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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  December 10, 2018 3:00am-3:59am PST

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the north carolina mountains get buried under a foot and a half of snow. also tonight the incoming chairman of the house judiciary et committee says federal prosecutors have outlined impeachable offenses against president trump. >> they were committed in the service of fraudulent office. >> a colorado mother missing since thanksgiving. her cell phone last sent a signal 800 miles from home. >> she has a 1-year-old child. she wouldn't just leave her. kyle r murray wins the heisman trophy. hours later his homophobic twts>> and mdog's
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compsh he grde dung california's wordfire. >> welcome to the overnight news. we begin this morning with a flurry of plilt call headlines. adam schiff said on face the nation president trump could face jail time after federal prosecutors suggested the president directed illegal payments during his campaign. the president this weekend announced another high level departure from his administration. the chief of staff john kelly will be out by the end of the year. this comes as washington awaits more details emerging from robert mueller's russia investigation. >> democrat adam schiff expected to chair the house intelligence
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committee next year said president trump may be guilty of felonyerlawyer. federal prosecutors in new esidenal elect in and at the 6 direction of president trump. referred to as individual one. >> there's a real prospect on the day donald trump leaves office the justice department may indict him. >> there's no reason to not standby anybody at this moment. >> republicans like marco rubio are withholding judgment. >> these things are to be taken seriously and i would caution everyone to wait until this plays out. >> the president was asked about the development on saturday. >> as far as the report that we see according to everybody i have spoken to, i have not read it. there's absolutely no lewith soe running for president trying to build a hotel somewhere. >> reporter:
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derero other allegations emerging from the investigation. that during the election cohen worked with candidate trump and russian nationals on a potential hotel in russia describe d as te moscow project. >> now if you're asking and saying i will give you something in exchange for letting us build a hotel, that would be wrong. but i haven't heard any evidence of that. >> reporter: the recent filings disclose russia offering political synergy to the trump campaign as early as november 2015 proposing a meeting between trump and vladimir putin. while another memo charges paul manafort, the former chairman, with lying. as president trump faces increasing pressure from multiple investigations, he's also changing his chief of staff. ancing general john kelly will leave his post before the beginning of next year one of the leading contenders to et are place kelly has decided
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he will not take on the new role. a replacement is expected to be announced the end of this year. >> thank you. president trump on twitter today took aim at former fbi director james comey. accusing him of lying to law k lawmakers during his closed door testimony on friday. the president added, this whole deal is a rigged fraud. new details on comey's trip to capitol hill. >> the hearing was described as contentious at times. republicans were frustrated because an fbi attorney instr t instructed comey not to answer many of the yes, sir. among the notable revelations when they launched then counterintelligence investigation in july 2016, the trump campaign itself was not under investigation but instead it was launched based on the activities of four americans to see if they were working with the russians to influence the 2016 election.
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comey did not get into who those four americans are, but we know that trump campaign foreign policy advisers george papadopoulos had attracted suspicion. republicans were hoping for more revealing information about comey's role in the clinton e-mail server investigation, which comey initially wanted in a public setting rather than behind closed doors. >> when you read the transcript, we're talking about hillary clinton's e-mails. i'm not sure we need to do this at all. >> oklahomay told lawmakers he didn't believe firing mueller alone would be enough to derail the investigation. he's expected back on capitol hill later on this month. >> jeff, thanks. said today the u.s. intends to continue supporting saudi arabia's military interests in yemen. a nation torn apart by four
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years of civil war. some u.s. senators want to pull that support after the killiof l khashoggi. elizabeth palmer is the only u.s. network correspondent inside yemen and reports tonight from ai den. >> it's a long way from aden, but there's plenty of soldiers around. they help to keep things stable here. enough for life to resume. the government is quick to thank saudi arabia for helping win after they lost it three years ago. the prime minister. >> the darkest moments of 2015, the saudis back us so yemen cannot be in chaos. >> reporter: but to do it, saudi arabia waged and is still waging a ruthless bombing campaign against the houthis, often with american weapons. and there's no way to know how
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many civilians it's killed. >> the americans are packing away from the saudis in the wake of the murder of jamal khashoggi. is that going to hurt you? because if saudi arabia becomes toxic for america, then yemen does too. >> yemen is important country. if u.s. wants to stand with yemen, they should decide it's important to have a relation with the u.s. for decades. >> reporter: america's support in this war for saudi arabia will come town to a political fight in washington. meanwhile, the casualties are mounting as many as 85,000 children dead. 2 million people on the run and 40 million facing extreme hunger. elizabeth palmer, cbs news, aide b. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. california phones offers free specialized phones... like cordless phones.
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or call during business hours. a major snowstorm buried parts of north carolina and virginia this weekend. in the blue ridge mountains and nearby foothill, the snow is knee deep and the roads are a mess. the storm is still pushing through the region tonight. meg oliver is there. >> reporter: a snowstorm packing freezing rain, sleet and strong winds blasted across the south. a winter wonderland arriving early before the end of fall. >> enjoy the beauty, but respect the danger. >> reporter: governor kocooper told residents that more freezing temperatures and snow are coming. >> don't put your life and the lives of first responders at risk by getting out on roads
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covered withsnow and ice. >> reporter: north carolina, oklahoma and virginia have all declared states of emergency. >> have you ever seen the roads that bad? >> no. >> reporter: mike richie has been stranded on i-40 east outside of ashville since starred night. >> conditions were terrible. that's why we had to pull over. i just called work and told him and he's like you guys got to keep moving. i said, we couldn't. there's no way. >> reporter: in raleigh more treacherous conditions. this big rig jackknifed on interstate 85. over 1,000 flights were cancelled due to the storm levering passengers stranded at the raleigh airport. and in greensboro, cars were tranded on the highway with near zero visibility on the roads. over 2,000 city trucks are clearing more than 5,000 miles of highways and roads in hazardous conditions. residents are staying home and digging out. the heaviest snow fell in areas around ashville, north carolina, with more than a foot of snow
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here in the mountains. >> the storm so bad in south carolina even a church kept their doors closed. >> this is sunday morning. what you see is nobody there because the church is closed today. that sends a pretty strong message. >> the storm isn't over. forecasters are predicting several more inches of snow and with freezing conditions overnight the main concern is icy driving conditions in the morning. >> meg, thanks. lisa meadows is tracking the storm in our minneapolis station. what's the latest, lisa? >> we have already seen a foot and a half of snow from the system but it's not done yet. it will drop more snow, especially in north carolina and virginia. those it spots underneath this winter storm warning until monday morning. you can see the bulk of the state of virginia and eastern kentucky and tennessee underneath this winter storm
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warning. we do anticipate travel impacts. also looking at possible power outages here. here in the purple is where we're indicating the potential of more snowfall, but the warmer part in the pink is wet snow or even sleet causing some slick roadwa roadways. this is overnight tonight and as we go into tomorrow morning. now watch the morning commute time frame for the carolinas looking at wet snowfall or rain possible once you geter off to the east out toward the coast. we're going to continue with this until the storm moves out into the atlantic, but it won't do so until we head into monday afternoon. so more than likely looking at these travel impacts continuing not just tonight but also for tomorrow morning. we could still add another half a foot of snowfall in locations including out into virginia and also looking for the out into north carolina. >> thank you. a nationwide search underway for a mother from colorado who
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has been missing since thanksgiving. >> reporter: for more than two weeks, no one has seen or heard from 29-year-old kelsey barrett. one of the last places the young mother was seen on thanksgiving day at a safeway in woodland park, colorado. >> if she's out there and doesn't want to be contacted, let us know she's safe and we'll let the family know. >> reporter: she was reported missing on december 2nd. police say a few days after thanksgiving her cell phone pinged nearly 800 miles away outside gooding, ohio, not far from where she has family. >> god, please keep the family in your heart and soul. >> reporter: in washington state where some of her family lives a vigil was held by her brother-in-law. >> if they see her anywhere, please, please say something. >> reporter: online thousands
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are following the facebook page dedicated to the search that's regularly posting pictures and updates on the case. her brother traveled to colorado to help find her. we know one thing is certain. she did not pack to go anywhere. all luggage is here. her purse is all that seems to have gone. barrett's cars are still in colorado and police tell me they have searched her home for clues and are working closely with family to learn more about her including her life on social media and anyone she's been in contact with. >> thank you. there was a massive clean up in paris sunday following another day of violent protests. cars were burned and windows smashed across the city. hundreds of protesters spent the night in jail. the protests started a month ago over a gas tax, but now address many issues. the president will address his country monday.
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coming up, the controversy over a christmas classic. why some radio stations are refusing to play it. and later the college football heisman trophy winner billions of bacteria,
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awarded an oscar for best original song, there's a debate over the lyrics of "baby, it's cold outside." what some see as flirty is suggestive of date rape. some radio stations are et refusing to play it. >> over the years 1944's "baby, it's cold outside" has been interpreted by more than 100 singers. ♪ my mother will start to worry ♪ >> but now it's being reinterpreted by listeners. we're hearing more than an innocently flirtatious christmas song. >> the me too movement changed station ted playing the song as part of its christmas moouzic format, they were overwhelmed by
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listener complaints. >> what specifically did people say when they initially e-m o i. people who were sexually harass ed o or raped or had children in the car ompded by the lyrics. >> monday he pulled the tune joining other stations. >> i'm sure that this was not the first time that people have listened to the song and thought, oh, that sounds coercive. what's different is the me too movement is that we have to do something about it. >> reporter: according to gender studies experts, the current controversy is part of a growing cultural shift in how some classic songs and films are now viewed.ra of me too, what's really come up about movies like "16 candles" is the relationships between the males and the ways in
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which there are casualo k to consent. >> they are letting listeners decide whether to bring baby back. an online poll will determine if "baby, it's cold outside" will get iced o ut for good. >> what's been the feedback? >> don't mess with my christmas music. that's been the feedback. still ahead, through still ahead, through california's worst wildfire, know what turns me on? my better half, hors d oeuvres and bubbly. and when i really want to take it up a notch we use k-y yours & mine. tingling for me, warming for him. wow! this holiday season get what you want i'm at this wing joint telling people that geico has been offering savings for over 75 years. that's longer than the buffalo wing's been around. dozen wings. and did you know that geico...
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sglrvelgs china's foreign ministry ordered a meeting with the u.s. ambassador to denounce the ars of a top communications executive. she was arrested earlier this month and remains jailed in canada on the orders of u.s. officials. she's accused of violating u.s. sanctions on selling technology to iran. her arrest has heightened trade tensions with the u.s. her bail hearing continues tomorrow. quarterback kyler murray of the awded the heisman troe my fist last night. within hours muayeportedly used an weets to friends. he spoke this morning with nfl
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today host james brown on cbs. >> i was young. i own every single part of it. i used a poor choice of words. but at the same time, me being at this stage and having this platform, i learn from it. it's critical for me that i move on but own up to what i said and move on and learn from it. >> this may be the last season of his in college football. he has already signed a a major league baseball contract with the oem land athletics. you couldn't ask for a better guard dog than madison of paradise, california. his ener was et vak waited and home destroyed in the deadliest wildfire in colorado's his rhode island. for weeks he guarded the burnt property waiting for her to return. an animal rescuer made sure he had food and water until he was finally reunited with his owner last week and given his favorite
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treat. wheat thin crackers. up next, a president's
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the 41st president was laid to rest last week. but his thousand points of light vision lives on. here's mark strasman with a case
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in point. >> annie is replame clinton campaign ing the street corner at blight and despair. >> what happens? >> drug deals, prostitution, gambling, everything. >> reporter: this is atlanta's english avenue neighborhood. >> i have a problem seeing business on the street. >> what they do is their business. how they do it is your business. >> et yes, because you have to have respect for your neighbors. >> reporter: moore went to work. >> the first thing i did was build chess tables. >> putting up tables was symbolic. >> yeah, we care. somebody cares. >> we just cleaned it up. >> she brought truckloads of donated dirt into this abandoned church. >> there's no place on english avenue for people to gather. we were trying to pmake this th gathering spot.
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>> this 57-year-old grandmother personifies president bush's points of light. >> did you think you had it in you? >> i didn't know. i just started doing it. this is what this will look like. i don't want to build another neighborhood. i want to fix what's going on here. >> point of light honoree. >> this past january 15th moore was name d a deally point of light, number 6175 since president bush launched the program in 1990. >> he's allowed a lot of us to go down in history with him. we're a part of him. >> they have shared history, lights that led the way. cbs news, atlanta. >> that's the "cbs overnight news." check back for the morning news ands th morning." frhe broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano.
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welcome to the "cbs overnight news." we begin this morning with a flurry of political headlines. congressman adam schiff said on "face the nation" president trump could face jail time after federal prosecutors suggested the president directed illegal payments during his campaign. >> he may be the first president to face the real prospect of jail time. >> adam schiff expected to chair
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the house intelligence committee next year said president trump maybe guilty of felony crimes outlined in friday's cohen. it was said he paid off mistresses to influence the 2016 presidential election in coordination with and at the direction of president trump. >> there's a very real prospect that on the day donald trump leaves office, the justice department may indict him. had may be the first president in a long time to face jail t e time. we have been discussing the issue of pardons that the president may offer to people or dangle in front of people. the bigger question they come down the road as the next presidaset to >> say y standby president? agai's no reason to
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not standby anybody at this moment. there are pleadings, cases, evidence, we're going to wait for it all to be out there. i would wait until you make judgment. your judgment may not change, % but it should be made object the basis of all the information. that's what we're doib in the intelligence committee. so as i said repeatedly, i believe the probe should continue and move forward. both will be there before the american public. we'll see what it shows and move on from there. >> the president was asked about the development on saturday. >> as far as the report that we see according to everybody i have spoken to, i have not read it. there's absolutely no collusion chrks isy spor >> seeobm with someone trying to build a hotel somewhere. >> rand paul defended prmp from other relegations from the investigation. during the election cohen worked with then candidate trump and russia nationals on a potential
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hotel in russia described as the moscow project. >> now if you're asking and saying i will give you something in exchange for letsing us go to a hotel, that would be wrong, but i haven'tea evidence of that. >> it disclosed russia offering synergy as early as november 2015 proposing a meeting between president trump and vladimir putin. while another memo charges the former chairman with sore y'all lying. as president trump faces increasing pressure from multiple investigations, he's also changing his chief of staff. anoungsing on saturday that john kelly will leave his post before the beginning of next year. now one of the leading contenders to replace kelly has decided he will not take on the new roel. he's mike pence's chief of staff.
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>> president trump on twitter today took aim at james comey. accusing him of lying to lawmakers during his closed door testimony on friday. the president added, this whole deal is a rigged fraud. jeff has new deta >> the hearing was contentious at times. republicans were frustrated because an fbi attorney instructed him not to absentee many of the questions. among the nobody. when they launched their counterintelligence, the trump cap pain was not under investigation, but instead it was launched based on the activities of four americans to see if they were working with the russians to influence the 2016 election. comey did not get into who the four americans are, but we know that trump campaign foreign policy advisers had attracted suspicion because of their
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contacts with russian operatives. comey initially wanted in a public setting rather than behind closed doors. >> when you read the transcript, we're talking about hillary clinton's e-mails. >> he didn't believe firing mueller alone would be enough to derail the investigation. he is expected back on capitol hill later on this month. >> jeff, thanks. a state department official said today the u.s. intends to continue supporting saudi arabia's military interests in yemen. a nation torn apart by four years of civil war. some u.s. senators want to pull khashoggi. elizabeth palmer is the only u.s. network correspondent inside yemen and reports tonight
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>> it's a long way from aden, but there's plenty of soldiers around. they help to keep things stable here. enough for life to resume. the government is quick to thank saudi arabia for helping win after they lost it three years ago. the prime minister. >> the darkest moments of 2015, the saudis back us so yemen cannot be in chaos. >> reporter: but to do it, saudi arabia waged and is still waging a ruthless bombing campaign against thhofth and there's no tiat's killed.re away from the saud in the wakeo ho ting tot you? .euse if saurabia becomes toamae
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>> yemen is important country. if u.s. wants to stand with yemen, they should decide it's important to have a relation with the u.s. for decades. >> reporter: america's support in this war for saudi arabia will come town to a political fight in washington. meanwhile, the casualties are mounting as many as 85,000 children dead. 2 million people on the run and 40 million facing extreme hunger. elizabeth palmer, cbs news, aide b. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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over the past couple years, krit cannics of the news industry came up with the phrase for stories they don't like. they call it fake news. one thing that's not fake is the real danger a journalist takes to bring news from foreign war zones into your home. sometimes it costs them their lives. here's ted koppel. >> reporter: it was a war zone back in the 1980s. >> you couldn't give property away back then. >> no, it was awful. shootings every day. just really bad violence. >> reporter: mike took all the money he saved shooting photographs for the "new york times" in actual war zones and
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>> i knew there was a need. i felt like we could make a difference. >> mike and another photographer with a place where disadvantaged kids could learn about photo journalism. >> got about 60 students and a lot of west african families. >> mike's friend tim spent years in west africa. did some of his most creative work there. >> he would do these beautiful landscapes. >> for more than a month, the bronx documentary put on a special exhibit featuring the work in liberia alongside that of another veteran photographer. who worked for geting images.
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>> chris was looking for visceral powerful photos to end up on the frant pages of newspapers. he was looking for impact. >> in 2011 they were both killed while on assignment in libya. >> the problem is that the absolutely no way to do it from a distance. >> that was chris just months before his death. there's something of a breed unto themselves. >> often what's there is chaos. naz this moment when chris took a phone call in the middle of an intense fire fight in liberia. the scene is from a documentary. >> let me call you back.
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>> the minute i heard that, i knew we were going to open w that. at was h in a nutshell. fire.s cool and collected under >> they knew one another since high school. greg directed the documentary as a tribute b to his friend. it's not an act. it's a state of mind. his ability to find and capture a moment of absolute clarity in the midst of total menace. >> it's the photo that kind of put chris on the map. it's a picture of joseph with a grenade on a contested bridge. >> reporter: the photograph ended up on front pages all over the world. here's the part that got no attention. after the war in lye boia ended he found that young fighter. when chris learned joseph wanted
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to go to school, he paid for his education. >> forged similar close ties to the people he fought with. >> it's important to connect with people. document them in these stream circumstances. >> reporter: low key he still true attention. >> he was tall with some grit. so people just noticed him. >> reporter: himself, the photographer and recalls the first time he and tim met at an airport. >> i felt to lock up. >> sebastian and tim would spend a year in and out of afghanistan embedded with u.s. troops at a remote outpost. the documentary was to be
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nominated for an academy award. >> i think we were incoming. it's obvious what you shoot. when there's nothing going on in a hot day, everyone was knocked out with the heat and tim was taking everyone's photographs as they slept. he said you don't get it. they look like little boys. it's what their mothers see when they think of their sons. >> april 20th, 2011, chris and tim were in libya in the middle of yet another war. you can't see tim, who is shooting the video and it's hard to make out the sound, but. tim says -- which way is then front loin from here. that became the tult of sebastian's next documentary.
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he planned to be along. >> the last minute i couldn't go. tim went object his own and was hit with a fragment from a morter. the same that killed chris. >> reporter: sebasan was knowl fend tim could have been saved. >> i started a program called risc, it's purpose is to train exr experienced reporters in first ud techniques. so other journalists might know what to do. several hundred free lance reporters have taken the class. so are those offering at the bronx center. >> we are shooting in low light. >> reporter: the founder knows what he's teaching.
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>> jumpblism is not opinions. it's facts and evidence. we teach them this was tim's method. >> it's boing to be tricky but i have faith in you. you can to this. >> that's also what the film maker believes. >> one thing we learned is that they are i want credibly self-policing. they value the truth and the honesty that a news photograph and should deliver. >> you never fake a photograph. if we ever saw a photographer altering a scene, they would never work again. it had o in an age of photo shop. we live in an age where altering photographs every si12 yoorld k can do that. >> no photographer alters a photograph. it's our ethics. it's dpens the very region risking our loifs, of to tell
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the story correctly. >> that contribute. opened to a packed house, friends, members of the bronx community and the united nations deputy secretary general. >> we all are here to secelebra the work of two of then finest human beings. the bravest photo journalists of all time. >> my friend martin is dead. jyles toully, my friend lost poet arms and legs. thez men and women went out there and put themselves on the line. >> that is a legacy worth passing on. >> you have to think about where the box is going to go. what you're going to put in and what you're going to put out. >> that's boufl. did you see
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know what turns me on? my better half, hors d oeuvres and bubbly. and when i really want to take it up a notch we use k-y yours & mine. tingling for me, warming for him. wow! this holiday season get what you want the american christmas tree association says three quarters of owl awl homes will have a tree this holiday season. the question for a lot of people is real or fake? >> 30 million real s but al trees have become increasingly popular since they were created in the '80s. take a loolk at these two trees
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next to me. it's hard to tell which is real, which is fake and which can bring more joy to your home. >> we're looking at how many trees on all this >> 65,000 trees on 65 acres. that's unbelievable. how many ready? >> between 5 and 6,000 trees ready for sale this year. >> these merry, merry real christmas >> the douglas fir is feet tall. >> they are not just filling hissen seventh generation farm, they are also lighting up homes and hearts. >> i think it's the memories and the joy of hearing them saying we're going to cut our tree. >> what would christmas be without a real tree? >> a choice that promotion boards million dollar social media campaign is fighting to
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preserve. by encouraging americans to keep it real. >> anyone thinking about buying an artificial tree, what do you say to them? >> i wouldn't give my wife fake roses on valentine's day. why would you want an artificial tree in your house. >> americans bought 27 million real christmas trees. >> we plan for 7 to 10 years down the road. during the recession ten years ago, farmers planted fewer trees. that means this year supply is below demand. which has boosted business and prices. a real tree will cost you about $75 or for anywhere from 9 to $19,000 you can buy an artificial tree and iil you a lifetime. there's a bit of a real or fake christmas competition going on.
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about 80% of u.s. households put up artificial trees. >> we'd like to have an artificial et tree because i have allergies. so we have had them our whole life. >> the artificial tree is so convenient. they don't have bugs. you put them up. and you're set. >> artificial tree companies are also stepping up their marketing and tech game. >> this is a section that goes right down in there. then it lights up. >> he was disappointed with the fake tree options. >> one of the great things is it comes prelit and you don't have to water it. you don't have to sweep up the enjoys real christmas trees and says above all it's about the holiday spirit. >> it helps our industry. fewer families are setting up christmas trees each year. so when i like about keep it real is it's really focused on a
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younger demographic and getting them excited about going out to them excited about going out to a christmas tree farm and them excited about going out to a christmas tree farm and ♪ whatever it is that floats your boat... ...or tickles your tastebuds... ...or brightens your day... ...even if you've never tried it before... ♪ ...just know that... you can, in portland. >> dr. stanley: remember this: cannot change the laws of god. when he has visited you in some form of adversity and he brings you through that, that's like he has increased the strength of the foundation of your life and your faith in him. [music]
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...just know that... you can, in portland. there's an artist who is making quite a name for himself painting with colors of the distant past. >> reporter: you'll find a kaleidoscope of powder that when mixed and mashed reveal rare shades from the past. >> it's like cooking. you know your ingredients. >> reporter: pedro is equal parts artist. >> this is the base. it's the most ancient tha you c. it's basically glue. >> reporter: pigments that were popular centuries ago burks have faded over time. as a conservative tort, it's his job to research and match time periods with their appropriate
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pigment. then it following ancient recipes to bring it back to their original grandeur as staff at the 18th century strawberry hill house have learned authenticity can have its own unique scent. >> it's the lst thing you should do. >> that smell depending on the color could come from any number of unusual ingredients. it's made with crushed beetles. the result of a chemical reaction with cop the, is known for the amount of elbow greease that it goes into this. he only knows one man that has the patience to make it by hand. >> i'm has been to be up because you have every hour. >> that's commitment to color. >> reporter:felt fer says his
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passion began when he was a kid growing up on the streets of portugal, a city he says hasn't done enough to et preserve its history. >> i remember ever since the villa, the children and staff. >> the his latest project has him preserving a piece of london's past. this massive will join dozens of others. all of them replacing identical ones removed a century ago. felger identified the colors that would have likely been used in the 1700s. vibrant groans and reds. >> as ab artist and historian, this is quite a grand display for you. >> yes,s. . i'm proud to be part of it. this isn't about et me. >> buildings and their past getting a fresh coat of old
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paint. jonathan vigliotti, london. >> that's t it's monday, december 10, 2018. this is the "cbs morng southern snowstorm, and it's still autumn. frosty weather stranding drivers. the search is on for the next white house chief of staff. some names on the short list. and french president emmanuel macron is preparing to address the plight of paris today after another weekend of today after another weekend of violent protests. captioning funded by cbs good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green.

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