tv CBS Overnight News CBS August 11, 2017 3:07am-4:00am PDT
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and your mother, but no. as alzheimer's and dementia is a disease, that requires medical care. but for normal age-related symptoms like forgetfulness, a faltering short-term memory, that fuzzy-brain feeling, cebria is a great solution. >> thank you, dr. laux. >> now we have clyde from tucson, arizona, with a question. clyde? >> hi, bella. dr. laux, i'm 70 years young, and i'm really excited about trying cebria. what else can i do to keep my brain from getting old? >> you're a smart guy, clyde. that's the right question to be asking. you've got to eat well -- adequate protein, no trans fats, cut down on your sugar -- get regular, adequate deep sleep, decrease your stress, handle the curve balls, and you've got to exercise -- both physical, as well as mental exercise. play scrabble, learn a new language -- do something that challenges your brain. "use it or lose it" applies here. of course, take your cebria.
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>> thank you, dr. laux. >> thanks, clyde. >> well, we only have time for one more question -- beth from state college, pennsylvania. hi, beth. >> my question is -- i'm only 45 years old -- can cebria help me? >> this is an excellent time for you to start taking it. i mean, you are part of that sandwich generation -- taking care of your kids, probably caring for your parents, as well. i get it. you've got so much going on, it's easy to get turned around and forget things. this is a great time for you to start taking cebria. >> sounds great. thank you. >> thank you. and all our skype video people from across the country, great questions. dr. laux, we only have a minute left. is there anything else you'd like to add? >> bella, why i'm here today is personal. i'm not getting any younger, and all the things that i heard today and the things that you said, my brain was suffering. and as a doctor, it scared me, probably more than most people. so i looked for a natural solution. cebria was a game changer for me.
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my confidence, my memory, it returned like what it was when i was at the top of my game. cebria is a once-in-a-lifetime discovery with solid science. i wanted people to have a chance to get what i got, to get back, perhaps, something they thought they'd lost forever. >> dr. laux, thank you so much for introducing us to cebria. >> thank you, bella. >> for dr. laux and myself, be happy, be healthy, take care of your brain, and be good to yourself. >> when your neurons are firing with places to connect, your brain's working. when it's functioning at its best, you know it, and you can feel it. >> i won't stop taking it. i won't, 'cause i don't want to -- [ laughs ] i don't want to go back. >> announcer: it's not too late to pick up the phone or go online to order cebria, the only patented, natural supplement capsule with neuro-pep12, scientifically shown in a published double-blind study to significantly improve memory in
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just 30 days. look at these brain cells under a microscope. when treated with the natural neuropeptides in cebria, the cells begin to grow, reaching out, making healthy, new connections, helping restore short-term memory, and there's nothing else like it. >> studies have shown that people over the age of 60 lose about 17% of their memory every 10 years. studies of cebria have shown that people improve their memory by an average of 18% in just 30 days. >> announcer: a full 2-month supply of cebria is only $79.95. but it won't cost you that today, because we're going to let you try cebria risk-free for a full 30 days. all you pay is shipping and processing. and when you call in the next 5 minutes, we'll also include the acclaimed "new memory advantage," with the latest information on easy things you can do to improve your mental fitness and memory for life. a $20 value, it's yours free.
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we'll also send you a 30-day supply of cebria's perfect omega. just one perfect omega has the power of three ordinary fish-oil supplements, supporting the healthy functioning of the brain, eyes, and heart, and elevating your mood. a $40 value, it's yours free, too. so call now and try cebria for a full 30 days. and if your memory doesn't improve, if you don't feel sharper and more confident than you have in years, simply return cebria, but keep "the new memory advantage" and the 30-day supply of perfect omega just for trying cebria. have your credit card ready when you call or go online to let cebria change your life. call now. the preceding was a paid presentation for cebria, brought to you by trusted brought to you by trusted thera botanics.
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u.s. diplomats seshirving in cu experiencing and the cause is a mystery. julianna goldman has the latest on this story, which was broken by cbs news radio correspondent steve dorsey. >> reporter: it began last year in havana. more than a dozen staffers at the u.s. embassy experienced unexplained ailments. symptoms including headaches and sleeplessness. sources say some suffered permanent hearing damage and some had to return home. state department spokeswoman heather nauert: >> we don't know exactly where this came from, okay. we can't blame any one individual or a country at this point yet. >> reporter: but so far, the investigation has shown that the culprit is likely a high-tech sonic device that can't be heard by humans but, clearly, can be harmful. officials believe it was operating in or near the homes of embassy workers. pthe question: who put it there and why? >> it's audio, but it's beyond the range of our ears. >> reporter: vince houghton is an intelligence historian and curator at the international spy
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museum. he says cuba, or even the russians, could have been carrying out an intelligence operation that went south. but houghton and other intelligence experts say it could also have been a routine intimidation campaign, taken to another level. >> so this culd be new technology that has had a side effect that no one expected. on the other hand, it could have been designed to harass, to make people feel uncomfortable. >> reporter: to retaliate, the u.s. kicked out two cuban diplomats in may. last night on state television, the cuban government called the expulsions "unjustified and baseless," saying, "it has never, nor would it ever allow the cuban territory to be used for any action against accredited diplomatic officials or their families." there are indications that diplomats are still being affected, and it's not just the u.s. canada says at least one of its diplomats has also suffered hearing loss. the f.b.i. and the state department continue to investigate. anthony. >> mason: julianna goldman with a health mystery in havana. thanks.
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the software engineer fired by google this week is speaking out about it. he'd written a memo criticizing the company's diversity policies. john blackstone is at google headquarters in mountain view, california. >> reporter: at google silicon valley campus, the work schedule today called for a company-wide town hall meeting where c.e.o. sundar pichai would address the controversial memo written by the now-fired software engineer james damore. damore defended himself in an interview with bloomberg news. >> the whole point of my memo was actually to improve google and google's culture, and they just punished me and shamed me for doing it. >> reporter: the memo criticized google's efforts to hire more women, suggesting "biological causes may explain why we don't see equal representation. women, on average, have more neuroticism," damore wrote. >> it's largely because of the differing interests in people versus things, which is linked
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to prenatal testosterone. >> it is profoundly demoralizing to come up against this prejudice over and over again. >> reporter: kim scott is a silicon valley veteran who rose to management at google. she is now an author whose book, "radical candor," offers advice to managers. she agrees with damore's argument that it is hard to express conservative opinions in silicon valley, but says he went too far. >> i think he raises some good points there, but i'm not eager to talk to somebody who thinks that i am stupid or more neurotic than he is because i happen to be a woman. >> reporter: damore has filed a complaint with the national labor relations board, claiming he was treated unfairly by google. >> what james said clearly contributed to a hostile work environment. i don't think google had any choice but to fire james. >> reporter: we've just learned that google has now canceled the town hall meeting that was planned for this afternoon.
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the company claims it's in favor of diversity there's a class action lawsuit sager they are being treated unfairly. >> mason: john blackstone at google headquarters. thank you, john. coming up next on the "cbs evening news," taylor swift testifies that a d.j. groped her. she's suing him. and later, college buds helping their neighborhood get a bigger slice of the pie.
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>> mason: in denver today, taylor swift testified that a former radio host groped her while they were posing for a photo. he lost his job and sued the pop star. she counter-sued. david begnaud is at the courthouse. >> reporter: swift and furious-- the singer insists this photo shows her being groped by former radio d.j. david mueller back in 2013. she was 23. he was 51. today on the stand in federal court, taylor said what happened was "despicable, horrifying and shocking." "i felt him grab on to my ass cheek under my skirt. the first couple of milliseconds i thought it was a mistake so i moved to the side very quickly so his hand would be removed from my ass." swift was combative at time with mueller's lawyer who pressed her:
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swift said she would not allow mueller's attorney to make her feel as if it's her fault. ;;;;on screen mueller was fired two days after the incident. he testified that the photo was weird and awkward, but insisted he touched swift's ribs, not her rear. shake it off, i shake it off >> reporter: mueller is suing swift for $3 million in damages. karen steinhouser is a law professor at the university of denver. taylor swift is counter-suing for $1. how do you think that is going to sway the jury? >> this case is about credibility. who do the jurors believe? do they believe someone who isn't trying to get financial gain or do they believe the person who is trying to get money from a celebrity? >> reporter: so, after the alleged incident, swift's security team confronted the d.j., who said, "hey, call the police, i didn't do anything." but swift's mother testified, they didn't call the police because they didn't want the publicity-- which they are now getting plenty of, from all over the world. anthony. >> mason: they sure are. david begnaud at the courthouse in denver, thanks. coming up, why could there soon
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his death. researchers in massachusetts have created piglets that might one day provide livers, hearts, and other organs for humans. they used a gene-editing technology called crispr to remove viruses from pigs that could cause diseases in humans. they say pig-to-human transplants could happen within two years. in st. louis last night, the cardinals had the bases loaded in the sixth. cue the rally cat. around it ran, all over the outfield. a groundskeeper scooped it up, and was bitten repeatedly. but when play resumed, yadier molina hit a grand slam on the first pitch. the cards beat the royals 8-5. the groundskeeper is fine, just a few cuts. the cat is on the loose. here's hoping the mets find him. up next, three friends bringing their neighborhood a new era of pizza and prosperity.
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moore and clint gray, former football players at tennessee state, are the huskies. >> we invested about $1,000 a piece. back then, that's all we had. >> reporter: that was it? >> i don't even know if it was $1,000 a piece. two of us probably had about $800. >> we're standing at the original mad pizza science lab. >> reporter: they turned this former garage into a pizza-making lab where they developed their unique recipes. they thought selling 300 pizzas a day would be great. but since opening in march, they do nearly 1,000. for them, building a bng business isn't only about doing well. it's also about doing good. >> what better place to create change and be an example than in our own neighborhood? >> reporter: their neighborhood is north nashville. citywide, 17% of people live in poverty. here, it's 40%. unemployment is more than three times the rest of the city.
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>> we see a lot of times that a lot of guys that we grew up with, they don't come back because a lot of times they don't see the opportunity that's here for african americans in nashville. and-- but we're about creating opportunities. >> thank you! >> reporter: slim and husky's also provides something that's been almost impossible for folks from this neighborhood to find: a job they can walk to. >> no matter what you look like or where you come from, you know, if you work together, you can create a community that continues to build. >> we 100% believe in it. >> reporter: belief, the too-often missing ingredient when it comes to revitalizing neighborhoods. at this pizza place it's pairing nicely with the cheese, sauce, and crust to get the job done. jim axelrod, cbs news, nashville. >> mason: nice slice of that's the "cbs evening news." i'm anthony mason in new york.
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thanks for watching. this is the cbs overnight news. >> president trump unleashed another verbal assault in his war of words with north korea leade leaders kim jong-un, saying his threat to fire and fury wasn't enough. meanwhile guam in the cross hairs of the show down. >> i maybe wasn't tough enough so he got tougher today, saying doing this a long time.
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>> north korea already denounced his fire and furry statement as a load of nonsense. president trump is upset with what they've said as he is about the nuclear weapons program. >> he's disrespected our country and said things horrific. and with me, he's not getting away with it. he got away with it for a long time, between him and his family. he's not getting away with it. this is a whole new ballgame. >> reporter: the head of north korea's rocket forces announced plans to target american military bases in guam with a salvo of four missiles that would land within 25 miles of the island as a crucial warning to the u.s. four missiles would apparently be intended to overwhelm the thaad missile defense system on guam, but pentagon officials said there were no plans to rush additional interceptors to the island, and defense secretary mattis told reporters residents
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of guam should not be worried. the president said it is north korea who should be worried. >> he does something in guam, it will be an event, the likes of which nobody has seen before, what will happen in north korea. >> reporter: he seemed to hold out little hope negotiations could resolve the standoff, and doubted economic sanctions would be effective enough to pressure north korea into giving up its nuclear weapons. at the beginning of this administration, officials said they would give economic sanctions and diplomatic pressure about 12 to 15 months to work before turning seriously to military options. but it seems the commander in chief has already run out of patience. the heated rhetoric out of washington is rattling nerves throughout asia. former cia director in tokyo discussed the situation with anthony mason.
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>> the president said his fire and fury warning wasn't tough enough from your vantage point in tokyo what do you think? >> i think the president's statements of the last two days are reckless for two reasons one is that kim jong-un has been shown to be provokable, and so this playground game of "dare-double dare" is dangerous. the second reason that-- is that statements such as this box the president in, from a policy perspective. at a time when he should be trying to maximize policy options, he's narrowing them. he's at risk of making the same mistake here that president obama made on the syria red line. so i don't think the statements are helpful to-- to u.s. interests. >> mason: at the same time, secretary of state tillerson appears to be trying to calm things down. are mixed signals damaging u.s. credibility, though? >> anthony, clarity in foreign policy is one of the keys to
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success. and right now, we have three voices. we have the president's very tough rhetoric that's being read as possible u.s. preemptive action. you've got secretary tillerson's statements, which walk back significantly. and then you've got secretary of defense mattis' statements that are tough, but they talk about a u.s. response to a first step by north korea. one of the great frustrations here in east asia is, they don't know what u.s. policy is, and they're asking, "what is u.s. strategy?" >> mason: michael morell in tokyo. thanks very much for being with us. >> you're welcome. in other news, it was 40 years ago yesterday that a nightmare ended for the people of new york city. a serial killer called son of sam was captured, he killed six, wounded seven others in a reign of terror that had the entire
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city on edge, he was sentenced to more than 300 years in prison. he agrees to speak with us here's a preview. >> people will never understand where i came from. no matter how much i try to explain it. they wouldn't understand what it -- what it was to walk in darkness. >> it was 1977. new york lost its mind. we had a blackout. in which 3,000 people were arrested. you know, it was a very, very different time. people were afraid to walk around. >> the city is preoccupied with a killer in one note signed himself the son of sam. >> most victims are young women shoulder length dark brown here gunned down in queens. >> i got there and she was dead in the street. my daughter was 18 years old that's what he took out of my
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heart 18 years. >> struck again on brooklyn's lovers lane, the killer's six victim, wounded seven others. >> oh, my god we've been shot. i should have been dead. >> what do you remember from the shooting it is efl? >> the bullet totally destroyed the left eye and most of the right eye. where the bullet struck me right in the head i never felt anything. it just hit me directly in the head and travelled right across to the right side of my head. >> the only substantial includes have been two letters, one mailed to the new york daily news. >> writing about a dog that gave him orderers to kill. >> serial killer is about to walk in here and talk to us. it looked like him, right? >> god bless you.
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>> maurice. >> honor to meet you. >> thank you for talking with us. >> it's a big step. i had my misgivings and nervousness, other things. >> sure. understood. >> is this a special place for you. >> yeah it is a place of refuge. i've been locked up since the time of my arrest just under 40 years. >> you just turnnd 64. >> yeah. >> what would you tell david burkwits today. >> turn around before it is too late because destruction is coming. far as i'm concerned that was not me. that was not me. even that name, i hate that name. i despice that name, the moniker son of sam. that was a demon. >> you can see the full report tonight at 10:00 p.m. eastern. the overnight news be right back.
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this is the "cbs overnight new news". report from centers of disease control says suicide is growing for teens up 28% since 2000 with average of 5 deaths a day. for girls age 15 to 19 has reached a 40-year high. we look behind the rising toll. >> he was an athlete. >> her 17-year-old son seemed fine last thanksgiving. >> the next day i got woken up by the police knocking on my door saying i needed to come with them right away.
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i found out then that he shot himself in the head. >> new cdc data show suicide rate for boys age 15 to 19 increase more than 30%. three years ago conrad rory died in this truck from carbon monoxide poisoning after his friend encouraged him through text messages, we found out both teens suffered from meantal illness. teenage suicide rate for girls up a 40 year high. the role of cyber bullying is becoming more prevalent. in june 12-year-old malry grossman took her own life. her mother said it was because she was harassed on text, on snapchat and instagram. >> in the beginning it was teasing, name calling, exclusion
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was rnt positive part, you are not welcome here. >> professor at san diego state university. >> teens are much more likely now than just five or seven years ago to say that they are anxious and depressed and thinking about suicide. >> in a provocative new artical there's a correlation between popularity of smart phones and increased rates of suicide and depression among young people. >> teens who use electronic devices more hours a day are more likery to be at risk for suicide. >> the so called smart phone generation is less likely to have face to face interaction with friends which she says is crucial for mental health and building social skill. some people in waiting to see if their homes are in danger of being swallowed up by a giant
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sinkhole has already gobbled two houses and five othes condemned. >> this is as close as authorities will let us get to the sinkhole and to all of the work being done in this area. frlgz you can see there's a lot of activities right now. only allowing us this close for security reasons. we can show you what it looked like earlier this morning. it was widened by another 30 feet since last week. no deaths or injuries have been reported. the crews have not finished clearing the debris. >> officials described this mammoth sinkhole now filled with water as the largest in the county in 30 years. it swallowed two home it's in this tampa suburb when it suddenly appeared july 14th. after it widened again over the weekend five more houses were condemned and more families displaced. >> the news we are not going to be able to go back in ever to
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the house is sad but it offers closure. >> it's not safe to live in. >> the county found cracked walls or unstable foundation in the houses it wants demolished. >> this is catastrophic financial event for people, these are people's nest eggs, their homes sometimes is the biggest investment they may have. >> officials don't know if the sinkhole is still growing or if it aggravated existing depressions near by. >> that area was a lake before, who knows may become a lake in the future. >> part of the first phase 125 truck loads of uncrushed lime rock to keep the edge from collapsing and waste trucks will remove water and back hoe will remove debris from the center of the sinkhole. residents remain unconvinced. >> keep putting dirt in it. and the dirt is going to keep
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clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but will it stop this teen from being embarassed by her parents? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. i'm about to pop a cap of "mmm fresh" in that washer with unstopables in-wash scent boosters by downy.
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because this scent lasts up to 12 weeks, which is longer than any relationship i've ever been in. freshness for weeks! it says you apply the blue one ok, letto me. this. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. no matter who was in there last. protection. new lysol power & fresh 6 goes to work flush after flush for a just-cleaned feeling that lasts up to 4 weeks. lysol. what it takes to protect. rice farmers are up in arms over the new competition they're facing from cauliflower. that's right. it gets chopped up and sold as riced cauliflower and is selling
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like hot cakes. john blackstone got a taste of the grocery battle stewing. >> in the rich farm land of salinas valley,cafornia, under rated vegetable is hot under the son. >> cauliflower you can use as a main dish, a side dish. >> can be barbecued. baked. stir fried now green giant is sledding it into tiny bits to create popular rice substitute with 15 less carbs. >> end of the day consumers want to eat healthier. >> it is now at the center of controversy in a tale of rice and men. described it as ad and this ad challenged the rice industry to get out of its way. >> do we need to call cauliflower rice?
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>> rice farmer has no intention of moving over. >> riced cauliflower. why even call it riced cauliflower. could call it bits of cauliflower. or cauliflower crumbles. secondly when did riced become a verb. >> for three generations his family has been growing rice in wetty fields north of sacramento. >> isn't it beautiful. >> convinced americans should know more where their food comes from. he wants rice farming tv. >> we're about to fly the rice seed on this field right about now. he worried riced cauliflower is con fusing consumers. do you think somebody calling cauliflower rice is going to have an impact on your sales? >> i think will. >> and he's not alone. these days even riels farmers have washington lobbyists they're asking the food and drug
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administration to define rice so not everyone can use the name. >> cauliflower crumbles, whatever you want to call it. keep it out of the rice aisle. >> the rice people are a little upset about you using that name. >> we feel we're being very clear with what we're offering which is rice vegetables. >> the popularity is spreading this market in los angeles makes their own cauliflower rice and consumer demand made it a best seller. >> instead of rice and chicken it's cauliflower and chicken. >> you know what we have in common with this little guy? the desire to survive. >> even a rice farmer admits he can't live by rice alone. >> i'll be open with you, there's cauliflower in our refrigerator it's just a head of cauliflower. i'll eat that. i'm not too excited about it but i'll eat it. >> what he won't do is call it rice. for this farmer that simply goes against the grain. john blackstone, california.
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if you're the type of person who likes to camp you know the campgrounds are more and more crowded every year. the largest company in the u.s. reports sales are higher for record six years in a row. we have the story from campground in up state new york. >> camping has historically been a great barometer of american economy. low unemployment leads to more spending for things like camping and this week campgrounds will be full. what's surprising is how many millenials are now investing in the great outdoors. images of millenials on road trips and outdoor adventures have filled social media, #camping posts on instagram now over 14 million. popular trend is keeping employees at this factory
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working at a record pace to produce more than 70,000 recreational vehicles by the end of the year. >> in this one plant how many today. >> 42 today. >> this is the president of keystone rv, subsidiary of world's largest manufacturer. >> the number of your sales year over year up 20%. >> and we expect it to be as high if not higher. >> they are marketing to millenials. >> this is home sweet home. >> the newest generation is buying at all price points. amenities in this rv include an electric fireplace and retractable tv. >> all of the comforts of home. >> right here. >> he and his wife moved from nebraska to a koa campground close to her job as a traveling nurse. >> affordable for you. >> super affordable. >> how much does this sell for?
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>> probably 40,000, 50,000 roughly. >> you can advertise it over long period of time. >> exactly can get your payments down to $170 a month. >> with a ten-year bank loan payments could be under $200 a month and with cost of camp site you can live just about anywhere. for millenials driving rv sales that's the point. >> they are just getting into the workforce for the first time rv is great way to travel decide where you want to set up your life from there. >> aliceon was raised camping and now works with her husband at koa in mystic where she's the general math ger. >> there's 75 million campers and 38% are millenials. we're catching on. it's something becoming more popular with us. >> this one is actually designed around the mimennal buyer. >> manufacturers are dog their
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best to keep up. providing modern finishes. stainless steel and must haves like solar and wifi. >> a lot of people are traveling and working from their rv. they want that wifi so they can hook up to a camper and travel the country but still be able to run their business from a remote place. >> with more buyers and more people out there that lifestyle is just taking off. we're coming back strong. >> and strong rv sales means more jobs a big deal in part of the country where unemployment was at 15% in the last recession. >> we're above full employment. >> what's the unem employment. >> it's below 3% in the county. in 2009 we were leading the country for unemployment rate. >> it's not just full employment it is full production. all of the rvs on the line have
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we end with a story of a young boy on a mission to make you smile. steve hartman found him on the road. >> it's every kid's worst nightmare and jaden hayes has lived it twice. first lost his dad when he was four. not long after his mom died unexpectedly in her sleep. >> i tried and tried to get her awake. couldn't. >> jacen was understandably heartbroken. >> anybody can die. anybody. >> but as we first reported in 2015 there was another side to his grief. a side he shared with his temporary guardian after the second funeral. told her he was getting tired of seeing everyone sad all the time.
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>> that's the beginning, where the adventure began. >> asked her to bring bunch of toys to downtown georgia where he lived. >> thank you. you want me to have it. >> thank you, man. >> trying to make people smile. rubber duckies. dinosaurs. >> because those are the things that make people smile. >> yeah. >> what happens to their face. >> really. he targeted people that weren't already smiling and tried to turn their day around and it worked. >> it's to make you smile. >> even if it wasn't always quite the reaction he was hoping for. it was so overwhelming to people that a six-year-old orphan would give away a toy and expected nothing in return. he was paid handsomely in hugs. >> i'm still sad my mom and dad
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died. >> i bet you are. >> in the smiles he made he clearly found a purpose. >> i'm counting on it to be 33,000. >> 33,000? that's a pretty big goal. >> uh-huh. >> you think you can make that goal? >> i think i can. >> it's been two years now since we first met jaden. today he lives in winlterville, georgia with scott and diane howers, his aunt and uncle. he still thinks of his mom and dad a lot. >> how you doing. >> doing good. >> he says he's in a happier place now. >> who you do you get from sad place to happy place. >> time. >> as for his smile project he'd like to return to that mission some day. until then he's focusing on more age-appropriate goals. >> what do you want to be? >> famous basketball player and famous baseball player. >> and there's the only smile that matters. steve hartman on the road, in
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winterville, georgia. steve hartman on the road, in winterville, georgia. >> that's thehe captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's friday, august 11, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." president trump ramped up his tough talk against north korea. >> he's disrespected our country greatly. he has said things that are horrific. and with me, he's not getting away with it. >> but the defense secretary is stressing diplomacy. and mr. trump takes aim at senate republican leader mitch mcconnell telling him to get back to work. plus a car plunges seven stories from a parking garage
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