tv CBS This Morning CBS December 12, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PST
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>> yeah. cbs this morning will get you posted next. thanks for joining us this morning. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, december 12th. 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." president-elect trump rejects cia claims that russia interfered in our elections. we'll talk to cia insider michael morell. also senator john mccain and chuck schumer who want a congressional investigation and trump transition senior adviser kellyanne conway. >> millions face a dangerous commute with snow and rain pounding parts of the country. we're tracking the storm and what's next for travelers. >> plus uber knows when you're going after your ride is over. we know why uber and other companies could be tracking your location even when you're not using the app. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye
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opener your world in 90 seconds. it's going to be a mess for travel really along the eastern seaboard. >> this front stretches all the way down into dixie. so we'll be dealing with it through mid-day. >> and major winter storm frustrates millions. >> significant totals. over a half foot of snow likely across much of new england. it's going to feel brutally cold. talking about the coldest air moving yet. >> the cia has concluded that russia intervened in the election to help you win the presidency. >> i think it's ridiculous. i think it's just another excuse. i don't believe it. >> facts are stubborn things. they did hack into this campaign. >> the somber time in turkey after two deadly bombs ripped through istanbul. >> the blast occurred outside of a major soccer stadium. >> islamic state fighters have retaken palmyra. the first time since they were expelled nine months ago. >> a louisiana jury has found a man who fatological a shot retired new orleans saints will smith guilty of manslaughter.
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>> it was a gut-wrenching scene inside the courtroom. >> twelve people are recovering from their injuries this morning after a major fire swept through this michigan ski resort early sunday morning. >> a risky rescue this weekend in new brunswick, canada, where a moose was found trapped in the ice of a frozen river. >> all that. >> la la land won best picture of the 22nd critics choice awards. >> you ready for this? >> making the catch. and off to the races he goes. touchdown giants. >> this performance was something special. >> and all that matters. > south korea's parliament has voted to impeach park geun-hye, the country's first female president, over a corruption scandal. you know it's hard not to look this story and think, that could have been us. >> on "cbs this morning." >> oh, come on. >> it's going to go. >> president obama and bill murray. >> practicing their putting in the oval office. >> all right. >> where's michelle?
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>> just stay out of those drawers. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." president-elect donald trump is having extraordinary public argument with the cia over russia's role in the u.s. election. he dismisses the intelligence community's conclusion that russian hacking was part of an effort to defeat hillary clinton. >> mr. trump calls the finding ridiculous, and suggests democrats are behind it. margaret brennan is at the white house with the escalating feud over intelligence. margaret, good morning. good morning. well president obama has ordered a full review of the extent of russian hacking. but the president-elect is arguing that the intel community should have made its findings public before the election. something they first did back in october. >> i think it's ridiculous. i think it's just another excuse. i don't believe it. >> reporter: in a harsh rebuke
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to the cia, president-elect donald trump says he does not believe that russia intervened in the u.s. election to help him win and said democrats made it up. >> they have no idea if it's russia or china and somebody. it could be somebody sitting in a bed some place. i mean they have no idea. >> so why would the cia put out this story that the russians wanted you -- >> i'm not sure they put it out. i think the democrats are putting it out, because they suffered one of the greatest defeats in the history of politics in this country. >> reporter: mr. trump's comments directly contradict the cia's conclusion that russia tried to damage hillary clinton's campaign by leaking e-mails hacked from democratic party computers. asked about his mistrust of the intelligence community, mr. trump said he doesn't need his daily intelligence briefings on threats facing the u.s. >> i don't have to be told, you know what, i'm a smart person. i don't have to be told the same thing in the same words every single day for the next eight
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years. >> reporter: senate leaders are divided on how to handle the russian meddling. but a handful of key bipartisan lawmakers do want a congressional investigation. >> recent reports of russian interference in our election should alarm every american. >> vladimir putin is a thug and a murderer and a killer. and a kgb agent. >> reporter: republican senator john mccain said mr. trump shouldn't let his friendly relationship with vladimir putin get in the way. >> you can't make this issue partisan. it's just -- it's too important. a fundamental of a democracy is a free and fair election. >> reporter: all u.s. intelligence agencies agree that russia was behind the hacking. but unlike the cia, the fbi has not concluded that it was meant to advantage donald trump. those reports aren't public. and now, john bolton, a key trump adviser in line for a state department position, is now suggesting that the obama administration may have faked the hacking. >> margaret, thank you very much.
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russia is also an issue as the president-elect chooses the country's top diplomat. exxon mobil ceo rex tillerson has emerged as the leading candidate for secretary of state. he is drawing attention from his close ties to russian president vladimir putin. a kremlin spokesman called tillerson highly professional. this morning nancy cordes is following the reaction to tillerson in washington. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. trump aides floated mr. tillerson's name in part to gauge the kind of blowback they would get from their own party. the reaction has been mixed. some republicans say tillerson is very impressive, a proven business leader. while others say his friendly relationship with russia is exactly what they don't want in a secretary of state. >> he's a great man. we'll see what happens. >> reporter: in a quick exchange with reporters at the army navy game the president-elect played coy about his top cabinet pick. though in an interview he praised tillerson's credentials as the head of an oil and gas behemoth for nearly a decade.
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>> he's much more than a business executive. i mean he's a world-class player. he's in charge of i guess the largest company in the world. >> reporter: it's not quite the largest company in the world. but exxon mobil has struck big drilling deals with oil-rich russia. tillerson is considered to be one of the american ceos who knows vladimir putin best. kremlin even awarded him the order of friendship. >> a matter of concern to me that he has such a close personal relationship with vladimir putin. and obviously they've done enormous deals together. that that would color his approach to vladimir putin, and the russian threat. but that is a matter of concern. we will give him his chance. >> reporter: another republican senator, florida's marco rubio, tweeted, being a friend of vladimir is not an attribute i am hoping for from a secretary of state. picking tillerson to be america's top diplomat would mean passing over former gop nominee mitt romney.
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but mr. trump is leaning towards picking romney's niece, roma romney mcdaniel to head the republican national committee, currently the chair of michigan's republican party and would replace reince priebus who left the rnc to become mr. trump's white house chief of staff. charlie? >> thanks, nancy. michael morell is a former acting director and deputy director of the cia. he supported hillary clinton for president. he joins us now from washington. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> so help us understand this. what's the difference between the conclusions of the fbi and the cia. >> so even before the election, charlie, the entire u.s. intelligence community believed that the russians were interfering in the election. that -- >> that includes the fbi? >> that includes the fbi. it wasn't clear at that time the motive. what's changed now, and this is not official, this is all based on leaks, what's changed now is it seems like the cia believes that the intent here was to
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advantage donald trump and disadvantage hillary clinton in the election. >> so why -- >> that's what's different. >> how did the cia reach that conclusion. >> so one of the things that caught me -- what caught my attention, charlie, was that the cia believes this is a high confidence judgment and the cia doesn't come to a high confidence judgment just based on circumstantial evidence. so i think they've got more here. i think they've got sources who are actually telling them what the intent was. >> so how significant is it, mike, especially with you using the phrase high confidence judgment, that the president-elect is publicly disputing the cia? >> well what -- what -- what -- what i think is going on here is that he believes that this is a political judgment. he believes that the cia is a political institution, and he's going to have to learn that it's not. it is apolitical. it is there to tell him -- call them like you see them. it is -- it is the most important institution to him in
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that regard. it's going to tell him how to think about the world in a way that is divorced of politics. and divorced of policy. and he's going to have to start understanding that. >> it's kind of a knock on you, mike, because you were in the cia when that wmd assessment was made. what are your thoughts about that? >> so i think, the cia get everything right? absolutely not. right? was iraq wmd one of our biggest failures? yes. but the cia gets most things right. one of the things that most people don't know is we actually track how well our judgments stand up over time. and when you look at those averages, right, it's a fielding percentage, not a batting average. it's very, very high. cia gets most things right. and donald trump's going to need to understand that. >> you briefed george w. bush every day, his intelligence briefings. we heard donald trump say yesterday i don't have to be told the same thing in the same
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words every single day. is that what these intelligence briefings are just the same thing repeated every day? >> interestingly, i think i understand where the president-elect is coming from. he is seeing the pdb as it's written for president obama. and after eight years, the pieces written for president obama are very tactical. and they assume a significant amount of knowledge on the part of the reader. so if the briefer is just focusing president trump on those pieces, then i understand where he's coming from. >> hmm. >> so what the briefer has to do is, use those pieces as a launching point to talk about bigger strategic issues. >> interesting. >> michael morell, thank you. >> welcome. in our next half hour we'll talk with senator chuck schumer and john mccain about the cia's evidence of russian hacking. a massive storm is busting millions of americans with snow and freezing rain from the great lakes to the northeast. the snow piled up on roads in michigan overnight made driving very dangerous there.
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cars skidded onto the shoulder. some places received more than 6 inches of snow. cold, arctic air is swilling over the northern tier of the country. areas from washington state to maine have new snow on the ground this morning. tony decoppola is near james town new york in the middle of all the mess. tony, good morning to you. >> good morning. big stretches of central and southern new york state are under more than two feet of snow this morning. look at this street. tributed to more than 90 accidents over the weekend alone in just this county. snie and ice buried parts of the midwest and northeast sunday night covering cars, coating roads and sending drivers careening off of them. the thick blanket of powder looked beautiful from the air. but it was a nightmare on the ground. difficult to clean up and nearly impossible to drive through. >> one of the worst storms you've dealt with? >> one of.
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it just never stopped this one. didn't give us a break at all. >> jeff runs a towing company in western new york. his drivers have been working around the clock. >> i give them a lot of credit for staying in it. i mean they're tired. they're wore out. this snowstorm just didn't quit. >> my people handled over 50 just car crashes. >> chautauqua county sheriff said it's not unusual to see several crashes after the first major storm. >> speed is probably a factor in 75% to 85% of the crashes. they just go too fast. >> icy conditions contributed to this pileup in michigan on interstate 75 and a plane slid off the runway after landing at detroit metro airport during the storm. at most airports the problem was simply getting off the ground. more than 1200 flights were canceled at chicago's o'hare and midway airports through sunday. richard watson is worried about his health after getting stuck during a layover. >> i'm a little concerned, because i'm a liver transplant patient, and last night was the
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last dose of the rejection meds that i'm carrying. so i need to get back to washington today. >> here in jamestown people may get a break later today when some of this snow starts turning to rain but we're only at the beginning of the season, and in a given winter, they can expect 15 feet of snow before it's all over. >> thanks, tony. it's also snowing hard in much of new england. this is how it looked this morning in worcester, massachusetts. meteorologist danielle miles of our boston station wbz is in andover near the new hampshire board. danielle, good morning. >> good morning, lots of active weather coast to coast, we are live here about to watch one storm depart from the northeast later on today. but another storm coming in to the west coast with areas of rain and snow, and gusty wind, as well. so we've got winter weather advisories and warnings, areas of snow and rain continue to expand eastward across the pacific northwest. and that will continue over the next 12 to 24 hours. we're talking about some
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snowfall totals that are going to top out over a foot. particularly when you get to the high terrain of the cascades, and then back into the intermountain west. lesser totals, the lower you get in elevation. but it's also going to be accompanied by winds. near-zero visibility at times with blowing and drifting snow. meanwhile the rest of the week you're going to hear about some big-time cold. it's going to be diving out of central canada, big upper level low. big trough digging in with temperature readings that are going to be running in the single digits, and teens. that is without the wind factored in. so as this trough digs east, places like the northern plains, the midwest, and also the northeast, are going to be experiencing some of those subzero windchill values accompanied by snow squalls, particularly as we head into thursday and friday. lots of weather to watch from coast to coast this week. >> that is cold. danielle, thank you so much. a jury has convicted the man charged with killing former pro football player will smith.
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a new orleans jury found him guilty of manslaughter last night. hayes shot the former saints player during an april road rage incident the jury also convicted hayes of attempted manslaughter for wounding smith's wife. david begnaud is in new orleans with reaction to the verdict. >> good morning. the closing arguments were dramatic. you have a prosecutor who happens to be the father of the elected d.a. who said what the defense was serving to the jury was garbage. the defense went so long in the closing argument, the jury was nodding off. one guy was asleep out cold. this jury was sequestered for about a week and came back with a verdict in less than seven hours. will smith's former coach sean payton rushed home from the team's game in florida sunday to join smith's family in court. he was there when it was announced that cardell hayes was guilty. john fuller is hayes' attorney. >> -- see what the next approach is. >> reporter: surveillance video appeared to show smith rear-end hayes' hummer around drive away. hayes then followed smith and
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bumped into his mercedes. smith's blood alcohol content was nearly three times the legal limit. hayes shot smith eight times in the deadly confrontation that followed. smith's wife raquel was shot in the leg but survived. during the trial, hayes testified that the former saints player punched him and that he feared he was going to be shot. those claims were never supported by forensic evidence. though police recovered a loaded gun from smith's gray suv. there is no evidence he ever grabbed that gun. legal analyst -- >> you said hayes was perhaps the best witness for the defense but he had bad facts. >> right. he had terrible facts. he was the best witness for the defense. but his facts were so bad he couldn't overcome them. mr. hayes, how did raquel smith get shot? he couldn't answer the question. >> a statement released on behalf of raquel smith following sunday's verdict said her heart is full of gratitude. several of smith's teammates visited the courthouse during the week-long trial. including former saints running
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back deuce mcallister. >> there's no way that either party could really win. just because there was a guilty and a not guilty verdict you know that doesn't mean that everything is -- starts over now. you know, she'll still get up in the morning and her husband is not there. the kids will get up in the morning. their father's not there. >> so for manslaughter in louisiana cardell hayes is looking at up to 40 years in prison and it's worth noting louisiana law does not require a jury to be unanimous in order to achieve a verdict. that is exactly what happened here. the jury was split 10-2. >> david, thank you. the critically acclaimed musical romance la la land is leading the golden globe nominations just announced this morning. the nominees for the 74th annual awards were revealed before dawn in los angeles. la la land received seven nominations, and the new drama moonlight, yea, received six. moonlight was nominated with hack saw ridge, hell or high water and manchester by the sea.
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20th century women, dead pool, lawrence foster jenkins, meryl streep, la la land and sing street. the winners will be announced january 8th there's so many to choose i want to see that manchester by the sea. >> that's great. loved that. >> la la land that's good. denzel and viola, we'll see. and remember moon light. a lot of good movies. >> a lot of good movies. >> trying to catch up on christmas vacation. >> there you go. >> your ride with uber might not be over when you think it is. ahead why the company and others could be tracking your location when you're not using the app. first, t,, . good monday morning. taking a lookout side, we have temperatures into the 40s. even 50 in mountain view and san jose, santa rosa just
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dropped to 38 degrees. sunshine during the day and clouds quickly fill in tonight. temperature wise in the 50s to 60-62 degrees. looks like we'll have light rain tuesday but heavy rain thursday and showers friday. the president-elect is on a collision course with top senators over russia. >> ahead, republican john mccain and democrat chuck schumer respond to mr. trump's suggestion that cia intelligence is politically motivated. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning."
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>> tomorrow, the national parks work, at the site of the deadly warehouse fire in oakland. the site w . this is a kpix5 morning update. >> federal investigators say they finished their work at a deadly warehouse fire. the site remains secure. investigators have ruled out a refrigerator as the possible cause but say they're still looking at possible electrical problems. the weekend brought more snow to the area with the delight of ski report operators. right now, there are no restrictions on interstate 80 or u.s.50. that could change later this week as more snow is expected. in the next half hour, cbs this morning, senators john mccain and shuck chummier or why they're calling into an investigation. stay with us.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, the cia concludes russia used hackers to help donald trump win the presidential election. senator john mccain is us and he is joining us from phoenix but guess what. senator chuck schumer is in our green room. he will tell us what they need to know what exactly russia did. >> a change in uber's privacy policy and what the consumer might be doing with all of your data. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" says elon musk will attend president-elect's tech submit. musk is a close associate of
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investor peter thiel who organized the wednesday's meetings in new york. apple's tim cook and facebook sheryl sandberg and amazon's jeff bezos also reportedly plan to attend. the agenda for the meeting is unclear although mr. trump has manufacture sised boosting american jobs. iran air faces opposition. a deal worth 16.6 billion. boeing will sell 80 jet liners to iran air and this would be the largest business deal that the company has made with iran since the sanctions were lifted appear a landmark nuclear deal. president-elect trump has criticized the agreement and some members of congress plan to fight the boeing deal. a man should face a hate crime star of a worshiper near a mosque. the suspect is supposed to survive. the fbi says anti-muslim crimes are 67% last year and islamic group reports 200 such incidents
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since election day. cia officials now believe russia worked to influence this year's election in favor of president-elect trump. the trump transition team says in a statement these are the same people who said saddam hussein had weapons of mass destruction. the election ended a long time ago and it is time to move on. >> the cia briefed congress last week but a bipartisan group of lawmakers is calling for an investigation of russian hacking. two of them are with us. democratic senator chuck schumer of new york is here in the studio. he will become senate minority leader next month and senator john mccain of arizona, the chairman of the senate armed services committee, joins us from phoenix. good morning to to try and elect donald trump? >> i don't.
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i can't reach that conclusion yet, which is why we need a bipartisan effort to uncover the whole situation and there is no doubt about the hacking. let's establish that. i was hacked into. my campaign in 2008 was hacked in so no doubt about the hacking and then the question about the intention. it's part of the larger issue of the cyber threat we face from russia, china, and other countries. it's another form of war fare and the entire issue is going to be examined by the armed services committee because it's a threat to our national security. >> senator, you made clear that you want the armed services committee to look into hacking and certainly cyberespionage. how will that be different from the presidential investigation, except that will be bipartisan? >> well, i don't think it's going to be done in a month and that is what this administration has left, to tell you the truth. but it's got to be bipartisan
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and i'm, frankly, very appreciative that chuck schumer and jack reed, the senior democrat on the committee, are all involved in this. we have a very bipartisan committee, believe it or not, in the armed services committee. >> it's a very good committee and works in a bipartisan way. look. we don't want to point a finger and i don't want this to turn into a benghazi investigation, which seemed, at least to many people, highly political. this is serious stuff. when a foreign power tries to influence our election or damage our economy, for that matter, this is serious. it's gotten worse. and a better bipartisan investigation is needed. the cia saying one thing and i haven't gotten the briefings and the fbi, something else. we had need to get to the bottom of this in a fair, nonpartisan, nonfinger-pointing way. >> how did it -- >> the president is not willing
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to accept the fact there was hacking by the russians when the congressional -- when all of the intelligence agencies say there was hacking by russians? >> i can't speculate about the president. i was very glad and i spoke to john about this, that reince priebus on tv yesterday morning said that the president and he supported a bipartisan congressional investigation. that's good news. no one should try to sweep any facts under the rug. we will see where the facts lead. we don't know yet. once we get the facts, we will make our conclusions, but to jump to conclusions or to say we don't need an investigation is so wrong because the vital interests of our country are at stake and this is something that should concern democrats and republicans and liberals and people who care about this country. >> how did it come that twou o you leading this effort and the republicans saying the democrats are looking for somebody to blame. >> that is why it should be bipartisan and john mccain
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leading it. i have a lot of faith in him. he is a man -- >> he called you, you called him? >> i called him yesterday morning saying, look. we should not have this degenerate into political finger pointing. it's too serious. he agreed. we put out our statement and we called jack reed, a good democrat, lindsey graham, a republican. the idea this should be bipartisan and fair and just interested in, like, dragnet said, what was his name? webb. >> jack webb. >> july the facts, man. >> but senat you will head, to do the investigation, correct? >> no. we also will be working with foreign relations and intelligence committee. we will all be working together. but it is a national security issue. >> what is the risk here? >> there is no doubt -- there is no doubt that russians and others have hacked. i mean, there is no doubt about that. now the question is the intention. but what the larger issue that the armed services committee and others are looking into is the whole issue of cyber, because it
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is an area where the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff said we do not have an advantage over our potential adversaries. that is the only form of possible conflict where our adversaries have an advantage over us. the whole -- this issue has brought cyber, i think, to the position and -- >> if i could say one thing. >> go ahead. >> a few years ago, there was hacking and people thought this is some random individual, american or overseas. now we are finding, we are pretty clear, it's governments behind it and it's not just the russian government. >> they are worried about future -- >> correct. this is serious, serious stuff. the fact there is an allegation, serious, that an election tried to be influence, we have to find out the answers. >> based on the briefings that both of you have seen, is there evidence that the russians also hacked the republican national committee? >> i haven't gotten briefings yet because i'm not -- >> john mccain? >> i have not gotten that
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information. i don't have that information. >> the question is -- >> the investigation -- >> the question i'm asking why would they hack just into the democratic national committee? what would be the goal of doing that? >> we do not know what they have done. there is good evidence they hacked into the dnc and i've heard it second -- >> senator. >> the people briefed told me this is serious and wide ranging. let's find out. >> one quick question. if rex tillerson is the nominee for the secretary of state will he have a problem being confirmed in the united states senate? >> well, look. the bottom line is every one of these nominees, and particularly a guy like tillerson, needs a thorough, thorough hearing. the wung thing we will insist on, democrats, not quick like this. five minutes to each person in one day. we will want thorough questions and he will be questioned thoroughly should he be the nominee and thiel allegations and talks about his closeness to putin will come forward. can say as a future minority
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leader, god willing, that this has to be a thorough -- we will not stand for a quick you just ask your question and say hello and he leaves. >> yes. there will be some follow-ups. >> lots. >> thank you, senator schumer and mccain. good to see you. he is joining us from arizona today. a change in uber's privacy policy has some app users questioning which companies have access to their locations. ahead, why uber and other apps might be tracking you longer you you think they are. that is scary. we invite you to subscribe to our "cbs this morning" podcast and proud of this. you get the news of the day and extended interviews and podcast originals. find them all the on itunes and apple's podcast app. [ cough ]
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in the company's private policy. >> reporter: if you use uber, you know the driver needs your location in order to pick you up. just like we know amazon needs our address to ship our purchases. but the latest change in uber's policy asks to track riders for five minutes after they have been dropped off. that has some people questioning what these apps that have the ability to track our location really need to know? >> i use it a lot and my two children use uber way more than the they should. >> reporter: her family depends on uber using their app five times a week but the company changed adding the capability to track a customer's whereabouts a full five minutes after they have gotten out of the car bothers her. >> it would never be necessary for a company like uber to know where you are when when you're not in their care, their company, or in their car. >> reporter: the updated tracking policy also lets uber track riders even when the app is running in the background.
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uber says the reason is it helps improve pickups and drop-offs and customer service, and enhances safety. the company explained to us it was facing challenges, including connecting drivers and riders. but some consumers and privacy experts argue that goes beyond the scope of what is needed. >> this location tracking, in terms of not just during the ride but also afterwards, is totally unnecessary to the service. >> reporter: claire gartland is with the electronic privacy information center. the group filed a complaint in 2015 with the federal trade commission charging uber with unfair and detceptive trade practice. >> it represents an erosion of the privacy that users have and they continue to take baby steps and reach further into our personal lives. i think it's a basic practice and users are upset.
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>> reporter: she says uber would allow them to share location data. the car services new policy has renewed the debate over how much access digital services, including companies like google and amazon, should have and who should regulate them. the federal communications commission limits how cell phone carriers can share consumer's personal information but gartland says digital platform like smartphone appears don't face the same scrutiny. >> in many ways it saints going but what we already give to other companies. >> reporter: nyu professor here says the united states privacy laws are weak but there might be another deterrent to bad behavior on the part of companies like uber, consumer backlash. how do we know that they stop after five minutes? >> well, we trust that they will do what they promise to do. i don't trust that uber is telling the truth because i believe in uber's good intentions. i trust that uber is telling the truth because it would be really
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damaging to their long-run profits if they were caught in a lie on something like this. >> reporter: so uber told us there is a way to stop the company from tracking you this way. you can disable the location tracking in the permissions for your app but that means you have to type in each address manually. if you allow tracking during your ride, there is no way to stop the company from tracking you for five minutes after you get out of the car, unless you close the app completely, not running in the background, but close it completely after you get out of the car immediately every time. >> smart thing to do, isn't it? >> so if you have your hands full? >> just got to remember. >> and if you have nothing to hide, maybe don't worry about it? >> depend on whether you want them to track you or not. >> up to you. it's big trouble when a moose wanders. firefighters respond to a big and rather awkward emergency. first, it's time to check
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. good morning. we're lookingout at a mostly cloudy sky. temperature wise, 38 degrees to 50 up each mountain view and san jose. other ones we're sitting in the 40s to head out the door. partly to mostly cloudy day. temperature wise in the 50s. light rain tuesday, rains about wednesday a heavy rain and gusty wind. showers friday. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by weathertech.com.
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tahoe say they've located the body of a skiier missing since saturday. . good morning. it is five minutes before 8:00. investigators have located the body of a skier missing since last saturday. he was found on an expert slope not yet open for skiers this year. coming up in the next half hour of cbs this morning, traffic and wet ever coming up next -- weather coming up next. (my hero zero by lemonheads)
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. good morning. 7:57. here's a live look at the extremeway. pretty slow heading to downtown oakland and i want to let you know about a serious roll over crash that has foothill boulevard between 23rd and miller avenue stretched down. good morning to you, take international boulevard instead. moving over the bridge to foster city, that will take you a long 30 minutes between 880 and 101. then your alternate between 5:00 and 7:00. >> good morning everybody. beautiful view of the golden gate bridge over mostly cloudy skies. isn't that gorgeous. you'll see live rain showers tomorrow. mid-40s around the rim of the bay. san francisco at 50. 51 in san jose. winds light and rain showers
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, december 12th, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including president-elect trump questioning the cia for saying that russia helped him in the election. his senior adviser kellyanne conway is with us today in studio 57. first, here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> president obama ordered a full review of the extent of russian hacking, something they first did back in october. >> the cia believes this is a high confidence judgment. and the cia doesn't come to a high confidence judgment just based on circumstantial evidence. so i think they have got more here. i think they got sources who are actually telling them what the intent was. >> big stretches of central and
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southern new york state are under more than two feet of snow this morning. sometimes much more. >> we're watching one storm depart from the northeast later on today, but another storm coming into the west coast with areas of rain and snow. >> closing arguments were dramatic. this jury was sequestered for about a week. it came back with a verdict in less than seven hours. >> no doubt about the hacking. let's establish that. >> what do you say to critics who say, listen, the democrats are looking for someone else to blame because hillary clinton lost? >> that's why it should be bipartisan. it should be bipartisan and fair. and just like webb, just the facts, ma'am. >> a black man was arrested in philadelphia after he went on a pro trump graffiti spree. he has been sentenced to spend the next five years with his auntie and uncle in bel air. i'm charlie rose with gayle
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king and norah o'donnell. a winter-like storm is making travel dangerous this morning for millions of americans. the weather system is battering the northern tier of the country with snow and freezing rain. >> whiteout conditions and ice in michigan.to a weekend pileup airlines canceled more than 1200 weekend flights at chicago's o'hare and midway airports. a blast of bitter cold arctic air will sweep across the midwest into the northeast later this week. china's government says it is very concerned about president-elect trump's comments on the one china policy. mr. trump suggested one china could be used as a bargaining chip. tensions rose when the president-elect took a call from taiwan's president ten days ago. >> i fully understand the one china policy. but i don't know why we have to be bound by one china policy unless we make a deal with china. having to do with other things,
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including trade. >> a chinese foreign ministry spokesman said, quote, the one china principle is the political bedrock for the development of the china/u.s. relationship. if it is compromised or interrupted, the sound and steady growth of the relationship will be out of the question. president-elect trump disputes a report that claims hacking during the campaign was part of an effort by russia to defeat hillary clinton. president-elect calls the finding ridiculous despite bipartisan support for a congressional investigation. mr. trump's potential pick for secretary of state rex tillerson is drawing criticism for his relationship with russia. tillerson is the ceo of exxonmobil, the company that made big oil drilling deals with russia. in 2013, russian president vladimir putin awarded him the order of friendship. that same year i asked tillerson about the description of exxonmobil as a unique company because of its power. >> it was about the power of exxon. >> i'm sure it was almost like a state into itself. >> i have heard others make the
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comment to me that there is an allusion to or reference to exxonmobil having its own state department. >> yes, that's right. >> i would tell you it is in the quite that organized. but -- >> do you wish it were in. >> no, because i think it is -- i think we're very efficient how we go about it. >> the republican senators like john mccain and marco rubio raising questions about tillerson and his ties to the russian president. >> kellyanne conway is senior adviser to president-elect trump. she joins us once again at the table. good to see you. much to discuss this morning. let's start with this. when is president-elect going to tell us that mitt romney is out and rex tillerson is in. >> the president-elect will make his final announcement midweek, he told me yesterday. as you can see, he's taken this process very seriously. he's had a very wide selection, wide berth of qualified men and women. and it looks like rex tillerson is a leading candidate. until he makes that announcement --
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>> other people are still in the running? >> they are. but obviously there has been a lot of buzz about rex tillerson, a trumpian kind of pick. >> lawmakers have concerns about his ties to putin. how are you handling that concern? >> we look at this as a asset, not a liability. he's not hanging around with vladimir putin on the weekend at dinner parties. he understands russia. he's doing business there. he had to deal with china, russia, yemen, the developing world, the middle east which needs stabilization. exxonmobil is a $320 billion company, rex tillerson is in charge of 70,000 employees. secretary of state has about a 66 or $70 billion budget and this is somebody who knows negotiation, he knows about national security, he knows how to -- he's a job creator. fourth highest ranking official in our united states government, very important selection. >> how about john bolton? is he under consideration? >> he interviewed for this position and he may end up with a position in the state department, charlie. that will be announced by the president-elect.
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but, really greatly qualified and very diverse backgrounds of all of the individuals who have come in. >> can i raise one question with respect to the president-elect's mind in terms of what he said, not whether there was influence by russia and hacking to defeat hillary clinton, and elect donald trump, but just the idea of russia hacking. all american intelligence agencies believe the russians did it. why doesn't the president-elect? >> well, he basically is talking about the election result, though. people are trying to -- but he is. >> apart from that, does he believe, regardless of what the purpose was, that the russians hacked? >> what he believes is that we should have evidence, not these off the record unsourced quotes and leaks from a house intelligence committee where now you have fbi arguing with the cia over it. there is no clarity between them. we don't have a single source -- >> they both agree on one thing, that the russians hacked. >> what people are trying to do -- >> question about motive. >> in fairness to the president-elect, people are trying to conflate that now to revisit the election results. we're just surrounded by
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election deniers. first jim comey's fault, then a bunch of people in a movement we don't know, we're not associated with and we denounce time and time again, then russian interference, it is bernie sanders, how dare he run in a primary, it is always something other than hillary clinton's fault as to why she lost. we're not going to accept that. we're not going to allow people to insinuate or insult the president-elect and the tremendous victory he had. >> doesn't he trust the cia? >> he does. and -- absolutely. >> they say -- >> he trusts the intelligence community. here's the very bottom line, basic bottom line for the president-elect. and you can trust this going forward in his administration, charlie. we don't want intelligence -- we don't want foreign interference in our intelligence and our politics. >> by any government. >> by any government. by anyone. we also don't want politics to interfere with our intelligence. that's what's happening now. politics should not interfere with our intelligence. i saw a newsweek article posted last night, everyone should really read, it talks about how the cia officials say, wait, you
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can't rush to judgment. it is fuzzy and ambiguous. >> it can also be true, kellyanne. it can also be true that the russians are responsible for the hacking, that the russians tried to influence the election, but that donald trump won by other means. both can be true. >> it could be, but we don't know that. that's the entire point. if people want to have congressional investigations, they should do that. but we can't get ahead of ourselves and make -- >> the central claim against the russian government is that they're trying to sew chaos and confusion and led to distrust in the greatest pillars of american democracy in our government. and one of those is the cia. do you believe that president-elect trump, though, is helping to undermine the reputation of the cia by the comments he's making by dismissing them, their report as ridiculous. >> not at all. what he's -- >> and suggesting their competence is in question because at the beginning of the iraq war, they got it wrong then, so therefore they got it wrong now. >> tremendous respect. and do you respect the
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intelligence community, he said, i do. unequivocal about he does. this conclusion is being -- it is a political conclusion that this scenario of people can't realize. vladimir putin didn't tell hillary clinton to ignore wisconsin and michigan. >> is this what he's saying with respect to the one china policy, we'll negotiate that, there are thing i want you, china, to do and i'll consider respecting one china if you do these things i want you to do. is this a bargaining about one china? >> not at the moment. he's not the president yet and won't be commander in chief yesterday. >> he said it yesterday in an interview. >> he received a congratulatory call from taiwan and playing it forward a little bit, charlie, he has shown an openness to affecting different policies. but nothing has been announced, nothing has been finalized, we're respectful of the fact that for the next five weeks we have another commander in chief and president in the oval. and that's incredibly important. but this is somebody that is a guy that will do great things.
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this country voted for change. nobody can argue we don't have the best relations around the globe that will change under president trump. >> thank you. many disabled veterans need four legged help. chip reid visited a training center where there is a lot to learn. >> these two want to be service dogs when they grow up, right? >> yes, but they're going to have to stay focused. >> meet maggie and honor coming,
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>> one republic's front man says he will never get stuck in a rut. >> i would rather be able to fit into any niche or genre at any time, as music evolves i'll evolve with it. if i never get a name for myself as, oh, man, i love his sound, that's fine, because i will be able to pay my mortgage. >> he's got name for himself, though. ahead, how he built a career writing songs for other artists,
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plus, how china influenced his own band's name. very interesting. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. fothere's a seriousy boomers virus out there that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. one in 30 boomers has hep c, yet most don't even know it. because it can hide in your body for years without symptoms, and it's not tested for in routine blood work. the cdc recommends all baby boomers get tested. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us it's time to get tested. ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. it's the only way to know for sure.
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disability. some vets who face physical or mental challenges rely on support from therapy dogs but the animals can be hard to train and few are available. the nonprofit group hero dogs has helped more than a dozen veterans find the help they need. chip reid is at the group's facility in maryland. >> reporter: this is the hero dog training center, otherwise known as my version of paradise. all of these dogs are at various stages of training to be here hero dogs and here are their trainers and getting the dogs ready to change the lives of veterans with disabilities. at just 11 weeks old, maggie and honor are hard at work. these puppies only have a 1 in 3 chance of becoming official hero dogs. >> turn around and come back. >> reporter: jennifer lund started the organization six years ago. >> you already have a sense of whether they are going to make it through the whole program? >> i'm looking for a puppy outgoing, eager, interactive and not on bothered by much.
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i can usually at this aage rule out puppies who wouldn't be good candidates but i unfortunately don't have a crystal ball and can't guarantee which ones are going to make it. >> reporter: on average, training takes about three years. >> step. step. wait. >> reporter: mitch is 3 and now in advanced training. >> initially, we stay say step and wait so they don't continue forward. >> reporter: is mitch a pretty good student? >> he is a pretty good student and helps he likes his treat. >> reporter: he is a lab, after all. mitch won't meet his veteran until his training is almost complete so he needs to learn how to help with mobility and if his future partner suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, how to react. how do you teach a dog to respond to anxiety? >> initially, i would, you know, very, obviously, tap, tap, tap my leg. and then tell the dog to touch or paw my leg and then reward him. but, over time, as the team forms a bond, the dog will, on his own, starting to recognize signs. >> reporter: trinity nelson and new york, named for world war i
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hero. she was a marine gunnery starting 14 years before being medically retired with constant arm and back strain and ptsd. trained to get you to focus on him when you're having anxiety issues? >> correct. >> reporter: he knows right away if you are? >> he knows right away. he knows to focus on me. >> reporter: two months before she met york, trinity's husband, also a marine veteran, lost his battle with cancer, sending her into a tailspin. >> we are getting real close to probably, you know, becoming, you know, one of the 22 veterans that, you know, every day that, you know, would take their life. >> reporter: what was it about york that pulled you out? >> i think it was just that we had the same personality. we have, you know, that kind of weird sense of humor. on certain days, that's what i
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need. and he knows it. so he'll do something just to make me laugh. >> reporter: because your laugh is a reward for him? >> oh, yeah. very good. >> reporter: it's that kind of team work that hero dogs fosters at training sessions like this one at national harbor in maryland. >> sweetheart, do you want to come home? >> reporter: after almost two months of working with hero dogs, retired colonel lisa luntundras found her partner. she served 26 years as an army nurse before being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. >> being in charge of a hundred beds at walter reed and going to say, okay, i need help, is a really emotional process. >> reporter: they still have a lot to learn. but that is okay, because they are doing it together. >> ruby just wants to make me happy, work together with me and train me, and keep me mobile. and independent. i know that if and when my
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disease progresses, she won't be judging me along the way. are you ready to go home? this is so exciting, ruby! >> reporter: hero dogs gets about 80 applications a year from disabled vets in the washington, d.c./maryland/virginia area. one thing you need for disabled vets, they need to be able to for example, you're going to have to get up. come on, mitch. okay, hold on. for example, if you drop your keys, well done, mitch! good doggie! by the way, everything is paid for by hero dogs. the disabled veterans who get these dogs don't have to pay a dime. norah? >> oh, chip, thank you! >> he is right. >> you should be able to get a dog available to everyone who needs one and wants one. >> he said it right. a different kind of paradise. i think after training them three years it would be hard to let them go. notice how everybody's voice changes when they talk to their dog? good boy, mitch, good boy. >> thank you, chip, for that
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story. it's a wonderful life for people in seneca falls, new york. we will take you to a village that people say inspired a christmas classic. you're watching "cbs this morning." ( ♪ ) ♪ they tell me i'm wrong ♪ ♪ to want to stand alongside my, my love ♪ ♪ whoa, talkin' 'bout my love ♪ the full value of your totaled new car. ♪ to want to stand alongside my, my love ♪
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take the reins this holiday and get the mercedes-benz you've always wanted during the winter event. now lease the 2017 gle350 for $579 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. life... is unpredictable. life is deaths. and births. sickness and health. love and heartbreak. and covered california is there for it all. not just to help keep you well. but to make sure the cost of being unwell doesn't ruin this whole life thing. because it's more than just health care. it's life care. the new movie "patriots day" explores a boston marathon bombings and their aftermath. john goodman is in our toyota green room with the person he plays in the movie.
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former boston police commissioner, ed davis and john are together in the green a pathway to the beach in pacifica remains blocked off nkhole. the . this is kpix5 morning update. >> good morning. it's 8:25. a path way to the beach of pacifica remains blocked off by this sink hole. later today flouride will be added to water. in the next half hour of cbs this morning after john goodman is at tv57 to discuss his roll. traffic and weather in a moment.
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♪ >> hello! merry christmas! >> "it's a wonderful life" has delighted audiences for 70 years. one town in central new york feels a special connection to the christmas classic. seneca falls turned itself into bedford falls over the weekend. people say there the director frank capra was inspired by the village. three of the actors who played jimmy stewart's children help celebrate the movie's 70th anniversary. >> still stands up, too, doesn't it? >> nice. >> old fashioned values never go out of style. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, a new movie that aims for a real life look at the boston marathon bombings. john goodman is in our toyota
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green room with the former boston police ed davis. see how they had to relive the attack to create "patriots day." >> plus -- wake up, john! >> ryan tedder is the front man for the pop power house one republic but the writer behind a string of hits for other performers. ahead how hi career rebounded after his band nearly fell apart. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" looked at the dilemma facing snack food makers like pepsico. customers still prefer fatty and assaultee snacks. many of their products have flopped hurting the bottom line. >> what is wrong with fatty, salty snacks? >> better to have something else. >> make you want to drink a lot of water! true. the names of two giant panda cubs will be revealed today. the two pandas at zoo atlanta
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are 100 days old today. >> i'm going to see them tomorrow. >> to atlanta? >> to atlanta. >> oh? i didn't know you were going to atlanta. chinese tradition is the day they get their names. what am i missing is in the public voted on a choice of seven sets of names. more than 23,000 votes were recorded. the pandas could make their public debut as early as this month. so go on to atlanta and see them in person. very cute. >> i'm going there for an interview with al pacino. >> you didn't clear that with me so i'm just curious. >> check your answering machine. john goodman's remarkable career has run more than 30 years. tv watchers remember him for his golden globe winning man as don connor in "roseanne." he has leapt his voice to several animated films. >> he stars as boston police commissioner ed davis in the new movie "patriots day." the drama is based on the 2013 boston marathon bombings and the
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manhunt for the attackers. >> you guys identify the two we looking for. we need to release those pictures! >> we overplay our head we may force these guys to react. >> gentlemen, if i may. right now boston is working against us. normally you got a murder. rats. we don't got that problem. when it comes to terrorism everybody wants to talk about this city. they are talking about the wrong people. release the photos of our guys sitting back. listen. trust me. let boston work force, i'm telling you. >> "patriots day "on "is distributed by cbs films, a division of kcbs. john goodman is with us along with ed davis. this is what the director peter berg said. no actor who looks more like ed davis. they are both tall and larger than life.
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you both agree with that? >> i think ed is larger than life than i am. >> that's true. it's is not -- >> i need to define larger than life. >> he's got a personality. i don't. >> that's not true. >> just the way -- he knows everybody. he is just mr. boss. >> a legend in his own time? >> yes. >> did you feel pressure, though, playing him? i'm curious about the first time you two met. >> i put so much pressure on myself and we had such a big job to do that i just had to forgot about it and focus on what we were doing. and i'll get killed later for it. it was that kind of a feeling. i had too many good people to work with. >> when you met him, what did you think, ed? >> when with i first met him, i walked in the room and he was practicing with peter and mark and trying to practice my accent. i tapped him on the back and he said, i can't do this with you here! i just can't do this with you
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here! >> ed, you were commissioner of the boston police department for seven years. >> right. >> and during boston marathon bombing and you did such an amazing job. >> i had a great team. >> take us back to that day and what happened that day. some of the challenges you encountered. >> well, the tragedy sort of laid out before us. people were killed and 42 seriously wounded. in danger of dying. and 280 injured. the scene was horrible. it looked like a war zone there. and so it was important for us to take care of the wounded and save as many lives as we could, but then to pursue the suspects. it was a case, a sense of urgency and anger among the offices that had been attacked and showed their bravery the next four days to run these guys down. >> what was some of the friction with the fbi? >> this is a complex undertaking and a lot of agencies involved in it.
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and there was a disagreement about when to put the photos out. i've always been focused on the community so i wanted to get them out quickly. the truth is rick delorean and i are good friends. we could not have done it would you the bureau. there was stress but it worked itself out. >> what are the lessons to learn from the responses? >> two. i think one is the police officers who were out there are compassionate and really focused on putting things right, getting the community back together. but the other one, charlie, is the community response. the boston strong response. the terrorists have to understand that they are trying to tear us apart but they are making us stronger by doing this. it's a failed strategy. >> john, what did you think you had to get to get ed davis? >> it was -- i actually just kind of reacted to the way people treated me. there's a respect. there is a command there. naturally.
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but he also shows up at a scene and he knows all of the officers' names and how their families are doing. just a tremendous undertaking to do this job. and i'm talking like i'm -- >> you can't help it! >> aw! such a responsibilities, they are enormous. >> you said you gave him your phone number. what did you seek from him? >> we did. if we needed little hints on scenes that were ongoing. i would call commissioner davis and he was more than willing to help. >> give me an example. what would you say, john? i'm calling you about what? >> there was a scene that we caught but a phone call with vice president biden that everybody was on. we wanted to know what the call was about. and what they discussed. so i started improvising, which i'm not the best at, which maybe why the scene isn't in the film. >> talk about mark wahlberg.
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a boston native who was a driving force behind this and he was here and we talked about it. he was worried it was too soon. what was it like working with mark? >> it was tremendous. mark has an incredibly commitment to the community, to the city. when you combined him with peter burg's side of the story and hard hitting journalist that yo >> john goodman and ed davis. "patriots day" is the name of the movie and opens on january 1st. the lead singer of one republic is not letting success go to his head. ryan,, . good morning. we're looking out at a mostly
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♪ ♪ everything that drowns me makes me want to cry ♪ baby i've been loving you dreaming about the things that we could be ♪ >> people have watched the "counting stars" video on youtube more than 1.5 billion. the man who wrote and sang it, his name is ryan tedder and he has found a productive formula. the front man for the pop band one republic has written for
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some of music's biggest names. he says music is way to make a business while doing what he loves. ♪ >> reporter: ryan tedder is best known as a front man of pop chart power house one republic. ♪ ♪ we will be counting stars >> reporter: ryan, you said it's hard to know when have you a hit. that doesn't seem to be a problem for you. >> for one republic it's difference. writing for other artists is harder than me writing for one republic. >> reporter: those other artists include some of music's biggest♪ and most popular songs. >> we let it burn burn burn ♪ >> reporter: it's safe to say that ryan tedder is a hit-maker. he invited us to watch him film
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one republic's newest video "let's hurt tonight." did you write to this the song or for the album? >> no, i wrote this for the album. >> reporter: even though the first take sounded great, there was one detail that bothered him. >> i'm sorry. what happens if you don't get a haircut in nine months? >> reporter: it's important to look good when you're one of the hottest commodities in music. it's not where tedder expected to be a decade ago. ♪ i'm holding on my own got ten feet off the ground ♪ >> reporter: let's start with "the apologize." that is how most of us got to know one republic. it had been cut before the record label before "apologize" came out. >> they were kind of cleaning house so we got dropped the same week katy perry and we got dropped. >> by the same label?
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>> how did you take that news? >> i remember driving back from my manager's house in laurel canyon and i was sunk, because i had put three years of my life into it at that point. we had like ten shows left as one republic. so it was like, well, let's keep our commitments and finish these shows and by june, we are done and going to break up as a band. we start playing the shows and they start selling out. ♪ ♪ say hey it's too late to apologize ♪ >> reporter: what did you think when people started to come hear you? >> the weirdest time period, like 40 people, 150, 400, 500, 1100 and selling out and when interscope showed up and said we want to do a deal and right now and "apologize" it just exploded and "stop and stare." it became a very big second hit for us which kind of cements the band. ♪ ♪ stop and stare >> reporter: i told the band if we can't get another hit record
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off this album, we are done. i'm not going to be the one hit wonder like vh 1 is now. >> where is ryan teeder? >> where is ryan teeddder? >> and "apologize." that rescued us from the one hit wonder dom. >> you did not want to be a one hit wonder? >> no, i was destined not to be that. i would rather be known as a writer and producer and this band goes boom and flitter out. >> reporter: tedder's career as an independent songwriter was also heating up. that big break came after writing "do it well" for jennifer lopez. >> a publishing company came to me. we want to sign you and give you 75,000 advance just based off of that one song. >> reporter: is that like, wow? >> my brain melted!
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i was like that, tgi friday's is on me, let's go! >> or olive garden? >> or olive garden. seriously. take your pick. there is cheesecake factory. ♪ >> reporter: you'd think as a grammy nominated owner of a platinum and two gold albums, one republic would be unmistakable. ♪ >> reporter: not so. ♪ yeah, we are going down >> reporter: we were called republic, which i i still love that name. every time you google republic, china pops up. republic of china. so i was like sitting around with my pen. god. how many records do we have to sell before we outgoogle china? and the answer is a billion! the answer is, it's impossible. >> so you added the one? >> we added the one and that is where really it came from. i wish we were called republic on the record because there has
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been enough freudian slips with deejays and presenters ever since the boy band from the uk came out with the band they had. >> one direction? >> hey, is everybody excited? i was like, geez! god! you know? and the whole crowd just starts booing. he is like, what happened? literally how this guy talked. we are like, dude, like, i'm too old for this! ♪ >> reporter: but tedder puts his songwriting ahead of his faith. he hopes to say relevant by not sticking to one style and calling himself the swiss army knife of music. >> music evolves with it and if it means i never get a name for myself, i just love his sound, that is fine, because i will be able to may my mortgage and i will be able to fix my car and have a life! ♪ let it take you home >> reporter: you'll be able to eat! >> i'll be able to eat and go to cheesecake factory.
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anything beyond living is just extra. ♪ good life got to be good life ♪ really a good life good life ♪ >> reporter: you can hear my extended conversation with ryan tedder on the "cbs this morning" podcast on itunes and apple podcast app. the thing about him. he is one of the nicest guys i've ever met. you're so normal and he said, that is because i'm from oklahoma. you can't be too cool for school, he says. >> how come he is so good at writing songs? >> it's something he really apologize. his mom was a teacher. he just really loves writing. >> what a great interview. >> he has such a great touch and he can tell some work for him and others. >> i like him a lot. thank you, ryan tedder. we be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning." once i heard i was going to
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be a park ranger, i got really excited. gabe's obviously really sick. and there's a lot that he isn't able to do, and make-a-wish stepped in. we had to climb up the mountain to get the injured hiker. he fell from, like, a rock. he's been the one that has been rescued so many times. he said to me, "today, i got to be the hero." (avo) the subaru share the love event has helped grant the wishes of over twelve hundred kids so far. get a new subaru, and we'll donate two hundred and fifty dollars more to help those in need. ♪put a little love in your heart.♪ the great thing about doing
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music pieces you can put conversation and music videos altogether and tell a story. altogether and tell a story. >> you're so right. ,,,, did you know slow internet can actually hold your business back? say goodbye to slow downloads, slow backups, slow everything. comcast business offers blazing fast and reliable internet that's 10 times faster than slow internet from the phone company. say hello to internet speeds up to 150 mbps. and add phone and tv for only $34.90 more a month. call today.
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since saturday . this is a morning update. >> good morning. it's 8:55. investigators say they've located the body of a skier missing since saturday. the 64-year-old man was last seen on an expert slope not yet open for skiers yet this season. the site of a deadly house fire in oakland will remain secured. they ruled out a refrigerator as a possible cause but looking at possible electrical problems. later today, flouride will be added to drinking water in parts of san jose.
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>> thank you very much. morning everybody. this is the live weather camera looking out. right now, we have temperatures into the 30s and 40s. later today partly to mostly cloudy skies. upper 50s in mountain view. 57 degrees backing all the way into antioch. wednesday an in between day. heavy rains, gusty winds on thursday. showers on friday. (my hero zero by lemonheads)
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wayne: hey, baby! - momma got some money! - oh! (laughing) jonathan: it's a trip to miami! tiffany: come on, guys! on a car! (cheering) jonathan: oh-oh! wayne: whoo! - let's get that big deal, baby! whoo! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: ladies and gentlemen, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. i need one person, let's go. you. what are you? you-- oh, you're a swan, you're a goose. - i'm a black swan. wayne: you're a black swan. i love that movie. so what's your name? champaine? - yes.
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