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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 15, 2018 7:00am-8:58am PDT

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quarterback with 200 career regular-season wins. >> what a game. what a game. living up to the hype. this morning's "
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tom brady making norah o'donnell once again proud this monday morning, right? >> always important to live up to the hype. >> he never lets us down. >> big night in boston. big night on tv as well in this first 60 minutes interview from the white house, president trump says that he's comfortable after nearly 21 months in office. he gives his performance high marks, especially on north korea, saying no one talks about war with that country anymore. correspondent lesley stahl asked about his relationship with north korean leader kim jong-un. >> do you trust him? >> i do trust him, yeah. that doesn't mean i can't be proven wrong. >> why would you trust him? >> first of all if i didn't trust him i wouldn't say that to you. wouldn't that be foolish to tell you that right here on 60 minutes? >> remember what reagan said, trust but verify. >> that's very true.
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but the factsy trust him. we'll see what happens. >> but isn't it true that they haven't gotten rid of a single weapon and they may be building more missiles with nuclear -- >> they wonant to and i will te you that they're closing up sites. >> but is it true that they haven't? >> nobody really knows. people are saying that. i've actually said that, and nobody really knows. >> but they're still building missiles, more missiles? >> we don't really know, lesley. we don't know. >> president trump said last month at a rally that he fell in love with kim when they exchanged letters. in last night's interview he says he gets along with the north korean leader despite his record of human rights abuses. >> i want to read you his resume. he presides over a cruel kingdom of oppression, ghoul logs, starvation, reports that he had his brother assassinated, slave
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lubb, public executions, this is a guy you love? >> i'm not a baby. i understand these things. >> why do you love that guy? >> i get along with him, okay? >> but you love him. >> that's just a figure of speech. >> no, it's like an embrace. >> well, let it be an embrace to get the job done. >> he's a bad guy. >> let it be whatever it is. i get along with him really well. i have a good energy with him. i have a good chemistry with him. look at the horrible threats that were made. no more threats. no more threats. >> and the president also denied being too friendly with russian president vladimir putin given his human rights record and the allegations of election meddle. >> do you agree that vladimir putin is involved in assassinations, in poisonings. >> probably is he, yeah. probably. >> probably? >> probably, but i rely on them. it's not in our country. >> why not they shouldn't do it?
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>> of course he shouldn't do it. >> do you believe that the russia russians interfered in the 60 campaign -- election? >> they meddled. i think china meddled too. >> why do you say china meddled. >> let me ask you -- >> why don't you just say that the russians meddled? >> because i think china meddled also. and i think china is a bigger problem. >> you're diverting the whole russia thing. >> i'm not doing anything. i'm saying russia, but i'm also saying china. >> it was a very spirited conversation between the two of them. very interesting back and forth and very revealing. >> she did a very good job because the president sometimes stretches the truth and lesley tried to hold him tough to the line. >> and that's america's interests and we'll work with anybody regardless of what their human rights record is. >> at one point he summed it up by saying i'm the president and you're not. >> right. >> which is a factual statement.
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>> that's also a very factual -- >> two years no this presidency it and plan to retaliate if any sanctions imposed over the interest. >> tell everybody what's at stake here. you know -- >> well, there's a lot at stake. maybe especially so because this man was a reporter. maybe you'll be surprised to hear me say that, there's something really disgusting and terrible about that if that was the case. we're going to get to the bottom
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of it and there will be severe punishment. >> cbs news national security contributor and the acting director of the cia, michael good morning. let's start with the president saying that the u.s. is going to get to the bottom of this. there's the talk of recordings. how do we get to the bottom of this? >> think we need a couple of things. one is we need the turks to share with us whatever information they have. i believe that they had giingel tell against sources inside the consulate and they need to share that with us soon. the saudis need to share what they have and then we need though collect our own intelligence. it's only when we have all that information that the intelligence community will be able to tell the president me sort of confidence what we think happened inside that concull late, which is still murky because there's two competing narratives.
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>> has there been a rush to judgment? >> i think the turkish narrative is more compelling because they say they have evidence. anded sauds di and saudis have done no explanation. i think that is more compelling and that's where most people have gone. but the bottom line is we don't know what happened inside that consulate. >> let's deal with the news this morning as you hear that turkey and saudi arabia are expected to do a joint skpection inspection on monday is that significant? >> i think it's significant but i wouldn't expect a lot from it sips their narratives are so in contrast. i think that information needs to be shared with us and shared with us soon. >> there's a lot of pressure for the u.s. to react. how long can an investigation like this go on for? >> that's a great question. as the information flows in, the analysts will start to make judgments. but along with that judgment will be a confidence level. so they could start out by
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saying, you know, we believe the saudis killed him inside the consulate but we only have low confidence in that. and over a period of a week to two weeks that confidence level could rise. ers tw theudent efidence lel. d say once t analysts have the information, it could be seven, ten, 14 days before they come down with a firm conclusion. >> you know, the president seemed very reluctant, mike, to end the business deal, the arms business deal, with saudi arabia. if this is true, is will any way that he with should still do business with saudi arabia? he pointed out it's an awful lot of money. >> gayle, i think there's sort of three different buckets of things the united states could do if, indeed, the saudis were involved in his disappearance and his death. one, at the low end of the spectrum would be limited sanctions against those individuals and those entries who were specifically involved in the murder. in the middle would be a arm sa.
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and at the far end would be sort of broad sanctions against saudi arabia in general. my guess would be that we would send -- that we would end up somewhere with a mix of the lower end and the middle end. hour. more than 1800 people are involved in the search and rescue efforts across the florida panhandle. one of the most famous names in american retail, sears, filed
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for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection overnight. the company has struggled for years closing hundreds of stores after it dominated the department store business for much of the 20th century. sears was supposed to make a $134 million payment on its debt today. the bankruptcy filing means another 142 stores will close, but sears will try to reorganize and keep several hundred stores open. hillary clinton says her husband absolutely should not have resigned following the monica lewsinsky scandal. in an interview for cbs sunday morning, the former first lady and presidential candidate spoke with tony da copy you'll about the record number of women running for office in 2016. >> there are people who look at the incidents of the '90s and they say a president of the united states cannot have a consensual relationship with an intern, the power iminterval too great. >> she was an adult. but let me ask you this.
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where's the investigation of the current incumbent against whom numerous alsos halegations have made in which he dismisses, denies, and ridicules? so there was an investigation, and is it, as i believe, came out in the right place. >> tony is here with more from that interview. good morning. you asked the question. >> i did. it was a wide-ranging conversation. it was about an hour-long conversation. and hillary clinton knows more than anyone what it's like she's a two-time presidential candidate and she became the first woman to win a major party's nomination. we sat down to talk about sexism, politics and why this nd why crops of female crop oftes may still feel like they're running uphill. what warnings do you have as we >> w reach crunch time in the 2018 campaign for the women who are out there running? >> you just have to be yourself. come hell or high water, you o bt have to be yourself. e about tre about the hell part. apparentno, sometimes, it is so
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apparent that you are being ju judged on your hair, your clothes. all of that. and, you know, you look at the mails running. sa they're no fashion icons. nobody's saying i'm not voting for him because he didn't comb se hair. >> even as hillary clinton clinton supports female candidates, she holds a complicated position in the me too era. remember, her husband was accused of multiple acts of sexual misconduct before ecoming president and was repeached over lies he told with the relationship over the white y hse intern. llllary clinton stood by his lde through all of that. looking back, do you wish you would have done things tfferently? differently your if you had done things differently in your personal life? >> it's an easy question. no. i did what i thought was right. i feel very good about that. >> when you support women now
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who are running with their stories of sexual assault front and center, does it make it more difficult for you to be forward as a supporter when you have not contended fully with the accusers in your own life? >> well, no, because there was the most intense comprehensive investigation, people forget that, and i don't. i remember it very clearly. >> and in retrospect, do you think bill should have resigned, president clinton should have resigned, in the '90s, in the wake of the monica lewinsky scandal? >> absolutely not. >> so it wasn't an abuse of power? >> no. >> you do not believe he should have resigned? >> no. >> how do you content with members of your own party saying he should have? >> that's their right to their opinion. but they were not in the middle of it. >> now, bill and hillary clinton will kick off a series of etse on vegas where i imagine this may come up yet again. now, of course, the past never changes.
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people's perspective on the past tends to change. but it appears in this case hillary clinton's perspective has not. >> even monica lewinsky's perspective has changed over, you know, a few decades ago. >> yes, you know, i asked her in summary, is there a double standard being applied here and hillary was quite clear, no, there's not, or if there is it's one that benefits the current occupant of the white house. >> she is so much more than what her husband did in the oval office. she is her own person and continues to be defined by that. >> all right, thank you, tony. we learned overnight that prince harry, my favorite story of the day, prince harry, meghan markle, they're expecting their very first child. the royal family broke the news on twitter shortly after the duke and duchess of sussex arrived in australia. the royal couple, they're in sydney, vigliotti is there.
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>> reporter: we're outside the iconic opera house joined by the international media. we were called in for a meeting, what we were promised would be a surprise announcement. you have to acknowledge the moment the roomful of normally chatty journalists fell silent. seen here arriving at the international airport, prince harry and meghan made their bombshell announcement. the child is due some time in the spring. the royal expert calls it an historic moment. >> she's an american, she's the first mixed race woman in the royal family. i think the queen will be absolutely thrilled. >> reporter: kensington palace says the couple first told the queen and their extended royal family a princess eugenieugenie wedding on friday. they were open about their desires to start a family, speaking on british television. >> something to talk about.
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>> children? >> not currently, no. no, of course, i think one step at a time. hopefully we'll start a family in the near future. >> reporter: near being the key word. the queen is said to be thrilled by the news. the couple are here for their first international royal visit to australia, fiji, tonga and new zealand, which is now raising health concerns because zika warnings. >> they have taken medical advice from doctors in the uk about the risk in tonga and they've decided on that medical advice they will carry on. nothing will change. >> reporter: you also have to worry about this other big concern, the sheer exhaustion. over the next 2 1/2 weeks, this couple will travel to 4 countries, 76 engagements. they're getting rest before their first official appearance tomorrow morning here outside the opera house, where they will make their first appearance before a very excited public.
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for those who are keeping count, this baby will be seventh in line to the throne. >> wow, jonathan vigliotti, in sydney, australia, thank you. >> we know women who are pregnant, they run marathons, they win the australian open, so it can be done. >> hopefully she won't have the morning sickness that kate had, right? >> we can actually do stuff while pregnant. she's 37, he's 34. i think it's great. great, great, great news. >> congrats to them. the top pediatric expert accuses the trump administration of putting children's health at risk. ahead, and only on "cbs this morning," how she says she was put on leave without warning. what happened when we tried to get answers good monday morning. critical fire weather conditions for this morning with a red flag warning. and until noon with the northbay and bay hills. extreme danger.
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80 for -- 80 for oakland, and today the warmest out of the extended forecast but so warm as we go to the work week and into
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a child who was not vaccinated is the first person to die from flu in florida this season. ahead, our dr. tara fnarula wil be here to break down some of the misconceptions about the risks and benefits of the flu vaccine. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." vaccine. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." now i'm doing more to lower my a1c. once daily tresiba® controls blood sugar for 24 hours for powerful a1c reduction. tresiba® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. don't share needles or insulin pens. don't reuse needles. the most common side effect is low blood sugar,
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good morning. 7:26 am. then 17,000 customers are waking up to no power. last month they shut off power to help minimize fire danger. and, they are announcing plans to combat the homeless crisis. and, they have them losing their homes. and, fremont street is open ahead of schedule. the transfer terminal remains closed as repairs remain closed. we'll have news updates throughout the day undercover platforms including our website.
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good morning. we are tracking a slow ride for drivers we do have a car that's blocking at least one lane as we are passing over. this looks like it is still causing delays. 41 minutes is how long it is taking drivers to go just to get over the 680. and, it is a 53 minute ride to san antonio. let's check in with mary. well, high fire danger this morning with a red flag warning in effect for the northbay and east bay hills until noon today. critical fire weather conditions and that will also help to hit us up. so middle 70s and en, d midshipman 80s and and. and we are so warm for the rest of the work week into the weekend.
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a lot of people happy in boston this morning after the red sox win? >> she's happy. >> i wasn't so happy. welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things you should know s mo north and south korean officials agreed to move forward on a project to reconnect railways and roads between the two countries. these routes have been cut off since fighting in the korean war ended 60 years ago. they have ussed ways to ent agreements at the summitnoer. ee sed the korean
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engagement in efforts to denuclearize north korea. premiums and deductibles set to rise slightly next year. the monthly premium that covers office visits and outpatient procedures will cost $135.50 in 2019. that's an increase from this year. experts suggest weighing all other health care options during this period before making a decision. snow is causing dangerous icy conditions as it blankets the rockies and high plains. up to a foot of snow covered roads and homes in wyoming, new mexico and colorado. some areas in new mexico could get a foot of snow by this afternoon. florida officials say a child is the first death in the state during this year's flu identified, tested positive for
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influenzccat vaccinated. it puts the spotlight on dangerous myths about the flu shot. the doctor is here to discuss this. >> what this is is a strong, clear message to parents about the importance of vaccination. this vaccine is safe, it is the most effective tool we have. and we know that of the 180 deaths last year, 80% were in kids who were unvaccinated. and a recent study showed that the vaccine has the power to reduce deaths in healthy children by about two-thirds. when you look at the number of kids vaccinated last year for the flu, it's about 60%. that falls short of the national goal of 80%. why is this? this survey pointed out a lot of misconceptions. 30% of parents thought it caused
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autism, 30% thought it was a conspiracy. 30% said it doesn't work and over half thought the flu vaccine could give their kids the flu. none of this stuff is true. it's important we deal with the science and the facts. parents should speak with their doctor if they have any questions. but every child over six months should be vaccinated. it should be done early, by the end of october. and if it doesn't match the strain, it can reduce set vthe severity of the flu and complications of the flu. officials said it's like wearing a seat belt. >> is it required or just recommended? >> this year it's recommended by the cdc, although the american pediatrics still request the shot over the mist. well, last night in a "60
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minutes minutes" interview, leslie stahl asked about separation of families which he halted in june. >> when you allow the parents to stay together, okay, when you allow that, then what happens is people are going to pour into our country. >> so are you going to go back to that? >> we're looking at a lot of things. really what we want to do is change the immigration laws because they're a laughingstock all over the world. >> i think you're saying it's under consideration. >> i want all the laws changed. there have to be consequences, leslie, for coming into our country illegally. >> arrested migrant families at the border, which have been climbing all year, surged after the administration ended family separation. there were nearly 13,000 arrests in august. that's almost triple the amount in the same month last year. immigration and customs enforcement says its border region detention facilities are so overwhelmed, most migrants are being processed and released. mireya villarreal is in arizona.
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good morning. >> reporter: good morning. border agents are telling us they're seeing larger family units crossing the border here in arizona. some groups as large as three dozen people coming here. some of these groups are actually seeking them out, turning themselves in and then asking for asylum. the centers here in arizona are so overwhelmed, the government is now relying on churches to help house migrants. one pastor told us late last week 800 people were brought to the tucson area in one day. the i.c.e. field office in tucson has seen a 51% increase in family apprehensions compared to this time last year. a migrant mother we spoke to said she decided to cross the border with her son after they ended the separation policy. many of these people have actually been brought to the u.s. by smugglers. border patrol said these smugglers are taking advantage of the change in policy to prey on vulnerable, would-be
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migrants, coaching many of them on what to say or what to do to gain asylum in the u.s. these families still have to go to federal court on their immigration proceedings, but there's 2,070 arrests made since the beginning of the year, so it will be a while before these cases are closed. >> mireya, thank you, good reporting. there are reports, too, that people migrating here are listening to what could happen to their families. >> they want you to listen and they want it to be a deterrent and now they're thinking not so much. a top television official said she was blindsided when the epa put her on leave. she speaks out about how she was suddenly sidelined and why she's worried kids will no longer have the same protections from poisons. will no longer have the same protection from poison.
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official for the epa who was suddenly put on administrative
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leave is now speaking out only on "cbis morning." dr. ruth edack in september. leaders said it was about her leadership but did not provide details. now she's worried about the direction of the epa. good morning. >> good morning. news about her being put on leave shocked, stunned and worried whether or not the epa truly wanted to have regulations that protect children. >> our message is no longer welcome. the message that children are not little adults and they need special protections is not welcome. >> reporter: making sure children are protected from environmental toxins has been dr. ruth etzel's job at the epa. she's the nation's top epa expert, author of children's books on environmental health. >> your job is to go to the epa and say, look, this regulation
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you're considering, you need to know how it impacts children. >> exactly. i often think of my office as the children's conscience. we're kind of nagging them. is this okay for children? are you sure this is okay for children? >> reporter: it seemed that those above her no longer wanted her advice. her monthly meetings to advise the epa administrator were abruptly halted. >> reporter: so you had no one-on-one meetings with scott pruitt and no one-on-one meetings with mr. wheeler? >> not one. >> reporter: she said this was launched after the flint water crisis stalled, with one company brought in by the new administration telling her anything brought in with regulations wouldn't fly. >> my sense is the government has absolutely no intention of taking any actions towards seriously changing lead in
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children's environment. >> reporter: what does that mean for the kids? >> it basically means that our kids will continue to be poisoned. it basically means that kids are disposable. they don't matter. >> reporter: through it all, she says, she kept pushing until about three weeks ago, when an official came into her office. >> my boss, who is the deputy chief of staff, walked in and handed me a piece of paper and said, i'm putting you on administrative leave. and i almost fell off of my chair. i said, what's this about? and she wouldn't say. >> reporter: did you have any idea what was happening or why it was happening? >> none whatsoever. >> reporter: did you have any warning? >> no. >> reporter: nothing? >> nothing. >> reporter: in a letter to epa, over 120 environmental and health organizations expressed their great concern, saying by placing dr. etzel on leave, the epa has sent a signal that children's health is not a priority for the agency.
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so at a meeting last week, we approached epa officials. acting deputy chief of staff helen wooden-aguilar is the person dr. etzel says came into her office that day. >> reporter: why was she not told the reasons she was put on leave? >> unfortunately, i can't comment on that. >> reporter: we also asked her boss, chief of operations, henry darwin, the man right under administrator andy wheeler. >> it's inappropriate for me to talk about these issues. >> reporter: why is dr. etzel on administrative leave? >> like i said, it's inappropriate for me to talk about these issues. >> reporter: but why was she put on administrative leave? >> do you want me to say it againment again? i can't comment on these issues. >> reporter: dr. etzel says it's time to speak up. >> this is totally wrong. the only people i report to are mothers and fathers and
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communities in the united states, and if epa won't let me tell about how children are being poisoned, i'll just tell the mothers and fathers directly. i have that right whether or not epa wants me on their staff. >> reporter: what if they come up later and say, well, you did these things wrong? >> if i did, i'll say okay. if i didn't, i'll say i didn't. but i don't know what the allegation is, so it's very hard to know. but basically i'm a straight shooter. i'm transparent. so if i make a mistake, i own it. >> dr. etzel made it clear to us she's speaking as a pediatrician, not an epa official. they said dr. etzel was placed on leave to give the agency the opportunity to review allegations about the director's leadership at the office. but dr. etzel has said she was
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never made aware of any allegations. the epa insists it's protecting children and that this won't affect dr. etzel's work. >> we can't suddenly unhear this, and as a parent i would be very concerned about what's happening. >> she is clearly, in my view, looking out for the health and welfare of children. >> she says if she's wrong, she will own that, too. >> she's worked in public health for 30 years, including at the world health organization as professor. i'm sure she'll be hearing from a lot of parents after that. >> 120 people on that letter. >> and her former boss. republican senator been sasse thinks our >>good monday morning. critical fire weather conditions with a red flag warning in effect until noon the north bay and east hills.
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so extreme fire dangers watching that closely for you. it is sunny and warm. middle 70s in san francisco, 80 as well as for fremont, mountain view, 87 for a high for you. and 85 for concord as well. still warm for the rest of the work week. this is stonington, maine, a town where almost half the population is self-employed. lobster fisherman is the lifeblood of this town. by 2030, half of america may take after stonington, self-employed and without employer benefits. we haven't had any sort of benefit plans and we're trying to figure that out now. if i had had a little advice back then, i'd be in a different boat today, for sure. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges.
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. welcome back this morning. here's a look at some of the headlines. they report that there are calls to resign. and, commissioner after he showed games from a hunting trip. blake fisher and his wife legally shot 14 animals including a family of baboons, a giraffe and a leopard. he said he didn't do anything illegal, unethical, or immoral. the governor's office tells cbs news the governor is concerned and is investigating. >> you're right, they're graphic and kind of gross. "the boston globe" reports elizabeth warren released dna test results that reportedly show that her great, great, great grandmother was at least partially native american. they say the analysis provides strong evidence that warren had a native american in her family tree six to ten generations ago. president trump has mocked
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warren's claims that she's of native american decent calling her polka honor the tus. >> and news week reports a bottle of wine sold for $558,000 becoming the most expensive in the world. the burgundy wine was sold saturday at a sotheby's auction in new york. it was one of only 600 and came from a top producer in france. ahead we'll take you to antarctica with how a warming know. >> changing coa-- glow is chang coastlines around the world. now. >> -- glow is changing coastlines around the world. ow. >> -- glow is changing coastlines around the world. w. >> -- glow is changing coastlines around the world. . >> -- glow is changing coastlines around the world. -- glow is changing coastlines
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. we've hadfor a long time.is in san francisco and half-measures haven't fixed it. homelessness doesn't just hurt homeless people. it hurts all of us. that's why we're all voting "yes" on c. the plan is paid for by corporations that just got a massive tax break. it's time for them to give back by helping all of us to fix our homeless crisis. with more affordable housing... expanded mental-health services...
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clean restrooms and safe shelters. vote "yes" on c. it helps all of us. than 17-thousand pg&e customers in sonoma.. napa.. and lake co deac 7:56 am. the power is still out for more than 7000 customers in sonoma. and, your utility deactivated the power lines due to the high fire danger. and, several schools will not be open because of the power outages. and, it is unified school district and unified school district as well. starting tonight 8 pm until 4 am, several will be closed as a pretty is as they replace seals. news updates throughout the day.
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good morning it is 7:57 am. and we're tracking a couple of problems for folks ma way over to the bay bridge. and, then the red, 36 minutes, to the 38. in a live look at have a 24 right near telegraph. slow going if you're heading westbound. we are tracking a new problem around 980. that has one lane block. that is the backup that is stretching from that. definitely scene delays and a crash blocking that on-ramp. let's check in with mary on that. we have a live look at our salesforce power camera. you can see the flags a whipping in the wind this morning. a high fire danger with a red flag warning. extreme fire danger we are going to see above average temperatures, plenty of sunshine today and that
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continues through the work week and into the weekend. have a great day.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's monday, october 15, 2018. welcome back to cbs "this morning." ahead, more from president trump on "60 minutes." why last night's interview raised questions about his defense secretary, retired general james mattis. plus, we go to antarctica where a nasa unit is searching to discover the true extent of climate change. first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. in his first "60 minutes" interview from the white house, president trump gives his performance high marks, especially on north korea. >> i want to read you his
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had his half brother assassinated, slave labor, public executions. this is the guy you love? >> i know all these things. i'm not a baby. turkey and saudi arabia are expected to conduct a joint inspection on monday. of it.uldn'tt whole their narratives are in contrast. i think information needs to be shared with us and shared with us soon. hillary clinton knows more than perhaps anyone about what it's like to be a woman in politics. we sat down to talk about why this year's crop of female candidates may still feel like they're running uphill. talk about a way to kick off your first overseas tour. this baby will be seventh in line to the throne. a new report claims taylor swift's instagram post endorsing midterm candidates may have led to over 64,000 young people registering to vote. which is impressive until you remember that wendy's g s million people to vote for whichburg kewhich burger can get it?
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[ laughter ] >> i don't remember that campaign. >> sweeping the nation. >> john dickerson and norah o'donnell. they're here, too. james mattis left on a trip to vietnam and singapore with president trump raising new speculation that mattis could be the next senior official to step down. now the president said that even though he and mattis have clashed on a number of issues, they have a good relationship. >> you have said this administration is like a smooth-run magazine, yet we keep hearing the white house is in chaos. >> it's so false. it's fake news. i'm changing things around. i have people on standby that will be phenomenal. they'll come into the administration, they'll be phenomenon. >> more people are going to go? >> yeah, other people will go, sure. >> so many people.
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you have kind of a record of on turnover. >> i think i have a great cabinet. there are people i'm not happy with. >> who are you not happy with? >> i don't want to say that. >> come on. >> i don't want to say that. but i have people i'm not thrilled with and others i'm beyond thrilled with. >> what about general mattis? is he going to leave? >> i don't know, he hasn't told me. i have a great relationship with him. >> do you want him to leave? >> it could be he is. i think he's sort of a democrat if you want to know the truth. but general mattis is a good gygy guy. at some point everybody leaves. people leave. >> when asked if mattis had explained nato to him, the president said "i think i know more about it than he does." a pentagon spokesman issued a statement? response to the president's remarks saying secretary mattis is laser focused on doing his job -- ensuring the u.s. military remains the most lethal
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force on the planet". if there's one thing most americans agree on, it's that politics are increasingly hostile. a new cbs news battleground tracker poll found 84% of registered voters in competitive districts think the tone and civility of politics are getting worse. republican senator ben sasse of nebraska thinks it's part of a larger problem. in his new book "them, why we hate each other and how to heal" sasse says the lost of community has helped to widen the political divide. >> 40% of the public thinks the party is not just wrong but evil. >> you write about this unprecedented upheaval. >> the civil war was bad but since then this is terrible.
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politics is filling a void of the hollowi natural local traditional tribes. people understood family, shared vocation, workplace, neighborhood, were the core places where your identity was found. >> and you have data to back this, not just your opinion. >> absolutely. >> the size of homes. >> so in the last 50 years, average size of a new home in america has grown 350% and yet there's a lot of data that shows if your house gets farther and farther from your neighbors you're less likely to know the person who lives two doors from you. that's statistically correlated with being happy. a bigger square footage house doesn't make you happier. >> we have less friends. you say we're living through a crisis and we're literally dying of despair. we have less friends, we're not doing as much with each other and to each other. loneliness you said is a huge problem. >> at the nih, researchers see loneliness as the number one
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public health sis in america. the average american in 1990 had 3.2 friends. today 1.8.40% ofeople have eith or one confidante. that hurts. >> and a lot of the confidante is their phone. there's no doubt we're seeing a shift in social norms. we're also seeing a shift n political norms as well and your republican colleagues, senator marco rubio, said he doesn't think we can go back to the way things were. do you agree with that? >> i think we're headed toward a deeper darker tribal place for a time. the question is how -- i named this book "them" because we act like political differences are sort of core anti-identities for people. until you have things that you're for first you won't figure out what we're doing together in politics. >> politics are important but not the first thing. certainly not the only thing. our politics arefere looking to find grand meeting there because they're not reflecting well on core underminers of happiness.
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>> to the extent supreme filled this hole with politics, watching it on tv all the time there could be more many examples of you and your colleagues reaching out to each other saying i won't treat you like a person who has only the worst motive. i won't call you evil, i won't say that your perhaps wigenuine held view is a scheme to keep you in office. >> well said. you want to give us a pep talk at the senate. >> no, i've got my own problems with pride and humility. >> we do have a problem right now where the senate is being swallowed hole by cable tv news. there's a bunch of people who instead of seeing the senate as a place you go to from the community where your identity is rooted, where your friends are, where you're raising kids next toho mayif segregating our neighborhood so you don't live next to people who disagree with you on politics. >> but when you look at the big picture you say most people aren't watching pol because you take on the media,
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too. so when we hear anyone attack the media in general as opposed to merely pushing back we should look critically at them and their behavior. who are you talking about, senator sass? >> pretty much everybody in washington but maybe the politicians at the top in washington are particularly good at trying to just demonize. there's a lot wrong with the media and that's not beating up on the four people in this room. this is about which economic incentives and the way we consume media. it's not economically profitable for a media outlet to try to speak to 70% of america. that isn't how we consume. in the 1950s, 70% of households were watching "i love lucy." it wasn't important content but it was shared. in the last 15 years the most watched programming in america 2014 so there's real economic incentives to try to just speak to the 1% of the public that already agrees with you. >> are your colleagues listening to you to be better, do better? it doesn't seem so?
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>> we don't listen all that well in washington. i'm one of eight people out of 100 in the senate who's never been a politician before so i'm new this-to-this place. we should listen more than we talk. when i'm home i find the vast majority of people don't want politics to be the center of meaning, they want to get a bunch of pragmatic stuff done. we need to think about job retraining for an age of work disruption that is coming at a faster and faster pace but you don't want to find good and evil in politics and too many people in the cable news tribes and political parties think anti-tribes are enough to sustain them. i think most americans differ. >> all right. you tweeted about leaving the republican party. we're going to be watching. >> thanks for having me. [ laughter ] >> let's talk more about that. [ laughter ] >> thank you very much. >> what's the book called? >> "them, why we hate each other and how to heal."
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coming up, dozens of people urulsly survived thea florida wrath of hurricane michael. how one good monday morning to you. critical fire weather conditions this morning with a red flag warning in effect until 12:00 noon. sunny and warm conditions through the day with mid 70s in san francisco and mountain view is 85. today the warmest out of the extended forecast but still warm through the workweek and into the weekend. ol
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police in savannah,hing f t people who defaced a historic
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monument by adding googly eyes. city officials posted pictures last week of the new eye wear on the statue of revolutionary war hero jenna than y'all green. the 50-foot monument wasn't seriously damaged. savannah officials say it may look funny but harming our historic monument is no laughing matter, in fact, it's a crime. >> when you look at that, you can't go "that's pretty damn funny". >> and also eat your vegetables! much more news ahead. nasa is seeing the big picture of climate change. ahead, we'll take you aboard to see how the effects are being felt around the world. plus, how a painting in the white house that was seen in the "60 minutes" interview puts president trump in a club with some of the greatest leaders in history. and more of our interview
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with music icon, she's a legend, that tina turner. the message about stwlabout sex was trying to send with her performances. not cool. freezing away fat cells with coolsculpting? now that's cool! coolsculpting safely freezes and removes fat cells with little or no downtime. and no surgery. results and patient experience may vary. some common side effects include temporary numbness, discomfort, and swelling. ask your doctor if coolsculpting is right for you. and visit coolsculpting.com today for your chance to win a free treatment. and visit coolsculpting.com constipation until my doctor direcommended miralax.my stimulant laxatives forcefully stimulate the nerves in your colon. miralax works with the water in your body, unblocking your system naturally. miralax. now available in single serve mix-in pax.
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♪ ice ice ♪ baby last night on ♪ ice ice baby . last night on "60 minutes" president trump expressed doubt about global warming. nasa is winding down it's operation ice bridge. they fly manes to antarctica to study ice health. in the latest installment of our "climate diaries" series. >> good morning from the southern tip of south america and a place with a 500 year history of scientific
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exploration. standing on a replica of the ship that migellin used. but this area has never seen anything quite like what nasa is doing now. >> it can seem like flying across the surface of a distant frozen planet that you might expect from nasa. but this flight is just 1500 feet above the most remote place on earth, antarctica where the frozen wastes are becoming less frozen all of the time. as one mission scientist says, they're not here for the views. >> because humanity, the nation, and the race, we need to know what is happening to the climate and specifically the sea level. a lot of what is happening at
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sea level starts at the polls. the ice is liberated or sequestered, it is either frozen or melted. >> for a decade this time of year nasa has been flying to antarctica. >> 6:15 p.m., another 25 minutes. now using a 50-year-old dc 8 jammed with high-tech equipment and highly trained scientists. the world's coldest place. it may look just like snow and ice, but this plane can see more than the eye can see. it has lasers, radars, a gravity sensor that can map the seabed. >> i like to think about what we do in a simplified manner as just taking a yardstick to the ice year after year. >> it is finding less ice and the ice melting is speeding up. research stations on the ground can see the ice loss, but to get
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the big picture, you have to get up here says mission chief scientist joel mcgregor. >> the ice sheet is discharging two olympic sized swimming pools worth of ice into the ocean every second. >> it could cause six inches of sea level rise this century. >> that is a clear concern for coastal communities, not just the united states, but coastal countries around the world. >> why has the melting increased? that is the ice sheet down there, warming seas turned a thick solid sheet of ice attached to the coast into a collection of icebergs to a thin film of ice. it has allowed the glacier behind it to go into the ocean twice as wickquickly.
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>> the cork is under the bottle and the ice can accelerate for awhile. >> what used to seem so frozen and permanent is now fluid and changing fast. >> after the science, of course, comes the politics. the question for the scientists is anybody listening? that is the subject of the next series of climate diaries, gale, that we will do tomorrow. >> thank you, mark phillips. the creator of transparent, an active participant in the times up movement. we'll get a look at her new m memoir coming up. kms
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california's public schools rank 44th in the nation. 44th. i'm marshall tuck, i'm a public-school parent, and i know we can do better. in the public schools i led, we got more funding into our classrooms, supported our teachers, and we raised graduation rates by 60%. that's why president obama's education secretary endorses me. we've done it before. now, let's do it for every public-school student in california. i'm marshall tuck. i'm running for state superintendent. profited millions from tobacco, oil, and wall street. as a rich developer, she violated clean water laws. now she's trying to buy this election. the lt. governor's office isn't for sale. i'm dr. ed hernandez. as state senator, i worked across party lines. held drug corporations accountable. invested in schools and middle-class jobs.
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our campaign's people powered by firefighters, teachers and nurses. because i'll put you first - not big money. . that is tina turner. but for a minute i thought that was gayle. >> singing great tina turner
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says she didn't perform for the men in the audiences, but the women. gayle in particular. thousands of people in the north bay are without power as this is a kpix 5 morning update. >> good morning. i am michelle griego. thousands of people in the north bay are without power as emergency officials take action to reduce the risk of wildfires with still no word on when power will be restored. police are still looking for the driver involved in a crash into a vacation home. electric scooters returning to san francisco. skipped and skip were chosen out of 12 companies who applied for the permits. we will have news updates throughout the day on our
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website at www.kpix.com. these aren't just pancakes, well, yes they're pancakes but they're more than pancakes. they're a pancake experience. introducing the new craft pancake lineup from denny's.
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good morning. we are tracking a slow ride along the peninsula along northbound 101. this is near hillsdale but just a little farther north you will be tapping the brakes with an accident right near broadway. speeds dip below 20 miles per hour and it is 30 minute from what a side road up to sfo and across the san mateo bridge it is red across from hayward. it is a mess for oakland right now
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with 42 minutes from 238 toward the maze. westbound 24 you will be in for some slowdowns and a crash still blocking two lanes with backups at the bay bridge toll plaza. high fire danger this morning with a red flag warning in effect until 12:00 noon today due to the extreme fire danger. it is dry winds and they will also heat us up. above-average temperatures through the afternoon with plenty of sun and mid 70s in san francisco and 85 in napa and livermore. it is one of the warmer spots through the afternoon pick today the warmest side but still warm
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through the work week and into the weekend. l reporting, any
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time, anywhere.eporting, any welcome back to cbs this morning. it's time to show you some this mog's welcome back to cbs this morning. it is time to show you some headlines. a utility company shut off power to 5900 customers in california. red flag warnings returned to the region. strong winds were forecast last night and many of california's most destructive fires were attributed to powerlines that sparked wild fires in extreme winds. pacific gast and eric ss usa today reports on the
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ways that arms are seats. the average american has gained about 15 pounds in the last decade. they have cut about six inches of seat space. they have offered vouchers for customers that have complained of uncomfortable seats. and a new painting in the white house. it shows president trump drinking a indict coke with ab -- abe lincoln, chester archer. a screen shot of the moment went viral. it was done by andy thomas. a congregation in florida fe as the walls of their church collapsed aroundthem.
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25 members took shelter in the as michael barr reeled ashore l week. this is what the church looked like a week before the storm. we are joined now from panama city where the church refused to shut their doors to those in need. good morning. good morning you see that the welcome sign was blown out, there is caution tape all around this church. when you look at how it was constructed, we're talking layers and layers of bricks that could not withstand the strength of that category 4 hurricane. yesterday when the pastor held service outside, he told his members that the church is not the rubble behind us, but it is us. >>. amazing grace, how sweet the sound. >> it was an emotional service, and for many members, this church was like aecond me.
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pa john blunt recorded this video moments after the walls were ripped away. miraculously everyone in the damaged church survived including a 91-year-old woman that took shelter in a closet. >> i was praying for life. >> his wife, caroline that evacuated, learned about what happened on facebook. >> you didn't know if your husband was alive. >> no. >> he called me about two hours after that and he just said i'm okay. the sanctuary is gone, but i'm okay. >> this is our change chsanctua the tomorrow. >> half of the building is now gone, but right in the center on top of a podium, the church bible appears to have weathered the storm sdplp in some the church wo,dibu supplies to those in need like the rest of
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panama city, they plan to rebuild, but blunt says he needs god's help to do god's work. >> the building needs to be fixed but the people need us right now, it's a good time right now to be the church. >> st. andrew has been in this community since 1896 but this building was constructed in 1955. the members, about 300, were definitely close before the storm hit. he says now they're even closer as you can imagine. everyone just leaning on each other, gayle. >> thank you very much, pictures really tell the story there. thank you, the ground breaking tv show "transparent" changing our understanding of gender identity. jill soloway shares her journey to identifying as nonbianary.
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she also talks about the impact of her father coming out as being transgender. >> i have to confess, you're the first nonbianary person we have had at the table. you said you grew up a heterosex woman and when your father came out as transgender, you started to change. the word trans means bridge. people are familiar with going from one to the other. some people stay onare, i descr
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people as sort of male, sort of female, it kind of changing. and hearing she and her is okay, but they and them -- i stumbled saying their memoir, what is wrong with saying her, he, she. >> some people feel like the word she describes somebody that is female or someone that is fem or female presenting. there is expectations around she that don't feel resonant with she. it is like a third gender. >> the book is called she wants it, not referring to you then, who is it referring to. >> it is a little referring to me because i have been a she my whole life. and the book is about desire.
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when i was in my early i wrote "she wants it." i was thinking about things like consent and gender. are women less trusted than men when it comes to consent. when you become a director, it is about desire, wanting, wanting, wanting. i want this camera, this set, these actors, but the phrase she wants it is afraid that a man might say to another to offend a woman. it could mean "she got what she wanted." >> you could wonder if it is fix or reality. you're writing about a character, but it is about your life. >> yes, my television making is an art to process my own reality. >> and do you have people that say thank god, she gets it, i am
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understood. >> i get people that say thank god, you're saying and doing these things because it allows me to see versions of myself that are possible. >> people feel seen, i love that expression. >> me, too. >> finally feel seen. >> you said you wrote "transparent" to come out and change the world. >> yeah, when my parent came out, it changed my world, and i thought if i could write something quick enough to my parent felt safe in the world. getting into an elevator, or a taxi cab, or they could say i have seen "transparent," i understand. >> do you have people asking you questions all of the time? >> yeah, a simple thing is that the bianary is not that dependent in all of those ways. it will help us get through the
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next fade of humanity. >> you are with amazon, the shopping place where i buy my things, but amazon took this on because they saw something that other people do not see. >> yeah, it is an amazing place for innovation. i remember being here with jeff besos a few years ago and saying wow, being able to put television and content together with the services they provide and the stuff they sell is a new thing. >> and the star, jeffrey tambour has to leave the show because of allegations associated with the me too movement. how do you pivot when the whole show was basically based on the coming out. >> yeah, that's why we're hoping that people will tune in for our fifth and final season that will be a moving musical. i think we're pivoting in a way to help people transition in a way that can be t charges, that
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is important to say. jill, thank you, i have so many questions, i'm glad that we could ask them and you not think we're stupid with two os. >> i'm really happy to be that person, i want to bring some fun to the conversation as well. >> thank you, jill soloway. "she wants is" goes on sale tomorrow. and why tina turner decided to move to switzerland. she xfinity xfi.
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♪ oh, ♪ what's love got to do, got to do with it ♪ look at her, that was tina turner singing her number one hit "what's love got to do with it." she won eight grammys for that number and other hits like "proud mary." we'll have more on our interview with her coming up. we went to talk to her about her new memoir. she says she has a lot left to
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stage since she left the stage nine years ago. >> do you miss performing? >> no. >> i became tired of it. it was just traveling all of the time, never being at home. when i retired i said enough of tina. i don't want to hear any more, i want to retire. i want to go in my garden, i want to shop, i want to do thing that people that are not a star do. >> after more than 50 years in the spotlight, tina turner gave up her u.s. passport to call switzerland her home. >> they love me here, i'm not a diva. >> you're not? >> no, i am not, and i never wanted to be. i know them, i met some of them and i move the other way. >> do you miss living in the united states? >> no, when i lived in the states, they didn't give me the freedom that the other countries gave me. m mya angelo came to me at one of
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oprah's gathering, and i said many countries didn't like me, and she said no, they didn't like ike. in 2007, ike died of a drug overdose. >> what did you feel when he died? >> i just didn't feel anything. i didn't know when he would show up, and when he died, it was like okay, now he is ne>> tina love with german record producer back in 1985. they got married five years ago. >> the first time you see him, you knew this was something, somebody special, what was it? >> it was a body reaction. i think it was my heart beat, and i was shaking, and he was
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very young then, he was only 30 years old. i think i was probably starting to age, but i was still tina with the big hair and i thought oh my gosh, what a good looking man. i didn't think he was young or i was old, at that moment i just felt love. >> now at the age of 78, tina details that love story in her new memoir. she also reveals the philosophies that have guided her one of a kind career. >> you write in the book that you are sexy wouithout being sexual, what does that mean? >> what i was trying to say then, on the stage, i was, i implied sexuality without being sexy with the body. you never saw any dance movement provocative, provoking. >> you also say you didn't play for the men in the audience, you
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played for the women which i thought was interesting. >> when the women sat there and gave me a side look they didn't like me because i was attractive for the men i think at that time. so i thought i have to find out how to get the women on my side. >> you wanted them to know i don't want your man. >> yeah, i was tryo say to them in my performance that i'm here for you. i'm here not just for the men. >> tina, i have to say something about the legs. i would sit there with my mouth open looking at your legs going "good lord." >> i think it was the dress, the length of the dress and the shoes that made a good leg. >> i could have put on that shoe and that dre and they would have said "get off of the stage." >> she is doing fine, she has had intestinal cancer, she had to have a kidney transplant, she
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had a stroke, irwin, her husband who is 16 years younger than her, at first she said she had a little trepidation, he donated a kidney to her. she said no no, you're young, and he said i don't have a life without you. she very happy and they're doing great. tina turner is coming to broadway and it will be tina turner the musical. it is knockout good. >> for someone who went through all of that to have illumination from within. >> that's right, and she looks radiant, doesn't she? >> on today's pod cast, we hear from tom morelo and his
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california's public schools rank 44th in the nation. 44th. i'm marshall tuck, i'm a public-school parent, and i know we can do better. in the public schools i led,
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we got more funding into our classrooms, supported our teachers, and we raised graduation rates by 60%. that's why president obama's education secretary endorses me. we've done it before. now, let's do it for every public-school student in california. i'm marshall tuck. i'm running for state superintendent. minutes can mean the difference between life and death. proposition 11 saves lives by ensuring medical care is not delayed in an emergency. proposition 11 establishes into law the longstanding industry practice of paying emts and paramedics to remain on-call during breaks and requires they receive fema level training and active shooters and natural disasters. vote yes on 11 to ensure 911 emergency care is there when you or your love one need it.
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that does it for us. be sure
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than 17-thousand pg&e customers this is a kpix 5 morning update. >> good morning, right now the power is still out for more than 17,000 pge and customers in sonoma, napa and lake counties, the utility activated the power outage because of high fire danger. >> today libby schaaf and keuzer permanente officials are going to discuss people losing their homes. the lumbar street project will make numerous improvement ts. we have news updates throughout the day so go to our platforms
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including kpix.com tuck those shirts in, fellas. come on.
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you only have one chance to make a first impression. progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents, but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. -whoa! the club is rockin'! good morning we are tracking a slow ride heading to the north bay 101 near highway 12, we are seeing a back up. slow going across the richmond san rafael bridge. heading across the golden gate
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bridge, headlights making your way into san francisco, east shore freeway, 40 minutes, minutes at carlson to the maze. lets check in with mary on the forecast. we have a high fire danger with the red flag warnings in effect for the north bay and east by hills through the morning and until noon, lower relative humidity levels, below 10% and extreme fire danger as we head through the day. we are going to see the winds easing later but we are still looking at dry relative humidity levels throughout the day and for the next several days so the fire dawning not over yet. day time highs above aver year, mid 70s for san francisco, san jose, mid 80s, concord and livermore
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and fairfield about stay warm as we we head through the work week
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wayne: whoo! oh, snap! jonathan: say what? - let's make a deal, wayne! wayne: you're going to tokyo. tiffany: more cars! jonathan: a new jaguar! - big deal! wayne: $75,000! who wants some cash? - big deal of the day! wayne: y'all ready for season ten? let's go! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady, thanks for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? who wants to make a deal? let's see. the magician, come on over, magician. everybody else, have a seat, have a seat, have a seat. kathryn, welcome to the show. how are you, kathryn? - hi, wayne, nice to meet you. wayne: welcome to the show.

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