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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 3, 2018 7:00am-8:58am PDT

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update is 7:26. >> don't forget cbs this morning is coming up next. have a wonderful day. captioning funded by cbs good morning to our viewers in the west. it's tuesday, july 3rd, 2018. welcome to cbs "this morning." thailand celebrates as the soccer team and their coach are found alive deep inside a flooded cave system. why it could take months to get them out. the heat wave continues to scorch more than 70 million americans as people across the country hit the road for what aaa calls terrible tuesday for the traffic. a kentucky trophy hunter faces online outrage after killing a giraffe in south africa. why she calls it conservation. plus, new evidence that coffee may help you live longer.
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dr. tara narula will tell us how much to drink to get the maximum health benefits. we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> we are coming. it's okay. many people are coming. you're very strong. >> a missing youth soccer team found a live in thailand. >> this entire country is relishing a happy ending. >> but now the race is on to get them all back to safety. >> it is brutally hot. >> the dangerous heat wave continues this morning. >> when is this heat going to end? >> this is all in the hands of mother nature. >> in the pittsburgh area, thunderstorms caused flash flooding. high water trapped motorists and flooded homes. >> a terror suspect is under arrea arre arrest, accused of plotting a fourth of july terror attack in cleveland. >> president trump revealing he met with four contenders for kennedy's seat on the supreme court. >> i'll be meeting with two or three more over the next few days and we'll be announcing it on monday. >> harvey weinstein is facing
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three new sex crime charges. >> weinstein now charged in connection with a third victim. >> all that -- >> serena williams made her return at wimbledon. >> she's back and she's winning. >> and all that matters. >> it's a free for all going on. there they go. >> quite the scene at the world cup qualifier. a wild brawl breaks out. >> ugly, ugly scenes right now. >> this has gone wild. >> on "cbs this morning." >> japan desperate to cover the spaces. there's the winner! oh, can you believe it. >> belgium becomes the first team in 48 years to overcome a two-goal deficit in the knockout stage. >> he strokes belgium into a quarterfinal, and it is all over. what a game. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places.
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they could have said what a match for serena williams. i love when they say she's back and she's winning. >> very exciting story. we begin with something very exciting too. john dickerson is off. anthony mason is here. that's not the exciting part. this is the exciting part. >> i'm excited. >> i think he's excited. >> no, no, no, that's not the exciting part that i'm excited about today. i'm excited about this. when we begin. it's always good to see you, anthony mason. >> thanks, gayle. >> 12 member of the youth soccer team and their coach who disappeared inside a coach in thailand are safe. they were missing for ten days. experts say it could take months to get them out. this is the first image of the missing little boys who range in age from 11 to 16 years old. so they're young. rescuers found them yesterday about 2 1/2 miles inside the flooded cave system. >> more than 1,000 rescuers from around the world searched for ten days. now they must decide how to guide the boys to a safe area. ben tracy is in chiang rai,
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thailand, near the cave where they were found, ben, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. so this is exciting news. not only did they find these boys inside this cave, but they say they're in good condition. they're now giving them a high-protein liquid diet, antibiotics. they're trying to get their strength back up. the focus of this operation now shifts to how you get them out of the cave. >> thank you, thank you. >> reporter: those were the first words from the boys after being found by two british divers. ten days after they went missing inside the intricate cave system. >> how many of you? 13? brilliant. >> reporter: still in their soccer uniforms and huddled together just aboeve floodwater, the boys asked for food and when they can go home. >> not today. not today. >> reporter: for their parents waiting above ground, the news that they're safe and ended days of waiting and praying.
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the 12 boys and their coach disappeared on june 23 after soccer practice. their bikes were found just outside the caves. they apparently went in to explore and became trapped by flooding cautioned ecauseded b. the tham luang nang non, cave system. passages were obstructeded by thick mud and high water. they were located near a chamber known as pattaya beach which has a higher elevation. captain jessica tate with the u.s. air force was 1 of 35 americans who helped in the rescue effort. >> everyone's coming together to figure out the next course of action and how to bring them out as safely and as quickly as possible. >> reporter: rescuers are now racing to pump out water from the cave as heavy rain is in the forecast for the rest of the week. lasted until october and the cave is regularly flooded. >> translator: it is not 100% secure, the governor said tuesday, so i cannot confirm how
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many days the kids will have to stay in the cave. >> reporter: a thai navy s.e.a.l. team will make the decision how to get the boys out of the cave. one thing they're considering is teaching them how to swim out with special dive masks so they can breathe. but it's pretty dangerous. the water is murky. the passageways are narrow. even experienced divers had a hard time getting to the boys doing that same thing. we're told by one of the rescuers these boys don't know how to swim. another option is simply leave them inside the cave, which some experts say is the best thing they can do, the safest thing, until the water recedes. the problem is that could take weeks, if not months. anthony. >> ben tracy. real challenges still ahead for these teams down there. >> i don't think now's the time to learn diving. when it was really hard for experienced navy s.e.a.l.s to get in there. the rescue people on the scene say we worked this hard to get them, we're not going to lose them. they will do everything they can. >> as ben said it could literally be months. >> yes, but you're alive.
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i say leave them there and give them food. all right, 75 million americans will be in the grip of an extreme heat wave today. temperatures will soar into the '90s in the northeast. it will feel like triple digits in cities from washington and philadelphia to bangor maine, a a and new hampshire. the heat is expected to stick around until independence day. demarco morgan is on the beach. >> reporter: good morning. it's a lot cooler now, but that will soon change. beachgoers will get a chance to jump into the water here just to cool off. that's not the case for construction workers, those who work outside. centers for disease control and prevention says those who work outside are more vulnerable to heat stress which could lead to heat stroke and heat exhaustion. laying the foundation for a new building right by the beach, tom albe
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albertini are keeping scarves and rags around their necks to keep cool. >> there's buckets of water all over the site. if they have to get out of the sun, we have them come into the trailer. they have their own trailers they can cool off on. then they'll get right back to it. >> reporter: jim vorel also works outside. >> i'm checking refrigerant pressure. >> reporter: to keep people cool inside. he's been in the air conditioning business for 50 years and has seen a spike in calls during the heat wave. >> i'm probably doing eight or ten calls a day generally. >> reporter: in new jersey about 50 elderly residents were evacuating from this nursing home after the air conditioning in their building malfunctioned. they were taken to other facilities run by the same company. and a train on its way to new jersey was halted in philadelphia because of a chanical i. passengers said they were stuck on the train for more than an hour without air conditioning. they were later transferreded to another train. back in the northeast, lifeguards for the new jersey beach town of sea girt have
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rescued or assisted nearly 100 swimmer since the weekend. as more people head down the shore and other beaches in the region. >> we knew it was going to be hot. >> reporter: marc cingo and his daughter took the boat out in connecticut to try and stay cool. under the 84 degree sun, it felt more like it was 95. >> it's rough. a lot harder than i thought it was going to be but it was fun. >> reporter: beaches like this one here on the east coast and the west coast will be packed for the fourth of july. back here east, the temperatures are supposed to be in the mid-80s. when you add the heat index, it will feel more like it's in the '90s so stay hydrated. >> all right, good advice for anybody heading out there. thank you, demarco. lonnie quinn, chief weathercaster of our new york station wcbs is here with how the weather will impact the fourth of july holiday. it's in the hands of mother nature. what is she saying to you today? >> she's probably thinking i'm getting you back for all the people complaining about the rough winter we had. if you take a look at the eastern half of the country, you
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are look at feels like temperatures. so this is what it feels like when you take the temperature on the thermometer and you factor in the mugginess, the humidity. feels like 106 in dallas. on the western half of the country. all right, the big heat is inland. the difference here is these are actual forecasted high temperatures. your air's dryer but it will be 106 in las vegas. 108 in phoenix. same deal tomorrow for the fourth of july. 107 in phoenix. by the time you get to the end of the week on friday, big-time heat, even los angeles, from the 70s, it goes to 101. a lot of heat out there. 113 in phoenix. anthony. >> those are some ugly numbers, thanks, lonnie. a record number of people are expected to hit the road over the fourth of july holiday. and today will be the busiest day. aaa predicts 39.7 million travelers will drive over the holiday this year. that's nearly 2 million more than last year. since july 4th is on a wednesday, many are planning to start their weekend early.
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kris van cleave is on the road on interstate 395 outside washington, d.c. kris, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this terrible tuesday traffic is expected to build as the day goes on. it will slow way down come midafternoon. the peak time between 3:30 and 6:30. in new york city, you could see the drive time more than double for a normal trip. the d.c. area will be close behind. so will los angeles. aaa estimates the independence day travel season will be the highest since it started tracking holiday travel 18 years ago. nearly 47 million people are expected to travel. the auto club believes a strong economy and consumer confidence has left people with disposable income they are using to travel. despite the highest gas prices for the fourth of july since 2014. now, gas prices have ticked down a little bit since they were flirting with $3 a gallon on
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average over memorial day weekend. but there's still some 63 cents more than they were last year. norah. >> all right, wear your seat belt, kris van cleave, thank you. interviewing federal judges to see which one may be promoted to the supreme court. the president has now narrowed his list of potential replacements for justice anthony kennedy from 25 to 7. there are two women on that short list and one person of color. chip reid is at the white house. chip, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the white house is putting together a team. some call it a war room. to help the president pick his nominee by his deadline of this coming monday. and then get that nominee confirmed by october. >> they are really incredible people. in so many different ways. >> reporter: speaking to reporters in the oval office, president trump called his interviews with four potential supreme court nominees, quote, very interesting and said he would be meeting with two or three more candidates. >> i think the person that is
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chosen will be outstanding. >> reporter: according to "the washington post," president trump interviewed four federal appeals court judges. brett kavanaugh, amy coney barrett. kavanaugh worked in the george w. bush white house. he said he considered roe v. wade to be settled law. >> if confirmed to the d.c. circuit, i would follow roe v. wade faithfully and fully. >> reporter: barrett grabbed the attention of conservatives last year when she defended her catholic faith in her confirmation hearing. >> my religious belief would not bear on the discharge of my duties as a judge. >> reporter: thapar would be the first indian-american supreme court judge. he is a favorite of mitch mcconnell. dea kethledge told senators at his confirmation hearing the best judges are the ones that seek to apply precedent in good faith.
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press secretary sarah sanders said the president is not asking candidates about their views on roe v. wade. >> the president is not going to discuss specific cases with those nominees. >> reporter: republican senator lisa murkowski of alaska, who supports abortion rights, said she would like the nominee to be in the mold of anthony kennedy, the retiring supreme court justice, who was often a swing vote. and by the way, later today, the president will be meeting with another female candidate. that is judge joan larsen of the sixth circuit court of appeals. harvey weinstein faces new and more serious sexual assault charges involving another accuser. the manhattan district attorney announced an updated indictment yesterday against the disgraced hollywood mogul. it includes two counts of predator sexual assault and criminal sexual act in the first degree. the charges stem from an alleged encounter in 2006. in may, a new york grand jury indicted weinstein for alleged
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sex abuse involving two other women. jericka duncan is here with the expanding criminal case. jericka, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the new york district attorney's office charged harvey weinstein with new felony counts monday. two are for predatory sexual assaults. the maximum sentence for that offense is life imprisonment. the d.a.'s office said the additional charges are linked to a woman who claims weinstein sexually assault heard in 2006. weinstein has already been indicted for the alleged assault of two other women. in may, you may recall a grand jury indicted weinstein on charges of rape in the first and third degrees, as well as criminal sexual act in the first degree. weinstein denies any wrongdoing. in fact, in a statement, weinstein's attorney told cbs news the 66-year-old will plead not guilty to the additional charges. the attorney went on to say weinstein plans to be fully vindicated and that it is unjust to charge weinstein as a predator when theconsensual.is d
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on monday. in all, more than 75 women claim the disgraced movie mogul assaulted them or acted inappropriately. again, he denies any claims of nonconsensual sex. norah. >> jericka, thanks. the man accused of murdering five people at a newspaper in annapolis, maryland, made his alleged intentions clear before the deadly rampage. police say he mailed threatening letters to a courthouse, the maryland court of special appeals and a law office just a few hours before the attack. it is unclear whether any of the letters were seen or read before the shooting. >> signed by suspected gunman jared raymos, the haunting to the capital gazette with the objective of killing every person present. a copy of the letters was sent to the paper' editor tom marquardt who previously told cbs news about raymos' threats against the paper. >> the police came away with the
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conclusion there wasn't enough there to file criminal charges against him. >> reporter: raymos' letter also reference his failed defamation lawsuit against the capital gazette. in 2012, he sued the newspaper after it published a story about his harassment of a former female classmate. the suit was eventually thrown out. an appeals court refused to hear the case. in a letter to the appeals court, he writes if this is how the maryland judiciary operates, the law now means nothing. you are too cowardly to confront those lies. this is your receipt. i told you so. he also sent a letter to judge charles moylin, one of the judges in charge of the case. welcome to your unexpected lega phenomenal grace. >> reporter: last night, more than 500 family members and friends gathered to remember editor rob hiaasen, one of the five capital gazette employees
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who died in the attack. >> my dad is my best friend. he is my hero. he is my strength. he is the purest form of happiness i've ever felt in my life. >> reporter: the american society of news editors has called for a moment of silence in all newsrooms on thursday. exactly one week after the shooting. this morning, the president issued a proclamation, ordering all flags to be flown at half-staff to honor the victims. >> i'm glad he's made that decision. >> i am too. >> very nice gesture. a passenger says there were no warning signs before a tour boat exploded and caught fire in the bahamas. ahead, we've got new good morning, everybody. partly cloudy skies from the sales force tower camera view. we have a little blue sky and also cloud cover, a sign we are getting the winds coming in from the coastline. that will convict to blowing sm
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central valley. slightly cooler today than yesterday, 70 in oakland. tomorrow, 4th of july will be the coolest day of the week.
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a kentucky woman says a kentucky woman says she hunted an african giraffe to save other animals. >> why conservationists question her explanation for the killing showed in a picture that triggered backlash around the world. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." this portion of cbs this morning sponsored by parodontax. the toothpaste that helps prevent bleeding gums. it's clinically proven to remove plaque, the main cause of bleeding gums. for healthy gums and strong teeth. leave bleeding gums behind with parodontax toothpaste.
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coming up, three things you should know this morning, including how the u.s. postal service is going to pay billions after putting the wrong statute of liberty on the stamps. and
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counties is now up to 70-thousand acres... and is still just 5-percent contained. good morning, 7:26. i'm michelle griego. this wildfire in napa and yolo counties is now up to 70,000 acres and only 5% contained. the wildfires brought bad air to the bay area and now there are concerns that setting off fireworks tomorrow could make it worse. officials are recommending watching fireworks at a public show. protesters have set up camp outside the ice building in san francisco. calls to abolish ice have grown louder since the zero tolerance policy included the separation of migrant families. we'll have a look at traffic and weather in a moment.
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good morning, 7:27. an earlier crash causing major slowdowns on northbound 17. this is just past laurel road and that backup continues to stretch beyond granite creek road. expect delays, about a 52- minute ride from vine hill up to highway 9. 880 southbound, new reports of a crash keeping your ride slow heading to the bridge. neda? we have a few clouds out there, gray in some areas. you can also see sunshine? in san francisco this morning. we have clouds coming in from the coastline and the west wind is in full effect. this is a look at san josi, temperatures there 59 degrees right now. afternoon highs will be just a little below average.
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♪ she's back and she's winning! serena williams. >> i'll say. special mommy hug to serena williams. she returned to wimbledon and walked off a winner. the seven-time champion beat aroncha. she missed last year's wimbledon because she was pregnant with her baby girl, alexis owe olympia. she looked determined yesterday. >> it's exciting to watch her. >> it really is.
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>> always love to see her on the court. three things you should know this morning. federal judge is blocking the trump administration from asylu seekers. the ruling says the government must immediately release or grant hearings to 1,000 asylum seekers. massive wildfire in northern california exploded overnight and nearly doubled in size. the fire grew to 94 square miles and is only 5% contained. it's threatening 700 homes and buildings and forcing evacuations in yolo and napa counties. governor jerry brown says more land burned in california in the first six months of this year than the same period last year. and the u.s. postal service owes a sculpture artist more than $3.5 million for copyright infringement. the usps used a photo of the lady liberty replica, featured
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in las vegas, on more than 3 billion stamps. a collector noticed the mistake. davidson argued his work was intentionally unique and more fresh faced, sultry and sexier than the original in new york. >> eagle eye collector. the postal service says they would have selected the photograph anyway. hard to say that -- >> that's what you get for using a replica. >> when you can go out there and take a picture. >> it's right out there. >> she's right over there. all right. we are learning more about americans that were killed in that terrible accident injured in a boat explosion in the bahamas. ten u.s. tourists were on board at the time when flames engulfed the boat. maleka jackson was killed, celebrating her wedding anniversary. stefanie schaffer lost both of her legs. word is that she's a dancer. she was air lifted. michelle miller is here. it's terrible to watch.
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>> good morning, everyone. a passenger tells "cbs this morning" the group of 12, including two crew members, was just a few minutes into a half day wildlife excursion ahead of the blast. he says there was no sign of trouble before the trip turned into a nightmare. bahamian police are still working to determine what went wrong when this tour boat exploded and caught fire saturday. maleka jackson, celebrating her 15th wedding anniversary, was killed in the blast. >> maleka would be, i guess what i call, a shooting star. >> her father, melvin griems, says she was a loving mother to her 12-year-old son and believed in giving back to her community. >> she had a life thaayed strgh. and it was a life that brought a lot of joy and a lot of support and love into the lives of others. >> reporter: jackson's husband also suffered burns and was transported to a florida hospital monday.
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a passenger aboard a nearby boat captured the chaos on his cell phone, as others helped pull people from the burning vessel. stefanie and brooke schaffer were on vacation with their mother and stepfather. stefanie, a dancer and avid soccer player was sitting on the back of the boat. >> the legs below her knees had to be amputated. >> her uncle mike schaffer says she was put into a medically induced coma. her mother, stefanie, was also injured. schaffer says he's still trying to process what happened. >> some of my friends are reaching out. you see this stuff on tv but never think it's going to be someone that you know. ef is even alive. ood, mycl >> a go fund me page for the schaffer family has raised more
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that operates the tour boat but they declined to comment. >> worst nightmare. >> i'll say. >> yeah. >> horrible scene.is. >> michelle, thank you. skin care company, rodan and fields cut ties with a white south carolina woman who allegedly assaulted a black teenager at a community pool. >> get out! get out! get out now! >> stephanie sebby-stremmepel is charged with third-degree assault for apparently hitting dj rocquemore. the 38-year-old used racial slurs and told the teen that he and his friends did not belong at the pool. sebby-stremmepel is accused of assaulting two police officers after the sint. she allegedly bit onehe arm. her lawyer said in court there is more than one side to the story. rodan and fields says an
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independent consultant for the company. >> it's tired to getting white people assaulting, it seems, black people doing normal stuff. >> what is wrong with her? >> she seems lovely, doesn't she? >> i know. >> permit patty called the police on the little girl selling lemonade. >> enough. >> enough is right, norah. >> she's lucky to be alive, not shot by the police officer she bit. >> that's true. >> a terrified florida mother placed a frantic 911 call after her daughter was chased up a tree by an 11-foot alligator. >> my daughter is stuck in a freaking tree. there's gators surrounding her. we can't get her out. please! she's just 15. she's like 500 feet down the water. it's thundering and lightning and everything. >> the teen was floating on a ralph friday near the ocala
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national forest when a gator pursued her. she clung to the tree 30 minutes as the dangerous reptile stood hissing 30 feet away. the sheriff shot the gator the teen climbed down safely and no one was hurt. >> you can really hear the anguish in that mom's voice. >> in that mom's voice. >> someone told me gators can climb trees. is that true? >> i haven't seen that. >> that's what i heard. very well-informed friend. >> not in this case. >> not in this case. you're right. >> kentucky woman who hunted an african giraffe is defending herself against critics. why she says the dead animal in this picture that caused an uproar needed to be killed, she says. subscribe to our "cbs this morning" podcast. it's available wherever you would like to download your podcast. you'll get today's top stories and what's happening in your
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an american hunter is pushing back against her critics after photos of her next to a giraffe she killed in south africa triggered global outrage. tess thompson talley tells "cbs this morning" she killed the old bull giraffe to prevent it from attacking younger giraffes. she said, quote, this is called conservation through game management. david begnaud shows us why some conservationists aren't buying her splanation. david, good morning. >> anthony, good morning. it's being compared to cecil the lion. remember that big cat hunted down by the dentist in 2015? even though this giraffe wasn't world famous like cecil, the reaction has been equally as intense. conservationists fear that one of the greatest beasts of the african savannah could soon face extinction. fewer than 100,000 giraffes
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remain on the entire planet. when these pictures surfaced of tess thompson talley posing with a giraffe she just killed, conservationists were sickened. >> it's disgusting that anyone would take joy or pleasure in killing a beautiful and graceful animal like a giraffe. >> reporter: obscure news afric. actress deborah messing said she was a vile, heartless, selfish murderer. >> people will say stuff behind a computer screen they'll never say to your face. >> paul babaz is president of safari club international. tess thompson talley is also a member. >> giraffes are legal to hunt in south africa. >> reporter: she said it's over 18 years old, beyond breeding age yet killed three younger ne the younger bulls are able to
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breed, she said. trophy fee for a giraffe is about $2,000 to $3,000 per animal. he says because money from legal hunting helps support the local community, it provides an incentive to make sure big game animals don't become extinct. >> without that, poachers could many in and kill the animals indiscriminately, which is unfortunate. >> reporter: her prey was a black south african giraffe. sub species which population is up 167% since 1979. to more than 21,000. but the giraffe population overall has declined, as much as 40%. iris ho with humane society international insists wildlife tourism is far more beneficial for the animals and local communities than trophy hunting. >> u.s. imports almost 4,000 as ten years,s affeng killed and imported into the u.s. as hunting trophy.
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>> reporter: now according to babaz, that hunting advocate we spoke to, of th giraffe meat during the hunting trip but gave most of it away to feed local villagers, including children at an orphanage. he cannot prove that happened and we cannot independently confirm it. >> i have trouble with this whole idea of posing with an animal you just shot. >> i do, too. >> i don't understand why you want to do that. >> i just threw up in my mouth. when you give that tag that you gave, the more you hear, the worse it gets. i didn't even know that people hunted giraffes, number one. >> growing up in texas, like norah and i did, big game hunting is not foreign. i, maybe ignorantly, didn't know giraffes were. >> i didn't either. >> thank you, david. >> thank you, david. a look at this morning's other headlines, including how president trump's tariffs on imports could cause car prices in the u.s. to sky rocket. plus, learn about the new
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research that links drinking coffee to, yes, a longer life. >> norah, you're going to live a long life. >> you see me drink a lot of coffee. is that what you're saying? is that what you're good morning, everybody. we are starting off kind of gray but we'll see cooler conditions and a little less smoke. the north bay is dealing with the smoke and ash there, a lot of it also moving to the east. satellite and radar i showing plenty of clouds this morning, mid-80s in fairfield but 65 in san francisco. check out the 4th of july. alright, i brought in new max protein
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the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto. and help make more tomorrows possible. entresto, for heart failure. welcome back to "cbs this morning," here's the other headlines from around the globe. the idaho state reports the 3-year-old birthday girl died in the stabbing attack. she was stabbed while celebrating her birthday saturday. she was the birthday girl at 3 years old. she was flown to utah for treatment by died there yesterday. the suspect you see here was charged with first degree murder. he has a long wrap sheet and could face the death penalty. secretary of state mike
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pompeo is visiting north korea this week, engauging in talks about nuclear weapons programs. the u.s. hopes to achieve major disarmorment in two and a half years. since the summit, there's been reports that north korea has been expanding a plant that makes solid fuel for mid range missil missiles. usa today says president trump easter riffs on imports could at $5,000 to the new vehicles in the u.s. new car prices average about $32,000. proposed tariffs of up to 25% could increase the cost by sart00 to 00caondonnid cleaned up the russian stadium after the team was knocked out of the world cup. fans stayed behind after they loss yesterday picking up litter and placed it in blue bags. the team, itself, no different saying the players left the
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locker room spotless and left a thank you note in russian. wow. >> that's nice. >> very polite. college student says he waited too long to tell his mom he was depressed. his family's response and why they are asking other families to talk openly about their mental health. kids 'cause dad's gonna make it rain "tre tres". he's saying he's gonna score a bunch of three-pointers on you. yeah, we ball til we fall. there are multiples on the table: one is cash, three are fha, one is va. so what can you do? she's saying a whole lotta people want to buy this house. but you got this!
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finalized today.. for the 2 defendants in the deadly ghost ship warehouse fire. derick almena and max harris both face dozens of involuntary manslaught 7:56. a plea agreement is expected today in the ghost ship fire. derick almena and max harris will face dozens of involuntary manslaughter charges. in lake county, the pawnee fire has burned almost 15,000 acres. it's 80% contained. crews are hoping to take advantage of lowering temperatures and higher humidity. health care groups are pushing for a statewide soda tax on the 2020 ballot to pay for public health programs. the proposal, 2 cents per fluid ounce and that would not apply to diet sodas. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning, 7:57. we are tracking slowdowns for drivers along 280 through a loo saratoga. in the northbound direction, we have a crash near stevens creek
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boulevard. it's definitely causing that backup almost to 87. so that's about 24 minutes along that stretch. we have 12 minutes between 85 and 101. heading over to the bay bridge toll plaza, not bad. no backup at the maze heading into the city, just a little sluggish. neda? waking up to a few clouds out there. looking towards the north bay, it's a little gray over there. areas where the fires are burning, where that smoke is going to linger. south bay, nice blue skies there. san josi 61, and some smoke is heading more towards the central valley today. we are seeing that shift in the wind direction, pushing in the coastal cloud cover out there. also afternoon highs today cooler than yesterday, 83 in concord and 65 in san francisco. tomorrow is the coolest day of the week, then temperatures rise in time for a sunshine-
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's tuesday july 3rd, the day before fourth of july. norah is ready. welcome back. how gmail users can protects themselves from app developers reportedly have permission to get into their accounts. a vote in favor of drinking coffee. the newest research on possible life extending benefits. but first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. 12 members of a youth soccer team and coach who disappeared in a care are safe. they were missing for ten days. >> not only did they find the boys in the cave but said they are in good condition. giving them a high protein liquid diet. >> those who work outside are more vulnerable to heat stress,
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which could lead to heat stroke and heat exhaustion. >> these are actual forecasted high temperatures, your air is drier but 106 in vegas and 108 in phoenix. >> traffic is expected it'start tinto mo beuild now. it will slow way down. >> the new york district attorney charged harvey weinstein with new felony koupts, two for predatory sexual assault. >> the white house is putting together a team to help the president pick his nominee by his deadline of this coming monday and then get that nominee confirmed by october. >> two neighborhood big shots going head to head and head over heels. >> after a neighborhood kid showed off impressive gymnastics skills, arthur brown jr. leashed his own inner child. >> watch this. >> stuck the landing. are you kidding me? >> here's to doing back flips, that's awesome. >> i can do that.
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>> officer is in good shape. i could never do a cart wheel even as a kid. can you? >> cart wheel that's an ugly thing to watch sfwl i used to do a roundoff. >> used to be able to do one. >> not surprised. >> can you climb bridges too? >> yes, already did week. >> okay. >> i'm norah o'donnell. john is off. rain is in the forecast in thailand and that could force a group of boys and their soccer coach to dive out of a cave. video from thailand's navy shows the movement the team was discovered after ten days underground. officials say the group is mostly in stable condition. they are being given high protein liquid food and painkillers and antibiotics, apparently they were shouting eat, eat. wanted food immediately. >> i'm so glad they are alive. such a great story. the group explored the cave after a soccer practice and became practitrapped by floodin
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moved in quickly. the cave system stretches about six miles into a mountain. rescue teams found the boys two and a half miles from the entrance, after passages with thick mud and high water. they are known in a chamber which has a higher elevation. keep in mind it's dark down there. >> rescuers say they may wait for water levels to drop or try to pump enough water out to let the boys get out. that could take weeks or even months due to thailand's rainy season which runs until october. another option is teaching the children to dive through the water. but experts say that -- while that would be faster it would be riskier. >> 75 million americans are facing another day of extreme heat. temperatures are expected to soar in the 90s for half of the country and that includes boston and baltimore and charlotte, north carolina. cities like albany new york and charleston, it will feel like triple digits. this is the fifth day of the heat wave. more than 90% of the country is expected to experience above
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average temperatures for the next week. >> our chief weather caster of wcbs is here to put it in perspective. good morning, it's july. >> it should be hot, sure. >> do we really have reason to complain? >> well, okay, we have really good strong understanding that there's a correlation between climate change and extreme hot and extreme cold. remember, we just came out of a year where we had snow -- >> in april. >> that's what happens, all about the flow of the jet stream. the jet stream separates hot air from cold air, okay? the cold air is north of the jet stream and hot air is south. and it flows like -- like a sign curve, like a side ways "s." when it peaks and you get that big ridge, what happens is in climate change you get higher peaks and lower valleys. not like you get hot i long str
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isn't it? five days? >> as far as heat waves in general. >> it depends. washington, d.c. over 20 days to sort of get up in their record setting territory. in new york city, we've had 12 days and we're pushing now our fourth day in the city. there's more to come. >> have summers in fact gotten hotter? >> you know, without a doubt. look at the days above 90 degrees. i want to start with -- miami florida, where the heat is. miami has had 70 more days since 1970 that the temperatures have been above 90. austin, 30 more days where the temperature has gotten above 100. look at that fact. you go back to 1970, it was a rarity for austin to have a day above 100 degrees. now they have 38.5 a year. >> wow. >> it does seem like something is taking place out there. >> thanks so much. >> the department of health and human services has one week left to comply with the federal judge's order to reunite
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children under 5 who are separated frteay its responsible for more than 11,800 minors that includes children children who arrived alone. the department is only revealing the total number of unaccompanied children saying the numbers keep changing and it's still evaluating the judge's ruling. >> a week ago hhs said 2,047 were in shelters and the number has not been updated or changed despite our repeated requests for new numbers. the department of homeland security's last update on the number children reunited with parents came on june 23rd. at that time 522 children had been reunited with their parents. new research shows that drinking coffee may help you live longer. dr. tara narula is live with why
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♪ ♪ >> i new study adds to growing evidence that drinking coffee may help you live longer. research in jama internal medicine shows people who drank one cup a day had a 8% lower risk of dying early. those who drink six to seven cups saw a 16% decrease. our dr. tara narula, good
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morning. >> good morning. >> does this mean the more coffee you drink, the longer you live? >> that's a simplification and definitely it adds to a growing body of evidence that suggests that coffee has protective health benefits. we were here about a year ago talking about two other studies that showed a mortality benefit. in the large study they look add at 500,000 individuals in the uk. researchers asked how much coffee do you drink per day and what type and took buy logic samples. across a range of drinking anywhere from one to eight cups there was a mortality benefit. >> does the type of coffee you drink make a difference? ? it does not. instant and ground and decaf coffee. the usda in 2015 said moderate drinking three to five cups, about eight ounces per day is acceptable and can be part of a healthy diet. >> what is it that's in the
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coffee that may have health benefit. >> coffee has a thousand active compounds, like antioxidants and b vitamins and minerals and potassium and anti-inflammatory compounds, it's been shown it can help your body process blood sugar and anti-inflammatory effects and good effects on liver functions. overall a lot of protective benefits we think from coffee, not just caffeine. >> if i'm drinking six to seven a day, i'll live longer but have a case of jitters. >> some people are sensitive to coffee, stomach upset, tremors or irritability. >> before you came we were talking in the studio, tony knows everything, he's always heard that coffee causes cancer. there are take lot of people that believe that and i've heard that too. >> the world health organization said in a review over thousands of studies that there is no conclusive evidence that there's a link to cancer. where did this come from? when you roast coffee beans it can produce a clem cal that can
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be produced with french fries or other cookies or crackers or anything that gets heated at high temperatures. and the studies that showed links to cancer were in rats. they were in animals at very high doses given this chemical. but overall review of the evidence, no definitive link to cancer. in fact as we've head, there may be decreased risk of certain types of cancer. >> tony is wrong on that. >> sorry, tony, wherever you are. >> where is he? >> we'll give him rebuttal time. >> high blood pressure. >> as a cardologist, people ask that a lot. there can be acute effects in people who don't often drink coffee but chronically it does not raise the blood pressure. >> got it. he's wrong on that too. thank you. >> it's not your day, tony. >> tony said -- >> happy birthday. >> i didn't see cancer. i said blood pressure. >> happy birthday, it's his birthday tomorrow, fourth of july. >> happy birthday. >> he's a peach. >> more than 3 million, 12 to
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17-year-olds struggle with deprepgs and less than half get help. one family shares critical information that saved their lives. >> when he said i'm depressed, i'm seriously depressed and have been for a long time, that blew me away. he was upbeat, he was getting up every day and he was involved in his activities. so it was confusing and i'm thinking what's he talking about, i'm depressed? >> a lot of people are asking that question these days. how the georgia mother responded and the lessons for other families dealing with the teenager area cries for help. very important information. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. with just one pill. hours aleve. all day strong. how did we test our with two pounds of steak. in each hand. dixie ultra. stress tested so you can stress less at dinner.
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treatment they needed. stigma surrounding mental health often prevent open discussions and as part of our effort to keep conversations of mental health at the forefront, mark strassmann spoke to one family about their journey out of the darkness. >> reporter: will hargen was 17 and carrying a secret only he knew. >> he said hey, mom, can we talk? >> tracy hargen thought her all-american high school junior was feeling typical teenage stress. >> but then when he said i'm depressed, i'm seriously depressed and have been for a long time, that blew me away. he was upbeat. he was getting up every day. he was involved in his activities, so it was confusing. and i'm thinking, what's he talking about, i'm depressed? >> reporter: but your first reaction was denial? >> yes. >> reporter: not for him but for you? >> yes, yes. like this can't be. i would know. >> reporter: but will says he has felt blue since he was 9. >> joy wasn't really there much.
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it wasn't that i started to become sad more often. i just started to become apathetic. >> reporter: what did you tell your mom? >> i simply told her look, for as long as i can remember, i have been very depressed. it was a lot of unknown to me. so trying to describe it to her was difficult. but i knew that this wasn't normal and i knew that i was miserable. >> reporter: it's estimated more than 3 million u.s. children ages 12 to 17 have at least one major depressive episode a year. that's about one in eight adolesce adolescents. >> for years you swallowed it? >> since i was 9 i thought i need to figure this out myself. >> reporter: when hargen opened up about his depression, she realized her next words mattered. >> i said to him, thank you so much for telling me. thank you for trusting me. i can tell this is really hard for you. i just want you to know we're going to be here for you from here on out, you're not on your own. >> our brain is a bigger bully -- >> kim kirkup, a licensed
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professional, treated will for eight months. the hargens gave us permission to talk to her. what did they do right? >> by realizing whenever someone is depressed you have to act. if it drags on for too long it's just going to exacerbate everything. >> reporter: will says he never felt suicidal before telling his mother but had you not told her or had her response been unhelpful, could you have sunk even lower? >> that's the moment where things had gotten significantly better or far worse very quickly. >> reporter: will is now 19 and a student at bentley university in massachusetts. his freshman class was asked to write a one sentence personal statement on their arm called dear world. >> i wrote the phrase i can feel the daylight again on my forearm right here, essentially si'm ou. i can actually feel things again and i can enjoy the daylight. >> reporter: when you first saw it -- >> yeah. i
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because when i saw it, he was standing there, so powerfully, so -- just in his own being. he's telling all these strangers his story and he's telling them, i'm better. >> reporter: something to think about, if someone close to you says, can we talk? for "cbs this morning," mark strassmann, roswell, georgia. >> boy. >> these conversations are so important. >> yes. >> if you've had a kid go through depression or anxiety, talking about it helps enormously. >> that story is going to resonate with so many this morning. and talk about what they did right. certainly will felt safe telling his mother. that's what i keep hearing, they have to feel safe to talking to you and you are open to hearing it without judgment. >> and she listened. no stigma attached. no stigma attached to that. all you want for your kids is for them to be happy. >> that's it. >> they took action and saw a professional.
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you need professional help. >> this isn't something you can do by yourself. you're right about that. very, very, very important information. >> thank you, mark. >> mark strassmann, indeed, and will and his mom, mrs. hargen. thank you all. a camera captured images when a new planet is formed. what does that look like? that's what it looks like. what we know about temperatures and the environment on this baby planet. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back.
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astronomers have captured the images of a brth irth of a planet, showing the young planet forming in the dust of a star data suggests it's a giant gas planet with a cloudy atmosphere and temperatures of around 1800 degrees fahrenhe modest. >> that's right. it's hard to know what you're
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looking at but it's intere the bay area. now - there are concerns that setting off fireworks tomorrow could make it worse. s recommend watchi good morning, 8:25. wildfires have brought bad air to the bay area and now there are concerns that setting off fireworks tomorrow could make it worse. officials recommending watching the fireworks at public shows. east palo alto is hoping to prevent illegal dumping by shaming offenders on banners. the city says last year there were 1200 reports of illegal dumping. aaa says this will be the busiest 4th of july for travel since 2000. 47million people will drive 50 or more miles this week. we'll update traffic and weather in a moment.
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good morning, 8:27. we have a couple problems slowing down drivers heading along the east shore freeway. this is 80 at carlson, and westbound traffic is in the red, 36 minutes from highway 4 to the maze. this is all due to an earlier crash involving a motorcycle. ked near gilman. then a new report of a car fire coming in past gilman as you approach university. the ride continues to slow stretching well beyond richmond. if you're westbound, you can see the gilman onramp trying to
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get on 80, very ow right now. no delays over the y bridge toll plaza, nice and holiday light, in the green with 15 minutes heading into san francisco. neda? if you're looking out, we have dark clouds across the east bay. it's allowing for a little sun to shine over the water. other than that, pretty cloudy start around the bay. check out the south bay, san josi with nice beautiful conditions. that's a great sign, no smoke in the skies there. 61 in san josi, 54 in san francisco with smoke out where the fires are and blowing more to the east and north today. that means for most of the san francisco area, we should not there toda ansh be a little t ed by the low clouds along the coast, and afternoon highs today in the 60s for most of the coast and
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the bay, inland areas tomorrow dropping below average. paint bd under your tape... not with frogtape! frogtape is the only painter's tape treated with patented paintblock technology. paintblock reacts with the water in latex paint to form a micro-barrier against paint bleed, giving you the sharpest lines possible. get professional results with frogtape... no messy lines, paint b. for sharp lines every time, frog it!
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♪ ♪ welcome back to cbs this morning. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. time reports on a study that suggests women can increase their risk of diabetes. researchers looked at 7,000 workers. women working more than 45 hours a week had a 51% higher risk than women working 35 to 40 hours a week. researchers did not see the same effect in men. a possible reason is women tend to assume a lot of household chores so working long hours on ct relate?t can havendv okay. can i get an amen?
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>> the hill reports on a poll that finds a record low number of people say they are extremely proud to be americans. gallop surveyed more than adults in the united states last month. those that are proud to be americans fell to 47%. that's a record low. 52% said they were extremely proud. the results came amid a fresh discussion over civility in politics. >> cardi b. became the first female rapper to have two number one hits on the billboard hot 100 charts. her latest single i like it climbed one spot to the top of the chart. her debut hit was number one on the top 100 for three weeks back in october. this is a goodyear for cardi b. expecting a baby due in july, any day now. >> congrats to her. the los angeles time says a margarita loving bear had a grand ole time taking a dip in a california hot tub. caught on video friday just
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lounging in the backyard jacuzzi of a home. i love this picture. the homeowner says the bear found a margarita and then the bear did what many people do, took a nap under a tree. the relaxed bear eventually just sort of wandered away. >> sounds like my ideal weekend. >> does margarita make you sleepy? >> it's also probably sweet which is why a bear liked it. the wall street journal reports tennis great roger federer left nike to wear uniqlo clothing. it's valued at $300 million over ten years. the current happen ranked men's player emerged wearing his new uniform. it marks the end of more than 2 decades of sponsorship by nike but uniqlo doesn't make tennis shoes so he plans to stick with
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nike foot wawear for now. $30 million a year to wear clothes. google is awaring third party applications to scan the e-mails of some gomail users. google does little to police developers that gain access to inboxes by offering e-mail based services such as price comparisons or other tools. users can sign up for apps like earn me, unroll me and boomerang. some trained computers or actual employees to scan inboxes. all of this is raising concerns about security and privacy. google said it vets all the apps that request access to gmail accounts and only grants access with the explicit consent of users. cbs news contributor nicholas thompson, good morning. >> good morning. >> is this similar or the same to what happened at facebook with the cambridge analytical
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information? >> it's similar but less bad in two ways. first with female and cambridge analytica it was not only acces your friends and we knew the data had been disappropriate d.t >> nearly 2-thirds of active e-mail users have a google, a gmail account. >> i know. >> it's incredible. it's 1.5 billion people. so what is happening here? if i type in hey honey i'm interested in a vacation in italy at a nice hotel and an ad pops up for hotels in italy who is scanning my e-mails? >> gmail doesn't do that anymore. they stopped doing that practice. this is more about if you add an extension. you could have a comparison extension or travel extension then it might scan your e-mail and give you something but you would have to opt in and install
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that extension. >> what are they able to see? >> the e-mails. if you get an extension that lets you organize your e-mails they're going to see your e-mails. if you get an extension that lets you enroll news letters they have to see headers and information on your e-mails. what's interesting is people opt into this and they don't quite understand and the reason they don't quite understand is because the privacy settings were kind of made in the 2000 to 2017 world. google should have changed them. >> i'm not sure i understand. explain. what are these extenders people are opting into. >> if you install an extension into goolg gle or gmail it will allow such and such app to read your e-mails. but people rnlt suaren't sure. you go on and see what apps have access to my inbox and there may be some that you really like having. you don't mind that they read your gmail because they make your gmail better.
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it's good that some apps have this. what you don't want is to have allowed aps to read your gmail without them being useful or you explicitly having allowed them. >> is there something google should be doing that they're not doing? don't you have to have access to stuff to make the app better? >> it's good these things exist. google shouldn't shut this down. they make gmail better but they should do two things differly. they should be much more explicit when you sign up. it should say this thing is going to read your e-mail. are you sure you want that? are you really sure? totally sure. >> they have to do all of that. >> much clearer and then secondly they need to have restrictions on what the apps can do with the data. what you don't want is you don't want an app that you use to organize your inbox more efficiently which then sells your data to marketers ored so google toe ecions >> we protectur t my anyou check and see if
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anything looks fishy. you do that right now if you haven't done that for awhile. >> a f rit. actually. >> do you have a google gmail? >> no, i don't think so. >> those are for other people. >> asking for a friend. >> i don't have that account. >> thank you very much. actress amy adams stars as a troubled newspaper reporter in the new hbo series sharp objects. she got issues. it's based on the book by best selling author
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my name is jamir dixon and i'm a locate and mark fieldman for pg&e. most people in the community recognize the blue trucks as pg&e. my truck is something new... it's an 811 truck. when you call 811, i come out to your house and i mark out our gas lines and our electric lines to make sure that you don't hit them when you're digging. 811 is a free service. i'm passionate about it because every time i go on the street i think about they're the reason that i want to protect our community and our environment, and if me driving a that truck means that somebody gets to
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go home safer, then i'll drive it every day of the week. together, we're building a better california. ( ♪ ) prepare to be awed. prepare to be moved.
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prepare to make a mad dash... ( ♪ ) ...because with the incredicoaster, pixar pal-a-round, and a bunch of your favorite pixar characters, it's going to be pretty incredible. pixar pier is now open! only at disney california adventure park.
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my favorite animal is the meerkat. do you know what they are? they're so cute. they're so cute, i've got this little charm bracelet with cats on it. do you have lots of boyfriends? did you try out for cheer leading or anything? i tried out but i didn't make it. >> that's amy adams in the family drama june bug. she earned her first of five oscar nominations for her role. since then she played a princess, a con artist in american hustle and a professor communicating with aliens in arrival. well now adams is starring in the new hbo series sharp objects. it's based on the book of the same name by gillian flynn.
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the best selling author of gone girl. flynn's work has been called brilliant, mesmerizing and disturbing. in sharp objects she portrays the troubled reporter who returns to her hometown to investigate the murder of two young girls. >> i just can't have you here. this story gets out in st. louis suddenly that's all we're known for. >> some publicity could help. get you some information. it's worked in other cases. i have a right to be here and i'll let you do your job if you let me do mine. >> fine. >> amy adams and gillian flynn are executive producers of sharp objects. they joined us last week to talk about the new series. >> i want to talk about her first. she is described as a self-mutilating sex addicted alcoholic newspaper reporter
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fresh from a psych ward sent to cover creepy child murders in her hometown. >> people like her. >> those are her good qualities. >> she's a little messy but you said there's something freeing about playing somebody that's a little messy. >> it is. i'm a little messy. everybody has a little bit inside of them that they keep to themselves so for me it's freeing to get to share that and deconstruct myself a little bit and it feels like i'm at a good point in my life. >> i'm thinking she can't possibly resinate with you in anyway. >> she does. not in every way. she's hard on herself. really hard on herself and she's really affected by people and i think she bears a lot of pain and i think that's something that's pretty common. i wasn't raised to sort of share my pain and talk about it. >> talk about it.
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>> so that's something i have in common with her because gillian can speak to this. she said something so beautiful. i'll start crying again. about sometimes camille wears her pain and sometimes it would be so freeing if everybody could see the pain that everyone is wearing. >> gillian, we all read "gone girl." watched the movie. a haunting book in itself. sharp objects you wrote before. it was your first novel. >> my very first. this is 12 years to get to the screen for this one. >> publishers first din want to publish it? >> they were not beating down my door. let's put it that way. we heard a lot of people don't want to read about women like this. people don't want to read about women they can't root for, that aren't heroic. to me, i think very heroic character because i think sometimes if you're in a lot of psychoal damage, then the most heroic
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thing you can do is to keep your head above water and that's what she does every single day. >> i love that steven king wrote about it. we didn't really know you back then but steven king said something, i found myself dreading the last 30 pages or so but it's helpless to stop turning them. i have seen three episodes and i don't know how this is going to end and it's very disturbing. it's so good. >> especially the way it's filmed. i love series that when you -- wait, what was that? and you have to scroll back and sort of see what you might have missed because of something that's going on in your character's mind. >> what's so wonderful is gillian provided this resource in the model and it's so much taken from the novel from her inner monologue in the novel so it's really wonderful and found a way to bring that cinematically. >> he's a brilliant editor. >> she connects with her mother.
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>> that's the nicest thing you can say. >> i love the name adora by the way. played by patricia clarkson that is incredible. was that difficult to do those scenes? >> it was hard. she doesn't want to give her anything and yet she takes everything out of her so it's trying to keep yourself together while falling apart and that was always painful. >> you have a favorite daughter. did it make you think about your own mothering? >> it did. i have insomnia so i would wake up in the middle of the night and have camille panic but i'd have to be like wait i don't need to own this but i did think about the way that generationally we pass down ourr unintentionally. so it made me look at how i parent and what i need to own on my own in order to be a really good mom to her. what i need to let go of. >> what do you both hope the audience will get out of this? >> this is a strange thing for
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me but i al you know, i think -- i hope that they find comfort of all the books i have written, sharp objects is the one that people want to talk to me about the most. so that's the one that people linger in bookstores or book events or that write to me about and want to share a story with me about. so, you know, i think, again, like i said, sometimes keeping your head above water is the heroic thing on any given day. >> let me tell you something, after the first episode people will be talking. >> yeah. >> thank you very much. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> you guys are awesome. thank you so much. >> say that part again. >> you guys are awesome. >> sharp objects debuts sunday july 8th on hbo. >> a impae ietngitd you can hea more on our podcast.
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or where ever you like to download your podcasts. we hear from the team behind the popular investigative podcast in the dark. they describe how they came across the death row case of curtis flowers that's been tried six times for the same crime that she says he says he did no. you're watching cbs this morning.
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>> limbani, the chimpanzee, who wasn't able to contain his excitement when he was recently reunited to the couple who saved his life. he jumped into his old caregiver, jorge's arms, and gave him a huge hug. the pair met two years ago when limbani was born. jorge and his wife gave him round-the-clock care for the first few months of his life. zoological society says limbanni greets them like this every time he sees them. >> that's a nice, deep hug. >> that is the very definition of a hug. >> that's what you call jumping for joy. don't your kids do that when you come , jumping up and down, into your arms? but then the way that he reached for the mom -- the mother rejected the little chimp after the humans had been working with him, the mother rnd
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then they took him back again.
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counties is now up to 70-thousan and is still just 5-percent contained. the county fire broke out saturday, north of lake berryessa. wildfires have brought bad air to the bay area. now - there are concerns that setting off fireworks tomorrow could make it worse. officials ks at public sho wildfires now have brought bad air to the bay area and there are concerns setting off fireworks tomorrow could make it worse. officials recommending watching fireworks at public shows. demonstrators are setting up camp outside the ice building in san francisco. activists posted images as they protest ice and the separation of migrant families. we'll check weather and traffic in a moment.
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alpay school fees and improveet ththeir standard of living. good morning, 8:57. we are dealing with a couple hot spots on the roadways but overall it's been nice and easy. we are tracking slowdowns along westbound 24 as you make your way through but our travel times are back in the green, under 15 minutes from 680 to 580. live look at the east shore freeway, not many cars out there. the ride is improving along that stretch as well r couple earlier problems. take a look at the bay bridge
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toll plaza, what a treat today. you're in the green heading into san francisco. neda? it will be cooler out there so you may enjoy lunch outside today. looks like the smoke and haze in the sky are right where the fires are and east of them. south bay, nice clear conditions with blue skies thanks to winds blowing in the cooler air. 64 degrees in san josi, 56 in san francisco. look at the satellite and radar, showing we did get a bit of cloud cover all the way east of fairfield but that's burned off. concord you're seeing that sunshine, and downtown san francisco has the cloud cover hovering. temperatures today in san francisco 65, 81 in santa rosa and tomorrow will be the coolest day of the week, just in time for the 4th of july shows. by the weekend, sunshine and mid-90s. you could generate your own energy,
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at home. or to save energy, unplug unused appliances. do your thing, with energy upgrade california.
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wayne: i'm on tv. (screaming) wayne: puerto rico! jonathan: say "yah..." wayne and jonathan: whoa! jonathan: game show. (tiffany laughing) wayne: you got it! (screaming) go get your car. ♪ just a little bit of money - that's a lot of information. (cheers and applause) - wayne, i'm taking the curtain. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady. (cheers and applause) wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. let's make a deal. who wants to make a deal? in the bird costume, bird costume, i think you're a bird. bird, circles, whatever you are, come on. everybody else, have a seat. (cheers and applause) - i'm confetti. wayne: you are confetti. - i'm confetti. wayne: ah, now i see it. - now you see. wayne: so what do you do, kelly? - i'm a middle school band teacher. wayne: give her a big round of applause. (cheers and applause) middle school band teacher, what is your instrument of choice?

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