tv CBS This Morning CBS April 11, 2017 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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any point and temperatures in the 60s. >> you all have such cute pets. i have to get one. my daughter has been asking. >> let's do it! >> he is getting one! good morning. it is tuesday april 11th. 2017. welcome to cbs this morning. an 8-year-old boy and his teacher are killed in an elementary school shooting. another student is wounded. we're in san bernardino, a city rocked again by unthinkable violence. the secretary of state heads to moscow after saying russia failed its responsibilities in syria. we'll talk to leeian panetta about what is at stake. united airlines ceo defends crew members after a passenger is violently dragged off an overbooked flight. another man sitting one row up describes how it all went down. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's eyeopener, your world in 90 seconds.
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>> the guy just walked in and he just started shooting. >> beyond description. just tore up inside. >> this is just crazy. i've never seen anything like this. >> a school shooting in california leaves three dead. >> it's going to take time for our heads, our hearts to heal. >> if you gas a baby, if you put a barrel bomb in to innocent people, you will have a response from this president. >> if we're going to respond to every single human rights violation inside syria, we're proposing to invade syria. >> alabama governor robert bentley resigned after pleading guilty to two charges tied to allegations he tried to cover up an affair. >> just about everybody looked at this and said this is crazy. he should have resigned long ago. >> chicago police are investigating after a judge was found shot dead outside his home.
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>> we will hold this killer accountable. >> the ceo of united airlines is backing his company's employees calling a video of a passenger being pulled off a flight. >> united airlines has problems. it rocked from the top. >> in east texas, a severe thunderstorm swept across the region with heavy rain, strong wind and hail. >> a woman got quite the scare on a carnival ride in france. she slips out of her harness. hanging on by just her feet. >> a meteor got many people's attention as it streaked across the skies of southern california. >> did you guys see that? >> and all that matters, a turkish airline crew helped deliver a baby onboard a flight. >> and in keeping with the times, the baby was dragged by the plane by security. it was overbooked. >> on cbs this morning. >> fly the friendly skies united airlines promises. >> a video goes viral of authorities dragging a passenger down the aisle. >> this is what the ceo tweeted. i apologize for having to reaccommodate these customers. reaccommodate? it's like we reaccommodated el chapo out of mexico. welcome to "cbs this
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morning," gayle king is off. alex wagner joining us. welcome. >> good to be here. >> san bernardino, california, is grieving again after a terror attack. hundreds of children walked hand in hand yesterday as they were evacuated from their school. police want to know why a man walked into a special needs classroom and shot a teacher dead. he also killed one student before turning the gun on himself. >> police say the teacher was the gunman's estranged wife and the students were not targets. but hundreds of upset parents who rushed to the xhool to wait for hours to see their children. john blackstone is outside north park elementary school in san bernardino which is closed after the shooting. what a tough morning there. >> reporter: it is a difficult
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among here in san bernardino. a second student who was caught by a stray bullet in the c classroom is in the hospital this morning in stable condition. the couple was married in january. investigators are trying to find out what happened then and yesterday's violence. >> we have two victims out here with trauma. >> reporter: police say the 53-year-old man entered his wife's classroom. >> it's my understanding he entered the office and he said he was there to drop something off with his wife. >> reporter: according to authorities his estranged wife was his target. he aimed a .357 revolver at the 53-year-old and she was killed and shot were two students standing behind her.
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worried parents waited hours to be reunited with their children. the 8-year-old was air lifted to the hospital and a 9-year-old boy is in stable condition. the classroom had 15 students. this 7-year-old girl is one of them. >> i saw blood across the room. >> reporter: what did you do? >> i ran as fast as i can. >> reporter: teaching assistant was there in the class. >> the gun was out by the time any of us looked up. >> reporter: police say anderson then killed himself. >> i'm told he does have a criminal history that has to do with weapons charges and a domestic violence past and possible drug charges in there as well. >> reporter: the two were married in late january, but they were recently estranged. anderson praised his wife on facebook less than two months ago. >> wees
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stranged. we don't know the reason. >> reporter: smith's pastor says she was a teacher who had a heart for children. crisis counselors will be available today for students, families and staff. >> terrifying day for parents over there. thanks, john. secretary of state rex tillerson is on his way to moscow for the first high level talks in russia. he did not offer any evidence. putin spoke after meeting with italy's president. margaret is in moscow. good morning. >> good morning. secretary tillerson said world leaders all agree that the reign of the assad family is swiftly coming to an end. but leaders in moscow disagree. >> it is unclear whether russia failed to take this obligation seriously or russia is
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incompetent. but this distinction doesn't much matter to the dead. >> reporter: hours ahead of his trip to moscow, secretary of state rex tillerson criticized russia for continuing to support bashar al assad despite recent gas attacks. >> russia has really aligned itself with the assad regime, the iranians and hezbollah is at a long term alliance that serves russia's interests. >> reporter: this week the white house signaled that president trump may take further military action. >> the answer is that if you gas a baby, if you put a barrel bomb in to innocent people, i think you can -- you will see a response from this president. >> reporter: the kremlin condemned the u.s. attack and said it damaged already fragile u.s. relations. a blow to president trump's campaign promise to improve them. >> you know when you think about it, wouldn't it be nice if we actually did get along with russia? >> reporter: the change in rhetoric is striking.
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tillerson will urge russia to stop propping up assad and prevent further use of chemical weapons and raise concerns about election meddling. a former oil executive, rex tillerson has extensive experience in russia. president putin once awarded him the order of friendship but now that he's america's top diplomat that, only goes so far. the u.s. strike may complicate achieving any of his goals. russian international affair council director. >> it's become more difficult for tehran. it is even more now difficult for putin as well because, you know, he has to show that he's a strong leader and that he will not yield under the u.s. pressure. >> and just to give you a sense of the anticipation around secretary tillerson's meeting, it's on all the main papers . take a look at this cover. it says it all. trump and putin go head-to-head over syria.
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>> thanks, margaret. president trump meets with top military leaders to night. he is telling two other key advisors to stop fighting. the president said nothing about that controversy yesterday when new supreme court justice neil gorsuch was sworn in. the ceremony marked the end of a battle to fill that high court. major garrett is at the white house with the high level truce among his top advisors. major, good morning. >> good morning. all quiet in the west wing. that's the public line anyway. for the first time in weeks it appears to be valid. president trump through the chief of staff ordered his top warring advisors populous steve bannon and multimillionaire son-in-law jared kushner to cool it and cool it now. >> and i got it done in the first 100 days. that's even nice. >> reporter: the rose garden swearing in of supreme court justice neil gorsuch offered a tranquil counter point to weeks of white house infighting that president trump ordered to end. >> i always heard that the most
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important thing that a president of the united states does is appoint people. >> reporter: the gorsuch is over ideology, access and clout. >> what is the president's perspective on the ability, the current ability of his senior advisors to work as a team? >> he's very confident in that. >> reporter: late last week, reince priebus ordered a face-to-face truce between the two senior advisors. matters came to a head when bannon opposed the missile strikes in syria and kushner supported them. bannon has steadily lost ground to kushner in recent weeks. it started with a clumsy roll youst the travel ban executive order which federal courts blocked and the white house abandoned. then the obamacare repeal failed while bannon worked on negotiations and mr. trump removed him from the national security council. kushner is leading key white
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house task forces, traveling to iraq with the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and planning the visits and including the visit with president xi. >> my father speaks for himself. >> reporter: in an interview this morning ivanka trump, and senior advisor to the president down played the west wing drama. >> i do think we have a lot of different viewpoints at the table. but they're not at odds with one another. >> bannon sees kushner and allies as globalist democrats while kushner regards the bannon faction as harshly nationalist and bannon himself a bit vengeful. put this uneasy peace appears to be holding. one white house insider said it's between can't we all get along and don't tase me, bro. nora? >> that's a new one. all right, major. thank you. north korea called the u.s. reckless and warned of catastrophic consequence it's
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there is military action in the korean peninsula. the u.s. and south korea began joint military exercises in south korea yesterday. about 3700 military personnel including 2500 americans took part in the exercise. the u.s. navy sent an aircraft carrier and other ships off the korean peninsula saturday due to concerns over the north korea nuclear weapons program. if china decides to help that will be great, but if not we will solve the problem without them. >> alabama governor robert bentley resigned following a scandal involving an alleged affair with a top aide and accusations of anelaborate cover-up. thinks resignation came hours after state lawmakers started impeachment hearings against him. bentley pleaded guilty to campaign violations. they came to light during the investigation prompted by his alleged affair. our reporter is outside of the state capitol in montgomery. omar, good morning. >> good morning. last friday robert bentley said
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he would not resign. he did nothing illegal. what a difference a few days make. this morning he now has a criminal record and he is no longer in office. >> i have decided it is time for me to step down as alabama's governor. >> reporter: embroiled in scandal, now former governor robert bentley resigned from office. >> i've not always made the right choices. >> reporter: bentley stepped down after pleading guilty to two misdemeanor violations of campaign finance law. he will not serve any time behind bars, but has to pay thousands in fines, surrender thousands in campaign funds and will not be able to serve public office again. the charges are connected to an affair with a former staffer. both have denied having an affair, but a 130 page report from the house committee special council tells a different story.
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it includes text messages where he professes his love multiple times. in 2014 dianne bentley secretly recorded a conversation between bentley and mason. >> i know it's a difficult situation. >> reporter: all this drama led to a battle with his own republican state lawmakers who launched impeachment proceedings. hours after they started bentley resigned ending that process. the lieutenant governor was sworn into office shortly after bentley stepped down. >> i, the administration, will be open and it will be transparent and it will be honest. >> reporter: she is alabama's second female governor. as for bentley's plea agreement he has agreed not to take a retirement or receive other benefits for being a former
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governor and has to serve 100 hours of community service in his capacity as a physician. chicago investigators are looking for a motive this morning in the deadly shooting of a criminal court judge. a gunman killed the judge outside his home and a woman was also shot and taken to the hospital in serious condition. dean reynolds is at chicago police headquarters where detectives are learning more about the killer. >> reporter: good morning. the police are going over surveillance footage for clues that might lead them to the shooter. so far they've found no connection, though, between the gunman and his victims. >> respond. two people shot. >> reporter: police were called to the chicago home of the circuit court judge around 5:00 in the morning. an unknown suspect shot a female friend outside his house. the two often exercised together
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in the morning. after hearing the commotion the judge went to investigate and came face-to-face with the gunman who shot him four times. >> they exchanged words before he was fatally shot four times. at this time it does not appear the property was stolen from their person or residence. >> reporter: the 66-year-old's law career spanned four decades. in 2009 he reportedly ordered the man who killed four members of singer jennifer hudson's to be held without bond. his house was on the south side, an area that has become increasingly violent over the last five years. the judge had security cameras installed in his home. >> i feel scared. the neighbor is changing. you have a lot of break ins and burglaries going on. >> reporter: neighbors say they heard gunfire and then a women's voice screaming don't kill him. the judge died and his friend is
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expected to survive. >> you have our word we will not let his life be lost in veain ad we will hold the gunman accountable. >> reporter: the gunman fled off the shooting, but he may have had a car nearby. in the meantime the fbi is offering a $25,000 reward for information to solve this crime. >> all right. thank you so much. wells fargo's board is slamming two former executives for creating a culture that led to the fraudulent account scandal. they are clawing back an additional $75 million from the former ceo that oversaw the scandal. the two have been forced back to give back $136 million. among the largest in corporate history. last fall it was revealed 2 million checking and credit card accounts were opened without
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customer authorization and about 5,300 employees were fired. people in michigan are cleari cleaning up this morning after a possible tornado tore through the western part of the state. the wind ripped down trees and damaged building. the weather swept through texas bringing rain, hail, flash flooding and a possible tornado. in east texas damaging winds snapped trees. more dangerous storms could hit the state tomorrow. a new world series championship banner is flying high above wrigley field for the first time in more than a century. players took turns raising the banner before last night's home opener. the sellout crowd braved cold temperatures and a long rain delay to celebrate the first world series win since 1908. players paraded the championship trophy across the field for cheering fans. the night ended in another
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celebrati celebration. the cubs beat the dodgers 3-2 in a walkoff single. >> the cubs are going to be celebrating this for another 108 wins. they should. it was a big win. getting fake documents to call your pet a service animal can take less than a day. ahead, how impostures are giving service dogs a bad name. plus, where fraudsteres could receive fines and jail good tuesday morning from kpix. carry umbrellas today with a sprinkle or two or a passing light rain shower coming. temperatures mostly cloudy skies and into the 50s. later today, seasonal with cloud cover and into the 60s and seasonable wind, and unsettled weather with accumulation about to put -- about .25 inches of rain.
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testing. >> and we hear where president trump should go to alleviate interchange coming to highway-four at "balfour" road. for now, drivers have to stop at a signal - which can cause major backups during peak times. the last shelter to house victims of the coyote creek flooding - is now closed. more than 60 people slept at the "seven trees community center" - after losing their homes. mayor sam liccardo says 400 families still need stable housing. traffic and weather... in just a moment. ,,,,,,,, ,,,, whoa!
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did you guys see that? >> what appeared to be a meteor near san diego interrupted this woman's web chat last night. she told cbs news she saw the large fireball pop-up on her screen and thought it was coming for her because it was so close. a security camera also pointed at the night sky in southern california appeared to capture the streak of light. look at that. the american meteor society received hundreds of reports from people who saw it in california and arizona. the american immediator sociemeo knew it existed? >> and join the explorers club. >> two birds, one stone. welcome back to "cbs this morning." another fabulous space show is going on 400 million miles away.
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nasa put out the new photos of jupiter. the spacecraft did a fly by of the giant planet two weeks ago. one shows two regions in jupiter's atmosphere side by side. the hubble space telescope is taking spectacular new photos. jupster as close to earth as it can get right now. that makes it a good subject for the telescope that is in earth's orbit. >> here's a look at other big stories around the globe. president trump said that missile strike on syria proves his father is not in bed with the russian president. he was not intim datd by putin's talk of war. he said there would be no one harder than president trump if they "cross us." eric trump also said nep stichl a beautiful thing. saying that a family member is more likely to be more honest with the president. "the wall street journal" now says tesla tesla has only a tiny
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fraction. >> gm has a lot more cars. >> they do. tesla has the momentum though. >> "washington post" said regulators changed their minds about letting airline travelers use cell phones during flights. the head of the federal communications commission sided with pilots and flight attend ants who oppose the idea. he plans to dropt 4-year-old proposal. the "boston globe" reports the ceo of united airlines is defending employees after the forcible removal of a passenger from an overbooked flight. now the security officer who dragged the passenger off the plane in chicago was put on leave. in a letter to employees, a defiant united ceo said he emphatically stands behind them
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and commended them for going above and beyond to ensure we fly right. he said the company is committed to treating customers with respect and dignity. but he also accused the passenger of being disruptive and belligerent. chris is outside of washington, d.c. good morning. >> good morning. the ceo's letter to employees is not calming this controversy. it is what everyone is talk bchlgt united stock price is poised to take a hit this morning. it is a this
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video. >> i have a choice, i'll definitely not fly united. >> the department of transportation says airlines do have the right to bump passenger but they have to be compensated up to $1350. still dot plans to review what happened on this united flight. the chicago airport says it does not condone the behavior of the officer in the video. charlie? >> thank you so much, chris. >> i mean, i -- i -- it's really difficult to watch that video and what they did to that passenger. >> each layer of the story makes united's response that much more
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controversial, i think, when you see that video. asking. >> i assume the siceo would say both. >> okay. >> chris, thank you so much. recommendations from a government advisory panel out this morning suggests new screening guidelines for prostate cancer. u.s. preventive services task force says men age 55 to 69 should discuss the potential benefits and down sides of blood testing with their doctor. but there is no apparent benefit of screening for men 70 and older. he said the panel recommend nod screening. our doctor leads us a cancer senter from usc. he joins us from los angeles. good morning. >> good morning. >> so what caused this? >> there was a study in europe showing if you screen, there is a 20% drop in the death rate and 30% drop in what we call disease or disease that has spread. so new data caused them to shift the guidelines. in addition, there is a shift now that if you are diagnosed with prostate cancer, a third of
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men don't need to be treated and they could be followed with active surveillance. all that data together caused the united states preventive task force to shift the recommendation from a d to a c which means the benefits slightly outweigh the risks. >> is it possible? do we assume that most doctors will recommend against screening? >> i think it's recommending for screening now. so the assumption is hard to know. but clearly the data show that a doctor and a patient need to start to have to discussions at around age 50 based on family history and based on the value system of the patient whether they should undergo screening understanding the risks. so it really requires the discussion. >> is there a reliable way to tell which of these cancers may be deadly? >> well, a biopsy. when you look that biopsy, we know that some of them don't need to be treated. others can be very aggressive. so by looking under the microscope, you can know. that but right now we don't have a blood test that can do that. it requires a needle and a
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biopsy. >> now let's talk about breast cancer screening. a new letter published by the journal of american medical association acknowledge there's is a divide now among doctors about whether to get mammograms. >> it's further confusion. we're seeing now that guidelines are changing. and doctors are shifting in the direction of doing more testing. and so even though the data now are showing that maybe can you wait later until age 50 to do screening. they're doing screening earlier. i think doctors say, listen, more is probably better. but hopefully there is a discussion in the room with the patient and based on their values from the family history, the right decisions are made. there's a lot of noise in the field. >> when you say more is probably better, that suggests there is some window there where more isn't necessarily better. how big of a problem is overscreening and overtreatment? >> it's hard to know. clearly we are overscreening and overtreating. but many women will say, listen, i want to do everything i can so
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i can avoid breast cancer and play with my grand children. and others are saying listen, i want to go exactly with the data. so there is no right answer. these are really hard studies to do that take many decades. and it's very hard to randomize somebody and say you're going to get no screening and you'll get screening and let's see what happens. so there is a lot of noise in this space and discussions need to happen. it's difficult because you need 10, 15 minutes with a doctor to understand the risks and benefits and make the right decision for you. >> dr. david trying to make it clear for us. thanks for your time. >> thank you. ahead, not just any puppy can become a service dog. >> you are the cutest thing. but they're about to enter 15 to 18 months of intensive training to become legitimate service dogs. i'm in princeton, massachusetts, where a proposed state law would make fake service dogs illegal. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." >> don gets the best
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service dogs can give people invaluable help. but many who claim to receive pets for privileges are not entitled to. new luz aaws ma making it i wil tloel have imposters. >> reporter: a snowboarding accident in 2007 put kristina slaven in a wheelchair but it didn't take her off the mountain. >> i knew that it was not necessarily a life altering injury. it was just a change.
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>> when she's not giving ski lessons to people with disabilities, we'll find her accompanied by her faithful lab and service dog earl. >> earl does a lot of retrieving for me. when i lose my phone, he is very good about finding it. >> i could use him. >> everybody could. >> reporter: like these puppies smothering our camera, earl was trained at needs, a service dog industry leader for more than 40 years. >> good boy. >> reporter: jerry is needs ceo. >> how many tasks do the dogs have to learn? >> we train the dogs in about 50 different tasks. we train to open doors, to turn on lights, to retrieve objects. >> find the phone. >> reporter: that's the major difference between trained service dogs and the mini impostures gaining access to the place that's accommodate the disabled. you may have seen the cute chihuahua or occasional pig posing as something more than the well intentioned pet that they are. do you think that fake service dogs can hurt the public's
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impression of real service dogs? >> i know that fake service dogs hurt the public perception of real service dogs. i see it every day. there are dogs that have been in stores and had accidents in stores or just generally disruptive. >> under. >> is training a service dog ton a well heeled companion is difficult. but getting fake credentials to pretend your pet is qualified couldn't be easier. within 24 hours of logging on to one website, we obtained a phoney certificate and id for my border collie abby. three days later, her uniform arrived without me having to show any prove of a disability. so what would you say to someone who is either doing this or thinking about doing this? >> i would say that i understand people's desire to have their dog with them. they don't think it's a big deal just as people park in handicap spots and think it's not a big deal. >> reporter: a newly proposed law in massachusetts would make misrepresenting a service animal
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illegal. if passed, massachusetts would join 12 other states where it's already law. the toughest of which is in california, with a maximum penalty a $1,000 fine and up to six months in jail. >> good boy. >> reporter: can you imagine what your life would be like without him? >> i don't want to imagine what my life would be like without him. good boy. he makes my life worth living every single day. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," don daylor, prince poll, massachusetts. >> i like the banner, thaw paws. >> how a girl escaped good tuesday from the kpix studios in san francisco. a few raindrops will greet you this morning. keep your umbrella handy. a passing light shower and no real accumulation.
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video captured a terrifying moment when a girl fell out of the harness. she was hanging only by her feet. her head came dangerously close to hitting other attractions as she swung back and forth in a fare fair in paris. the new mattress champion arrived at the cbs broadcast center. sergio garcia right here in studio 57. you're watching cbs this morning. well, when you have copd, 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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new information about a robbery in suisun city. this is the kpix5 morning update. four minutes before 8:00 and i'm anne makovec. new information about a robbery in suisun city. police respond -- police were sleeps -- relieved surveillance video of a robber demanding money from a cashier. an alarming report about rising sea levels and the effect on marin county. the public works department said at least 700 homes and buildings may be threatened within the next 15 years. local traffic and weather in a moment. ,,,,,,,,
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working west on highway 4 at leverage with four cars involved and the right lane is blocked with big delays approaching the river. give yourself extra time on north won a delacruz, an accident on the right shoulder with the freeways busy working out of san jose. a lot of brake lights and busy north. working into mountain view, a stall is at shorelines with lanes stuck from 237. good morning. it is a great start to your day with some raindrops and a light shower in the north bay. looking toward the transamerica pyramid, temperature-wise, san francisco is fifth three and the cool spot is santa rosa. the winds are under five but variable wins stand at 20 and temperatures are pretty seasonal with a scattered light shower or raindrop. carry your umbrella to be on the safe side. ,,
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's tuesday, april 11th, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." the trump administration pushes russia to turn its back on syria. president obama's former defense secretary and cia director leon panetta looks at how the u.s. might get what it wants. first today's eye opener at 8:00. >> the couple was married in january. investigators are trying to find out what happened between then and yesterday's firing. this political magazine says it all, trump and putin go head to head over syria. >> president trump ordered his top warring advisers to coup
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cool it and cool it now. >> governor bentley said he would not resign and he did nothing illegal. police are going over surveillance footage, they found no connection between the gunman and his victim. united stock price is poised to take a hit this morning, it is a pr disaster for an airline that brands itself as the friendly skies. >> each layer of the story makes united's response that much more controversial. crazy, a package of salad mix sold in a florida well mart was found to contain a dead bat. >> they have no idea how the bat got in the bag. they know the odds of this happening in florida were exactly 100%. >> i'm charlie dagata with norah o'donnell and alex wagner. gayle is off. san bernardino school is closed after a married couple and a child died in a murder/suicide.
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cedric anderson walked into the special needs classroom and shot his wife, karen smith, as she was teaching. >> 8-year-old jonathan martinez standing behind his teacher was also shot and killed. 9-year-old student was wounded and is in stable condition. anderson and smith got married less than three months ago and investigators are trying to learn why they became estranged and how that might have led to the shooting. secretary of state rex tillerson landed in moscow a short time ago. while he was on his way, russian president vladimir putin suggested the u.s. planted fake evidence of chemical weapons in syria. tillerson said after a meeting in italy this morning that russia has a choice to make. >> russia has really aligned itself with the assad regime and hezbollah. is that a long-term alliance that serves russia's interest? or would russia prefer to
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realign with the united states, with other western countries, and middle east countries who are seeking to resolve the syrian crisis? >> russia's foreign ministry said it's hoping for productive talks with tillerson. spokesman also said russian-american relations are the most difficult since the end of the cold war. >> leon panetta held a series of top jobs in washington during a widely respected career in public service. he served as white house chief of staff under president clinton, director of the cia when osama bin laden was killed and secretary of defense under president obama. now is he chairman and co-founder of the panetta institute for public policy. secretary panetta joins us from mashville, tennessee. secretary, always good to see you. thank you so much for joining us. >> nice to be with you. >> what do you think the secretary of state needs to achieve in his visit to moscow today? >> well, i think it's very
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important for him to send the kind of message that he spoke about in italy, which is that the russians have a fundamental choice here, to accept some responsibility here for what happened in syria, to try to influence assad never to do it again, to basically join the nations of the world in making sure that we don't experience another chemical attack in syria. for that to happen russia has to make a choice whether to stick with assad, iran and hezbollah or whether it's going to join with the united states in trying to promote a more peaceful world. >> mr. secretary the russians already said if force is used again they'll meet force with force and so have the iranians. have they already made that choice? >> charlie in the world of foreign policy, the name of the
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game is to obviously send all kinds of messages to each other, recognizing that we're still a long way from any kind of direct confrontation. i don't think the russians want confrontation with the united states, and i don't think the united states wants direct confrontation with the russians. but we're in for some tough nerktings right now in terms of trying to get the russians to exert some influence here so that assad does not conduct additional chemical attacks. after all, russia does bear responsibility here. they're the ones that negotiated the agreement. they're the ones who failed to enforce that agreement, and so they have a great deal of responsibility to do what's right. >> former ambassador to syria told me last night that assad has won, the civil war is over. do you share that judgment? >> no, i really don't. you know, i think that there's no question that assad has been
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reinforced by the russians, by iran, by hezbollah, by the fact that no one was willing to take him on directly, and so there's no question, he has exerted some strength here in terms of trying to retain control of syria, but the fact is that there is no future in syria with assad. he has killed his own people. he's committed atrocities. there is no way that a future syria is going to continue under an assad regime. that's a reality, and i think the russians need to understand that, and work with us to ultimately remove assad from power. i don't think we ought to give up on that. >> what indications do you have that the russians might cooperate? there's an ap report that says russia had advanced knowledge of syria's chemical attack, and it was a russian-made fighter jet that bombed a hospital treating victims in syria.
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what did you make of that report? >> well, you know, it doesn't really surprise me that the russians would have some sense of what the syrians were up to. but at the same time, i think the russians have to decide what is in their fundamental interest here. is it to take on the united states? is it to take on other arab nations in the middle east, take on the world community that has made clear we're not going to tolerate additional chemical attacks. is that what they want to do, or do they want to try to work with the united states, and others, to make sure that this never happens again? i think the russians, in my experience, know when they have an opportunity to try to move in the right direction, and this is an opportunity for them to try to do what's right. so i don't automatically assume that russia's going to go in the other direction.
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we've got to deal with them in tough ways. we've got to make clear we're going to use military force again if we have to but in the end we've got to convince them they have to work with us. >> mr. secretary, let's talk about the issue of north korea. president trump has just tweeted this, north korea is looking for trouble. as you know, the pentagon has moved an aircraft carrier off the korean peninsula. tensions are quite high, as of course other military exercises are going on in south korea. do you think something may happen this week? >> well, i worry about the fact that april 15th is the birthday celebration of their founder in north korea, and every time they have a celebration like that, they tend to do something provocative and i suspect they're working on either an additional missile shot or a nuclear test or something to show the rest of the world that
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they're, that they can influence what happens in that region. so for that reason, i think it's important for us to have our force present in the region. we need to show that we're prepared to take whatever action is necessary to ensure that north korea does not engage in any deliberate attack in that region. so we've got to be tough with them. we've got to make clear that we're not going to tolerate this kind of provocation but at the same time we've got to continue to try to see if china can pursue the kind of pressure that will bring us back to the negotiating table. >> what is our red line inside of a north korean attack? what is it that should cause us to take severe action? >> i think, charlie, that the real concern here would be that, as they continue to develop their icbm capacity that they
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try to test an icbm, and that they're crazy enough to put a miniaturized nuclear weapon at the top of that icbm in order to test it, not necessarily to attack but to test it, i think if we see that, if intelligence presents that kind of scenario, that would be very dangerous, in terms of the united states and that region, and i think would indeed cross the line in dealing with north korea. >> thank you. >> and leon panetta, thank you so much. >> nice to be with you. >> great to have you. the young woman who survived a taliban attack on her school bus in pakistan is now a u.n. messenger of peace. malala yousafzai is the youngest person to receive the u.n. secretary-general's highest honor. we sat down with her and she had a message for president trump about america's acceptance of refugees. >> it's important that he understand that these people are
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in need, and i have seen them, i went to a refugee camp and i think he needs to go to the refugee camp. >> you think president trump needs to go to a refugee camp? >> i definitely agree with that, president donald trump needs to see refugee children and visit the refugee camps. he needs to know what real life is like in a refugee camp. >> we also spoke with the nobel peace prize recipient about the humanitarian crisis overseas. her push for girls education, and her own plans now for college. she's 19 years old. we're going to bring you the full interview tomorrow, that's only here on "cbs this morning." many americans admit they have not figured out how much money they'll need to retire. bill schlessinger is in our good tuesday morning from kpix studios. carry your umbrella. a sprinkle or two and a passing
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light rain shower with temperatures into the 50s and mostly cloudy skies. later, seasonal and cloud cover with the 50s and increasing wind, variable, 10-20 miles an hour. unsettled weather through tuesday. rain showers easter sunday night. sergio garcia, masters champion, competed in 73 majors without a win, before his
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stunning victory in a playoff against his friend, justin rose. he is right in our toyota green room wearing his green jacket to share what it means to finally come out on top. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ the sun'll come out tomorrow... ♪ for people with heart failure, tomorrow is not a given. but entresto is a medicine that helps make more tomorrows possible. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow... ♪ i love ya, tomorrow in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto helped more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure... ...kidney problems, or high potassium in your blood. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow i love ya, tomorrow ♪
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what's the story behind green mountain coffee and fair trade? let's take a flight to colombia. this is boris calvo. boris grows mind-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee.
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americans think about being ready for retirement. 60% of workers are very or somewhat confident about having enough money to live comfortably during retirement. but only 41% admit to crunching the numbers to see how much they will need. cbs news this business analyst jill schlesinger is here. are we overconfident here? we may be. the funny thing about that survey is that 60% say hey, i'm confident but only 40% have actually crunched the numbers. that's a little bit strange. i think that the crunching the numbers part is so important. it starts with understanding how much you're spending to day. people cannot stand doing. but there are lots of apps for. that figure out what you're spending right now. then you want to project out into the future. do you that by saying okay, what is the stream of income? maybe i'm lucky enough to have a pension. i'll get social security and what will i maybe make from some of the savings that i've accumulated? you figure that out. there are a lot of calculators on line. the place that did this survey has a nice cool called the
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choose to save ballpark estimate. very easy to use. >> what is retirement? >> clearly yushgs not interested in it. i would say this, when most people -- i'm a certified financial planner by training. people come into my office, what would they say? i want to retire. what do they really mean? i want to feel comfortable enough to live the life i lead today in the future without working this hard. and that really might mean that you got to do some extra saving. so we know that retirement confidence is very much linked to whether or not you have a retirement account. so those who have the 401(k) or 403(b), that's terrific. but if you don't have that kind of account, it's a little bit more problematic. we tell people to open an ira or a roth ira, $5500 can you put away. $5500 if you're over 50. there is a plan for the government for people saving very, very small dollars called
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the myra.gov. fwhaut allows you to put as little as a couple bucks in every month away for the future. really important to look at. >> and if you leave your job, what do you do your savings like in your 401(k)? >> there's a pitfall about this. so there is a few options. you can leave the money there if the plan allows it. you can roll it over into an ira or ira rollover account or move it into the new job. but here's the thing. too many people are literally just taking the money out. they're taking the distribution. it is taxable if you're under the age of 59 1/2. there are penalties involved.al. and a study from boston college found that taking that money out early can actually reduce your retirement income by as much as 25%! so we don't want people to do that. >> leave it in the box. >> yeah. >> among current retirees, nearly 8 out of 10 say they are very or somewhat confident about
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having enough money to live comfortably. that's up 4% from a year ago. so what explains that? is that lidge it? >> i think it's ligit. i think people were saying they were more confident about being able to cover health care cost. that is g but also, look, the stock market is up pretty nicely. people feel good, more confident. that's good savings strategy. stick with your plan. don't dip into early. >> thank you, jill. >> always great information. >> just in time as we do tax season. >> ahead, new evidence that road salt is polluting lakes. plus, joey mcintyre of new kids on the block joins us with his new series, the character he plays with none other than himself. joey mcintyre, you're watching cbs this morning. ♪ predictable. the comfort in knowing where things are headed.
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but, you know, it was very, very enjoyable. >> what is the greatest thing this is the kpix5 morning update. good morning. it is a 25:00 and i'm anne makovec. students at a san bernardino elementary school will stay home for the next two days. investigators are trying to figure out why a man walked into the classroom of his estranged wife and opened fire. and then turn the gun on himself. his wife and an 8-year-old student died in the attack and another student is in the hospital. a driver plunged his car into a swimming pool in santa clara. the driver managed to get out of the car and no one was hurt. your local and traffic weather report are next. ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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good morning from the traffic center. highway 4 is causing a bit of a snag. respond four at leverage a traffic alert. i just checked with chp and all lanes have been cleared and everything is on the right shoulder. a busy ride on westbound 4 this morning with stop and go conditions from antioch into pittsburgh. slow toward 242 with a break on the east shore freeway. not the case on the san mateo bridge, a 30 minute drive time from 880 west bound to 101 with
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an accident on the eastbound side and traffic is slow from foster city, as well. six sadie southbound still busy working to 24, westbound 24 busy through lafayette and slow and go conditions on the bay bridge. good morning. this is the scene looking at the transamerica. if you look at hill in the distance, you see flags are on- the-fly with winds up to 10 miles an hour. mostly cloudy with a couple of raindrops this morning and right there to the north, of the golden gate bridge, we have a stray shower in the forecast and we have haze and 50 different shades of gray this morning. temperature-wise, into the 50s. 50 in santa rosa to 53 in redwood city and 56 in san jose with high temperatures seasonal and into the 60s with a stray shower and raindrops through thursday. up to .25 inches of rain in some locations.
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joggers out enjoying the warm weather by the intread ip museum in new york city. the high will reach almost 80 degrees. >> fist pump. i'm into it. >> right here in new york city. >> you know it. that's right. charlie is going for a walk. he already went for a walk this morning. >> i did. >> yeah. >> walk to work. >> the man moves. >> speaking about moves, welcome back to cbs this morning. sergio garcia is here. the masters champion. we're so thrilled to have him. also joey mcintyre in the house! all right. we got a good half hour ahead. >> right now, time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe.
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"the new york times" has a unique plan that could bring the world cup to north america in 2026. soccer officials from the united states, can dashgs mexico work at the bid to share tournament games. ahead of u.s. soccer says president trump supports the plan despite tensions with mexico. the fifa, the world governing body, for the sport. >> "the wall street journal" says an activist investor wants to shake up whole foods. they own nearly 9% of the upscale grocery chain. the investors are pressuring the company to improve operations. they also want to explore sales possibilities. whole foods shares have lost nearly half the value since 2013. salt used to de-ice roads may be contaminating lakes. that is according to the first continent wide study of fresh water lakes. they found sales of sault grew to 20 million tons in the last
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50 years. they refeud the lakes and 44% showed signs of long teerm salinazatoin. >> "the washington post" says one of the quotes won the pulitzer prize for national reporting in a series investigative articles last saw the rise of donald trump. congratulations to them. i e-mailed peggy. i said peggy pullser. that is your new name. >> great reporting. >> and britain's telegraph reports that singer ed sheeran settled a lawsuit over the hit song "photograph." ♪ you can keep me >> his song reached number 10 on the u.s. billboard top 100 nun 2015. he's accused of copying it noit
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for note from a song called "amazing." it was released two years before. take a listen. ♪ how did you find me came out of nowhere ♪ >> the judge's order said the copyright case was dismissed after an agreement was reached etween sheeran and the songwriter of "amazing." details of the settlement were not revealed. sergio garcia was called the best golfer never to win a title. that changed sunday in dramatic finish at the masters. >> how do the story lines and scripts, how do they happen time and time again here? >> and after so many years, once and for all for sergio!
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sergio! sergio! sergio! >> so garcia beat justin rose to win the green jacket. he had finished in the top ten at augusta three times before. now he is the third spaniard to win the masters. sergio we're thrilled to you have here. congratulations again. >> thank you guys. >> can you tell us what it felt like for you, what was going through your mind when the ball went in the cup? >> you could see it. >> yeah. >> and you can hear it in my voice. >> what were you saying? >> i because of what all the things that
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happened throughout my career. i think i learned so much. and it helped me grow up not only as a golfer but as a person. i think it made this victory taste even better. >> yeah. wonderful to see you and justin rose at the end. i know you're good friends. it was just also a display of terrific sportsmanship. >> yes. i think -- i mean my philosophy when it comes down to playing golf is i'm going to try -- i'm going to try my hardest to beat whoever is next to me. but i'm going to try to do it because i play better than them, not because i'm trying to make them feel bad or something to make them play worse. so i want to beat justin like i beat him on sunday. you know, it is very important. bring the extra hole. i don't want to, you know, do any gamesmanship to make him feel uncomfortable.
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that would make me feel uncomfo uncomfortable. and the way i am, i wouldn't be able to play the way i know how to play because i would be out of place. >> when you missed that putt on 18 that sent you into the play-off, what did you say to yourself? >> well, the same thing i was saying -- i hit a good putt. >> he miss aid putt, too. >> i think we both hit good putts. we both misread them. i hit that putt on the practice round and the ball went a little left. so i didn't have my caddie or anything. i was confident. i knew exactly what i wanted to do with the putt. i knew it was a quick putt. i just need to get it going. i thought okay. right on the right edge. it's going to break a little left and just put a good stroke on it, be confident. and i did. and it went straight. but i did what i wanted to do. i was still feeling good about
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it. >> yeah. >> i was playing well. i felt calm. i knew i could probably have another chance. i just need to go out there and do it in the play-off. >> you did it. you did it. you got congratulations all around. congratulations tour continues. congratulations from tiger woods. you had a complicated relationship with him. what did that feel like? >> yeah, it's great. i mean there have been so many different congratulations from so many people and friends of mine and fellow players telling me that they were crying watching it. it was amazing. and donnie willett, he was crying and hugging me and everything. >> he was last year and champion. >> yeah. it is great. i think at the end of the day, we're all people. we all do respect each other. and, you know, we all have our differences but, you know, we have to be bigger people and bigger person and kind of put those things aside.
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>> you can't be affirmed because he passed away too early an age is seve ballesteros. >> that would have been great. >> the former spanish champ. >> yeah. >> unfortunately, seve is not here anymore. it would be nice to see him that sunday when it happened. but i'm sure he was looking at it from up there. >> so i know you're getting married this year. congratulations. >> thank you. >> and so charlie told me that your fiancee is also a golfer. >> yeah. >> and she helped you make a better golfer? i don't know about that. >> his mind, not golf. >> she doesn't coach me. no. >> just wait until you get married. >> probably true. no. but she played collegiate golf
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in texas. >> that's awesome. >> yeah. so, yeah. she's turned me into a long horn fan. >> are goug you going to wear t green jacket when you get married? >> i don't know. we've been talking about it. she's up for it. when it gets closer, we'll mack a decision. >> so now that you got past this, you can think about the grand slam, can't you? >> yeah. it will be great. it would be great. you can't win them all if you don't win the first one. >> there you go. >> okay. the winner gets to pick the menu for the champions dinner. thought about it? >> yes. i thought about it not this year. i thought about it before. >> okay. >> for a long time. it's going to be a spanish dish. it's going to be one of my favorite dishes in spain. but -- >> what is it? >> i can't reveal. >> that's a tease, as we say. >> it is a good tease. >> but it's going to be delicious. yeah. >> well great.
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sergio, congratulations. thank you for being here with us. >> thank you. it's a pleasure. >> such a thrill to meet you and watch you >> thank you. >> joey mcintyre is about to head on tour with the band that began his career. the new kid on the block is in our toyota greenroom to share how he balances music with his new tv show where his kids star, good tuesday from the kpix studios in san francisco. raindrops will greet you out the door. keep your umbrella handy. passing light showers with no real accumulation. in the 50s and later, a seasonal spring day. cloudy and breezy with the winds 10-20 and variable. unsettled weather through thursday and high pressure building in, sunny skies through saturday and rain
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this is perfect fosh hbo. >> whoa. whoa. slow your roll, joe. i didn't say it was with hbo. i said it's like hbo. the company channel. >> the company channel i never heard of that before. >> it's ross, bro, brand new network. they want to be the hbo for women. >> i snowed cookies before dinner. okay, whatever. the company channel. i want to get back to work. >> joey mcintyre, welcome back. >> thank you. >> good to be back. >> great to you have. i heard that you describe the show as curb your enthusiasm meets parenthood meets episodes. >> yeah. kind of, yeah. i play -- i like to think an exaggerated form of myself. maybe my friends would think no you're dead on, joe. that's you. but it's been fun. it's a to play my wife. she never acted before. and she's amazing in it. so it all worked out.
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>> yeah. this is fact and fiction ever blur when you do this? >> a little bit. a d of misguides me sometimes. i take the bait. >> you are back to it again. >> yeah, we tour us, boys to men and paula abdul this may, june and july. we've been very lucky. the first time around with the new kids was amazing. we're together this time around longer than the last time.
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and it's the best fans in the world. we have a lot gf times. >> it's the same fans, right? >> yeah. >> oh, yeah. i want to brainwash the next generation. so we want to bring the next generation in. that's going pretty well. we have some younger kids in the crowd, too. >> is it fun singing the old hits? is there something you can't stand sing anymore, something you love singing? >> not necessarily. i mean, we don't -- there is something -- we're lucky to have ten hit records that we can sing. >> a lot to choose from. >> yeah. so we're lucky. and we enjoy it. and we try to mix it up with new stuff, too. but we embrace the past. >> look at these -- look at the video. >> yeah. that was the very, very first video that we made. >> that is michael hall, isn't it? >> maybe. we can -- it can be if you want. >> yeah. i think it's a bright 80s colors that is throwing you off a little bit. >> oh, gosh. >> wow.
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>> is it weird? does that make your life seem so far away? >> i guess it's like high school. people look at their year books, you know what i mean? it's kind a little funny. at this point we just, you know, we look at it with open heart. all that nostalgia is kind of fun to look at. >> you're funny. i think people know that you're very talented. but you're funny. >> thank you. >> did you have to convince people, no, really, i can do this? >> a little bit. i had good acting gigs. you just want to build that resume. i guess it's led to this to, you know, you have to make it happen though. i created the show. >> you are executive producer. >> yeah. along with donny wallberg who is on here with you often with "blue bloods" and stuff. it's been a great experience. i learned a ton. >> anything else you want to do? >> tap dance. >> no, come on. >> yeah. well, i love the theater. i group in the theater.
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so i, you know, i've done a few things in new york and my wife is from here. but it's expensive. i don't know if we want to go back to three rooms, you know, in manhattan when we have a little bit of a yard in l.a. it's tricky. i love the city. >> good luck on the tour. >> thank you. >> tell everybody we said hi. >> i will. >> we'll see him out on the big stage. >> yes. >> "return of the mac" premiers tomorrow night on a division of cbs. you can hear more of "cbs this morning" on our podcast. good song. ♪ you're watching "cbs this morning." ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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you're not taking these. hey, hey, hey! you're not taking those. whoa, whoa! you're not taking that. come with me. you're not taking that. you're not taking that. you're not taking that. mom, i'm taking the subaru. don't be late. even when we're not there to keep them safe, our subaru outback will be. (vo) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. so great to see sergio garcia on this program. >> and joey mcintyre. >> indeed.
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this is the kpix5 morning update. good morning. five minutes before 9:00 and i'm anne makovec. recall effort, judge aaron persky receives support from one of the previously fierce critics. he's the judge who handed down a light sentence to a former stanford swimmer for sexual assault and he is now being endorsed by the da who helped get him removed from another sexual assault kits. today marks the groundbreaking for an interchange on highway 4 at balfour road. drivers have to stop at a signal which can cause major backups during peak times. an alarming report about rising sea levels and the effect on marin county. the department of public works said 700 buildings and homes may be threatened within the
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reports of an accident at third in the lane and northbound delays near burlingame and south near sfo. on the east shore freeway, sluggish into berkeley and you will see delays at the bay bridge but it is improving with metering lights on. 17 minutes to downtown and busy on 880. good morning. take a look right now, the live where the camera is looking to telegraph hill and pioneer park. gray skies and we have mostly cloudy conditions throughout the day. here is another view of ocean beach from the cliff house with clouds and disability is impaired for vision somewhat. the winds have picked up and it will be 10-20 and variable. highs pretty seasonable in the 60s with a scattered shower today and random raindrop and drizzle. same on wednesday and thursday with. we dry
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wayne: (screeching) jonathan: it's a trip to ireland! (irish accent): hello, wayne mcbrady. wayne: oops, i'm naughty. jonathan: it's a new motorcycle! omg. wayne: come on, brother, let's do it! what?! tiffany: wake up! wayne: if you're having a good time say, "yeah!" (cheers and applause) jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america. welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in. i need to make a deal right now. and i want to make a deal with... ...you. silver, come on, silver. everybody else, have a seat. hey, silver. - hi. wayne: how are you doing? - i'm fine. wayne: where's wayne? i mean, right here. it's kind of easy to see. - yeah. wayne: silver, welcome to the show. give silver a big round of applause. now silver, what do you do?
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