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

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♪[ music ] good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, november 17th, 2017. welcome to cbs this morning. democratic senator al franken calls for an ethics investigation of himself. the senator apologized after a radio host said he forcibly kissed and groped her before becoming a member of congress. a shouting match in the senate over tax reform. senior republican senator orrin hatch erupts at democrats who say the gop plan favors the rich. the house approves the plan keeping it on target for a final vote next month. plus amazon's new service letting delivery services into your home.
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astonishing new time lapse video of earth. why nasa says it shows the earth breathing and getting warmer. but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> he just mash his mouth to my lips and, you know, it's like wet and he, like, puts his tongue in my mouth. >> senator al franken faces sexual harassment allegations? if the assertionings are true, it's deeply troubling. >> they need to be investigated. >> that's why you have an ethics committee. >> you accept his apology? >> i do, i do. >> alabama senate candidate roy moore fighting off calls to get out of the race. >> i want to tell you who needs to step down, that's mitch mcconnell. >> this is nothing short of extraordinary. >> republicans are one step closer to passing a tax reform bill. >> i get sick and tired of the richest -- >> regular order, mr. chairman. >> this is bull crap that you
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guys throw out here really gets old after a while. >> huge fire engulfing a senior living complex in westchester, pennsylvania. dozens were seen out on the street. >> a man leads houston police on a chase and then shows off his dance moves. >> not the best time to bust a move. >> all that -- >> antonio brown! >> pittsburgh dominates to win. >> and all that matters -- >> blake shelter talking about how he's been handling his title of sexyist man alive. >> i have been fat and ugly my whole life, i am going to milk this for everything that it's worth. >> on cbs this morning. >> are you ready for cool runnings 2? move over jamaican bobsled team, here comes nigeria. >> three women representing nigeria will make up the first african bobsled team to reach the winter games. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places.
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>> welcome to cbs this morning. the newest sexual harassment scandal in washington hits a well-known democratic senator, minnesota's al franken is asking for an ethics investigation into his own behavior. a talk radio news anchor released this 2006 photo of him touching her chest while she slept. >> leeann tweeden also says al franken forcibly kissed her while they were putting on shows for service members overseas. the former "saturday night live" writer and performer apologized in a statement saying, i'm sorry, i respect women, i don't respect men who don't. >> senators from both parties including republican leader mitch mcconnell and democratic leader chuck schumer urged the ethics committee to investigate. cbs news reached out to 16 women who used to work for al franken in the senate. we heard back from six of them and they say they never witnessed any inappropriate behavior. julianna goldman is on capitol hill with the fallout, julianna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning.
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senator franken kept a very low profile here yesterday. meanwhile, across the country in los angeles, leeann tweeden was recounting in great detail how she was victimized by franken before he became a u.s. senator. >> he grabs the back of my head and just sort of comes in and puts his lips on mine and sticks his tongue in my mouth. >> according to leeann tweeden, just minutes before their first uso show in kuwait, al franken kept insisting they rehearse a skit they had written that included a kiss. >> i'm like, don't you ever touch me like that again. >> reporter: tweeden says she didn't see this picture of franken appearing to grope her while she was asleep until she returned home. >> what if that was your daughter or your sister or your mom. is that funny? >> reporter: on thursday, franken said of the picture, i look at it now and i feel disgusted with myself. it isn't funny. it's completely inappropriate. democratic and republican colleagues who, last week, passed a bill mandating sexual harassment training in the
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senate, said the alleged behavior was inexcusable. >> i'm troubled about them. >> it's not fitting behavior for anyone. >> reporter: franken mentioned the 2006 uso trip on the senate floor in 2010. >> i was kind of the co-host with a beautiful, um, woman named leeann tweeden. >> reporter: but he has also said his sense of humor is sometimes more fitting for late-night tv. >> sometimes has to say, okay, al, let's keep it here in the room? >> yeah, the question -- i wrote this book to answer a question i get asked a lot which is, is being a united states senator as much fun as working on "saturday night live" and the answer is no, why would it be. >> reporter: talk radio hosts in franken's home state of minnesota took him to task. >> if you're a pervert, you're a pervert. doesn't matter if you're a democrat or a republican, you're still a pervert and it still needs to stop.
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>> reporter: franken says he will cooperate with an ethics investigation, but it's still hard to know what his future in the senate holds. these allegations are now part of the wave of accusations of sexual misconduct across hollywood, comedy, politics and franken straddles all three. >> all right, julianna, thank you. president trump is blasting senator franken over the allegations. he called him al frankenstein on twitter and said the picture with tweeden, quote, is really bad, speaks a thousand word. the president also asked, where do his hands go in pictures 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 while she sleeps. during the campaign, at least 11 women publicly accused president trump of sexual misconduct in the past. president's press secretary brushed aside questions about those allegations yesterday. >> i think the president has certainly a lot more insight into what he personally did or didn't do and he spoke out about that directly during the campaign and i don't have
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anything further to add beyond that. >> the president said nothing in public about claims of sexual misconduct by republican senate candidate roy moore. the former alabama chief justice made a brief statement to reporters yesterday, then stepped aside while event ogwi g organizers blocked questions. dean reynolds is in alabama. dean, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, % except for an appearance on fox news earlier in the week, moore has not answered questions from reporters on allegations of misconduct since those allegations emerged last week. and yesterday in birmingham, it was more of the same. >> our valiant leader, judge roy moore. >> reporter: a supportive conservative crowd from around the country gathered yesterday to praise the judge who continued to make clear he has no plans to quit. >> i'll quit standing when they lay me in that box and put me in the ground. >> reporter: moore's campaign initially billed this event as a
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press conference but it ended in a frenzy of unanswered questions. >> we paid for this microphone -- he's answered that question repeatedly. let's take the next question. he's already answered that question. >> reporter: with reporters asking about recurring allegations that moore once had inappropriate interactions with young women. moore walked away from those questions protected by event organizers and received a police escort. but the controversy accompanied him as well. he maintained the support of alabama's republican party, which said thursday he deserves to be presumed innocent, adding that voters will make the ultimate decision. but the national gop wants little or nothing to do with him. with many republican lawmakers supporting his accusers and mulling ways to block his path to washington. >> we have called for hill to withdraw from the race and that is the right thing to do. >> mr. president -- >> reporter: president trump made an appearance on capitol hill thursday, but ignored questions about moore. >> the president believes that these allegations are very
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troubling and he thinks that the people of alabama should make the decision on who their next senator should be. >> reporter: a new poll shows democrat doug jones leading moore in the senate race by eight points now among likely voters with less than a month to go until the special election. before these allegations emerged, other polls shows that this race was relatively close. now the question becomes whether judge moore can make up the ground he's apparently lost. >> all right, dean, thank you so much. we should note that special election is set for december 12th. the democrat who replaced hillary clinton in the senate says president bill clinton should have resigned over his affair with monica lewinsky. senator kirsten gillibrand told a "new york times" podcast, yes, i think that is the appropriate response. gillibrand also says sexual misconduct was treated differently 20 years ago. she said, quote, there should be a very different reaction to
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these cases today. a shouting match erupted in the senate over the republican tax overhaul. >> order -- >> we do attack -- >> regular order -- >> middle class -- >> regular order -- >> democrat sherrod brown and republican orrin hatch argued last night over who benefits from the gop plan. the heated exchange came after republicans successfully voted to move the bill to the senate floor. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. at the heart of this argument is new analysis by congressional number crunchers who find that while the plan lowers taxes at first, it would actually raise them by 2027 for anyone making under $75,000 a year. >> when republicans are in power, the first thing they want to do is give tax cuts to the rich. that's just -- it's in their dna. >> reporter: at the end of the all day senate finance meet, ohio democrat sherrod brown's attack on the new republican tax plan got under the skin of
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chairman orrin hatch. >> i've been here working my whole stinking career. for people who don't have a chance. and i really resent anybody saying that i'm just doing this for the rich. give me a break. >> mr. chairman, the public believes -- >> i'm not through. >> okay. >> i got kind of sick and tired of it. >> reporter: democrats say republicans are rushing the bill through congress. they're also upset that the plan eliminates obamacare's individual mandate, cuts the corporate tax rate to 20%, and eliminates american's ability to deduct state and local taxes. >> over and over again. how many times -- >> reporter: senator hatch took it personally. >> what you said was not right, that's all i'm saying. i come from the lower middle class originally. we didn't have anything. so don't spew that stuff on me. i get a little tired of that crap. i like you personally very much but i'm telling you this bull crap you guys throw out here really gets old after a while.
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to do it right at the end of this was just not right. >> reporter: the house passed its tax plan yesterday. and senate republicans are hoping to hold a senate vote on their bill right after thanksgiving. they insist that these tax hikes will never actually happen for low and middle income earners become congress will simply renew some of the provisions in their plan that are set to expire. charlie. >> thanks, nancy. dan senor was a senior adviser to the mitt romney presidential campaign in 2012. good morning. looking at that, what's the likelihood that the republicans with ill get this done or what challenges do they face in getting it done? >> if that's the question or debate, i think republicans are in pretty good shape. all the independent fact checkers are said the typical attacks against republican tax plans, that they're tax cuts to the rich, is not really applicable here, because the republican plans both in the house and senate basically doublize the standardized deduction which covers most
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taxpayers. so really does not raise -- it actually cuts taxes -- >> congress' nonpartisan tax analysis said most people who make less than $75,000 a year, their taxes will go up, average tax burden. >> that's because when the tax cuts expire in 2027, those people will experience a tax increase but the understanding is they're just going to extend the tax cuts ten years from now. the idea is between now and the next ten years most tax players in the middle class will experience some kind of tax cut. don't get me wrong, there's a lot in this wrong i think is hugely problematic. the process is messy going forward. i do think the democratic attacks are not the problem for the republican plan. the problem is the intrarepublican debate and there's still a handful of republican senators that are in opposition or at least have serious questions. just look at the map. 52 republican senators. so republicans can't afford, if you assume mike pence is going to be tie breaking vote, republicans can't afford to lose three senators. and there's about six, if you think about corker and flake are retiring, mccain, who's
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uncertain, collins, rand paul, ron johnson, there's still unknowns. >> susan collins. things seem to be going much better over at the house. is this a big win for paul ryan? >> yeah, well look this is an issue, if you asked paul ryan when he was an intern for jack kemp, you know, when norah and i knew him back in d.c. -- >> when we were children. >> when we were children. >> yeah. >> his dream would be some day be on the ways and means committee and pass massive tax reform. he did that last night. and he did it with a white house that is not always easy to work with in terms of its legislative relations. and, you know, it was an impr s impressive feat. again, the tax bill in its comprehensiveness is not exactly what he envisioned when he had big hopes for tax reform but it is an impressive feat. >> what's going on with conversations inside party and why do you think the president hasn't spoken out about that? what's your take? >> i think that the republicans in congress have been very
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strong. and they just made it clear that he should not be a senator. whether he's not elect order whether he steps aside, whether he is seated and then is expelled. he should and would not be a senator. i think the president is a little more cautious. why at the end of the day this president is not someone who likes to pick a fight that he can't win. he did it in the primary and he lost. i think he was embarrassed, right, he got involved in the primary, he campaigned against roy moore and he lost. and i think he's worried as many republicans i speak to in congress are, they said look, moore doesn't really need us. he doesn't need the rnc. he doesn't need the nsrc. if we go against him and he still wins, it makes us look weak. >> dan senor, thank you. a judge declared a mistrial in the federal bribery case against senator bob menendez. the powerful new jersey democrat was accused of accepting expensive gifts in exchange for political favors.
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the jury deadlocked after a week of deliberations. senator menendez outside the courthouse. >> the way this case started was wrong. the way it was investigated was wrong. the way it was prosecuted was wrong. and the way it was tried was wrong. >> prosecutors have not said if they plan to retry menendez. the ethics committee is reopening an inquiry into his alleged misconduct. a manhunt under way for a gunman who shot and killed a baltimore detective. sean suiter died yesterday. he was a father of five children. help was shot in the head wednesday when he was approached a man who was acting suspiciously. he and his partner were investigating a 2016 homicide in west baltimore at the time. the ohio state university is suspending all fraternities on campus until further notice. the move comes as 11 of the school's 37 fraternities are under investigation this semester for code of conduct
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violations. a majority of the cases involve hazing or alcohol. errol barnett is in columbus. errol, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. some buckeyes here are stunned by the news, while other students on campus saw this coming. because this is yet another example of greek life being halted because of allegations of underage drinking and hazing. now, a statement sent from the university to all chapter presidents yesterday said that ohio state will not tolerate behavior that puts the health and safety of students at risk. and indeed this is the fourth school in two months to ban parts of its greek system. on tuesday, texas state university suspended greek life activities aft effort 19-year-old matthew ellis was found dead in an off-campus apartment. last monday, florida state university banned all fraternities and sororities following the death of a freshman flesh, andrcoffey.
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and matthew died, his alcohol level was more than six times the legal driving limit. at penn state, 26 fraternity members are charged in the hazing death of timothy piazza. happening at a crucial social time here. the final home game of the season is saturday. students living in the frat houses can remain there while the suspension is in place. the sororities here remain acti active. charlie. >> errol, thanks. at least 20 people were hurt in a massive fire that tore through a pennsylvania nursing home overnight. flames poured from the roof and windows of the senior living community in westchester. the five alarm fire quickly spread to several buildings as residents sat outside in wheelchairs wrapped in bankettings. none of the injuries appeared to be life threatening. the facility did not meet fire safety codes in its last inspection in february. >> wow, very frightening. iraq's government says the
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last town in that country controlled by isis has been liberated. iraqi forces backed by a u.s.-led coalition took over rawah this morning. the advance of the military campaign began three years ago after isis fighters took over nearly one-third of iraq, including its second largest city. the trump administration declares shooting elephants can help save them. ahead, the policy reversal that big game hunters are applauding, but why one conservation group
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by toyota. let's go places. nasa is giving us an unprecedented look at earth. >> it took nasa 20 years to create this amazing time lapse image of how the earth is changing as the planet heats up. put your science hats on because coming i on cbs in morning, i'll
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ahead, three
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suspect who stabbed a safeway employee in north berkeley. good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. police are looking for a suspect who stabbed a safeway employee in north berkeley yesterday afternoon. the suspect was trying to shoplift then stabbed an employee who intervened. no word on the employee's condition. muni will be debuting a brand-new train today. the transit agency says the state-of-the-art train is quieter, with wider aisles and improved design to reduce delays. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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slow in the yellow. 8 minutes from the split to sierra point parkway. san mateo bridge 26 minutes from hayward to foster city. the 580 approach past 24, "slow, stop, go," and a crowded ride across the richmond/san rafael bridge. eastshore freeway and bay bridge jammed in the red. here's a live look at san jose this morning. so just a few billowing clouds over there. some areas could see drizzle in the early-morning hours the remnants of the storm that brought us rain yesterday. starting off chilly 41 in santa rosa. 49 in concord. oakland 47. there is some lingering sierra snow. if you are heading towards the higher elevations keep your chains and snowboard handy. temperatures in the low 60s all across the bay area.
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good news for those who host thanksgiving dinner in their homes. according to the american farm bureau federation, the price of a typical thanksgiving dinner is down 75 cents this year to $49.12. which i'm guessing people at the farm bureau don't shop at whole foods because i paid, i don't know, $50 for a sack of potatoes there, i don't -- but cost of dinner is down, which is good. unfortunately, the emotional cost of spending three hours with your family this year is higher than ever, very -- >> oh, that is so true. >> family time. it's always good. bring your coupons if you want to get a big break when you go grocery shopping. welcome back to cbs this morning. here are three things you should know this morning.
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the white house plans to ask congress for another $45 billion for hurricane relief in texas, florida and puerto rico. some government leaders say the amount is significantly smaller than what is really needed. on monday, puerto rico's governor requested more than $94 billion. earlier this month, the state of texas requested $61 billion. texas republican senator john cornyn calls the white house request wholly inadequate. phone companies will have more power to block robo calls. the federal communications commission adopted new rules to crack down on calls that are likely scams. this included numbers that start with a 911 area code or are not assigned to anyone. experts predict the changes will not stop robo calls completely but they say it's a good start. >> and dale earnhardt jr. is preparing for the last ride of his nascar career. he will make his final start on sunday at homestead miami speedway. it will be his 631st career
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start. the 14-time cup series most popular driver will retire from full-time racing after the weekend. he will move to a career in broadcasting. >> big-game hunters are celebrating a trump administration policy change while animal rights activists are furious. the fish and wildlife service will allow hunters to bring so-called elephant trophies from zambia and zimbabwe into the u.s. the obama administration had banned imports of ivory tusks and other elephant parts. don dahler's here with the decision and the growing argument over conservation. >> reporter: the african elephant is classified as threatened under the u.s. endangered species act. both sides in this debate say they're committed to protecting the species. one, by using hunting to raise money for conservation, the other by stopping elephant hunting altogether. elephants are among africa's most social and intelligent wild animals but they're now in the
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cross hairs of an international debate over their very survival. u.s. fish and wildlife says legal, well regulated sport hunting puts much needed revenue back into conservation. the organization says several factors led to the reversal of the obama era policy. arguing that zimbabwe is now better able to manage hunting quotas, track revenue from hunters going to conservation efforts and monitor how that money is spent. >> frankly, nothing has changed. nothing has changed but the administration. >> reporter: critics say the move will harm already endangered elephant populations. >> this announcement is a great travesty for elephants as i think most people know we're in the midst of a poaching crisis. elephant populations across africa are declining. >> reporter: the great elephant census counts the animals from the air. in a report released last year, the organization said the number of elephants on the african continent declineded by 30%
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between 2007 and 2014. in zambia, the population has largely remained stable, but in zimbabwe, the population has declined 6% over the same period. that african nation is now struggling with political unrest, leading to additional concerns for conservation efforts. >> here you have a government in the midst of a coup at the same time the trump administration is saying we trust in and have faith in the zimbabwe government to manage its elephants. there couldn't be a worse timinging for this decision. >> the move was applaud by hunting groups including safari club international. u.s. fish and wildlife says it will request annual reports on this elephant plan including the budgets of how much money is going to elephant management and preventing poaching, charlie. >> don, thanks. our most complete picture of life on earth is coming into focus. a stunning new nasa time lapse video crams 20 years into just a
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few minutes. it is helping scientists learn a lot more about global warming and how the earth is changing. chip reid is at nasa's goddard space center in green belt, maryland. chip, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the scientists we talked to called this place paradise for geeks and what they're geeking out about now is that new toy for studying what's happening to the oceans and what it means for us. >> this is one of a kind, it's never been done before. so being able to capture land, ocean, atmosphere, ice, over 20 years together, it's insanely cool. >> stage one ignition. >> reporter: nasa had the first of three satellites in 1997 allowing them to track life on earth through 20 years. bottom line, the plannetet gett warmer? >> absolutely. >> reporter: the nasa scientist says the data is changing.
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what are you seeing in terms of water levels, ocean levels? >> generally speaking, ocean levels are rising. they rise slowly. it's like watching ice cubes melt in a glass of soda. >> reporter: what's causing these changes in color are changing in zillions of microscopic creatures called phi phifoplankton. >> you love these guys. >> they're useful to society. they give us oxygen. they're just so beautiful. >> reporter: the tiny ocean organisms she studies along with plants on the ground pull carbon dioxide out of the air and help make human life possible. how many cells are in this bottle, would you guess? >> 20 million. >> reporter: these building blocks of life are at the bottom of the food chain and she says as they challenge, so does earth's ecosystem. >> it's really cool because it show us what's happening now, what's happened in the past but also what's going to happen in the future. >> reporter: yes, it's complicated but one way to think about all this is scientists are
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keeping track of all these phyto plankton in the oceans so they have kind of an early warning system on what's happening to the earth as it heats up and to help them do their jobs even better, they're sending up another satellite tomorrow. >> all right, chip. it may be complicated but you can certainly feel the unthesism from dr. jeremy and dr. ivona, i like that. >> the ecosystem is so connected. >> insanely cool. >> professor chip reid there, that was excellent, chip, thank you. >> professor reid, you're looking good, thank you, chip, thank you very much. amazon is rushing to update the security of its new inhome delivery system. ahead, how researchers say vulnerability's the same as thiefs getting a physical key to your front door. yikes. we invite you to subscribe. here's our invitation to our cbs this morning podcast so you'll get the news of the day, extended universiextend ed interviews and podcast originals at apple i pod app.
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or weak upon standing. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may be fatal. symptoms include nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, tiredness, and trouble breathing. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of ketoacidosis or an allergic reaction. symptoms of an allergic reaction include rash, swelling, and difficulty breathing or swallowing. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or have severe kidney problems. other side effects are sudden kidney problems, genital yeast infections, increased bad cholesterol, and urinary tract infections, which may be serious. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. isn't it time to talk to your doctor about jardiance? absolutely. ask your doctor about jardiance. and get to the heart of what matters. why do people put why does your tummy go "grumbily, grumbily, grumbily"? no more questions for you! ouph, that milk in your cereal was messing with you, wasn't it? try lactaid, it's real milk without that annoying lactose. good, right? -mmm, yeah. lactaid. the milk that doesn't mess with you.
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cyber security researchers are raising concerns about amazon's new service, you know, the one that lets drivers deliver packages inside your home. they have a way to lock and relock your door and record the entry with a wireless security camera but that convenience may come with a very serious risk. anna werner is here with a glaring new vulnerability. good morning. >> good morning. the new amazon key system lets the driver open your front door with the security of a camera watching them, but the findings of one security research firm raised questions about whether that camera will be capturing what's really going on. >> if it is digital, it is hackable. >> that's what cyber security expert john sileo told us. >> i want to see the hackers get a hack at it and see what they can do.
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>> reporter: three weeks later they've had their chance and found flaws. here's how it works. for $249 the company sells you a special smart door lock along with an in-home wireless camera aimed at the door. a delivery system alerts you that your package has arrived. amazon opens the door remotely, drops off the package, steps outside and tells amazon to lock the door. they found a weakness in the security camera system. the potential for hackers to use what's called diaw thentyfication hack. >> they can wall in and you won't see anything. >> a mach driver finishes dropping off a packaged a then a nearby hacker sends commands to the wi-fi server the security system relies on and temporarily takes the system offline and
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unlocked the door again that it's simple to do. takes one command. >> in a model while the customer app shows a closed door, a would-be burglar could walk inside without the camera seeing him. >> by being able to disable this camera, we're essentially reducing the security to essentially providing a physical key to your home. >> amazon says that flaw isn't in their software. it's in the server all companies contain. they plan to put out an update later this week to quick low provide notifications if the pcamera goes offline during delivery and make sure the system will not unlock the door if the system is disabled. they call these types of attacks unlikely, but kaudle disagrees. >> based on the simplicity of the attack 20rks and available software, you can implement this yourself. >> amazon told us they do not
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believe customers would be put at risk by this. in their view it is not a security issue. they say they've thoroughly backgrounded their delivery drivers but he and his researchers were kind of surprised to find this sort of vulnerability that lets drivers into your home. >> so it sounds like amazon doesn't think they need to go back to the drawing board. >> amazon said they're going to release an update but kaudle says there eeg something about the design. >> i like that. if it's digitag digital, it's h >> i would like to know if they can put the meat in the freezer. >> exactly. up next, a look at this morning's other headlines including backflipping robot. ahead, the robot shows off its
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talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. welcome back to "cbs this morning." here's a look at some morning headlines. news week reports north korea is rapidly building its first operational ballistic missile submarine. commercial satellite images taken november 5th show the movement of parts and components at a north korean shipyard. construction also appears to be under construction, that is according to a washington-based north korean monitoring project. another shows a submarine in dry dock undergoing what appears to be a complete overhaul. >> "the washington post" reports trump's pick for homeland security secretary is caught up in complaints. she is being guided through her confirmation process by a
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private consultant. a watchdog group says that consultant represents companies seeking millions of dollars in contracts. the white house says there's nothing inappropriate about an individual volunteering to help prepare a nominee. >> 210,000 gallons of oil leaked from the pipeline. the spill in a rural area near the north dakota border. officials do not believe that any drinking water was polluted there. a photo from the owner transcanada shows a large darkened area. the pipeline company faces strong opposition for a proposed expansion that passes near tribal an intiness times looks at atlas, the back flipping robot. it is made using parts from 3-d printers. boston dynamics released a video showing just how human its robot had become. we've been following the development of atlas since february 2016. its big move now is an incredible back flip. look at that. not only does atlas land
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successfully. it also celebrates by raising its arms over its head. >> where is its head? >> yeah, you're right, it doesn't have a head. >> it doesn't seem like it. listen, he's got great moves. very human like. >> can he do the laundry? >> he can't do that yet. >> he can do a back flip. when his daughter vanished, a texas father wouldn't stop until he got answers. ahead, how he says he had an omen about her disappearance. disappearance and then drove the investigation to find her. so wes like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. which helps provide for win's family. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. i can't believe it comes in... how great this tastes!
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caused some additional damage, to areas scarred by the wine country wildfires. large sinkholes emerged... some in areas where w good morning am i'm kenny choi. the wet weather has caused some additional damage to areas scarred by the wine country wildfires. large sinkholes emerged some in areas where wildfires melted the underground storm pipes. more retailers are getting into the christmas spirit as thanksgiving approaches. they include a macy store in san francisco where window displays will have pets up for adoption this year. >> traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. time now is 7:57. and we are tracking delays westbound 92 as you approach the toll plaza. report of an accident, it's definitely slowing things down and backing things up along 880. past that and the toll plaza,
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here's the ride across the san mateo bridge things move but we are still in the red. it's been a slow ride heading over to foster city, san mateo. 40 minutes. it looks like our sensors need to catch up there, though. but 880, still pretty sluggish commute for drivers northbound just under 50 minutes from 238 towards the maze. westbound 24 approaching the caldecott tunnel. an accident causing delays. it's about a 20-minute ride from 680 to 580. look at these clear skies out there across the bay today. 51 in concord. 47 in oakland right now. so it is a bit chilly out there this morning. temperatures today will be a slightly cooler than average temperature. here's the rest of the storm system just leaving some wraparound moisture across the sierra. weekend sunny, fog at the coastline, monday slight chance of rain. and another slight chance of rain on thursday.
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i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell . democratic senator franken is joining for an investigation of sexual harassment charges against him. leeann tweeden claims he forcibly kissed her during a 2006 uso tour before the long-time "saturday night live" comic was elected ,>> she also released a photo. womenn has responded saying, enm sorry, i respect women. tnd the fact that my own actions have given people a good reason to doubt that makes me ashamed. he said he would glad cooperate with the senate ethic's committee cbs news has learned that member also of the house want to wbpoena twitter. the president's oldest son released screen shots of what he says are all of his private messages with wikileaks. they go back to september of
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jeff peg washiegues is in washington with new details of the house investigation. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. sources familiar with the investigation say committee members are considering the subpoena because they don't know if they've been given the full picture of the discussions between the president's son and wikileaks. he source says there is also interest now in questioning people donald trump jr. told about his contacts with wikileaks. trumprsday the senate judiciary committee sent a letter to jared cont kushner's attorney saying that there he withheld information. they are asking for e-mails there r sent and received about wikileaks in september of 2016. they also want documents about a "russian-backed or overture and doorr invite." meanwhile, soviet born businessman and his lawyer spent more than two hours inside the ho unsel rof special counsel robert mueller. he was in the june 2016 meeting at trump tower with kushner and donald trump jr. when they met hat russt russian lawyer who claimed she had damaging
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information about hillary g inton. the meeting has become an important focus for investigators. charlie. >> jeff, thanks. tesla is breaking into the trucking industry. last night the automaker tr unveiled its new electric semi truck. it plans the release it in 2019. tesla already faces challenges when it comes to delivering its most affordable vehicle. val vladimir duty yers is here. n> he hasn't said what the truck will cost but he says it will be cheaper to operate than a standard truck. it raises questions whether tesla can keep up with the founder's ambition. with the pomp and circumstance of a big tech unveiling, elon musk showed off the new electric semi truck. >> it is unlike any truck you have vichb. >> reporter: the ceo says it has a 500-mile range on a single charge and contains many tesla features including the autopilot
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feature. the meet demand tesla says it is building a network of solar power mega charging stations which need to be ready when the truck becomes available in 2019. the announcement comes as tesla faces challenges. it lost a record $619 million and struggled with production. it is significantly behind on orders for its low-cost sedan, the model three, with some customers waiting 18 months or longer for delivery. tim stevens attended last night's event and said production is one of the issues they need to address. >> they're struggling to get out the door and meet the preorders, they need to get those out and pay for products like the tesla semi. >> of. >> reporter: stevens says the automaker needs to shake the reputation some of the vehicles aren't reliable. >> when you are talking about a commercial truck businesses will depend upon, you need those things to be bullet proof. tesla has to prove to the toustry that their trucks will be even more reliable than the
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truks already on the market today. >> reporter: tesla said those abilitility concerns are out of step with current reality as the company makes improvement to its cars. kt the end of the event musk can unveiled another surprise for ed one other. he showed off the tesla roadster. everybody at the table is mouths mo agape. they say the electric vehicle mn reach 60 miles per hour in 1.9 seconds. the car's base price, $200,000. >> is it a sports car? it doesn't have seats in the back? >> it seats four. >> it does? >> yeah. 0 and get this, 0 to 100 in 4.2 seconds. > where are you going? >> places, gayle. >> i get you. tesla may have bumps along the owad, but i love how he thinks. outside the box. >> and about the future. outs this roadster available for christmas, charlie? >> yeah, the four of us can go for a ride with charlie. m. thank you vlad.
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>> a boy can dream. >> dream big. once almost unheard of in children, type 2 diabetes is claiming kids as newest victims. this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is sponsored by liberty mutual insurance. liberty stands with you. insurance. liberty stands with you.
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a former college football star threw a hail mary at country music and scored big time. ahead, chase rice opens up to jann crawford about his bittersweet road to familiar. don't miss the late show. among the guest, norah o'donnell . you says, i can't say it the way you do. >> norah mora o'donnell. >> is that an italian name? >> it is italian. >> she is going to be there after your late local news right
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here on cbs. >> great jokes, charlie rose. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." we appreciate that. norah tonight on stephen colbert. we will be back after the break. ♪ we learned three days on a riceville beach ♪ >> cbs news, real news. break. paying less for my medicare? i'm open to that. 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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in our morning rounds, the alarming rise in childhood diabetes. type 2 diabetes was once known as adult onset because it was so rare in kids. not anymore. with one in five school age children consider canned obese, the rate of type 2 diabetes in young people is climbing. the newest study shows almost a 5% jump in a decade for those between the ages of 10 and 19. some experts warn the number is still rising. our doctor tara narula is here with the dangers of the disease at every age. good morning. >> good morning. >> why are we seeing a sharp rise? >> it is not something we talked about 20 years ago, and it is heartbreaking to think now in this country about 20,000 children, children who have type 2 diabetes, 5,000 new cases a year. this is a disease that is going to take a physical, emotional and economic toll on these individuals. how did we get here? one of the biggest risk factors is obesity. we have an obesity epidemic.
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in addition to that, look at the lifestyle we need now. how many of our children get the recommended 60 minutes of exercise? how many sit in front of screens all day long, eating fast and processed food? in addition there's a family history component. as our society we all have more diabetes as adults, we potentially can pass it on through our children through genetics, environmental exposure and what happened plea natally. the more women have gestational diabetes the more their kids are at risk for developing. >> do you treat adults what i used to know as adult onset diabetes. >> we are leerarning we need mo research on how to treat children. we are basing it on what we do for adults, but we have a lot of medications we can use for adults. for kids we can only use two that are considered safe and approved by the fda, metforman
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and instanulin. we have to use things kids like to use like technology to bring them into learning about diabetes education. we have to make the information appropriate because there are racial differences in how they are affected. to generation? >> it can be. there's definitely a family history component. >> do you think parents should be held accountable? most kids aren't cooking for themselves or exercising on their own. >> not at 5 years old, and we can see this as early as that. certainly parents are part of the issue and need to be part of the solution. you have to engage the whole family in the process to deal with this, to teach them how to eat they will thi and exercise because lifestyle is part of it. but the complications, we see the complications not when kids are 50 or 60. we're seeing this as early as five or ten years down the road when kids are in the prime of their lives. they're starting jobs, having kids and families and what's happening to them? developing end-stage renal
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disease, leading thome dialysis, heart attack and stroke, neuropathy, retinopathy, blindness. >> wake-up call. thank you. >> yes. >> make sure you find out if you've got it, get the test. coming up, a desperate father's search for truth. >> i'm marie meagher. she was 27, stunning, then vanished in north texas. her devoted father drives the investigation to find her. when her body is found wrapped in a sheet and dumped here in the middle of nowhere, could it be anything other than murder? that's coming um on "cbs this morning." "cbs morning rounds" sponsored by for your sweetheart. get more information on type 2 diabetes and heart disease. rt go to foryourswe com for more information on type 2 diabetes.
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when a daughter vanished, her father would not stop searching for the truth. he feared something terrible had happened to when he couldn't reach her and he believes her new boyfriend had something do with it. tomorrow night on "48 hours" how jessie's father would not give up. here's a preview. >> i remember having a nightmare. something was terribly wrong. jessie was killed. and when i woke up, it was just a dream. >> reporter: but in his heart of
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hearts, gary bardwell knew it was more than a dream. it was an omen. >> i felt it. >> reporter: in may 2016 jessie vanished from her home in texas where she had been living with her boyfriend for four months. >> as the father of three girls i was very determined to get to the bottom of what happened to jessie. >> reporter: jason lowe said she left the apartment on the morning of may 8th and never returned. he never seemed concerned four days later. the detective recorded their conversation. >> they've been questioning me at work. >> reporter: the day detectives searched the apartment there was a line of cocaine on the table, but it wasn't the drugs they were interested in. it was the odor coming from the garage. >> it's a smell that you never forget. >> reporter: it was the smell of death and it was coming from the back of jason lowe's black audi.
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there was no jessie bardwell, but even without a body, jason was charged with murder. >> i had no doubt he had killed her. >> reporter: but he did doubt they would ever find her. >> texas is a huge state. there are 100 million different places you can hide a body in texas. >> reporter: the police eventually found jessie bardwell. what they found no father should ever see. >> she was thrown away like a piece of trash. >> a lot of times you can't recognize evil. it's one of those things you know it when you see it. >> reporter: jason's court appointed attorney says he is sure jason did not murder jessie. he's not so sure he can convince a jury. so he road tests his case. >> i've been a lawyer for 42 years. >> in a mock trial. >> i have never done this. >> with surprising results. >> not guilty of murder.
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>> not guilty. the defense now believes jason lowe could walk out of jail a free man. but gary bardwell will not let that happen. >> give me ten minutes in a 5x8 room and i would kill him. >> it must have been torturous for that dad. because he didn't like him from the very beginning. >> i think every one of us has a friend or family member who start as relationship with someone and everyone thinks why are they with that person. this happened over four months. she stopped talking to friends. the only access was by him. he was like, when do i step in, when do i step out. she's an adult. >> what does the mock jury do? >> you have a person who's measured giving the correct tone, the exact words he wants to use. that's entirely different than a person who's a packet long cal liar o who gets up on the stand,
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gets very emotional and doesn't always follow the same line of story the defense attorney wants him to. >> what was it? >> i think the body was so badly decomposed. while ruled a homicide, they didn't know how it happened. sometimes the jury needs to have everything spelled out for them. they don't connect the dots the way the prosecution would like. >> they don't say how she was killed. >> they could not say how she was killed. >> you can watch maureen maher's full report "taken away." you can watch it here on cbs. just hours after his infant son's death, marquise goodwin makes a touchdown. >> he's gone. >> love conquers all. ahead, marquise goodwin and
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his wife open up escaped from a mental hospital in hawai'i, is scheduled to appear in a san joaquin county courtroom today. rand good morning. it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego. a killer who escaped from a mental hospital in hawaii will be in court today. randall saito was found not guilty by reason of insanity of a 1979 murder. downtown ice set to open up for the season in san jose today. as usual, olympic legend kristi yamaguchi will take part in the opening celebration at the circle of palms along market street. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. we are tracking an accident slowing things down for drivers heading along 101. this is right near mendocino avenue. that off-ramp currently blocked if you are heading northbound. so 35 minutes from rohnert park expressway to steele lane. and a slow ride heading southbound 101. this is near ignacio through novato, 33 minutes from roland to 580. the eastshore freeway, jam- packed and in the red. we have a crash westbound 80 right near carlson and you can see right now chp holding traffic and running -- actually running traffic breaks just releasing those two right lanes. but you can expect a big backup
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along the eastshore freeway. 43 minutes from highway 4 down to the macarthur maze. let's check in with neda now on the forecast. check out these clear skies this morning. temperatures are in the 50s and 40s. santa rosa 45. 52 san jose. here's a look at the remnants of the storm system that brought us the rain yesterday and the night before. now we're only seeing some snow flurries across the sierra. so your forecast today looks sunny. 60s for the coast, low 60s for the bay and inland areas. and look at those clear skies! it's going to stay clear tonight which is great news for the leonid meteor showers. we are experiencing new moon tomorrow morning, so that means that dark conditions, dark skies and clear skies. so that means you will see about 15 meteors an hour. that's what's expected overnight. it will peak between midnight and dawn tomorrow. so enjoy out there. the weather is just right for that. here's a look at your seven-day forecast. more rain monday. and then more rain thursday.
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♪ here comes the sun, everybody. a beautiful time-lapse view of the sunrise over manhattan this morning. there's something about the skyline of new york city that's great. >> yeah. there's that big, tall building. >> very nice. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." happy fri-yay is what i say. time to show you headlines around the globe. people reports on a perfect match. congratulations to serena williams and alexis ohanian, they tied the knot in new orleans. among the celebrity guest, eva longoria and kim kardashian. the wedding comes 11 weeks after they had a baby girl which they named alexis olympia jr.
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dog owners have a lower mortality rate it is said. researchers found owners of canines have a lower risk can of cardiovascular disease, particularly true of people with hunting breeds. the study shows single people who own dogs have a 33% lower risk of death than single people who don't have one. >> i need to get me a dog. >> yes, you do. >> and you two are going to live a long life. you have hucky, you halucky and hemingway. >> good for you remembering those boys. >> i wish i had one. >> usa report -- it is never too late. >> the hours are tough for me. >> you have to have someone walking the dog a lot. usa reports on a lawsuit to determine who created the game of life. testimony is scheduled to begin in los angeles federal court. the widow of a toy inventor says her husband created the game and another man took credit for it. she says she was cut out of more than $2 million in royalties. the other man and the toy company, hasbro, say the game
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was a prototype nfl star marquise goodwin and his wife are opening up about the sudden death of their baby boy, and goodwin's difficult decision to take the field hours later. >> and goodwin is gone! a 49er touchdown! >> the san francisco wide receiver scored an 83-yard touchdown sunday. he blue a kiss to the sky as he crossed into the end zone and dropped to his knees. but it wasn't until after the game that goodwin and his wife morgan revealed on social media their son had died due to pregnancy complications. dana jacobson sat down with the couple for an interview you will see only on "cbs this morning." dana, good morning. >> good morning. an emotional interview from both of them. it may have been marquise goodwin in the end zone sunday, but he credits his wife morgan, his faith and his son for helping carry him there. >> imagine having something you want more than anything in the world and you get it and it just
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is stripped away from you. >> marquise can and morgan goodwin don't have to imagine. their baby boy was delivered stillborn sunday morning after morgan went into premature labor at 19 weeks. >> i would give my life up if i could have a boy. that's the one thing i wanted more than anything in the world, and now i don't have that opportunity right now. >> reporter: despite his grief, hours later marquise was playing in the 49ers' game against the giants at morgan's insist answer. >> it was actually morgan's idea that i go play in the game. for me, my intentions were to be with her the whole time. >> reporter: morgan, why did you want him to go play this game? >> we had our baby boy. we spent time with him. i'm explaining to him, i want you to play in this game because i want your son to see you play. >> reporter: marquise goodwin didn't just play. >> wide open for the speedster, goodwin. >> reporter: he caught this pass
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for an 83-yard touchdo touchdow. it would lead san francisco to the first win of the season. >> as i'm running i blue a kiss to god and to my baby, and i dropped down on my knees and give god his glory because i'm thankful, i still am thankful for the opportunity just to be alive, for my life. >> reporter: even after all you had been through? >> even after all i've been through. >> reporter: you're watching this. what's going through your mind, morgan? >> i was in the hospital on the bed watching, and i busted outcrying. and i immediately said, that was for you, baby. >> reporter: only two 49ers' teammates knew the pain marquise was playing with. it wasn't until their social media post after the game that the world was let in. >> we got some really supportive response, especially a lot of women who have also been through the same exact thing, and not even once but twice sometimes
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and three times. >> a lot of people that i've never been in contact with have sent messages, have sent gifts and flowers and also told us that, you know, we're inspiring them because they're going through something without all of the love that everybody showed i don't know if we would be as good as we are right now. >> reporter: the two college sweethearts met at the university of texas at austin where they were both track stars. >> i knew when i met morgan that she was the perfect girl because she was in college, she was an athlete, and we had the same morals and beliefs, and i knew that she would be a great mom. >> reporter: they'll celebrate their second wedding anniversary in february. they credit their bond and their faith for carrying them through this difficult time. >> with faith you can do anything, and with love you can do even more. love conquers all. >> reporter: i'm sure you wanted to share football with a son. do you think that your son will always be a part of football with you when you're out there? >> my son will now always be a part of football because of the
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experience i experienced on sunday. i'll try to take that same enthusiasm and passion that i played with each game from now on. >> marquise's instagram biohas a quote on it. the reward lasts longer than the pain. i asked him what it means to him now after the death of his son, and he told me that while he still wishes that he had his son, despite all of this pain he has faith that god has something bigger and better in store, and their strength is inspiring. morgan told us how cathartic it was to speak with us. some wonder why you would speak with us after a tragedy, and some have learned from them as well. >> what a beautiful couple. i think god has something bigger for him. when you look at the touchdown, the meaning takes on a different look. a beautiful couple. >> people didn't know at the time and were wondering on social media why is he crying and emotional, and later to hear the story your heart goes out to them. >> they both would be great parents. you hope they have more
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children. >> without a doubt. they have two dogs they are dog parents to, and it would be wonderful to see them there. >> i hope it works out. i agree. >> nice couple. >> when we come back, single and song writer chase rice talks with jann crawford about his journey. >> you have done a lot of interesting things. >> yeah, probably four lives in 32 years. >> reporter: what is the story of chase rice? what does it say to you? >> i think forrest gump is a true story. i've been told that before. [ laughter ] >> forrest gump is a true story. all right, chase rice. how he went from college ound ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ wow! nice outfit. when i grow up, i'm going to mars. we're working on that. some people know how far they want to go. a personalized financial strategy can help you get them there. see how access to j.p. morgan investment expertise can help you. chase. make more of what's yours.
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♪ that's country star chase rice's latest single called "three chords and the truth." it is on his new album that comes out today. the rising star took a winding path to fame after an injury crushed his nfl dreams. in 2013 he helped the band florida georgia line write the hit song "cruise" that sold more than 10 million copies. his new album called "lambs and lions" is his first in years. good morning, jann crawford. >> good morning. he seems to have lived almost four years live by the age of
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32, and it is a life hard to believe. he is finding success his own way, existing pressure from recording labels as he comes out with music his own. >> this is a new song, called three cords and the truth. >> reporter: his life has taken unexpected turns. ♪ while we break up >> reporter: as chase rice took the stage before his moes devoted fans, everything made sense. >> it is the most true record i have written in my life. everything i have done from the time i was a little kid, sports and what it was, i made it happen. >> reporter: rice grew up performing, but in a family of athletes football became his passion. he was a star linebackerer at t the university of north carolina with sight it set on the nfl. in the first game of his junior year he suffered a gruesome ankle injury. >> luckily that year i started picking up guitar more. >> reporter: it was kind of an outlet. >> yeah, i was bored. >> reporter: less than a year later a phone call from his mother brought news of another loss, this far bigger than
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football. >> the way she said my name i knew something was off. she said, come home, dad died. i was like, what. >> reporter: what happened? >> he had a heart attack. >> reporter: he was a dedicated father and coach, and after his death his music became an outlet. rice had to find his way forward. when he failed to make the nfl after college, an old coach hired him to work on a nascar pit crew. then a friend suggested he audition for a show he had never even seen, "survivor." >> chase having a hard time. >> reporter: rice came in second, winning $100,000, enough to move to nashville where his childhood friend brian kelly had just formed a little band called florida georgia line. the two started to write music. >> together we were doing some great stuff, and through that "cruise" happened. >> how did it happen? >> we were writing a slow song and all of a sudden brian starts
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humming along. ♪ ain't no doubt ♪ and cruise >> reporter: that riff would grow into the most downloaded country song of all time. ♪ ready, set, let's ride >> reporter: soon, rice released his first solo album with two top ten hits. ♪ that's right. if you want to go anywhere ♪ >> reporter: still, he was searching. >> it was not exactly what i knew i wanted to dochlt i did it because i thought it would sell tickets and would be popular. >> reporter: how would you say where you are now? >> i know what i don't want to sing about, i know that. >> reporter: which is what? >> which is a girl in a truck with the tailgate down on a perfect night with the stars looking up. i decided i wanted to step away from that a little bit. i want to sing about lions. that's not country or wrong. i don't even know what it is. >> reporter: his new album is personal and wide-ranging with energetic pop-up songs alongside an emotional tribute to his
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father. ♪ tonight knowing the secret to life ♪ ♪ but sure knowing where it starts ♪ ♪ amen >> reporter: whose memory rice keeps close. you wear that when you perform? >> every night. i used to think he was watching from the best seat in the house. now i'm starting to wonder, i feel like he's actually next to me. >> reporter: rice continues to live by a mountain otto in coll came up to in college to get through it all. >> i kept saying to myself, head down, eyes up, keep going. >> reporter: what do you think your dad would say? >> he would be proud of me. i can say that now. i didn't used to think that. >> reporter: that must mean a lot to you, knowing he would be proud of you? >> yeah, it is like you're heading in the right direction. i guess in life if you're doing that, just keep going that way and you will be all right. >> reporter: head down, eyes up. >> eyes up, keep going. that's right. >> reporter: now rice has also turned that motto into a growing clothing brand, and it is one that he wears on stage almost every night. for rice that slogan is really about staying focused through
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the good times and the bad on what really matters. norah. >> love it. love that story. >> love him. i'm getting that song today. jann, i think it is right. he has lived four lives before the age of 30. it is amazing what he has done. >> reporter: it is. and he has kept his focus, kept going. >> jann crawford, or justice/music correspondent. >> up next, all that happened this week. you are watching "cbs this morning." at stanford health care, we can now use a blood sample to detect lung cancer. if we can do that, imagine what we can do for asthma. and if we can stop seizures in epilepsy patients with a small pacemaker for the brain, imagine what we can do for multiple sclerosis,
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even migraines. if we can use patients' genes to predict heart disease in their families, imagine what we can do for the conditions that affect us all. imagine what we can do for you.
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i am a first responder tor and i'emergencies 24 hours a day, everyday of the year. my children and my family are on my mind when i'm working all the time. my neighbors are here, my friends and family live here, so it's important for me to respond as quickly as possible
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and get the power back on. it's an amazing feeling turning those lights back on. be informed about outages in your area. sign up for outage alerts at pge.com/outagealerts. together, we're building a better california. i like the way we ended it. that does it for us. as we take a look back at all that matters this week. >> he said, i am the district attorney and if you tell anyone about this, no one will ever believe you.
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>> i don't even know the woman. i don't know anything about her. it's absolutely false. >> senate majority leader mitch mcconnell has joined a long list of senate republicans calling on moore to drop out. >> he's obviously not fit to be in the united states senate. >> moore tweeted, dear mitch mcconnell, bring it on. >> al franken is asking for an ethics investigation into his own behavior. >> puts his lips right on mine and sticks his tongue in my mouth. >> while it lowers the plan, it would raise them by 2027. >> the republicans are in power. give tax cuts to the rich. >> i come from the lower middle class originally. >> he attacked my school. >> a custodian who distracted the shooter and likely got more children out of harm's way. >> three ucla basketball players detained in china for shoplifting are apologizing. >> thank you for taking the time to interview. i also apologize to the people of china. >> what i did was stupid. ♪ i'm coming out, so we've got
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to get this party started ♪ >> the art world is stunned, shocked, they can't believe it. >> $400 million, sold. >> tonight was definitely the most exciting moment of my career. >> when it was here, it looked like you guys weren't even breathing next to it. >> this is a museum of biblical proportions. >> you're going to have a lot of stiff necks. this is the whole bible, first page to the last. >> i wonder if he thought it was carbonated water the way he held it out so far. >> does anyone need water at the table? everyone's so good. >> doesn't matter, deaf, hard of hearing, hearing, we play the game. >> the quarterback taps the center and we go when the football snaps. >> i was stunned to learn subway has almost 45,000 and mcdonald's has like 35,000. you're bigger than mcdonald's.
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>> it really comes down to one sandwich. >> this ma by the first time a ce o'has ever made me a sandwich. i love it. >> how long has this been going on. >> i heard someone saying get out for times i would have voted for him. >> has president obama seen it? >> you nknow, i'll explain it t you. i think it's pretty good. >> i was surprised in the boork you said you accept criticism that you're open to it because when i would call you with concerns about your movie, you would say they're not made for people who live in greenwich, connecticut. that doesn't sound like somebody who's open to criticism. >> i'm open to criticism. gayle would call and say i've got concerns about this. i would say, it opened number one, gayle, thanks. >> norah morahan o'donnell. >> i like that.
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you know my middle name. norah 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
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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 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. (♪) (♪) 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.
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suspect who stabbed a safeway employee in north berkeley. it happened yesterday afte good morning. i'm michelle griego. police are looking for a suspect who stabbed a safeway employee in north berkeley yesterday afternoon. investigators say the suspect was trying to shoplift, then pulled a knife when an employee stopped him. no word on the employee's condition. muni will be debuting a brand-new train today. the transit agency says the state-of-the-art train is quieter, has wider aisles and an improved design that will reduce delays. the holiday season kicks off tonight in san francisco. i will be hosting the embarcadero building lighting ceremony with kenny choi downtown. disney on ice will also be there. festivities start at 4:00 and conclude with fireworks. stay with us; weather and traffic in just a moment.
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good morning. time now 8:57. we continue 20 track slowdowns for drivers on the eastshore freeway. emergency crews remain on the scene. you can see those flashing lights on the shoulder there. so lanes no longer blocked near carlson. but traffic is still sluggish approaching the scene earlier at the crash. 38 minutes from 4 to the maze. look at the bay bridge toll plaza. it is still looking like a parking lot. it's just under 30 minutes from the maze into san francisco.
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oakland 880 the nimitz freeway, 43 minutes northbound from 238 to the maze. and an accident in the southbound direction right near lewelling, traffic slowed to 17 minutes from 238 to the highway 84. let's check in with neda now on the forecast. at this hour we have clear skies and we have cool temperatures mid-50s for concord, 53 in livermore and santa rosa 48 degrees. the remnants of the storm system are long gone. we are seeing snow across the tahoe area but that's about it. they did get a nice heaping of snow. it will be a good weekend for the ski resorts. temperatures along the coast today will be in the low 60s. same with the bay. inland sunny and dry for your forecast today. and if you are heading out, check out the ice rink today. michelle and kenny will be there. it will be 56, clear and cool skies. so bring a jacket. have fun, bring your hot cocoa, that will be nice. here's the seven-day forecast. rain monday and thursday. good mor i'm_
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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) jonathan: i'm vanilla 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, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? (cheers and applause) who wants to make a deal? let's see here. curtain one, come on over here, curtain one. stand right here for me. and... (cheers and applause) the doctor over here. the nurse, doctor, nurse, nurse, yes. linda, hey, linda, how are you doing? cassie, watch your step, watch your step, cassie, hey, cassi

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