tv CBS This Morning CBS February 14, 2019 7:00am-9:01am PST
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ocean science center. we have a lot of issues going on today. if you are heading out, please be careful and stay updated on line at kpix.com, and of course our next local update is 7:26 am. date is 7:26 am. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's thuray, february 14th, 2019. happy valentine's day to you. welcome to "cbs this morning." former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe sits down with 60 minutes for a bombshell first tv interview since being fired. mccabe tells scott kelly why he starteded the investigation of president trump and confirms there was talk of removing the president from office. a judge ruled that former trump campaign chairman paul manafort lied three too manies times to the special counsel.
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computer hackers tried to steal more than 11 million medical records last year. see why that information is so valuable and what you can do to protect your data. >> one of the surprising favorites is a black and white movie in spanish. director alfonso cuaron shows us how it sends a message of hope. we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opening, your world in 90 seconds. >> it's going to be devastating for manafort. >> a legal blow to the president's former campaign chairman. >> voiding the plea deal with the special counsel.tentionally lied about the russia probe. >> sending it to president trump for his signature. >> i don't want to see a shutdown. >> a rest warrant issued for a former counterintelligence
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specialist accused of revealing classified informationing to iran. >> she appears to have switched her allegiance. >> severe turbulence, injuring five people. >> send a food cart. >> sounded like we hit buildings at 30,000 feet. >> the teacher strike in denver ending. >> agreeing on a new pay system. >> all that. >> ready to let it go. frozen's back again. ♪ let it go i'm so excited. >> all that matters. >> new backlash over changes to this year's ogs caoscars. decide to hand out awards during commercial breakings. >> a week away from them being like, just to speed things up, they'll be actors who we wish were dead, okay. >> security camera video of a man who had a built of an ice ka paid on the way to the mailbox.
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his shoes were like a comedy. let's look at that one more time. look at the action. i mean. >> don't do that. >> i didn't do it on purpose. >> clearly adding insult to injury. >> this morning's eye opener presented by toyota. let's go places. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." be careful in the driveway. just stay inside and watch us. >> don't do that. i love his response. i didn't do it on purpose. >> we got a big show this morning. >> we'll start right with it. extraordinary revelations. in his first tv interview since is being fired, the former fbi's former director is telling 60 minutes why he launched an investigation into president trump. andrew mccabe waxs a career
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official. he oversaw russian election meddling and hillary clinton emaims. he took over after james comey was fired. in his new book, the threat, mccabe describes extraordinary measures justice department officials took after comey's firing. he said he was concern md about the president's possible ties to russia. >> remember last march, about one day before mccabe was scheduled to retire, he was fired by then attorney general jeff sessions. the justice department accusing him about sharing information with the media. mccabe did not receive his full benefits and is considering a lawsuit. in an interview for sunday's 60 minutes mccabe discussled a meeting with the president in the oval office just hours after comey was fired. >> i was speaking to the man who had just run for the presidency. and won the election for the
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presidency. and who might have done so with the aid of the government of russia. our most formidable adversary on the world stage. that was something that troubled me greatly. >> how long after you deep sid d decided to start the investigations? >> i think the next day i met with the team investigating the russia catises. i asked the team to determine where are we with these efforts and what steps to take going forward. i was very concerned i was able to put the russia case on absolutely solid ground. in an indelible fashion. that the case could not be closed or vanish without a trace. i wanted to make sure our case
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was on solid ground and somebody came in behind me and closed it and tried to walk away from it, they would not bae able to do that without create ago record. >> you wanted a documentary record? >> that's right. >> that those investigations had begun because you feared they would be made to go away? >> that's right. >> the white house responded to the opening of that investigation calling it completely baseless investigation. now we're hearing directly from mccabe as he tells his own story with scott pelley on 60 minutes. this is fascinating toed in thi interview. he wallas a career fbi professional. he confirmed he opened that investigation. why? >> it was about eight days in may in 2017 right after comey was fired. mccabe describes a chaotic time,
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especially at the justice department. when questions are being asked whether jim comey was fired to obstruct the russia investigation and if so is the president an agent of russia. there were two investigatings. one, a criminal investigation. the other, a counterintelligence investigation. mccabe told us that he had many reasons to open both of those investigations and as we just heard him say, he wanted to get those investigations open so that if he got fired right away, they wouldn't just disappear. >> what did he say about friction in the white house? >> well, he tells the story, john, of the president repeatedly in meetings and phone calls trying to convince him, mccabe, everyone at the fbi wanted comey fired.
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saying to the presenident, no, that's not what happened, people are in tears over the firing of comey. he says it was at that point he realized if he hadn't burned the bridge with the president, he could certainly smell it smoking. >> a very candid conversation. i've only read an excerpt from the book. he's speaking about his feelings for the president. was there anything in the interview that surprised you about what he was saying? >> the most illuminating thing to me were these eight days in may when all of these things were happening behind the scenes that the american people didn't know about. there were meetings at the justice department in which it was discussed whether the vice president and a majority of the cabinet could be brought together to remove the president of the united states in the 25th amendment. these were the eight days from comey's firing to the point that mueller was a pointed special
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counsel and the highest levels of american land were trying to figure out. >> i want to put a finer opponent on that. don't believe there's been a source that went on the record to confirm that the 25th amendment was discussed. mccabe is saying that was discussed? >> mccabe is the very first person involved in these meetings who has come out and spoken publicly. >> there was a discussion under way about removing the president of the united states? >> they were counting noses. they were not asking cabinet members whether they would vote for or against removing the president. but they were speculating this person would be would us, that person would not be and they were counting noses in that effort. >> this was not perceived to be a joke? >> this was not perceived to be a joke. it was also said at a previous time that the deputy attorney
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general rosenstein offered to wear a wire into the white house to record potentially incriminating conversations with the president. a statement was released after that, that that was never serious, it was sarcastic, et cetera. mccabe says no, it came up more than once. it was so serious he took it to the lawyers at the fbi to discuss it. >> mr. rozsenstein seems to den that. interesting how the versions of that exchange -- >> rosenstein says he never authorized wearing a wire but that's not what we're talking about. we're talking about discussing whether it was a posability. >> did you have a hard time d p keeping ykeep ing your face straight? >> i did say silently can't believe i'm hearing this. >> seems he was trying to reinforce how surreal this was.
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he'd never seen anything liking it. >> he'd been in the fbi his whole career. he rose in his sterling career. became head of the prestigious washington field office. rose all the way to the number two position at the fbi. and this was, without a doubt, the most surreal moment. >> can't wait to see it. extraordinary interview and reporting, scott, thank you. this is such a big story that the justice department is weighing in. a spokesman saying deputy attorney general rosenstein rejects mr. mccabe's representation of events as factually incorrect and there's no basis to invoke the 25th amendment. mccabe revealed more of his conversations in the special report right here on cbs.
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well, a judge has ruleden manafort lied repeat lid to the special counsel's office. he could not spew spend the res his life in prison. one month later, he pleaded guilty to two more counts of conspiracy and agreed to cooperate with the russia investigation in exchange for an lighter sentence. the ruling means the special counsel does not have to follow that agreement. pauley reid at the white house. >> reporter: good morning. last year, the special counsel accusedme mannafort of repeated lying. manafort denied the allegations. after a series of secret behind closed door hearings, the judge found manafort did intentionally lie about three of the five things alleged by prosecutors. including his contact with an
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associate known to have ties with russian intelligence services during the campaign and after president trump was oo electric elected. he faces ten years in prison in addition to bank and tax fraud convictioning convictions. he likely faces the rest of his life in prison. his only state of escaping, the presidential pardon. the president has said he has not taken that option often tf table. congress plans to vote later today on a bipartisan compromise budget bill that will prevent another partial government shutdown. white house officials believe president trump will sign it even though it doesn't give him the money to build the border wall. the president indicated he will find another way to build it. >> as we review the new pros
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proposal, i can promise, i willer in waiwill er in willer in waiver from my sacred duty. we will get the wall done. the wall is very, very -- on its way. >> nancy cordes is on capitol hill where the final plan was revealed overnight. nancy, good morning to you. >> guaood morninging. the final plan is to get support when it goes up today. no one wants to see another shutdown. they want to send a powerful message to the president that he should sign this bill even if it doesn't contain everything he wanted. the bill does give the department of homeland security roughly $25 billion for border security funding in 20 the 1919. included is nearly $1.4 billion for physical barriers. 55 miles of new fencing along the border. that fence which some republicans are call ago wall will be steel packled with
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concrete, 35 tall in some areas, 18 feet tall in others. one thing that won't be in the bill is a measure that was proposed by democrats at the last minute to provide back pay to federal contractors. affected by the government shutdown. the white house signaling the president will sign the bill. he has said he'll find the rest of the money he wanted somewhere else. >> a beautiful morning there in washington, thank you. a former air force special agent is thought to be the first u.s. intelligence officer ever accused of defecting to iran. saying wit let left the u.s. in 2013. now accused of revealing the name of an intelligence officer. she worked as a pentagon contractor until 2010. saying spying on iran was part of her job. in 2012, she attended an anti-american conference in
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iran. prosecutors say lower ater that she began communicating on behalf of iran to find intelligence recruits. witt is believed to be in iran today. four iranian hackerings were indi indicted. a newly released video is raising questions about a company at the center of a criminal investigation stemming from the nation's opoid epidemic. former executives and managers for insys therapeutics on trial. accused of bribing distribution to prescribe a highly addict imfentanyl spray. alleging the company used a music video to push salings. >> reporter: those former executives and managers are charged with bribes and kick backs for doctors would wrote large number, of prescriptions. the video is now just one piece
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of mounting evidence in the case. ♪ >> reporter: the five-minute rap video in a sales conference. two young salesman promote the powerful spray. the message, encourage sales reps to push distribution to increase the subscriptions until the patient reaches the adequ e adequates do dosage. prosecutors say it is person wearing the substance costume is the former vice president of sales alec burlakoff. in november, he pleaded guilty in the nationwide conspiracy to bribe doctors to prescribe it. he is expected to testify as a government witness.
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cbs news he made 1,000 payment also to doctors that totaled more than $2 million. prosecutors claim insys founder personally recruited physicians for a kickback scheme which included dinners and payments for sham speaking engagements. kapoor's attorney claims he's innocent. >> he was not involved at all. >> reporter: since the food and drug administration approved it in 2012 to treat severe cancer pain, it has reportedly disclosed more than 900 substance related deathings. they told us they in no way defend past misconduct of employees. >> thank you for that. you look at that video. so disturbing. leave the rapping to people that rap. when you think how they're using it, it seems really
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inappropriate. >> highly inappropriate. ahead, a new warning about diet it is a windy start to the day. we have a high when morning and wind advisory in effect through the morning. we also have a flood warning for southeast marin county until 8:45 am due to all of that rain. the roads, streams are flooding. we have scattered showers and thunderstorms through the afternoon. the wind will be easing with unsettled weather tomorrow into the weekend. the weekend.
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anna warner shows how easy it is to get your information and what the government is doing about it. seven women accuse this singer/producer ryan adams of abuse. his response. you're watching "cbs this morning." 's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ready to treat differently with a pill? otezla. show more of you. with cinemastream for less buffering,
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day, surprising new research on finding love in the digital age. friends with benefits. apparently it's a thing. how science can help improve your chances of having a lasting relationship. plus, the first documented this is a kpix 5 news morning update . >> good morning. it is 7:26 am. i am michelle griego. the mudslide caused a home to tumbled down the hillside in sausalito. here's what is left of the home along crescent avenue. one woman was trapped in the debris and being treated for minor injuries. the city of san jose has lifted the evacuation order for the homes along the guatalupe river. people were urged to evacuate this morning due to a flood threat and the evacuation area was north willow glen between willow glen way and atlanta
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avenue. again, the evacuation orders have been lifted. in hours the russian river in sonoma county is expected the flood. experts predict the russian river will hit flood stage at 10 am, taking on friday and remaining above flood level until saturday. we have news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website at kpix.com. te platforms including our website at kpix.com. es. at ross. yes for less.
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great minds shop alike? yes. that's yes for less. yep! yes, yes, yes ,yes, yes... yes. seriously, 20 to 60 percent off department store prices every day. at ross. yes for less. it is busy and especially long 880 with an ongoing traffic alert. it looks good here but south of this area we have an accident with the trouble spot not far from this area. we have a traffic alert 880 at davis with a lanes blocked. we are tracking strong wind with the high wind warning and wind advisory in effect until 10 am. we also have a flash flood watch for most of the bay area due to all of the rain. scattered showers with isolated heavy downpours possible through the afternoon.
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valentine's day was the saint of seasonal marketing. if you haven't picked something out your your speetheart you have a lot of options. olive garden is offering a breadstick bouquet for valentine's day. the bread book kaye coouquet co paper, my love for you is never ending. and cinnabon selling a nine-count pack of mini bun rolls. for one, you buy her enough to buy her the best, as long as you don't have to leave the mall food court. for the meat-eatin' woman in your life, bouquets of bacon
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roses. yes. if you don't make her heart flutter, 40 slices of rolled up bacon will stop it dead. >> oh, my god! i love that. >> get you bacon. i like that, stephen colbert. >> a little sprinkling of lipitor and you are okay. plenty of ideas, tony. >> i know. still seeking something, i just stop by the food cart. welcome back to cbs "this morning." here are three other things you need to know this morning. ford is recalling nearly 1.5 million of his best selling f-150 pickups mostly in the u.s. ford says the transmissions can suddenly down shift into first gear. it's received fire reports of accidents and one whiplash injury possibly related to the problem. dealers will release a software fix. ford's f series pickups is the top selling vehicle in the united states. members of the house armed services committee blasted leaders of the nation's military
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academy yesterday for not doing enough to stop a sexual assault crisis on their campuses. a nearly 50% spike in sexual assaults and three military academies in the past year that came after our reporting exposed troubles patterns at the air force academy. they pledged to address underlying cultural issues at the institutions. and a new study finds ap link between diet drinks and a stroke. women who consume two or more a day were 30% more likely to have a strike caused by a blocked artery. water is the best no calorie alternative. the international sweeteners association says low calorie sweeteners are tested and their safety confirmed. >> water always works. targeting people's medical records, a firm that helps
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health care companies protect data says there were 222 hacking incidents last year. that's up nearly 25% from 2017. in all, more than 11 million patient records were affected. anna warner shows how some of those records are being bought and then sold on the black market. that's not good. anna, good morning. >> no, it's not good, gayle. in addition to your doctors' notes, your medical records is contain sensitive information like your date of birth along with credit card and social security numbers, as health care providers store this information digitally, some left their files vulnerable to being exposed. we spoke with a victim of medical identity theft who showed us just how much damage that can do. >> it was quite a tumultuous decade of a mess. >> reporter: the mess started in 2004 for brandon reagan when as a young marine he lost his wallet. months later -- your mother calls and says what? >> local authorities were here
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looking for you today involving this incident. >> reporter: which was? >> a car theft. multiple car thefts at the time. >> reporter: someone posing as him was stealing cars and getting multiple medical procedures. he got the bills to pay. >> reporter: the balance says $2,236. the bills added up to nearlies $20,000. >> you tried to get these problems off your credit report? >> i did. >> did it work? >> until the next billing cycle. >> it's like a never-ending battle and not the kind you and the marine corps are trained to handle? >> yes, ma'am. >> reporter: but this man sees it all the time at the health and human service department's office of inspector general. >> every one of our investigations involves the use of medical data to commit fraud. >> reporter: he warns people want people's medical records. >> a treasure-trove of all this information about you. >> reporter: last year alone he
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says the agency handled nearly 400 reports of medical data breaches. some of that information winds up for sale on the internet's dark web. >> sometimes they're compromising this data and we don't know how it's being used, when or if it will be used to compromise those individuals identities. >> kind of sitting out there like a time bomb essential willy? >> that's right. >> reporter: how easy is it for criminals to get hold of patients' files? we asked this security expert. >> how long did it take to find medical records on the dark web? >> a few seconds. >> yeah. literally three seconds? >> yeah. >> reporter: this seller offered children's health records for sale. >> usa kids pull records from a pediatrician? >> from the years 2000 to 2014. >> reporter: another posted an entire hospital's worth of files. >> health care data base from georgia, 397,000 patient records. >> 39,0 7,000 patient records wt
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they're selling? >> exactly. >> reporter: how are they getting them? >> product description, breached a very large hospital recently. >> exactly. >> somebody hacked into this hospital and here's the records if you want to buy them for 26 grand? >> exactly. monetize the records quickly and offering them at a discount compared to other prices i've seen on the dark web. >> reporter: social security numbers sell for a buck and credit card info up to $110. experian reports full medical records command up to $1,000, because they're an identity thief's dream. >> so i'm looking at the details, right? it says date of birth, place of birth. ed considerate card details. social security number, address, e-mails. >> three-digit code on the back of the card. >> right. so this is really all they need, if they buy this? >> exactly. >> then they can become -- >> you. >> reporter: and hackers have stolen millions of records. a breach at anthem insurance affected 78 million people, and a hack at ucla health exposed
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more than 4 million patient records. despite that, a 2017 survey of health care providers found just 16% reported having a fully functional cyber security program. >> one of our most important missions is to mitigate that vulnerability quickly as possible and that means communicating with those individuals over systems. >> reporter: as for brandon reagan, the crook who stole his identity served time in prison, but 15 years later, he says he still hasn't been able to undo all the damage. >> that hospital may still have his information, his blood type under my name at that hospital. >> reporter: that's worrisome. >> a little weird, i think. >> reporter: because of situation like that, experts we spoke with say it's a good idea to request a copy of your medical files now to clear up any confusions if your records are altered later due to medical identity theft, which is -- >> a lot of information on the medical records.
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never thought about your three-digit code is on your medical records? thinking about that. >> a lot of onus on us as usual. >> the thing, if doctors and hospitals don't have adequate security they community kacate other entities in the medical world, all have different security systems. >> such a shame. having digital medical records is a benefit to so many. >> convenient but comes with a risk. >> until they steal your identity. then it's not convenient at all. >> anna, thanks so much. singer and influential music pro producer ryan adams facing disturbing new allegations from multiple women. using think power to pursue them. if you're on the go, listen to our podcast. we'll be right back. hey, mi towel, su towel.
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moore. he offered to jump-start their music careers and then pursued them sexually. the disturbing allegations including claims of sexual misconduct involving an underaged girl. >> nikki, good morning. >> chances are you've heard at least one of his songs. now several women tell "the new york times "qwest he used his status in the music industry to prey on them. ♪ ♪ >> singer ryan adams broke into the music scene as a solo artist in the early 2000s. ♪ >> quickly churning out hits. the seven-time grammy-nominated singer has collaborated with artists like john mayer. ♪ >> and has produced for willie nelson and fallout boy, but "the new york times" spoke to seven women and more than a dozen associates of adams who describe a pattern of manipulative behavior in which he dangled career opportunities while simultaneously pursuing female artists for sex.
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♪ ♪ >> musician phoebe bridgers told the times she and adams started a relationship in 2014 when she was 20 years old and he was 40. she accuses him being obsessive and emotionally abusive when she broke things off she says he rescinded his offer to have her open for his upcoming concerts. adams is also accused of sending sexually explicit text messages to an underaged fan. adams allegedly exposed himself to her during phone sex. the most high-from file accusation came from adams' ex-wife, actress and singer mandy moore. she told the times during their seven-year marriage he was psychologically abusive and said his controlling behavior essentially did block my ability to make new connections in the industry. on twitter adams admitted he is not a perfect man and has made
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many mistakes and said he would never have inappropriate interactions with someone he thought was underaged. he said the times article paints an upsettingly inaccurate picture of him and calls it outright false. >> disturbing that the reckoning continues. >> indeed it does. >> tough to here. >> thank you. >> up next, a look at this morning's other headlines including an update on a story we brought you yesterday about poor housing conditi it is day two of the atmospheric river event. we have been high wind warning and wind advisory in effect through the morning along with a flash flood watch. that is because of all of the rain we have received already, and we continue to look at scattered showers with isolated and heavy downpours. the wind will be easing to the day with unsettled weather tomorrow into the weekend. the weekend. get to kohl's...
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infest vai infestations of vermin and flooding in their home. their children became sick. the army secretary and army chief of staff say they plan to hold their chain of command and private contractors accountable. school officials have agreed to end the first denver's teacher's strike in 25 years. public school teachers walked off the job over a long-running dispute over their pay. they put the final touches on the agreement overnight. it will raise salaries by 11%. those schools, though, remain open with administrators and substitutes taking charge of the classes. "usa today" reports apple and google are facing backlash for offering an app that lets men in saudi arabia track and control the movement of women. launched in 2015 the app reportedly sense realtime text message alerts telling men about the travel of their wives or daughters. they can also prevent these women from leaving the country. apple ceo tim cook said the tech
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giant will look into the matter. the reno gazette journal reports five delta passengers were injured in severe turbulence. the plane made an emergency landing in reno. the delta compass flight from santa ana, california, yesterday was headed to seattle. the plane did a nosedive twice. a drink cart flipped over and snacks and luggage were scattered across the cabin floor. delta is giving all 59 passengers a refund. >> i hope so. may we all never have a nosedive. to think about that and visualize that. >> the plane is fine. >> i know, john. i do think about that. when you go through something that the plane is still okay. in the moment, though, i'm wearing depends. >> i was -- if you didn't say, what kind of moment would that be? >> it would be a depends moment. >> doing enough -- i'm glad
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they're okay. >> "the guardian," researchers about a rare black panther. a zoo recorded the nighttime video also known as a black leopard. infrared footable shows the characteristic spots. it happened not far from the fictional setting of the movie black panther. >> gorgeous. >> so beautiful! >> wakanda forever! >> ahead, the director of "roma" tells us why he wanted to bring the tough times of his childhood to the big screen coming up on "cbs this morning." mornin alexa... "fire" by the ohio players ♪fire (uh) (uh) what if we turn it up a notch? ♪fire (it's all about) (uh, uh) what if we go off the map? ♪fire (woo, woo, woo) ♪fire
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is 7:56 am. i am kenny choi. the evacuation was lifted after people were urged to evacuate due to the flood threat at the guatalupe river. a woman was caught up in the mudslide in sausalito this morning with heavy rain sparking the mudslide that caused the home she was in to tumble down the side of the hill into a second home. the novato police have issued shelter-in-place for the
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the traffic alert continues along a dating. it is a troublesome ride at davis with a big rig accident, north down two lanes are completely blocked your at the peninsula a crash at south the 101 and shoreline. working your way through the maze we have an accident with lanes blocked toward powell street. it is backed up as far back as richmond. it is stop and go conditions at the berkeley curve your we have been high wind warning and wind advisory in effect and continuing throughout the morning. we also have a flood warning at southeastern marin county until 8:45 am. the flash flood watch continues
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. and happy valentine's day. it's thursday, february 14th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, the end of a mars mission that lasted more than 14 year, longer than expected. plus, it's valentine's day so we're going to look at how more couples are taking longer than ever to get married and why that seems to be good for them in the long run, but, first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. the fbi's former director is telling "60 minutes" why he launched an investigations into
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president trump. >> i wanted to make sure that if somebody came in behind me and closed it, they would not be able to do that without creating a record. >> he tells the story of the president trying to convince him that everyone at the fbi wanted comey fired. >> after a series of secret behind-closed door hearings judge amy berman jackson found manafort did lie about things alleged by prosecutors. >> no one wants to see another shutdown, and they want to send a powerful message to the president that he should sign this bill. >> former insys executives are accused of conspiring for wribs and kickbacks. >> mitch mcconnell is forcing a vote on alexandria ocasio-cortez's new green deal. >> alexandria ocasio-cortez is basically the cardi b. of politics. it doesn't matter what you're
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rapping. you want her featured on your tracks. ♪ i like high speed trains and no planes ♪ >> this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is presented by progressive. >> i'm john dickerson with bianna golodryga, gayle king and norah o'donnell. a federal judge raised the odds of former campaign chairman paul manafort spending the rest of his life in prison saying he intentionally lied to the special counsel's office about three separate topics including contacts during and after the campaign with an associate who the fbi says has ties to russian intelligence. >> prosecutors said last week that fan amortgage's lies about those contacts are still very much at the heart of what the special counsel's office is investigating. manafort agreed to cooperate in exchange for a light sentence, but the judge says the special counsel is no longer bound by that plea deal. manafort is one of five close
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trump associates or advisers to have pleaded guilty or been convicted of lying. vice president mike pens told european allies in poland this morning that they should join the u.s. and pull out of the iran nuclear telling calling iran the world's largest state spansor of terrorism. the agenda does not include saudi arabia's conflict with yemen and the role in the killing of "washington post" journalist jamal khashoggi and he was asked why pompeo is still backing the saudis and the de facto leader. >> the trump administration has been very critical of human rights violations in iran, but when it comes to america's allies such as saudi arabia, it seems that the u.s. is less critical, for example, mohammed bin salman, the crown prince believed to be involved in the killing of american resident jamal khashoggi. do you believe the cia's
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assessment? >> that's a ridiculous question. >> why is that? >> the united states calls out human rights violations each place that we find them. >> yet president trump has been more hesitant to criticize mohammed bin salman. >> we have an important relationship with the kingdom of saudi arabia and we're determined to make that a successful relationship but we've made clear as the facts are developed and as we learn more, everyone responsible for the murder of jamal khashoggi will be held accountable. >> saudi arabia -- >> not sure that was a ridiculous question. >> the crown prince said he did not order the murder. the governor in florida is calling on investigating failures in the shooting at park lapd. 17 students and staff members were killed in the shooting at marjory stoneman douglas high school one year ago today. there was a moment of silence hat so:17 eastern time this morning to honor all of the victims. another will be held this afternoo afternoon. adriana diaz is outside the school on the day of a very sad
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anniversary for the people there. >> reporter: a very sad day indeed. we spoke to students and parents who said they found strength through activism and the movement that started with this tragedy is keeping up momentum. last week there was a group on capitol hill lobbying lawmakers. students also tell us that it's been tough for them to balance academics and activism, and when they go to school here, they still see that building where the massacre occurred. it's a daily reminder of what happened here, especially today. do you feel safe in school? >> absolutely not. it's just very uncomfortable being at that particular school knowing that that's where i nearly lost my life. >> reporter: marjory stoneman douglas high school has beefed up security adding more than 100 new cameras and doubling its security staff to 18, but students like senior aliya eastman are directing more. >> our lives depend on you and our lives are in your hands. thank you. >> reporter: she told her story on capitol hill last week. >> when the gunman shot into our
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classroom nicholas was in front of me. as nicholas fell i matched his every movement and hid underneath his lifeless body. >> reporter: in the year since the massacre congress passed modest legislation allowing states and agencies to share mental health reports but no gun control laws. states including florida passed 66 gun control bills. at least seven states expanded background checks and eight allowed law enforcement to confiscate weapons from at-risk individuals. do you think there's been enough change nationwide? >> absolutely not, particularly for communities of color. i feel like the conversation of gun violence prevention has been surround by mass shootings or school shootings which is only about 2% of gun violence as a whole. >> reporter: as students apply pressure pubically. >> i'm amazed that i cannot see the end of this crowd here in d.c. today. [ cheers and applause ] >> reporter: a florida commission investigating the shooting made dozens of recommendations last month,
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including metal detectors and so-called hard corners where students can hard. this one from inside stoneman doug salas equipped with red first aid kits with tourniquets to stop bleeding. the report called for more funding for the state's new controversial guardian program. we visited the training in june where everyday people learn to become armed school guards. parkland's district says it's adopted more than half of the recommendations so far. >> that report i think probably could have gone further than it did. >> reporter: tom hoyer lost his 15-year-old son luke in the shooting. his bedroom remains untouched. >> it's been kind of a hard year of firsts, you know, so you're going through the first birthday, going through the first family getaway, first christmas. >> reporter: hour is working with the 16 other victims' families to push for more change. >> i would have a hard time living with myself. i'd have very deep regrets if i didn't do something that i know could be done and this happened again. >> reporter: the victims'
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families are pushing for changes in school safety, mental health and responsible firearm ownership. they also already have more trips to washington planned. as for what's happening here in parkland today, there will be no classes for marjory stoneman douglas students, but they are encouraged to volunteer. there will also be a moment of silence citywide at 22:1 p.m. when the shooting began one year ago today. norah? >> we're thinking of all of those families. it's hard to believe
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we have more news we have much more news ahead. tourists at thomas jefferson's monticello estate are now learning the complete history, including jefferson's relationship with his slave sally hemings. a look at how their defendants are making sure hemings' legacy is recognized and the director of an unlikely oscar front-runner tolls us about the intensely personal story about the movie and a new list of valentine's day love and break-up song list. we'll share. ♪
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in our series "a more perfect union" we like to show what united states us as americans is greater than what divides us. ahead of president's day weekend and black history month we look at thomas jefferson's legacy in the unbreakable connections of his descendants. these two don't look alike. they are related. our streaming network has the story of their ancestral links. i can't wait to hear. good morning. >> reporter: fascinating. good morning. how to present the exceptionalism along with the full history including slavery. at jefferson's monticello estate you're giving a peek into the experience. the latest, sally hemming and a personal look at the shameful chapter in american history.
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>> reporter: at the expense of monticello estate sits a simple room with white walls, brick floors and a single silhouette that represents the life of sally hemmings. one of our third presidents more than 600 slaves. the exhibit take as definitive stance on her relationship with thomas jeff zorn and the children they had together. a story once hidden, now has the spotlight. >> i knew that slave owners all over the south had relationships with clave slaves. so why wouldn't thomas jefferson. >> reporter: this is jefferson's sixth great-grandson. >> when i was a kid i jumped on thomas jefferson's kid. >> reporter: shannon is also jefferson's sixth great-grandson but from sally hemmings' side. >> my story is different. i stood up and proudly said, thomas jefferson is my great, great, great, great, great,
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great grandfather. the teacher said sit down and stop telling lies. >> meet your relatives. >> reporter: they met the first time on the "oprah winfrey show." >> she said, what are you going to do now? >> i went, oh, my god what am i going to do? i invited him to come to monticello for the family reunion. >> bringing the slave and slave owners children together the first time and a lot of people did not want that to happen and could mean a possible icon jefferson was a raini apist -- and they didn't want that. >> stand up here. >> now they're really not going to like me. >> reporter: they voted not to allow the hemmings to the buried in this graveyard with other jefferson descendants. >> this is your mom? >> should they are buried for the family?
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>> without a doubt. they're jefferson's descendants. >> 135 are enslaved african-americans. >> i grew up in a time you didn't hear the word slave here. on ten tours over ten different years and didn't hear the word "slave." now we have complete tours. i feel good america gets the full story. these two rooms used to be a bathroom and they uncovered that sally and her brother lived here. if you take a tour they go through jefferson's bedroom, john hemmings built that archway there. that was never talked about. you were never taught that as a kid, you weren't, i wasn't, that slaves built monticello, the capitol, the white house. this country would not exist without slaves and sally hemmings was one of the founding mothers of this country. i like to think about thomas jefferson getting up on the day he wrote the declaration of
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independence back in 1776, who made his breakfast? time to wake up and write the declaration of independence. >> i'm proud my brother said that. there are now context to the content and telling the full story what happened here and that makes history richer. >> reporter: what do you think sale hemmings' legacy should be? >> wow. i think one of the legacies sally hemmings left her children, that they know who they are's they didn't have to be silenced. they were able to tell their story. >> one of the great things in my life. getting to know the rest of my family. it's made my life and the life of my children so much richer. >> we can prove after separated by slavery and history so many decades we can come together as family maybe the world still has hope to come together and leeb their differences behind them. >> and we were able to get into that graveyard where thomas
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jefferson is buried, because as a descendant of thomas jefferson, lucian was able to get a key. he has a key. a privilege shannon does not have. >> is that going to change? do you think? sigh love the story. >> thank you. i asked shannon -- it's great they're acknowledging you as a relative, when you sadly pass will they put you in that graveyard? right now they can't but i deserve that right. i don't know i want to be buried there but i deserve the right to be. >> i should have the option. i love how lucian is speaking up and i love the two of them together. >> they were wonderful. fascinating is when lucian described sally hemmings as the founding mother of the country and all of the mothers and fathers and uncles who built this country, he feels strongly about that. >> who helped make history. >> yeah. it's amazing, because when there there were groups of people taking the tours and hearing about it and i said -- they said what going on over here? the two descendants of thomas
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jefferson. an older gentleman from iowa said i'd never heard of this. >> i didn't either. now we know it's true. thank you. >> thank you. you can hear more of have ladd's interview with lucian and shannon on today's cbs "this morning" podcast available on all major podcast platforms. ahead, nasa says it's final farewell to one of it's greatest explorers. the mars rover opportunity. the little robot's record-breaking work could pave the way to a possible human mission to the red planet. you're watching cbs "this morning." man 1: this is my body of proof. woman 1: proof of less joint pain... woman 2: ...and clearer skin. woman 3: this is my body of proof. man 2: proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis... woman 4: ...with humira. woman 5: humira targets and blocks a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms.
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earn entries for a chance to choose your ride on the grand prize drawing night, february 23rd. you could have your choice of a brand new jeep renegade or chevy malibu only at twin pine casino & hotel. of a brand new jeep renegade or chevy malibu what's the secret to finding love that lasts? a lot of us asking that question today. i'm in the toyota green room with anthropologist, your name? >> helen fischer. >> studied 35,000 single
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americans and after looking at your research, thinking dating ain't what it used to be. >> actually gotten easier's dating sites. not even dating sites. introducing sites. it's gotten easier. this is a kpix 5 news morning update . good morning. it is 8:25 am. i am kenny choi. the mudslide causes a home to tumble down the hillside in sausalito. here's what is left of the home on crescent avenue. one woman was trapped in the debris is being treated for her injuries. they have lifted the evacuation order for the homes along the stretch of the guatalupe river. people had to evacuate order this morning due to the flood threat at north willow glen along the river at willow glen way and atlanta avenue.
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again, those evacuation orders have been lifted. the east ridge highway 9 west of saratoga is closed due to downed trees and power lines. at this point there's no estimate of when it will reopen. we have news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website at kpix.com. favorite platforms including our website at kpix.com.
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to an injury accident. the backup is distinctive and you can see the red, slow-and- go in both directions. here's a live look at 101 and university with traffic crawling along on the southbound side. use 284 better ride this morning. there are two right lanes shutdown on the beta80, backed up to 92. 580 is slow. on the san mateo bridge, 25 minutes from hayward to foster city. we are tracking strong wind this morning with a flash flood watch. we have a high wind warning and wind advisory and flood warning due to heavy rain with numerous roads and small strings flooding. we have the flood warning -- flood warning until 8:45 am. we have seen a lot of rain in a short period of time and especially in the north day, 68
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♪ ♪ i'm so sick of that same old love ♪ ♪ it tears me up ♪ i'm so sick of sha aim old love. welcome back, it is time to show you this morning's headlines, the navy times reported the head of the navy seals is reviewing allegations of war crimes and drug abuse within the elite force. rear admiral colin green side yesterday a review is under way to look at leadership development and combat ethics. >> the review comes nearly two years after a cbs news investigation exposed drug use among the navy seals. the cbs report aired a video in
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which they addressed the problem in their ranks. david martin spoke exclusively, who disguised their identities. >> people we know of, we hear about have tested positive for cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, marijuana, ecstasy. that's a problem. >> how prevalent is drug abuse in the seal teams. >> it's growing, the drug use, it's growing. >> the review will include hard discussions. new jersey.com says the state's five catholic diocese released the names of 188 priests accused of sexually abusing children. more than 100 people on the list are dead. others have been removed from the list. virginia released a list of 58 priests accused of child sex abuse. the numbers are staggering. "the washington post" says president trump installed a
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room-sized video golf simulator at the white house. it confirms it replaced a less sophisticated simulator that was built and installed under president obama. the president personally paid the $50,000 cost. during the recent government shutdown the president said off the golf course. american children are speaking with british accents of watching the popular cartoon "peppa pig". >> it was easy for me, but you and, yogeorge and mommy will fi it very hard. >> it was easy for me. >> i love that. parents are going ton social media talking about the #pep pa effect. their children are suddenly using british words like straightaway and mummy. >> and i've got to go to the lieu. >> they're speaking chinese. >> different language. >> watching different shows. >> i thought they were just
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mispronouncing pepper. >> no, peppa pig, i like it. youtube has a list of its most popular valentine's day love and breakup songs. ♪ to the left to the left ♪ everything you known in the box to the left ♪ >> keep going, gayle. >> it's a great song. >> the song featured most on breakup play lis, beyonce's irreplaceable. celine dion's because you loved me, and topping the list ♪ i'll make love to you ♪ like you want me to ♪ and i'll hold you tight >> boiz to men's i'll make love to you, the most loved love song. >> is that your ring tone? >> you know you said that out loud. okay. >> nobody's listening. >> okay. >> all right, mrs. tracy, hello, mr. tracy, on this valentine's day, new research shows that
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revolution is in the works when it comes to finding love that lasts. biological anthropologist held enfisher studying the dating and sex lives of more than 35,000 single americans, the research revealed an emerging "slow love movement," couples with longer courtships less likely to get divorced, fisher says slow love could lead to a more solid and successful marriage, and helen fisher joins us at the table on this valentine's day. the research actually says fast sex, slow love, which is better than fast sex, no love. tell us how the slow love, how that works. i've never heard this term before. >> i made it up. >> oh, you did? >> yeah, well, i mean, i'm trying to be accurate. >> you're backing it up with research. >> oh, my god, yes, i saw all the research first. i work with match.com and i collect research from -- it's a representative sample of the americas, we don't poll the match members, we poll the american public. every single year i ask these questions over 50% of singles
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have had a one-night stand, have had a friends with benefits, moving in and living together before they wed. what's really happening is we're seeing an extension of the pre-commitment stage of love. and americans seem to think that this is reckless, and it began to occur to me, it's caution. >> caution. >> these people want to know every single thing about a person before they tie the knot. >> so they would have sex first and then get to know you, is that how it works? >> main strategies, first start out with just friends, friends with benefits, don't tell anybody, secretive, nonkmil committal, and then they have the official first date. in the old days, official first date. >> in the old days. >> it began, in my day, you had a date with somebody before you ever kissed them. >> why not the date first these days? >> they're so expensive. you know, i think that these days singles want to get to know every single thing about somebody before they wed. it's actually something like a
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sex interview. they want to get to know them. >> how so? >> i'm not advocating it. you learn a lot between the sheets, not how they make love, are they patient, do chef a sense humor, can they listen. >> are they generous. >> exactly. that's part of the process, they're terrified of divorce. so they want to make a solid partnership. so i began to think, with this long pre-commitment stage you're learning a lot. getting rid of what you don't want so that by the time you walk down the aisle you got what you want, and you can keep what you want. >> you say there's a sweet spot to the number of people you should be dating online. seven and nine. >> that's actually between five and nine. the problem with today's technology, anytime there's new technology you've got to learn how to use it. and that hasn't happened yet. all of these dating sites, they're not dating sites, actually, they're introducing sites. the only real algorithm is your own brain, get out there and meet them. >> what is the science of the brain say about what you need
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for a long, happy partnership? >> well, you need to get to know the person. we've put a lot of people into the brain scanner and we put people who were in love, and married for an average of 21 years. and the parts of the brain that become active in a long-term, happy marriage are three of them. the brain linked with empathy, controlling your own stress and your own emotions, and a brain region linked with overlooking the negative and focusing on the positive. what we call positive elusions. >> turning the announce inyanc. >> marriage is to be the beginning of the relationship, now it's the finale. we're going to move towards more stable partnerships because we're spending so much time getting to know the person before we wed. >> this is so fascinating. thank you. i really enjoyed this discussion. >> you three have all gotten it right, congratulations. >> you have time, gayle. >> we take lots of positive illusions. >> do i have time?
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>> friends with benefits scale. >> you can imagine the illusions with me. >> you can do it. love is not dead, courtship is not ruined. >> thank you, helen. well, historic mars expedition is officially over after a record breaking mission, but its efforts might help with any human trip to the red planet. nasa lost control with the rover opportunity eight months ago and yesterday the space agency declared it dead. the cause was a giant dust storm. mark straussman shows us how this little rover that could stretched its original 90-day mission to nearly 15 years. >> nasa scientists tried to revive the opportunity rover one last time. ♪ i'll be seeing you >> but not even the sound of billie holiday's voice could make up their most senior martian explorer. since touching down in 2004,
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opportunity has exceeded the space agency's wildest expectations. >> we took everything we needed, we put it on wheels and we made a geologist that could go and investigate. >> the rover, along with its robot twin spirit found evidence that cold, dust i martian surface was once warm, wet and capable of supporting life. although spirit met its end in a sand trap in 2010, opportunity chugged along for another eight years. logging more than 28 miles, taking almost 220,000 photographs, and setting longevity records, in june a plan planetwide dust storm blocked out the sun and choked the rover's solar panels. it sent back this final image and an ominous message, its batteries were draining and darkness was closing in. >> even though it's a machine and we're saying good-bye, it's still very hard. and very poignant. >> reporter: opportunity helped usher in a new generation of
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martian explorer. nasa hopes mankind will be soon to come. >> side by side with landers and rovers and robots. >> after more than 5,000 days on the martian surface, its final resting spot, fittingly, is a place called perseverance valley where the window for opportunity finally closed. for cbs this morning, i'm mark strassmann. >> you're sad for a robot. >> yeah. >> director behind hit films like "gravity" took a deeply personal approach to "roma." up ahead, he opens up about how the passion project following his childhood became an
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right in their school. doing whatever it takes to keep kids focused, so they see what we see. a bright future. join in at communities in schools dot org . the academy awards are temperature days away and "roma" a black and white foreign film with a largely unknown cast has become an unlikely oscar front-runner. movie is up for ten academy awards, best director, original screenpray nor alfonse cuaron. a deeply and personal
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autobiography looking back at his youth and turbulent times in the 1970s and we met up with him in hollywood. >> reporter: in "roma," exploring a childhood in mexico city where he was raised by a single mother and their selfless housekeeper. >> was this meant to speak to everybody? >> you can only do something from the standpoint that you believe or you have faith that you can talk to everyone. >> reporter: when his father left the family struggled to remain whole. he channelled his emotions into "roma." >> it is not necessarily purely my life and maybe it's a period that created fear that lasted for many years. i think the core of it is pretty universal, because at the end the film builds with the shared experience of loneliness but only the addictions give meaning
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to that loneliness. >> reporter: he admits he was caught off guard when his highly personal project went mainstream. >> what i was really surprised with was the overwhelming response, emotional response, when we started showing the film around in different countries all around the world. it gave me hope that at the end we are the same. >> reporter: that universal truth has led to "roma" being showered with awards including two golden globes. >> if you win an oscar at this specific time with a mexican movie in this movie with the political climate the way it is here in america, does that say something? >> well it would be just a reminder that when you have all of this rhetoric of talking about mexicans at rapist and danger dangerous, you have a feeling, hey, it's people. people like you and me and we share the same need for love.
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>> reporter: already well known for blockbusters like 2004 "harry potter: and the prisoner of asgobrand." drew $8 million. and known for pushing boundaries, stranding sandra bullock in space in the 2013 thriller "gravity." that made him the first latino director to win an oscar. back in the heart of hollywood, joined by two oscar nominated actress actresses. >> what does that mean to you to have it right here in hole kwin? >> you see it? >> right there! >> reporter: a bond between the single mother and the character cleo, the housekeeper. together they find strength to cope with the shame and pain of being abandoned by men. >> papa --
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>> reporter: the director dedicated the film to libbo rodriguez the servant who raised him and remains his friend. >> reporter: when you see cleo do you think of libo? >> if difficut's difficult not was trying to deal with the wounds, the family wounds. >> reporter: and auditioning nearly 3,000 women before casting aparicio, had no acting experience and had to face a real fear shooting a pivotal scene without knowing how to swim. >> i think at that point she was already an actress because she told us she knew how to swim. [ speaking in foreign language ] >> i didn't imagine they were going to make me go in to the sea. >> reporter: the film is also
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getting a lot of love in roma. the mexico city suburb where it was shot. >> speaking of mexico city, they've already said they're preparing that when the movie starts winning its ten oscars of the night, that they're going to throw a huge party. they're like preparing -- >> in mexico, anything is an excuse for a party. of course they're going to throw a party. >> so you're not surprised? >> no! i'm happy. >> reporter: and if "roma" reward season momentum is any indication, it's going to be one heck of a celebration. for cbs "this morning," reporting from hollywood. >> if "roma" wins best picture apparently the first foreign language film to do so in the entire academy and the first netflix film to win. >> very happy about that, people at netflix. does have momentum on its side now. a lot of good options there. you're watching cbs "this morning." we norah's favorite
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update . good morning. it is 8:55 am. i am kenny choi. in one hour the russian river in sonoma county is expected the flood. they anticipate it will hit flood level at 10 am this morning and remaining above flood level until saturday. the evacuation order has been lifted for the homes along the stretch of the guatalupe river. it was ordered to evacuate this morning due to a flood threat between willow glen way and atlanta avenue.
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again, the evacuation orders have been lifted. the mudslide caused a home to tumble down the hillside in sausalito. here is what is left of the home along crescent avenue. one woman was trapped in the debris and being treated for her injuries. 30 people were evacuated with over 50 homes affected. we have news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website at kpix.com. latforms including our website at kpix.com.
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♪ ooh woo, i'm a rebel just for kicks, now ♪ ♪ i been feeling it since 1966, now ♪ ♪ might be over now, but i feel it still ♪ ♪ ooh woo, i'm a rebel just for kicks, now ♪ ♪ ooh woo, i'm a rebel just for kicks, now ♪ ♪ let me kick it like it's 1986, now ♪ ♪ might be over now, but i feel it still ♪ ♪ might've had your fill, but you feel it still, ooh woo ♪ welcome back. i am gianna franco in the
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traffic center with good news to report along 101 and 8080. at the peninsula we had a traffic alert that has been cleared but the damages done with delays southbound and northbound 101. out of the south bay it is a struggle this morning. we have a crash on add northbound at davis that has been cleared over to the shoulder. he should improve through this area. westbound east shore freeway at powell street we have lanes blocked. at the golden gate bridge we have slow-and-go. it gets better heading into the city. we are still tracking strong wind with the high wind warning and wind advisory in effect this morning. we also have a flash flood watch in effect for most of the bay area. we have seen a lot of rain in a short period of time with this atmospheric river event. here's the hi-def doppler showing rain moving in across the bay. you can see from the golden
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(gasps) oh, look at you, look at you! spokeswoman: try a mcdonald's mini meal for just 3.99. (pleasant whistling tones) spokeswoman: try a mcdonald's mini meal for just 3.99. wayne: wow. - yeah, boy! wayne: tiffany, what's behind the curtain? jonathan: it's a trip to italy! - i'm here to win big today. jonathan: it's in the bag. (grunts) wayne: go get your car! give him a big round of applause. you did it, you got the big deal of the day! and this is how we do it in season ten. 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." happy valentine's day. love is in the air, and so is money. who wants to make a deal? let's go! you, miss mary. everybody else, have a seat please, have a seat. hello, miss mary, how are you? - i'm doing great! wayne: holding each other and stuff!
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