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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  February 17, 2017 7:00am-9:01am PST

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50s with scattered showers. thank you for watching kpix 5 news this morning. "cbs this morning" is next. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, february 17th, 2017. welcome to cbs this morning. in an extraordinary news conference, president trump comes out swinging, attacking his critics and defending his first month. he says he inherited a mess and his white house is running like a fine tuned machine. scott pelley and john dickerson help explain it all. more than 60 women accuse a team doctor for usa gymnastics of sexual abuse. two former gymnasts tell their story for the first time to "60 minutes." john is here with a preview. with all the talks of leaks, a high security app that makes messages vanish is gaining new fans in washington.
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we'll show you how it works. but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> the public doesn't believe you people anymore. the press honestly is out of control. you have a lower approval rate than congress. quiet, quiet, quiet. >> president trump pulled an astonishing news conference. >> it will say donald trump rants and raves at the press. i'm not ranting and rave raving. i'm just telling you, you're dishonest people. >> wow, all righty then, that was some press conference. >> stunning, sarah, it's stunning. >> u would, you couldn't turn away. >> it's crazy what we're watching every day. >> i'm really not a bad person by the way. >> we are important, we are part of america as well. >> a day of protests around the country. >> immigrants hit streets in protests of president trump's immigration order. >> we gonna fight you. >> it's going to be bad out there. >> a major storm now making its move into california. >> the storms in the west could
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last for a week. >> not good news for the already threatened lake oroville spillway. >> we can't guarantee what mother nature's going to do. >> two planes collide. investigators say a departing plane clipped the wings. >> nothing if not persistent, trying to break the window of a super market. that stubborn rock resistant glass. >> an employee catches a toddler with one hand after he fell off the counter. >> he celebrated with a victory dance. >> the tools that built his career, bluster, bravado, exaggeration and a few loose facts. >> and all that matters. >> to be honest i inherited a mess. it's a mess. >> no, you inherited a fortune, we elected a mess. >> on cbs this morning. >> there was so many weird tangents. he said hillary clinton's name 11 times. >> hillary. hillary. hillary clinton. hillary clinton. hillary clinton.
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hillary clinton. >> why is he still talking about hillary clinton? the election's over. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by tie yot ta toyota, let's go places. welcome to cbs this morning. charlie rose is off, though anthony mason is with us. >> happy friday. >> happy friday. >> president trump's first solo news conference at the white house was an unprecedented display of accusations, exaggerations. he said nearly everything americans have heard about his first four weeks in office is wrong. he defended his actions, blasted his critics and denied reports of a white house in chaos during which you could call a pretty free wheeling press conference that was all about trying to take back the narrative. >> the president's outbursts of frustration left many bewildered. his news conference lasted 77 minutes. he took at least 40 questions from 17 different reporters. >> the president gave few details on policies but he did
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promise a new order on immigration. and he gave time lines for overhauling obamacare and the federal tax code. margaret brennan is at the white house. margaret, good morning. >> good morning. after a week of tough news about the challenges fazing his white house, president trump tried to personally take control of the news cycle with this presser. he's already tweeted this morning that rush limbaugh said it was one of the greatest ever. >> tomorrow, they will say donald trump rants and raves at the press. i'm not ranting and raving. >> it felt like a throwback to the campaign. >> that's how i won. i won with news conference and probably speeches. i certainly didn't win by people -- listening to you people, that's for sure. >> now playing out in the east room of the white house. >> i turn on the tv, open the newspapers and i see stories of chaos, chaos. >> president trump flatly denied the notion that he's running a disorganized and ineffective white house. >> it is the exact opposite.
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this administration is running like a fine-tuned machine. >> he pinned the blame for the negative reviews on his favorite target. >> dishonest people. the press honestly is out of control. the press has become so dishonest. >> mr. trump insisted he'd done more in less time than any president in history and said next week he'd unveil a new executive order on immigration to replace the travel ban blocked by the courts. >> we had a very smooth rollout of the travel ban. but we had a bad court. got a bad decision. >> but the rollout resulted in confusion at airports across the country, due in part to a lack of coordination with government agencies. >> i inherited a mess. it's a mess. at home and abroad. a mess. >> the president blamed challenges on the situation he walked into. while unemployment is under 5% and the stock market soaring,
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mr. trump argues health care is failing and the u.s. is in decline. president obama often pointed out he inherited a global crisis and two bloody wars from his predecessor. >> the tone is such hatred. i'm really not a bad person. >> president trump believes criticism of him is unclear and claims anien could tact between his campaign and russian intelligence officials is made up. >> it's all fake. >> mr. trump was pressed on whether or any of his aides spoke to russian officials. >> nobody i know of. >> insisted if they did, he wasn't involved. >> i have nothing to do with russia. i told you, i have no deals there. i have no anything. >> asked about recent russian provocations including sailing a i ship 30 miles off the coast of the u.s. and russian jets buzzing a u.s. destroyer in the black sea, president trump gave no indication as to how he might respond. >> can we conclude they'll be into response? >> i'm not going to tell you anything about what response i do. i don't talk about military
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response. >> the president did reveal that the white house is finalizing its plans to replace obamacare and expects to send that plan to congress by march. now, the president will be holding a campaign-style rally this saturday in florida. >> all right, thank you very much, margaret. the president also defended this week's firing of national security adviser michael flynn. but mr. trump did not criticize the retired general for speaking with russian officials before taking office. the president said he would have, quote, directed him to do it. he also accused the press of spreading fake news about flynn and promised to flush out their sources of classified information. hours later, retired at michelle robert harwood declined an offer to replace lynn. sources tell cbs news he bowed out after a dispute over staffing the national security counsel. now, in washington with the president's attacks against leaks. good morning. >> good morning. the president blamed the
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intelligence community for leaking classified information about the contents of mike flynn's communications and said he called the justice department to open a criminal investigation into what the president referred to as illegal leaks. >> mike flynn is a fine person. i asked for his resignation. >> president trump said his decision to fire his national security adviser mike flynn had nothing to do with the intercepted calls between flynn and the russian ambassador to the u.s. >> i fired him because of what he said to mike pence, very simple. >> still, mr. trump said, he would have approved of flynn's conversation with the ambassador. >> i don't think he did anything wrong. if anything, he did something right. i would have directed him to do it if i thought he wasn't doing it. i didn't direct him. but i would have directed him because that's his job. >> interviewed by fbi agents looking into whether he discussed sanctions with the russian ambassador as the obama administration was announcing sanctions against russia. a u.s. official familiar with the investigation says the call
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was out of line and sought to undermine the obama administration's efforts to punish the russians for the cyberattacks during the election. the fbi's counterintelligence unit is investigating whether there were regular contacts between several trump campaign officials and the russian government during that time and whether they were coordinating as the cyberattacks led to leaks of damaging information about hillary clinton. >> those are criminal leaks. >> but president trump focused on the leaking of classified information critical of his administration and said he ordered the justice department to look into who's behind it. >> the leaks are real. you know what they said, you saw it. and the leaks are absolutely real. the news is fake. >> seemingly unable to stop the flow of information, mr. trump claimed the american people aren't getting the full story. >> it seems there's a disconnect there. the information coming from those leaks is real, then how can the stories be fake? >> the reporting is fake -- >> i just want to ask -- >> jim, you know what it is, here's the thing, the public
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isn't -- you know, they read newspapers, they see television, they watch. they don't know if it's true or false. because they're not involved. i'm involved. >> the president has been critical of the intelligence community but late thursday the cia issued a statement denying the relationship had soured to the point that information was being withheld from the president. the new cia director mike pompeo said, quote, the cia does not, has not and will never hide intelligence from the president, period. anthony. >> jeff pegues, thanks. one of the most unusual moments at the news conference came after an african-american journalist asked the president about involving the congressional black caucus in his plan to fix the inner cities. >> when you say the inner cities, are you going to include the cbc, mr. president, in your conversations with your urban agenda, your inner city agenda -- >> am i going to include who? >> are you going to include the congressional black caucus --
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>> well, i would, i tell you what, you want to set up the meeting? do you want to set up the meeting? are they end froms of yours? >> no, no, i'm just a reporter. i know some of them. >> set up a meeting. i would love to meet with the black caucus. i think it's great, the congressional black caucus, i think it's great. i actually thought i had a meeting with congressman cummings and he was all excited and then he said, oh, i can't move, it might be bad for me politically, i can't have that meeting. >> democratic congressman cummings responded, quote, i have no idea why president trump would make up a story about me like he did today. but cummings said he wasn't offended and looks forward to meeting the president. the congressional black caucus tweeted to the president, quote, hi, we sent you a letter on january 19th but you never wrote us back, sad. the white house has now reached out to the caucus to set up a meeting. cbs news political director and face the nation moderator john dickerson is here with us. john, good morning. >> good morning, norah.
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>> the president reportedly held this news conference over the objection of his top advisers. what did he hope to accomplish? >> well, i think he was grabbing the wheel, you know, he wants to be back in control. there is the fun of the campaign feel and all that. it reminded me lbj used to take reporters in his convertible driving across the lbj ranch and he'd go 70 miles an hour and he was in control and there was lots of hair pin turns. >> did it look like he was in control? >> to the people who loved him, he looked absolutely like he was in control, tweaking the noses of the press in there. a man in command of all the things his administration had done, a long list of things he achieved, absolutely. but the difference is, this is not a campaign anymore. mentioning hillary clinton so many times. he's not running against her anymore. campaigns are about a binary choice, me or her, but governing is about building consensus, getting an argument across, being directedened an focused and the this was not a directed and focused moment and this is -- >> a fine-tuned machine, i'm wondering does he have a
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different definition of that that most people don't know about, and what good came it's of the news conference that you could see? >> well, it's not a fine tuned machine. obviously, his executive order on immigration has been held up by the court. he lost his national security adviser for lying to the public. an extraordinary thing. with all the descriptions we've gotten about the flynn matter. no one says the reason he was fired because in this white house we never lie to the public. that's what you expect whenever that line came across in all 77 minutes yesterday. but he also said, john, he said he fired him because he -- because of what he said to mike pence, but the president had the same information. he could have told mike pence. >> well, absolutely. again, this is what happened, the national security adviser was not truthful about conversations with the russians and it was a muddle about when the president said, well, i would have wanted him to have those conversations. i was not clear that he really meant i would want him to have those conversations about the sanctions and that's more fuzzy after the press conference. >> let's try in the short time to break down what this means for the safety and security of the american people and the
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legislative agenda for the republican party. >> he doesn't have a national security adviser. what he had coming in, you know, he didn't get him. he doesn't have a person to advise him on national security. >> i find it stunning a vice admiral who spent 40 years -- >> former navy s.e.a.l. >> spent 40 years answering the call of his commander in chief essentially was publicly floated as a choice and publically said no. it's extraordinarily. >> it's also extraordinary that when the next thing hits as it may very well be hitting at this moment, the president doesn't have somebody he can turn to for that kind of advice. >> the president said he's going after low-life leakers. how do you see this playing out? >> el with, i think that's a public relations move he wants to basically categorize anything unfavorable to him as a leak that's a threat to national security. the way it will play out is the investigative committees on the hill will have to go after it and then he can tap the justice department to go after it. the problem is, when you push in one place on leaks, you sometimes get them on the other. the leaks are the result of the
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people inside the bureaucracy fearful about what's happening -- >> curious to hear what republicans are saying today too. >> well, they want this to go away. the republicans don't like the leaks either. so that -- >> -- about president trump's news conference yesterday, that's what i mean, i'm very curious to see. >> well, they don't like chaos and they're nervous. >> president obama was one of the toughest in punishing leakers, not only reporters but those in the intelligence community. >> sure, absolutely. >> john, always good to see you. understood is on fa sunday on face the nation, john will talk with devin nunes, plus former acting cia director michael morell and tom donilon, former national security adviser for obama. coming up monday, a new installment of our series we the people on the one month anniversary of the inauguration. we'll hear from four people of different political backgrounds and beliefs. with talked to them before the president was sworn in so how do they feel right now? that's monday on cbs this morning. president trump said he will announce his new travel order next week.
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the statement the same day hundreds of businesses across the country shut down to protest his immigration policies. immigrants make up about 17% of the nation's labor force back in 2016. california, texas, florida, new york and illinois have the largest immigrant populations in this country. dean reynolds is outside a restaurant in chicago which shut down to show support for immigrant employees. dean, good morning. >> good morning. we're here at the grill in chicago which yesterday closed its doors after a staff vote and hundreds of other restaurants around the country either did the same or let their employees protest. >> protesters marched in defiance of president trump's immigration brand thursday. as hundreds of businesses throughout the country close the doors in solidarity. more than 23% of the restaurant industry workforce is foreign born. that's nearly 2.3 million
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workers. greg dodd says immigrants make up about 90% of the kitchen staff in his philadelphia restaurant. more than 80 restaurants closed in that city. >> i'm not happy about losing the income. i'm not happy about them losing their income. to do this. this demonstration. i just, i felt it was best to support them. >> the allentown pennsylvania restaurant was one of just a few businesses to close in the area. >> we decided to close because we wanted to -- >> as of 2014, more than a quarter of the more than 42 million immigrants living in the u.s. are ex-in c mexican. the largest mexican community in the midwest. the director initially urged businesses to stay open. >> even though business owners are losing a lot of money today, we're in full support of our
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community. >> michael chose to close his family's little village liquor store anyway. >> there's nothing more powerful than for an entire community to tell people wait a second, we're also a part of this american dream. >> at least 50 restaurants in the chicago area closed their doors yesterday. they'll be reopening today. but another big protest is already being planned for may 1st. dean reynolds, thank you, dean. a powerful storm is hitting parts of california this morning. forecasters say southern california could see its heaviest rainfall in more than six years. the rain will continue through saturday. flood watches are already in effect in northern california. officials are confident the repaired spillways of the nation's tallest dam can handle the heavy rain. nearly 200,000 people living downstream of the oroville have to evacuate when the damage threatened to cause widespread flooding. the fbi is investigating sex
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abuse allegations against a former doctor for the u.s. women's gymnastics team. ahead, in a preview of 60 this national weather report sponsored by toyota. let's go places.
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some leakers are reportedly using self-destructing messages to release information. ahead, we find out how one >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by kohl's. kids' separates starting at just $7. plus, take an extra 15% or 20% off.
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more than two dozen babies have been hurt by faulty strollers. a recall and which models are affected. plus, new data plans have escalated the war between the nation's wireless carriers. your local news is coming up next.
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connected to armijo high school in fairfield has an active case of pulmonary tuberculosis. good morning, it's 7 n 26. i'm michelle griego. solano county health experts say someone connected to armijo high school in fairfield has an active case of pulmonary tuberculosis. the principal says the school is trying to identify everyone who had close contact with the patient to prevent it from spreading. assemblyman chiu of san jose is once again hoping california will dump or alter daylight saving time. he wants his legislative colleagues to approve a ballot measure. if passed state lawmakers would be able to get rid of daylight saving time or change the schedule. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,
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good morning. happy friday. it is raining outside so you have to prepare for your morning commute. it's 7:28. let's start with the richmond area. slow across the span of the richmond/san rafael bridge from a couple earlier crashes there. still affecting your roads so traffic is recovering. give yourself extra time. and high winds across the span of the bay bridge. the maze to downtown will now take you up to 30 minutes. and if you take mass transit, keep in mind ace train 3 is 17 minutes late. >> let's get to it live hi-def doppler radar lots on the screen been raining since 3 a.m. heaviest rain around the peninsula and the san francisco area. buying a break now in milpitas but you will have more rain, too. we have a high wind advisory in place winds up to 30 miles per hour gusts to 50. that's the scene at the golden gate bridge. temperatures are in the 50s with the gusty winds. it's storming outside. highways 50s, 60s. rain through wednesday. ,,,,,,,,
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donald trump held his first solo press conference as president. it's kind of hard to characterize the press conference. words fail me. how about cnn? >> it was unhinged. >> okay, jake, nice try, okay, but that's the line fake media. okay, what do his friends over at fox news say? >> all righty then. >> nice try. very funny. okay, what did fox news really say? >> wow. all righty then. >> stephen colbert is on a role. well done. >> yeah. >> you never thought you'd see jim carrey and the president of the united states even in the same sentence. all righty then. all right. more to come i'm sure.
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welcome back, coming up in this half hour, former members of the u.s. women's gymnastic team allege they were sexually abused by their team's doctor. they speak for the first time with "60 minutes." we have a preview. plus, secret messaging apps are reportedly being used in washington to leak sensitive information. ahead, the co-founder of confide will show us how his app can make messages self-destruct and what happens if you try to take a screen grab. >> that's going to be really interesting. time to show you some headlines. "the washington post" says the elaborate lifestyle of president trump's family is a logistical nightmare for security and the cost of protecting them come also at the expense of the taxpayer. later today, president trump will travel to mar a lago for the third straight weekend for a working get away. on saturday, eric trump and donald trump jr. will be in the united arab emirates for the opening of a trump brand golf resort. new york police will keep watch
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open the trump tower where miel hundred ya lives. and preparing for the possibility a trump golf course there will serve as a northern white house. "the post" says president trump's three mir a lago trips since the inauguration have probably cost the federal treasury about $10 million. the hill reports on president trump signing a bill undoing a coal mining rule. the second legislation he signed ending an obama era environmental regulation. the rule protected waterways from coal mining waste, part of regulations instituted in the final days of the obama administration that the republicans had planned to roll back. the miami herald reports on a recall of popular baby strollers because of a fall hazard. ritax recalled more than 700,000 strollers. the damaged part could cause car seats to fall out from the stroller. britax received 26 reports of injured children.
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the affected strollers were sold between may 2011 and this month. we have more information posted at cbs this morning.com. >> usa today says the unlimited data war among wireless carriers is heating up. verizon unveiled a one-line plan this week for $80 a month. sprint responded yesterday with a $50 plan. t mobile's deal cost $70. and at&t charges $100. there are wide differences between what those plans offer. >> got to look at the fine print. the pittsburgh post gazette says new york jets corner back daryl revise is accused of making terrorist threats. police say he scuffled with a number of men near a nightclub and his lawyer says revis feared for his safety and will turn himself in. he is a seven time pro bowl pick. interviewing several top gym nachts about sex abuse allegationsing against a former doctor for the u.s. gymnastics
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team. we first reported on this doctor last year. a lawsuit alleges he abused a young gymnast over seven years. naser's attorney told us no comment. now more than 60 women have come forward alleging the doctor abused them. the numbers are scary on that. sunday on 60 minutes former members of the u.s. women's gymnastic team speak out for the very first time. jessica howard was the national champion in rhythmic gymnastics. jeanette competed on the u.s. women's team. >> i was 15 years old. and i had a hip problem. a very severe hip problem. usa gymnastics suggested that i go to the ranch to work with their doctor. >> the caroly ranch is a mecca for elite gymnasts who have given up any sell blns of normal childhood to pursue their olympic dream. run by the legendary coaches,
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it's where enin members come r once a month for several days of intensive training. the girls stayed in cabins on the property and dr. naser would be there to provide medical treatment. >> he started massaging me. and he had asked me not to wear any underwear. and then he just continued to go into more and more intimate places. >> and when that happens, what was going through your head? >> i remember thinking something was off. but i didn't feel like i was able to say anything. because he was, you know, this very high-profile doctor and i was very lucky to be at the ranch working with him. >> did any of the other girls in your cabin talk to you about dr. naser? >> yes. the girls would say, yeah, he touches you funny. >> i remember being uncomfortable because of the area. but in my mind i was, like, if
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this helps, i'll do anything. >> did you ever complaint to anybody about it? >> no. >> why not? >> it was treatment. you don't complain about treatment. >> boy, john, this is very disturbing and unsettling to hear. >> yes. >> what can you tell us, number one, what kind of doctor was he? and it went on for nearly 30 years according to the report. why did it take so long? >> he's an opto pathic physician. he was the olympic team doctor. they trusted him. they called him larry. and some of them did have suspicions something was up but they really felt kind of afraid to come forward. it wasn't until the indy star did an investigative series last summer that reported that over the years there had been coaches, not dr. naser, but coaches within the usa gymnastic system where there were allegations of sexual abuse. they were reported to usa gymnastics and not immediately acted upon. when that came out, it gave these women the courage to come forward. you can only imagine how
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difficult it is. >> the attorneys representing these former gym nicht nast als suing usa gymnastics. there may be hundreds. >> as many of. >> as many as hundreds. what's the response of usa gymnastics? >> they say we didn't know until june of 2015. that's the first time we heard. we did an internal investigation. five weeks later, we told the fbi. they say they -- and they did. they relieved dr. naser of any duties. they say the fbi said don't interfere with our investigation. so they say that's the reason they didn't spread the news widely. then what happened was a year goes by. >> he's still practicing. >> he's still practicing in michigan, still seeing patients. it's not until more than a year later that it come also out widely and at that point, he goes, you know, everybody understands that -- what was happ happening. >> well, has dr. naser been charged with any crimes? >> dr. naser was arrested late
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last year on charges of sexual abuse of a child. i have to emphasize, he's saying i'm innocent. he's pled not guilty. he said this was a legitimate medical procedure. >> was that related to a gymnast he was charged with? >> it was related to actually somebody else that was not one of the three women i interviewed. >> kudos to the indy star. >> absolutely. >> yeah. >> john, thank you. >> and you can see john's full report sunday night on 60 minutes. he'll talk to the attorney representing more than 40 other women treated by dr. nassar. right here on cbs. on monday, the two women featured in our preview, plus an olympic medalist will join us here in studio 57 to share why they chose to come forward about this alleged abuse. apps are reportedly being used to leak information to journalists in washington. ahead, the co-creator of one app demonstrates how it deletes a message as soon as it's read.
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my wedding gift, let's call it an this maes am will self-destruct in 15 seconds. >> well, an app called confide promises to do something similar, minus the pyrotechnics. apps like confide are reportedly being used in washington to leak embarrassing or sensitive information to journalists. of our streaming network cbsn shares how it works.
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>> messages sent on confide are deleted leaving virtually no paper trail. that makes it very appealing at a time when people are afraid of not only being hacked but being swept up in trump's promised crackdown on leakers. >> i just received a new t received a new message. >> he didn't set out to make a leaking app but apparently many people use the confide. >> you unveil it with the wave of a finger. once read, it vanishes without a trace. >> it can't be cut, copied. it just disappears. >> taking a screen shot, for get about it. >> you can't go back. it notifies both the sender and a recipient that a screen shot was attempted. >> features like that are attractive to those who don't
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want to be outed. >> any newsworthy hack, leak, vulnerability of digital communication leads to a corresponding spike in our usage and engagement. you can't hack or leak something that no longer exists. >> on thursday president trump vowed to prosecute leakers. it's not known if messaging apps like confide and others were used in classified leaks. >> they're violating the law if they're revealing that information through any means. whether it's through an e-mail. >> kerry cordero, a former national security lawyer said there will not totally protect the leakers. >> sometimes these apps give users a false confidence that
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they will never be able to be traced, and alto the communication in this particular app might disappear, that doesn't mean that user is necessarily not able to be traced in any way. >> he says he wants all confide users to act lawfully. that's especially true for those who work in government and finance where disclosure is highly regulated. >> how many are trying to get confide right now. >> you know what broad says? think about this. when bob woodruff was interviewing deep throat in a conversation, it was in a parking lot. it's just up to the journalist. you're not going just get a document. >> what about pictures? >> you can get pictures.
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itse itself-destructs. >> thank you, vlad. >> it's a good name. the sudden break in the case of a murdered victim. ahead, what the police used to track down the,, >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by folgers. the best part of waking up is folgers in your cup.
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this is a time lapsed view of the majestic sunrise over manhattan on this friday morning. look at the color, guys. the sun painted the eastern sky a brilliant red. >> that's not what it looked like when i woke up. >> well, that's why we have to show it to you now. you can't appreciate it. >> thank you so much. a snowboarder went down a
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mountain in switzerland. his helmet camera posted the triggered avalanche. it did sweep him down the mountain. the snowboarder survived, got back up, and continued down the slope. >> you know, anthony, we'll fwib you all the sunshine you need. >> you are my sunshine. president trump's white house news conference was one of a kind. scott pelley joins us with the news questions that are still out there. it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of
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let's take a trip to la plata, colombia. this is boris calvo. that's pepe. boris doesn't just grow good coffee, boris grows mind-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm to grow even better coffee and invest in his community, which makes his neighbor, gustavo, happy. that's blanca. yup, pepe and blanca got together. things happen. all this for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee. packed with goodness. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history
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monitoring water levels at the anderson good morning, it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. as rain hits the bay area, officials in morgan hill are monitoring water levels at the anderson reservoir. if the reservoir spills over there's concern a potential flooding at nearby coyote creek. this morning san francisco is holding a public workshop on background checks for ridesharing companies which rely on third party checks involving names and social security numbers. stick around; we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,
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it is 7:57. there's traffic to worry about. in the richmond/san rafael bridge area, we have a problem here for a while now. this is after an earlier crash delays people on to the bridge here.
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as you can see, traffic backed up all the way through regatta boulevard. now, there is a new crash at harbor way blocking the left lane affecting your route on to the bridge. how's it looking on the bridge? 37 miles per hour along the way so expect some slowdowns an give yourself extra time. we're talking about a 25-minute drive between the maze and downtown across the span of the bay bridge. bart is on time. live hi-def doppler radar. it's been raining since 3 a.m. so now we have some ponding on the roads. hardest-hit areas coast to the north bay. three things to remember. we have heaviest rain now but on and off again rainfall all day. the biggest storm sunday night into monday. high winds everywhere except the north bay. wind gusts up to 50 miles per hour. red area is the big sur area. it's storming at the golden gate bridge temperatures are in the 50s. winds will continue to blow. rain sunday through wednesday. ,,
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's friday, february 17th, 2017. welcome back to cbs "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead, including deconstructing president trump's 77-minute news conference. "cbs evening news" anchor scott kelly is in studio 57 to help us do just that. here is today's eye opener at 8:00. president trump's first solo news conference at the white house was an unprecedented act of accusations and exaggeration. president trump tried to personally take control of the news cycle. >> russia is a rouse. russian is a rouse. >> he called the justice
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department to open a criminal investigation into what the president referred to as illegal leaks. >> i think he was grabbing the wheel. he wants to be back in control. >> did he look like he was in control? >> to the people who love him, he looked absolutely like he was in control, tweaking the noses of the press in there, a man in control of all the things his administration has done. >> where are you from? >> bbc. >> another beauty. >> impartial, free and fair. >> yeah, sure. just like cnn. >> the cnn reporter did fight back. >> just because the attack of fake news and attacking our network, i just want to ask you, sir -- >> i'm changing it from fake news to very fake. >> if that doesn't work he might have to ratchet it up to very, very toast ramost, fake news. i'm gayle king with norah
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o'donnell and anthony mason. charlie is off and recovering very nicely. thank you very much for asking. donald trump's first solo news conference. president trump said reports of chaos at the white house are wrong. in his words, this administration is running like a fine-tuned machine. >> in the last two weeks he lost his nominee for secretary of labor and forced out his national security adviser, making him the shortest serving national security adviser in history. trump was also defeated on his executive order of immigration in court. he called the 77-minute news conference on short notice and delivered a heated defense of his administration. >> the press, honestly, is out of control. the level of dishonesty is out of control. the leaks are absolutely real. the news is fake. >> it seems there's a disconnect there. information coming from those leaks are real then how can the stories be fake? >> the report something fake.
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people see television, they watch. they read newspapers. they don't know if it's true or false because they're not involved. i'm involved. i've been involved with this stuff all my life. >> you mentioned the spy vessel off the coast of the united states. >> not good. >> ballistic missile test that many interpreted as a violation. >> not good. >> as an agreement. >> not good. >> is putin testing you, do you believe, sir? >> no. i think putin probably assumes he can't make a deal with me anymore because politically it would be unpopular for a politician to make a deal. i can believe i'm saying i'm a politician. >> you said you have the biggest margin since ronald reagan with 306 electoral vote. in fact, president obama got 365. >> i'm talking republican. >> george h.w. bush 426 when he won as president. so why should americans -- >> i was given that information. i don't know. i was just given -- we have a very, very big margin. >> my question is, why should americans trust you, when you've
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accused information they've received as being fake when you're provided -- >> i was given that information. >> the president also said that the country's problems are not his fault because, quote, to be honest, i inherited a mess. less than 5% unemployment, incomes were rising and the economy was adding jobs. >> scott kelly handled yesterday's special report on president trump's news conference. he joins us now, bright and early in the morning. >> great to be with you, as always. it was quite an afternoon. i was watching your coverage. when you interviewed him before he became president, you said something to him like, you know, donald trump, if you're elected, running the country is not going to be like running a company and he said, we'll see. what is it we are seeing? >> well, you know, i don't think he's mad at the media. >> you don't? >> i think he's mad at not being boss anymore. any president comes in, and he has to answer to the public. he has to answer to the congress. he has to answer to the courts.
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and the only thing donald trump has done in his life is run a private family company. i asked him in that same interview, who tells you no. stumped him. he could not come up with a name of anybody who tells him no. but now as president, one of the most constrained jobs in the world, all day long people are saying, yes, sir, mr. president. but you can't do that. >> news conference yesterday, scott, he had it against the advice of his top advisers. >> there are some things that the president can do. and that is call a news conference any time he wants to. we were all scrambling to get on the air because that was a completely unexpected and unannounced thing. but, again, this is what the founders had in mind when they created the system of checks and balances. they wanted the president, the congress and the courts to be mutually constrained. donald trump isn't the boss anymore. he's the apprentice. and he doesn't like that.
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>> he has already been constrained by the judiciary in terms of his executive order on immigration. he most likely -- we haven't seen yet what the legislative branch will do. you have republicans in control of the legislative branch. what is the ownous on republicans? >> mr. trump tweeted something this morning that i just think perfectly captures what he has yet to learn about being president. he said the obamacare repeal and replace is, quote, moving fast, end quote. well, this is a sixth of the american economy. it's $3 trillion. >> health care, yeah. >> i'm sure it seems like it's moving fast when you haven't shown it to anyone. but when they roll this out, some significant amount of the public is going to say, well, that's not what we had in mind. and the congress is going to say, mr. president, thank you for your suggestion. it won't be moving fast. and i think this will continue
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to dawn on the president as he moves forward. >> the president insisted yesterday that his administration is a fine-tuned machine. do you think he convinced the american public of that? >> well, i don't think so. the evidence just isn't there. and it reminds me of a wonderful quote from harry truman, talking about his successor, dwight eisenhower. eisenhower, of course, was the last president we had, who had no political experience. and truman said poor ike. he's going to say do this and do that, and nothing is going to happen. it won't be a bit like the army. >> president of the united states, yet he keeps bring iingp hillary clinton's name. >> running against her yesterday, wasn't he? fascinating sbl what do you make of that? when will that stop, do you think? >> never. he needs a foil to push against. so, hillary clinton is that foil in some statements. the media is that foil very,
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very often. he needs a villain to be able to push against, to blame these constraints that he's feeling on somebody outside of his own inner circle. >> the president currently has a national security adviser. it's not his permanent one. he wanted vice admiral, 40 years served in the navy, navy s.e.a.l., who publicly turned down the president of the united states, his commander in chief. >> a military officer essentially. >> extraordinary. >> quite extraordinary. >> who is being reported that he told friends he didn't want to be involved. it was like a turd sandwich except he used the other word. family matters and financial matters is why he said he turned it down. >> but major garret said he was not given the authority to put his own team together. >> his own staff, yeah. >> earlier this week, the general in charge of u.s. special operations forces all around the world, the navy
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s.e.a.l.s, delta force, top terrorist fighters said, quote, the government is in terrible turmoil. i hope they straighten it out soon because we're a nation at war. >> one thing that's interesting, scott, part of the trump campaign was to advertise him as a successful businessman but i think a lot of businessmen would look at the way the administration is running right now and say it's not actually very business-like. >> norah was making a point before we were on the air that the trump organization is not a public company. so, he never had to answer to a board of directors. >> yes. >> he never had to answer to anyone. and so in terms of business, we really don't know how mr. trump ran the trump organization. but we can certainly believe that he was not used to having anyone tell him no. >> you had been there yesterday, what would you have asked him? >> wow! great -- >> yeah. >> i have to take -- i have to say the press corps did a wonderful job. and i also have to say good for
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the president. >> yeah. >> good for the president. >> i agree. >> he walked out there and took questions from all comers. and it was like it was never going to end. and he called on people like our major garret, who he knew were going to ask the most difficult questions. so, absolute credit to the president for that. i have to say. >> i agree. and he called on everyone. almost everyone. it was a long press conference. >> he nearly wore them out. >> which is what he did during the campaign, too. >> true. >> did that during the campaign. >> scott pelley, always good to have you here. >> good to be here. thank you. monday marks one month since donald trump's inauguration. the tv drama "homeland" includes a love story that is captivating fans and the actors. ahead, we go behind the scenes and learn why claire danes says it's very dangerous to
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a florida murderas a florida murder case takes police on a journey hundreds of miles. >> i'm erin moriarty, "48 hours." a doctor is savagely murdered in florida. police suspect her husband but got an air-tight alibi. then a tip leads to suspects 1100 miles away. that story, coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ hi, i'm frank. i take movantik for oic, opioid-induced constipation. had a bad back injury, my doctor prescribed opioids which helped with the chronic pain, but backed me up big-time. tried prunes, laxatives, still constipated... had to talk to my doctor. she said, "how long you been holding this in?" (laughs) that was my movantik moment. my doctor told me that movantik is specifically designed for oic and can help you go more often.
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don't take movantik if you have a bowel blockage or a history of them. movantik may cause serious side effects, including symptoms of opioid withdrawal, severe stomach pain and/or diarrhea, and tears in the stomach or intestine. tell your doctor about any side effects and about medicines you take. movantik may interact with them causing side effects. why hold it in? have your movantik moment. talk to your doctor about opioid-induced constipation. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
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don't ever let anyone tell you you can't change. that is what life is. change. it's not some magic trick. it's your will. your thoughts become your words become your actions become your reality. change is your destiny. now go chase it.
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police investigating a murder often look at spouse as the first suspect but in the murder investigation of the florida doctor, police say her husband had an airtight alibi. police tracked down the killers. how the journey would take them on a wild ride. >> i think any time there's a beautiful successful woman who's murdered that's sort of what society pays attention to for better or worse. >> the mysterious murder of teresa receivers a high-profile doctor who practiced holistic
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murder was a huge story for these two reporters shoo she was a spit fierks wearing 4-inch heels walking around. >> ladies, remember walking in a room and turning heads? >> she's telegenic and energetic. she's funny. >> in august 2015 the doctor cut short family vacation in new york with her husband mark and their two daughters. >> she was sort of the bread winner and he was the office manager at her prark it is and he helped raise the kids. >> dr. receivers flew home alone, planning to see patients the following morning. her medical assistant sandra hoskins became concerned when the doctor was late. >> it's 9:00, now it's 9:05, now it's 9:15. i said, where's the doctor. i was texting back and forth and no response called, no answer. >> 911, what is your emergency?
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>> teresa's husband mark asked a friend to check on her. >> he's out of town and she's dead on the floor and there's a hammer at the side and she was bashed in the back of the head. >> do you know how many times she was hit? >> 17? >> investigators questioned mark receivers but he had an alibi. remember, he was with his kids on vacation, but nearly two months after teresa sievers was murdered, a stunning break in the case. >> the sheriff gets up there and tells us simply the name of the first suspect and then about an hour later he calls us in again and says we've now picked up a second suspect. it was so shocking. >> shocking because the suspects lived in missouri, 1,100 miles away, and key evidence was found in a gps. this case as investigators were about to find out has as many twists and turns as the missouri
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river. >> erin moriarity is with us this morning. erin, good morning. what's the connection of the suspects to the case. what was their motive? >> well, i mean the motive is a little up in the air. there's been no trial so there may be more evidence. it does turn out that husband who has an airtight albie did grow up there and did know one of the suspects. they say murder for hire. but the real evidence is why he would want his wife dead. as you all kind of remarked about the 17 times, this was a savage murder. and then just to throw in one of these weird twists, okay, that suspect appeared to be very obsessed with the todoctor's husband, so much so he started dressing and looking like him. >> that's creepy. >> i know. when i was doing interviews, do you remember the movie "single
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white female?" that's what this is like. >> that's just horrible. >> erin, thank you. >> thank you. >> you can see erin's full report on "48 hours, eleven hundred miles to murder." here on cbs. ahead, how many restaurants made a financial sacrifice in a day without immigrants protest against president trump's immigration policies. plus, the remarkable half court shot and big surprise that had this woman celebrating. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪
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it is up and it is good. >> you might think erin tobins. one-armed shot won the con taft would have been the high light of her night. you would be wrong. she got a huge surprise when her boyfriend who's described as a dunkin' donuts mass kot turned up to propose. she said yes. he said she
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he never doubted her answer or that she'd make the dunk. ahead, the across the country today, demonstrators are skipping work to oppose the trump good morning, it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego. across the country today demonstrators are skipping work to oppose the trump administration's agenda. the largest protest in the bay area is expected to be at 555 california street in san francisco which is partially owned by president trump. steve glazer is expect to introduce two bills to eliminate or reduce the impact of bart strikes. one bill would land labor stoppages entirely. the other would allow the agency to bring in replacement workers in the event of a strike. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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good morning. it's 8:27. let's do a bridge check throughout the bay area starting with the richmond/san rafael bridge toll plaza. you see that backup there beyond the raindrops? that's from earlier crashes still impacting your commute so give yourself extra time. and moving over to the bay bridge toll plaza, you have a 25-minute drive between the maze and downtown also high winds to worry about and across the span of the san mateo bridge traffic smooth between hayward and foster city. moving to mass transit, bart has a 10-minute delay systemwide due to the rain and here to talk about it is
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roberta. >> it's live, it's our hi-def doppler radar. we have been featuring it since about 3 a.m. when the rain pushed into the bay area. the light green is the lighter rainfall, the yellow is a moderate and orange is a heavy downfall -- pour that continues to fall in the north bay. up to an inch of rain so far heaviest this morning. >> see the blue area? that's where we have a wind advisory in place just about everywhere except san francisco and the north bay. winds to 30 gusts to 50. you see the live weather camera looking towards the golden gate bridge. the flag is on the fly it is a sloppy morning commute. temperatures currently are in the 50s. later today 50s near 60 for daytime highs. extended forecast, lingering showers early saturday morning. otherwise the bulk of the day dry through sunday afternoon. more rain sunday night, monday through wednesday. ,,,,,,,,
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♪ ♪ ♪ all of me >> grammy host james cordon brought his parents backstage before the show. that's mom and dad there, turned into an impromptu performance with grammy award legend john legend. ♪ all of me i give my all to you you're my end and my beginning even when i'm ♪ >> malcolm and margaret cordon got to enjoy vip access to the grammys sunday night, also celebrating their 45th wedding anniversary. so great. john legend is so fun. so are the cordons. >> a good sax player. >> you see where james got his
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sense of humor because mom and dad like to play, too. >> that's one of my favorite songs of all times. >> you think about the meaning. i think about the meaning behind it. never, ever gets old. welcome back to "cbs this morning" this half hour. fallout from immigrants protest nearly one in four workers in the restaurant business are foreign born. bon apetite editor -- what you reading, adam? plus "homeland" is filmed in the united states again and we take you, yes, to the set. ahead, why the show is part of the real world intelligence community's game. headlines from around the global. bloomberg reports on the flu vaccine as the virus sweeps across the country. cdc says this year's flu shot
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had an effectiveness level of 48%. that may seem low but is better than some recent years. last year was 47%. the year before that, it was just 19%. britain's guardian reports on a 64-year-old woman in spain. what did she do? she successfully gave birth to twins. her doctor said the babies, a boy and a girl, are perfectly healthy. they were delivered via c-section thursday sheechlt used ivf treatment to become pregnant and the woman reportedly had her first child when she was 58. in a span of six years, in the age of 64, she has had three children. >> oh, my gosh. what's going through your mind right now? >> i want to see what she looks like. i can't imagine at 64. >> let me tell you, i've had three kids, including twins. it is not easy, man. >> imagine 64. >> no. >> i don't even want to be a father at 64. >> not a first-time father. >> or not with infants. you want to be a father. >> yes.
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yeah. thank you. i love my children. i love you all. >> you have wonderful children, yes. >> i'm not abandoning you. >> we knew what you meant, anthony. but just in case the kids were watching. >> yes. and usa today says delta is taking a fresh look at an old idea, serving free meals in coach starting this spring on cross-country flights where delta faces competition. u.s. carrier stopped serving free food to u.s. economy class passengers years ago. i think this will keep the coach class -- it's a long flight. >> i hated tw ed when they took away. >> and i can't make it on a bag of pretzels. hundreds of restaurants across the country will reopen this morning, after shutting down for the day without immigrants protest. everything from food trucks to fine dining closed yesterday to demonstrate the importance of immigrants to their businesses and to the economy. restaurants employ more than 2 million foreign born workers,
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including 45% of the chefs in the u.s. bon appetit's magazine's editor in chief, adam rappaport is with us. >> great cover. >> thank you very much. >> really like it. great story. >> let's talk about the economic concerns that could tighten immigration, particularly to the restaurant business. >> like i said if you've ever been in a restaurant kitchen you'll hear more spanish, korean or chinese than you will english. and immigrants, as you know, they are the backbone of the restaurant industry, cooking your food, clearing your table. they are who make restaurants go. without them, restaurants don't go. >> i love your first line that speaks to that, adam. if you've ever spent -- your letter from the editor. if you've ever spent any time in a restaurant kitchen you know that workplace diversity isn't some hr initiative. it's just the way things are. >> yeah. >> talk if you will a little bit
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about what the importance -- what immigrants add to the community in the restaurant business more than just cooking. >> but it's the fabric of our food scene in america. and i really believe that we have been most diverse in amazing food scene in the world. in italy you're eating italian food three times a day. i'm going to italian, thai, maybe a steakhouse. the reason we have a diversity of food is we have diversity of people cooking that food. for food lovers it's not a political issue. it's just something we should not take for granted but we should celebrate. and it's wonderful. and let's recognize that and salute that and find a way to sort of nurture it instead of crack down on it. >> is that what the protests were about is this. >> republican, democrat, whatever you are. i love this great mexican joint. who do you think is cooking the food at the great mexican joint
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you love? >> today's revenue is a lot for some restaurants. how big of a sacrifice is that to give up? >> you could be pulling in $10,000, $15,000 in revenue, depending on the restaurant. in d.c., very big name restauranteurs, people making reservations a month in advance. that's a big statement by someone like jose, who shut them down. he kept one open for workers who felt like they needed to work a shift or local customers who wanted to go to one of his restaurants but if you're going to make a statement, you make a sacrifice. you work on the line in a restaurant kitchen you're making $11 an hour. it's hard work. >> all right. adam, always good to have you here. >> thank you so much for having me, guys. the cast and crew of the spy thriller "homeland" gives us a sneak peek behind the scenes without giving too much away. >> "homeland" has come home to new york city. we're here on location.
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you can see claire danes shooting a scene right behind me. i'm alex wagner.
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♪ thank god. i was afraid you weren't picking up. i got a call from the fbi. >> what's going on?
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>> the van that delivered the bom bomb. >> mom, where's my crayons? >> ooh, that's a preview of this weekend's episode of "homeland." the sixth season of the critically acclaimed espionage series is once again set in the united states after a couple of seasons abroad. alex wagner got a rare, behind the scenes look at the set right here in new york city. alex, good morning. >> good morning, norah. we headed to chinatown in lower manhattan where the cast and crew were busy, filming an episode. with a greek orthodox church as the backdrop. >> and action! and cut. >> new york city. how has it been? >> yeah. the dreamiest. yeah. >> after spend iing the last fe seasons abroad, the spy thriller "homeland" is refocusing on -- well, the homeland.
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>> morning, everybody. sorry i'm late. >> claire danes' carrie mathison has left the cia for a nonprofit legal aid center. >> she was pretty damaged by what was asked of her. and grew to be calloused and cynical and realized that she needed to take this different tact. so she's done that. >> carrie, thank you for coming. >> of course. >> carrie is also secretly advising the president-elect. >> reach out to the president and make sure he knows you're unconvinced. >> major new character, playing the role of disrupter. >> we decided that our president-elect would be female. >> i will not have my agenda mischaracterized and undermined before i even take office. >> but she is a composite of the three major personalities of this last election cycle. so, she's a little rogue. >> problem not so much destroying isis, madam president as it is --
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>> madam president-elect. >> also working with the incoming president in an official capacity is carrie's long-time mentor, a top deputy at the cia. >> mandy, how is saul doing this season? >> doing well. good lord. there's nothing i can tell you without getting in trouble. >> understanding the stakes of the intelligence community on screen and in real life. >> in your experience, you interface a lot with the actual intelligence gathering agencies in washington. >> yes. >> how has that changed your perception of who these people are that are fighting the war on terror? >> i meet them, have dinner with them, spend hours talking with them. i e-mail them. i have a relationship with them. they are concerned beyond imagination both in the fictional world and in the real world. >> "homeland" is a show with many plot twists and turns. even though we're on set we can't show you everything.
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claire danes, carrie mathison, is shooting a scene behind me. but we can't show you the other character because it's a major plot spoiler. there's a discussion happening in hollywood about the responsibility of the media in portraying muslims. >> yes. >> where do you sit on that in terms of this show's responsibility? >> i sit right in the middle of t i'm part of the responsibility. i hope to be part of the cure. i am, without a doubt, part of the problem. we have to work very hard, and we do, as attending to the muslim islamic communities concerns about how they're portrayed in the media and everywhere imagined. we are one of those portrayers and we must up our game in that area. and we are. >> this is it? >> this is it. >> carrie's most lasting relationship has been with saul. romantic entanglements have not ended well. for nicholas brody, ibrahim and
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peter quinn. >> it's very dangerous to date carrie mathison. >> apparently so. >> you will most likely end up in a morgue. she's a bit of a black widow, but maybe it was worth it. >> people really want to see quinn and carrie. >> yeah. >> they want the little heart over the happy ending. >> yeah. that's not the "homeland" way. >> you saved me. >> yes. >> i always wish for a little domestic bliss, you know. a little easy going happiness for my girl, carrie. because she's earned it. she deserves, you know, a reprieve. >> amen. >> yeah. >> "homeland" often finds itself in the crosshairs of current events. this season is no different. danes says to expect an examination of the tension between fear and national security. >> must be hard to get dates if
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quite often they end up in the morgue. any dates. >> put that in the profile. looking for live people. but that's carrie mathison. >> such a good show. >> ends up dead after the date. >> so fun to be there. >> i bet. >> i bet. >> such terrific actors. >> yes. >> they're leaders in the field. >> thank you. thank you, alex. "homeland",,,,
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be sure to enjoy anthony on his sixth day and alex for cbs morning saturday. we take a look back at what happened this week. >> this administration is running like a fine tuned machine. i inherited a mess.
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>> the public doesn't believe you anymore. >> it's not a fine tuned machine. obviously the order on immigration has been held up, the laws regarding the national security adviser. >> i do get good ratings. >> significant dysfunction in the national security apparatus. >> general flynn had mislead the vice president and others. >> general flirn's resignation is not the end of the story. >> water managers are working hard to lower the level of the lake. >> it's stressful and rapidly changing. >> the investigation remains on who ordered the hit. >> he and his brother had a complicated relationship. >> the ship is over the verizon. the pentagon says it doesn't believe it poses any threat it's much easier for me to be tough on russia but then we will not make the deal. >> for fans, this is a game they'll never forget. >> they have said harrison
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ford's plane did not land on the runway. >> the runway is clearly marked. >> it was an accident that beyonce stopped. >> adele won five grammys while beyonce only won two. adele then announced she's pregnant with triplets. >> 25, adele. >> hard to except this award. the "lemonade" album is the winner. >> it was beyonce who stole the show. >> you had such a fan girl moment about beyonce. >> i met beyonce. i met the queen. ♪ because i'm happy >> i did not try to match the penguin this morning but i do think that's funny. >> welcome to antarctica.
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>> i'll break this open. smell that afrmt it's really good air like before humans messed up the atmosphere. >> it smells like ice. >> magic johnson enterprises is a billion-dollar industry. >> i didn't know that. >> did they take you seriously at first? >> no. >> you're basketball point guard. what do they know. >> no. >> they're taking you seriously now. >> yeah. >>you're still looking for a valentine, may i say join the club. the struggle is rear. places to meet people are the bar, the laundromat. >> are you at the laundromat? >> at my age i want a guy who has a laundromat. >> if men help with the laundry, you have better sex. >> that's a different story. >> and all that matters on "cbs this morning."
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>> we're getting into dirty laundry now. ,,,,,,,,
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so they can clear out debris cloggi good morning. today crews will slow the flow of water through the oroville damaso they can clear out debris clogging the spillway. nearly 200,000 people downstream from the dam were evacuated this week when lake oroville flooded and overflowed into the emergency spillway. this morning, san francisco is holding a public workshop on background checks for ridesharing companies. unlike taxis, companies like lyft and uber currently rely on third party checks involving names and social security numbers. assemblyman canton chiu of san jose is hoping california will dump or alter daylight saving time. he wants his legislative colleagues to approve a ballot measure. if passed, state lawmakers would be able to get rid of or
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change daylight saving time. stay with us; weather and traffic in just a moment. ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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good morning. happy friday. let's start your day off right. get to you work or wherever you're going on time starting with the richmond/san rafael bridge toll plaza. backed up to marina way due to earlier crashes. slow across the span of the bridge. here's a look at the bay bridge toll plaza.
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high winds across the span so give yourself extra time. bart is delayed 10 minutes systemwide due to rain. roberta, how much longer will this wet weather be? >> at least 120 minutes. so for two more hours -- [ laughter ] >> let's try to get specific now. for two more hours, we'll see periods of heavy rain. good morning, everyone. it's live. it's our hi-def doppler radar picking up anywhere from light to moderate to heavy rain throughout the tri-valley. three things i want you to remember today on and off again rainfall throughout the day. another storm sunday night through monday will be wetter and unsettled weather through wednesday. high wind advisory for the whole blue area just about the entire bay area except the north bay. already has been picking up winds at 50-mile-per-hour gusts. red is big sur. we have a very sloppy golden gate bridge. temperatures are in the 50s. winds blow. rain sunday night through wednesday. ,,
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wayne: (imitating chewbacca) you got the car! - holy cow! wayne: you got the big deal! you won, now dance! ooh! cat gray's over there jamming the tunes. vamos a aruba! let's play smash for cash. - go big or go home! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. who wants to make a deal? let's see. the bee, come here, bee. rebecca the bee, everybody have a seat, have a seat, sit down, sit down. rebecca, how are you? - i'm great, thank you. wayne: what do you do? - i'm a finance manager. wayne: welcome to the show. i have-- i have this for you. tiffany? jonathan: it's the "let's make a deal" vault.

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