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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 21, 2017 7:00am-9:00am PST

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this morning! enjoy the weather out there. >> thanks for watching. have a great day. cbs this morning is coming up, next. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's tuesday, november 21st, 2017. welcome to cbs this morning. cbs news and pbs take charlie rose off the air after at least eight women accuse him of sexual harassment. he apologized, saying he thought he was pursuing shared feelings. we'll hear from the reporter who broke the story. and a group of highly accomplished women discuss their own stories and the me too campaign to stop other harassers. >> the border patrol after one agent is killed and another badly hurt. the union says someone attacked the men with rocks. we're in west texas tracking this investigation. foreign workers secretly building car factories in america.
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for the first time, a u.s. business owner tells how the deception hurt her business and her workers. >> we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> the wave of sexual abuse allegations we've been reporting has now touched cbs news. >> following allegations of sexual harassment, cbs news suspends charlie rose. >> he has a lot of questions he needs to answer. the tables need to be turned on him now. >> i think he's probably toast professionally. >> absolutely career ending. i just don't see how anyone comes back from this. >> authorities in texas scour the area following the death of a border patrol agent. >> agent who survived reportedly does not remember what happened. >> the argentine navy is ramp up its search for a missing submarine. >> as the sub's oxygen supply runs low. >> another major stepness pressure campaign against north korea. >> the united states is designated north korea as a state sponsor of terrorism. >> a massive fire erupted in
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michigan overnight. authorities say the fire involved a high-pressure gas main. >> remarkably, nobody was hurt. >> all that. >> 52 yards to tie it. right down the middle. and short. >> and all that matters. >> la var ball speaking out about whether president trump actually helped his son get out of jail in china. >> tell donald trump to have a great thanksgiving, because big baller is. >> on cbs this morning. >> atlanta's georgia dome is no more. pretty cool for everyone watching unless you were the weather channel. >> talk about bad timing. a photo bomb by a city bus that totally blocked the blast. it gets worse because as soon as the implosion is over, the bus pulls right away as if right on cue. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go
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places. welcome to cbs this morning. we're going to begin with news affecting all of us at this broadcast and this network. cbs news has suspended our co-host charlie rose over allegations of sexual misconduct. >> the "washington post" published claims from eight women who all worked or wanted to work for his pbs program and they describe rose making unwanted sexual advances in the 1990s through 2011. bianna golodryga is here with the allegations and charlie's response to them. >> this one does hit close to home. we've been able to reach out to one of those accusers. she kididn't want to go on came but confirms the reporting is accurate. additional women have spoken out to business insider and "the new york times." some say he globed them or exposed himself to them and many paint a picture of a respected
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figure abusing his position. >> i think that you can't understate, you know, the level of influence and power that a man like charlie rose has. >> reporter: "washington post" reporter amy briton spent weeks reaching out to former employees and job seekers. several describe rose putting his hand on their leg, sometimes their upper thigh. one said he groped her breasts as she drove him in a car. two women said he walked naked in front of them after taking a shower. >> some critics might say, well, why were they in the position to see him naked. the thing about charlie rose is he would commonly require his employees to come over to his private home. >> reporter: he allegedly invited one woman to his home on long island while considering her for a job. she described crying the entire time as he reached down her pants. rose tweeted a statement yesterday evening saying, i deeply apologize for my inappropriate behavior. i'm greatly embarrassed. i have behaved insensitively at
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times and i accept responsible for that, though i did not believe that all of these allegations are accurate. rose explained, i always felt that i was pursuing shared feelings, even though i now realize i was mistaken. >> this is the cbs news night watch. >> reporter: during a long career in journalism, rose earned multiple emmys and a peabody award. >> this is charlie rose. >> reporter: but it's his signature interview program that made him a household name. in 2014, he was one of "time" magazine's 100 most influential people in the world. >> he had such power over the show, he owns the show. there is no human resources department in the charlie rose show. many of these women said even if they wanted to file an official complaint, they wouldn't even know who to go to. >> reporter: one of the accusers, a former assistant, said in a facebook post the work environment at the charlie rose show supported a spectrum of
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misconduct. she's one of two women who told "the washington post" they reported rose's behavior to the show's executive producer yvette vega. she claims veg ga would shrug and just say, that's just charlie being charlie. in a statement to "the post," vega wrote, i should have stood up for them. i failed. it is crushing. i deeply regret not helping them. the charlie rose program airs on cbs and then re-airs on bloomberg. both networks have suspended the program. charlie rose has co-hosted this broadcast since its debut in 2012. he's also a contributing correspondent to "60 minutes." in a statement cbs news says he's suspended immediately while we look into the matter. these allegations are extremely disturbing and we take them very seriously. "the washington post" reporter told us more than a dozen other women have reached out wanting to speak or share their stories since this article appeared
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yesterday. and, norah, as tough as this story is, it's important that we cover it the same way we covered the other ones. >>bianna. it takes a lot of courage for these women to come forward. i think that they should continue to do something. >> we hope they will continue to speak up. >> yes. i also want to say this, that this is a moment that demands a frank and honest assessment about where we stand and more generally the safety of women. let me be very clear. there is no excuse for this alleged behavior. it is systemic and pervasive. i've been doing a lot of listening and i'm going to continue to do that. this i know is true. women cannot achieve equality in the workplace or in society until there is a wrereckoning aa taking of responsibility. i'm really proud to work at cbs news. there are so many incredible people here, especially on this show. all of you here.
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this will be investigated. this has to end. this behavior is wrong, period. >> i certainly echo that and i have to say, norah, i really am still reeling. i got an hour and 42 minutes of sleep last night. both my son and my daughter called me, oprah called me and said, are you okay? i am not okay. after reading that article in "the post," it was deeply disturbing, troubling and painful for me to read. that said, i think we have to make this matter to women, the women who have spoken up, the women who have not spoken up because they're afraid. i'm hoping they will take the step to speak out too. that this becomes a moment of truth. you know, i've enjoyed a friendship and a partnership with charlie for the past five years. i've held him in such high regard. and i'm really struggling because how do you -- what do you say when someone that you deeply care about has done something that is so horrible. how do you wrap your brain
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around that? i'm really grappling with that. that said, charlie does not get a pass here. he doesn't get a pass from anyone in this room. we're all deeply affected. we're all rocked by this. and i want to echo what norah said, i really applaud the women that speak up. he doesn't get a pass because i can't stop talking about the anguish of these women. what happened to their dignity. what happened to their bodies. what happened to maybe even their careers. i can't stop thinking about that and the pain they're going through. i also find that you can hold two ideas in your head at the same time. you can grapple with things. and i -- to be very honest with you, i'm still trying to process this. i'm still trying to sort it out. because this is not the man i know. i'm also clearly on the side of the women who have been very hurt and very damaged by this. and i'm going to, you know, i haven't spoken to him. have you spoken to him? i haven't spoken to him. i intend to speak to him
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certainly later today. i'm very sorry and i'm very glad they have spoken up. >> well said. we are going to continue to do our reporting on this story and our allegations that have come forward. >> can i just say this, norah, we have a great team here and we're all, as you said, very committed to bringing you the news, even when it affects us so deeply. none of us ever thought we'd be sitting at this table in particular telling this story, but here we are, but we will continue to report the news as we always have. >> we should say this, that in our next hour, five highly accomplished women talk about their sexual harassment stories and how to help other women expose their abusers. that is ahead here on cbs this morning. >> we're also learning that the longest serving member of the house of represent tifls is facing accusations of sexual har ragsment. buzz feed news reports democratic congressman john conyers paid a woman more than $27,000 from his office budget in 20 15 to settle a complaint. the woman claims conyers fired her because she did not succumb
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to his sexual advances. others allege he made repeated requests for sexual favors. conyers office did not respond to a request for comment about this. >> a second woman accuses democratic senator al franken of sexual misconduct. lindsay mentz said he grabbed her back side while they were taking a photo at the minnesota state fair. franken says he did nouz remember but feels badly she felt disrespected. huffington says they were both being funny, she says that for more than to years, quote, there has never been anything remotely inappropriate in our interactions. >> the border patrol faces a deepening mystery sur routing the death of one agent and serious injuries to another. agent rogelio martinez died from injuries he sustained in the line of duty.
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near van horn texas, not far from the mexico border. >> reporter: the surviving border patrol agent is now in stable condition here in el paso. apparently he has no memory of what happened. the fbi's always brought in when there's a suspicion a federal law enforcement officer has been assaulted. in a statement released by the agency last night, they made no mention of attack or assault to describe what happened to the agents. in the last 48 hours, there was an e-mail circulated that stated it is unclear whether or not these agents were attacked or whether they were injured in a fall. agent rogelio martinez and his partner's wounds were extensive. broken bone, major head trauma. martinez had injuries to his chest, collarbone and ribs. the border patrol agents union believes they were victims of a stoning. >> it is consistent with having been assaulted with possibly
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rocks. that's the only thing they can think of. there's nothing else there on the scene. >> reporter: the fbi says the agents were found around 11:20 saturday night in a culvert near interstate so outside of the town of van horn. earlier that night, the law enforcement source tells cbs news martinez radioed in that he was getting out of his vehicle and following a trail of possible footprints in the dirt. he was later found unconscious and bleeding from the head. martinez apparently had not drawn his weapon. >> he was a dedicated agent that went out there to do his job and he did not make it home. >> reporter: the agents were airlifted to a hospital in el paso where martinez died from his injuries. on monday, president trump offered his sympathies to the agent's families and renewed his call for a border wall. >> we have to stop the massive drug flow from pouring in and my respect to the families that were so badly hurt because they were devastated. >> reporter: emory crawford is agent martinez's longtime friend. >> all he wanted to do is just help people and help the world
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and try to make a difference. he would be the type of guy that would give the shirt off his back and wouldn't ask for anything in response. >> reporter: that area where the border patrol agents were injured is known to be used by drug smugglers. the fbi's supposed to have a news conference later today. even though the incident is really a mystery as to what happened, the governor of texas has already authorized a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction in this case. >> all right, david, thank you. the justice department is suing to block at&t's $85 billion purchase of time warn, the owner of cnn. >> you are fake news. i like real news. you're fake news. >> president trump's frequent criticism of cnn is raising concerns about the motive behind the government's legal challenge. julianna goldman is at the justice department. julianna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the justice department says the merger would harm competition, increase prices for consumers and result in less innovation.
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doj also says that the newly combined firm would be able to charge cable distributors hundreds of millions of dollars more per year for time warner's programming. those costs would be passed down to the consumer. but at&t argued the merger would allow them to deliver more affordable poe gr ablable progr internet. and that this deal is considered what is called a vertical merger, meaning two companies in the same industry who don't directly compete. during the 2016 campaign, then candidate donald trump said he would oppose the deal because it would concentrate too much power in the hands of too few. but at a press conference yesterday, on monday, at&t's ceo randall stephenson said he didn't know if the lawsuit was all about cnn, but, gayle, he did say that selling the network was a nonstarter. >> all right, thank you very much, julianna. the white house is
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designated north korea as a state sponsor of terrorism. south korea welcomed president trump's new move to pressure north korean leader kim jong-un and said it will contribute to peaceful denuclearization. china says that more could be done. margaret brennan is at the white house with the latest on this story. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it has been more than 60 days since north korea launched a missile and that's why this designation is potentially provocative. because it's meant in part to test just how much pressure kim jong-un will take before he agrees to negotiate. >> the united states is designating north korea as a state sponsor of terrorists. >> reporter: president trump said putting north korea back on the terror black list was part of his maximum pressure campaign to isolate kim jong-un. >> in addition to threatening the world by nuclear devastation, north korea has repeatedly supported acts of international terrorism including assassinations on
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foreign soil. >> reporter: specifically one state sponsor's murder, that of leader kim jong-un's half brother. earlier this year, his killing was caught on security cameras as two women smeared vx nerve agent on his face at a malaysian airport. >> as we take this action today, our thoughts turn to otto warmbier, wonderful young man. >> reporter: otto, a college student who died following abuse in a north korean labor camp. a legal standard for other countries on the black list lie syria and iran. this designation allowed the u.s. to impose more sanctions on north korea. already the world's most sanctioned regime. >> the practical effects may be limited but we hopefully are closing off a few loopholes. >> reporter: but secretary of state rex tillerson admitted it is largely symbolic. >> the north koreans have demonstrated they have enormous
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capacity to withstand a lot. they'll make their people pay. >> reporter: the treachery department will make public today just what those new sanctions will look like. we've also learned that president trump is expected to speak by phone with russia's vladimir putin a day after he met with syrian dictator bashar al assad. the u.s. and russia are trying to map out a political transition in syria to end the war. >> all right, margaret, thank you so much. time is running out for rescuers from the u.s. and other countries to find argentina's missing sub marriage. the last communication with the san juan was six days ago when the crew reported a battery failure. argentina's navy says the sub cannot stay submerged for more than seven days without coming up for air. families of the 44 crew members had an emotional meeting with argentina's president at a naval base. investigators this morning are looking into the cause of a deadly explosion at a new york cosmetics factory. at least one person is dead and more than 30 others are hurt, including seven firefighters. people on the scene reported
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having breathing problems. the international factory is about 50 miles north of new york city and was cited this year for safety violations. the company paid more than $40,000 in fines. scientists say a world class trove of ancient fossils could be damaged in president trump sh risks national monuments. we'll take you on a dig in an area where good morning everybody. what a sunrise. we have the wispy clouds that made for gorgeous colors. great way to start this tuesday. travel weather not bad heading out on the roads for thanksgiving. looking at mostly sunny conditions and temperatures expected to reach if -- reach the 70s. highs in san jose possibly hitting 78 degrees today. your thanksgiving looks like sunny and 70s as well.
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why are foreign why are foreign workers being imported to build car factories here in america? jim axelrod is asking government officials. >> why won't you talk to us about this? >> i don't know anything about it. >> they say they don't have a level playing field here. >> i don't know anything about it. >> the jobs are supposed to to americans are going to romanians and people from the czech republic and poland and bosnia. >> ahead, an update on a cbs news investigation. you're watching cbs this morning.
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three things you should know this morning indeluding a new u.s. bombing strategy in afghanist afghanistan. >> how safe are buildings made only of wood?
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the f-b-i has arrested 11 good morning. it's 7:26. i'm michelle. the fbi arrested 11 members of the hell's angels motorcycle gang. four were indicted for a murder in fresno in 2014 when a man was lure into the gang's clubhouse example killed. piedmont city council approved a site near the elementary school. the antenna will be at top of the pole. some residents are worried the site will bring down property values. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. this is along northbound 280.
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two lanes blocked. that's keeping the commute slow. tracking the travel time 20 minutes. highway 85 is getting sluggish in the northbound direction. the bridge, tough ride out of hayward heading to foster city, what you can see at least. 26 minutes. your ride 101 heading to san francisco, just fine in both directions. >> here's a gorgeous view from the camera this hour. we're seeing cloud coverage out there. it's the wispy pretty kind. makes for gorgeous sunrises. most the bay area cleared out at 49. san francisco 57 degrees. get ready to break records today with the heat. especially in san jose. look how high our temperatures are going to be. 9 to 16 degrees above average. it's going to stay warm through thanksgiving.
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♪ welcome back to cbs this morning. here are three things that you american and afghan forces carried out air strikes against taliban drug labs in afghanistan for the first time. the top u.s. general in afghanistan says the raids happened on sunday. this is all part of a new strategy unveiled by president trump back in august to cut off taliban funding. the taliban generates an estimated $200 million a year from poppy cultivation and opium production. white fish energy says it will stop restoring power in puerto rico because of millions of unpaid bills. they obtained a letter saying they owe the company more than $83 million. white fish won and then lost a controversial $300 million no bid contract to restore
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electricity on the storm ravaged island. a little over half the island is still without power. and for the first time the tobacco industry will be forced to advertise the deadly and addictive effects of smoking on prime time tv. the court ordered ads will start on sunday after a decade of delay. in 2006, a federal judge ruled that big tobacco companies lied and misrepresented and deceived the american public about the impacts of smoking for the past 50 years. a cbs news investigation uncovered a hidden foreign work force building auto plants across the country. the first time this morning an american business owner is speaking out about how the practice hurts american workers. jim axelrod is here with how those concerns are being ignored. >> good morning. we found hundreds of eastern european workers on american construction sites including factories for bmw and volvo. now, south carolina business owners tell cbs news they're being undercut by cheap foreign labor and they've been trying to put a stop to it for years.
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>> it's good for the customers. >> reporter: she's the ceo of aec. the company that builds and installs automation equipment from its shop in greenville, south carolina. just down the road from dozens of major manufacturing plants. >> we're right in the middle of what should be a very successful place for not only us to be, but for other automation companies. >> reporter: but she says jobs that could be done by her 50 local employees are instead going to workers hailing from half a world away. >> our competition is coming in from overseas, from poland, romania, italy. >> reporter: same work, same training. >> same work, same training and in some ways we have better training because we've been doing it longer. >> reporter: just a much lower cost. >> much lower cost. >> reporter: the cbs news investigation this summer discovered hundreds of men from
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eastern europe working for subcontractors on projects in alabama and michigan as well as south carolina. >> what are you doing here? they are paid as little as $10 an hour and brought to the u.s. for six months at a time, thanks to these visas which allow foreigners to supervise work, but not actually do it themselves. a loophole we found being exploited at the expense of american workers. >> it's hard to describe what it's like to sit with an employee and tell them, i have to lay you off. i don't have a job for you when you know that other people are taking those jobs. >> reporter: she and four other south carolina business executives who declined to speak publicly for fear of being blacklisted told us they've made dozens of complaints like these to state officials starting as far back as 2013. >> what have you heard? >> we don't want to be upsetting the larger manufacturing companies that are coming in. if we make it hard for them,
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they won't come. >> does it make sense that a german car company would break sense in south carolina and call it home? >> reporter: south carolina has handed out hundreds of millions of dollars in tax incentives to lure foreign manufacturers to the state. in exchange they create permanent american jobs, but there are no requirements the plants themselves must be built by americans. >> the piece that we're being left out of is during the building of that plant. that's the area that an automation company lives in. >> reporter: the man who helped secure those deals is south carolina secretary of commerce who worked at bmw for 17 years. multiple local business owners told us they've complained about foreign workers directly to his office. he declined our request for an interview. >> how are you doing? wonder if i could ask you a couple of questions. >> you'll have to talk to my communication people. >> we did. they declined an interview, sir. why won't you talk to us about
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this? they say they don't know anything about it. >> i don't know anything about it. >> they say they don't have a level playing field. >> the jobs are going to romanians and people from the czech republic and poland and bosnia. is there merit to what they're saying? >> i think would complain to me if there was a problem. >> if we get in touch with your communication's director, are you going to set up an interview? because she declined our request. >> not likely. >> not likely. so did you ever get an interview? >> oh, well, we heard from the communication director after i attempted to talk to the secretary but it was not exactly to schedule an interview. as for their part, volvo and bmw tell us that it is actually their subcontractor's responsibility to ensure that their employees are properly and legally permitted to work in the united states. >> they didn't want to schedule an interview. what did they want? leave us alone, jim? >> you saw the door close. >> it's one of those things he's like where is that elevator? >> really good reporting. i'm glad we followed up on this.
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>> me too. president trump could open up parts of national monuments to commercial development. a look at the growing controversy. >> reporter: usually a political fight over public land pits a developer against environmentalists but it is a battle over bones like the bones that are being excavated right here in utah. 75 million-year-old bones that once belonged to the ancestor of a t-rex. that story coming up on cbs this morning. >> and we invite you to subscribe to our pod cast. you will get the news of the day, extended interviews. podcast originals. find them all on itunes and apple's pod cast app. you're watching cbs this morning. we thank you for that today. we'll be right back. back. there's only one national orange juice brand
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future of 21 national monuments is under federal review this morning. president trump is expected to significantly downgrade some of them in size and in scope.
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the grand staircase national monument in utah could shrink by 40 to 50%. many scientists worry though that the move could damage one of the richest deposits of dinosaur bones in the world. we wentz on a dig to see the concerns about the potential changes firsthand. >> one, two, three. >> reporter: paleontologists call this flipping the jacket and it's one of the most nerve wracking moments of their job. you're worried you could damage it? >> i really am. >> reporter: but it's also a reward for all his hard work. >> we just exposed more bone. yeah. >> reporter: titus is the paleontologist for the grand staircase in southern utah. >> reporter: so that bone is 75 million years old. >> and some change, yeah. >> reporter: and today he's unearthing part of a site he thinks contains four or five ancestors of the mighty t rex.
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>> reporter: does it feel like you struck gold? >> yes. yeah. >> reporter: you actually are emotional about it. >> i get very emotional about it. but i get excited about this kind of stuff. >> reporter: and there's a lot for him to get excited about. in the two decades since the 1.9 million acre patch of desert was designated a national monument, 25 new species of dinosaurs have been discovered in its sands. >> reporter: when this area became designated a national monument was that a catalyst? >> yeah, when it was created in 1986 it was originally envisioned that it would be an outdoor laboratory. >> on this remarkable site god's handiwork is everywhere and the fossil record of dinosaurs and other prehistoric life. >> reporter: but that designation enraged many residents of southern utah who suddenly were limited in their ability to graze cattle, extract m minerals like coal.
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>> it's one of the most volatile issues in utah. >> reporter: people are still angry? >> they're still angry. >> reporter: michael noel has fought against the monument for >> it means more people can utilize these lands in the future and it does not mean selling them off and it doesn't mean destroying them. all the laws, regulations, archaeological resource protection acts will all be in place. >> so these are around 75 million years old. >> reporter: i'm going to put this back then. >> he's been recovering specimens from the monument for years. if trump changes its status he fears there could be more recreation flap traffic like offroad vehicles and more chances for science to suffer. >> you know, there's a possibility that fossils may be lost or destroyed, things like
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fossil theft and vandalism. once that record of our planet's history is gone, we've lost something from the american story. >> reporter: back in his lab, alan titus stays out of the political fight. after all, when it comes to exploring grand staircase land he's hardly scratched the surface. >> we're about a fifth of the way through and essentially more than half of my career. so there's many careers worth of work left here to do just to document what lies here in the ground. >> reporter: for cbs this morning, southern utah. >> thank you. you know, dinosaur bones are understand why he's so excited about it and they are cool looking. >> very cool and quite old. >> you thinking about going on a dig? >> i have never done that but i would be interested in doing that. >> okay. you let me know how that goes. we have different ideas of fun, i see, nora o'donnell. >> up next, a look at this morning's other headlines
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including a spit test that may detect concussions in kids. and we are in nebraska along the newly constructed pipeline. how some hear the pipeline could warm air for the bay area the next several days. wet weather is not dipping down to our region until thanksgiving. slight chance of rain in the north bay. looking like 70s all the way through the weekend. i to take it ea slow. ♪ come on mom! ♪
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café-quality from beans to espresso machines. toys "r" us stores open thursday at 5:00pm for black friday. get doorbuster deals like 50% off nerf hail fire and barbie doll five pack. and get $30 off the doc mcstuffins all-in-one nursery. check out toysrus.com each day for new deals. toys "r" us. today we play. welcome back to cbs this morning. here's a look at some of this morning's headlines. the pittsburgh post reports the suspect in the death of a police officer in the suburb of new kensington was captured. he was taken into custody this morning. he's accused in the deadly shooting of 25-year-old officer brian shaw during a traffic stop on friday. shaw's funeral is tomorrow. the new york times says the fcc is planning a repeal of net neutrality rules. created during the obama era. the proposal is expected to be unveiled later today.
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internet service providers would no longer have to give equal access to all content. it would permit them to slow web traffic or charge more to view certain content. fcc commissioners are expected to back the proposal in december. the fcc declined to comment on this. the denver post reports uber was fined $8.9 million by colorado regulators. they say uber allowed 57 drivers with past criminal or past motor vehicle offenses to drive for the company. they had issues ranging from felony convictions to driving under the influence and reckless driving. in some cases drivers were working with revoked or cancelled or suspended licenses. uber said it recently discovered a process error that was inconsistent with regulations and is working with colorado officials. our cbs affiliate in richmond, virginia. wtbrtv said a spit test could diagnose and expect the duration of a concussion in kids. molecules in saliva might determine the symptoms. the test had an 85% prediction accuracy.
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standard tests were 65% accurate. the new tests could hit the market in one or two years. the experiments were conducted by penn state college of medicine and partly funded by a biotech company. and the new york daily news reports the inflation of macy's thanksgiving parade balloons will get tighter security. an estimated 200,000 people will watch the balloons being inflated tomorrow. this year there will be roof tops, snipers, helicopters, bomb sniffing dogs and radiation checks. at least one officer will be assigned to each block and every balloon in the upper west side. everyone attending will also be screened. this tighter security comes after the halloween truck attack in lower manhattan. lord knows the nypd does a good job. they are on the case and i always enjoy the thanksgiving day parade while i'm cooking and setting the table. always nice to have the tv on. >> i enjoy watching it from a friend's high rise apartment. cheering them on upstairs. >> it usually is pretty cold out there. >> it's very cold normally.
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extra security is very important so nobody's complaining. the big thanksgiving travel rush is already getting underway. ahead we will talk to the new tsa administrator about keeping air travel safe and whether passengers need to worry about screeners falling short. you're watching cbs this morning. we'll be right back. morning. we'll be right back. there are ordinary eggs... and the best. which egg tastes more farm-fresh and delicious? only eggland's best.
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will have donated over one hundred fifteen million dollars to those in need. living facility in santa rosa... claiming they were not properly evacuated during the tubbs good morning. it's 7:56. i'm ken any -- kenny choy. some residents of the villa ca bring facility are suing. the state department of social services is investigating the mayor, ed lee, is has asked the agency to enact a ban today. it would include buses, traffic stations. we'll have update on traffic and will weather in a moment.
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good morning. time is 7:57. we're tracking couple crashes keeping the ride slow. we'll begin at 101. this is as you're heading through the area. 26 minute travel time heading
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southbound from rolling down the 580 due to this accident we're tracking near alameda. east shore freeway. definitely seeing the clouds in the westbound direction. 24 minute ride highway 4 over to the maize. still in the red 21 minutes head tock san francisco. san mateo bridge. from 80 to 101, a crash at foster city. >> roads may not be clearing, but skies are. here's a look at downtown san francisco. check out trans america pyramid. 54 oakland. san francisco 57. san jose 56. get ready for warm weather. we have warm weather in store next few days. wet weather will be in the pacific northwest. sunshine and well above average temperatures. we should be in the low 60s for this day. going to be low to upper 70s,
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record breaking likely.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's tuesday, november 21st, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, the me, too, movement in the executive suite. five high-powered women talk about sexual harassment and helping women take charge. plus, a new go-ahead for a controversial pipeline. we'll hear from a nebraska farmer who says oil in his water supply do not mix. but first, here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. cbs news has suspended our co-host, charlie rose, over allegations of sexual misconduct. >> some say he groped them or exposed himself to them, and many paint a picture of a respected figure abusing his position. >> let me be very clear, there is no excuse for this alleged
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behavior. it is systemic and pervasive. >> charlie does not get a pass here. he doesn't get a pass from anyone in this room. we are all deeply affected. we are all touched by this. the surviving border patrol agent apparently has no memory of what happened. no mention of attack or assault to describe what happened. the justice department says the merger would harm competition, increase prices and result in less innovation. the designation is essentially provocative because it's meant in part to test just how much pressure kim jong-un will take before he agrees to negotiate. president trump lashed out at nfl running back marshawn lynch after photos showed lynch at a game in mexico where he was standing during the mexican national anthem but sitting during the u.s. national anthem. by the way, marshawn only stood for the mexican anthem is also the sentence that will start 70% of your thanksgiving fights this year. >> announcer: this morning's
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"eye opener at 8:00" is brought you by blue buffalo. good morning to you. i'm gayle king with norah o'donnell. it's a very difficult day for us here as cbs news has suspended our co-host, charlie rose, over claims of sexual misconduct. the "washington post" details allegations from eight women who worked or wanted to work for him at "the charlie rose show." >> the reported incidents happened between the late 1990s and 2011. bana golodryga is here with the accusations and reaction. bianna, good morning. >> good morning. this is a tough morning. we reached one of the accusers who didn't want to go on camera but confirms the reporting of her allegations, which includes rose exposing himself, saying that is accurate. "the post" reports the woman accused rose of unwanted sexual advances towards them, including lewd phone calls, walking around naked in their presence or groping. the story details instances where he brought women to his home on long island to discuss jobs. one woman said he appeared before her in an untethered
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bathrobe, naked underneath, and attempted to put his hand down her pants. she said she pushed his hands away and wept throughout the encounter. all of the accusers worked or tried to work for charlie rose, which is produced by his production company. pbs and bloomberg have suspended distribution of the program. rose said in a statement yesterday evening, "it is essential that these women know i hear them and that i deeply apologize for my inappropriate behavior. i am greatly embarrassed. i have behaved incensensitively times and i accept responsibility for that, though i do not believe that all of these allegations are accurate. i always felt that i was pursuing shared feelings, even though i now realize i was mistaken." cbs news released a statement saying rose is "suspended immediately while we look into this matter. these allegations are extremely disturbing, and we take them very seriously." the "washington post" reporter who broke the story told us that she received more than a dozen e-mails from other women who now want to speak with her.
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and norah, we at cbs, as difficult as this is, think it is very important that we hear from all of these women. >> well said, bianna. and i know gayle and i have talked about that, how courageous it is to be able to share this, because for many of them, it's something they've kept silent for a long time. >> that they've suffered in silence. it shows that people are listening, people are paying attention, and there are consequences for your actions. i think that, as difficult as this is, is an important message to send. >> i agree. nodz in other news this morning, the border patrol is looking into what caused the death into one agent and serious injuries to another. agent rogelio martinez died sunday from injuries sustained in the line of duty. his unnamed partner suffered broken bones and head trauma. their union believes they were victims of a stoning attack. the fbi says the agents were found late saturday night in a culvert near van horn, texas. a law enforcement source tells cbs news martinez had earlier radioed in that he was following
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possible footprints in the dirt. he was found unconscious and bleeding from the head. he apparently had not drawn his weapon. activists and some nebraska land owners are preparing for a new fight against the keystone xl pipeline. state regulators approved a revised path for this pipeline through nebraska. yesterday, removing the last major obstacle to construction. tony is along the approved route. >> good morning. the pipeline will continue on under this grain farm through 60 miles of previously untouched farmland. supporters say it will bring jobs and keep fuel, but critics, including the owner of this farm, say that's a bad bargain for the land and the planet. >> this fight is so important to me because this is our future. >> reporter: nebraska farmer art tanderup worries the pipeline could leak, interrupting a vital
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aquifer supply for him and the plains. >> once it's in there, it cannot be cleaned up. >> reporter: the steel tube would carry oil from montana through north dakota and nebraska to refineries in illinois and the gulf coast. president obama rejected the pipeline in 2015, citing economic and climate concerns, but last march, president trump green-lit the $8 billion project, a move supported by those in the oil and gas sdri, including craig stevens. >> pipelines themselves are the safest, most environmentally sensitive, and even the most cost-effective way to transport the energy our nation needs. >> reporter: but the fight isn't over. the approved expansion comes just days after an existing stretch of the keystone pipeline, built by the same company, trans-canada, leeched some 210,000 gallons of oil in south dakota. hundreds gathered in the capital last year to protest the dakota access pipeline passed through north dakota. if and when transcanada begins
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construction in nebraska, activists like jane kleeb says they'll be ready. >> you can't just say hey, i'm going to come and risk all of that so i can build a pipeline that just runs through your state and not get the type of hell that farmers and ranchers have brought to this pipeline. >> reporter: transcanada, the company behind the keystone pipeline, did not get its preferred route through the state of nebraska, which could mean still more delays and complications. norah, after nearly ten years of trying, the company says it will make a decision about whether to proceed by the end of the year. >> incredible to see this process go forward. tony, thank you so much. about 4 million americans will fly to their thanksgiving destinations this year. ahead, we're going to ask the new tsa administrator whether we can expect changes to airport security with reports of banned items slipping through screenings. gayle and i are frequently in the airport line, so
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener at 8:00" is sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family, so feed them like family with blue.
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many working women face a level of disrespect that most men can hardly imagine. >> i would walk in every day and there would be xerox copies of male genitalia on my desk. i was walking in like i can't believe i've gotten myself into this, and it was a sense of almost embarrassment to be a woman. >> ahead, five accomplished women talk about changing workplace culture and how social media helps harassment victims. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. ♪ discover card. hi, i'm just looking at my account, and i've got all this extra cash back. yep. that's your cashback match. only discover will automatically match all the cash back new cardmembers earn at the end of their first year. you matched everything i earned this year? yeah. whoo! more money! more money!
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♪ so, it's tens of millions of americans are packing their backs. holiday. aaa expects 50.9 million travelers to hit the roads, rails and skies for thanksgiving journeys. it's the most since 2005. air travel, they say, will see the biggest increase of 5%. about 4 million people are expected to fly this holiday season. this holiday weekend. the busy travel week comes after cbs news learned screeners missed prohibited items at least
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70% of the time at security check points during undercover testing. the new tsa administrator is with us now from washington to discuss as we get ready to hit the roads. thank you very much for joining us this morning. >> thank you for the opportunity to be with you this morning. >> here's the question i wonder. how is it they can get my contact lens solution but they can't get the weapons and really prohibited scary items? what can you say to reassure us that things are going to be better when we travel this weekend? just the other day my contact lens solution was confiscated and i had to throw it out. >> well, what we do is whenever we have a test like the inspector general conducted and we do our own testing as well, we use that to see where there are vulnerabilities. what we're doing right now and we've been doing over the past several weeks in fact into the summer is additional training for our security officer work force so i think it does an excellent job overall. looking at changing our procedures which travelers will
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see over the course of this holiday season, and also investigating new technologies that we can put in place in the check point. i would say to you that i travel often. i think air travel is safe and secure. and i think it's actually safer and securer today after the results than it was beforehand. >> so what specific things is the tsa doing to improve? >> what we're doing to improve is first off we're focusing further on training our work force. it's a very important part of our overall security posture. i personally have participated in some of the training for transportation security officers and it's excellent and we explain to them the why of what they're doing based on the intelligence information, the threat information that we have. additionally we've changed some procedures. right now when you go to the airport, most airports, you'll have to take out of your carry on bags any electronic device that's bigger than a cell phone and put that into a bin and what that does, that procedure allows our x-ray examiners to have a clear image when your carry on
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bag goes through the x-ray machine. additionally we have new lanes in many airports thanks to the airports and the airlines partner ship with us and these new lanes allow five people at the same time to put their carry on bags into bins, which should eventually speed up the process, and also provides some security enhancements enhancements for us on the security side of those lanes. so i think you'll see an immediate improvement in security. additionally we're focused very hard and i've accelerated significantly our investigation of new technology in the check points. >> you know, al qaeda has recently called on attacks on trains in this country. what security precautions do you have in place for that? right now it appears anybody can get on a train carrying anything. >> we work very closely with the rail industry. in fact, i was just up in new york a couple of weeks ago went to the new york transit system and also the am track and new
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jersey transit. we provide guidelines as tsa. we don't provide the security unlike at the airports where tsa provides security, but we provide guidelines to service transportation owners and operators and we work closely with them to assure intelligence information and also to share best practices back and forth between us. you'll see as you travel on transportation systems over this weekend an increased presence of law enforcement, of k-9 teams and that's part of the enhanced security posture in those systems. >> thank you so much for joining us this morning. thanks to all the tsa workers. i find them to be very professional. >> i agree with what he's saying. for the most part they do a very good job. are you traveling? are you going to test out your own system? >> my family is traveling to me but thanks for the comments on the work force. it's a difficult job to do. >> you're absolutely right about that. >> we're going to be traveling. >> we'll be doing our trains, planes and automobiles as well.
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all right. the white house christmas tree has arrived. first lady melania trump welcomed its arrival and that's baron trump too. why many americans may have problems getting their trees this year. and the hugely popular dj diplo is considered one of the most in demand producers in music. we'll discuss the new documentary about his historic concert last year in cuba. you're watching cbs this morning. neil lane designs for hollywood's biggest stars. and at kay, he designs for the star in your life. this ring was inspired by an art deco design that goes back 100 years. at kay... ...the number-one jewelry store for... yes. bob jimmy dean day breakfast sandwich. the real eggs, sausage, and cheese fill him up with goodness, so he gives his umbrella to nancy, which makes hank smile, which makes everyone's ride better. with jimmy dean, good mornings lead to great days. i'm and i'm an emt.erer when i get a migraine at work, it's debilitating.
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right now it's time to show right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. we're bringing them to you a little earlier than usual so we can devote as much time as possible to ou the detroit free press reports on the death of music and tv star della reese. reese was on "touched by an a angel." she died peacefully sunday night in california. no further details. reese was 86. >> that was one of my favorite shows. >> rest in peace. i was sorry to hear that >> i .esterday. the philadelphia enquirer reports on new research that he ws baby starts connecting words early on. babies between six and nine months old could identify months identgs of words.
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hat seem to follow what a word eans when used with a word cue. they used eye-tracking software. shis is certainly a note to self tered.ents. creaturesle creatures are paying attention even when you think they can't pay attention. th >> yeah. he brainrain triples in size in the first two years of life. it's important what you feed and wnd what you say and do in front o them. "usa're watching. usa "today" reports a one in 0en adults eats enough fruits and vegetables. federal guidelines recommend day.2 to 2 cups of fruit a day. we shchers warn the lack of fruit and vegetables raises the ts andor diabetes and heart sisease. >> it's provided right here in seegreen room. vegetables are good, too. rovided wichita eagle reports room. christmas trees may be wichi to find this year.
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nationwide shortage of popular types of fir trees have the year. in the great recession. in 2018 fewer people were buying trees so farmers didn't plant as many. short s ten years to grow them. supplies are short and prices are higher. first lady melania trump and baron welcomed the christmas tree.at the white house. horse-drawn family won the 2017 national tree contest and preseted a 19 1/2 foot tall fir aee. .t will be displayed in the blue displayed i t's a nice time of the year. >> it reminds me that as is giving and christmas are coming. nice to see baron. even women in leadership ines can be harassed and hreatened by men. ahead five take-charge women talk about their harassers and talk elping other women take action to stop abuse on the job. you're watching "cbs this morning" we're taking break. your local news coming up. 're taking a break. your local news coming right up.
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high-profile san francisco murder trial. e is good morning. closing arguments could wrap up today in a high-profile san francisco murder trial. josi garcia is accused of fatally shooting kate steinle in 2015. the defense claims that darcy a's gun fired accidentally. federal investigators are looking into two more incidents at san francisco international airport in which airplanes narrowly avoided colliding on the runway at night. according to the ntsb, a skywest jet failed to stay behind a painted line as another aircraft took off. and a compass airlines jet had to abort a landing when a plane was in the way lining up for takeoff. traffic and weather in a moment.
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good morning. we have a traffic alert in effect for drivers heading along westbound 80. the crash near solano avenue is keeping the ride very slow. it looks like two lanes just opened. we have two lanes closed and two lanes open. traffic backed up beyond hilltop at this point toward richmond parkway. over a one hour commute for drivers going from highway four to the maze. here is a live look. you can see traffic at a stop on the westbound side of interstate 80 right near san
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pablo dam road. we will go to the bay bridge toll plaza where things are looking better. 14 minutes from the maze into san francisco. 880 heading into oakland on the northbound side, 30 minutes from 238 up to the maze. and a new crash along 580 in livermore, expect delays heading toward 680. neda iranpour. >> looking at the dublin camera. look at the clouds. quite a view this morning with the sunrise. it has been pretty. temperatures, here we go. 50s across the board. 57, san francisco. san jose, 56. expecting to break records today and possibly tomorrow because of high-pressure bringing in warmth across california. san jose could reach 70 degrees today. not working its way into san francisco. we will see clear skies today. clouds may work their way in tomorrow and for thanksgiving. a slight chance of showers across the north bay for thanksgiving. that is about it. not getting a cooldown until the weekend. happy tuesday everyone!
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welcome back to cbs this morning. roy moore replamains defiant ine face of sexual misconduct. becky grace has more repeatedly pursued her at the department worked at at time. moore was about ten years older than her. >> i just thought that it was odd that a man that was that old was spending that much time in the mall. and so that kind of made -- i just kind of thought he was a creep. >> moore's campaign offered three witnesses who dispute that he was banned from the mall. at least nine other women accused moore of sexual
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misconduct ranging from unwanted advances to sexual assault. the youngest accuser was 14 at the time. moore denies any wrong doing. >> the me too campaign is giving a voice to many women who say they 'experienced sexual harassment and abuse. they say they are now speaking out to help others. alex, good morning. such an important conversation to have for all of us. >> such an important conversation to have and to hear. the group we spoke with on friday included cofounder and ceo of rent the runway. elle vest was the ceo of citigroup. and ceo of tribeca. and a three time national gymnastics champion. howard along with several teammates accuse their team doctor of sexual assault while she was competing.
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all of these women shared their experience and offered insight on how they hope to help more women as they continue coming forward. >> when i started work on wall street i remember one day leaning over a desk to work on a spread sheet, and turning around and there was a guy behind me pretending to perform a sex act on me with all the other guys watching and all the other guys laughing and this sense of incredible shame and -- >> you felt ashamed. >> absolutely and how could i have leaned over the desk like that. >> we're kind of a culture from the time growing up if this locker room talk starts in high school with men thinking it's okay to oversexualize women, like, what did we think was going to happen 30 or 40 years later when they get into the board room? you think about incidents over the last year with harvey weinstein and roger ailes and bill o'reilly. these are companies where not just those individuals were
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treemly powerful but everyone who runs that position of power is a man. >> if you had women on the boards in those companies you would not have had the kind of payouts. there's no way. >> the majority of cases that have come out, in some ways there are gray areas. it's very rarely black and white. you know, i think there is this problematic definition of rape as something that happens in a dark alley by a scary drunkard stranger. but the reality is, that only 8% of women are raped by strangers. >> jessica, i want to get you in here. did you know what was happening to you was wrong and did you feel like there was someone at the olympics committee in management somewhere on the team that you could go talk to to help stop this behavior? >> you know, i didn't. and i was in a position where i had to just trust this man. when news about the doctor
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started coming out i realized i wasn't the only one and more than 140 women have now come forward and usa gymnastics has done nothing and i really believe that the entire board needs to resign. there have been changes at fox, there have been changes at the wine steven company and usa gymnastics is just going on with business as usual and it's hurtful to me as a victim. >> while we have victims or survivors coming forward and saying metoo, we need men to say, i did that. we need men to step forward and to see themselves in these stories. >> i think that there are a lot of men that are in shock as to what they believe normal behaifz yo -- behavior was. harvey is an extreme case, a sexual predator and for somebody to say i grew up in a sexually
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promi promiscuous time is bull especially somebody that's in media and looks at the foreground of culture and also politics. >> we're different ages but we know about anita hill, we know about bill clinton, we know about bill cosby. what makes this moment different sf. >> the proliferation of social media and media outlets because back in the day if i wanted to say something, what was i going to do? what's different is we have a way to express our voices. what's also different about this moment is women are rallying around each other. >> pandora's box is opened and pandora is pissed. we have to ban together and now our foot is firmly in the door. now what do we do? okay? certain things happened then but this is now. what do i do and what do i say to my daughters, what do you say do your readers? >> do you think that young
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women, the readers of teen vogue is more forthright about what's happening in their bodies than older women. >> yes, absolutely, but i think one thing i want to kind of put forward into this conversation is that it happens to strong powerful women too. and so i think this -- it's important, this messaging about, you know, we need more women in these leadership polsitions, we need more women on boards but it might still happen to you. >> that's actually the reason i spoke up because i was sexually harassed after already raising over $100 million for my company, after having a successful company, and after i refused this investor's sexual advantage -- advances he called my board members and told them i was being unresponsive and should likely be fired. so he tried to come after my career when i rejected him. >> what was your reaction to that? >> i decided the reaction had to
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be 100% transparency. so i went to my board and i showed the text messages that i had received and shared the experience that i'd had and honestly my board members were shocked and we decided as a board to take immediate action together. >> for me as a woman who's dealt with some degree of it and funny enough i actually saw the person that i've had an encounter with on the red carpet walking into the winner of the year awards. a and at that moment, someone leading the resistance for this generation, i felt conflicted. i haven't addressed it with this person. i'm still wrestling with it. how many other women feel that way? how many other women who are standing up and retweeting are still traumatized and still trying to unpack what happened? >> we talk about what happens next. and we talk about that in the context of people outside immediate victim hood, but what happens next for victims? how do you feel since these allegations have been made
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public? >> i've just come around to the anger and i really, really struggle and i don't know if it's ever going to go away. and i think that's an important thing for people to understand that this doesn't just dissipate the moment you speak up. it's almost a moment that you speak up that you can actually start to process. >> do you think you can get to a point where this isn't the thing that you think defines you? >> i hope so. i really do. >> you will. >> yeah, and i -- seeing you guys and just listening to everything that you've been talking about, it's -- it almost makes me want to cry because i know that we can do what we need to do to make sure this never happens again. so that not one person has to come up and say, you know, metoo. and i am just very empowered by listening to you guys.
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>> according to multiple reports jessica howard's former team doctor is expected to plead guilty to first degree criminal sexual conduct charges in a michigan court tomorrow. in a statement to cbs this morning usa gymnastics said, our athletes are our priority and we are committed to promoting an environment of empowerment that encourages speaking up especially on difficult topics like abuse. >> well, jessica certainly put them on notice. i thought she raised a very good point and raised some troubling allegations about them. but i hope this is more than just a moment of we talk about it and it goes away, that we get used to a new normal. we've all had experiences where somebody does something and you go well, that was bad but it wasn't that bad and now we have to face the fact that it's all bad. so varying degrees but it's all bad. >> and i think it -- this moment is one of catharsis and healing but there is the question, when do the men sit down at the table with ustion because this is a conversation that needs to happen with both genders. >> i said earlier you know, it's
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systematic and it's pervasive and what it does is it cripples women's confidence. it cripples their ability to succeed and i think you have understand that. management has to understand that. not just say we're going to create a safe work environment. actually create that environment. >> and these are shattering experiences and we need to make sure people are whole. >> and zero tolerance, but i thought jane had one of the best lines. pandora's box is open and pandora is pissed. >> she's very pissed. >> we should say that was scheduled weeks ago before we are now part of this conversation. >> it came to fruition on friday. good timing to be having this conversation. >> thank you very much. music producer and dj diplo is here. i just saw him in the green room. he's reliving his historic concert in cuba. how he said the people of the
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isolated nation made ♪
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♪ think of your fellow man, ♪ lend him a helping hand, ♪ put a little love in your heart.♪ ♪ you'll see it's getting late, oh please don't hesitate...♪ ♪ put a little love in your heart.♪ ♪ in your heart... ♪ in your heart... ♪ in your heart... ♪ in your heart. (vo) going on now, our subaru share the love event will have donated over one hundred fifteen million dollars to those in need.
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that's the 2015 hit lane on. the song racked up 1 billion
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streams. >> how many? >> 1 billion. >> rolling stone calls diplo one of the most in demand producers in music. he's won two grammys. his performances make him one of the forbes highest paid djs in the world. >> he knows what he's doing. a new documentary called give me future explores the performance in cuba last year. major laser was the first american group to play there in more than five decades so the movie looks at the ground breaking performance in havana. >> there's not going to be another first moment. it's not going to be another inaugural concert like this. even if it sucks, let's do that. every artist begs for like a moment in time where people are paying attention to you and you know, when it actually gets to you, you have to seize the moment because it's not going to
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happen again. >> he joins us now at the table. good morning to you diplo. >> good morning. >> let's just say it did not suck. and this is what i want you to set the scene for us. because when you guys got there you weren't even sure how many people would show up. you thought maybe ten, maybe 20, but at the end of the day how many people showed up and what did you think when you looked across that sea of humanity? >> it was almost 450,000 people at the concert and for us, we were happy just to have a couple fans there. we weren't sure if anybody in cuba had heard of us, had heard our music. we had no idea how in touch they were with music so we were anticipating something small, cool and once the day started rolling on and people started walking up and it started from 2:00 a.m. just walking up. >> they have such an antiquated internet system so it is surprising they knew about you, but they did. >> we had to make a film about our experiences and the one
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thing i told the director is don't make this about us or our vacation, let's find the stories there. and the film ends up like an analog internet. people trade music and they trade information through the island through one usb key up and down the streets. that's how they found about it. >> he sends it and he sends it. it was amazing to see that in 2017. >> the way that music can be in some ways political, because cuba of course is a communist nation with limits on free speech and expression. how did you find that? i mean, performing there? >> well, we had our work hand in hand with the government to arrive there. it wasn't easy. i think our music was a bit easier to accept. we don't have any political views. we don't do profanity, nothing very negative in our music. so they like records like "lean on," records about self-discovery and our content was easy for the government to
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help us with. so we were working hand in hand with them and the u.s. government. we found the right way to flavz gait. we were the one group that was able to go there. i think others had tried but we were the one that they chose to represent for the people. >> you guys were huge. >> i liked the title, but give me future, so many people say this is an old country, nobody comes here, but the fact that these guys came here give me a future and make me feel alive. i want to know what that meant to you and what was your takeaway on your end when you left? >> well, there are experiences in cuba, like i said, the rolling stones were there as well and it's always like a nostalgic thing. you go there, you feel the old cars, it's old history and you don't realize there's you know, over 10 million people and there's kids there and they want to be part of the world. they want to feel like they're part of what we're doing and it did feel like the moment. they were part of something that they all know and they all love and for me i just feel like we're so close to cuba, they're our neighbors so it's nice to have empathy for the people there.
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they're trying to live just like us every day. something like this happens to them, a giant concert, the one experience, you know, that we had been part of and it's amazing to kind of see the growth and explosion. i thought when we went there this would be the beginning of many concerts. like there would be a huge amount of americans going there, but it really was the only thing and now the doors are kind of closing because we passed different laws really recently about traveling and so we don't know if it's going to happen again. >> you have an amazing career. not bad for a guy who made mix tapes in his bedroom and you are now one of the number one djs in the world. >> it started -- my path was very different than a lot of the musicians but i think just learning my way through it all kind of i think it's exploring different ways to do it. >> thank you diplo. i love that memory of making mix tapes. those were good times. >> give me future is now available on apple music.
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members of t good morning, it is 8:55 fshgs the fbi-- the fbi arrested 11 members of the hells angel motorcycle gang in santa rosa, four of the bikers were indicted for murder in fresno in 2014, when a man was lured into a gang's club house and killed. piedmont city council approved a new cell site near wild wood elementary, the antenna will be on top of a new lamp pole at the entrance of piedmont park, some residents are worried the site will bring down their property values. san jose sacred heart community service is handing out more than 4,000 turkeys in buxs full of food with those in need. it will continue through tomorrow. stick around, we will have weather and traffic in a moment.
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ur fellow ma ♪ lend him a helping hand, ♪ put a little love in your heart.♪ ♪ you'll see it's getting late, oh please don't hesitate...♪ ♪ put a little love in your heart.♪ ♪ in your heart... ♪ in your heart... ♪ in your heart... ♪ in your heart. (vo) going on now, our subaru share the love event will have donated over one hundred fifteen million dollars to those in need.
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good morning, time is 8:57, a traffic alert westbound 580, an accident has one lane blocked and traffic is backed up well beyond north glen road there. we are looking at over an hour ride just 280 to 680. that is about a 40-minute delay. do expect a slow ride heading out towards the dublin presenten interchange. earlier crash, westbound 80, all lanes have been cleared, and the roadway back open, but we are still looking at a 30-
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minute ride highway 4 towards the maze there. slow, stop, go. lets check in on the forecast. check out the skies across dublin. so pretty, our dublin camera showing quite a show, look at the clouds. we will see a lot of clearing later on, just like we are at the cliff house camera in ocean beach. 59 degrees already for concord, things warming up today. san jose reaching 57 degreesism here is the story, high pressure from southern california is large and in charge and causing the warmer weather for the bay area today, tomorrow, on through thursday. we could be reaching the 80s across a lot of the south bay today. the wet weather is sticking to washington and oregon. they are getting all kinds of rain from the atmospheric river there across the pacific ocean that is sending moisture that way. look at the temperatures, san jose, 78. 73 for mountain view. yes, 80s, possibly, inland for tomorrow. on thanksgiving, no shortage of heat. we are not cooling down until the weekend.
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for mild-to-te eczema?a it can be used almost everywhere on almost everybody. the arm of an arm wrestler? the back of a quarterback? the face of a fairy? prescription eucrisa is a nose to toes eczema ointment. it blocks overactive pde4 enzymes within your skin. and it's steroid-free. do not use if you are allergic to eucrisa or its ingredients. allergic reactions may occur at or near the application site. the most common side effect is application site pain. ask your doctor about eucrisa.
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wayne: (laughing) guess who's coming home! tiffany: (screaming) jonathan: money! wayne: yes! - number one! wayne: you've got the big deal! - (screaming) - wayne! wayne: you've got the car! - (laughing) wayne: yes, yes! - let's go for the big deal, baby! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey! welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? (cheers and applause) let's see. bacon, come on, bacon. (cheers and applause) hello, nice to meet you. hey, you're pamela. - i'm pamela. wayne: pamela, what do you do? - i raise money for kids with serious medical conditions. wayne: give her a big round of applause. (cheers and applause)

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