, one airline tells "cbs this morning," lax ranked among its top five for missed flights because of tsa lines and
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coast-to-coast flyers are striking back on social media. seem security lines that seem to never end are becoming the new normal in chicago.ational at o'hare international airport,alking abo we're talking about wait times up to three hours. to long enough to strand more than ay 100 passengers overnight sunday forcing many to sleep on cots. why >> what's the problem? why did it happen? >> this is absurd. >> they need to hire more people, figure it out. >> american airlines said 450 customers missed their flights at o'hare sunday along because of the long lines. this headline dub the trip through security a slow march the t through hell. the tsa blames the issue at sed o'hare on increased passenger volume but it's not just chicago. flyers around the country are blasting tsa on social media using #ihatethewait with pictures of long lines. passengers missed their flights pa at top 20 airports 6400 and wit that's in the last week. this i
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>> we're trying to work with tsa. this is an effort to help flag the to the tsa where the massive wait times are. >> with airlines for america, a trade association created the the thre hashtag. >> let them know if you have an joined s excessive wait time. >> airports joined seattle and atlanta threatening to drop tsa for private screeners. ki >> there will be wait lines. >> jeh johnson said tsa looking to hire hundreds of more screeners and authorize overtime for tens of thousands of officers. that may not be enough as the peak summer travel rush arrives. >> three hours is not ideal. reduc we want to reduce that as much as possible without compromising the safety of the american public. >> so how did we get here? congress capped the number of tsa screeners thinking millions of more flyers would enroll instafree check that expedited
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screening. at the same time tsa struggled to maintain staffing levels because of high turnover. at the same time you've seen a steady increase in the number of >> o flyers. >> okay chris. thank you so much. ntsb expected to confirm am ladelp track disaster in philadelphia was caused by train's engineer. by he was likely distracted by radio traffic.n. that's according to sources he familiar with investigation. he faced a loss of situational people awareness, barreled at 186 miles other an hour 8 people died others hurt. i he put on the brakes seconds before the accident. ntsb expected to recall call for technology that can automatically slow a speeding train. >> new olympic drug testing could force dozens of athletes out of this year's summer games in brazil. a short time ago international olympic committee said it's investigating 31 athletes from 12 countries. doping samples from 2008
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olympics were reanalyzed and tested positive. ioc said samples from 2012 games are also tested. it says any athlete caught eath of cheating with drugs will be alia. banned from going to rio. r p former prep school student as convicted of assaulting a releas freshman will be release freddiebout jail. classmates spoke out about the so-called senior salute aim to ha tradition, when graduating seniors would aim to have sex a ju with underclassman.n the judge sentenced him to a year in prison. he was free on bail while appealing his conviction but then revoked bail because of his curfew. >> being in jail really taught him some lessons, hard life lessons but also encouraged him he has a lot to look forward to. >> "cbs this morning" news legal expect ricki cleman with us this morning. are you surprised he's back out
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of jail. >> this is unusual how it preceded after conviction. very few defendants ever put out on bail pending appeal however happe his sentence was one year. what happened was he got the gift of bail then he violated the conditions of that because gift, he doesn't obey his curfew.ed? so am i surprised? what surprises me is that last thursday the supreme court of new hampshire got involved in a bail revocation hearing and said, hey, look we're sending re's this back down to the trial court because we find there's anpeal. issue of merit on appeal. he might serve his whole sentence and what happens if ns i it's reversed. unheard that's almost unheard of. >> but the prosecution can't be pleased with this. they seem to be saying look hehe ke keeps getting break after break g his and isn't learning his lesson orney j despite what his attorney said. >> the prosecution certainly day, believes, as they said in court thing
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yesterday, that the only thing that changed for owen labrie is that he doesn't like being in jail. ty >> nobody does. >> nobody does. the reality of the situation is minal he's a great criminal defense lawyer in this court and she sh came armed for bear. numb she brought two things to the judge. number one, she got him gainful he part-time employment. number two, she got it worked out so there could be electronicon argue monitoring.that we so how can the prosecution argue that we won't know where he is this we're not able to trust him. the judge used the term trust >> wil but verify. >> will she get a new trial. >> the trial motion is most the intriguing. the appeal is pending, that's doing to take a year. the female going after jay ney carney, the male the trial here was lawyer saying look there was ineffective assistance of an counsel. owen labrie did not get a fair
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trial. the supreme court of new hampshire looked at all the issues. what they say may have merit is this. there was a roommate, a classmate of owen labrie. supre what the supreme court is saying is look the defense didn't either get the chance to ly cross-examination him properly or they didn't take the chance which would be ineffective assistance. has to d has to do with him allegedly -- his lawyers say no with his allegedly going after young did girls the same way owen labrie did, including the victims. >> more to come.you. thank you very much. neigh good to see you. zika
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amazon could soon give some of the products on its own website with private label goods. >> ahead, a look at this potentially giant move and how consumers may respond. >> the news is back in the morning here on "cbs this morning." what if there was another way to look at relapsing multiple sclerosis? this is tecfidera. tecfidera is not an injection. it's a pill for relapsing ms that has the power to cut relapses in half.
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said females villains would not sell. and tomorrow we talk about your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. four in pittsburg, i onse to a rash of freeway shootings in that area. last night, good morning. more cameras will be installed along highway 4 in pittsburg in response to a rash of freeway shootings in that area. last night the pittsburg city council approved funding for six new cameras. stanley cup play-offs game 2 of the western conference finals taped. the sharks and bruce in slough. san jose hopes to make up for its loss in game one. the puck drops at 5:00. in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning" why online retailer amazon is making its first big push into perishable foods. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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southbound 101 accident blocking two left lanes with delays behind it southbound 101 at marinwood 7 miles per hour, speeds as you make your way through this accident with the slow-and-go ride of a drive time of 34 minutes southbound from 37 down to 580. once you get past that, though, you will see extra volume at the golden gate bridge. but from 580 down into san francisco still only 14 minutes. but still moving through there. broken-down vehicle clearing eastbound 80 at treasure island. upper deck of the bay bridge busy. >> live weather camera we are featuring this morning coit tower and we have lots of blue skies. temperatures above average. santa rosa 59. mild livermore and san francisco at 55. later today, 18 degrees above average in concord at 94 degrees. in the 90s in santa rosa. mid-80s to the south in san jose. chance of rain the weekend.
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the nba's most valuable player put on a show before the opening buzzer. steph curry drained shot after shot last night from the midcourt logo roughly 40 feet. but the thunder stole golden state's lightning in the opener of the western conference playoffs. oklahoma city beat the warriors 108-102. >> but steph curry is just pretty to watch. makes it look so easy. it's only game one. warriors are not done. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour the zika virus threatens to spread in the united states. congress debates whether to allocate more than a billion dollars to fight this disease.
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we're on the front lines of the battle against those mosquitos. plus melody hopson is here with amazon's reported push to offer its own generic products like food and detergent. ahead, why only some amazon customers may get to buy the private labeled brands. "the wall street journal" reports warren buffett's company berkshire hathaway bought a $1 billion stake in apple this year. buffett is the giving them a larger role. the move boosted apple's market value by more than $18 billion. "the boston globe" reports on a surgical milestone. the nation's first penis transplant. 64-year-old thomas manning had the surgery at massachusetts general hospital. cancer force the the amputation of his penis in 2012. the operation took 15 hours and required more than 40 doctors and assistants. surgeons say the procedure raises hope for maimed combat
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veterans. >> i think it's very important, and i think you should go online and see the name of the doctor that performed the surgery. very interesting. a little irony there. "the washington post" reports on today's likely senate vote for just over a billion dollars to fight the zika virus. some of the money would fund vaccine development. a government map shows the pnlt range of the mosquitos that carry the virus. more than 500 travel-related cases have been reported
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right now, there are only eight of these. >> david, thanks. amazon changed the way we shop online and stream video. "the wall street journal" reports the world's biggest retailer wants to shake up our run to the grocery store by expanding its private label brand. >> so you'll soon be able to buy amazon generic items like nuts coffee, and baby food and every day essentials like diapers and detergent. we reached out to amazon. they had no comment about this. melody hobson is at the table to dissect this. there have been jokes out there about it's jeff bezos' world domination plan to take over the world. does that surprise you? >> no not at all. one product at a time. >> but why this area now? >> because it's huge. $118 billion in private label goods were sold last year.
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that was up 2 billion from the year before. expect it to grow again this year. they've been in the space. they've had amazon basics with things like mouse pads and cell phone cases. then they moved into clothing and jumped to number two as the clothing retailer in america behind macy's largely driven by their private label clothes. >> and they've been doing this privately. in february apparently they rolled out seven private labels already. what do you think is the short-term goal, the long-term goal, how quickly could they gain a large audience? >> i think they can gain a large audience very, very fast. it's interesting they're only making these goods available to amazon prime users. those are the people who pay $99 a year to get all of these special benefits. so they get this special value. it will drive the prime customer. reportedly there are more than 50 million of them. so you can get traction very very fast. i would imagine we'll see
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product expansion. >> aren't you amazon prime, charlie? >> yes. >> i am too. >> jeff bezos prime. this is simply one more example of what scale can do for you. >> that is for sure. and everyone's saying what about the competition? i said, what about the vendors? the people who supply to them these dominant brands of nuts or cereal or oatmeal or whatever it is, they're coming into their category without having that marketing expense, and with this installed customer base the loyalty is to amazon not even to the brands anymore. >> that's what drove walmart's growth too. that kind of scale. >> so is this like walmart 2.0? >> for sure. >> here would be my pushback. as a mother i like tide brand. i like a certain kind of tide brand. in terms of cereal we like honey nut cheerios, a certain brand. you can't just make a generic brand of some of those. we have brand loyalty. >> however -- there's two
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answers to that. these are not your grandmother's generics. they're going for products that you won't know the difference. again, your kids don't know the brand of oatmeal you use. and you probably use quaker oats, but maybe not. so they won't be able to taste that difference. the other thing that's interesting, millennials don't care that much. they're not as brand loyal. >> why won't amazon comment on it? it's interesting to me that we reached out and they say, we're not talking about it. you would think they would want to talk about something that seems to be going so well. >> i think it's about the vendors. they're starting to take market share away from people who supply to them. that was something that made a lot of vendors not very popular with walmart. so i think they're trying to do it in a quiet, low-key way, but it's happening. the train has left the station. >> in an in-surgeon campaign don't advertise your strategy as much. >> the quiet rollout seems to be working. >> always interesting. thank you so much. a startling admission by the
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candid comments from the director of "iron man 3" are adding fuel to charges of sexism in hollywood. the director said in a new interview he originally wrote a villain as a woman but was told to change the character to a man. he says that's because toys based on male action figures sell better. michelle miller is here with what's being called another example of entertainment industry bias. michelle, good morning. >> good morning. this admission comes at an awkward time for studio executives. according to the aclu the federal government has been expanding its investigation into gender discrimination in hollywood. while this character gender shift allegedly happened a few years ago, it does once again put a harsh spotlight on how the
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movie industry feels about female characters and their selling potential. in disney's "iron man 3," villain aldridge kilian has superhuman strength and can breathe fire. he also happens was never told who made the decision but indicated it came from marvel corporate. >> it's not surprising to me marvel would have some reluctance to have a female villain if they felt it would impact toy sales. >> in terms of maximizing studio
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profits, superhero toys often come to the rescue. last year's u.s. toy sales were up nearly 7% to almost $19.5 billion. and it's estimated as much as 45% of that came from movie licensed products. >> disney may be looking at this saying, okay we're going to get a certain return on a male villain, whereas we might get a certain return on a female villain. that's where a decision like this could be made. >> it's not the first time that female characters in big movie franchises have faced tough times in the toy store. >> what'd you do? >> i bypassed the come press sor. >> rey was a force to be reckoned with in "star wars: the force awakens," but fans complained she was not included in some toy sets. and in "avengers," scarlett johansson's black widow might have been the karngt who dropped out of an aircraft on a
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motorcycle, but she was dropped in the accompanying toy set, replaced by captain america. even co-star mark ruff low tweeted, marvel we need more black widow merchandise for my daughters and nieces. pretty please? the backlash against both those overnights might meantimes are changing. >> i definitely think that if this decision was on the table today, marvel would not have chosen to eliminate a female villain from a film especially considering how much consumers have been very vocal about wanting to see more girl action figures. >> we reached out to the marvel and disney for comment, but we haven't heard back. it's worth noting that marvel and dc comics do have plans for female-fronted movies and i'm sure they'll be tracking how well they sell on the toy shelf. gayle? >> we'll all be paying attention. i've seen some good female villains. haven't you? >> sure have. >> females know how to be
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dastardly. michelle we thank you. tiger woods' comeback takes what you could call an awkward turn. ahead, how a water hazard on the golf course posed a triple >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by new rinocort allergy spray, for powerful nasal allergy relief. if you have allergy congestion muddling through your morning is nothing new. ...your nose is the only thing on your mind...
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you have been there. >> yeah. >> you've birdied that hole. >> i have. that's congressional country club. it's the tenth hole. there's a lot of balls in that water, including mine and my husband's. >> from tee to green, what is it? >> depends what tee you're hitting from me. for me it's about 110. for him it's up to 170. >> but you were cringing at it. that must be hard to look at. >> coming up more on south africa's rhinos facing extinction extinction. i've got allergies. and i'm doing just fine. claritin provides 24-hour relief of symptoms that can be triggered by over 200 allergens. yeah, over 200 allergens! with claritin my allergies don't come between me and victory. live claritin clear.
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antioch. ed fire onto highway-four in pittsburg good morning. it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. police say the gunman who shot at this car in antioch opened fire on highway 4 in pittsburg yesterday after recent -- several recent shootings. the pittsburg city council is getting six security cameras installed. this san mateo petsmart employee is facing animal cruelty charges. police say a one-year-old dachshund died during his visit with 38-year-old juan zarate. coming up on "cbs this morning," the scoop on what sunblocks actually -- the scoop on whether sunblocks keep us safe. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. and 2% back at the grocery store. even before he got 3% back on
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kenny used his bankamericard cash rewards credit card to join the wednesday night league. because he loves to play hoops. not jump through them. that's the excitement of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you. lanes blocked northbound 880 at thorne. we have an injury accident. a vehicle was traveling southbound hit the center divide, flipped over into
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northbound lanes. two left lanes completely shut down. you have big delays as a result. hoping to clear this out of the roads soon but in the meantime use an alternate. you're slow southbound anyway 238 to 84. northbound backed up because of the accident. san mateo bridge slow upwards of 30 minutes to go between 880 and 101. that's traveling across the span. northbound 280 right at 880/17 an accident there involving a motorcycle. it is over to the shoulder. but possible injuries. you're busy out of the south bay which has delays this morning on 280, 101 and 238. roberta? >> good morning, everybody. it's live. it's our live weather camera looking out towards sfo where there are no reports of local airport delays. visibility is unlimited from sfo through mineta international airport and across the bay in oakland. 55 degrees in san francisco. it is 68 degrees in santa rosa. 71 in fairfield going up to highs today mid-90s away from the bay. 74 in san francisco. san jose at 88.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west it is tuesday, may 17th 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including questions about sunscreen safety. first here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> the campaigns assume sanders will win oregon but kentucky is harder to predict. >> donald trump knows how to kountter programs by mentioning personal scandals that plagued bill clinton's presidency. >> is the aggressiveness smart or stupid. >> smart because he gets the media to talk about this.
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>> it has to be on the ground. >> this airport is telling people to be in the security line two to three hours before their flight and now fliers are striking back. >> you have more time because he didn't obey his cur fee. >> 500 calls a day questioning sprays for mosquitos. >> there are jocks about jeff baso's plan to take over the world. >> in an act of desperation, bernie is now going by colonel sanders. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the republicans have their presumptive nominee, but the democrats are still deciding.
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kentuckyians are voting right now. 134 delegates are at stake in kentucky and oregon including sup super delegates. it is a signal that bernie will go the distance despite the odds against him. >> hillary clinton needs 144 more delegates to clinch the nomination nomination. she attacked donald trump saying he lacked specific policies. >> some people might say all i want to hear is that i'm going to do it but i'm not telling you what i'm going to do. maybe in the primaries that's what they wanted to hear but people take their vote for president seriously. and they're going to look at that tv screen and say "he still doesn't have anything to tell us"? donald trump talked about his plan to criticize clinton's
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character. he said you really have to get women to ask themselves if hillary is sincere and authentic. >> and when talking to megyn kelly that he is not a bully, but he goes after people who attack him. >> i respond. maybe times ten, i respond strongly, but in all cases i respond to what they did to me. >> kelly told stephen colbert he felt he was counter punching against her. >> they get up there, make their comments. often their policies or character to be assessed by the american people and it's our job to punch them a little bit. we're the only thing that stands between them and the oval office. we have to ask tough questions, which in my own view doesn't
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make us fair game for a year of personal insults, but -- >> did his followers come after you after you were seen as adversaries. >> i mean yes -- no question it's been a dark year in many ways, but there has been a lot of silver linings. i think when you're tested like that it shows you who you are, who your friends are, it brought my husband and me closer together. it has not been all bad. >> kelly said her goal is to act with dignity and as a professional. donald trump is firing back at president obama for criticism during a presidential address. president obama never mentioned trump by name but said in politics and in life ignorance is not a virtue. in response donald trump said this is a primary reason that president obama is the worst president in u.s. history.
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>> a critique of the republican he said trump should make senate republicans reconsider their opposition to his supreme court nominee judge merrick garland. >> they're looking at a republican nominee who many of them say is not qualified to be president, muchless appoint someone in but giving him a hearing and a vote to someone they themselves in the past have said is well qualified and fair. >> the president also said if there was not a vacancy on the court, monday's birth control decision may have been different. all eight justices voted to send the case back to the lower courts. that sidesteps a possible stalemate. and yellow stone officials had to put a baby in the back of
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a car because they thought it looked cold and they repeatedly tried to reunite the newborn with the bison with his mother but it was unsuccessful. this is one of several interacts at national parks. last month officials attempted to pet a buyison. >> they should have just called park officials. >> a texas mom and dad turned graduation day into a family affair. they were having trouble convincing their sons to go to college. so they decided to lead by example. they enrolled with their sons to finish degrees they started 20 years ago. >> so really it works because we work as a team. all of us work as a team. >> i encourage anyone look if it is a dream of yours, go for it. anything is possible. >> how great is that?
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a new consumer reports a new consumer report into sunscreen show that's more than 40% of the product tested did not meet their claims. we'll look at the results coming up here on "cbs this morning." see me. see me. don't stare at me. see me. see me. see me to know that psoriasis is just something that i have. i'm not contagious. see me to know that... ...i won't stop until i find what works. discover cosentyx,
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editor, trisha. i love this study. so much information. fist you found 40% of the products you tested failed to meet their spf claims. how did you test these sunscreens? >> spf is protection from uvb rays, which are the kind that burn the skin. they sit in a tub, they are exposed to light, and they come back are tested for effectiveness. >> we found that the products claim to be an spf 50 but in our tests, they were an spf of 8. >> whoa. >> what did you do trish? that is a big difference. >> it is a big difference and what is interesting about those sunscreens is they are the ones that contain titanium oxide and
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zinc oxide. and in general, those didn't perform in general as well as they claimed they would. >> there is little difference between spf 50 and spf 100, but if you pick a chemical sunscreen with an spf of 40 or higher you have a greater chance of at least a spf 30. >> so if i'm going in the sun, what should i do. >> put it on 15 minutes before going outside, and reapply every two hours. >> and what spf, it should be what? >> we would say at least an spf of 30 but we remember a chemical sunscreen with a spf of at least 40. >> what is the best brand? >> the best in our test for
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lotion was an spf 60 also a pure sun defense. those were the four highest rated in our test. >> are sprays better than lotions or lotions -- >> you have to be careful with sprays. you can inhale them. using sunscreen correctly is very important. you don't get the protection if you don't use enough, if you don't reapply often enough -- so the sprays you can inhale and they don't recommend using sprays on children for that reason. >> we want to go back to bah than in in a boat who said their safety testing met fda requirements and they are confident in the effectiveness.
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>> i have bought many sunscreens, they say it is wet force ultimate sun protection they say it gets more effective when wet, but that is not true you say? >> yes we put it on dry skin and also on skin that was in the water, and we found no difference in the spf performance, but the sunscreen met it's spf claim, and it provided excellent uvb production. >> all of those things shiseido say there was significant flaws in the methodology in the consumer reports. >> we do our own testing and it's not a compliance test. >> i use it on my face. >> and it is working. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. >> i have a constant tan, so i feel really good. an ncis costar, michael
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weatherly is in the studio today. the number one cbs drama, preview tonight and season finale. why michael thinks it completes a full circle for him, ahead, on cbs this morning. we'll be right back. how long can you wear your shoes before corns, calluses and bunions make them unbearable? introducing dr. scholl's cushions with advanced duragel technology. they provide a thin, flexible layer between your shoes and foot pain. so you can move with confidence.
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but rangers insist it will protect the rhinos good morning. rhino numbers are becoming so extinct, it is the conservationist that are removing their horns. >> this rhino has been sedated so it's horn can be removed. this ranger knows his rhinos are marked animals, their horns a deadly bounty on their head. he made an uneasy peace with the difficult decision to dehorn the
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rhinos. it may harm their basement to live successfully in the wild. >> we have reached a tipping point in south africa. for a species heading towards extinction if we don't go in another direction. >> they must ensure the precise dosage when he fires from the helicopter. too much could be lethal. the rhino is quickly blindfolded. it is hard to watch, but he is not in any pain. the process is briefly traumatic, they say it is like filing a human nail. >> i would rather see him upright in two years time rather than being bloated in a ditch. >> this horn is what is being
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fought over. it is so valuable that it is immediately whisked off of the property and taken to a secret location out of the reach of criminal syndicates. >> it is so high that argueorganized crime gets about $150,000 per order. in vietnam it is sold under the belief that it cures cancer and enhances -- the rhinos are sprayed with a purple disinfectant, and then injected with an antidote to counter act the grogginess. there is no permanent damage if will be increasingly rare to see a rhino with the horn still attached, but they believe it is a price worth paying to save the species. hino
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horn does grow back and the reserve is hoping that this is simply dramatically reducing the risk of poaching. nora nora? >> incredible story. may grow back. that was tough to look at and then d. really? you just cut off my nose. tough video. >> his horn yeah. >> the equivalent of my nose. that's the point i was making. >> i think it still has its nostrils. >> okay. all right. he wrote a best-selling book about cancer and yesterday he gave some john hopkins graduates some simple advice. >> take a look around you. make a list of -- a mental list of all the facts, the math that you've learned in medical school and now know this as i do now. virtually all of this will be replaced modified challenged in the next decade. >> wow. he's in studio 57 with his new book and how the gene will be at
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the center of those changes after your local news. your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. tomorrow democratic presidential candidate bernie sanders will hold a couple of bay area rallies. the first one will be in san jose at 1:00 at santa clara county fairgrounds. tomorrow evening at 7:30 p.m., waterfront park in vallejo. the warriors lost game one of the western conference finals at home in oakland last night. they will face the oklahoma city thunder at home again tomorrow. and in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning," actor michael weatherly talks about the end of his run on ncis. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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u nan good morning. i'm gianna franco. let's jump to 101. southbound at broadway we have an injury accident blocking at least the right lane causing delays in both directions. southbound 25 minutes from 380 to 92. northbound expect delays as well especially spectator slowing passing the scene. about 45 minutes to go from 92 to the 80 split. 280 itself is looking better. so you might use that as an alternate north- or southbound
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in the meantime. south bay westbound 237 in the south bay blocking the right lane. milpitas slow drive times here 880 to 101, 24 minutes north 101 and guadalupe parkway heavy as far as traffic goes. a lot of brake lights. lots of company northbound 880 nimitz freeway past the coliseum. this is one of my favorite views this morning from my transamerica pyramid we are looking north towards angel island and alcatraz. good morning, a nice morning in progress. santa rosa 70. san jose 60s. upper 50s tri-valley. today 18 degrees above average in concord topping off at 94. 10 degrees above where we should be for this time of the year in san francisco at 74 degrees. yes, 94 degrees our outside number today in discovery bay. and brentwood. slightly cooler on your wednesday. seasonal thursday. rain saturday and sunday.
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good morning from upstate new york. here's a beautiful sunrise for you from our scipio center. that's in the finger lakes. our followers on instagram, we thank you for sharing your views. ret pretty stuff. it's a bright morning in newark new jersey. and on the farm in lincoln, massachusetts, where the cows are up very early. post your photos can the hashtag sunrise. >> you have a special place in your heart for newark. >> yes, i do. i'm the former official first lady of newark. self-proclaimed. cory booker doesn't know. i just named myself that. welcome back to "cbs this morning." that's how you do it. >> that's right. >> coming up in this half hour -- >> you got to believe it to be it. >> if you can imagine it t you
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can be it. >> that's how i feel. >> coming up in this half hour, "ncis" star michael weatherly. you are here. you are back. things won't be the same for him after tonight. we're going to take a look at his farewell performance as special agent dinozzo. plus, his special project with stephen spielberg inspired by dr. phil. also in the green room pulitzer prize winning author dr. mookerjee. the san francisco chronicle reports on big rigs that drive themselves. it's from a start-up called auto. drivers would take over on local roads. otto says this would improve
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safety and cut costs. "the new york times" reports on a drug being tested on dogs that appear to slow ageing. the same drug improved heart health in older mice and appeared to delay the onset of some diseases. some mice survived about 12% longer than the control group. it is part of the new frontier in science aimed at delaying ageing. a human trial is a long way off and would take decades. and "the washington post" reports on a study linking longevity and church attendance. women who attended services more than once a week had a 33% lower risk of death. the death rate for those who went once a week was 26% lower. the researchers said the effective religious attendance was stronger than participation in other social groups. jeans are at thegenes are at the core of our identity. gene therapy and alteration. dr. mookerjee is the author of a
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new book "the gene." he writes one humbling fact about our understanding of the human genome is how little we know. we're pleased to have him here. first of all, congratulations on this and the pulitzer for the biography of cancer. >> thank you very much. >> the interesting thing about it, it's both promising and scary. tell us why. >> well it's promising because as we learn more about human genes, we can diagnose diseases that we didn't know how to diagnose before. with things like genetic interventions, we can begin to cure some diseases. it's a long frontier. there's lots we don't know. but the technology is advancing rapidly. i'm excited about it. that's what makes it promising. the danger in all this is we will start intervening on the human genome at a time that we don't know very much about it. >> while it's an embryo.
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>> well or even in embryonic stem cells where we don't know all the ways that we can potentially manipulate it. really, it's the human embryo and embryonic manipulation that drives the concerns. >> but is it inevitable? >> i don't think it's inevitable. i think scientists will and have in the past stepped up to the plate and created strong barricades around what kinds of things can be done what kind of interventions can be done. so i think it's not -- i think it's not completely -- i think people will draw strong barricades around it. >> you write very candidly about the mental illness in your own family. you talk about two uncles and a cousin. did that have anything to do with your desire to explore this topic in 600 pages? a lot of information in your book. >> it's a lot of information, and you know that was absolutely the basis of the book. that and the fact that i was -- i still treat cancer patients. i'd began to experience the amazing things you can do with
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genes and genetics around cancer. you know you can diagnose. imagine me being able to tell a woman about her risk of future breast cancer and being able to screen for that or give her a drug to prevent breast cancer. this technology didn't exist 20 years ago or 30 years ago. we have all of this now. but on the other hand, we're also grappling with the fact there are so many uncertainties. we're using the language of genes very loosely. but what are the uncertainties? what's the real promise and what are the real perils? that's at the center of the book. >> what percentage of cancers have a genetic component? >> well, you know ultimately all cancers are genetic. cancer a genetic disease. so the question you can ask is what percentage of cancers' genes are inherited from your parents? we don't know fully the answer yet. there are many genes that can have small effects. sometimes, you know, there's one gene that can have a very big effect. braca one. we know about it. one gene big effect.
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on the other hand, there are many, many women with familial breast cancer that families have don't foe what genes are involved. so there's both ends of the spectrum, even in that one disease, breast cancer. >> because brca one is a single gene mutation. other things like huntington's disease, those are the first things you could create genetic mutation. you write the genome will be a manual of previvorship. what is that? >> it's a complicated word. it's the idea that, you know you can look at a genome and you can begin, we're not there yet, but we can begin to ask questions about what might happen in your future. so the word previvor is a word that reminds us we're going to try to predict the future from your genetic makeup. then you become a survivor of a disease you haven't yet had. it's a weird idea. often you're living in the shadow of an illness you haven't
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yet had. so it's a little bit -- it's a tough idea. we should be very careful with that kind of idea. >> are you optimistic about where we are in this whole study of genes and cancer and mental illness? >> i'm optimistic as long as the wider public understands that there won't be single genes for this. there will be multiple genes with small effects and a big role of the environment in illnesses like this. there will be genetic determinants. we know many mental illnesses have jegenetic components at their very core. as long as we understand the information is complicated, that's the key. >> you talk about the challenge to the gene pool as a triangle. >> so the triangle has -- we have to remember that extraordinary suffering is one important thing we have to evaluate. number two, is there a good correspondence between the gene
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and the disease? in other words, like brca 1, you have the gene there's a heightened risk for the disease. that's not true for all other genes. probably the most important, all of this should be publicly debated, and it should be open to choice. you shouldn't have a state mandate to test your genes or to do anything about your genome. >> thank you. >> we're just at the beginning of the legal frontier on this. >> that's a big legal frontier. >> great to have you here. >> my pleasure. >> thank you very, very much. and "the gene" goes on sale today. actor michael weatherly says good-bye to "ncis" tonight in the season finale after 13 years. and guess what? he's here in our toyota green room. next a look back i
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"ncis." that was back in 2003. the actor stayed with the cast ever since the number one drama in the world premiered 13 seasons ago. that's more than 300 episodes. tonight's season finale will also be weatherly's finale on the show. dinozzo tries to find his former team member and love interest after an explosion. here's a preview. >> it's going to be fine junior. you do know that right? >> no, actually i don't. >> well, i guess it's better to be prepared but i've got this feeling. >> feeling of what? feeling that she's still alive? so do i. but i don't know that she's still alive, and nobody knows anything, so what's the point in feeling anything at all? >> michael weatherly, welcome back. with a little light reading we left in the green room for you. what have you learned just now? >> i am predisposed to comedy. not drama. but tonight is a very dramatic
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episode. >> i know. all good things come to an end unless you anchor "cbs this morning." how are you feeling? you feel good right? >> i feel very good. i feel very whole, complete, and excited about -- it's a huge accomplishment. there's a sort of sense of graduating. that's deeply satisfying. but i'm also really energized by the future and what else is going to happen. >> we're going to talk about your future, your next chapter. you called this a full-circle moment. how? >> well it is -- season 14 will start in september. i won't be there, but "ncis" is a very rugged dynamic machine that keeps pumping out the television. i'm sure that they're going to do wonderful things but when i started the show i was playing robert wagner in a mini series about natalie wood. then robert wagner was hired in
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season seven to play my father, and that was six years ago. last week i went to the wrap party with robert wagner. as i was getting into the car, peter walks by and goes hey. it was one of those moments where you thought, oh. >> circle of life. nice. >> done. >> your "ncis" co-star pauly perrette has been here. she sent this message for you. listen. >> hey gayle and charlie and norah. i miss you guys. michael weatherly, i love. we've been partners in crime in this thing for 14 years. my heart belongs to you so much, my brother. i love you. i never want to do anything without you, and you're just going to be so missed and so loved. tonight's episode is your last. hopefully not your last. you got to come back and see us. but there's nothing like you, my brother. i love you so much.
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muah. >> well, that's very -- >> yes, very sweet. i have to say, i have probably built a huge retaining wall around my emotions. so that'll probably come out tonight a little bit. and i think also for the audience that loves this show it's a very powerful episode. i know if we get mark harmon to cry, but we try. >> but you try. >> it's interesting you say you built a retaining wall but it's been 13 years of your life. when you think about that, when we saw the first episode compared to where you are now. >> i look like i've been recast by an older, fatter guy. >> so tell us about bull. >> bull is the fascinating next step that kind of fell out of the sky, out of the lev moons moonves sky. he owns a lot of that sky, or at least controls it.
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i was really fascinated edd by this concept of trial analytics and services. what that really means is looking at why we do the things we do and human behavior as it applies to jury trials. it turns out that dr. phil mcgraw before he became television's dr. phil ran a company that did just that. incredibly successful. >> in fact that's how he met oprah. >> that's how the two of them got together. she credits dr. phil with her victory in that case. very much so. he was very frank with her and said look you're going to have your ass handed to you. i mean in his plain-speaking way of talking. because she was saying but this is how i feel. these are the facts. he goes the facts, there's one way for the facts and there's one way to tell the facts effectively. >> right. >> he really made such a difference for her. >> you have stephen spielberg
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producing. it's a real heavy-hitter show. >> and you, michael. >> yeah but the great thing was the client said what about innocent until proven guilty? bull says innocent until proven guilty is like two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun. it's the ad. it's the slogan. but it's not the truth. >> that sounds like phil too. sounds like him. >> i'm telling you, it's a show -- i finished reading it and sat down with my wife and said, remember that vacation we were going to take? it's not going to happen. we're going to make some more television. >> i know, but this is a new chapter. i think it's very exciting. for us too because you'll still be part of the cbs family. >> i have my summer reading. >> we'll be testing you. >> it's a full 600 pages. >> that's okay. >> you're flying back to l.a. you got time. >> beach reading. >> thank you michael weatherly. continued success to you. >> thank you. nice to see you guys. >> always good to see you.
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the knowledge to adjust for the best sleep ever. it's the semi-annual sale! save $500 on the memorial day special edition mattress with sleepiq technology. only at a sleep number store. among them an off duty la cop who ran into flames to save an unconscious driver. others saved a 2-year-old girl at knife point. it is nice to see all of the law enforcement honored. well deserved. >> the pride they feel in the room. >> nice. >> that does it for us.
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hey pal? you ready? can you pick me up at 6:30? ah... (boy) i'm here! i'm here! (cop) too late. i was gone for five minutes! ugh! move it. you're killing me. you know what, dad? i'm good. (dad) it may be quite a while before he's ready, but our subaru legacy will be waiting for him. (vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. the twenty-sixteen subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan.
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it's a subaru. gunman who shot at this car in antioch...opened fire onto highway-four good morning. it's 8:55. police say the gunman who shot at this car in antioch opened fire on highway 4 in pittsburg yesterday after several recent shootings. pittsburg city council is getting security cameras installed on the road. >> police hope the public will recognize these men. the burglary suspects have been breaking into joe chinese fast food around 3 a.m. on april 21. one was wearing an oakland raiders hat at the time. hollywood is making a movie about the winchester house in san jose. its owner designed the home to ward off "evil spirits." helen mirren will probably play winchester. >> i spent a night. i'm the only one that ever did that, too.
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because i was stupid. all right. [ laughter ] >> good morning, everybody. it was scary! looking out at mount vaca, the visibility is unlimited. you can see to mount diablo this morning. today will be the warmest day of the workweek. right now in the 50s and 60s and 74 degrees in fairfield topping off with high in the low to mid-90s there. 94 in concord and brentwood. 90 in mountain view today. 74 in san francisco. approaching 70 in pacifica. today 69 to 94. slightly cooler on wednesday. seasonal thursday. increasing clouds on friday with additional cooling. a slight chance of rain showers over the weekend. a look at your morning commute with gianna coming up.
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before earning enough cash back from bank of america to buy a new gym bag. before earning 1% cash back everywhere, every time and 2% back at the grocery store. even before he got 3% back on gas. kenny used his bankamericard cash rewards credit card to join the wednesday night league. because he loves to play hoops. not jump through them. that's the excitement of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you.
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traffic on the eastshore freeway, westbound near el portal an accident blocking lanes. busy westbound. slow coming away from highway 4. stays busies approaching richmond and then you will see brake lights berkeley into emeryville. we have slow-and-go conditions continuing at the bay bridge with the metering lights still on. your 880 approach is probably the best through this portion. westbound 580 and eastshore freeway still backed up. 880 though not looking so good near the coliseum northbound. you have a busy ride here. stop-and-go conditions into downtown oakland. 42 minutes 238 to the maze. south 101 at broadway, across the bay we have reports of this accident still stuck in lanes. it is clearing but the damage is done. you are slow in both directions
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wayne: you got the big deal of the day! jonathan: yeah, girl! it's a trip to bermuda! - bigger isn't always better. wayne: you won a car! - zonks are no fun. - big deal, baby! jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal”. now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls welcome to “let's make a deal.” i'm wayne brady. you know what we do. three deals, let's go. who wants to make a deal? the lovely pirate right there in the middle. the pirate, britney the pirate. the shark on the end. and the doctor right here. come on over here. everybody else have a seat. everybody else have a seat have a seat. brittany, how are you doing?
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