tv CBS This Morning CBS December 10, 2018 7:00am-9:01am PST
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next local update 7:26. cbs this morning is coming up next, have a great day, everyone. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's monday, december 10th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." a deadly storm slams the southeast with more than a foot of snow. we're in north carolina and virginia with emergency crews as they work to clear the roads and turn the lights on for hundreds of thousands. >> president trump's own justice department claims he directed illegal payments of campaign hush money. why key democrats are talki more penly about impeachment while the president insist he's in the clear. >> cbs news uncovered 500 reported cases of sex abuse at children's camps going back decades. one mother's warning and how some camps are enabling predator
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to gain access. and 60 minutes talked to scientists involved in the ground breaking study of the effects of screen time on children. what screen time does to kid's brains and how you can protect your kids from harm. >> we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> north carolina is in a mammoth winter storm. >> snow and ice turn deadly in the south. >> the national guard called to helped motorists. >> president trump is weighing his options after the man who thought many would replace john kelly as chief of staff stepped aside. >> i'll be announcing that over the next day or two. >> democrats are raising the prospect of impeachment. >> he may be the first president in quite some time to face the real prospect of jail time. >> just a day after winning the heisman trophy, tyler murray is now apologizing for homophobic
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tweet he sent. >> it's crucial to me i move on from it but own up to what i said. >> french president emmanuel macron speaks to his nation tonight as protests against his policies led to chaos and fires in the street. >> all that. >> european cross country championship. >> for the second year running, sliding his way. >> the epitome of monday. >> all that matters. >> so your -- not superadviced? >> i do not respected the fcc. i don't respect them. >> you're abiding by the settlement? >> because i respect the justice system. >> on "cbs this morning." >> tannihill will throw it. this will end it. or will it? pmiami running around. in the end zone! touchdown! a miracle. miraculous in miami. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places.
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>> welcome to cbs thz. >> are you okay? are you all right? we do have a doctor on staff, norah. >> i know. i know. >> what a play though. >> what a play. >> at least got to watch it. >> spectrum came through. but i did miss face the nation and "cbs this morning" on sunday but all is good. i did see the game. >> we'll start with the weather. devastating weekend snowstorm has crippled pars of the southeast. the region is not used to this kind of weather, especially this early in the season. so more than 230,000 utility customers are black the out after heavy ice and snow knocked down trees and power lines across the carolinas and
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virginia. ooh, that's an electrical transform they're exploded, knocking out power to nearby homes. >> i couldn't tell if they were excited or afraid. 20 inches of snow fell in the carolinas leaving dangerous roads. the storm is blamed for at least one death. winter storm warnings are up in at least four states. snow, sleet and rain are still falling in many areas at this hour. meg oliver's in fletcher north carolina where the clean-up is getting under way. >> reporter: there are close to 700 utilities ready to launch to help the more than 150,000 customers without power. although there are nearly 9,000 workers responding to the outages, duke energy says it could take days before all the lights come back on. utility workers are scrambling to get roads and power lines up and running this morning after an early season snowstorm
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pounded the southeast. the wintry blast dropped more than a foot of snow across parts of the carolinas, snarling traffic and stopping 18 wheelers in their tracks. mike richie spent the night in his truck after getting stranded on the side of the road. what were the driving conditions >> terrible, terrible. that's why we had to pull over. i just called my work and told him and he's like, you got to keep moving when it's snowing. i'm like, we couldn't, there's no way. >> reporter: the weather turned deadly sunday afternoon when police say a tree fell on a car in a charlotte suburb, killing the driver. 100 miles away near raleigh, a tree crashed on to an apartment building, sending three people to the hospital. airports from georgia to virginia raced to keep taxiways clear and planes de-iced. passengers inside the terminals faced more than 1,800 cancellations. hundreds more expected today. >> we stopped to get gas and we
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got back on the interstate. >> reporter: lynn clark was traveling with morge than a dozn members of a missionary group. they huddled for more than five hours without power or heat at this truck stop, waiting for help to arrive. >> we knew god would take care of us. >> reporter: they were in good spirits despite it all. a local church shelter picked them up and they stayed there for the niceght. they're hoping family can pick them up today. duke energy says they're making progress. you can see, the really busy sight. all these trucks responded to outages. they are restored power to 330,000 customers so far. >> parts of virginia also have more than a foot and a half of snow. the storm paralyzed major interstates and left drivers stranded overnight. more than 100 accidents were report the statewide. errol barnett is in
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chesterfield, tracking the efforts of 4,600 trucks. >> reporter: this is what it looks like. all of the snowplow drivers here are pulling 12-hour shifts. coming here to refuel and loud up with anywhere between 4 to 8 tons of the salt/sand mix which is stored in that white dome in the distance. the gargantuan effort. some roads here may not be usable until wednesday. up into richmond, the snow and ice sent drivers sliding off the highway. we saw this as we drove in from d.c. at least 1,000 stalled cars reported and downed trees trapped some drivers along i-85. overnight in bristol, motorist bh stranded more than 12 mores rescued by the national guard. emergency crews had to get out and walk to access those with
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medical emergencies and people rhode islanding atvs brought more folks in. but this is not over yet. rain is forecast for tonight. temperatures will dip below freezing. iced over roads will be a major hazard. some coastal areas of virginia are under storm and flood warnings and watches, with some areas expecting eight-foot waves. this storm is not done with virginia just yet. . >> not over yet. errol, stay warm. put that other glove on. weathercaster lonnie quinn of our new york station wcbs tv is here with the storm's potential impact in the next few hours. this looks bad. what can we expect? >> the most dangerous thing is going to be icing. that's what we see currently around raleigh, north carolina. asheville, you got snow still falling. spartanburg, it's rain. the radar picture showing you.
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by the time you get to later hours today, the nighttime hours, it's pushing off will be. look at the numbers. the biggest number i can find, a two foot reetd iading. lubbock, texas, 10. johnson, tennessee, also 10. so six states or more half a foot of snow or more. raleigh, concerned about, this morning, there's ice out there. overnight, i'm sure this storm, is gets cold again so it will refreeze. that's a problem on the roadways. another tough day. you know the storm's gone. so some problems out there. >> for areas that are not used to that. lonnie, thank you. president trump is looking for a new chief of staff after his top pick decided against taking the job. the president tweet the last night he'll make a decision soon
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on who will replace the departing john kelly. the retired marine general is set to leave by the end of the month. weijia jiang is at the white house. weijia, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. several namesters are mix to replace kelly. the former favorite is not among them. vice president pence's chief of staff ayers was the top contender but now says he is leaving the administration at the end of the year. white house sources tell cbs news the president wanted ayers to commitment through the 2020 re-election campaign. the 36-year-old was eager to move back to georgia and spend time with his young family. but says he will work with the maga team to advance the cause. the short list to replace kelly includes north carolina congressman mark meadows, ofls office of management and budget director mick mulvaney. trump has nominated william barr to fill the full-time ag post. state department spokesperson heather nauert to serve.
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and milley as chairman of the joint chiefs. with kelly con, his former mentee, homeland security secretary kirstin nielsen could be the next to go. >> president trump's own justice department accuses mr. trump of directing illegal payments during the 2016 presidential campaign. one top house democrat says the allegations could lead to impeachment proceedings. special counsel robert mueller and federal prosecutors in new york released memo also detailing evidence provided by the president's former personal attorney michael cohen. cohen alleges he, quote, actled at the direction of mr. trump to pay hush money to two women who claim they had affairs with trump. paula reid is at the whuls. what do these findings mean for the president? how is his legal team responding? >> well, they're responding using a familiar playbook by attacking cohen and the special
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counsel. the president tweeted attacking cohen and the russia investigation. but these new details, these revael reveal new challenges for the president because the special prosecutor is laying out in detail really something for the first time that connects the president with possible criminal activity. in addition to the special counsel investigation into possible obstruction or collusion, the president's own justice department is alleging that he par tils paymented in the commissioning of campaign finance violations. prosecutors allege he wallas secretly trying to manipulate the election by buying the so silence of them head of the campaign. that's what makes it a possible campaign finance violation. >> probably something the incoming attorney general has to talk about at his confirmation hearings. "new york times" reports the federal prosecutors are shifting their attention to whether the
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trump organization played any role in this campaign violations, in other words, beyond cohen. does that indication there are others? >> that's what investigators will look into. cohen is providing evidence. but it's interesting because the president's lawyers have been saying for months this is all wrapping up soon. these new revelations, these new details, suggest that this is nowhere near over and will continue well into the new year. >> paula, thanks. investors are keeping a close eye on tesla's stock after the ceo made controversial comments on last night's "60 minutes." he launched out at the securities and exchange commission. he told lesley stahl he does not respect the sec. and indicated he's still tweeting with no oversight. >> reporter: back in september,
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the sec charged musk with securities fraud, after he tweetled he had secured the fundings to take tesla private. the agency said that misled shareholder. now that the 60 minutes interview is raising questions if musk plans to comply with the sec restrictions on the social media. >> have you had any of your tweeted censored since the settlement? >> no. >> none? does someone have to read them before they go out? >> no. >> so your tweets are not supervisupe supervisupe supervised? >> the only tweet is if a tweet had shown movement of the stock. >> appearing to bristle at the new sec restrictions on his twitter account. >> how do they know if it's going to move the market if they're not reading them? before you send them? >> i guess -- who knows.
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>> are you serious? >> nobody's perfect. >> look at you. >> i want to be clear, i do not respect the sec. i do not respect them. >> you're abiding by the settlement? >> because i respect the justice system. >> he's known to fight public battles against people he feels like has wronged him. >> "the wall street journal" reporter has covered tesla for years. he says so far musk has not appeared to violate the settlement. the company has until the end of the year to put policy unless place to joef soversee his communication. a big part of tesla's success is tied to musk. >> the elon musk magic. it's hard for a board to pull musk back. he is the visionary for the company. >> tesla says it will comply with the settlement. that gives the company three weeks to get that policy in
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place to preapprove musk's related tweet. we reached out to the sec. the agency declined to comment on the 60 minutes interview. >> quite an interview. kris, thank you. china's government has summon the the u.s. and canadian ambassadors to demand the release of a top executive of the telecom giant huawei. meng wanzhou is being held for possible extradition to the united states. she was arrested as president trump and chinese president xi agreed to a 90-day truce in an escalating trade war. on face the nation yesterday, trade representative robert lighthizer said the arrest won't affect that truce. >> this is a criminal justice manner. it's totally separate from anything i work on. so for us it's unrelated. >> meng returns to court today for a bail hearing.
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her arrest has spooked investors who fear an extended trade conflict. the newly crowned heisman trophy winner kyler murray is apologizing for anti-gay tweets he sent as a teenager. >> the 2018 heisman trophy is awarded to kyler murray. >> those phones offensive messages appeared online. the tweets have been deleted but they appear to show him using an anti-gay slur when he was 14 years old. murray addressed the issue on the nfl today yesterday. >> i was young. i own every single part of it. i used a poor choice of word. at the same time, me being at this stage, having this platform, i learn from it. >> murray led oklahoma to this year's college football championship playoffs and its fourth big 12 championship in a
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row. he plans to give up football this spring to play baseball with the oakland a's. an organization formed after the sandy hook school shooting is reaching out to the general public with a new message. the public service announcement is designed to highlight behavioral signs that can go unnoticed while someone is planning a mass shooting. a point of view of a student who's ignored or bullied. educators miss key warning signs. >> leave me alone. >> it's your ex-boyfriend. >> thank you. >> hi, guys. vote for me for class president. >> your principal speaking. once again, cast your vote today. >> sandy hook promise was created by family members of the 26 people kill the at saed at s school six years ago this week. the group says it wants people to recognize signs like this before another shooter acts.
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cbs news has uncovered disturbing news about children's camps all around the country. hundreds of reports of sexual abuse. ahead, how you can have a false sense of security and what you can now do to see if your child's camp is we are b traing scatter -- we are tracking scattered showers and dense fog. through the afternoon, dry conditions and also clearing. daytime highs across the bay area, upper 50s, low 60s, 58 san francisco, 59 oakland and freemont and 59 santa rosa. a dry afternoon today, looking at plenty of sunshine tomorrow and we will stay dry through most of the week, rain chances back on friday.
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police. ms. a coplus, a colorado mog for more than two weeks. how a cell phone signal could help find her. a government study that spent ten years track how screen time affects children's brains. why the results so far should be a wake-up call. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. come and help me! let's see about this big. ♪ ♪ toyota. let's go places. there's no excuse for what they did to you. it's a hate crime. it's a miracle he survived.
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good morning. 7:26, i'm michelle griego. keizer mental health care workers in san francisco and across the state are walking on the picket line. the union says they are severely under staffed. keizer says it's beefing up staff and investing millions in the facilities. san jose, 16 residents evacuated and displaced due to a gas leak. firefighters tell us a car crashed in to gas meters on the side of the building, two people have been arrested. today in san francisco, the trump administration will try to convince a panel of judges on the 9th circuit, that children are not entitled to tax funded attorneys for
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good morning, a crash northbound 101, it's out of lanes, traveling out of maroon this to san francisco ax live look at the golden gate bridge, wet roadways, sluggish across the span bay bridge. metering lights from the maze in to san francisco. very slow off of the east shore freeway. tracking scattered showers on hi-def doppler this morning. things will be winding down quickly here. looking at dry afternoon, by lunchtime hour, all of us will be dry. daytime highs in the 50s, 59 oakland. 60 for san jose. a dry afternoon, we will stay dry for most of the week with rain back in the forecast friday and in to the weekend. you n you're at ross and you find vorite hero at a price that makes you the hero?
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yes! that's yes for less. stop stealing mine... never. the perfect sweater makes the perfect holiday gift. and it feels even better when you find it for less - at ross. yes for less. beautiful sunrise in the stiff brotherly love there. welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things you should know. french president emmanuel macron is expected to break his silence about violent protests gripping the country. people across france took part in a fourth weekend of demonstrations over rising fuel taxes and a higher cost of the living. about a thousand people were arrested saturday in paris after protesters overturned cars, smashed windows and set fires. the country's finance minister says the violence is hurting the french economy. the number of migrant families apprehend at the
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u.s./mexico border hit a record high for the fourth straight month. more than 25,000 families were detained in november for illegally crossing from mexico. families made up nearly half of all apprehensions at the border. a homeland security spokes penn call -- spokesperson called it a prediction from a broken immigration system. today is green monday, heard of that? like on black friday and cyber monday, major retailers offer big online discounts during this up and coming event. markdowns help them clear inventory before the end of the year. green monday sales have topped a billion dollars since 2011 making it one of the biggest online shopping days of the year. new this morning, cbs news has identified hundreds of reports of sexual abuse that occurred at children's camps across the u.s. now this is the time of year when many parents register their children for summer camp. families we spoke to said safety is one of their top priorities.
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but we found reports of more than 500 victims who were allegedly sexually abused at children's camps over the past 55 years. 21 of those cases surfaced this year alone. jericka duncan has been looking into the story which you'll see only here. >> good morning. they tell us that the real numbers of abuse cases is likely much higher since many are never reported. we spoke with a woman whose son accused a camp counselor of abusing him back in 2009. for her child's protection, she wanted both of them to remain anonymous. >> after you took a shower you put on your towel and he didn't want you to wear underwear under it. >> this video shows a texas boy telling a psychologist what a camp counselor did to him in 2009. it allegedly happened over the course of 12 days at an overnight summer camp named camp la hanna.
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>> he -- he wouldn't look under there, he would stick his hand up. >> when he returned home, the boy's mother said she knew something was wrong. little boy that loved to play out side. he was totally different. he wanted to lay on the couch. >> it wasn't until ten months later that her son revealed a 20-year-old camp counselor named matthew bovee had allegedly molested him. >> what was your initial reaction? >> i wanted to throw up. i was nauseous. and all i could think of is tell him i love him. >> it's a story that's been repeated again and again across the u.s. combing through reports dating back to the 1960s, cbs news counted at least 578 victims who were allegedly sexually abused at children's camps. >> thatprobable that's probablyt the tip of the iceberg. >> john described how camps can
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create tupts for president dators. >> it's isolation for warts. it's o -- parents. kids are a little bit older and feeling more independent and they may have a false sense of security. >> more than 14 million people attend camp each year, but there are no national regulations for camps to follow. eight states have no requirements for overnight camps to be licensed. 18 states don't require background checks for employees. further co further complicating maters, 24,000 camp counselors came from foreign countries last year. >> how big of a problem is this? >> it's a big problem. >> rania mankarious has been working on this issue with houston crime stoppers. >> if we can level the playing field and create national standards that all camps have to uphold to foraccreditation for m
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to come in, then it's a lot harder. >> a judge sentenced bovee to ten years in prison and allowed him to walk free. >> i remember at that point i was not going to let this go. >> but bovee later violated the terms of his probation and has been in jail ever since. the camp settled a lawsuit for an undisclosed amount and sent "cbs this morning" as saying they're proud of what they describe as their safe outstanding summer camp experience. they say they remain heartbroken after this camper's 2009 experience. >> camps are wonderful. camps are part of growing up. my other children attend camp. but i checked very carefully. >> now. >> now, the camp.
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i don't listen for a camp owner to tell me how the camp is. >> there are organizations like the american camp association that monitor camps and issue accreditations based on safety. now, the mother we spoke with suggests parents should check directly with those organizations to see if camps are accredited. so, again, she wasn't trying to scare people about camps as much as it was you have to do the work. you have to have the conversation with your children and just be aware the abuse could be happening. >> this is so important when your doog this becau favorite daughter and son were doing this, i never really checked at the camp. i relied on the word of what the counselors were saying. that's so good you're bringing this to light. she's not trying scare people, but we need to pay attention. thank you. ground-breaking research highlighted in a new 60 minute
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reports reveals what happens to the brain of adolescents who use social media. we'll show you the chemical changes and talk to lisa damore. and if you're on the go, here's an invite. subscribe to our cbs morning podcast. you get the day's top stories and hear what's going on in your world in what, norah? >> 20 minutes. >> we call that a deal. you're watching "cbs this morning," we'll be right back. frss to clean all your floors. and with patented dirt detect technology, roomba finds dirt throughout your home. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. let's go. nutella is sure to bring a smile to breakfast time. get free decorating tools inside nutella holiday jars. whoa!
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new research aimed at understanding the impact of social media on adolescent brains is already showing fascinating results. the national institutes of health study is following more than 11,000 children over a decade. in early testing, researchers found significant differences in brain chemistry for kids who had at least seven hours of screen time a day compared to kids who used screens less. anderson cooper spoke to the researchers for last night's "60 minutes." >> until recently, it was impossible to see what happens inside a young brain when a person is focused on a mobile device.
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but now scientists at the university of california-san diego have hacked that problem. >> how often do you have young people come in for mris? >> as often as we possibly can. >> reporter: dr. carol bagot is studying children's brains as they follow instagram, the most popular social media app. when we met 18-year-old roxie shimp, she was about to join the study. >> how long are you on it? >> every 15 minutes, probably. >> reporter: she can't take her phone inside the mri because of the magnets in the screen. so is she is allowed to look at a screen displaying images of her instagram account. that way dr. bagot can see which
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parts of the brain system are active when looking at social media. >> so you can actually see parts of the brain light up when you're feeling good. >> yes. in the scanner. >> in the scanner. >> yes. >> reporter: dr. bagot is one of the scientists who believe screen time releases dopamine which has a role in desire. >> so you're likely to act compulsively instead of checking yourself. >> you want to check on it to keep getting -- >> the good feelings. >> lisa damour is a cbs news contributor and is here with more on this. lisa, good morning. >> good morning. >> we won't know conclusive studies for quite a while, but do you know anything so far? >> here's what we do know. we know social media is incredibly compelling. we know it triggers parts of the
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brain. it's true in adults, too, not just kids. we also know digital technology interrupts things that are important, like sleep, one-on-one action face to face, focus, physical activity. >> so much is about guidelines. we know that pediatricians recommend that children under the age of two not have any screen time. what are the guidelines of children through adolescence, though? >> i think the way we want to think about it is there is no simple answer that we wish there were. i recommend that we really make priorities about what are we trying to protect? we're trying to protect sleep. we're trying to protect family time. we're trying to protect focus. so i think the guidelines should flow from there. children need a lot more sleep than children appreciate. lementary school children need 11 hours a night, middle schoolers need 10 hours a night, high schoolers need nine hours a
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night. if we even do that, that's a heck of a guideline. >> it's not just total time, it's we're creating a habit of distractions. we're teaching our kids to keep interrupting themselves which means they can't do anything hard because they seek that interruption. >> that's right. focus is a muscle that we build. it doesn't matter if someone interrupts you or you interrupt yourself, it still disrupts your focus. >> you have a new book coming out about anxiety and depression specifically among young girls. how does social media contribute to that? is there data that shows it's causal? >> we don't yet have causal data. what we do have are some studies that actually looked throuat th trajectory through sleep, that when high schoolers get phones that interrupt their sleep, they go on to have high rates of depression, high rates of fragility. we don't know for certain yet but we're in that direction. >> i hear from parents all the time that suicide rates are up, they know kids that go to school
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with depression and anxiety. what's causing that? >> i think we don't really know and simple answers are appealing but they're probably not accurate. we want to look at this in broad scope and think about a lot of factors that may be causing stress and anxiety to go up for our kids and make it important that we take steps to protect them from a lot of things. social media may be one of them. >> since i've already read an early copy of her book, i know there is a lot of answers. what is it coming out? >> it's coming out february 12. >> thank you, lisa, for joining us. >> thank you for having me. up next, headlines including a new warning
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our dad was in the hospital. because of smoking. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nicoderm cq. you've i like working.areer. what if my retirement plan is i don't want to retire? then let's not create a retirement plan. let's create a plan for what's next. i like that. get a plan that's right for you. td ameritrade. ♪
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." here's a look at some of this morning's headlines. cbsnews.com reports the search for a missing colorado mom is intensifying. 29-year-old kelsey berreth disappeared more than ten weeks ago on thanksgiving day. one of the last places she was seen was at a safeway in midland park. her cell phone pinged nearly 800 miles away in idaho. it's not far from where she was -- she was -- she has family, i should say. her brother says she did not pack to go anywhere. >> and she has a 1-year-old child. that's just very unusual that she's disappeared this way. >> we'll continue to follow that story. "the washington post" reports on a nationwide shortage of the new shingles vaccine. federal health officials recommend the two-dose chingles vaccine for age 50. they say demand sky rocketed when it became available in the
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spring. it affects 1 in 3 adults. you should contact your healthcare provider or pharmacy for the most up to date availability. the cvs spokesperson said shipments arrive at their pharmacy about every three weeks. and don't eat raw cookie do you. it's reminding people that flower is not treated to kill germs that could be linked to e. coli. two years ago e. coli was linked to raw flower. raw dough could contain e. coli because of the long shelf life. >> have they tasted oatmeal raisin raw? i don't know. we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning." new nivea essentially enriched body lotion... with 2 x the almond oil it deeply nourishes skin for 48 hours new nivea essentially enriched deeply nourishes for 48 hours.
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new listerine® ready! tabs™ aren't gum, mints, or marbles. seriously, what is this? if you guessed they're tabs that turn into liquid as you chew, so you can swish and clean your whole mouth instantly, then you were correct. and that was a really good guess. nice job. oh! oh! ♪ ozempic®! ♪ (vo) people with type 2 diabetes are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? (vo) and you may lose weight. in the same one-year study, adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. oh! up to 12 pounds? (vo) a two-year study showed that ozempic® does not increase the risk of major cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke, or death. oh! no increased risk? ♪ ozempic®! ♪ ozempic® should not be the first medicine for treating diabetes, or for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not share needles or pens. don't reuse needles.
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do not take ozempic® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to ozempic®. stop taking ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, itching, rash, or trouble breathing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase the risk for low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. we're transforming this home to show the new keurig k-café brewer is so easy, it makes any house a coffeehouse. rinsky's coffeehouse is open! it couldn't be simpler. just pop that in for a coffee. or brew a shot and froth fresh milk for a latte or cappuccino.
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i'm kenny choi. new details in san jose, an 18- year-old woman and her get away driver are under arrest, police say the suspect crashed in to a gas main at an apartment and reported her own car stolen. thousands of keizer mental health care workers are on strike across the state. union says they are grocery under staffed. keizer says they -- grocery under staffed. tonight, alameda residents have a chance to weigh in for plans for a marriott hotel. the report find it will be one
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dealing with wet weather this morning, quite a big problem at highway 84, a vehicle went in to the creek off to the right side of the roadway. 9 miles per hour, is what we are seeing as far as speeds go. travel times, pretty busy working westbound 80, off of the east shore freeway. use mass transit. bart is on time. we have capital corridor delays. we are tracking showers on hi-def doppler. things are winding down this morning. we are looking at a dry afternoon ahead, with clearing, mostly cloudy to particles skies this afternoon, clear skies by tonight. daytime highs in the 50s and low 60s across the bay area, 58 and san francisco 59 in oak
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good monday morning to our viewers in the west. it's december 10, 2018. welcome back to cbs "this morning." ahead, margaret grennan on the new court papers that according to some democrats leave president trump add risk of going to prison. plus, how to avoid pitfalls when you celebrate the holidays with co-workers. jennifer weiner will be here with networking tools. winter storm mornings are up in at least four states. >> what were the driving conditions like last night? >> terrible, terrible. >> there are close to 700 utility trucks red to launch.
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>> all of the drivers are pulling 12 hour shifts. >> the danger is icing. we'll see that around raleigh, north carolina. >> federal prosecutors laying out something that connects the president to criminal activity. >> this interview is raising questions if musk plans to comply with the s.e.c. restriction on his social media. >> but how do they know if it will move the market if they're not moving all of them? >> everybody makes mistakes. >> the president tweeted he'll make decision soon on who will replace the departing john kelly. >> his chief of staff is leaving the position at the end of the req because kelly requires extensive surgery to remove his palm from his face. noun [ laughter ] mutual insurance.
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>> >> hand in the palm never a good sign that things are going well. >> just the way some people think. >> the thinker. i'm gayle king john dickerson, nora o'donnell and bianna golodryga. a deadly snowstorm is pounding parts of the southeast. more than 230,000 utility customers in virginia and the carolinas have no electricity this morning. the highways became nightmares for drivers. >> at least one person was killed when a tree fell on a car near charlotte, north carolina, the national guard is helping people stranded for up to 12 hours on a 20-mile stretch of interstate 81 in southwest virginia near bristol. white top lived up to its name. two feet of snow fell in virginia, the highest total we
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found. richmond, virginia, got eleven and a half inches. >> president trump is looking for his third chief of staff in two years candidates include mark meadows, mick mulvaney and acting attorney general matt whitaker. >> the president's top choice, vice president mike pence's chief of staff nick ayers said no. kelly's departure comes amid record-breaking turnover. the brookings institution says 62% of president trump's a-team senior staff have been replaced at least once. that's more than any of the previous five administrations. the top democrat on the congress that court documents
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appear to link mr. trump to campaign finance violations involving his former personal lawyer michael cohen. mr. trump hay kuzed cohen of lying to get a lighter sentence. schiff says the president could face issues even though he has not been charged with a crime. >> my take away is that on the day he leaves office the justice department may indict him. he may be the first president to face the real prospect of jail time. we have been discussing the issue of pardons that the president may dang until front of people. the bigger pardon question may come down the road as the next question these determine whether to pardon donald trump. >> margaret brennan joins us from washington. good morning, margaret. >> good morning, nora. >> why is the congress more confident in an indictment rather than impeachment? >> the president hasn't been charged with wrongdoing but
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according to schiff he's pointing to the filing from rule prosecutors which outlines that the president directed these illegal payments during the campaign to silence these exmistresses so he's saying it helped cohen break campaign finance laws and that brings criminal activity right to the president's door but when he's talking about impeachment, he's putting a different standard because it's a legal and political calculation. the question is whether the president intended to violate campaign finance laws and congressman schiff says he needs to see more detail whether there is a broader pattern and whether twou it would be successful. >> let's talk about the chief of staff. certainly one of the plum jobs in washington that nobody
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appears to want. he got so far down the road with nick ayers only the hear nick say thanks but no thanks. how does it get that far down the road and what is he looking for in a chief of staff now? >> nick ayers has been such a rising star, he has been the vice president's chief of staff and before that he did a lot of work for the republican party, a lot of fund-raising as well. he worked for sonny purdue, pawlenty. he's viewed as have much a politically savvy -- that made him attractive. that's the khark wrist that i can the president is also looking for in terms of other contenders so he needs someone to who can help solidify support. republican republicans and the president aren't on the same page so he need the republican-controlled senate to be a bulwark against impeachment proceedings. he needs someone who can navigate a reelection campaign
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and that's why you're seeing these names out there like congressman mark meadows, like former congressman mick mulvaney who have that kind of judgment. >> but how could they not know nick was going say no? >> apparently the "new york times" reported they've drafted a press release. >> how could it get this far? >> well, nick ayers had been talking talking about returning to georgia, he has triplets, he wants to get back to more time for his family. but in term terms of how far along this got, it seems like the president is an active supporter and he just made the calculation that this wasn't the job he wanted ahead of the campaign. >> meantime we have yet to hear from john kelly. margaret, thank you. gift
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destructive wildfire. you're watching cbs "this morning." all while navigating kitchens, bathrooms and those hard to reach places. you and braava jet from irobot. better together. you'll make my morning, buty the price ruin my day.ou? complicated relationship with milk? pour on the lactaid, 100% real milk, just without that annoying lactose. mmm, that's good. they are ridiculous when they first wake up.unkin'? daddy walks into the walls like he's a bumper car. your dunkin' doesn't make you, you... but it helps. delicious dunkin' donuts coffee. pick some up where you buy groceries. unlike ordinary toothpaste, colgate total fights bacteria on teeth, tongue, cheeks and gums for 12 hours. so you're totally ready for that big moment. colgate total. be totally ready for life.
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moving? that's harder now because of psoriatic arthritis. but you're still moved by moments like this. don't let psoriatic arthritis take them away. taltz reduces joint pain and stiffness and helps stop the progression of joint damage. for people with moderate to severe psoriasis, 90% saw significant improvement. taltz even gives you a chance at completely clear skin. don't use if you're allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection, symptoms, or received a vaccine or plan to.
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inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. for all the things that move you. ask your doctor about taltz. we open up in the forest.rcial, i'm out in the wild eating my breakfast. raccoon come up and says, "are those bigger patties?" i said, "yep, fits on a biscuit."
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♪ for the first time, we're hearing what mars sounds like. those low frequency vibrations were captured by nasa's insight spacecraft. nasa adjusted the audio to make it easier to hear. scientists say those sounds were caused by martian winds blowing against the spacecraft solar panels between 10 and 15 miles an hour. insight took this photo of those panels. the mars lander will study the planet, including its internal activity and temperature over the next two years. >> let's listen to that just one more time real quick?
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>> hard to make the transition from markey mark. >> is that the easier to hear part? >> sounds like that west side highway to me. >> or a heart monitor. >> a quiet night in new york. >> you have to listen real closely. tomorrow in our note to self series, former first lady michelle obama opens up about a devastating loss, meeting barack obama and balancing family life with politics. you don't want to miss that. and ten years ago our financial system nearly blew up. ahead, three men who prevented a total meltdown talk about why they did it and why they're not surprised it's still controversial. you're watching cbs "this morning." strong and bright because it strengthens your enamel, but then also it polishes away stains for whiter teeth. new johnson's cottontouch™ a wholwash and lotionre for newborns is born made with real cotton and enhances your gentle touch a new soft
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fares. after the arrest of the cfo of the chinese tech company huawei. it has been a few years since the last economic slow down. alex wagner spoke to some of the key players in the 2008 financial crisis. >> we met up with ben bernanke and henry paulson. we went to the financial district, which is the epicenter of the financial crisis of 2008. i bet you're sleeping a lot better these days though. >> yeah, that is a low bar to get over. >> they're nicknamed the three amigos, the men that worked behind closed doors to stave off
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another great depression. they addressed the personal role the 2008 financial crisis had on them. >> i felt very alone. we really felt like we were kind of out on an island there. >> a crushing sense of responsibility and fear. >> the carriest times for me were never during the day, right? it was waking up in the middle of the night. >> you had nightmares? >> their new documentary delves into what happened in the financial mark melt down. >> we were a few days away from the atms not working. >> it was inappropriate mortgages and a housing bubble. >> we were preparing and we were complimentary to each other, but it is not something -- you know, you can train for war, but you don't want to be in combat. >> i think we had the constant
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relentless experience over and over again of facing something that was existential in it's effects on people's lives that we would be able to fix it. >> some credit them from saving the country from a worse case scenario. some felt the too big to fail banks came at the expense of the average american. >> the fact that the american public hates what we did is not surprising. because in many ways it's un-american. >> the things that were deeply unpopular and fair were the necessary essential things to prevent damage. it could have been dramatically worse for the economy if we had indulged the natural instinct of people which was to let the thing burning. >> the thesis of this project or documentary is the after let to
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a financial tipping in populism. >> this did not help, we had a crisis and a create recession but we have had structural issues if many, many years, increasing inequality, fighting for people to get ahead. >> home ownership in america now stands at levels not seen from the segragation level. >> i think it was exaggerated. one of the reasons that sub prime lending got so popular is it was expanding the american dream. home ownership is important, but it is not the only way to build wealth or have a stable community, there is an idea that
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buying a home is what everyone should do, some should not buy, some should rent. >> is the president and his policies strengthening and making the american economy more resilient. we're in a trade war with china, populism is fierce, does that concern you? >> i would say gravely. no country is stronger than their political system and our political system lost the capacity to govern. >> i'm optimistic that you will see the trump administration and china attack their issues, come to an agreement, and end the tariff war. but when that happens there will be significant structural issues and this will be a very difficult relationship between the u.s. and china for some time. and that, i don't attribute that to the trump administration. there is nothing that unites democrats and republicans today
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like anti-china rhetoric and sentiment. we need to find common ground with china for our global economic system to work, for us to have peace, prosperity, stability, we don't need another cold war. >> are you confident that the next financial crisis, if it was on our doorstep, that this president and congress could handle it? >> i don't think we have a system in place to deal with a crisis when it happens. we have things to make it less likely. it is less likely to occur, but if it does occur we have fewer fire holes than we had even ten years ago. >> all three men say they hope the new documentary helps people understand what went wrong and the decision making that went in the obama and bush white houses. very fascinating.
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>> yeah. >> you get a sense of the real humanity of what was going on. >> all right, alex, thank you so much. strategies for using your good morning. it's 8:25, i'm michelle griego. keizer mental health care workers in san francisco and across the state are walk on the picket lane. the union says they severely under staffed. skies ser beefing up the staff and investing millions in the facilities, 16 residents evacuated and displaced due to a gas leak. a car crashed in to gas meters on the side of the building. two people have been arrested. the homeowners association at country club vista installed its own automated license plate readers in response to a series of side shows and other suspicious activity in the
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through there. use an alternate if you can. another accident, east shore, westbound 80, blocking one lane. a busy ride working coming off of 80, towards the bay bridge, a couple of problems, try the richmond bridge instead. a live look at the san mateo, busy ride out of hayward, foster city, metering lights are on with the slow and go ride as well. tracking areas of dense fog and also a few isolated showers on hi-def doppler. things are winding down, we are looking at drier weather for this afternoon. clearing as we go through the day, mostly cloudy to partly sunny skies this afternoon. clear skies by tonight. upper 50s, low 60s heading through the afternoon, 58 for a high in san francisco as well as redwood city. oak land, a high of 59 as well as sap rafael and santa rosa. 6 san jose. dry afternoon and dry over the
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these days, women are the primary breadwinner in 50% of households. that means house work is a man's job. so get the new ge big boy home appliances. like the big boy dishwasher features a 70 pound steel door. >> and she may have climbed the corporate ladder, but she will need an actual ladder two use the big boy washing machine because that sucker is six feet tall.
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dirty floors don't stand a chance with the new ride on vacuum cleaner. >> that is awesome. >> i love drago, of course. he is like the modern day mr. mom. welcome back to all of the big boys and big girls out there. right now it is time to show you some of this morning's headlines. a cbs affiliate says scammers are targeting gift cards. they go in the store and write down numbers on the card, they will get notified when you activate it, and then they will spend it before you. an internet user spotted what appears to be lyle and eric menendez in the background of a
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1990 basketball card. they can be seen sitting courtside. it would have been taken before they were arrested for murdering their parents, the brothers are now serving life sentences. california's desert sun says a boxer became the first transgender male to fight professionally in the u.s. he won the super featherweight fight by a unanimous decision on saturday. he competed as a woman in the 2012 politic trials, but a shoulder injury forced him to withdrawal. he transitioned to mail. >> the "new york times" says your apps nowhere you have been. you can't keep it a secret. the times analysis found that 75 companies receive anonymous precise location data from apps from users that enable location services for local news, weather, and other information.
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several of them claim to track up to 200 million mobile devices in the u.s. the apps can track your movements more than 14,000 times a day. the inspection can be traced back to you. the market for use and analysis of the data by advertisers or retail outlets is worth $21 billion. disclosure from apps. press "don't allow" access for your location when the prompted by the program. and the torture of dressing for your holiday office party. jennifer whinner says you have to choose clothes that signal polishes without boring, attractive but not provocative, and looking for promotions not propositions.
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that can be trouble for women in the workplace. she is joining us now to discuss holiday office party etiquette. i have to say i groaned a little bit, the topic, i thought in 2018, here we are, still having this conversation. >> still having the conversation. >> but every year someone gets into trouble at the holiday party. you think it is still necessary. >> i have to ask first why are we having holiday parties at all. >> for moral? >> wouldn't you rather have an extra $100 in your paycheck? rather than going to the party.
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>> let me tell you something, we're never given the option. the holiday party is here. not optional. it is tricky. men have a uniform, you put on a suit and tie and you're dressed. if you're over dressed you take off the tie and you're good to go. for women it's like okay, holiday festive, does that mean what i wore to work today plus a ne necklace, do i have to bring it? >> the suggestion that what i wear is that i'm asking for it. that's what has been, as you know, well she dressed that way therefore she deserved today be treated that way. aren't we past that? why don't we focus on behavior, norms of behavior. >> that would be lovely and fantastic. unfortunately as anyone who has been living and breathing and paying attention knows that we're not there yet.
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certainly in my industry in publishing, a lot of the guys that got taken down in me too situations, it was for off campus activities. it was what they're doing, out for drinks or at a party. >> that doesn't have anything to do with what the women are wearing. >> absolutely and we should be policing their behavior rather than our clothing, i agree with that completely. unless it says ugly sweater party you don't know what to wear all of the time. it's tricky and i think you look at the catalogs, everything is cute, a little sexy, that's not the message you want to send at the office party. >> and limit alcohol consumption. >> absolutely. do not drink, have a friend, have a plan. if that guy that checks out your butt when you go to the copier corners you, have a friend looking out for you and say hey,
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sarah, come over here with me, not with him. avoid the creepy guy. >> what else can you do? >> what else can you do at an office party? i joke that unfortunately i would say wear a body camera at this point. i know, right? a body camera and a one piece bathing suit under the clothes, but here we go. >> there are all kinds of other reasons that holiday events a fraud. you walk up to your boss, you want to say just enough, not too much, or do you avoid them all together? >> no, you want to talk to the boss, you want to show you're a team player, you like where you work, you like what you do, you like the responsibility, you want a promotion. >> do you say that at the party? >> no.
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and you don't sell your side hustle at the party. i think you want to bring your best self to that party and you don't necessarily is to be saying promote me or give me a raise. >> yeah, you have to go. i speak as someone whose best self is currently on the couch watching the simpsons. >> why do you have to go? >> you want to show you're a team player, you're want to be there, you like these people, fake it until you make it. >> but you make an appearance, you say hi to everyone, and you're not the last person at the party. >> i'm never the last person at the party. >> do your thing, say hi, a little face time, avoid the creepy guy. >> my husband says i'm just going to go take a tour up and down the hall. >> and laugh, right? >> absolutely, nora has a very
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nice looking refrigerator with good stuff in the back, just saying. all right, a dog that survived the dead deadliest wil in california history, the dog was patiently waiting when andrea returned to her home. when the fire broke out, she was not able to rescue her dogs, both shepherd mixes, and miguel turned up the shelter 80 miles away. madison was spotted after the fire swept through. >> you're the best dog. imagine the loyalty. coming through the worst of circumstances and being here waiting. it was so emotional.
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1700s was -- look at me, how dare you, close your eyes. >> overweight, diseased, and often, perhaps understandably, nasty. >> i heard the word fat. >> but in the hands of olivia coleman, she may at last get the credit she deserves. >> fun to play that kind of aristocratic -- >> playing the person most removed from you is the most fun. you always find a little bit of you in everyone, i suppose. you always have to find something you like in everybody you play. >> you are the world's second worst man. anyone crosses you god help them. >> go and take this. >> bloody hell.
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>> she has had major roles in television series in the u.s. most recently in the adaptation of the night manager where she played an unlikely spy master to great acclaim. >> nice to meet you. >> you're so beautiful. >> but the award she won for the favorite in which she stars with emma stone and rachael weiss brought her career to another level. she won the best actress prize, and the film awards. >> it is all tiptoeing towards the big award. do you feel you're getting the recognition. >> not finally, that sounds horrendous. when you get nominated, it is a surprise and an enormous -- you know, it is really incredibly
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exciting. >> oh, great, now she is crying. it is probably not something she imagined when she began her tv career doing comedy sketch shows. but her life is about to take another dramatic rn. she has been cast as the new queen elizabeth in "the crown." as the saga develops and the queen ages, there was only so much that make yum could do. so it is olivia coleman's turn to ascend to the thrown again. >> you seem to have cornered the mark market. >> playing a living queen is a
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lot different than one that has been dead for 300 years. >> it is like the die has been cast twice, does it limit what you can do? >> i can't play her welsh or unkind. i really tried. it is daunting. it is the hardest thing i have done, i think. >> really, this roll? >>. >> yeah. >> because of the responsibility of it? >> yeah, there is more ready made critics and there is 1,000 of them as opposed to -- >> millions i would have brought. >> olivia coleman's movie will not stream until next year. >> for cbs this morning, mark
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phillips. >> golf ahead. >> i'm so excited about season three, i'm excited about my favorites. >> i love her already. >> i love when she says playing overweight and diseased, playing someone so opposite of you. who wants to play someone overweight and diseased, you do if you're not overweight and diseased. >> and at your office parties don't say that to anyone. >> all right, now to today's cbs david martin who is celebrating 35 years of spectacular reporting on cbs news. hear his podcast on all major platforms. watching "cbs this morning." >> go david.
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this is a kpix 5 morning update. good morning, it is 85:00 5, i'm michelle griego. in san jose, a hit and run suspect and her alleged get away driver are under arrest. an 18-year-old woman slammed in to the side of an apartment and severed a gas line this morning. police tracked her down after she reported the car stolen. 16 people in the building have been displaced. thousands of keizer mental health care workers are on strike, the union says they are grossly under staffed. keizer is beefing up the staff and investing millions in the facilities. dozens of teachers at oak land high school are staging a sickout. teachers can't afford to live
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40 minutes, that's your drive time there. use the san mateo instead. bart also an option. see slick surfaces out there. golden gate bridge, not bad. we have a crash west 980, 27th street, blocking one lane. heads up there and your travel times now all in the red. north 101 south bay, 76 minutes and a stop and go ride along the altamonte pass. good morning to you. watching the showers wind down this morning on hi-def doppler. through the afternoon, a dry afternoon. looking at temperatures in the upper 50s to low 60s. 58 san francisco. 59 in oak land. dry afternoon, we will stay dry over the next few days. rain chances back on friday.
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wayne: you can't lose! - (screaming) wayne: we're making wayne in the club. you've got the big deal! tiffany: yeah! cat: wait, wait, wait, wait. wayne: is it good? - show me what you got. jonathan: it's a new bmw! - (screaming) wayne: season ten-- we're going bigger! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. i need three people, let's go. let's see, let's see, let's see, let's see. three people. you, the girl scout or boy scout, yes, right there. nora, right there. and the musketeer, come on over here. come on, marc, marc.
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