tv CBS This Morning CBS August 17, 2018 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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>> brian, it's been a fun week. >> thanks for having me. >> you know when brian is around, he is always leaving stuff all over the desk, all over the place. >> like those glasses? >> yes. >> i'll clean it up in time for kenny. have a good weekend. good morning to our viewers in the west. hey, it's friday, august 17th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." tributes pour in for arena franklin as the world celebrates the queen of soul. we'll talk with fellow legends and longtime friend stevie wonder and smoksmokey robinson g with the late show's jon baptiste about her legacy. revoking ex-cia director's john brennan's security clearance. one of them, former cia acting director, michael morrell, will join us. skiing legend bode miller
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and his wife share an emotional plea after losing their young daughter in a sudden drowning. how they are turning their grief into a life-saving mission. and epipens can mean the difference between life and death. how a newly approved competitor could drive the cost for millions of americans. but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. sna ♪ chain chain chain >> her music just went and swept everybody. >> a giant among giants. >> the world pays respect to the queen of soul. ♪ chain of fools >> you've had a lot of legends and superstars but we've only had one queen and her name is aretha franklin. >> omarosa released another secret recording. she says it proves president trump wanted her to keep quiet. >> i am here to blow the
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whistle. >> the vatican breaking its silence on the pennsylvania grand jury report detailing child sexual abuse. >> there has to be accountability. >> in colorado, christopher watts is being held without bail on suspicion of killing his wife and two young daughters. >> this is absolutely the worst possible outcome. >> heavy wind and rain hammering the south. those storms pushing to the east. >> all that -- >> the first inning homer, a pretty sweet bat flip. the umpire grabs it right out of the air. >> all that matters -- >> a number of america's newspapers. >> "the boston globe" led the charge with their editorial, the free press is wicked smaht, donald trump has gone too far. >> on "cbs this morning." >> this country has lost one of our greatest. >> the queen of soul was indeed music royalty. >> soul stirring voice was like no other.
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>> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." i'll bet you've been listening to a lot of aretha franklin music over the last 24 hours. said that her album, the greatest hits of aretha franklin has now topped the itunes list. i was one of those people. norah o'donnell is off today. bianna golodryga is with us. we begin with a nonstop tribute around the world to music legend aretha franklin. there was only one queen of soul. she died yesterday at her home in detroit after battling cancer. she was 76 years old. >> and as gayle mentioned this morning, her albums are on top of amazon's best-seller list. vladimir duthiers from our streaming network cbsn is
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outside franklin's lifelong church where many have come to honor her. vlad, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. check out this cover of "the detroit free press." eternal respect. exactly how the folks coming here feel. franklin's father was a preacher here and the congregation is mourning, as is the entire world. ♪ you make me feel paying tribute to the queen of soul thursday, singer alicia keys belted out a rendition of "a natural woman." while a guest on a radio show. ♪ the morning rain keys was one of several powerful female singers to pay tribute to arena franklin. an emotional ariana grande appeared on "the tonight show."
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♪ natural woman." >> reporter: singer mariah carey tweeted, she blew open the door for me and so many others. former president barack obama wrote, aretha helped define the american experience, may the queen of soul rest i in eternal peace. ♪ chain chain chain >> reporter: franklin's sound was unmistakable. ♪ r-e-s-p-e-c-t >> reporter: cori murray is the director of "essence" magazine. >> if you want a very vast career in this industry, you look to aretha as the beacon. ♪ freedom freedom >> reporter: franklin was the first woman to be inducted into the rock 'n' roll hall of fame. she took home 18 grammy awards. and sang at the inauguration of america's first black president. mourners gathered at new bethel baptist church in detroit thursday, where franklin got her start singing gospel music.
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you felt you had to be here? >> yes. >> reporter: why? >> because it's, like, it would be remiss not to be here to honor her. >> she is such a big part of detroit. >> reporter: berry gordy, the founder of the motown record label, has known franklin since she was a child. >> many artists come along once in a decade or once in a generation. or once in a lifetime. and aretha franklin only comes around once, period. >> reporter: cbs news has learned an aretha franklin tribute concert is being planned at madison square garden in new york city for november. her last known performance was last november at a gala for elton john's aids foundation. he tweeted yesterday "long live the queen," gayle. >> there was only one queen of soul, thank you. with us now is jon baptiste, band leader for "the late show with stephen colbert." he played at aretha's birthday party five years ago.
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he dedicated last night's "late show" play list to the queen of soul. good morning. >> good morning. >> she left such a mark. yet she had no formal training. i want to talk to you about her musicality and what it meant to you and what you saw in her. >> well, as a musician, as a trained muse signatur eed music someone who comes from trained musicians in my family, you have to understand that the training was her being born into this lineage. this cultural epicenter. the hub of so many things that were going on in the world this time. you have her father who has duke ellington, dina washington, sam cook, martin luther king jr., all coming by the house. and she, a baby, and they're trading stories with her. she's feeling their frequency and their vibration and they're teaching her about music. >> reporter: you said the world is emptier today?
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lower today. >> she put a lot of soul in the world by being in that moment, gospel, jazz, rhythm and blues. i mean, she was across all of it. how did she do that? >> well, she was someone who synthesized everything that comes before. you have the blues. negro spirituals. gospel. jazz. d duwop. all these sounds. it was the first time i call them ancestral sounds. they're the sounds of the american way of life, but somehow she made it global. it was the first time you would see something like this. for a black woman to come out and really share that sound with the rest of the world is amazing. it's a visionary thing that you can't really explain how it happened. but when you hear it, you're, like, oh, that's us. it's universal.
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>> and the discipline, the discipline that you talk about her having. so many great singers lose their voice over time. they can't hit the same notes. she could towards the very end. >> no, she could towards the very end. her musicianship is something that's not really talked about as much. but even just piano playing with the voice. how she conducted the band. from the piano chair. and the rhythm and the feel of what she was doing was a lot of the voice and also the piano complimeb comb playmenting that. there's a master class in every song she recorded. we have to continue to study and really absorb the music she's left her. >> reporter: it never gets old. i like that. a master class in every song she recorded. >> absolutely. >> reporter: thank you very much, jon baptiste for joining us. in our next hour, we'll talk with two other music legends
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from detroit, stevie wonder and smokey robinson. they will share their memories of their friend aretha franklin. more than a dozen former senior intelligence officials are sharply criticizing president trump's decision to pull former cia director john brennan's security clearance. a letter first reported by cbs news calls it inappropriate and deeply regrettable. >> it claims the president's decision, quote, has nothing to do with who should and should not hold security clearances. and everything to do with an attempt to stifle free speech. cbs news senior national security contributor michael morell is one of those who signed the letter. he's a former cia acting director. michael, good morning. >> good morning, john. >> what is the key danger of what the president did in your view? >> john, i was not just a signer of this letter. i was one of the organizers. and i will tell you that it was
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difficult to get the language just right. because there were those of us who believe that what john has done since he left government and how he has chosen to use his voice is appropriate and actually required in a democracy, and there are those of us who believe that he is acting inconsistent with the stature of the former director, so it was tough to get that language right. what we all agreed on was two things, one is that john is a patriot. that he worked his entire life to keep the country safe. that there are americans who are alive today that wouldn't be if john had not served in government. and we did none of us like the allegations that were being made against him by the white house and by some members of congress, including senator paul. the other thing we agreed on, john, is that the use of a national security tool for political purposes is
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inappropriate, unprecedented and dangerous in a democracy. >> dangerous how? is this a national security issue? >> so it's not -- john, it's not a national security issue. it's dangerous in that there are individuals, many on the national security side, who want to criticize the government's policies. some who are supportive and some who want to criticize. some who want to criticize the president. and this in our view is an attempt to incriminate them. the risk here is that a number of people will no longer speak out because they'll be afraid of the president taking action against them. jim clapper, one of the people on the list, the security clearances the president is considering lifting, says he is currently advising members of the trump administration right now as we speak. he didn't want to name them. what does that tell you about the president and his state of mind now? is he aware that he could actually be shooting himself and
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the country's security in the foot? >> it's a great question. because the purpose, the reason that former senior officials maintain these clearances is that -- not for their own benefit, but that they can advise the current government. i do that all the time. i've been on two commissions since i retired. and i'm -- i advise senior officials all the time. many -- as do many of the others on the list. this is actually a loss for the government. not for the individuals. >> all right. michael morell, we thank you for joining us this morning. >> you're welcome. president trump's daughter-in-law says the latest secret recording from ex-white house aide omarosa manigault newman is a fraud. the audio reveals that lara trump, who's married to eric trump, offering her $15,000 a month campaign job. omarosa says it proves the president wanted to buy her silence after she was fired. lara trump says she was shocked and saddened by what she called a betrayal. omarosa's promoting a new memoir published by shame -- simon and
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schuster which is owned by cbs. chris watts made his first court appearance yesterday, as the soul suspect in the case. omar villafranca is outside the family's home in frederick, colorado. >> reporter: prosecutors think the mother and the two daughters were killed inside this home and that has friends and neighbors in this area shocked. >> those two little girls are so innocent and so sweet and i just don't understand how you could do this. >> reporter: ashley bell's daughter played with watts 4-year-old bella and 3-year-old celeste. bell's memories of the seemingly close-knit family are shattered.
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>> i kept telling myself, no, no, no, he wouldn't do anything to her. >> mr. watts, why did you kill your wife and two children? >> reporter: chris watts said little inside a colorado courtroom on thursday. the silence was a dramatic reversal from earlier in the week, as watts pleaded for his family's safe return. >> i just want them to come back and if -- if they're not safe right now, that's what's tearing me apart. >> reporter: thursday, police recovered a body believed to be shanann's on an oil field where her husband worked. bodies believed to be bella and celeste were also found in close proximity to their mother. watts was fired on wednesday, the same day of his arrest. investigators have not revealed the possible motive. >> we love shanann and those girls so much. >> reporter: friends nicholas and amanda thayer say that she expressed concerns of infidelity. >> it came to her mind that possibly he could be cheating. >> as horrible as this outcome
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is, our role now is to do everything that we can to determine exactly what occurred and assist in filing a thorough case. >> reporter: shanann's family is running the gamut of emotions. they're confused and they're angry over this tragedy. police are not commenting on reports that chris confessed to killing his wife and two daughters. but he is expected to be formally charged on monday. this morning there's a new push for investigations after a scathing grand jury report detail alleged sex abuse by more than 300 catholic priests in pennsylvania. the vatican called for enablers to be held accountable, adding, the church must learn hard lessons from its past. >> reporter: the u.s. conference of catholic bishops has proposed a new system for reporting of uses. some survivors are deman
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more action. they're greeting the vatican's response with skepticism because they say they've heard the same rhetoric before. >> clearly, the holy see condemns sexual abuse of minors. >> reporter: insisting pope francis was on the side of survivors. it was in response to accusations the highest levels of the catholic church concealed 300 predator priests in pennsylvania. >> we can express our feelings about these horrible crimes in two words. those are shame and sorrow. >> reporter: shaun doherty was just 10 years old when his family's priest began abusing them. attorney general josh shapiro released a sweeping grand jury report into sex abuses in the catholic church. what's everyone's reaction? >> rage, anger, did i gust. it's just more of the same. >> reporter: snap, a group of abuse survivors, asks the u.s.
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justice department to open a nationwide investigation. similar reviews have already taken place in ireland and australia. yesterday, the attorneys general of new york and new jersey indicated they may launch investigations in their states. >> the sheer scale of the issue in pennsylvania was -- really couldn't have been worse. >> reporter: the theology professor believes the same horrific abuses and cover-ups found in pennsylvania likely exist elsewhere. >> an intelligent bishop who wanted to get ahead of this problem would volunteer his archives, avoid the fallout of what happened in pennsylvania. >> reporter: the archdiocese of newark says it is auditing its files on abusive priests and will determine a protocol for any names released once that is complete. cardinal mckcarrick was newark' archbishop for 14 years.
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>> nikki battiste, thank you. olympian bode miller and his wife are channeling the grief of losing their young daughter in a drowning accident into bri preventing other deaths. >> one of the things i've wrestled with is the guilt and the responsibility of it and how i need to change the way i parent with this new understanding i have for water. >> ahead, how the millers believe that good morning. hazy conditions out there. it is looking not as blue as yesterday. air quality in the moderate range. there is some call coverage to start out. a lot of this will burn off quickly. leaving you with sunshine and hate. 93 concord, 94 livermore. 66 san francisco. staying very cool at the beaches over the weekend.
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a chronic shortage of epi pens is leaving many children heading to school without the life-saving allergy drug. >> ahead, how the fda is now turning to a generic rival to fix the problem and why help could still be months away. you're watching "cbs this morning." this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by verzenio. sponsored by verzenio. and i treat my mbc with new everyday verzenio- the only one of its kind that can be taken every day. in fact, verzenio is a cdk4 & 6 inhibitor for postmenopausal women with hr+, her2- mbc, approved, with hormonal therapy, as an everyday treatment
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in pleasanton: firefighters are dousing hot spots after a two-alarm structure . it's not clear wh good morning. in pleasanton, firefighters are dousing hotspots after a two alarm structure fire. it is not clear what started the fire. investigators say the building is a total loss. the defendants in the ghost ship warehouse fire due back in court. the judge rejected a joint plea bargain last week saying derek failed to express submission remarks. a memorial service for a chp officer who was killed in a deadly crash last week. set to begin at 11:00 a.m.
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warning. we are tracking an accident causing slowdowns in the south bay along northbound 101. the crash is near story, it has one lane blocked along the 101. plus that offramp it looks like 2-3 lanes are blocked on that offramp there. do expect delays. right now we are seeing backups stretched towards capital expressly. the view above the top of the clouds. of course, it is starting off gray as we tend to see in the summertime. temperature is pretty cool 577 cisco. check out your seven day forecast temperatures in the mid- 90s. places like concord and livermore close to triple digits for the hottest inland locations. those 90s will stick around all week long.
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♪ you make me feel ♪ you make me feel ♪ you make me feel like a natural woman ♪ >> drop the microphone or in this case drop the fur coat. that's aretha franklin bringing down the house with "you make me feel like a natural woman." that was at kennedy center honors back in december 2015. she performed it during a tribute to carole king who co-wrote the song. ahead, stevie wonder and smokey
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robinson will join us as we explore more of aretha franklin's legacy. what's so great about the kennedy center honors, i was there that night, you don't know who's coming out to perform. so when she came out on stage, when she opened up with "natural woman," half the fun was looking at aretha and looking up to see carole and then see the obamas. it was electrifying what you saw that night. very special. >> that song's giving me chills. i've had the chills the whole last day. it's like i've been in a meat locker. >> you do hear her music differently knowing you're never going to get a chance to hear it live again. she said later that night was one of the most special nights of her life to be there. >> to see the smile on carole king's face. it made her proud. >> special to be in the audience. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things you should know this morning. the jury in the bank and tax fraud trial of former trump campaign chairman manafort began its second day of deliberations a short time ago. jurors submitted four questions to the judge yesterday.
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including asking him to redefine reasonable doubt. others dealt with filing rules for foreign bank accounts, shell companies and an exhibit list. manafort is accused of hiding millions of dollars in overseas earnings from the internal revenue service. chipotle plans to retrain all its employees on food safety after nearly 650 people became ill after visiting one of its ohio restaurants. the cdc shows yesterday that tests show customers were infected with a bacteria that appears when food is left at an unsafe temperature. >> and wedding bells will rick f ring this saturday for nearly 30,000 couples in the u.s. the wedding planning site says august 18th is the most popular day to get married. nearly 4 million guest suspected to attend the nuptials. it's estimated they will spend nearly $1 billion on gifts and attire. >> you won't forget your anniversary, 8/18. >> yep. >> i like it. two families brought together by tragedy are now
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working to turn their pain into a platform for change. the federal government estimates some 300 children, ages 5 or younger, die in swimming pool accidents every year. it's something two families, one-time strangers, endured on the same day back in june. emmi was the 19-month-old daughter of olympian bode miller and levi was an energetic son. dana jacobson joins us. >> it is a tragic story. it's resonating with so many people. the lives of both the miller and hughes families were shattered by similar drowning accidents in swimming pools. two months later, those families are working to sound the alarm, to create awareness of how fast and how often a drowning occurs in hopes of preventing other families from feeling the devastation they now endure. bode miller has spent most of his life on the slopes. but today he's in the water with
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his 3-year-old son nash, as he learns to kick, then float, rest and breathe. miller and his wife morgan chose this self-rescue course after their 19-month-old daughter emme made her way into a neighbor's pool and drowned. >> every time i close my eyes, afraid to go to sleep, replays in my head. but it happens so fast. and under normal everyday circumstances of where life happens the way it has for years and it's forever changed our lives. >> reporter: a new plan of action is taking shape in the miller's home where they're joining forces with water safety advocates to create a wave of change. >> we're in the early stages of development in both the software and hardware. >> reporter: knowing there's no one solution to prevent drowning, the group met with the start-up using artificial
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intelligence to monitor pools. >> we can raise a lot of awareness and things like that but we want to have i pampact i the long run and make sure it can be accomplished. >> i can tell you from experience that a 3-year-old who has not had swim lessons -- >> reporter: nicole hughes lost her son levi when he drowned the same day as emme. both children wore flotation devices when swimming and were supervised by parents. but just like emme, levi had been inside with his mom when he slipped out unseen. in seconds, he was gone. >> there's no way around this. he depended on me to keep him safe. and i did not. we weren't even swimming. and that to me has been what has, more than anything, continued to fuel me. i know that sounds so crazy but there is just such a disconnect between what people think drowning is and what it really is. >> reporter: both nicole and morgan had to pull their babies from the water. both are mothers to other children.
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their shared heartache is the basis for their friendship and inspiration for their fight. >> i think one of the most powerful things out there is a parent's love for their children. to lose a child and still have that love. it needs to be directed somewhere. >> reporter: to try and reach the biggest audience, they'll soon meet with the aap, the american academy of pediatrics. >> parents need a water safety plan. if a pediatrician were to say what is your water safety plan? >> reporter: they hope to convince the aap to mandate that all pediatricians suggest the dangers at regular checkups. >> oh, my gosh, that's amazing. >> reporter: nash is the same age as levi when he lost his life. aside from birth defects, drowning is the leading cause of death in children ages 1 to 4. nicole remembers levi's last visit to the doctor. >> we discussed if he could drink out of a cup. if he could scribble with a crayon. lots of talk about screen time. can we please talk about what really matters and that is the
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well being of my child and that is keeping him alive. >> reporter: as a father, even before emme was born, bode says he also wishes their doctors had talked about this silent killer. >> it sounds like what both of you are saying in some ways, you want parents to be given this information with the same sense of urgency as they are given energy about sids, about car seats, vaccinations. >> this is the number one cause of death for children under 4, you know, and that to me should dominate the whole conversation. >> reporter: i think people look at you and just wonder how do you get through the day at this point. when you talk about her with such love. >> i think that's one of the days that a lot of people don't understand. yes, it hurts and it's hard. but she's still my favorite topic of conversation. i love talking about her. >> yes, talking about kids doesn't get old as a parent.
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which is the reason we all only hang out with other parents. >> reporter: as the most decorated male ski racer in the united states, bode miller knows his name recognition is providing a platform that could help their mission to permanently reduce the number of deaths. the miller family is working to find a new normal. one that includes a new baby boy arriving in october. >> one of the things that we wrestled with, i wrestled with, is the guilt and the responsibility of it and how i need to change the way i parent with this new understanding i have for water, and that's just going to take some time and patience with myself. >> reporter: now, it goes without saying swimming pools can have a powerful pull on small children. both emme and levi drowned when they had been inside a home and not expected to be near a pool. a year from now, morgan and bode
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are hoping the danger surrounding water is a topic that every pediatrician is having with parents and children are learning about it in schools. that's probably the biggest part of their message. we have to talk about this, no matter how uncomfortable it is. they can't bring their kids back. they can't bring emme back. >> that's why it's so generous and brave of them to share their pain with us in hopes it will help others. i think most people don't know the statistics about drowning with little kids. you don't really know that statistic until it happens to you. >> exactly. >> that's why it's so great they're saying pediatricians, please let parents know. >> nicole said parents look for the loophole. i'm not going to be that family. these are examples they are now. >> parents have to listen, that's the thing. >> morgan said there's no more love than a parent has for a child. >> that's true. >> dana, thank you. well, the first generic rival to epi pen has just been approved. ahead, how the new competition could drive down the cost of a product that's become a symbol
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of soaring drug prices. re watching "cbs this morning." ♪ you are so beautiful... to meee... ♪ ♪ ...can't you seeeeee? ♪ you're everything i've hoped for... ♪ ♪ you're everything i need... ♪ you are so beautiful... [explosion, screaming & sirens] ♪ ...to meeeeeeee. [explosion, screaming & sirens] toyota. let's go places.
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♪ ♪ save me the food and drug administration has approved the first generic rival to epi pen. the self-injecting device used to treat potentially life-saving allergic reactions has faced a number of issues in recent years, including shortages and high prices. anna werner reports on how the new generic drug sold by teva pharmaceuticals could shake up the prices. >> reporter: he suffers from a severe nut allergy which means having an epipen like this one could be a matter of life or death. in may, the fda reported a shortage of epi pens due to a manufacturing issue. demand left many pharmacies bare. >> the shortages is a really big problem. it didn't matter who i called. i could not find it. >> reporter: parents like sam's mother have been stocking up on epi pens as the back to school season begins.
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brunson finally tracked one down but then ran into another problem. >> it's about $700 or just shy of $700 for one box. and i really needed to have the generic. >> reporter: the drugmaker mylan faced backlash after the price of its epi pen soared from just over $100 in 2009 to more than $600 in 2016. the company put out a cheaper $300 version following criticism from congress. teva pharmaceuticals will make the new generic epi pen but it's unclear when it will be available or exactly how much it will cost. in a statement, the company said, we're applying our full resources to this important launch in the coming months and are eager to begin supplying the market. dr. jon lapook is the cbs chief medical correspondent. >> you don't want price to have to come into that. i would have had this life-saving medication with me but it was just toobrunson
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family, that's a decision they face every day. >> it's not feasible for a household income, no matter who you are, to write over a check for $700. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," anna werner. >> anna, thanks. up next, a look at the other headlines, including new details on what may be the first shark attack injuring a sublime view showing a lot of servers on the water. that is where a lot of you will want to go this weekend as temperatures rise up. that ridge of high pressure bringing that heat hovering over southern california. our heat will be rising. mid- 90s for a lot of you. mid- 60s for san francisco. that 70 forecast, tomorrow, temperatures rise even more near triple digits for some of our hot spots. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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>> "usa today" reports a federal judge will decide whether deported parents can be reunited with 366 separated children still living in this country. more than 2,600 kids were separated from their parents under president trump's zero tolerance immigration policy. the administration has reunited more than 1,600 children and connected another 473 with other sponsors. a hearing is scheduled later today in san diego. san francisco cbs station wpix says newly released video shows california's most intense fire tornado. it killed a firefighter last month after exploding in the middle of the carr wildfire near redding. 37-year-old jeremiah stoke was helping evacuate residents when he died. the tornado's base was the size of three football fields and had wind strengths of up to 165 miles an hour. and "the boston globe" says beach glowers described a harrowing scene after a swimmer was bitten by a shark off of cape cod in massachusetts.
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witnesses say the victim, 61-year-old william litten of scarsdale, new york, was swimming near seals on wednesday when he was attacked. about ten people carried him from the water. he is in serious condition with deep puncture wounds to his torso and leg. >> as bad as that is, he is very lucky. aretha franklin's longtime friend and collaborator stevie wonder will join us from los angeles. ahead what he loved most about sharing the stage with the queen of soul. we'll be right back ♪ i sit and wait in vain morn we'll be right back. yeah, i think i can handle it. no pressure... ...that's just my favorite boat. boom. (laughs) make summer go right with ford, america's best-selling brand. and get our best deal of the summer: zero percent financing for sixty months on f-150. get zero percent financing for 60 months- plus $2,800 bonus cash on a 2018 f-150 xlt equipped with 2.7l ecoboost.
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the family of a woman stabbed to death at the macarthur bart the family of a woman stabbed to death at the macarthur bart station will launch a lawsuit against the transit station today. it alleges bart failed to provide riders with the hires standard of care. a plea hearing is scheduled in dublin today for an uber driver accused of sexually assaulting a passenger. the victim was drinking in san francisco last month when the suspect picked her up and assaulted her. the state of california will not set up a banking system for recreational marijuana businesses anytime this year.
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good morning. an accident at the maze, westbound 580 on the transition ramp to east on 80. you can see that car on his side. crews are there working on trying to get that lane cleared. in the meantime we are seeing a big backup starting to develop towards the maze. that is a live look past 24. no major backup of the toll plaza. give yourself some extra time it is getting busy. we are noticing clouds are breaking apart a little bit. the sunshine certainly going to absolve today. right now in san francisco partly gray, partly sunny. 57 degrees in san francisco. oakland 58.
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welcome to our viewers int he west. it's fridaugust 17th, 2018. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead we'll remember aretha franklin's musical magic with her fellow icons and good friends stevie wonder and smoky robinson. but first here's today's eye opener at 8:00. >> nonstop contributes around the world there was only one queen of soul and she died yesterday. >> this cover the detroit free press saluting aretha franklin with its headline eternal respect. >> there are individuals who want to criticize the government's policies, criticize the president. the risk here is that a number of people will no longer speak out because they'll be afraid of
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the president taking action against them. >> the memorial is growing here. prosecutors think that the mother and the two daughters were killed inside this home and that has friends and neighbors in this area shocked. some survivors are greeting the vatican's response with skepticism because they say they've heard the same rhetoric before. >> you said the world is emptier today. >> oh, my goodness, the soul quotient in of the world is much lower today. >> but she put a lot of soul in the world, gospel, jazz, rhythm and blues, she was across all of it. >> i all them ancestral sounds. they're the sounds of the american way of life. but somehow she made it global. ♪ on the ground
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>> i'm john dickerson with gayle king. we've been listening to that gorgeous music all morning. music lovers around the world are honoring a ledge pend. she waeen of soul aretha franklin died yesterday after a battle with cancer. she was 76. the new york times called her a voice for empowerment more than a little bit, noting how her biggest hit respect became an anthem for civil rights and feminism. >> congressman and civil rights hero john lewis says she embodied what we were fighting for and her music strengthened us. barbara streisand calls her a uniquely brilliant singer. lionel ritchie writes this, her voice, her presence, her style, ice, herid it better. ne franklin spoke to 60 minutes in 1990 about starting out at her family's church in the '50s. spoke old were you then? >> about 9. 19 what was that like at 9 years old to have to get up in front bout crowd like that? >> i really didn't want to sing
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at first, but my dad insisted that i do. >> great to see her and ed insistedogether. franklin went on to win 18 >> franklin s. fellow music legend stevie wonder was one of franklin's long time friends and ollaborators. her version of his song "until you come back to me" became a timeer one hit. they performed it together at soul train's lady of soul awards in 2005. ♪ ♪ until you come back to me i'm going to love you ♪ >> they continued to work oogether until her final album last year. >> legends on stage never gets ld. stevie wonder made one last visit to the franklin home in gets old.n tuesday. he's in los angeles bright and early this morning and we are visit to very honored to have stevie join us this morning.
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stevie, thank you so much for getting p. tell yto tell you this. this. listening to your song "i'd never dreamed you'd leave in summer" and it remind me so uch of aretha franklin this morning listening to her leyric and your voice. i know that when you visited her earlier this week, what can you tell us about your last conversation with her? i heard that you two, plan doing more music together, true? >> we talked about doing some music as recent as maybe two months ago we'd been talking about it. there was a song that i had gritten called the future and we were going to, you know, sing it together. and so i -- i thought i cried my last tear, you know. myi said, i wanted to get it together because i did want to see her on monday i decided i
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would go, i flew out from l.a. to detroit and went to see her, ut from l.a. t. she wasn't able to speak back, but her family felt that she could hear me and so i just said all the things that i've always said. and told her to say hello to my sister that i lost six years ago. we idt, you know, she didn't incredible music, incredible singer. she touched -- she touched every genre, every singer was influenced in some way by the ty she sang. she hey will forever be influenced by her because of her bece, her emotion, her sincerity is unforgettable. e're going to be hearing her singing at reverend franklin's church when i was little, maybe 4, 5 years old because my mother nould always listen to the church services on sunday.
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and so the voices i remember most in my life would be dr. king, her voice, and her father, reverend franklin. verendviously growing older i always remember john lennon's song "imagine" in the emotional places. lennon songhat stands out for you for her personally, but for your outonally and professionally about aretha franklin? what stands out to you about her? lly andwas just consistently a great human being. and she always even with satever turmoil that may have turmoilpening in her life, even through her illness she did not thathat on anybody else. she believed, i think, that most of all she was doing god's work
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she mosshe was. was.brought joy to a lot of lives and she will -- her voice hed the essence of her will long live all of us that are hear right now. >> stevie, you also started in a church when you were younger. talk about that experience and how that is so particular to her usic. >> i think that, you know, muiously the church is a place where we learn all the various know rifts, various forms of singing eing influenced by, you know, gospel music, the roots. and i think that me hearing all the various sounds and singers in detroit being raised in detroit, that was -- that was the reason that i was inspired. and she was a great inspiration. >> stevie, one of the hardest an questions to answer that people
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stevie,ing across the world now is what was your favorite aretha franklin song. let me ask you about respect, because "the new york times" frankl escribes it as a 2:28 quick trip to the emotional gym. >> i knew "respect" from otis redding. but when i heard her sing it, it was like hearing a whole new song. it,ing what she did with the song originally done by otis wholeg. the you know, another it wasrity to that is the song that i wrote "until you come back to me" i did it and we were co going to put it on album i think but we never did. but the greatest gift for me was when i heard her sing "till you atest gif to me". someone said on one of the channels yesterday that when she sings your song, she takes it and you don't get it back. ned that's what she did.
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>> and you don't mind her taking it either, stevie. see don't mind at all. >> i see you with your harp. do you have something that you want to do for us this morning? are you up for it? i know it's early. what's on your harp? ♪ i love you aretha peggi.that's a forever thing i really -- i'm too emotional to think about any singing right now. >> i understand. > but it's a celebration. we have to celebrate her life and continue the legacy by ng peopleeople of all the various genres hear the music that influenced us all. i've known some time about her condition. pd i just prayed that even
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eough the odds were very, very, razy crazy, you think maybe one out of, or two out of a hundred, you know, would succeed or beat his thing, i just feel that all these various diseases that we have and all these things that are happening in the world in part is because there are those in don't believe in global warming, don't believe that we do affects the world, what we eat affects the world, affects ects and i just hope that people will row up and grow out of the foolishness, and know that we all by how we think, how we do, truly lereat others,. and know that we all by how we >> matters. >> that we will never unlock the key until we truly let go of the hatred, the bigotry, the
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selfishness. when we do that, then with can unlock some of those things that keep us in this place. >> stevie, thank you. >> i thank you. i love you, aretha, but you know hank nowshe does know that. >> i'm sure she's there with sister. ter. >> we love you too, stevie. thank you very much for getting up with us. >> thank you. >> the great smoky robinson >> t first met aretha franklin meting us off with the muse atlantic, he first met aretha franklin when he was 8 years was ahead, he will join us with his favorite memories of the queen of soul. irst, it is 8:11. time to ch
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♪ you better think about ♪ you better think about what you're trying to do to me ♪ >> there's much more news ahead. first on cbs this morning, the results of a new report on how police departments address racial bias. we'll take a rare look inside the nypd's training that helps officers recognize and set aside prejudices. aretha franklin's song "think" very good song for that story. plus, serena williams is opening up by why her tennis come back was so difficult in an new interview. and smokey robinson joins us from california this morning to remember his lifelong, that would be aretha franklin. you're watching cbs this morning, we thank you for that. we'll be right back. "freedom ♪ ing." we'll be right back.
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going to come ♪ >> first out today, a new report shows how police departments are combating bias on the force. 85% of police academies have say they increased implicit bias training for police recruits since 2015. jeff got a rare look inside a training course with the nypd who's first deputy commissioner says there is a race problem u.s. police should address. jeff, good morning. >> good morning. experts say that implicit bias is something that we all have and we make unconscious assumptions about people based on how they look. but police often have to make split-second, tough decisions on when to use force for a number of reasons. but trying to make sure those decisions aren't just based on race, that starts with training.
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>> police in new york city and across the country have auld trained for dealing with physical threats and now. >> we take people, we put them into boxes. >> they are increasingly training to battle cultural ones by taking implicit bias classes to recognize and set aside their prejudices. >> do we tend to get cynical based on our experiences if we have negative experiences over and over and over again? >> we can't train enough. >> first deputy commissioner benjamin tucker oversees nypd training, officers, and recruits are required to attend an eight-hour implicit bias course. >> when did that become a priority for the nypd? >> couple years ago. >> he says the department increased tactical training after the 2014 death of eric garner in an officer echokehold. implicit bias training started earlier this year. >> do you think that there is a race problem in police departments across the country? >> listen, is it -- certainly.
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i think there are issues around race that are palpable in this country. we have not had the kind of conversation we should have around those conversations. >> even in police departments? >> especially if police departments. >> especially? >> yeah, i think so. >> no justice, no peace. >> protesters have called for police regular forms following a series of high-profile shooting deaths of black men. including michael brown in ferguson. olt ton sterling in baton rouge. >> put your hands up. >> and this past june, they'reman blevins in minneapolis. the addition of implicit bias training was among the recommendations of presidential task force made in 2015. 85% of law enforcement training acad nays participated in a new survey say they have increased that training for recruits while 66% added training for existing officers. though less than a fourth of all u.s. police academies responded to the survey.
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>> you know who you are as a person and you know what biases you have. we're saying to you, don't bring those biases to work. that's the implicit piece of this. >> how do you think that message is being received? >> i think it's being received well. >> but it's going to take more than classroom training to satisfy gwen carr, the mother of eric garner. >> are you encouraged by what the nyp dprd is doing? >> not really. she says she gets discouraged by continuing reports from across the u.s. of unarmed minorities getting hurt or killed after encounters with police. >> so do you think this is a step in the right direction? >> it's a step. it's in the right direction. now we have to see if it works. >> nypd officials say the training works for them along with more tactical training, body cameras, and a focus on nonlethal weapons. the department says its number of police-involved shootings is down. >> it's good to see they're
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this is a kpix 5 morning update. good morning. it is 8:25. the mense know fire, the largest in state's history is 6 contained. the river and ranch wildfires that make up the complex have scorched more than 370,000 acres. that's about three times the size of san jose. transportation authority wants to add a traffic light that's going to be activated so they can get to the code beach safer. officials hope to start the construction by next year. and competitors from canada and across the u.s. are taking over this weekend for the
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good morning which accidents along 580 here and tying things up for drivers trying to get in. this is a live look and this is just pass that on 24. it continues to be slow as you pass the scene there. here is your approach to the at the scene op the crash. the back up is here near high streets. do expect
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the delays if you're heading to oakland and 80 does not look like a great alternative. that's in the yellow. heading northbound to 238 to the main, and once you get over the bay bridge, look at that. it's in the green. that's what we call friday light conditions in to san francisco. we have a lovely way to start the day. look at this kpix acamera. there's some clouds out there, but a lot of it is breaking a part. look at the clear skies. now, the problem is that off in the distance there's a little bit of hayes. the air quality is not so good. yes, it maybe a little bit today and then in through the weekend. san francisco and then 63 already in concord. this is a look at the air quality. yesterday we were good in the green and then we have yellow and moderate. yes, it's going to go through the weekend and so will the heat. it's 94 in livermore and then now 7-day
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"say a little prayer". we'll talk to our lifelong frie friend, smokey robinson. >> when she came out, you could see she looked very frail. but she just blew the crowd away that was sitting there that night. she never lost her voice. in an interview with the "new york times," tesla ceo elon musk says this past year has been excruciating and the most difficult of his career. musk said he had been working up to 120 hours a week trying to meet production targets. he also tweeted last week which sparked a federal investigation of tesla where he announced he intended to take tesla private. and serena williams talked about her come back.
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williams said she breast fed for about nine months and her coach told her to stop breast feeding and but the advise was hard to take from the guy. archaeologists discovered a mysterious white substance a year ago. a new analysis reveals the residue is 132,000 years old. the cheese is similar in consiste consistency to goat cheese. this is something food lovers will like, our partners at the b.b.c. report that carb lovers can rejoice. researchers found that people who get about half of their total calories from carbohydrates may be at lower risk of early death. that's compared with chose who follow very high or very low
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carb diets. while we will always remember aretha franklin as the queen of soul, legendary smokey robinson will remember her as his older friends. ♪ oh, baby baby ♪ oooh oooh baby baby ♪ baby baby ♪ oooh oooh >> baby baby, robinson and franklin performed together several times throughout the decades. but they grew up in the same neighborhood in detroit. smokey robinson joins us from glendale, california. smokey robinson, it is good to see you. >> gayle, my love, it's good to see you too. >> of course we're all thinking about aretha, but that was some
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neighborhood you grew up in, diana ross, the temptations, the four tops. how did you become friends and what was it like to see your childhood friend become the queen of soul? >> we became friends because she and her family moved to detroit when i was 8 years olds, really. and you know how things are, her brother, cecil who's passed, just came around to play with the guys in the neighborhood. and we werennt around to see hi new house. and in detroit, we lived in the hood, the hood hood. but in the middle of that, there were two press blocks, which was amazing, was reverend seal franklin was one of the richest
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men in the country. and we're walking around and i hear a piano playing in this room and this little voice coming. and peek in, and there's aretha sitting at the piano, playing and singing almost like she did as an adult. she was probably only about 5 years old. but that's how i first met her >> and what was it like performing with her side by side, smoky? you guys did that many times. >> well, you know, it was always wonderful to do nick with aretha. aretha like i said was my ace, she was my baby. so we were really, really close. and to do anything with her was always a joy. >> smoky, can you talk a little bit about the cultural moment that both you and she embodied in america at a time where african-americans, where it was a very tough part of american history. she was a cultural icon and was at the center of cultural
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change. >> well, yeah, i would say that we all grew up in that era. we grew up in the rosa parks era, i call it. because she was the start of it all. and we marched with dr. martin luther king and ralph abb abbernathy, and we did the sit ins, and we turned the other cheek which wases re really, re hard to do under the circumstances. it was a master plan and as you can see, it worked pretty well. >> and aretha is in a league of her own and can't be replaced, but who are the younger generation singers that she really respected and thought had a future as leaders in the music industry? >> well, aretha was like me, gayle. aretha loved music and she loved new artists and when i see people talking about today, well, you know, the music is in
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trouble because all the new artists are dead. showbiz has a great future according to what's happening out there with new artists and aretha appreciated that. and i don't know who she specifically would have said, oh, this is my favorite new artist. but she appreciated the fact that there were new artists out there. her granddaughter is a great singer. my granddaughter. so it just goes on and on. >> well. you know, we have certainly lost a legend. what do you think that the music world has lost with the death of aretha franklin, in terms of what she meant to us musically? >> just her presence, you know, because i talked to aretha about maybe five weeks ago, so her plan was, she was going to retire from doing performances. but she was always going to record. she said, smoke, i'm just not going to do anymore dates but i'm going to continue to record. but she has left us with a musical legacy that kids who
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haven't even been born yet will get a chance to experience. >> now i hear her music differently, smoky, knowing we can't hear it live again, i hear different things i hadn't heard before listening to her voice. >> and you and her together, pure magic, smoky, i'm sure there's people out there googling your granddaughter. our private moments in the digital age could come back to haunt or reward us. ahead in our reporters notebook, we have missed him, john, what we can learn from people's
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♪ change change change in today's world, it's not hard to find yourself being recorded. with an explosion -- i feel like it's happening right now. with an explosion of cameras being around ever corner. what's on those cameras can tell us a lot. the good, the bad and the ugly behavior from parking lots to the west wing. one test of a person's character is when they do the right thing when they don't think anybody is looking. the catholic church of pennsylvania failed that test.
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at the white house, staffers were facing that test daily as recordings were released by former top trump official omarosa manigault-newman. >> general kelly came to me and told me you wanted me to leave. >> no one even told me about it. >> and candidate donald trump talking about hush money payments to an alleged mistress that president trump said he knew nothing about. >> when it comes to time for the financing -- >> we'll have to pay for it. no, no, no, i got it. >> newman said she kept pressing record to protect her friends. she wanted to protect the virtues of those she was privately recording because they had no virtue. although the last several months, private companies by anthony scaramucci and steve bannon suggests that newman
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wasn't the only one playing a double game. worldly people say all this private deceit is just what happens in politics. but rather than recline into that cynicism, consider the case of susan johnson. johnson was the woman who braved the wind and the rain to return a shopping card to walmart. turns out returning a shopping cart can tell us about something about your character. according to to scientific american, people return shopping carts because we're worried about the people who would have to collect them if we didn't. this is a building block of basic public service. you're not just in it for yourself or for your tribe. imagine if he could measure for this caring quo -- quotient when we're picking our leaders. will they do the right thing when they don't think the cameras are rolling?
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>> that is such a good question, do you do the right thing when nobody's watching? >> pass the shopping card test. >> that should be a litmus test for politicians. >> wow would we construct that? it would be difficult. >> john, you have a lot of material to work with this week. amount of examples. >> i don't think it's going to stop. >> maybe next week more tapes will come out. >> undoubtedly they will. >> and you can see more this morning on our podcast, join us on apple's podcast app or wherever you view your podcast. said we review michael arsano talking about his podcast about wh how i can't date jesus. and up next, we'll look at all that mattered this week, you're watching cbs this morning. programming that's part of "cbs this morning." up next, you're watching "cbs this morning."
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more than 129 million trees have died in california. pg&e prunes and removes over a million trees every year to ensure that hazardous trees can't impact power lines. and since the onset of the drought we've doubled our efforts. i grew up in the forests out in this area and honestly it's heartbreaking to see all these trees dying. what guides me is ensuring that the public is going to be safer and that these forests can be sustained and enjoyed by the community in the future.
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tomorrow on "cbs this morning: saturday," her youtube videos have helped her with her science. we'll introduce you to hillary grass le. and before we leave you, let's go to the control room? a round of applause for john tech. >> he's moving on to bigger and better. >> he's moving, going to seattle. he's leaving our show.
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he's a beg cheese around here. he's going to be missed. he's the one on our air saying wrap it up, you need to gorks stop talking. >> which he's doing now. >> that will do it for us. now we'll take a look back at all that matters. ♪ here i am by the railroad tracks i'm waiting on my baby coming on back ♪ >> the brilt yanlt songwriter and sinner was 70 years old. >> her songs are in your head or you're hearing them. >> white house officials are condemning the former white house adviser. >> in interest. >> in the trump world, everyone lees. they sign wemg thing today
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nothing on that. >> the statute of limitations has expired for all but go of them. more than 100 apresumed dead. >> it doesn't normally have category 5 rapids. if i had been standing here before, i would be dead. >> the officers are racing to get cats and dogs. you hear them, come on, let's go. let's go for a ride. ♪ don't you step on my blue suede shoes ♪ >> rebon and the others aregold
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made from corn. >> did you know i wear a size 10? >> we found out. new york tiemgs is celebrating madonna's 60 yrlds birthday. >> that who e saes. once i saw her working out and did like that to her tummy, i go whole, whole, whole. aretha franklin r-e-s-p-e-c-t. >> she left such a mark on history, culture, and music. >> gospel, jazz, rhythm and blues. >> opera. >> she was across ought owl its. they will get a chance to swerns it. her voicing her emotions, her sin sore tell is unforgettable.
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in the ghost ship warehouse fire good morning everyone peer go i am michelle griego i go. defendants are due back in court on the fire. a plea garden -- plea bargain was rejected, saying sufficient remorse was not shown . a woman has filed a lawsuit alleging this bar failed to give the highest standard. the chp officer's funeral
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is set to begin at 11:00 this morning at our fathers church in vacaville. more updates on our website at kpix.com. this is not a bed. it's a revolution in sleep. the new sleep number 360 smart bed is on sale now, from $899, during sleep number's 'biggest sale of the year'. it senses your movement, and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. it even helps with this. so you wake up ready to put your pedal to the metal. and now, all beds are on sale. save 50% on the new sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. plus 24-month financing on all beds. only for a limited time. sleep number. proven, quality sleep.
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give yourself some extra time. right now we are talking about a 40 minute ride from 680 over two 580, 22 minutes double that -- 680 over to 580, 22 minutes in this area as well . we had early morning cloud burn off. it's a little bit cloudy in san francisco. in dublin, here is a live look, barely a breeze, the trees haven't moved much. in the distance you may notice a bit of a haze. we are going to see that today into the weekend, 56 degrees in san francisco right now, livermore, 62, 67 in concord and already almost 70 degrees, it yesterday in the green, good air quality. today is not going to look as nice, 94 in livermore and 66 in san francisco, a wide temperature difference in the
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wayne (high-pitched): oh-oh! jonathan: it's a trip to australia! tiffany (in australian accent): it's a diamond ring! wayne (in french accent): you said that before. say it again. - going for the big deal, baby. wayne: you got the big deal! jonathan: ha, ha. tiffany: hello? open the box! wayne: you won a car! you did it! - (screaming) jonathan: i'm vanilla pudding. wayne: dreams do come true! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? you right there in the pink cowgirl hat, come on over here, fly girl. everybody else have a seat, have a seat, have a seat. hello. is it "an-dree-a" or "an-dray-a"? - "an-dray-a." wayne: nice, welcome to the show.
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