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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 14, 2017 7:00am-9:00am PST

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important. >> today is the day to do that. >> galoshes for michelle. >> i love galoshes! thanks for watching kpix5 news this morning. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, november 14th, 2017. welcome to cbs this morning. republican senate candidate roy moore faces new pressure to quit after a fifth woman accuses him of sexual misconduct. moore's wife stands by his side, calling him a kind and gentle man. five penn state fraternity brothers now face felony charges after the death of a pledge after the fbi recovers lost surveillance video. timothy piazza's parents say the video reveal also the mind-set in the house. and an historic naval exercise that is a powerful show
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of force against north korea. millennials talk about money, getting it, spending it, making shurg they have enough of it. we begin this morning with today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> he said you're just a child, no one will ever believe you. >> accusations mount against senate candidate roy moore. >> this is absolutely false. i never did what she said i did. this is a political maneuver. >> the senate majority leader said moore should drop out of the senate rate. >> do you believe these allegations to be true? >> i believe the women, yes. >> as president trump wraps up his asian trip, a report allegedly his son corresponding with ricwikileaks. >> this has got to stop and we will hunt this person. >> national mourning in iran after an earthquake caused devastation in parts of both iran and iraq. >> a video now recovered from
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the crime scene prompted new charges in the hazing death of a penn state university freshman. >> it's time to man up, fellas, and be accountable for your actions. >> winds toppled trees, wind gusts topped 15 miles per hour. >> just like a freight train. >> all that. >> touchdown, carolina. and carolina, 45-21 tonight. >> and all that matters. >> the president asked me, he said, what do you want to do with the rest of your life. and i said, i want to do what i've done. the same answer i would give you when i was 29, when i was 39, i want to make a difference and i think i can. >> on cbs this morning. >> that's it for sweden. magnificent performance. >> in italy, tears, disbelief. >> italy won't be playing at next year's world cup. the first time since 1958. >> meantime, sweden's players were so excited they got some tv commentators involved. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places.
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>> welcome to cbs this morning. alabama senate candidate roy moore denies the newest claim of sexual misconduct against him. but this morning, more republicans are calling on the former judge to drop out of the race. >> a fifth accuser named beverly young nelson says moore tried to force her into sex when she was just 16 years old. she told her story at an emotional news conference yesterday. the incident happened about 40 years ago. now the national republican senatorial committee called moore unfit to serve and said if he is elected to the senate, he should then be expelled. manuel bojorquez is in balabama at the state republican headquarters. >> reporter: the state gop is cautiously waiting this out but senate majority leader mcconnell has joined a long list of senate republicans calling on moore to drop out. moore fired back on twitter saying mcconnell should step
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aside. moore is doubling down on his innocence and calls the allegations a political attack. >> he said, i am the district attorney of etowah county and if you tell anyone about this, no one will ever believe you. >> reporter: beverly young nelson says she was 16 years old when roy moore attacked her after offering her a ride home from her job as a waitress. >> him putting his hands on my breast. i tried to open my car door to leave. but he reached over and he locked it so i could not get out. >> reporter: she says moorparked his car behind the restaurant where she worked. >> and i was begging him to stop. i had tears running down my face and instead of stopping, he began squeezing my neck, attempting to force my head on to his crotch. >> reporter: at yesterday's press conference, nelson brought along her high school yearbook which she says was signed by moore. >> i don't even know the woman.
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don't know anything about her. >> reporter: with his wife by his side, moore remained defiant. >> can tell you without hesitation this is absolutely false. >> he is the most gentle, most kind man that i have ever known in my life. >> reporter: republican leaders are calling on moore to step aside right away. some suggesting that alabama voters write in luther strange who lost the primary to moore. >> it will be best for him, the state, his family, the gop and the country if he stepped aside. >> he should not be a united states senator. >> i hope that he steps down immediately. >> if these accusations are true, there will be no place for him in the senate. >> reporter: but moore supporters in deeply red alabama with determined to fight washington's establishment. >> i believe him. i believe this is nothing but pure 100% swamp politics. >> reporter: the scandal has republicans scrambling to figure out how to hold on to their senate majority and what to do if moore were to win.
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arizona republican senator jeff flake went as far as saying he would support the democrat in the race, doug jones, over roy moore. >> all right, manny, thank you so much. donald trump jr. confirms he had direct communication with wikileaks during and after the last presidential campaign. the organization apparently contacted him first. last night, the president's oldest son released pages of private messages from september and october 2016. during that period, wikileaks published e-mails and documents stolen from hillary clinton campaign chairman. jeff pegues is in washington with what we learned from trump jr.'s messages. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump jr. doesn't believe this new information proves anything and his lawyer essentially said there's nothing to worry about. congressional investigators tell us they see these revelations as more potential evidence of possible coordination between the trump campaign and russian operatives. >> this has been an election for change. >> reporter: the president's son donald trump jr. was in direct
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communication with wikileaks from september 2016 until july of this year. it appears wikileaks initiated contact. trump jr. released screen shots monday of what he claims are all of the twitter private messages between him and the controversial website. candidate trump frequently praised wikileaks during the campaign. >> wikileaks, i love wikileaks. wikileakings is amazing, the stuff that's coming out. >> reporter: the day after the comments, wikileaks sent donald trump jr. a link to the hacked democratic e-mails with this mess am, strongly suggest your dad tweets this link if he mentions us. an hour later, candidate trump tweeted, very little pick up of incredible information provided by wikileaks. on october 14th, donald trump jr. sent out the link himself saying, all the wikileaks e-mails are right here. that same day, then vice presidential nominee mike pence was asked about trump campaign contact with wikileaks on fox
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news. >> some have suggested on left all this bad stuff about hillary, nothing bad about trump. that your campaign is in cahoots with wikileaks. >> nothing could be further from the truth. >> reporter: u.s. intelligence officials determined that wikileaks was being used by the russians to disseminate material that was stolen from democrats. there are three open investigations into russian campaign meddling on capitol hill. congressman eric swalwell. >> he's demonstrated he and other campaign members were willing to do whatever it takes to work with the russians to get dirt on their opponent hillary clinton. >> reporter: vice president peps said through a spokesperson last night he was never aware of anyone associated with the campaign being in contact with wikileaks. donald trump jr.'s attorney accused them of leaking the messages and added we have no concerns about these documents. >> attorney general jeff sessionings is expected to face trough questions this morning about russia. he's appears before the house
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judiciary committee. the hearing is just getting under way. sessions will likely be asked about recently released court documents and testimony and they show he was told about meetings between trump campaign aides and russian interest. paula reid is on capitol hill. paula, good to see you. what are lawmakers focusing on today? >> reporter: jeff sessions worked here on capitol hill for years but now it has become a mine field for him as new court documents contradict his previous testimony before congress. sessions has repeatedly testified of no knowledge he had any contact between the trump campaign and russia. but former aides page and papadopoulos have revealed they both told sessions about their contacts with russia. papadopoulos told the fbi during the campaign he suggested a meeting between then candidate trump and vladimir putin in front of both trump and sessions and that sessions shut that down. now attorney general sessions
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had to recuse himself from the russia investigation for failing to disclose his own meeting with the russian ambassador. >> imagine they'll be fireworks. what about the attorney general now asking his prosecutors to open up a new russia probe? >> reporter: the justice department is considering a special prosecutor to look into the clinton foundation and uranium one, that is a deal that was approved by the obama administration when a russian company purchased a canadian-based mining company that had some uranium operations here in the u.s. but some former justice department officials tell me they believe all the attention on uranium one is really part of a long-term strategy to discredit robert mueller. president trump has also called for more scrutiny of uranium one and all of this, of course, gives republicans a more friendly line of russia questioning for the attorney general when he appears before them later today, norah. >> paula, thank you. president trump's flying home from asia this morning after a 12-day trip. he plans to meet with house republicans open thursday ahead of a high-stakes vote on tax
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reform. the president tweeted from manila last night, quote, excited to be headed home. with the middle class getting big tax cuts. his proposal would actually increase taxes for 13.8 million middle class households. that's according to congress' nonpartisan joint committee on taxation. just yesterday, the president said he wants republicans to lower the tax bracket for the wealthiest americans to 35%. he also wants to repeal obamacare's individual mandate. that is not currently part of any tax bill. >> a secret deal reportedly allowed some of the most notorious isis fighters to escape from a besieged city with their weapons. our partners at the bbc say 250 fighters were committed to leave raqqah. they got out with 3,500 family members to isis-controlled territory. the report says their convoy included nearly 50 rented trucks, 13 buses and more than 100 isis vehicles. 10 truckings were loaded with
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weapons. the bbc says the u.s. and british-led coalition knew about the deal brokered by syrian democratic forces and they actually monitored the exodus. here's an excerpt of quentin summerville's report. >> reporter: the world was told only a few dozen fighters were being let go, no foreigners and no weapons. but the trucks were cramled full of fighters, some wearing suicide belts. all were heavily armed. after days of searching, we picked up the trail at a truck stop on the outskirts of tabqah. here we discovered the drivers, all civilians, who drove isis to freedom. they'd been hired by the kurdish-led syrian democratic forces. it was the longest journey of their lives. their trucks were rigged with is bombs in case the deal collapsed. they'd been told me were picking up only a few hundred civilians.
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that it would be a quick job. they ended up driving day and night for three days. this couldn't look like the islamic state escaped to victory. so the fbs insisted there would be no flags and no banners. instead, is fighters sat boldly on top of the trucks. the axle on one truck broke it was so overloaded with is weaponry. >> the pentagon spokesman says the united states was not part of this deal but the spokesman also points out the u.s. was not prepared to bomb buses full of women and children. the families of victims in the sandy hook school shooting are at the connecticut supreme court right now with their fight against gunmakers. they want to reinstate a lawsuit against the manufacturer of the military-style weapon that was used in the 2012 attacks. the families claim the company markets this weapon to young people who could be prone to violence. don dahler is in hartford outside the connecticut supreme court house where the hearing is
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under way. don, good morning. >> reporter: last year, a judge dismissed the lawsuit by some family members of sandy hook victims citing a federal law that shields gunmakers from liability in deaths. now appealing, saying that remington knowingly marketed the rifle toll a high-risk group of young men including the shooter adam lanz za. nearly five years after her 6-year-old son dylan was killed by adam lanza, nicole hockley wants the gun manufacturer held accountable. >> a weapon designed to inflict mass casualty. that's morally reprehensible. >> reporter: in a brief submitted to the connecticut supreme court, attorneys representing ten sandy hook families content in order to boost sales, gun manufacturer remington targeted a younger demographic by linking the ar-15
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to macho vigilantism and military-style insurrection. in print ads, the firearm is portrayed alongside phrases like perform under pressure, bow down and consider your man card reissued. >> remington increases the risk when they market the weapon this way of pulling in dangerous users. >> reporter: josh koskoff is the attorney representing the ten families. >> collectively, they're going to be at increased risk. >> reporter: according to the gun violence archive, more than 1,500 mass shootings have taken place since sandy hook. legal analysts say appealing the lawsuit risks on proving the gunmaker's negligence allowed the weapon to fall into the wrong hands. >> they judge this case according to the law. so although these horrific, horrific shootings that have happened are out there, theoretically the judges should disregard them. >> reporter: cbs news reached out to remington for comment. they have not yet replied.
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now, if the families are successful in this appeal, it opens the door to the discovery phase in which they might have accession to internal documents and e-mails that could reveal remington's marketing strategy. >> one of the worst heartbreaking stories. thank you, don dahler. the first new blood pressure guidelines will likely bring a major change in treatment. 11 big medical groups are now redefining the danger zone. for the top blood pressure known as systolic, the bar is lowered from 140 points to 130. >> the new guidelines mean an estimated 31 million more people could be dieing an notioned with high blood pressure. that would be the total of nearly half of american adults. this doctor is a cardiologist with northwest health. why did they change and, secondly, what are the implications? >> this is a silent deadly health crisis that we've really been undertreating. what we now have is over 8900 research studies that tell us
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what we previously thought was prehypertension or high normal which sounds okay is really not okay. that risk starts to go up over systolic pressure of 120. by the time you're at 130, you're risk of cardiovascular events have doubled. this is really about lowering the bar, raising awareness and early intervention. we've lowered the cutoff from 140 over 90 to 120 over 80. stage 1 hypertension begins at that point. normal is still 120 over 80. elevated is when your top number's over 120. stage 1 between 140 and 130, over 80 and 90 and stage two over 140 and 90. we use risk to kind of tell who should get medication and who should have lifestyle recommendations alone. if you're at elevated risk, you'll get lifestyle recommendations. if you're at a higher risk, i'm association if you're at lower risk, you'll get lifestyle recommendations. higher risk, you'll get
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medication and lifestyle. >> that's a lot of numbers to pay attention to. everybody keeps calling it the silent killer. >> right. >> what exactly does it do to your body, high blood pressure? >> it's increasing the pressure in the blood vessels that supply blood to all organs of the body. you're slowly and silently damaging these organs over time. it can lead to heart attack, stroke, heart failure, peripheral or tarkansao or tear like aneurysm. it's important to start recognizing it early. they're saying with guidelines it's going to affect a lot of individuals under the age of 45. it will triple the number of men under 45 now dieing an notioned with hypertension and will double the number of women which is a good thing because we want people to pick this up early. >> what are the ways we can reduce our blood pressure? >> i mentioned lifestyle. this is kind of the cornerstone of all treatment, even for those who get medication. that means exercise. a heart healthy diet like the dash diet. a diet low in salt.
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high in potassium. stress management. weight reduction. all these things can lower your blood pressure by about 4 points to 5 points systolically, that's very impressive. now there's medication. under the new guideline, about 50% of americans are not going to be needing that cutoff where they would be controlled, 130 over 80. they will need to intensify their regiment with either higher doses or more drugging g. it's estimated only 4 million americans under these new recs will need medication. a message to north korea with drills near the korea peninsula. be tracy reports f well with, we're dry today but more rain is on the way. in fact, take a leek at the future cast. increasing sunshine and
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the fog is going to dissipate. watch what happens tomorrow morning. showers making the way back in and going south tomorrow. it's going to be a wet one. mild today and dry for the tuesday. it's a wet wednesday and unsettled thursday and drying for the weekend. five fraternity five fraternity brothers are now charged with felonies in the death of a penn state student after an alleged hazing ritual. >> timothy piazza's parents
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respond to the new video evidence that led to these latest charges. >> you're watching cbs this morning. >> this portion of cbs this morning sponsored by serve pro, helping to make fire and water damage like it never happened. ♪ ♪ hi ted, glad you could join us! ♪ ♪ give it a try. mmm. give that to me. ♪ ♪ (laughing) ted? ♪ ♪ hi, i need your help. i've been trying to find ted? a knee specialist... but nobody has an opening for months! you can't always control your feelings... oh, i found one in-network next tuesday. but unitedhealthcare can help you control your care. thanks, stephanie. unitedhealthcare when did you see the sign? when i needed to jumpstart sales. build attendance for an event.
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whfight back fastts, with tums smoothies. it starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue. and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum -tum -tum -tum smoothies! only from tums (♪) (♪) it all starts with a wish. the lincoln wish list event is here. sign and drive off in a new lincoln with zero down and a complementary first months payment. ahead, three things you should know this morning, including senator rand paul's return to capitol hill after bowing seriously hurt by a
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this is a kti x 5 morning update. good morning. it's 7:26. the parents of a 10 -year-old boy injured in may after being objected from a water slide are suing after suffering scrapes all over the body. the family is expected to file a lawsuit against the park and the city of dublin. san jose officials are considering whether to link rent control to the rate of inflation. that's the hot topic tonight at a city counsel meeting. the law will be adopted back in 1979 and applies to units before that year. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. time is 7:27. it's been a slow ride this morning due to a number of different crashes that we have had. a new one coming in near canal. not blocking any lanes but certainly adding to the back up. this is the stop right now, so there's the crash and then we are going to continue to be slow along the bridge. east shore freeway is 80. look at the back ups. that's heading westbound. 68-minute ride over an hour just to go from highway 4 to the main. we have sunshine to start out the day for most unless you're right here. that's the bay bridge. it's cloudy with a little bit of clouds and fog. overall we're going to see the increasing sunshine. temperatures are in the mid to upper 60s today. upper 50s to low 50s along the coast and by
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colbert" going what is that on his lip? >> what is that facial hair? >> i saw him a couple of days ago, the elton john 25th anniversary of the aids charity that he does. he did not have that. so i'm thinking, guys, it's fake. >> oh, movember. the month of november where guys don't shave. charlie, you're not supposed to shave. >> unlikely to happen. >> just throwing it out there in case you wanted to play. welcome back. i would like to see you -- have you ever had a mustache? >> no. >> no need to start now. welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things that you should know this morning. the list of republican leaders in congress who are calling on alabama senate candidate roy moore to withdraw is growing. but moore still has the support of one of his former primary rivals, republican congressman mo brooks. brooks said too much is at stake. he said, quote, roy moore will vote right on each of these
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issues and that is why i'm voting for roy moore. senator rand paul returned to capitol hill after an attack in his yard that broke six ribs. the republican cast votes yesterday with his arms at his side. he says he is still in pain. paul's return was hailed by president trump. great to see you looking well and back on the senate floor. he will help us with tax cuts. the senator declined to answer questions about the assault. general electric is getting out of the light bulb business. the light bulb has been an iconic part of the company's largest conglomerate for 125 years. ge has decided to shrink and focus on three core businesses, health, power and aviation. the new ceo made the announcement yesterday. he said ge would leave its lighting, transportation, industrial solutions and electrical grid business. new video evidence led to more than 150 new charges in the death of a penn state student after an alleged hazing ritual. five fraternity brothers are now charged with felonies.
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a total of 26 face criminal charges. anna werner is outside the fraternity house in state college, pennsylvania. she spoke with timothy piazza's parents. >> reporter: the fbi was able to recover the surveillance video from the basement of the fraternity house. initially they told detectives the camera was not working but now that video means more young men are facing new charges. police say the restored security footage from the fraternity house basement shows timothy piazza consuming at least 18 drinks in 82 minutes. >> this is a very important situation. >> reporter: district attorney stacy parks miller said not once did the 19-year-old get alcohol on his own. beta theta pi brothers gave him all of his drinks. >> we believe the behavior was reckless and that people could foresee serious bodily injury and death from the culmination of this behavior. >> reporter: she charged 22-year-old braxton becker with
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tampering with evidence, for deleting the basement video while police were searching the fraternity house. >> they sent it to the fbi and they confirmed it was deleted and were able to recover it. >> reporter: tim's parents, jim and evelyn piazza. >> what does it mean to you to have new charges filed and to have that video be recovered? >> i think having the video recovered just kind of shows the type of mindset that went on in that house, like they could get away with it. >> his life mattered. it should have mattered to all of them. >> reporter: prosecutors filed more than 150 new charges monday, including involuntary manslaughter, aggravated assault, hazing, and furnishing alcohol to minors. five defendants face felonies among the 12 new fraternity members charged. joseph ems' misdemeanor charge was dismissed but he's charged again with hazing, furnishing alcohol to minors and unlawful acts relative to liquor. his attorney, william j. brennan
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has not yet seen the new video. >> we successfully defended this case once. we thought it was behind us. but we'll suit up and do it again if need be. >> reporter: piazza died in february following what prosecutors described as an alcohol-fueled hazing ritual that started in the basement. >> i don't know that as an adult who has had drinks all his life i'd be able to tolerate one-third of that. not even a quarter. >> reporter: tom kline is the family attorney. >> the videotape is going to be the ancillary evidence which is going to likely convict individuals. it was the missing link in proving what happened. >> reporter: we reached out to attorneys for the defendants charged yesterday. we heard back from two of them. lawyers for gary dibileo and michael bonatucci tell us their clients are not responsible for the death.
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north korea is accusing the u.s. of taking up a strike posture around the korean peninsula. for the first time in a decade three american aircraft carriers and their escort ships teamed up for drills in the western pacific. the show of force, which ends today, is widely seen as a warning to pyongyang. ben tracy went aboard one of the carriers. he's now in the south korean capital of seoul. ben, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the u.s. navy says these exercises are about training and preparedness, but this was also a massive display of military might right in north korea's backyard while president trump was in the region. the u.s. navy flew us out to the uss ronald reagan to see it in person. we boarded a navy cargo plane at the air force base south of seoul. we were told the flight would last about 90 minutes. when we reached the deck of the uss reagan, we saw f-18 fighter jets, one after another, being launched over the waters just off the korean peninsula. if needed, these jets could strike military installations in
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north korea in just minutes. if there was a conflict with north korea, they could launch a fighter jet off this carrier, one every 20 seconds. of course they then have to get all those fighter jets back onboard. this is how they do it. but what the u.s. military really wants the world to see is this. three u.s. aircraft carrier strike groups, the reagan, the theodore roosevelt and the uss nimitz, sailing alongside each other. together they support about 200 aircraft and their combined combat power simulates what could be brought to bear in a war with north korea. >> why do you think these exercises are important? >> we can't be ready without that, and to stop those kind of exercises would reduce our ability to defend the united states and our allies and
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maintain the peace and stability in this region that has endured for so many decades. >> reporter: this naval exercise has infuriated north korea, which is calling it a deliberate military provocation. china and russia have tried to get the u.s. to freeze these military exercises in exchange for north korea freezing its missile launches, but neither country seems interested in doing that. gayle. >> ben tracy reporting from seoul. it's good to know they're prepared and ready if necessary. >> we have the greatest military in the world. they prepare and they're ready to fight. >> hope they don't have to fight. thank you very much, ben. investigators say severe sleep deprivation and lack of oversight led to a deadly california bus crash last year. ahead, how a federal regulator is being blamed for keeping the bus company on the road despite safety issues. and you can hear more of "cbs this morning" on our podcast. you can get them on itunes and apple's podcast app. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. taking a break, we'll be back.
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the national transportation safety board blasted another federal regulator for not doing enough to get unsafe bus and truck drivers off the road. this follows an investigation into a 2016 bus crash in california. four people died in this accident and 20 others were hurt. investigators found that the driver was severely sleep deprived. they also concluded that the federal motor carrier safety administration could have acted on safety issues which may have prevented this crash. kris van cleave is in arlington, virginia, with more on this story. kris, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. fmcsa is essentially an agency without a lot of leadership right now. it hasn't had a full-time administrator since january. the acting administrator retired earlier this month and the appointee to take over the
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agency still hasn't been confirmed by congress. the ntsb is basically saying someone over there needs to get to work. the deadly accident was horrifying. a signpost tore through much of the bus's passenger cabin just after 3:00 a.m. >> there was every type of injury you could think. >> reporter: the ntsb found the bus company had demonstrated its repeated lack of compliance but was allowed to keep operating. shortly before the crash it passed an inspection by the federal motor carrier safety administration, or fmcsa, despite a virtual laundry list of issues. they also found drivers worked too many hours and falsified reports. it listed the lack of oversight as a contributing factor in the crash. >> are there unsafe drivers on the road today and are signs being missed? i think so. >> reporter: ntsb chair robert sumwalt. >> was there enough evidence with their existing rules to have taken action to prevent this crash? >> well, we think so. we think that they should have
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done a better job with knowing what was going on with this particular carrier. >> reporter: the investigation raised questions about the fmcsa's oversight. we found a voluntary reporting system with drivers failing to report dangerous medical conditions. the agency declined to talk on camera but in a statement said it will review the findings, adding safety will always be its highest priority. the agency did eventually shut down the bus operator more than two months after the deadly crash. >> i think they need better regulations to enforce what they're doing, and they need to do a better job of doing what their regulations call for. >> reporter: a d.o.t. official was quick to point out that this accident occurred during the previous administration. the ntsb notes earlier this year fmcsa abandoned new regulations on a safety rating system and sleep apnea.
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>> thank you so much. up next, a look at this morning's other headlines, including the new pill just approved that talks to your doctor after you swallow it. plus millenials frequently get a bad rap about how they spend their money despite often be financially strapped. the misconceptions about millenials and money. it's in our new series "my generation." first, it's 7:45. as we go out the door the temperatures are mild and increasing unshine today and then we start to see the showers. enjoy the drier weather today and around the bay and coast. it's wet and windy for thursday and dry and unsettled again for the weekend. and resilient for a lifetime the more that we can strengthen
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wtsp reports police are investigating the suspicious death of a person in the same neighborhood where a serial killer is suspected of several deaths. the body was found early this morning. police say it's too early to say if the shooting death is connected to this possible serial killer. three people were killed in an 11-day period last month. investigators released surveillance videos of a hooded suspect. three ucla basketball players detained in china reportedly have been allowed to leave. the three players were accused o of stealing designer sunglasses. the "wall street journal" reports they were seen checking in for a delta flight to l.a. president trump raised the matter with the chinese president during his visit to beijing last week. the wall streeten journal reports the fda approved a digital pill. it's designed to help patients
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properly take their medication. the chip sends dosage and ingestion time to an app and that can be shared with doctors. this is totally the future of medicine. it's exciting. >> so the doctor can know did you take the medicine you were prescribed? interesting. italy is suffering one of the worst humiliations in modern history. what is it? the national soccer team will not, repeat, not play in the world cup. ahead the newest that faces -- world cup. ahead, the newest -- let's go to sumatra. where's sumatra? good question. this is win. and that's win's goat, adi. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. making the coffee erupt with flavor. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. that erupts with even more flavor. which helps provide for win's family. and adi the goat's family too. because his kids eat a lot. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. packed with goodness. you or joints. something for your heart...
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new concerns, in areas affected by the wine country fires. this video from skydrone five shows a sinkhole that opened up in santa rosa. the city's water department is and we have a video from the sky drone showing a sink hole in santa rosa. the water department is concerned of the wet weather's defense and the weak infrastructure. a man charged with murder and that's one of the few suspects with last week's murder and the continuation high school.
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it's a drive there to the
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freeway and it's northbound 101 in the expressway and traffic is backed up beyond and during the red. almost an hour and a half. we have a vehicle and right along the test and that's heavy in both directions. it continues to be on the thort bound director and that's the main. that's a check of the traffic. good morning. we're off to a mild start around the bay and then plenty of sunshine. the midday and then it's warm in the spots -- and that's the wet weather system and that's system and what we see friday and then
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we will look at the weekend.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. tuesday, november 14th, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, senate candidate roy moore defies calls to step down saying he never knew the women accusing him of a violent attack. subway ceo on transforming the family business that became the world's largest restaurant chain but first here's today's eye opener at 8:00. ro roy moore denies the claims against it. >> mitch mcconnell joined a long list of senate republicans calling on moore to drop out. >> donald trump jr. doesn't believe this proves anything and his lawyer essentially said
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there's nothing to worry about. >> a secret deal reportedly allowed some of the most notorious isis fighters to escape from a syrian city with their weapons. the fbi was able to recover surveillance video that new video means more young men are facing new charges. the u.s. navy says these exercises are about training and preparedness but this was also a massive display of might right in north korea's backyard while president trump was in the region. jimmy kimmel turning the big 5-0. wouldn't be a proper b-day without roasting. >> i for got jimmy kimmel's name so i googled ugly late night talk show host and i got him. >> jimmy kimmel is not funny, neither is david letterman. i would have to go along with both of those. >> this morning's eye opener at 8:00 presented by liberty mutual insurance.
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i'm charlie rose with gayle king and "new year'norah o'donn. 17 senators have backed away from roy moore. texas senator john cornyn and ted cruz withdrew their endorsements of moore and majority leader mitch mcconnell said i think he should step aside. i believe the women. beverly nelson is the fifth to accuse him. nelson says that moore offered her a ride then parked his car and attacked her while she fought him off. >> at some point -- at some point he gave up and he then looked at me and he told me, he said, you're just a child and he said i am the district attorney of etowah county and if you tell anyone about this, no one will
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ever believe you. >> with his wife at his side roy moore called the new allegation a political attack. >> i can tell you without hesitation this is absolutely false. i never did what she said i did. i don't even know the woman. >> moore says mcconnell should step down instead for failing the conservative cause. attorney general jeff sessionssor the house judiciary committee. the it comes a day after the justice department said prosecutors are looking into whether a special counsel should be appointed to investigate the clinton foundation's connection to an obama era uranium deal. just one issue they asked prosecutors to examine. president trump expressed frustration with the justice department before his asia trip and said democrats should face scrutiny. >> i'm really not involved with the justice department. i'd like to let it run itself but honestly they should be looking at the democrats. they should be looking at podesta and all of that
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dishonesty, they should be looking at a lot of things and a lot of people are disappointed in the justice department including me. >> during his confirmation hearings sessions told the senate judiciary committee he would recuse himself from any investigations involving hillary clinton. anita hill shared her account of dealing with sexual harassment and spoke with "glamour" magazine yesterday. >> in 1991 i testified before the senate judiciary committee that clarence thomas who are repeatedly harassed me when he was my boss was unsuitable to sit on the u.s. supreme court. >> hill said all women are entitled to work and live without fear of sexual misconduct. others including aly raisman joined her on stages to share their personal stories. earlier former vice president joe biden was asked if he would have handled hill's 1991 case differently. biden presided over clarence thomas' confirmation hearing.
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supporters of hill believe it was unfair to her and subjected her to public humiliation. >> let's get something straight here. i believed in you. i voted against clarence thomas. i feel really badly she didn't feel like the process worked but i tell you what, i said something at the time that proved to be right. i said this is going to be the start of a fundamental change what constitutes harassment in the workplace and people are going to begin to change and it began to change because of her courage. >> biden urged the audience to change the culture of how women are treated in society. research shows millennials face greater economic challenges than previous generations. this morning they are opening up about their passion for entrepreneurs and their spending. >> having another source of income to be able to sustain the lifestyle you want to live. you'll use your main hustle in order to finance your side hustle so your side hustle can
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become your main hustle. >> side hustle, main hustle. everybody hustle. ahead in our new series my generation millennials speak with remarkable candor about their financial challenges and triumphs too. they h >> announcer: this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is sponsored by liberty mutual insurance. liberty stands with you. >> annoe
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opener at 8:00 is sponsored by liberty mutual insurance. liberty stands with you. just like the united states this morning, at least for soccer fans, the other country that will miss the world cup, italy. >> italians woke up to some of the worst news in the world of sports in nearly 60 years. this newspaper which says, fine, says it all, the end. we'll have that story coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ lower premiums? extra benefits? it's open enrollment. time to open the laptop... ...and compare medicare health plans. why? because plans change, so can your health needs.
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sign and drive off in a new lincoln with zero down and a complementary first months payment. ♪ we're partnering with refinery 29 for our new series called "my generation" taking a look at the financial lives of millennials. it has a popular feature called money diaries and they reveal their salaries and what they spend each week and we compiled our own diaries and several shared those that impacted them the most including student debt and the side hustle.
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>> it bothers me when people say millennials are lazy. i care about making money and i'm pretty shameless about it. i just butought pie first house and every dollar i spend i think has related to this. super happy but it was hard. >> aside from the credit card debt my husband and i also have significant amount in student loan debt. i believe our starting balances together were about 225,000. and now we're at about 160,000. there is a lot you could do with $2,000 every month of the year if it wasn't being spent on that. >> friends and family coming out of college with pretty significant student loans and thought to myself, gosh, that's something i don't want to get involved in and did basically two years of college. what do i really want to do with my life and do i need a degree to do that and, you know, the answer was no. >> i think that we live in a
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generation in which we're always going to have side hustles. a side hustle is having another source of income to be able to sustain the lifestyle that you want to live. you'll use your main hustle in order to finance your side husbandle so your side hustle can become your main hustle. >> a big priority of mine has been saving. but with the money that i don't save, i would definitely say i travel a lot. i like buying vintage clothes. i like going out to eat with my friends. >> we spend a lot on experiences. my parents i think laugh at when they see and hear what we're doing but i just chalk it up to my experience buck as being filled. >> we like to be able to enjoy life. but we also are quite intelligent as far as like how we spend our money. >> we are all trying to find a balance between spending responsibly on necessities and things that we need and spending on things that enrich our lives
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and make us happier. >> joining us now is cbs news business analyst jill schlesinger and lindsay stanberry. great to have you both. lindsay, what did others think of the millennial generation. >> we get a terrible rap. it's unfair. we're coming up. we graduated into our session and have student loan debt that's crazy and the more educated generation and more live at home because we're saving money. >> what is the rep you have. >> that we overspend. that we are not responsible. that we're not investing. th that we're not hitting our milestones as fast as our parents are. >> do they have faith in basic financial institutions? >> you know, a lot of times we hear this thing like, oh, they don't love anyone. they don't trust anyone but i was fascinated. the edelman trust barometer came out and when they drilled down
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there was something really interesting in it and found that millennials actually trust banks and payments and financial services more than the general population. i think there's a rationale behind it. they like it when it's fueled by technology. so they trust that if i use my square app it's going to work. and if i use a financial service that's an online investment adviser that works. maybe not a person, maybe not a company, but they do trust the technology. >> lindsay, what do they prioritize when it comes to spending. >> i think they're trying to pay down that debt. something that hangs over their heads and stresses them out. i think we see them prioritizing experiences, food. >> they like to travel. and not just go to martha's vineyard. >> they like to go overseas and quit their jobs and travel. a lot are saving money so they can do that. >> how are companies capitalizing on it. >> it's fascinating. when i talk to all the ceos at
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financial service companies, this is their absolute passion. how are we getting this huge generation to become part of our organization? and what we know is they've got to have a value system, because millennials do say that part of the reason they choose to do business with certain companies is based on the values of that company. and so it's not only providing a service, it's not just about price, it's who are you? do you stand for something that i care about? and this is transforming almost every area not just travel, not just restaurants but also financial services. >> you talk about technology. there's also a lot of transparency i feel like lindsay. >> there is. >> younger -- a younger generation will share with one another how much they make. >> i think they're really open and seeing that with money diary, they want to share because we grew up not talking about money, right? >> it was impolite. >> it was impolite. not ladylike. but then if you're not talking about it, how are you supposed to know what salary to ask for or how to invest in your 401(k).
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>> is there a difference between men and women? >> i think there's a big difference between them. there's still a lot of stigma around women making a lot of money, making more than their partners and i think financial institutions really talk to women differently and not always in the best way. i think pa we are really -- the reason money diaries is so great is because it's peer to peer and takes away a lot of stigma around money and makes it less taboo. >> i don't know why they use venmo and share how much money. thanks so much. tomorrow in our series "my generation" we'll explain the 67% project that shows more than two-thirds of women are a size 14 or up. but are rarely represented in the media. how millennials are changing the way we view those women. on "cbs this morning" podcast we speak with malcolm paris, author of "kids these days and the making of
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millennials." he explains millennials are the hardest working most educated generation in u.s. history as lindsay told us. it is true, they are super smart. find it on itunes and apple's podcast app. "60 minutes" captured of "vanity fair" tina brown talking about a future cover photo. >> act of bad taste in every magazine is very important on a regular basis, i think you have occasionally do things that other people say, my god, why do they do that and if you don't you're not alive. you're boring. >> my god, look at tina's earrings. no one could ever call her boring. she is in our toyota green room with a look at her new memoir. how she says the controversial cover of demi moore pregnant is still relevant today. hi. we'll be right back with tina. ♪ always there to remind me
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fine, the end. that's how one italian newspaper summed up italy's humiliating exit from the soccer world cup. it's the first time the country failed to qualify for the competition since 1958. seth doane is outside rome's olympic stadium where the loss is described as a national shame. seth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. yes, this is the rome's olympic stadium here, and to really understand the scale of this, you have to put it on olympic
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terms. imagine in the u.s. putting all of the fans together for all of the different sports teams and then having them lose. you begin to get a sense of the agony of defeat. >> soccer brings italians together and today they are united in grief. >> it's a trauma. >> i think so. the loss left fans speechless while watch iing the end of the game. outside the stadium, some did find words. but they were not nice. >> our country is falling apart. it's disgusting, said another. the world cup cannot exist without italy. but this year it will. delight for sweden, magnificent performance. >> and this will take a long while to sink in. italy has failed to qualify for a world cup finals.
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>> reporter: this is the apocalypse, said italy's leading sports newspaper. on the field, players' faces showed that. >> november, 2017, will be an infamous date in italian football history. >> reporter: in italy, where soccer, football here, is religion, this is the country's greatest sports failure in nearly 60 years. italian goalkeeper wiped tears from his face and after the match retired from international play. many players could not quite find the words, while italy's head coach said there's just one thing i can do, say sorry to the italian people. >> it's bright and sunny in rome. today it's overcast, gray and spitting rain. it captures the national mood. italy is not the only notable team not to make it to the world cup playoffs.
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the u.s. also failed to qualify. >> the u.s. men. thank you so much. r whether to allow medical this is a kpix 5 morning update. good morning, san francisco leaders will consider whether is a to allow medical marijuana businesses to sell relational marijuana until local guidelines can be established. recreational part becomes legal on january 1st. gilroy police say 40 people who used their cars at a valero gas station were hit by a credit card skimmer. at least $50,000 was stolen from the victim was. offices believe the skimmer was in use at the gas station for at least a week. we will have traffic it back weather in just a moment.
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-- we will have traffic and weather in just a moment. -- good morning, san francisco leaders will consider whether is
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to allow medical marijuana businesses to sell recreational marijuana until local guidelines can be established. recreational pot becomes legal on january 1st. gilroy police say 40 people who use their cards at valero gas nation were hit by a credit card skimmer. at least 50,000 was stolen from the. offices believe the skimmer was in use at the gas station for at least a week. we will have traffic and weather in just a moment. >> just a little under an hour from hillcrest to get over to 680. give yourself some extra time heading through that stretch. 680 is a slow ride from 24th, just under 20 minutes. the crash is still blocking two lanes north 1001 at lawrence expressway. you can see traffic backed up beyond 680. we are looking at an hour commute for drivers making their way to san antonio.
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here is a live look on north first street and you can see lots of traffic. don't want to be there right now. at the toll plaza things looking like a parking lot. we are in the red, 26 minute ride heading into san francisco. the freeway a little over an hour to the macarthur maze. let's check in with julie. >> good morning, a mild start today, mild temperatures later as well. plenty of sunshine with highs in the mid- to upper 60s. inland today will be the warmest locations. tomorrow low 60s. big changes as a wet and windy weather system comes in for the morning commute spreading south through the evening commute. we are talking heavy rain, over one inch possible and gusty winds as well. we stay unsettled thursday, trying on friday, unsettled for the weekend. ♪
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what if home security was different? what if it looked different? what if the measure of working, was that you never had to think about it. ♪ what if it was so easy to use, you actually used it. -- we will stay unsettled on thursday, drying on friday, and unsettled for the weekend. ♪ heavy, labored breathing heavy, labored breathing coughing breathing through oxygen mask breathing through oxygen mask breathing through oxygen mask breathing through oxygen mask covered california. it's more than just health care. it's life care.
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oh, yeah. >> we had about a 45-minute bus ride. >> 45-minute bus ride, 6-minute train ride. so we decided to hop on the train with the squad. hey, what's up? >> that's the cleveland cavaliers just piling into a new york city subway car. lebron james recordes his teammates during the ride yesterday but one commuter appeared unhappy to be on camera. the man told us he didn't know that was an nba superstar sitting next to him. >> i didn't think they were a professional team. i certainly did not think it was lebron james, who i have heard of. i could not pick him out from a lineup if you paid me. but really it wasn't a huge deal. i just needed more coffee. >> okay. the video was posted on an
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uninterrupted website that's co-founded by lebron james. the commuter says looking back he finds the experience hysterical. he does look clearly annoyed. lebron james said that was his first time ever on a subway. >> i don't know. how do you not know what lebron james is? >> maybe you don't like basketball? maybe you don't like basketball. >> okay. >> but now he knows. welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> right now it's time to show you some of the morning headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" reports nearly two months after hurricane maria, the health crisis haunts puerto rico. more than 2,000 calls have been for psychiatric crises. puerto rico's governor asked for more than $94 billion in federal aid as the island struggles to recover. britain's "guardian" says a champion scrabble player is banned after being accused of cheating.
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they banned allan simmons for three years. he allegedly put letter tiles he had just drawn back into a bag to get more tiles. >> that's bad. >> he denies cheating and said he planned to concentrate on more important things in life. "newsweek" says diabetes and heart problems can be avoided if you eat slower. there's an 18.1% chance of developing health problems. those eating at normal speeds have a 6.5% chance. only 2.3% of slow eaters developed the syndrome. lord & taylor merchandise is coming to walmart.com. they will start offering higher end clothing and accessories from lord & taylor on its website. the partnership starts next spring and will allow lord & taylor to reach a wider audience. walmart is hoping to attract millenials who do not shop on its online store.
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the world's oldest wine was found in 8,000-year-old jars. it was discovered in the country of georgia. the oldest jar dates back to around 6000 b.c. researchers believe this is the earliest example of grape wine making. they said the wine was probably made in a similar way to today's wine with grapes week crushed and then fermented. tina brown transformed vanity fair into a pop culture. the former editor in chief was brought in to lead the magazine back in 1983 after it failed to find its voice and struggled to gain advertisers. her first cover, blonde ambition, featuring daryl hannah, made an edgy statement about the publication's future. it was followed by other iconic images, including madonna, michael jackson, eddie murphy and cher. "the vanity fair diaries" pulls back the cover as editor in chief of the magazine. she's published her own diary
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entries from 1983 to 1992. welcome to the table. boy, this is juicy, juicy, gossipy, dishy, sexy and smart. >> finally opening those pages. >> you really did. i think it's interesting that you talk about your life. when you were in school, you got kicked out of three different high schools as a kid. >> true. >> and your father blames the high school for failing this very unusual girl. >> that was what was so great about my father. he was so proud of having a disrupter as a daughter. he would go in and say how sad it must be if you just failed this extraordinary girl. my mother would have their heads held high. they would sweep out. let's go, dollar, like pack your drunk and let's go. >> here you arrive in new york, your very first day. you're not yet 30. in the cab on the way to your hotel you hear dr. ruth giving very explicit sexual directions, very graphic sexual act and you're thinking what have i got
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myself into when you come to this country. because it's on the radio. >> i'm bumping along in the cab from jfk with my case in the back knowing i'm going to be going into this editorial challenge, and suddenly this voice as i'm looking out the window. i'm thinking what is this place? what do they do? what are you listening to? >> i think you said my kinda town. >> that's really the point. you wanted to come to new york because this is where it was, you wanted to test yourself. >> new york was for me having come from london, it was the capital of the action. i'm a girl of the arena. i like to be in that gladitorial ring. there's nothing like being on broadway, which i felt was being in new york city was. >> characterize -- >> go ahead. >> describe that moment when you decided you wanted to move from being a writer to an editor. you were assigned a story about go-go dancer. >> they asked if i would dance to get a sense of it. >> and did you?
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>> i did. i was union jackie actually. and when i got off that dancing, i thought to myself, i think it's time i made the assignments. i want to be the one to tell people what to do. no more of this. i want to be an editor. >> so when you saw the table, you thought i want to hop up there. but you weren't 30 yet. you take over "vanity fair" just as you're turning 30. >> it seems young now, but i was this kind of -- i blazed ahead. i had had four and a half years of editing in london and been very successful so that was my sort of learning curve. when i came to "vanity fair" i really had a strong vision of what i wanted to see. >> and what was that? >> it was a sophisticated mix. i felt that american magazines were not combining literature with celebrity with arts with business. i saw it as this gleaming package that was on the front edge of culture and it was all about how that would all mix together. so it was always about the search for the mix. the movie star piece, the crime piece.
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>> you were famous for the covers too. >> yes. >> what did they do for you an what was the one that launched it? >> the covers were absolutely critical. the first cover immediately made a statement, the one you showed, because it actually followed the first, you know, failed editions, which were very sort of pretentious and sort of artie illustrations. i wanted to immediately say this is glamorous, this is edgy, which of course the wonderful picture. >> the reagans. >> that was a critical cover for us. we got access to shoot them at the white house. we went to do that and i took with me harry benson, the great photographer. he was such a brilliant mischievous mind. he brought with him a boom box and in the boom box was a tape of frank sinatra. as the reagans walked in, he puts on the boom box and nancy
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says let's dance, darling. >> i like how she kicked up her foot. if she didn't like them -- >> when they kissed, i knew i had the spread of a lifetime. went back to the office, was busy laying it out. suddenly got the call, mrs. reagan needs to approve the pictures. first i just hid. the chairman said you have to show nancy reagan the pictures, send them. i thought i'm not sending them. i hopped onto the plane, took the shuttle down there, sat there three hours and finally persuaded them to run. >> this is a story about them. >> cy newhouse was the very shy roman emperor whose company it was. he was the only really person that mattered but was also very reluctant power chief in a sense which is what made him very beguiling. he really knew what he wanted and he appreciated editors that appreciated magazines. alexander lieberman was a very, very cultured, a great artist himself, knew everybody from picasso to diana reland. my dear, he had this little mustache, a douglas fairbanks mustache, and the two of them have this dynamic way you have to negotiate the politics between them.
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>> they had never seen anybody like you. >> what's the challenge of the new editor? >> i think it's a completely different company now. it was a much more personal company then because cy newhouse was so personally involved. it's more of a corporation now. but they have anna winter, who's a fabulous editorial director and they are the guiding spirits now. i think she's a terrific choice. she's young, she has intellectual rigor an i think she'll bring a new broom to the whole situation. >> a new broom. tina brown, thank you so much. >> thank you. >> and "the vanity fair diary" is on sale today. only on "cbs this morning,"
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the most powerful woman in fast food opens up about leading subway into the future. >> i don't think that there's anybody out there that knows more about this brand or loves this brand more than i do. >> next, we hear from suzanne greco about how she is giving subway a new look to reinvigorate the brand. fi
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accused of obstructing justice to theat the fbinuclear war, and of violating the constitution by taking money from foreign governments and threatening to shut down news organizations that report the truth. if that isn't a case for impeaching and removing a dangerous president, then what has our government become? i'm tom steyer, and like you, i'm a citizen who knows it's up to us to do something. it's why i'm funding this effort to raise our voices together and demand that elected officials take a stand on impeachment. a republican congress once impeached a president for far less. yet today people in congress and his own administration know
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that this president is a clear and present danger who's mentally unstable and armed with nuclear weapons. and they do nothing. join us and tell your member of congress that they have a moral responsibility to stop doing what's political and start doing what's right. our country depends on it.
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the world's largest restaurant chain is getting a makeover. subway grew from one connecticut store front to nearly 45,000 locations in more than 100 countries. that's bigger than mcdonald's. but the company shrank for the first time in 2016 and now it hopes a new look will help jump start the 50-year-old brand. in a story you'll see only on "cbs this morning," we went behind the counter with the subway ceo and lifelong employee, suzanne greco. she talked in her first tv interview about taking over the company started by her big brother and the struggles with staying competitive in the fast food industry. today the subway experience is familiar around the world. but when 17-year-old fred deluca opened pete's super submarines in 1965, it was a family affair. >> we came from a very modest family. and the idea to open that first sandwich shop was really for fred, my brother, to generate
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money to pay for his college because we didn't have any money. >> you were in a subway store at age 7, right? >> i was so intrigued with this idea that we own a business. this was like a big deal to me and i just wanted to be a part of it. >> in 1974 deluca began recruiting outside owners to buy subway franchises. by 1990 there were 5,000. but the subway family received devastating news in 2013. deluca had leukemia and he named his little sister, suzanne greco, as his successor. >> those who worked for their family will attest to the fact that they're hardest on you. never did he want people to think that he handed something to me or that i didn't earn it. you know, when we got toward the end of this, he said you're ready. i want you to carry on the legacy. >> i was stunned to learn that subway has almost 45,000 and
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mcdonald's only has like 35,000. you're bigger than mcdonald's. >> yes, we are the largest restaurant chain out there. but it really comes down to one sandwich. that one sandwich, that one customer. and serving 7.5 million sandwiches a day. >> how many sandwiches a day? >> 7.5 million sandwiches are served in a subway daily. >> hi, i'm jared, the subway go. >> reporter: greco took control in the midst of a public relations crisis. national spokesman jared fogle was arrested on child pornography charges. the following year rivals grew, while subway sales declined. for the first time the company closed more locations in the u.s. than it opened. >> what do you think caused that decline in sales? >> well, there's a lot of disruption. so we were the ones that started with this fresh revolution. that's how we started and that's who we're going to be. that's who we are. but many brands are starting to do that. that is what customers want. >> so where was subway failing
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to innovate? >> consumers' ideas about food and their ideas about restaurants and service have evolved. and being the size that we are, it's not as simple to make a change, but we are making rapid changes. >> those changes include renovated store fronts, highlighting subway's use of fresh produce, kiosks where customers can place orders and a mobile app where loyalty is rewarded. >> do you feel like you have to restwengt it? >> fresh, delicious customized food is still relevant today, but we do have to evolve because fresh has a different meaning than it had 20 years ago. >> greco pointed to subway's partnership with farms across the country that allow it to move produce from field to
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sandwich in a matter of days. >> this is where all the magic really happens. >> still, she says the key to subway's success resides behind the counter. >> this may be the first time a ceo has ever made me a sandwich. >> i love it. i love making sandwiches. it taught me so much. >> facing a rapidly changing industry, greco believes fulfilling her brother's goal of 100,000 locations remains within reach. >> the idea of being able to provide this fresh, nutritious, customized sandwich at an affordable price, i feel that, yes, every community should have that available to them. >> thank you. >> we were taking a look at sort of the top ten restaurant chains in america. you're the only one who has a female as the ceo. does that give you a certain amount of pride? >> oh, i'm extremely proud to be leading this brand. it's really, really exciting for me. i don't think that there's
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anybody out there that knows more about this brand or loves this brand more than i do. >> and they're expanding overseas. they're going to redesign all these stores and remodel them. but interesting, it's a great american story. a great american story. >> she had a big smile when you said you were the only woman, i like that. and they make their own bread. they get me when they say fresh banged bread made here. >> i asked her what's the secret ingredient. that smell. >> and her graduate school was working with him knowing that she was going to take over. >> yeah. and charlie likes subway, i just learned. >> everybody likes subway. you're watching cbs. congratulations to you, suzanne greco, you go. fall in the bad ass category. you're watching "cbs this mo
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this is a kpix 5 morning update. good morning. the parents of a 10-year old boy injured in may after he was ejected from a water slide are suing after the boy suffered scrapes all over his body. >> san jose council members will consider changes to the rent control ordinance today. increases could be tied to the rate of inflation. >> former mayor frank jordan is expected to file a lawsuit against pg&e today, they blame the utility for the fire that burned their home. weather and traffic in just a moment.
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good morning. we are tracking a couple of traffic alerts that is making your ride very slow along highway 4. in earlier problem no longer blocking four lanes but still blocking at least one lane. you can see your travel time a little under an hour to get to highway 242. here is a look at 1001 -- here
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is a look at 101, traffic okay at this location but a little further we are talking an accident near baker. we have a deadly crash on highway 12. it has been a shut down in both directions. do expect delays and avoid the area if possible. let's check in with julie on the forecast. >> good morning, we have a mild start, a mild day with plenty of sunshine in store. highest today in the upper 60s. low 60s around the bay and along the coast. big changes coming tomorrow. we have a wet weather system moving in, we are talking a half inch to an inch of rain possible for some locations. this is going to be a much wetter and windier system then we have seen lately. unsettled thursday, dry on friday and unsettled again the weekend. give your boring old breakfast a wake up call.
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wayne (high-pitched): oh-oh! jonathan: it's a trip to australia! tiffany (australian accent): it's a diamond ring! wayne (in french accent): you said that before. say it again. - going for the big deal, baby. wayne: you got the big deal! jonathan: ha, ha. tiffany: hello? open the box! wayne: you won a car! you did it! - (screaming) lla pudding. wayne: dreams do come true! 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." how are you doing? i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for watching. we're going to make a deal, but first i need an assistant. i need a personal assistant. (cheers and applause) pete, come and join me, everybody else have a seat. have a seat, everybody. come on over here, pete, how are you doing, sir? - good. nice to meet you, mr. brady. wayne: pete, what do you do? - i am a chemical technician supervisor. wayne: a chemical technician supervisor.

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