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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 29, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com ♪ ♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is thursday, september 29, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." new information about the elementary school shooting in south carolina. a family friend said it wasn't the first time the teenager accused of opening fire and brought a gun to school. breaking news. a train full of morning commuters crashes into a station just outside new york city. dozens of people are hurt in the mass casualty incident. rescue efforts are under way. donald trump tries out a new line of attack against hillary clinton and doubles down on his controversial comments about a former miss universe. the nominee has another aleppo moment on tv.
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we begin with today's eye opener" your world in 90 seconds. they told me they went to the background and i am so scared. i don't want her to go to school now. >> a school shooting in south carolina. >> the shooter is a juvenile, white male. no racial undertones there. no terrorism involved. a new jersey transit train has crashed. police say there are serious injuries. >> it's a busy hub in the middle of the morning commute. >> looks like a scene out of a movie. the train breaking through the walls and you can see significant damage. isn't this one of the strangest elections you've ever seen? >> on the campaign trail donald trump continues to lash out at hillary clinton. >> she put the oval office up for sale. hundreds of people have died in aleppo since the end of a cease-fire. >> it's extraordinary. >> so what do we do? >> people keep asking. is it too late and the answer is no, it's not too late. congress voted to override president obama's veto. allowing victims of 9/11 --
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>> severe flooding in china. more than two dozen people are missing after a landslide. >> who is your favorite foreign leader? >> anyone in the continent, anybody in the world you like. pick any leader. >> the former president of mexico. >> which one? >> i'm having a brain -- >> name anyone. >> all that matters. >> everyone is still talking about this debate. >> i don't know about you, but i am still -- i'm still detoxing. >> 80 million americans skipped the nfl for it which i think is a sign of the apocalypse. >> on "cbs this morning". >> did any of you see the video that katy perry made. she gets naked and tell us everyone to vote. >> it's our responsibility to register to vote, to go to our local polling place and make a choice between two people nobody can believe are our only
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available option. this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. ♪ ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning" as you wake up in the west, there's been a devastating commuter train cash just across the hudson river in new jersey. the train crashed full force into the hoboken station. >> more than 100 are hurt, many of them critically. this happened at the end of the rush hour. cbs evening news executive producer steve capas is at the scene and joins us from the scene. what do you know? >> hi, gayle. there is an ongoing situation. there is a great deal of concern that the structural integrity of this train station. what happened was a commuter
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train barreled through the end point of this rail line, and in the process caused a severe damage to the station. we've seen a beam that has collapsed. we've seen a partial roof collapse around it and the lead car, the lead car is off the tracks and has slammed into the building. so the concern now, of course, is for the people who are on this train, but also people who were in this crowded terminal at the time. i'm directly across the terminal now near the triage area. we are still seeing people being brought out of this train station. many of them being treated. fortunately, they're able to go out on their own power and we're also seeing people being carried out on stretchers with apparently serious injuries. the numbers that we're seeing, at least a hundred injuries and that's possibly an early
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preliminary number that's likely to change as this continues. >> describe some of the injuries, steve, that you've seen. >> we've seen scores of people, norah, with bandages held to their head, bloody clothing. one guy was on the ground in the parking lot with what appeared to be a broken leg. i've seen a number of people -- one person who does not appear to be conscious carried out on a stretcher and many of the people on stretchers wrapped in thermal blankets to prevent shock. i can tell you that there's -- i've seen roughly 75 people all of whom have some indications of injuries and they're still being assessed in this parking lot by emergency medical personnel. a big grouping of people who are not as severely injured were just taken out of here on a bus to be assessed, but ambulance
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crews are shuttling people out of here as quickly as they can get them out of the station. >> all right, steve capus reporting there from hoboken. steve, thank you so much. one of the questions at this hour is why this happened. our transportation correspondent kris van cleave is joining us now. kris, do we know, was it accidental? was it intentional? >> good morning, norah. it's way too early to know the cause here. federal railroad administration investigators are on their way to the scene. highly likely you will see the national transportation safety board doing this investigation. a lot of questions, they'll want to know why this train was going so fast, fast enough to blow through the terminus block at the rail and they'll talk to the engineer and the operator of this train and look at what the signals were. also, you will likely hear talk whether seat belts would have made a difference. the ntsb had recommended studying that after amtrak, particularly a train like this
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where there is a lot of debris, and the walking wounded that steve was talking about in his report. they'll have a lot of questions. they'll want to know what cameras there were, how fast was this going and why was it going so fast and what was going on with the engineer as they approached the station and it should have been slowing down, not speeding up. norah? >> we'll continue to monitor the rescue efforts and bring you the latest on the train crash. new details are emerging about the teenager accused of opening fire at a south carolina elementary school. two 6-year-old students and a too teacher were shot yesterday. one is in drit cal condition. the 16-year-old was suspended within the past two years for bringing a weapon to school. he has been home schooled since then. >> that teenager is in police custody this morning. police say the alleged shooter killed his father at home before attacking the school. manuel bojorquez is in townville
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elementary school, 100 miles northeast of atlanta. good morning. >> manuel, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. classes are canceled at townville elementary where the gunman opened fire at 1:45 yesterday afternoon. the school of nearly 300 student his practiced for such a scenario multiple times over the past several years. investigators believe those active shooter drills helped prevent this shooting from becoming a lot worse. dozens of law enforcement officers began swarming townville elementary school seven minutes after receiving a call that there was a gunman on campus. >> the shooter will be a white male, all black clothing and blond hair. >> two 6-year-old students were shot. one in the leg and the other in the foot. jacob hall was airlifted to the hospital. a female teacher was also struck in the shoulder. >> the shooter is a juvenile. he's a white male. there's no racial undertones there. there's no terrorism involved. >> reporter: police say the shooter who was armed with a
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handgun never entered the school. volunteer firefighter jamie brock apprehended him and held him outside on the playground until police arrived. >> as you all have heard one of our firefighters did that, and probably saved a lot more lives. >> police say the gunman began his rampage by shooting his father, 47-year-old jeffrey osborne at the family's home. at about 1:44 p.m. the shooter call his grandmother and was emotional. when the grandparents visited the home they discovered their son's body and their grandson gone. he had drive tone townville elementary about three miles away. frantic parents were alerted by text to come to the school as students were evacuated to a nearby church. scott rushed to meet his daughter lacy. >> i saw her come out, and i just ran to her crying, and just gave her a big hug, you know? just thankful. >> 6-year-old jacob hall remains in the hospital in critical
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condition. the other student and teacher who were injured were released from the hospital last night. investigators said there is no known relationship between those victims and the suspected shooter. >> all right. so much to be thankful for despite the horror there. today is hitting back after hillary clinton after his debate performance was criticized. his latest attack centered on the clinton foundation and his opponent's health. donald said he told miss universe to lose weight in order to save her job. major garrett is here with his shifting strategy. good morning. >> good morning, donald trump as the nation now knows prepped lightly for the presidential debate and he's cramming and in full public view. he is working on several new lines of attacks and themes test marketing them as he travels from rally to rally all part of an effort to make clinton's fitness for office, not trump's, the central issue of this campaign. >> the only people hillary clinton ever fights for are the
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special interests who write checks for her, big, fat, beautiful checks. >> reporter: donald trump portrayed hillary clinton as relentlessly corrupt alleging pay for play schemes while she was secretary of state. >> she put the office of secretary of state up for sale, and if she ever got the chance she'd put the oval office up for sale also. >> there's no proof to support trump's accusations. still, trump marketing a new -- >> remember this race, follow the money. >> he mocked clinton's health and the fainting spell, one the campaign later blamed on pneumonia. >> day off. day off. day off. all those day offs and then she can't even make it to her car. isn't it tough? >> i hardly know this person. >> in another interview with
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alicia machado. >> on monday's debate, trump accused of bullying machado. >> he pointed to the beauty queen's troubled past and said he was only trying to help. >> they wanted to fire her. i saved her job because i said that's going to be ruinous, and i've done that with a number of the young ladies, with the staff itself and look what happened? look what i get out of it. i get nothing. >> trump predicted the machado case could backfire on clinton. ultimately charges were never brought on either count and he continues to litigate this machado saga although some indicate it has damaged his image with some women voters. >> major, thank you very much. hillary clinton campaigns in iowa on the same day of in-person early voting. the democratic nominee and
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bernie sanders reached out yesterday to younger voters. clinton and sanders were out to woo the kids. nancy cordes is in white plains, no, with the election only 40 days away. . good morning. >> like kids the world over young voters have their ideas about this election and they're three times more likely to say they are voting for the third-party candidate and it is unclear whether all of the top democrats who are now being deployed will be able to change their minds. >> thank you, bernie. thank you for your leadership. >> clinton may have won the nomination, but at the university of new hampshire she acknowledged there's one thing sanders still has on her. >> bernie's campaign energized so many young people. >> young people typically lean democratic, but only 17% of voters under 30 say they're very enthusiastic about voting this year. their ambivalence about clinton
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and trump, and the green party's jill stein and they'll go for libertarian gary johnson who strawingeled struggled last night to name a foreign leader he admires. >> who is your favorite foreign -- >> who is my favorite -- >> any one of the continents, any country, name one foreign leader that you respect or look up to. >> i guess i'm having an aleppo moment. >> anybody in the world you like. anybody. pick any leader. >> i'm having a brain -- >> his aleppo moment was a reference to this exchange. >> earlier this month what would you do if you were elected about aleppo. >> about -- >> aleppo. >> and what is aleppo? >> you're kidding. >> no. >> at universities in pittsburgh in philadelphia wednesday, the first lady warned students that a vote for a third-party candidate could swing the race trump's way. >> the stakes are far too high
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to take that chance. too high. >> the detroit news is announcing this morning that it is endorsing gary johnson for president, the first time the paper's 143-year history that it is shunning the republican. the endorsement says trump is, quote, unprincipled, unstable and quite possibly dangerous and it cites clinton's career-long struggles with honesty and ethics which sounds a lot like what we hear from young voters, gayle when they explain why they're not voting for either one. >> congress has ended a long struggle to fight the zika virus. members approved a short-term budget deal last night that includes $1.1 billion in zika funding. it provides victims of lead-tainted water and flood victims in louisiana. the house voted 342-85 avoiding a government shutdown.
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wells fargo ceo is facing aggressive sales tactics. his bankers opened up 2 million unauthorized accounts in customers' names. california announced it will suspend some of its business with wells fargo for a year. juliana is on capitol hill. good morning. >> reporter: as he did with the senate hearing last week, john stumpf will apologize for unethical sales practices. now his prepared remarks does not mention how the bank has cut his salary and lawmakers will be bringing it up as well as california's latest move. >> if they have to get down to their knees and a little reflection and a little prayer would help them. >> california state treasurer announced wednesday he's suspending some of the state's biggest deals with wells fargo. the state will no longer use the bank to purchase investments or underwrite bond sales and he's urging other states to follow suit. the bank responded with a
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statement saying we have already taken important steps and will continue to do so to address these issues and rebuild your trust. >> i am deeply sorry. >> jeong said he wasn't satisfied by john stumpf. >> it's also known as a massive problem. >> that response was, frankly, not a little bit, it was incredibly disheartening. >> since then, wells fargo announced it was taking away tens of millions of dollars of stock awards from the ceo and his former head of retail banking. the company has launched its own investigation into the matter. >> stumpf will get another chance at damage control today when he sits before lawmakers. house financial services committee jeff henserling wants to get to the bottom of who else is involved in the accounts
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other than the other 5300 people the company fired. >> someone up the food chain, knew about it, condoned it, turned a blind eye to it. how have they been held accountable? >> henserling plan to ask why regulators didn't catch what wells farming owe was doing. they'll spivenlgly be pointing fingers at the consumer protection bureau which was created during the obama administration. the man killed by police in southern california is demanding the release of the video of the shooting. alfred o longo. police in el cajon shot and killed him tuesday after he pointed an electronic smoking device at officers. his sister says she told police he was unarmed and mentally unstable. dramatic new video shows is the aftermath of another deadly police shooting and this one in louisiana. ahead, how this body camera video could impact the murder trial and the deputy
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we're continuing to gather new information on the breaking news, the commuter train crash in new jersey. three people have been killed and at least 100 more were injured, many critically. the rush-hour commuter train smashed into the lobby of a station in hoboken and that is just across the hudson river from lower manhattan. >> seven miles from here. photos from the scene show there is heavy damage to that station. one witness said the train simply did not stop. officials say that this particular train usually carries around 250 passengers. we will hear from people at the scene as we continue to follow this breaking story. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back.
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financial services committee." the hearing comes one day after ess ties - good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. today the ceo of wells fargo testifies before the house financial services committee. the hearing comes one day after california cut business ties with the bank. san jose says its campaign to fight illegal dumping is paying off. the city partnered with a british firm known for studying human behavior to make flyers and crews are making 30 pickups a day. coming up on "cbs this morning," the fbi is warning states that hackers may try to compromise their voting systems. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,,,
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good morning, time now 7:27. unfortunately, we do have a fatal crash to report here in vallejo. there is a traffic alert issued by chp. westbound 80 at redwood parkway a motorcycle versus a big rig crash. crews are clearing the scene. it's going to take a long time so to avoid the area take cordelia junction to get to 680. it is backed up all the way to american canyon road along westbound 80 into the maze. now, if you are heading from the eastshore freeway to the maze to downtown 30 minutes. good morning, everybody. delays sfo nearly one hour and 30 minutes due to low clouds and fog. it's more expansive and extensive. it's the marine layer and it's hovering across the bay area. 50s and 60s out the door. later today cooler day some 60s at the coast. 70s bay and peninsula to the low 80s inland. breezy late day. ,,,,,,,,
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♪ yesterday, elon musk, visionary billionaire and one act away from being a super villain, laid out his plan to send people to mars. now, unfortunately, if you're interested in this, tickets are a little pricey with projected current cost being $10 billion per person! finally, a plan to shoot billionaires into space! i believe we have gotten a photo of the project managers. yeah, there you go. there you go. now. >> both of you guys said, yesterday, that that is something you would pass on. >> that's right. >> even though you're the no adventurous at the table? >> we are not going to mars. >> glad about that. i like you right here. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, new concern about the security of
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our voter registration systems. the fbi says that hackers have made more attempts to breach state election databases. ahead the connection with russia. a barrage of bullets fired at an suv. the bullets kill the suspect's 6-year-old son put how it could influence the officers' upcoming murder trials. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" says opec members agree that oil production must be cut to push prices higher. that could lead to increased gas prices. cartel reached an understanding yesterday in algeria yesterday. >> "usa today" reports that blackberry will no longer manufacture its own iconic phones. oh, no. blackberry will outsource the development to partners and they
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plan to focus on software. they fell out of favor out of the arrival of that iphone in 2007. >> let's point out that gayle is still a loyal member. >> you're going to have to pry it from my cold, dead hands but now i my have to give it up. i have the iphone. >> iphone 7, my dear. >> you turned it on to me years ago but now i have to walk around with two. but i might have to officially go the other side. >> all of those e-mails. all of the texts, all of the photos. >> i don't know what is wrong with the blackberry! >> i know. >> technology. >> i got it. other stories in the papers today. from "the san francisco chronicle" reports california tossed out its ten-year statute of limitations in rape changes and bill cosby's accusers could not file criminal charges because too time had elapsed.
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the new law won't apply retroactively. two minnesota sisters were found dead in africa and on vacation. a it is reported they were staying at a resort. they were found last thursday in their villa and showed no obvious signs of trauma. the sisters needed help to their room the previous night after drinking. an autopsy is reportedly scheduled this week. a man is arrested for kidnapping a convenience store clerk. video shows the woman dragged from the shop yesterday and forced into a cap. she escaped but police say she was roughed up. authorities say the suspect and the victim did not know each other. disturbing video shows the deadly end to a police chase in louisiana when a 6-year-old boy was killed. we want to warn you the video is graphic. a judge allowed the release of the body camera video. two officers opened fire on an
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suv last november. the driver was wounded but his autistic son in the passenger seat was killed. to being used as a deadly weapon at that time. the body camera video starts in silence and shows deputy city marshals in marksville, louisiana, chasing an suv in november of last year. they claimed after the chase ended that the driver posed a threat when he backed his vehicle toward them, even though it appears the driver showed both hands to the officers. two marshals opened fire. they shot 18 round. 6-year-old jeremy mardis, diagnosed with ougautism was kid
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in the passenger seat. christopher few who was driving was shot twice but survived. these two marshals are charged with second-degree murder. stafford is heard on tape saying he didn't know the boy was there. >> the kid -- >> it's unclear when officers first checked on junk jeremy. you don't see an officer go to the paermg side until about seven minutes after shots were fired. >> anybody have gloves? you maybe want to pull that juvenile out. >> the pulse. you got one? >> paramedics arrived about nine minutes after the shooting to take few away in an ambulance. didn't
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see a need to fire his weapon because he didn't fear for his life. >> so hard to hear. incredible. it keeps happening. >> another reason to show that you need those body cameras because the body cameras tell one story and sometimes authorities tell another. very important to have those cameras working. >> i agree. the fbi is urging states to make sure their voting registration is free of hackers. james comey says hackers are trying to break into voter register systems of states. officials are not saying which states have concerns. jeff pegues is in pennsylvania and -- washington' looks at the
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growing threat. >> reporter: first, arizona and illinois and now multiple law enforcement sources are telling cbs news a total of about ten states have had their systems probed or breached by hackers. we learned that information as government officials are becoming increasingly concerned about russian efforts to disrupt or influence the election. >> we are urging the states just to make sure that their deadly bolts are thrown and locks are on. >> reporter: on wednesday on capitol hill, lawmakers questioned fbi director james comey about whether the russians were trying to breach u.s. election systems. >> there has been a variety of scanning activities, as well as some of attempted intrusions at voter registration databases beyond those we knew about in july and august. >> reporter: officials are reluctant to blame russia publicly but privately the government officials believe the russian government or hackers working with it are behind the election system cyber attacks and this brings hack on the
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democratic national committee. in an interview earlier this month, russian president vladimir putin played coy when asked about his government's involvement in the dnc hack. >> translator: i don't know anything about that. >> reporter: the u.s. has its own offensive and defensive cyber capabilities. the programs are highly classified. in a recent interview with cbs news, cia director john brennan declined to offer specifics about whether the u.s. is using its cyber tools to respond to russia. what about the u.s. capabilities? >> well, there is a different type of capabilities that the united states will have and i'm not going to give you and your listeners a sense -- >> reporter: you can't talk about it? >> and i choose not to. >> reporter: a government official says the russians like their cyber activity to grab headlines and while these cyber strikes have been successful in accomplishing that goal, u.s. officials are confident that the outcome of the election will not
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be affected. while voters databases are accessible through the internet, most voting machines are not. gayle? >> thank you, jeff. a son survives a week lost at sea but his mother is missing and presumed dead. ahead, the 22-year-old is the center of the
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we're rounding 'em up in a very humane way, in a very nice way. we're going to build a wall. that's not america. we're all californians. i'm tom steyer. it's time to speak out. please, register. and vote. vote. nextgen california action committee is responsible for the content of this advertising. ♪ a 22-year-old man rescued sunday after week lost at sea is now at the center of a criminal investigation. nathan carman is his name. he told the coast guard his boat had taken on water. he made it into a life raft but his mother did not. more than two years he was considered a person of interest in his grandfather's murder.
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michelle miller is at the light house in rhode island where the mother and son left on their doomed fishing trip nearly two weeks ago. >> reporter: good morning. when nathan and linda carmen set sale from here they were supposed to be gone no more than a day. more than a week later, nathan was caught drifting off the coast and his mother is presumed dead and now he is facing a possible charge of reckless endangerment. even before nathan carmen arrived in boston, authorities have shown up at his vermont mom with a search warrant. the repairs he did to his boat may have been considered unsafe for operation. they seized a modum and gps sim card and letter written by carmen who had asperger syndrome
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went on fishing trips with his mother. >> i want to thank the public for their prayers and for their concern for both myself and my mother. >> reporter: the carmen's left point judith on september 17th. leaned texted a friend they were headed 20 miles south. but nathan told the coast guard they were yet. >> i was whistling and calling and looking around and i didn't see her. >> none of us really know what he went through and i'm sure it was traumatic, after seven days at sea, i don't know how anybody made it. >> reporter: in 2013, nathan carmen's grandfather,
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87-year-old john chockalos was shot dead in his home. the associated press, person to see his grandfather alive and insists he had nothing to do with the death of his grandfather. >> they are the two closest people and no way he would injure either one of them. >> police had sought the arrest of nathan carmen in 2014 for the murder of his grandfather, but prosecutors rejected that request saying they needed more information. that case remains unsolved, norah. >> wow. an interesting twist in the story. michelle, thank you. tim tebow comes out of the dugout swinging. ahead, his memorable first
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professional at-bat in a baseball game. first, it's time to check your local weather. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ my brother and i have always been rivals. we would dream about racing each other, in monaco. ♪
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when i was 11 or 12. maybe my parents just didn't know. right, mom? dad? what will you say? don't wait. talk to your child's doctor today. learn more at hpv.com. tim tebow slammed the first pitch fastball over the left field fence for a home run yesterday in florida. he rounded the bases and met his cheering teammates at home plate. his only hit of the day in six at-bats. the former nfl quarterback is playing in the minor leagues for the new york mets. >> that is okay. >> what a great start. >> first day of school. first to get a gold star. >> remember how your mom said you never get a second chance to make a first impression? that always stays with me. go, tim tebow.
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amazon keeps on expanding into new business. ahead the company's risky new move into delivery services and what it could mean for customers and other shipping companies. you're watching "cbs this morning." we always like that. your local news is coming up next. we will be right here.
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santa cruz mountains, by monday. the 38-hundred acre fire... near loma prieta... is good morning. i'm kenny choi. cal fire hopes to contain the "loma fire" in the santa cruz mountains by monday. the 3800-acre fire is now 22% contained. it's destroyed one home and six outbuildings and damaged another house. it's the end of the line for a long-time family-owned business in palo alto. peninsula hardware is going out of business after 63 years. the owner says he simply is ready to retire much to the disappointment of customers. in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning," cbs sports analyst boomer esiason with a preview of thursday night football. we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,
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good morning.
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time now 7:57. we do have unfortunately a fatal traffic alert to tell you about right now in vallejo. westbound 80 after redwood parkway it was a motorcycle versus a big rig and that motorcyclist is dead. let's take a look at the traffic now on that -- it's blocking two lanes and backed up about 4.5 miles, expected about an hour and a half to get through it and as allege alternate take cordelia junction or 680. the maze to downtown right now at westbound will take 40 minutes to get through the maze into downtown san francisco. i'll send it to you. >> all right, roqui. thank you. good morning, everybody. we have over an hour and 30- minute delay on some arriving flights due to this right here, overcast conditions, low clouds, fog, along the coast and into the bay this morning. we do have at this time temperatures into the 50s and now 60 in redwood city. later today let's break it down. a cooler day from 60s at the beaches, 60s and 70s common across the bay. rain on sunday. ,, ,,,,,,
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good morning the our view ners the west. it is thursday, september 29th, 2016. welcome back there is more news including the deadly commuter train crash in who boca b ben, new jersey. here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> there has been a devastating commuter train crash. the train rammed full force into the station. >> it was quiet and i remember hearing a boom and it sounded like a boom. >> did hear some folks say you know, the train is going to stop. just didn't stop. >> it was like a big crash and then everything from the ceiling
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just fell. >> donald trump as the nation knows prepped lightly for the first debate. now, he's cramming and in full public view. >> some voters are three times more likely thap the broader electorate to say they are voting for the third party candidate. his prepared remarks do not mention how the bank has since cut his salary, but you can bet lawmakers will bring it up. >> tebow's home run. first pitch. frankly, dan, pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty good. >> michelle obama campaigned for hillary clinton today telling voters quote, we need an adult in the whourks but joe biden said okay, but they can't come in my pillow fort. >> we are following breaking news this morning. a high speed commuter train crash across the hudson river from new york city. our partners report at least three people were killed when the crowded new jersey transit
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train rammed into the hoboken station. more than 100 are injured. rescue efforts are still going on. >> the impact collapsed part of the station's roof. you can see is damage in this view. a woman who was in the front car that crashed describes the moment of impact. >> when we came into hoboken and slowed down, and then it just didn't stop. it, it was like a big crash and then everything from the ceiling just fell. >> did you see injuries? >> how bad? >> i don't think anybody on the, in the car that i was in, i think people got head injuries from stuff falling from the ceiling. >> you can see she's still very shaken up. this happened over two hours ago in hoboken, new jersey, and that is a major connection point for new york city commuters. jim axelrod is with us.
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what can you tell us? >> well, good morning. you can see as you look behind me over my shoulder sort of a massive response from emergency workers here at this historic train station in hoboken. as we've been reporting right now, we can confirm three deaths. more than 100 injuries and many of them are described as critical injuries. again, this happened just around 8:45 eastern time. roughly two hours and 15 minutes ago. this train, commuter train making a run from northern new jersey to this train station was packed tight from all accounts of eyewitnesses. as it approached, this is a terminal point right here, where these stations come and then a lot of passengers disembark and head to work and lower manhattan. as it approaches the station, it just didn't stop. ran through the bumper at the end of the track and reports are that it went into the station. now, because this train car was packed so tightly, that is what is accounting for the tremendous
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number of injuries that work rers are still dealing with at this moment inside this station. we do have reports that it wasn't necessarily a question of high speed. it's just because of this heavy massive piece of equipment, not stopping and running through this bumper. that so much damage was done. not just to the train, but as you've been able to see from some of the pictures, there is structural damage inside this open air station. the station was built dates back to the early part of the 20th century, built in r very solid construction, so that gives you a sense of what the blunt force trauma of this train hitting construction must have been like because of the tremendous damage that's done inside the station. obviously, a lot of emergency workers and investigators on the scene, but it is just too early to tell at this point. what the cause might be for this crash. >> all right.
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jim, they're telling us this was the final stop for this train, so we would imagine it was packed at the time. >> yeah, that's sort of a standard operating procedure here at this station. a lot of o trains from around new jersey converge in hoboken, people get on other station, go to their jobs in lower manhattan. that's why this train, absolutely packed this morning at the time of impact. >> thank you for report frg the scene there on our streaming news network will be following this breaking news story throughout the day and there will be a full wrap up tonight on the cbs evening news. investigators are working to find the motive behind a school shooting in south carolina. police say a 14-year-old boy opened fire at townville elementary school. a teacher and two 6-year-old students were wounded before the suspect was apprehended. one of those children is in critical condition. family friends say the teenager was suspended within the past two years for bringing a weapon to school.
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before the shooting, police say teen murdered his father at home. donald trump is sharpening his attacks on hillary clinton ahead of the next debate. he's focusing on issues he says he didn't hit hard enough on monday night. in wisconsin yesterday, he called clinton corrupt and said quote with her, it's about follow the money. last night, bill o'reilly asked trump about one of clinton's charges from the debate. >> a statement you made you were smart for paying as few taxes as you could pay. you know that's going to be in the next debate. on campaign ads. do you have any defense for that right now? >> no, i didn't say that. what she said maybe you paid no taxes. i said well that would make me very smart and i have to tell you something, tax is a big expense and i would mind paying less if our politicians knew how to spend the money, but they don't. they waist the match up. they don't know what they're doipg with the money. >> trump did not reveal what he's paid in taxes.
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hillary clinton is getting more help from the first lady. in pittsburgh yesterday, michelle obama said a presidential contest reveal who is a candidate is. >> if a candidate thinks not paying taxes makes you smart, if candidate thinks it's good business when people lose their homes. if a candidate regularly and flippantly makes cruel and insulting comments about women, about how we look and act, well, sadly, that's who that candidate really is. >> the first lady says hillary clinton is the only one in this race with a qualifications and temperment to be president. amazon is reportedly building a shipping operation that could challenge ups and
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sean combs is reflecting on his rise to fame and what matters most. >> look iing in the mirror and saying that you don't want to miss out and just time to grow up. and it's time to just think about that. because you know, that's, that right there is what the meaning of life is. >> family. >> family, yeah. >> a reflective sean combs reveals what's behind the new sense of responsibility to give back. you're watching cbc this morning. we'll be right back. ♪ tomorrow's the day we'll play something besides video games. every day is a gift especially for people with heart failure. but today there's entresto®- a breakthrough medicine that can help make more tomorrows possible. tomorrow, i want to see teddy bait his first hook. in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto® was proven to help more people
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♪ well, the nation's largest well, the nation's largest online retailer r start its own shipping business? we told you amazon is laying the groundwork for its own shipping service. sources tell the journal the goal is to haul and dlifr packages for itself as well as for other retailers and consumers. that would make amazon a competitor with ups and fedex. nick, good morning. so glad you're here to talk about this. this is so interesting. we've heard rumblings about this because the ups, the shipping is taking a big cut out of their bottom line. >> absolutely. >> you think it's a reality, it
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can work? >> i don't know. this is a huge bet for amazon. we don't know exactly what they're doing and they deny they're trying to take on ups and fedex. this is a story coming out of the "wall street journal." it had 30 sources. they're not telling us a lot about it. what happened is that a few years ago, amazon had a lot of problems shipping a at christmas so started building at aps capusty. now, seems like they're going to make a whole business and be three companies. they'll ship some packages through fedex and ups, but they'll have their own business and then the big question is will they ship their competitor's packages. >> a statement says they're sup lementing. >> they always supplement this seem lix they want to be seen as supplementing, but supation is not the plan. >> look at what they did in the enterprise zone. they built a hunl business built
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on the thing that was doing for itself. >> right, this is a similar power. what they did there is built the whole cloud computing infrastructure, which last quarter was more profitable than their retail business, which is crazy. they host netflix, almost the whole entire internet based on infrastructure they're building themselves. they're studying how shipping works. they're going to expand and b possibly provide to others. >> a friend of mine said you can get anything at amazon. food r for your hamster, new shoes, new clothes. so why wouldn't they do this? it seem tobs a genius idea to most people. >> shipping is hard. dhl was the last big shipping venture to say we can do this, we'll solve this problem. where is dhl now? it's pretty hard to do it. how are you going to ensure the trucks? really have enough capacity if you don't have enough orders, can you do it efficiently? we know they can pack the boxes. steady where they should drive, but this is a hard business to
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get into and fedex and ups, pret thety good. >> also having a lot of time to practice. >> and there's a lot of information they have their competitors don't have. amazon's big not secret, but advantage, is that they have all the day that. >> and they know they have one big customer. >> right. they do. >> when you look at jeff, is there anything that seems to be too risky for him to take on? >> he was asked this question, i was listen tog an interview he did this summer. what were you not doing? i don't think i'm going to go into the oil industry. >> so, he has an answer. >> probably a good idea. >> he's doing a pretty good job at it. >> "washington post" say iing o yeah, they like it. >> good to have you. >> thank you very much. good to see you. a former bengals quarterback and cbc sports analyst is hosting his radio show right now. hi, boomer. he can't hear me. okay. i just like the name boomer. he'll give us a preview of tonight's football match up.
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"thursday night football" continues tonight. the miami dolphins visit the cincinnati bengals. the crucial game is both teams
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only have one win so far this season. cbs sports nfl analyst boomer esiason is co-hosting his "boomer and carton" show on wfan in new york. we are simulcast the show and here on "cbs this morning." good morning, boomer. >> you guys are creating a lot of problems for me at this radiation station. my partner is upset he is not a part of this discussion. you know these creative types and how mad they get when they are not a part of this, a big national tv show and everything. >> we apologize but he want to hear about the bengals tonight. what do you think? >> i think a great game. miami coming to cincinnati. it's not on our network but the nfl network and the only place you can watch it. i think it's actually a huge game for the bengals because they lost last week to denver at home in cincinnati and paul brown stadium tonight will be wokking and i think andy dalton will play well and come away with a victory. i think the bengals are like the dolphins and i have disappointed
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where they are right now. both teams are 1-2 but i think the bengals have what it takes to win tonight in their home building. >> what do you think of the patriots so far without tom brady? >> awesome. awesome. charlie, the thing about the patriots is bill belichick is such an amazing coach and has been since he took over there back in 2001 and watching him over the years and covering him, i'm not surprised by their success. i'm not surprised how they can just plug and play with another quarterback. and when tom brady comes back in week five, they will be playing against the cleveland browns. they will probably, most likely, be 5-0 after that game and well on their way to what eventually could be another undefeated season. the interesting thing is that they actually meet the denver broncos in week 15 out in denver, i believe. so we could actually have two teams, i think, would be 14-0 at that time playing. i think that game is on cbs. i hope it is! >> we do too, boomer. boomer, four other teams undefeated. shall i name them for you? >> if you'd like to. >> i'll let you do it, boomer.
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>> philadelphia and baltimore are two of the surprises. there is no question that baltimore has the culture of winning. john harbaugh is a terrific coach in his own right and they had more injuries than anybody else in football. i guess them and the chargers and very they have come back with a vengeance. the philadelphia eagles are tremendous. i think what is happening there, not only the rookie sensation carson wentz which is a big part of the story, their defense is a big part of the story. they have a new coaching staff there. jim schwartz is their defensive coordinator. i don't necessarily know those teams will make it through the year undefeated but certainly they are living large right now. philadelphia is not playing this week. they and the green bay packers are on a bye. >> are you you suggesting if the super bowl was tomorrow you would predict it would be denver and patriots? >> no. they would be in the afc championship game. that is what i would say. the super bowl for me, charlie, would be the patriots and the minnesota vikings. the minnesota vikings are the
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other team that is undefeated right now. they are a team that is going to play monday night and they host the new york giants monday night. that will be a huge game for the giants, but minnesota has built a brand-new stadium and made the trade for sam bradford. they lost adrian peterson but their defense is one of top three defenses in all of football and i think they have the chance to get to the super bowl from the underside of the ledger. >> you did great today. >> they pay me to do this. just down the hallway from you. >> i think she was trying to make it "boomer and king" on the radio show. watch out. >> that is what ifg going for. >> bye. >> you can watching the miami dolphins and cincinnati bengals only on the nfl network. a year of change, you could say, for sean combs. ahead, our revealing conversation with the hip-hop mogul. find out why his focus is not on plxs this election season right after your local news. plxs thist
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after your local news. lxs this after your local news. expected to plead guilty today to avoid a life sentence. the charges good morning. it's 8:25. i'm kenny choi. accused kidnapper michael muller is expected to plead guilty today to avoid a life sentence. the charges stem from the bizarre kidnapping of denise huskins in 2015 that police thought it was a hoax. muller was arrested a few months later. the spirit of sacramento is headed to a new home after capsizing earlier this month. a crane was brought in to lift it out of the water yesterday near bethel island. its next stop is the corps of engineers facility in sausalito. and in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning," sean combs speaks with gayle king about his family politics and whether this will be his last tour. raffic and weather in just a moment. ,, ,,,,,,,,,,
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good morning. time now 8:27. we have a traffic alert to update you on in vallejo. let's look now at the damage. westbound 80 after redwood parkway a motorcycle versus big rig is still being cleared. this will definitely take a few more hours. we'll keep you posted as to when it all is cleared out. but it is backed up past american canyon road and as an alternate because you will want to avoid this area, take columbus parkway or that cordelia junction to 680.
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if you are heading to the altamont pass, we have some slow-moving conditions here, as well. coming off 205 at just 30 miles per hour, and that five-vehicle crash still causing delays. roberta? >> thank you, roqui. good morning, everybody. over 1 hour 30-minute delays on sfo on some arriving flights due to low clouds and fog. we are sock in at this hour and our temperatures are in the 50s to 60 degrees. later today, numbers spanning from the 60s at the seashore to low to mid-60s around the bay. low 70s around oakland and alameda back in through emeryville into the richmond area. 70s around the peninsula. good morning, san jose, at 78 degrees. average high is 83. so unseasonably mild today. livermore you're down from 91 yesterday to 81 degrees today. 82 in brentwood. cooler conditions friday, windy in the afternoon. saturday autumn-like. rain on sunday. ,,,,,,,,
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♪,,,,,,, hey. hey white people. hey, white people. i'm really glad you like jazz and i love it when you come up to me and tell me that. but that doesn't mean that i want to hear you. that is doo bop. bad idea. >> what do people mean when they say tall, dark, and handsome? which part is dark, exactly? >> you know what is really ignoring to me? how people assume that black people know each other. i don't get it, honestly. in your mind what is going on? you think we all meet at oprah's house once a month and look at black people's stuff? you're wrong. it's twice a month!
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>> he is right. is there a meeting twice a month at oprah's house. she can accommodate all of the black people too because it's a very big house. that is funny. i must say to the colbert people, chris licht, the shot was straight on so it didn't look like this. like this dress. >> you think they were trying to do what? >> i don't know, charlie, but i'm outraged. this is my outraged face. >> you looked good. looked good. you got it. you got it. flaunt it, baby. ♪ >> that's a little -- >> charlie is not complaining. welcome back to "cbs this morning." cleavage is good. not that much right there. this half hour a conversation with sean diddy combs. ahead, he opens up fame and family and why he favophilanthr
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over family. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. bodies of the 24-year-old jose fender and two friends were found sunday after a boating accident. a private funeral mass will be held today. the "los angeles times" reports on a man who was called a driving force behind the cbs franchise "ncis." gary glasberg died in his sleep yesterday. the cause of his death has not been released. gary glasberg was 50 years old. >> "time" reports on the fda approving the first artificial pancreas. it's called the minimed 670g. the device attached to the body monitors your blood sugar levels and automatically provides insulin if it's needed. "wall street journal" reports on citigroup timing up with rival banks to fight venmo.
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it includes various banks. it's developing the app zelle to compete with venmo and other services. unruly airline passengers incidents worldwide increased 17% in 2015. flyers were aggressive in 11% of those cases and 23% of the cases involved alcohol or drugs. >> alec baldwin has been tapped to play donald trump on "saturday night live" this season. "snl" released a promo. baldwin will debut his impression of the republican presidential nominee on the season premiere this weekend. baldwin is no strange to "snl." he has guest hosted the show 16 times, a record. it is must-see tv on saturday night. >> hillary is already great on that. who plays her? >> kate mckinnon. >> she won the emmy for it. >> she did. first time.
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good for her. earlier this year, sean diddy combs, once again, topped forbes list as the wealthiest hip-hop artist. he became a pioneer in the music industry when he founded bad boy record labels more than two decade ago. he told us the other day his path to success started even before he could legally hold a job. i've heard the story how you had a paper route as a kid. you didn't have just one paper route, you had four. >> yes. i was brought up by high mother and my grandmother. my father was killed when i was 3. one day i had, you know, asked my mother for a pair of sneakers. and the look on her face that she couldn't afford it, it just made me realize that i needed to step up as the man. so i started making a lot of money at a young age. ♪ >> reporter: news flash. you're still good at it. news flash. you're still making a lot of money at a young age. >> i love to serve people. >> do you? >> yeah. whatever i do, i used to clean
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bathrooms in gas stations. >> reporter: did you? >> yeah. i took a lot of pride in it because i know all of the other bathrooms were filthy and i would just, like, i wanted people to walk into a clean, pristine bathroom and to wash their face when they came out. and asked who did that bathroom? and i felt proud. >> reporter: that never left you. i've heard you say today that no matter what i'm going to do, i'm going to work harder and i'm going to be the best at what that is. >> yes. >> reporter: you still believe that today? >> yes, yes. i just believe that you have to think out of the box. you have to be one of the crazy ones. ♪ >> reporter: and crazy is a word some may have used to describe diddy as combs came to be known when he traded a college campus for a career in music. ♪ ♪ we are close to the edge >> reporter: within a few years he had his own label. what was your goal?
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what was your vision back then? and you called it bad boy. >> bad boy for me was i wanted to shake your the industry as far as musically. i wanted to integrate hip-hop into r&b. ♪ bad bad boy >> just make it more what was going on and more disruptive. >> reporter: and very cool? >> yes. i was one of the early adapters of how to move it forward and how to own a music and own the culture and the lifestyle. so i started to demand. ♪ ♪ >> now hip-hop had become a billion dollar business. who is ready to have a good time? >> reporter: diddy now finds hoims a family reunion tour. many of the artists who helped
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build the bad boy brand. >> it's a juourney because i'm listening to the sound track of my life and i'm listening to what the golden age of the '90s were. >> reporter: missing from the bad boy lineup for nearly two decade. ♪ ♪ every saturday >> reporter: but remembered through a heartfelt tribute is small. the first artist assigned was diddy. he was killed in 1997. >> he was only 24. >> yeah, he was only 24 and it's something you can't do a bad boy show without biggie. >> give it up. >> it's my final tour right now. >> reporter: is it really your final tour? >> it's might final tour as of right now. >> reporter: because barbra streisand said it was her final tour a couple times. >> if it's not, people will still come. but you have to -- like one of
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the things i've been going through this year is just change, like, where do i go from now? >> reporter: do you ever think about getting in politics yourself? you were a voter. >> introduce yourself. >> i'm barack obama. i'm the u.s. senate candidate from the state of illinois. >> i met obama and, you know, i interviewed him. >> you want to be the president of the united states? you call your man. i could make sure that i'm very clear. i love what this president has done. but i thought that because we were -- we were delivering a vote for him, that the politics game, i thought would apply to us. and when you look at the things that are affecting, you know, african-american and kid in our communities, there's no hope. people have to understand, like, even things, like the whole shootings of -- there's too many. it's way too many and nothing is
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being done. >> reporter: you're talking about the shootings with black men? >> yes. >> reporter: by police officers? >> it's just been too much -- it's too much of a trend right now. >> reporter: sean combs sounds different these days, doesn't he? >> yes. yes. >> reporter: you're a different person these days? >> yeah. yeah. my priorities have changed and just also, like, the responsibility. these are students right here. give them a round of applause. >> reporter: you could call 2016 a transformational year for diddy. when he didn't on tour, philanthropy took center stage. >> i would like to start my scholarship fund. >> reporter: he donated a million dollars to howard university, the school from which he never graduated. >> 1-2-3! >> reporter: he opened a charter school in harlem.
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the new york city neighborhood where he was born. >> this is leveling the playing field. capital right here. we make sure our students get a fair chance. >> at this time in my life i decided to make a move from "me" to we." i felt i had done enough of "me" and time to go to "we." that is the whole thing and not get involved in politics because i think politics is a bunch of [ bleep ]. i'm not going complain about it. i'm going to go do something about it. >> he is going to do something. i asked him who he is supporting in this election campaign? he said he is withholding his vote and look at the debates and then make a decision. what he wants to do next, he wants to focus on his family. he has six children and he realizes, i think i'm a good father but i want to be better and take time off and devote everything to his children and
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philanthropy. >> he has a big vodka deal and all sorts of endorsements and doing very well financially but music isn't the main focus for him and not the main source of his money. >> really good interview. >> very mellow. >> yes. i've never seen that before. >> very, very mellow. >> i like that phrase, focus more on "me" than "we."
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♪ welcome to our first broadcast. i'm charlie rose. i don't know what it means but as we begin the giants are losing. >> 25 years ago tomorrow, on september 30th, 1991, the first broadcast of charlie rose aired on pbs in new york. >> look at that tie! >> that is the first time i've seen that since, in fact, it happened. this is a surprise to me. >> look at that tie! >> we have a little surprise for you, my friend. >> we want to salute this milestone and celebrate all of your engaging conversations so guess what. we called on bradley cooper. they all happened -- turn around, charlie, to see it. they haul happened at this iconic table behind us. we are good, right? >> oh, yeah. >> we asked bradley cooper who is your friend? you can touche back arouurn bac. you have interviewed him very much. many times. we asked him to share your rich history. go, bradley. ♪
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>> i'm pleased to have spike lee back at this table. welcome. >> back at this table. >> i'm pleased to have my friend here. >>. >> welcome. >> i wanted to get at this table a long time. >> artists that want to master their craft have history. >> where do you want to be? >> at this table. >> what is your job? >> for charlie rose, a master of the art of conversation. >> i would like to begin. >> one unforgettable instrument is his tiger oak tanble. last year, nancy gibbs asked charlie what we have all wondered. >> what is the table, the deal, the black? >> the deal was poverty. >> because you bought that table? >> i bought that table myself so i knew if i could put a table in a room with not much light and a couple of chairs, i could have a
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real conversation. and i know that people, all of you like to eavesdrop on a conversation. and that was the idea. you and i had a conversation this morning. >> reporter: but it wasn't always that way. >> elvis was probably the big -- >> the idea came during a meeting with "rolling stone" editor and publisher jan wener. >> charlie was visiting me one day and remarked the liked the round table. >> i am pleased to have him back at this tanel. a table that is very similar to the one that sat in his office that i once wanted to get from him. >> i said, i can't. that actually has been my own desk for the first ten years of "rolling stone." i told him where he could get one like it. it wasn't going to matter to him. >> because i knew that if you had a table in which the essence was an interview, but an interview is at the core of drama, fiction, real life. it is, in essence, you know, the
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notion of a dialogue between two people is what an interview is and that is at the core of so much communication. >> you can establish what you do so as well, a chemistry of confidentiality. that is what comes across the table. >> music is the language of the spirit. you, as sort of a jazz man conversation that -- you're pretty musical the way you move around the table with word. >> i'm not sure what you had to risk. >> i knew it was something, yeah. >> i didn't realize i was risking my entire profession. >> please use a telephone. my message to the u.s. press. ♪ don't be cruel ♪ >> i love sitting here and it makes you feel like you're talking to a friend. >> stories that can tell. >> it's those stories that andrew holter said makes it challenging to put a price tag on an item like this.
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>> this is an irreplaceable object. when you think of the charlie rose show, you think of the dark room, you think of this warm table that sits in front of charlie and his guests. you know, the years of history, the number of people that have sat here. the way he is able to pull things out of his guests that nobody else can do. i mean, this is a treasure and should it end up in the sith se -- smithsonian. >> for "cbs this morning," i'm bradley cooper. >> bravo! that is awesome! so many years. >> i'm totally surprised. that table and i have been a long way. >> i didn't know you bought it yu yourself. do you remember what it was? >> what happened jan wener said you go down to this place and they have what i think you're looking for. i went down and i remember what i paid for it. i paid $4,000 for it and that was the set. my set cost $4,000. >> happy anniversary! >> thank you. >> you're watching "cbs this ,,,
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all of this with the global warming and the - a lot of it's a hoax. it's a hoax. it'll get cooler. it'll get warmer. it's called weather. we need some global warming! we need leaders who get it. so that we can move away from coal and oil to clean energy. i'm tom steyer. if you want to do something about climate change, you can. please. register and vote.
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nextgen california action committee is responsible for the content of this advertising. mountains, by monday. the good morning, it's 8:55. i'm kenny choi. cal fire hopes to contain the "loma fire" in the santa cruz mountains by monday. the 3800-acre fire near mount loma prieta is now 22% contained. it destroyed one home and six outbuildings. it damaged another home. san jose says it campaign to fight illegal dumping is paying o the city partnered with a british firm known for studying human behavior to design flyers and now crews are making 30 pickups a day. a huge kidnapper michael muller is expected to plead guilty today to avoid a life sentence to charges stemming from a kidnapping of denise huskins in 2015 that police thought was a hoax. but muller was arrested by the fbi a few months later. now for a look at weather,
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here's roberta. >> we have the sunshine inland but we have the clouds stacked up at the coast and into the bay this morning. we have delays at sfo over an hour 30 on some arriving flights but boy, look at the morning sunshine at the mount vaca area. okay, so the clouds are lining the rim of the bay right now where our temperatures stand in the 50s and low 60s. it is currently 56 degrees in napa and in livermore. it's going to be cooler today a gentle breeze late day variable 10 to 15. 60s coast, 60s, 70s bayside to the 70s around the peninsula. hello, napa at 74. and fairfield at 80. same in antioch as well as vallejo. let's take our outside number 82 today. cooler and breezy on friday and light rain especially to the north on sunday. roqui with traffic next.
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good morning, welcome to the kpix traffic center. time now 8:58. let's talk about bay area traffic right now. westbound 84 at the dumbarton bridge after the toll plaza. there's a two-car crash out there blocking -- partially blocking the right lane causing heavy delays and traffic moving at just 14 miles per hour. now, you want to listen to this heading to vallejo on westbound 80. we have a chp traffic alert issued for a motorcycle fatal crash with a big rig. traffic moving all the way down to just 2 miles per hour. and if you want to avoid the traffic altogether we suggest columbus parkway or cordelia junction to 680. but that's a look at your traffic. see you at noon.
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wayne: (screaming) jonathan: it's a trip to ireland! hello, wayne mcbrady. wayne: oops, i'm naughty. jonathan: it's a new motorcycle! omg. wayne: come on, brother, let's do it! what? tiffany: wake up! wayne: you're having a good time, say yeah! 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. one person, let's make a deal. alicia, come on over here. (cheers and applause) everybody else, sit down. sit down, please. now is it alicia or ali-cee-a? - it's alicia. wayne: nice to meet you, alicia. everybody, this is alicia. (cheers and applause)

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