tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 23, 2016 3:12am-4:01am PST
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for lack of insurance. and two months ago his bus swiped a car causing minor damage to both vehicles. mateen made serious allegations concerning walker and yesterday's crash. >> my daughter said right before the bus flipped that he was speeding around a curve and asked them "are y'all ready to die?" >> reporter: he asked the kids what? >> are they ready to die? >> reporter: we have not been able to verify those allegations, but mateen one of three parents we tacked to who complained about walker's past driving. scott, we also spoke on the phone with walker's mother. she called her son, a good kid, and called the crash a terrible accident. >> mark strassmann covering this tragedy tonight. mark, thank you. here in los angeles, more than 30,000 people will spend
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the holiday on the street. homelessness is dropping in much of the country, but not in california. we asked ben tracy to find out more. >> reporter: in santa ana, california this tent city is home to 500 people living in the shadow of city hall. >> they want to pretend we don't exist. >> nick blinderman is 26 and uses heroin. >> i never in my life have seen anything like the drug use around here. it's as common as like drinking coffee in the morning. >> reporter: homelessness is rising in california in part because housing costs and rent have skyrocketed. 120,000 people are homeless here. 66% of them live on the street. the highest rate of people without shelter, in the country. >> you cannot convince me on any day of the week, that this is the way that people should have to live. >> mark ridley thomas, los angeles city supervisor. tents line streets all over los
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angeles. so, ridley thomas wants governor jerry brown to declare state of emergency. using fund for natural disasters to address homelessness. you believe this is a disaster just like a wildfire or an earthquake? >> well, it's pretty obvious. this is simply an intolerable set of circumstances. >> reporter: on election day, los angeles voters approved a $1.2 billion plan to build 10,000 units of affordable housing. it's not enough but a start. >> so this is pretty typical of the first step up off the street. phillip man gano is an expert on homelessness and says programs often focus on hunger or drug use not permanent housing. services without housing leaves people still on the street in shelters. >> tanisha lives at the tent city in santa ana. >> there is people that used to teach. there is plumbers. there is roofers.
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there is construction workers. there is everything here. but nobody is willing to give them that chance because they have hit rock bottom. >> and the view from the bottom its not pretty. so, we ask governor brown's office if he plans to declare that state of emergency. scott, he said that would not be appropriate. he says that chronic homelessness, like the kind you see back here, is better dealt with on the local it's judgment day. back seat chefs peer inside your oven. but you've cleaned all baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that beautiful bird. go ahead. let 'em judge.
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donald trump was elected in part by promising to stop the flow of american jobs to china. but it turns out, that's a two-way street. as jim axelrod found. >> reporter: the factory floor is bustling at this manufacturing plant in ohio. a billionaire has indeed brought jobs back to this part of the rust belt. >> we'll stop the jobs from leaving ohio and from leaving america. >> reporter: not that billionaire. this one. mr. chou, how many jobs do you expect to create in ohio? 3,000. not hundreds. thousands? chinese billionaire, bought this former gm plant which shut its
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doors in 2008, costing the area 1,000 jobs, and turned it into a state of the art auto glass factory. today, the ohio plant is part of chou's global glass empire. helping to produce 23% of the world's car windows. >> when i walked into it two years ago it was dark, dirty, and had been uninhabited for quite a few years. jim reid, a supervisor, voted for donald trump, who made the chinese a target during his campaign. >> we can't continue to allow china to rape our country. that's what they're doing. >> reporter: what do you make of hundreds, thousands of jobs to this part of ohio its chinese? >> i'll be honest. i struggle with it a bit when i made the decision. >> reporter: why? >> just because of what i have been kind of led to believe. >> it is the greatest theflt in
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the history of the world. >> reporter: but mr. chou seems untroubled by the criticism. he told us, "that was just campaign talk." now that trump its the president elect, things will be different. >> reporter: are you making america great again? what would your message be to donald trump about chinese businessmen in the united states? >> give them a try. >> reporter: 10% of the jobs at the plant are held by chinese employees. as the for wages, jobs average $21 an hour. compare that to the old gm jobs there that paid $30 an hour. but scott, mr. chou told us he is looking to raise the pay scale considerably. jim axelrod for us tonight. jim, thank you. coming up next -- an extraordinary gather (achoo!) you can pick up the flu from surfaces for up to 48 hours. it's like having a sick family member in your home.
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are my teeth yellow? have you tried the tissue test? ugh yellow. what do you use? crest whitestrps. crest 3d whitestrips whiten 25 times better than a leading whitening toothpaste i passed the tissue test. oh yeah. crest whitestrips are the way to whiten. ellen and de niro. cicily, scully, two michaels, redford, hanks, diana, 21 in all received the nation's highest civilian honor. here's jan crawford. >> i am the president. he is the boss.
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♪ born in the usa >> reporter: in music they reign supreme. ♪ that your love on the silver screen, they are legends. >> you talking to me? >> there is no crying in baseball. >> reporter: the dean of baseball announcers, vince scully. >> when the crowd is roaring -- >> reporter: two of the greatest basketball players to play the game. michael jordan. >> michael jordan is the jordan of greatness. >> reporter: one of a kind. >> all of these people affected our lives. >> the president is saying you are a person who is more than what you do with the basketball. >> absolutely. but i have always believed that i can do more than stuff a ball through a hoop. my greatest asset is my mind. and i try, try to use it for good. >> reporter: most of the honorees are long accustomed to
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picking up awards. >> the name de niro is synonymous with tough guy. >> reporter: as robert de niro told us this means something more. >> who would have thought i would, i would be getting this? i think that anybody, who wants to do things in the arts, whatever it is, politics, that they should follow through on it and always try to do the right thing. >> reporter: not all honorees were household names, scientists, educators and architects. the designer of the vietnam veterans memorial as a college student. >> we are all coming from different places. we have all really followed our passions. >> reporter: we asked lin what drives people to greatness? >> you have to have your dreams and have your ideals. and you have to believe that one single person can make a huge difference. >> we all can contribute. we all should contribute if we can. >> reporter: how big of a deal is this? >> to get this medal, it is really significant. it is something that all americans can -- can say that
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finally tonight, thanksgiving usually comes with wishes for peace, harmony, and tranquility. but it can also bring a cornucopia of stress, tension, and anxiety. dr. jon lapook went in search of a holiday cure. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: at mildred e e.strang middle school in new york, students are singing about math. you don't have to know algebra
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to understand the equation being taught here. kindness equals tolerance. 13-year-old asha is in the #th grade. >> one of our main focuses is to accept people's differences to know that we are never all going to be the say and to be proud of our differences. >> reporter: how does that square with what you have been hearing during this past election? >> okay, i feel look many people, they didn't respect each other's different views and different opinions during this election. >> reporter: what do your teachers tell you about communicating with each other? >> you have to be sure you don't offend them. you try your best not to offend them. but still to got your point across. isabelle armstrong is 11 in sixth grade. >> if one person believes one thing. and you believe the other. be kind of like, okay, we have different opinions. i'm okay with that. ♪ >> reporter: at international night, students learn to walk in
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other people any shoes. ♪ and appreciate customs and foods from around the world. >> can i try one of these? >> 13-year-old 8th grader helped mc the event. in a few days across the country. millions of people will be having thanksgiving dinner. what is your advice for this thanksgiving? >> i feel like, families should just stay true to what really matters. is family and friends. and you should always be kind to each other. >> reporter: over time, stress can lead to serious health challenges. from anxiety and depression to heart attack and stroke. so, scott, this thanksgiving, treating each other with a dose of kindness, tolerance, and common curt sourtesy may be just the doctor orders. >> dr. jon lapook for us. doctor, thank you. that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others check back with us a
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little bit later for the morning news. and be sure not to miss "cbs this morning." from the city of angels, los angeles, california, i'm scott pelley. welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. the trump transition continues to move slowly. the president elect said he wanted to name some top cabinet picks before heading to florida for thanksgiving. that didn't happen. and a couple of mr. trump's campaign promises may not come to pass either. the president elect now says he will not try to jail hillary clinton. and he adds, that climate change may not be a hoax. chip reid has the latest. >> reporter: at trump rallies, lock her up was almost a campaign mantra. candidate trump called hillary
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clinton crooked hillary and threatened to put her in jail. special prosecutor here we come. right? in a meeting today at "the new times" where reporters were live tweeting the conversation, mr. trump said this, when asked about prosecuting her. i don't want to hurt the clintons he said. i really don't. she went through a lot. and suffered greatly in many ways. later, he added, i think it would be very, very divisive for the country. he also, changed his tune on the issue of climate change. and whether it is caused by human activity. during the campaign, mr. trump left no doubt. >> a lot of it is a hoch. a he said he wanted to cancel the paris accord, an international agreement negotiated by the obama administration to reduce fossil fuel emissions. but today, mr. trump told the times, i think there is some connectivity between humans and climate changed. asked if he wants to withdraw from climate change accord.
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he replied the i am looking at it closely. i have an open mind to it. >> i would bring back watt e boarding and a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding. >> reporter: mr. trump during the campaign on issue of torture. today he told the times he changed his mind after talking with general james mattis strong candidate for secretary of defense, and who opposes waterboarding. mattis told mr. trump give me a pack of sec rets and a couple of beers and i will do better. mr. trump said today, i was very impressed by that answer. the president elect also made news when asked if it is a con flkt of interest to be actively involved in his businesses, while also serving as president. the laws totally on my side, he said. the president can't have a conflict of interest. he did add though that he is phasing out his business activity and giving it to his kids. before becoming chairman of the trump campaign, steve bannon was ceo of the conservative website breitbart in an interview with
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"mother jones magazine" last summer. bannon said we are platform for alt right a conservative movement popular with white nationalists. asked about the alt-right today. mr. trump told the times, i don't want to energize the group. i disavow the group. >> there is shock and outrage in chattanooga, ten see where five young children were killed and many others hospitalized in a tragic school bus crash. police say the bus driver was speeding down a winding road when he wrapped his bus around a tree. mark strassmann reports. >> reporter: neighbors recalled hearing an explosion and then the sounds of children screaming. they struck a tree so hard the bus almost split in two. investigators say, 24-year-old, johnthony walker driving recklessly well above the posted speed limit of 30 miles an hour. ntsb chairman, christopher hart.
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hours after the crash, parents searched for their kids. >> he was trapped between the seat. but -- that's it. that's all she said. >> reporter: an hour later we saw mateen at the hospital looking devastated. he had just learned that zahra was among the children killed. jazmine mateen is their mother. angry. hurt. mateen told us for three months she complained about walker's driving. walker has no criminal record. his driving record shows his
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license was suspended in 2014 for lack of insurance. two months ago his bus swiped a car causing minor damage to both vehicles. mateen made serious allegations concerning walker and yesterday's crash. >> my daughter said right before the bus flipped that he was speeding around a curve and asked them "are y'all ready to die?" >> reporter: he asked the kids what? >> are they ready to die? the deadly crash in tennessee renewed the debate about putting seatbelts on school buses. the top government safety regulator called school buses the safest way for students to get to and from class. but would seatbelts make them safer? kris van cleave is in washington with the latest on this decade's old debate. >> reporter: ntsb agrees with that. when you look at the numbers it is very rare for there to be a fatal school bus crash. children on board the school bus
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are least likely to be killed in the crashes. still top safety regulators say, seatbelts should be on school buss only a few states require that. crash experts say in many cases those restraints could be improved. >> we know seatbelts will save lives if we put one for every kid. >> reporter: head of ntsb says three point seatbelts like the ones in your car that go across the shoulder and waist should be on every school bus. but there is no federal mandate. six states require seatbelts on school buses only california meets the ntsb recommendation. his agency has been weighing whether to mandate belts on school buses for four decades. >> we are not denying this is going to be a challenge. looking at research, funding to figure how to help everybody nationwide get their kids even safer. estimates four children die every year in large school bus crashes. it believes seatbelts would reduce the deaths by half.
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this seatbelt manufacture ear rollover test shows impact of a crash on unbuckled children. >> the belts are good. and they certainly are very good in a rollover where you might be ejected if you didn't have that belt. >> reporter: independent crash investigator, ken sakalsky says two point seatbelts over a student's lap and used in several states may not protect as well in a side impact crash like this one in florida, where a child died. the seat pivots over. this belt, ramps up over the crest and into the abdominal region. >> reporter: so this seatbelt becomes a weapon when that seat starts to move. >> exactly. yeah. >> reporter: last year, predicted it would cost between $7,300 and $10,000 to retrofit each school bus with seatbelts. with an estimated half million school buses in service the cost would be in the billions. administrator rosekind suggested new buses could come off the assembly line standard with
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it was 53 years ago yesterday that president john f. kennedy was assassinated while traveling in a motorcade through dallas. the fatal moments, 26 1/2 second in all, were captured on 8 millimeter film by a dressmaker named abraham zapruder. now his granddaughter is sharing the story behind the lens ins a new book. jan crawford reports. >> president kennedy at dallas airport, was cheerful, waving, had been quite a triumphant tour. >> reporter: in an instant you see the entire course of history changed. >> three shots were fired at president kennedy's motorcade. >> reporter: 486 frames. a home movie showed the shooting of a president from beginning to
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end. >> president kennedy died at 1:00 p.m. central standard time. >> the film was the first of its kind. it broke every barrier. alexander zupruda grew up with it. her grandfather, abraham, dressmaker and immigrant wanted to record the president's visit for his wife and children. with an 8 mill meter camera he stood on his concrete ledge on the grassy knoll. >> when he saw the limousines, he began filming. >> he was the eyes for america. on to that horrible day? >> that's right. i think the film in many ways, the film is really america's memory of this event. >> reporter: the story of the film is far more than those 26 seconds of video. as alexander zapruda recounts. >> you have the film? >> within hours her grandfather was thrust in front of the camera into a media storm. >> i saw his head, practically
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open up, all blood and everything. i kept on shooting. >> reporter: the government took copies of the film but left zapruda with the original. he wanted the film to be protected out of respect for the kennedys. he protected it to "life" magazine. >> their interest was actually in protecting the american people. and, protecting the kennedys. which in today's world, seems completely unfathomable. nobody protects any body. the whole concept of privacy is practically obsolete. >> reporter: for the next 12 years, life kept the original under wraps. >> if you are at all queasy, don't watch this film. >> reporter: in 1975, geraldo, aired a bootleg copy. >> the most horrifying thing i have ever seen. keeping it from the public, fueled conspiracy theories the government had something to hide. >> the film wasn't shown as a film to the american people for
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12 years. now it wouldn't be 12 seconds before up on youtube. the other part of the story that is fascinating. the story of technology. changing technology. >> reporter: we talked to zapruder in a gallery where you can see technology evolved and affected journalism. >> your grandfather. he was kind of the first citizen journalist in a way. >> he was. think a lot about black lives matter movement and use of the cell fphone to record something. a form of resistance. become something more powerable. >> reporter: the zapruder film carries its own power. by accident or fate it changed how we saw the world. >> it is the story of how life turns in an instant. here is this beautiful couple riding down the street. >> reporter: smiling. >> reporter: smiling. jackie looked so thope to see you again soon.. whoa, whoa, i got this. just gotta get the check.
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almost there. i can't reach it. if you have alligator arms, you avoid picking up the check. what? it's what you do. i got this. thanks, dennis! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. growwwlph. it's what you do. oh that is good crispy duck. the in-laws, the type-a it'scousins, siblings and back seat chefs have all assembled to look inside your oven. but you've cleaned off all the baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that big, beautiful bird. "mmmmm" go ahead. let 'em judge.
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she's gonna stick with the short-term stuff. 12 hours? guess i won't be seeing you for a while. is that a bisque? i just lost my appetite. why take medicines that only last 4 hours, when just one mucinex lasts 12 hours? start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. when jon stewart ending his 16 year run on the daily show he ended up missing the entire 2016 presidential campaign. if stewart has any regrets about the timing of his departure, he is not admitting it. especially not in his new book. stewart sat down with charlie rez rose to discuss it all. >> reporter: over the 16 years, how did the show evolve? what did it become it was not at the beginning? >> in truth, i think the evolution of the show we became
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belter at doing it. >> this is the daily show with jon stewart. >> what we tried to develop was an internal barometer of what worked for the show and how we could execute it. >> bush by 225 votes. so as you can see. it's never going to end. i'm going to work on my obama, are you ready, here we go. >> yes, we can. >> what an entrance. an escalator down. i haven't seen an entrance that majestic since my friend met be at the gap after grabbing an orange j of the lius. >> one simple goal. >> yeah. >> i want you to admit there is a thing such as white privilege. all i want. >> easy to forget in 2016, what the media world looked like in 1996, 1997, 1999. where comedy central was still
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kind of a sketchy proposition. >> we have an honest open deep bait between the president of the united states and the one man we believe has the insight to stand up to him. >> one of the pivotal segments on the show through bush vs. bush in 2003. he knows this way better than i do by the way. mr. president, is the idea to just build a new country that we look better? >> we will tear down the apparatus of terror and we will help-up to build a new iraq that is prosperous and free. >> i don't think our troops ought to be used for nation building. >> people used to come up to me in the news business, how do you fine the clip of the guy contradict himself? from five years ago. tivo. rerecord it. we we go back and search for it. >> the idea of what the daily show became was not something banging around in your head when you took the job or was it?
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>> well, what was banging around in my head was -- is there a better way to execute public affairs comedy that means something to me? can i express my comedy about things that i care about in a way that is entertaining enough so i won't get fired. it could get rejected. >> go down doing it my way. >> that's right. >> i am going to go down the way i feel like i am going to do it in the way that i think is the best iteration of my abilities and itch if that goes down, i can bartend. >> yes, you could. >> what they found early on -- >> every reporter's dream. >> found a tone in a piece, steve carell did john mccain. >> the best way to get to a presidential candidate's bus is through his wife.
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>> carell is a world class impro vie improv. >> you have world class improvisers working with civilians who don't know they're in an improv. >> senator, how do you reconcile the fact that you were one of the most vocal critics of pork barrel politics yet while you were chairman of the kmer committee, the committee set a record for unauthorized appropriations. >> mccain freezes. a dear in the headlights moment. then what do we have to do at that point? we let you go. it's catch and release. >> i was just kidding. >> we have to undercut it with a laugh. i don't even know what that means. >> the world is worse than when i started. have i caused this! >> one of the difficulties of this is this has been given a greater place in the discussion and a larger role in the, the
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discourse than is warranted. and once that started to happen. i think -- you began to question if it is a good thing or a bad thing. >> the thanksgiving meal is not only about the turkey. there its also the fixings, and the dessert. and for most people, dessert usually means, apple pie, and pumpkin pie. maybe even sweet potato pie if you get adventurous. well in maryland, dessert is all about the cake. namely, the smith island cake. rita braver climbed on board to got a taste. >> reporter: smith island reachable only by boat is less than ten miles off the coast of maryland. but a world apart. british settlers first came here in the 17th century. and today, it its a tranquil place. unless you happen on to the kitchen of the smith island cake
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lady. >> how many can you do in a day? >> no more than 10. >> no more than 10. 10 cakes a day. >> like to keep it at six, seven. i don't know who is going to wear out first me or the oven. awe maury she ships to the mainland. but she has no website. >> how do they find out about you? >> neighbor tells the neighbor and the son tells the daughter or whatever. i have no idea. >> reporter: a labor intensive process. eight to ten thin layers. each baked in its own pan. >> okay. almost. almost. >> reporter: then carefully iced. dollop of frosting in the middle. >> reporter: marshal's island roots go back countless generations. like most women here she learned to bake smith island cake as a child. no one really knows how it all began. >> i think it became a competition between the women of who could get the most little
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layers. >> does it taste as the good as it looks? >> i hope it will. >> reporter: it does. and when she started taking them up to the state legislature, they voted smith island cake the official maryland state dessert in 2008. >> well, we were hollering look we won the super bowl. >> reporter: but the island has also suffered significant set backs. coastline loss to erosion and rising sea waters. a once thriving seafood industry, now struggling. and a population that has dwindled to around 200. but cakes are on the rise. ever since a young wharton business school grad happened to taste one. when did you go from saying this is really good cake, to let me see if maybe there is a business here? >> almost immediately. >> reporter: and so brian murphy founded the smith island baking
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company in 2009. he started by visiting the island. and talking to mary ada marshal. she says brian i love this idea. can i pray for you? i said you pray? she said honey you can't live in the chesapeake bay and not pray. in fact, murphy first opened the baekery on the island with an all local staff. but after seven years, he moved across the water to christfield maryland, vexed by the island's idiosyncracies. >> roof leaks. power doesn't work. internet doesn't work. the bay freezes over. >> reporter: you regret you had to move? >> terrible. these are real people. >> reporter: the backery still employs any original smith islanders who want to stay on. >> how do you know if a smith island cake tastes good or not? >> when there is none left. >> reporter: but though she wishes the baek bakery well. mrs. marshal wonders if it is
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facebook promising changes to fight the spread of misinformation and fake news on the social network. founder and ceo mark zuckerberg is devising a plan to keep phone yo news stories off face book feeds. after the presidential election, critics say the plan is too little, too late. they also say, questionable decisions facebook made months ago might have made the problem worse. the facebook ceo told global leaders in peru he wants to connect the world. >> you can take any system in the word and make it much, much better than it is today. >> reporter: as he demonstrated virtual reality to peru's president he was forced to deal with the more trubing reality back at home. the seemingly unchecked proliferation of fake news on
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the site. a facebook representative addressed the controversy monday. >> the amount of news that is on the site as you would call it fake news is very small. we are not satisfied with that. >> reporter: zuckerberg outlined seven ways the social media giant hopes to detection measures, third party verification by fact checking organizations and possibly adding warnings, flagging false stories by third parties or the facebook community. but critics say, zuckerberg's proposed fixes are too little too late. >> i think as a diplomatic answer it was great. but, you know i think what people really want are specifics. he failed to deliver that. >> adam was contracted to work for facebook's trending topics division in may. he said he was laid off four months later and the division was eliminated. >> reporter: in your opinion should mark zblekerberg have seen this coming?
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>> maybe not mark zuckerberg, but leaders within the company should have been paying more attention to what was, you know, showing up in people's news feeds for sure. >> his job was to make sure that inaccurate news didn't trend on facebook. he says his devision was eliminated weeks after criticism earlier this year that facebook's information gate keepers were suppressing conservative view points. he said his division could have helped minimize the amount of fake news. >> by stopping fake news from trending you are likely to stop fake news from spreading further. >> he thinks it is unrealistic for users to fact check the stories in their news feed and says the responsibility is on facebook. well that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news. and cbs this morning.
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from the broadcast center in new from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jericka duncan. captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, november 23rd, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." a blast of cold, snowy, and wet weather will hit parts of the u.s. today, just as millions of people hit the roads for thanksgiving. so love and comfort to these families. help and hold them in their weakest hours. >> a community is mourning the loss of five children killed in a school bus crash and heartbroken parents are speaking out. and shifting positions. president-elect donald trump may not follow through with some of hica
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