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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  May 17, 2019 7:00am-8:59am PDT

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and look at this behind us. gold and blue for the warriors. right? two more. and it's the nba finals. >> go, sharks. have a good one. good morning to you, our viewers in the west, it's friday, may 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning,". >> a fighter jet crashes into a southern california warehouse near a busy freeway, some are saying it's a miracle it wasn't worse. adversity score, telling colleges whether applicants had a tough background. researchers fought great white sharks gathering off the california coast, what's attracting them and how they can impact beach goers. meghan markle's close friends are giving us a look at the royals life with baby archie. a look at today's eye
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opener, your world in 90 seconds. plane just crashed. >> holy [ bleep ]. >> that's a military airplane in our building. >> a fighter jet crashes through a california warehouse. >> nobody's seriously injured, a pilot ejected. >> we hear planes all day long, just never think one's going to fall out of the sky. the trump administration is planning to move migrants from crowded camps along the border to florida. >> this has to be the most inhumane act that could be happening by the president. >> documents revealing people linked to the trump administration and congress contacted michael flynn to influence his cooperation with the russia investigation. despite now tensions with iran, president trump is tamping down the heated rhetoric toward iran. >> mr. president, are we going to war with iran? >> i hope not. >> chelsea manning is back in jail for refusing to testify before a garage. >> badst at -- bo >>
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>> i am very proud of myself. >> out of his hands, it's over, golden state survives. >> all that matters. >> new york city mayor bill de blasio is the latest democrat to announce he's runnior >> phow 76% o new yorkers are ag p>> maybe he's running for president so he can get away from all the people who hate him in new york. >> on "cbs this morning". >> gene simmons made an appearance in washington and ended up speaking at the pentagon. >> gene simmons is at the pentagon podium, that is ridiculous, you couldn't get kid rock? >> of course, the kiss army has a long tradition of relationship to the u.s. military. we all remember this famous p t portrait of george washington. >> announcer: this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places.
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welcome to "cbs this morning," i was going to wear kiss makeup for my final day but they wouldn't let me know. >> this nation would have been proud. >> yes, very proud. i thought it was a photo shop with gene simmons. >> you can't think it was real? >> no. but yes, it was. >> john, you look good with your pocket square on this last broadcast on "cbs this morning," i like it. >> mop up the tears. >> aww, come on. >> always go for the sentimentality, it's like hitting them behind the knees, they never see it coming. start the broadcast, shall we. >> okay. >> it's good news, when that fighter jet falls out of the sky in a heavily populated, you might expect a major disaster, remarkably no one was seriously hurt when an jplungeto a south
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california warehouse near a busy freeway. slow motion dash cam video captured the jet as it slammed into the building and punctured the roof east of los angeles yesterday. >> a dozen people on the ground were treated for minor injuries, the pilot ejected to safety. david begnaud shows us scary moments from people inside the building. david, good morning. >> reporter: we heard fm a witness who said the noise was deafening as the jet crashed. the pilot was having an hydraulic problem and the eyewitness reaction was dramatic. >> holy [ bleep ], dude. >> reporter: look at that destruction inside the warehouse. it's located right across from march air reserve base. >> that's a military airplane in our building. >> reporter: through the plume of dust workers could see the giant hole and scattered debris where the f-16 fighter jet crashed. >> one of my sales reps looked and said man that plane is going down. >> reporter: frank sandoval was
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just testing parts right where the jet crashed but had left the area ten minutes prior. >> we hear planes all day long, 20 times a day, you never think one's going to fall out of the sky. >> reporter: traffic was backed up for miles on the 215 freeway. it runs right between the air force base and the warehouse. cal fire captain fernando her herrera said it's lucky the plane didn't ignite. warehouse sprinklers did extinguish a small fire. >> that's pretty remarkable that it fell into a building, there wasn't a large explosion, there was no civilians injured severely. the pilot survived. we didn't have a tragedy. >> reporter: for this community military planes are a familiar sight and sound. but something like this is rare. balder castro helped to evacuate an injured co-worker. >> i was thinking they were hot dogging and breaking the sound barrier, no, it shook the
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building. we're lucky to be alive. >> reporter: no major injuries. it was part of a training mission with norad which defends the u.s. and canada. they wouldn't tell us if the plane was armed with weapons at the time of the crash. but there was a fire official who said it is a miracle that there wasn't some major explosion. >> looking at the pictures, very scary. i like what the guy said, we hear planes all day long, you don't think it's going to fall out of the sky. >> right, taking off and landing. >> very scary stuff. >> david, thank you very much. >> you bet. forecasters say rough weather will threaten more than 65 million americans over the weekend. chief weather caster lonnie quinn of our new york station is tracking a threat that starts tonight and will run through at least tuesday. lonnie, good morning. >> good morning to you, vlad. here's what's going on. the jet stream is like this gravy train in the area of storms, latched onto two. there's one in the rocky mountains that will drop with severe weather for the northern plains today, second one offshore, this is monday and tuesday's threat. that one's going to be more
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severe. look at the futurecast, this is a computer model depicting where we believe the storms are going to pop up. for today it's anywhere from, say, south dakota into nebraska, and also down around texas. a little torn tisouthern tier h well. saturday, the reds show you the severe weather, anywhere from iowa all the way down to texas, louisiana by sunday. you're still going to see some red flashing on the screen here but you don't see too much. the sun is going to overall be calmer. let me show you how it all comes together. a late day tornado threat, 50% chance for nebraska, south dakota and southwest texas, going into your day tomorrow. bull's eye is texas, arkansas, oklahoma. take a look for next week. this is going to be stronger, large tornadoes possible, texas, oklahoma and kansas. it's that time of the year, it's active out there, john. >> it's that time of the year and fortunately we have you to break it down for us. the trump administration is moving hundreds of undocumented
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immigrants to south florida. local officials say they have been told to expect plane loads of migrants from south texas, starting in about two weeks. ben tracy is at the white house. ben, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. so far the white house has not officially confirmed this plan but last month president trump did say he was considering a plan to send illegal immigrants to so-called sanctuary cities. it's not clear if he's now making good on that threat. >> this has to be the most inhumane act that could be hang by the president. >> reporter: moving people from texas border camps to florida is an unwelcome surprise for local officials. >> just no real plan on what's going to happen to these 500 people every month that's going to come to palm beach county. >> reporter: it's no secret the migrant camps are overcrowded, but they say this is not a solution. >> we want a better plan from our federal government. we are not a border state. >> reporter: the mayors have
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been told to expect two plane loads of migrants each week, up to 1,000 people a month. split between palm beach and broward counties. both are democrat strongholds but don't consider themselves sanctuary cities. the migrants would likely be released into the community awaiting immigration hearings. florida senator marco rubio wrote a letter demanding answers from the department of homeland security. >> immigrants must be financially self-sufficient. >> reporter: on thursday president trump announced his new plan for legal immigration, based on so-called merit rather than family connections or diversity. it prioritizes immigrants in high-paying professions and those who speak english. >> we discriminate against brilliance. we won't anymore once we get this passed. >> reporter: democrats say the president's plan is offensive. >> merit, it is really a condescending word. they're saying family is without merit.
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are they saying most of the bec engineering degree? >> reporter: the president the tweeting about immigration this morning. in a tweet he just sent out he said all people illegally coming into the united states will be removed at a later date. he goes on to say don't make yourselves too comfortable, you will be leaving soon. gayle? >> he has a lot to say on twitter this morning. thank you very much, ben. federal judges ordered the release of some of the material withheld when the mueller report was made public. it's about former national security adviser michael flynn and a phone call that he had with russia's u.s. ambassador. now, this could reveal how others tried to obstruct mueller's investigation. paula reid is at the white house with the latest on this story. paula, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, gayle, this is the first time a judge has ordered the justice department to reveal portions of the mueller that had been kept secret. there were multiple instances where people connected to congress or the trump administration reached out to
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flynn and his team in a way that could have impacted his cooperation with the russia probe. the public version of the mueller report revealed that one of those people was one of the president's personal attorneys who reached out to flynn's team in november 2017 and left a message asking for a heads up if flynn had any damaging information about the president. now, flynn has a recording of that message and a judge has ordered that a transcript of the message be released to the public. now, flynn is currently awaiting sentencing for lying to the fbi. about his contacts with russian officials before president trump took office. but democrats are already seizing on these new details to renew their calls for the full unredacted mueller report to be released to the public. >> paula, thank you very much. you know, the president said when mike flynn got caught up in this he said i feel very badly for him. he might not feel so badly for him now. the questions of instances,
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and one of them was do you canning dangle the potential for a pardon or do you do things to try to get people not to talk? and so it's fascinating as you focus in on these individual in we'll see if it actually leads to anything. >> it will be interesting to see what he has to say about michael flynn now as you point out. he feels badly until it looks like you're going to do something that will hurt the president in any way. >> see if they can peel back this redacted portion of the mueller report. >> which makes it more important that robert mueller testify, we get the chance to hear from him. >> a lot of people want to hear from robert mueller. with tensions rising between iran and the united states, saudi arabia is blaming iran for a drone strike that shut down one of its oil pipelines. the u.s. has sent military units to the middle east after alleged threats from tehran. margaret brennan spoke to iran's u.n. ambassador. good morning. >> reporter: iran's leaders are skeptical of president trump's offer to talk in part because he already withdrew from a
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diplomatic deal with them. yesterday the president told his acting defense secretary that he does not want war, and i asked iran's u.n. ambassador if that reassured him. >> i believe that president trump does not want a war. >> reporter: iran's ambassador to the u.n., majid ta takht-ravanchi told cbs news he believed it was genuine. >> mr. president, are we going to war with iran? >> i hope not. >> ravanchi accused the u.s. of using flawed intelligence and pointed to one key adviser's past support of the 2003 u.s. invasion of iraq. >> reporter: you're talking about ambassador bolton? >> i don't want to name any names but he has been definitely one of the persons. >> reporter: ravanchi flatly denied u.s. intelligence reports that an iranian commander ordered to prepare an attack. satellite photos show containers
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for short range ballistic missiles being loaded on boats. >> reporter: u.s. intelligence says they have evidence of that. do you deny that? >> we do not fire missiles out of small boats. as long as they cannot share those information with the general public i think there is no utility in saying that these information are credible. >> reporter: behind closed doors on capitol hill yesterday the trump administration shared that classified intelligence with the so-called gang of eight. after the briefing house intelligence committee chairman adam schiff said he feared a clash. >> the administration all along has failed to articulate where their strategy is supposed to lead. but it certainly appears to be leading towards confrontation. >> reporter: other members of congress will have to wait until next tuesday to receive a briefing. frustrating key republican allies. >> i would tell the administration you should pick up the phone and call members of congress so that we don't have a microphone put in our face asking us about why you're doing something and we have no clue. >> reporter: ravanchi blamed
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the -- why his country is dismissing the president's offer to have talks. >> why can't you get to a table to negotiate? >> they want to have this in their hands to intimidate iran, at the same time calling for dialogue. what type of dialogue is this? >> reporter: ravanchi confirmed iran has been in touch with congress but declined to say this offices. he is close to iran's president, and the ambassador told us he will soon fly back to tehran to discuss how to cool tensions. vlad. >> lots of saber rattling. margaret, thank you very much. this sunday margaret will speak to adam schiff and senator kirsten gillibrand. that's face the nation sunday here on cbs. missouri is passing legislation later today outlawing abortion after eight weeks of pregnancy.
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this would become the fifth state this year to enact a so-called fetal heartbeat bill. adriana diaz spoke to people on both sides of this issue. >> it is one of the most egregious overreaches of governmental regulation that i have ever seen. >> reporter: dr. david eisenberg is the medical director at the only abortion clinic left in missouri. it only endangers women who are bound to get abortions anyway. >> those regulations do not make anybody healthier, they do not protect people who need abortion care. they just make harder to get it. >> reporter: missouri's laws are the strictest in the nation. if the supreme court overturns roe v. wade, the new bill automatically bans all abortions. >> the phone is ringing off the hook. >> reporter: kawanna shannon is saying -- >> reporter: do you think that's
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not enough? >> no, it's not enough. a lot of women don't find out until they're past that time. >> reporter: missouri's anti-abortion advocates argue the bill is meant to protect women, especially those with fewer means. >> most women don't want an abortion, the number one reason they feel they don't have a choice is because they don't have the finances. >> reporter: the bill increases tax credits to donations to pregnancy resource centers and provide emotional and material support. women who receive abortions after eight weeks would not be prosecuted but doctors who perform them could face up to 15 years in prison and potentially lose their medical licenses. supporters of the bill say it's worth it. >> i had to be comfortable with the fact that it's legal to abort a child in this great country of ours, and so if that is the law of the land i'll be comfortable with that too. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," adriana diaz, st. louis, missouri.
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former army intelligence analyst chelsea manning is back behind bars this morning after refusing to testify before a grand jury. manning told a federal judge yesterday she would rather starve to death than cooperate with prosecutors investigating wikileaks. the judge ordered her to remain in a virginia jail until she agrees to testify or until the grand jury's term expires in 18 months. manning spent seven years in prison for giving thousands of classified military and diplomatic files to wikileaks. the group behind the s.a.t. test is giving colleges a way to measure the challenges that applicants face outside the classroom. we'll talk to the head of the college board good friday morning to you. we'll be in between storm systems for today. a beautiful day across the bay area. now, starting off mostly cloudy, breezy and a few spotty showers out there. and hi-def doppler this morning. weather headlines as we head
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through the afternoon. mostly sunny. we'll have that clearing. a cool day today. rain returns tomorrow morning. it's going to be a wet day, pretty much all day long for your saturday. wet start for sunday. but dryer for sunday afternoon. check out our daytime highs for today.
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we have much mor we have much more news ahead, see how boeing's 737 max jets are one step closer to takeoff after they were grounded over two deadly accidents. plus, facebook sheryl sandberg will be here at the table, why men are less likely to help women succeed in the me too era, and why she believes men need to step it up. and guys cue the jaws theme, meg oliver is watching summer visitors you don't want to have near you. >> reporter: they're considered the kings of the ocean, now a cluster of great white sharks are lingering off the coast of the carolinas, one is 15 feet long. we'll tell you why coming up on "cbs this morning."
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meghan plus one." plus " e big bang theory" good morning, everyone. it is 7:26. i'm michelle griego. governor gavin newsom is vowing to fight back against the trump administration. it revoked nearly a billion dollars in federal funding for the bullet train. the warriors now have a two- games to none lead. game 3 is tomorrow in portland. meanwhile, in san jose, tonight at 5:00 p.m. pacific time, it is game 4 of the western conference final against the st. louis blues. san jose leads the series, two games to one. we'll have new updates throughout the day, including our website, kpix.com.
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well, good morning here at 7:27.
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a couple of things to tell you about. one of them is a wind advisory. there is a wind advisory on most of your bay area bridges. be prepared to get shaken around a little bit. we are talking about the benicia bridge, golden gate, as well as the san mateo bridge. commute times all in the green. but none of them in the red. that's good news. half an hour to the tracy triangle. a little higher than that on highway 4. and almost an hour on 101. a breezy start to the day. mostly cloudy skies ask just a few isolated spotty showers this morning. we are going to have clearing and sunshine. a break between storm systems today. a cool day. low 60 negligence oakland. and mid-60s from napa, fremont. our storm rolls in for tomorrow. it's going to be a wet day on saturday. a rainy start on sunday. but drying out after that. sunday afternoon looks great.
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you know, i've grown too. there's a bartender back there. >> that's true. now there's a completely different woman who botched my drink order. how hard is 65% coke, 35% diet coke. >> judging by the look on her face it's at least 1% saliva. >> that was the scene from the finale of the hit cbs comedy "the big bang theory" which finished its record breaking run last night. the series capped a remarkable 12 years with 279 episodes, wow. the cast joined stephen colbert last night on the late show. he asked them whats ite t be the longest running sitcom in history. >> did it feel like the longest
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at comes up.ettes, always hated tears. take that, tears. >> this much. >> oh, my god. >> and if you missed last night's finale, you can still catch it on cbs all access. i recorded it because i was curious to see how they did. remember when johnny galeki, and kaley cuoco, they said the ending was perfection. >> that's what you want to see when your favorite people are going away. >> this is what johnny said yesterday, quoting winnie the pooh, how lucky i am to have something that makes saying good-bye so hard. that's a nice way to think of that. >> it is. going to miss that show. >> very nicely done. welcome back to "cbs this morning," here are three things you should know this morning. boeing says it's finished updates to its flight control software implicated in two deadly crashes involving its 737 max aircraft. the company says that it has
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flown 207 test flights with the revised mcas software, in addition boeing plans for additional pilot training are being reviewed by the faa. rtication flight with the faa. so far the regulator says it has not received a completed request. a new clinical trial provides evidence that consuming heavily processed food drives people to overeat and could be a leading factor in america's obesity epidemic. researchers found those consuming a diet of ultra processed foods ate about 500 more calories a day and gained two pounds after two weeks, the same participants switched to an unprocessed diet with the same amount of calories they lost an average of two pounds over the same period. the findings were published in the journal cell metabolism. and the college board will start assigning an adversity score to all students taking the
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s.a.t. to capture their social and economic background. it's meant to help admissions officers account for any disadvantage stemming from those factors. the score is calculated using 15 factors including the crime rate and poverty levels from the student's neighborhood. the formula does not consider race. colleges will see the scores when reviewing applications. 150 institutions are expected to use this test this fall. david coleman is the ceo of the college board, he is here to discuss the organization's new approach and its response to the massive college admissions scandal. good morning. >> good morning. >> good to see you. so you've probably seen this, one critic in the "new york times" said if the s.a.t. needed a sophisticated, conventional or conte contextual framework to make it valid that's a sign it's not a good test. why did the college board create this? >> the s.a.t. is a record of your achievement, what it doesn't measure alone is it
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doesn't measure what you've overcome, the situation you achieved that in. what we can do with this context i resourceful you are, have you done more with less? to be clear it's not a personalized adversity score, it's the general context of your school and neighborhood and what it's aiming to do is highlight the resourceful students. give you an example. a college we partner with let in a woman from mississippi, happens to be a rural white young woman, very small school. her score was average, but in context it was 400 points higher than any other kid scored at her school, the neighborhood, the world she lived in was rife with poverty, a small school without a lot of advanced opportunities but she made the most of it. we're saying the s.a.t. shows you achievement. but what it can't show alone is your resourcefulness, doing more with less. >> and that's the point you're trying to make, i hear, is that it's really about putting it all in context. calling it the adversity score,
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some people say it should be called a privilege score. >> yeah, i think calling it a score is kind of a mistake, if you don't mind. it's really a general background. so every kid in the same school or same neighborhood gets the same background information. we use no personal data. >> don't colleges have access to that information already? >> they have some data, and you're right, this is really making what colleges already do a lot better. we've long agreed in american education we should recognize students who have defied the odds to accomplish things. they try to use school profiles and a jumble of evidence. all we're doing is providing it in a more fair way to schools that might not have as much resources to make their profile can be seen in the same light. they can witness the neighborhood in which students grow up. and really all this is about is there is so much more talent than we can see than by using scores alone. >> david, you say it's a valid measure of achievement. a lot of people would think, and these are people who would probably not have adversity that think it's a veasure of
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your ability to cram for an idiosyncratic test. people are thumbing through books going crazy, what about that criticism? >> it's an old fashioned picture of the old s.a.t. in 2014 we resi vised the test d made the best of preparation free for the world. you get a personalized study plan for free and you practice just what you need to get better at in reading and math. this is not a mysterious test. it tests core math skills and your ability to read with confidence. 8 million students are now signed up on con academy dwarfing all the largest test organizations by four or five times. >> what's your reaction to the college cheating scandal? >> we cooperated with federal authorities in the scandal and closed the loophole that was used. the safest most secure place to
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take the test turns out to be your own school. there were accommodations for students with special needs. that was exploited here. we will be more careful that identity is proved seven times over. we can solve the security problem. but the deeper anxiety in the varsity blues case, let's crack down on cheating, i'm all for it, we will keep working with authorities. >> you said don't call it an adversity score, the resourcefulness score, how is that going to work, what are you going to do later today? >> i want to be very clear with the public we are going to publish by 12:00 p.m. today how this is calculated. remember, it's not an individual score for that student. it really is about the broad context they grew up in. every kid in the same neighborhood gets the same score for their neighborhood and every kid in the same school gets the same score for their school. >> they don't know the score. >> that could be made available. we're talking about that. but the thing is, it's no insight to families that they don't have many resources. this is not a revelation. let's be honest here. what's exciting, what gets
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interesting is those students who despite those situations nonetheless achieve so much. those are within every racial community in this country. >> race is not a factor. >> race is not a factor. in the asian community, as all of us should know there are poor asians from diverse environments who face enormous challenge. it will show them, it will show within the rural white community emerging to be seen in a different way and from the african-american community and latino community. what i will say, gayle, is as much as certain race is disfr proportionally with more crime and difficult housing situation sz you're going to see more effort show up here. >> it's controversial. you seem to have an answer for all the controversy, david coleman. thank you very much, sir, for joining us today. >> thank you. the carolina coast is a gathering place for a group of great white sharks this morning. that's what you call them. and the surprising manmade features that may be attracting the sharks to this particular stretch of coastline. you're watching -- sharks are
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very scary to me. you're watching "cbs this morning," we'll be right back. ack. k. with quality ingredients, nutella is sure to bring a smile to breakfast time. show your appreciation with a limited edition nutella jar!
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a cluster of massive great white sharks is gathering off the coast of the carolinas this morning. they're some of the same sharks researchers have been tracking for more than a decade. meg oliver is there to show us the resurgence of the vulnerable animals, meg, good morning. >> vlad good morning. researchers tell me the sharks are as close as 20 miles off the coast here. great whites can reach about 4,000 pounds and 17 feet long. their numbers along the atlantic coast are on the rise. these are the sharks that have been spending the past week off the coastline of the carolinas. and they even have names. cabot, hal, jane, jefferson, brunswick and last but not least, luna, a 15 footer who weighs in at more than 2,000 pounds. >> a 15 foot long white shark is pretty close to a full grown, as
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large as they would ever find. >> it's almost like a small car. >> yes, yes, so if you were to basically walk next to it you would have a long ways to go before you get from tail to nose. >> reporter: there's a reason luna and her friends are so well-known. they're being tracked by dr. robert hueter, a senior scientist ocean research organization. "cbs this morning" was there when he and his first team tagged their first great white in the north atlantic in 2012. >> in our studies we are tagged about 43 sharks, and six of the largest ones are off of the carolinas. they're not right up close to the beach so no worries for the swimmers. >> reporter: hueter and his team have been studying the sharks 'migration patterns around the world. luna, for instance, is on a typical migration, moving south to the warmer waters of florida between october and december. and now making her way back up north for the summer. >> these sharks have been coming
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here for millennia, as long as the east coast of the united states as existed these sharks have been in our waters. >> go, jefferson. >> reporter: there's something else here that could also be encouraging these sharks to stick around. >> so one of the really unique aspects off the north carolina coast is we have thousands of ship wrecks. >> reporter: experts say the ship wrecks provide artificial reeves that thousands of fish now call home. >> so when sharks come in there's big fish, small fish, this whole food chain that exists on all these wrecks. i do believe we're seeing more sharks come back because of the protections that are in place. so it's a conservation success story. >> reporter: a success story, indeed. now, the next part of this the as far north as newfoundland. shark attacks are rare but you can take precautions, they're attracted to shiny jewelry, colorful swimsuits and the risks are greater at night than during the day. >> thank you so much, meg. i have to know when i'm in the water don't wear my yellow
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tankini. >> and no shiny jewelry. >> my yellow thong. don't upset the shark. picture that, tony, a yellow thong. enjoy your cheereos. thank you, meg, that was good. >> and leave the fanny pack at home. >> there you go. up next, a look at this morning's other headlines, including the legacy of world famous architect i.m. pei good friday morning to you. today will be in between storm systems. a beautiful day ahead with clearing and afternoon sunshine. so it's a breezy start with mostly cloudy skies. a few isolated showers. upper 50s, san francisco. cool day. low 60s oakland. mid60 for fremont, san jose, concord and livermore. a wet day tomorrow. pretty much raining all day long for your saturday. rainy start wednesday, drying out for the rest of your
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sunday. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by national car rental. go national, go like a pro. at national, i'm in total control. i can just skip the counter and choose any car in the aisle i like. so i can rent fast without getting a hair out of place. heeeeey. hey! ah, control. (vo) go national. go like a pro. is your floor's best friend. only roomba uses 2 multi-surface rubber brushes to grab and remove pet hair.
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and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ready to treat differently with a pill? otezla. show more of you. (sheila) (neil) oh it's so good to see you. (neil) are you just hanging out with the mom's of other famous people? (oracene) what's up neil? (neil) hi venus and serena's mom. snoop dogg's mom. dwayne jonhson's mom. odell's mom. am i in trouble? (sheila) no honey there's nothing wrong. (oracene) although he does look thin. (sharon) he does look thin. (neil) thank you? (sharon) come on over here and let us look at you. (sheila) honey, have you been getting enough sleep? (beverly) something is off. (sharon) it's the hair. (neil) what's wrong with my hair? (gideon) it's definitely the hair. (neil) what? where did you - there's nothing wrong with my hair. welcome back to "cbs this morning," here's a look at some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" reports the trump administration has notified more than 570,000 employers since march that the names of some of their workers
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do not match their social security numbers. the no match letters are expected to affect the hospitality, construction and agriculture industries which rely on undocumented workers. letters have left many employers conflicted. if they take action they could lose thousands of workers who lack legal status. if they don't they risk fines in the future. in 2016 an estimated 7.8 million undocumented immigrants were in the labor force. the associated press reports on the death of one of the world's most revered architects, talking about i.m. pei. his work includes a giant glass museum, the east building of the national gallery of art in washington, d.c. and the jfk memorial library in boston. those buildings are known for their grand spaces and powerful ge metric shapes. i.m. pei was over 100 years old. reports on an epic video of
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something in the water. drone video captured a large school of stingrays near sydney, swimming in unison, hundreds off the coast. >> very beautiful. >> very cool. >> where are they going? facebook's chief operating officer, sheryl sandberg is here to talk to us about the company's influence on users and me too in the workplace. we'll be right back with sheryl at the table. table. 4 start the day slow-roasting turkey for incredible flavor. then, they double seal every slice for freshness. the results, well, they speak for themselves. ((cat 2) fwhoa- so many choices!
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good morning. it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. on monday, 600 teachers, counselors, and nurses plan to walk off the job in union city in south hayward. it is the first strike in the school district's history. they're demanding a 10% raise over two years. the difference between california gas prices and the national average is now the biggest we have ever seen. a new report suggests that maybe in part because retailers charging significantly more for essentially the same product. and a new bill to address the housing crisis. will have to wait until next year. yesterday, they shelfed the issue introduced by state
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well, good morning here at 7:57. we have several trouble spots to tell you about. where we have an accident in the north direction. not good for you coming in from marin county. this is as you're pulling into san rafael. one lane at least is blocked. we have another if you're headed into marin. this is westbound 580, right there just past the toll plaza on the richmond, san rafael bridge. your main travel times this morning, all in the yellow at this point. luckily, nobody in the red. looks like you'll be able to get there on time, despite all of those crashes. mary? >> thanks, emily. mostly cloudy skies and breezy to start off the day. and a few isolated shower on hi- def doppler. you can see that. a few very light showers this morning. we're going to have clearing and afternoon sunshine. enjoy the cool day across the bay area. upper 50 in san francisco. low 60s in oakland. mid-60s in san jose and fremont
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at ross. yes for less. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's friday, may 17, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." facebook's sheryl sandberg is here with us. she shows how women may be getting less support on the job in the me too era and some of meghan markle's old friends reveal how marriage and mother hood will affect her and prince harry. first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. >> no one was seriously hurt when an f-16 fighter plunged into a warehouse near a busy freeway. >> the noise was deafening. apparently the pilot had a hydraulic problem.
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>> it's a late day tornado threat. about a 50% chance for nebraska, south dakota, and southwest texas. >> so far the white house has not officially confirmed this plan, but last month president trump did say he was considering a plan to send illegal immigrants to sanctuary cities. >> people reached out in a way that could have affected his cooperation with the russia probe. >> they are skeptical of offers to talk because president trump already with drew from a deal with them. >> i believe president trump does not want a war. >> "game of thrones'" big finale is this sunday. after a major turn last week, apparently parents are now regretting naming their children after a certain "game of thrones" character. i won't say this one. i will say you should always let a fictional character's full story arc play out before you saddle your child with the name. just ask my nephews saurumon and
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chancellor palpatine. >> that's funny. people name their kids. my favorite daughter kirby was named from "falcon's crest." we're very original. >> how is that? >> she's doing okay. >> do you remember that? >> i do. i loved that show. >> better than falcon. >> ronald reagan's first wife was on that show. >> aim a california community barely avoided disaster last night after a jet crashed through a warehouse near a very busy freeway. >> holy [ bleep ], dude. >> the pilot of the f-16 ejected just moments before the jet slammed into the building in riverside yesterday. officials say the plane experienced hydraulic problems during a training mission. a dozen people on the ground and the pilot were taken to the
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hospital with minor injuries. officials in south florida are demanding answers after they say the trump administration told them hundreds of migrants will be released in into their communities. they're told to expect 1,000 a month flown from el paso texas startig in two weeks. the white house has not confirmed the plane. president trump has threatened to put migrants in so-called sanctuary cities that don't comply with immigration laws. the two county governments are led by democrats who say neither has declared itself a sanctuary. women are still navigating the effects of the male dominated work places a year and a half after the rise of the me too movement. in dedicated to helping women achieve their goals. 60% of male managers say they are uncomfortable interacting with women at work. that's up 32% from 2018. workplace interactions that men
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are nervous about include mentoring, socializing and having one-on-one meetings with women. sheryl sandberg, leanin and facebook's chief operating officer is with us. sheryl, good morning to you. >> thank you all for having me because this topic is so important. >> no. i read the numbers and my mouth fell open. what message does it send? >> we're in a bad place. 60% of male managers in the u.s. are afraid to have a one-on-one meeting with a woman. >> how do you get promoted without a one on one meeting? >> no one ever has. i feel confident in that. they are more likely to hesitate to have a work dinner. the problem is even before this women and especially women of color don't get the same amount of mentoring as men which means we are not getting a seat at the table. it harass
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us. you need to not ignore us either. >> do you thinkhavetoemael tt w? >>t's a lse trade-off. i think people can travel, go to dinner. all of those things can be done and everyone can behave appropriately. if there is a man who doesn't want to have a work dinner with a woman my message is simple, don't have one with a man. group lunches for everyone. make it explicit, thoughtful, equal. >> people don't get promoted in group lunches either. >> correct. >> you have to have a meeting. >> correct. >> if they're behaving appropriately they don't have to worry. you say men need to step up. >> men need to step up. we need to redefine what it means to be a good guy at work. it is not enough not to harass. too many people think that's sufficient. that's necessary. it's a basic, but not sufficient. women need equal opportunity. what does that mean? equal time in meetings. it means the right kind of
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feedback. a recent study of performance reviews showed 66% of women got feedback on how they worked. their style, they are too aggressive, too this or that. do you know the percentage of men who got that feedback? >> not a lot. >> less than 1%. >> that's the behavior. >> what is style feedback? >> it's how you do your work, not the work you do. women are told they are too bossy, aggressive, too this and that and men get feedback on work. that's why men get more promotions. also, the informal time when a boss takes a trip, a junior colleague that person gets all the time to spend with the boss. who gets promoted? our message is simple. if we want to stop sexual harassment in the workplace, one of the things that does that most effectively is having more senior women. the only way is if women get the same meetings, one on one coaching, the same feedback on their work so they can get the
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promotions they deserve. >> other than men not meeting with male. there is occasionally gossip in our industry. >> you said that with a straight face. >> you did that really well>>s men are not crazy to think, gee, if i have a one on one lunch or have this mentoring meeting the gossip gets out of control, sudden sudd suddenly i have to explain something when nothing went wrong. what should men do if they have concerns about what happens in a work place where they have no control over what happens when tongues start wagging? >> i'm with gayle. you have to have a one on one conversation. those conversations can happen in rooms with doors open in a public restaurant having a lunch or dinner. i don't think you can get falsely accused of something. i think men need to step up and say, in order to get women promoted those women need the same coaching, same feedback, same opportunities that men get. >> sheryl, i want to ask you
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about facebook. as you know, one of facebook's cofounders chris hughes, called for facebook to be broken up ow outbing it as a monopoly that 's respon >> w and i knowize power of theh companies including facebook. those are the right questions to be asked. i think the right answers are about writing the right rules for the internet. you can break us up, break up other tech companies but you don't solve the things people are worried about -- privacy, elections, content. at facebook, we know that we have hard work to do to earn back people's trust. we're doing the work. we are doing two things. the first is we are fundamentally changing how we run the company. we have massive teams in place whose whole job is to protect people's privacy, protect elections, go through our systems and find things. >> it still keeps happening, sheryl. we know facebook has taken some knocks. facebook has addressed it. but some people say that it
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hasn't changed. one of chris's points he made here is that facebook has gotten too big not just to fail, but too big to care. does he have a point? >> i don't believe that's the right point. one of the reasons we had so many announcements of vulnerabilities is we are finding them. we made a commitment. mark and i said we are going to do anything it takes to fix these systems. we believe we can do that. how do you do that? you put teams of people in place and they go systematically through things and find vulnerabilities and we announce them. we have built a lot of tools to have other people tiend find things. we found something on facebook. we're grateful for it. it means another thing we'll fix. it is true that the size and scope of what we face is unprecedented. we know that. we know we have a deep responsibility to protect elections, protect privacy. we're doing the hard work and we're going to continue to do the hard work. >> what image do you think people have of facebook? >> look, i woke up yesterday
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morning and i got on facebook. i saw two things.y nephew going camping trip. he's 7. and i awe saw a picture of a colleague raising money for a friend of hers with twocuomer t? >> i think feel hapeople are us facebook to share and connect and it makes their lives better. >> i see a different view out there. >> well, just let me finish. i think people also have real concerns that things happened on the platform we didn't expect. we didn't put enough resources to protecting the system. over the last two years that's changed. when i think about my job, i have been at facebook 11 years. i spent eight or nine of them really focused on growing the company and also focused on protecting the community. i would say that was priority one and two. now my job has changed. i come to work every day and my
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job is about protecting the company more than growth. >> a lot of people think facebook still doesn't get it. they have white hot rage about facebook. they hear you talk about fixing the internet and feel there is bullp bullet proof glass between facebook and what people think. your assessment, because you are talking about the wonderful things it does and don't recognize the heat out there suggests to them that you still don't get what people's issues are. let me be really clear. we understand that we made mistakes and that things happened on our service that we didn't foresee. we never foresaw russian interference in the 2016 election. full stop. that's on us. what happened by 2018? by 2018, we understood foreign interference. we find it and take it down so much the media doesn't cover it. if you look at the things people
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wrote it was still about 2016. we are going into the 2020 election. we have war rooms in place. we have a working relationship with the fbi and the homeland security. all of them are working on this in a way they weren't as well. we are all working together to protect. i guess what i want you to know, what i want everyone to know. >> in less than ten seconds, sheryl. >> we know we have hard work to do. whatever it takes, no matter how long it takes, mark and i are going to do the work to keep people safe on facebook. >> we'll continue, sheryl. thank you very much.
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meghan markle's close friends are giving cbs news a rare glimpse into her life with prince harry and baby archie. >> will she be out there making her own baby food? >> oh, i totally see her making her own food. >> she will? i was kidding. >> oh, yeah. she loves to cook. >> reporter: ahead, why her friends think prince harry will be the coolest dad. you're watching "cbs this morning." re watching "cbs this morning." . you're watching "cbs this morning." your she shed was struck by lightning. zachary, is my she shed covered by state farm? your she shed's covered, cheryl. you hear that victor? i'm getting a new she shi-er she shed. she shi-er? mhhm. that's wonderful news. go with the one that's here to help life go right.
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for the very first time some of meghan markle's closest friends are giving us an inside look on the dutch and duchess of sussex. in a cbs exclusive, they talk
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about why she is so ready for motherhood. >> i have the two best guys in the world, so i'm really happy. >> archie is here and it's clear three's company. >> there's just going to be so much love for that baby. >> danny martin is one of the actress's closest friends. so is janina gavankar. >> it's pretty awesome. >> meghan anddeca she's always wanted to be a mom. >> has she? >> she's going to be such a good mother. she's going to be so low maintenance, she'll be very ma he own baby hoofood? >> oh, i totally see her making
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her own baby food. >> really? i was kidding. >> no. she loves to cook. >> and he talks about harry. >> he ees 's so good with kids. even after the wedding portrait with the family, he was on the floor playing with the kids. that's how i knew he was going to be the coolest dad. >> with all they've been blessed with, there have been ugly challenges. headlines painting her as demanding, dubbed duchess difficult. >> you hear these stories and there's no truth to them. >> your ex-lencys, prime minister. >> but meghan's friends are fully confident of who she is and stays clear of the rumor mill. >> she doesn't read the bad or the good because she knows the metric that you have for your own life cannot be based on a headline. >> what are the tears about for you? >> i think becausew her so
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well and she doesn't deserve all this negative press. >> through it all harry has been by herbicide. >> she is with her soulmate. the two of them together are very powerful. >> and making royal history a newly minted tradition with archie a distant sephth in line for the throne is poised to cary on. >> this is a dawn of a new generation that their child is going to represent what the world is now. >> and you can see our special "meghan & harry plus one" tonight at 8:00. a lot happened to her, she got married, moved, and had a baby. >> she did it all in one year. >> she did it all in one year. we're cheering youn
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"60 minutes" scott pelley has spent his good morning, everyone. it is 8:25. a.m. michelle griego. the ptsa and mount pleasanton middle school is raising money. after vandals trashed the campus. the warriors now have a two games to none lead over the portland trail blazers. over the western conference finals. game 3 is tomorrow in portland. meanwhile, in san jose, fans are getting ready to watch the game. the sharks are away. it is game 4 of the western conference final against the st. louis blues. san jose leads the series, two games to one. we'll have news updates throughout the day, on your favorite platforms on our website, kpix.com.
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good morning, here at 8:27. we're still tracking that trouble spot, coming out of the north bay, southbound 101. it is blocking one lane. and elsewhere, we are slow and go, as you're making your way across the bay bridge, at the toll plaza. slow all the way backed up to the foot of the maze. east shore freeway is moving along pretty well this morning. your travel times now in the green coming out of the altamonte pass. less than half an hour. about the same amount of time. if you are on the east shore freeway, you're back in the green, making your way to the east shore freeway. and back up into the yellow, in san jose this morning.
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let's take a live look at the san mateo bridge, where things are starting to clear up, moving right along in the westbound direction. in the eastbound direction, everything there looks pretty darn good. golden gate bridge, this commute is starting to ramp up. but once you make it to the bridge, everything seems to be moving along just fine. the zipper car there is giving you a few extra lanes. >> all right, thanks, emily. nice to see sunshine there. we'll continue to see clearing throughout the day. hi-def doppler, dry for the most part. ol showers. and you can see that from pill pitas through san -- milipitas through san jose. upper 50s in san francisco. low 60s in oakland. mid-60s in fremont. san hoo zay, -- san jose, concord and livermore and santa rosa. next storm system rolls in for saturday. widespread rain tomorrow and the afternoon. it's going to be a soggy saturday. a rainy start sunday morning. and drying out sunday
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afternoon. a break monday. showers return next tuesday.
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♪ ♪ good day sunshine welcome back to "cbs this morning." right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. cbs boston station wbz says police arrested a teacher after he allegedly planted a live round of ammunition at a massachusetts high school. investigators say surveillance video shows 57-year-old old high school teacher alfred purcell dropped a bullet on the stairwell floor yesterday. he reported finding it and the school was immediately placed on lockdown. police say he admitted to planting the bullet to prove the school needed metal detectors.
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>> who can forget that face? "new york times" reports internet sensation grumpy cat has died. say it ain't so. this morning the family of the adorable 7-year-old cat said she died in the arms of her mommy tuesday after complications due to an infection. you're smiling. >> you said krump grumpy cat has died! i was expecting good news. then you said, has died! >> we were hoping for a he is risen or something. >> or he's okay. >> he's not okay. >> you're not coming to my funeral. >> yes, i know. >> wow. >> break out the cymbals and the pom-pons. >> definitely. >> oh, man. rough crowd. she rose to fame six years ago after her owner posted meet grumpy cat. we will miss grumpy cat. >> yes, we will. even if you're not a cat person,
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you liked grumpy cat. unlucky diners were served a bottle of wine worth nearly $6,000 by mistake. a customer ordered the bordeaux on the left and instead got the bottle on the right which looks very similar but costs 17 times as much. the restaurant said mistakes happen. they still love the staffer who accidentally gave it away. yeah, sure. it sparked funny responses including many looking for a table from the same waiter. the waiter, we are told, still has a jo. >> and the worst thing is, they were having fish. >> ba da bump. >> thank you. it's the last day. you've got to work out all the groaners, otherwise, the supplies will be wasted. and now this, what a joy for us. over his decades-long career, award-winning journalist and "60 minutes" correspondent scott
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pelley has been on the front lines to cover events that changed the world. his new memoir "truth worth telling, a reporter's search for meaning in the stories of our times" highlightss history. he writes about his conversations with marines stationed in afghanistan, parents of sandy hook shooting victims, and even music icon bruce springsteen. scott pelley is here first on "cbs this morning" to talk about his book. scott, congratulations. welcome. >> thank you very much. good morning. great to be with you. >> you start your book after the 2015 paris attack. why there? >> you know, it occurred to me there, john, there were people bringing candles to this makeshift memorial in paris for the 120 people who were killed on that day, and they had this look of bewilderment on their face. it occurred to me i had seen it before. i'd seen it on 9/11 at the
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world trade center and the oklahoma bombing. i'd seen it again and again throughout my career. and it occurred to me people were asked the question, what's the meaning of life. i thought we're asking the wrong question. don't ask what's the meaning of life. life is asking, what's the meaning of you. and in that idea i began to think about all these people that i had met over the years, the people you were just talking about in the intro and how they had discovered the meaning of their lives, the virtue in life in some of the most challenging events of our times. >> i love the title of the book, scott, "truth worth telling," w atim iiee presournmunr attack clearly that there is no democracy without journalism. that's an important message to send at this time.
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>> the american people have to have independent generally reliable information to make decisions about their lives and the lives of the country. the founders were counting on us to be proactive citizens. they gave us the power in this country, and the only way we can exercise that power is with credible information. james madison described freedom of the press as the right that guarantees all the others. >> you know, scott, you and i both often talk about victor franco's book "man's search for meaning," and it struck me when i was reading some of these accounts especially of lance corporal david hall who was killed in afghanistan. franco writes this. everything can be taken away but one thing, the last human freedom to choose one's attitude. you talk about hall and devotion and why he did what he did. he lost his life in afghanistan because of the choices he made. >> absolutely. of course the holocaust survivor who wrote that
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tremendous book in the 1940s, david hall was the mine sweeper at the head of the column. every day and at one point they took his mine sweeper away and gave him a promotion. he wouta he wd e mine sweeper there was unambiguous virtue of what he was doing sweeping the path and protecting his fellow marines. the beginning of the book is called gallantry and it's what i saw down there at the world trade center on 9/11 with the fire -- >> ground zero, yeah. >> with the city of new york. it occurred to me those 343 firefighters killed that day. the largest loss of life of any emergency service in history. the firefighters went up the stairwells. they don't know what 9/11 was about. they didn't know why the world trade center had been attacked, but it didn't matter. they knew what they were about.
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>> everybody that knows you, scott, would not call you liar, liar pants on fire, but you lied about your age at the beginning to get a job. >> i lied about that, and why did you bring it up.ue qst f tr began with a lie. i wanted a job as a copy boy and they only hired kids who were 16. >> how old were you? >> i was 15. so i fibbed about my age, and my mom would drop me every day two blocks from the paper so people couldn't see i didn't have a driver's license. >> so mom was in on it too. >> mom was in on it too. from the age of 15 i've been doing this, so it's been a long, long ride. >> it's worked out okay. your first book, congratulations. >> thank you. >> we love it. "truth worth telling, a reporter's stories and the meaning of our time." good to have you, scott. >> great to be here.
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>> great to have you. john says farewell -- also pronounced farewell -- in his final "reporter's notebook" and he'll be heading over to "60 minutes." he's coming over there with you, scott. >> we're awfully proud to have him. >> we think it's a big deal too. >> but first at 8:38, all right boys, time for bed.
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listen to your mom, knuckleheads. hand em over. hand what over? video games, whatever you got. let's go. you can watch videos of people playing video games in the morning. is that everything?
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i can see who's online. i'm gonna sweep the sofa fort. well, look what i found. take control of your wifi with xfinity xfi. let's roll! now that's simple, easy, awesome. get started with xfinity internet for $29.99 a month for 12 months, plus ask how to get 250 back when you switch to xfinity mobile. click, call or visit a store today.
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in this morning's final ""reporter's notebook"" we turn
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to all of you in the studio, in the building and cbs news bureaus all over the world and to you, our audience at home. usually you write essays to get into things, college, jobs, an idea. this is an essay on the way out. >> what's your name? >> what your name is? >> i'm a transfer student here. >> after 17 months as co-anchor of "cbs this morning," i'm leaving the program to go to "60 minutes." the ultimate exit essay is a eulogy, but i come here not to bury but to praise. a good day has meaning, ming joy and love. meaning here is given by the news cycle. >> let me ask you about the mueller investigation. >> personal meaning in this job comes from being in the company of so many people working all together under tremendous pressure and high stakes to untangle the news and tell stories well.
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you have no idea the logistical challenges. >> mr. president, you are 94. it is nearly 94 degrees outside. what are you doing here? >> two possums once started fighting on a building where we were trying to hold a focus group. shortly before an interview with theresa may they switched the ocation, 120 miles south. >> this is the previous woman. >> yes. >> wasn't that great? ♪ >> the days are long and broken planes and train tunnels filled with water all mock our plans. despite that, the joy in this show is obvious. why i ought to -- >> give us the bad news, lonnie. good morning. >> thanks for the introduction. >> we have a license to
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interview politicians -- >> howard schultz said he wouldn't run as an independent if the democrats nominate a moderate. >> oh, isn't that nice. >> musicians, actors to ask them anything we want. >> are you a hoarder? >> no, no. i use everything i steal. >> and we have great fun around the table. >> we know how lucky we are. >> i did make some bedazzled t-shirts that say i love taylor swift. i might have an extra one in your size. >> you have a bedazzler? >> you dropped it. >> do you want me to get it? >> you're one of the "time 100," gayle. you don't have to do any of that. >> thank you. >> though sometimes my jokes seem only to be for myself. >> welcome back to dad jokes central. >> those talons are really sharp. >> mariners are usually worried about albatrosses, but that's another story. >> even the crew is like -- groan. >> groan of appreciation. >> actually there was no groaning. it was just crickets. >> john dickerson.
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>> and now to the love, well, that's everywhere. everyone who surrounds us during the two hours we're on the air or who works in the offices above or the edit bays below, they build the stage on which we get to dance and without which we would collapse. if those of you out there feel like you're a part of a community it's because you are. hello, television audience. so thanks for letting me join in. it's anchor aweigh, my friends. i'll be back again some day, just in a different chair. ♪ >> yeah. all right. >> oh, man. >> you sound pretty good there, john. >> oh, man is right. you sound pretty good. what i love is how you pay tribute to the crew and the team
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that works with us to put this team together. you look at what you've done, john. you've done a lot here. >> you know everything that they do so of course you have to. >> oh, i do. >> and to kiera and clair and wes and craig. they did an amazing job on that piece. >> you did an amazing job. we're saying anchor aweigh but it's across the street to bigger and better "60 minutes." no joke. >> i'm thrilled to go there but i'm also thrilled to have been here. >> i feel that, too. before we leave, can we bring out the certificate for john's mani/pedi, the facial? we want you to look good. >> this is from everybody. >> everybody signed it. >> someone who knows about this guitars -- >> wow. >> we wanted to get you a martin guitar. it's a classic american guitar. >> next we take a look at all that matters. it's a classical american guitar. ♪ ♪ with the chase mobile app, jason wu could pay practically anyone, at any bank,
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all while putting on a runway show for new york fashion week. ♪ ♪ he could. or, he could make it even easier - and set up recurring payments to his neighbor. for cat sitting. (meow) whoa. you've groomed her, too. (cell phone vibrating) and now she's ready for the catwalk. life, lived jason's way. chase. make more of what's yours.
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that does it for us. we'll look back at all that mattered this week. >> bye! >> women's health care is under attack, and we will not stand for it. >> you just aborted the state of alabama. >> this is a huge win for anti-abortion activists. >> u.s. officials insist they have hard evidence on the threat of iran. >> china is vowing to fight this trade war to the finish. >> open up your product. have it made in this country. >> what are we paying more for? >> furniture, building supplies, dog colors. >> we went to a rally. >> how in the world can we justify mandating a medical intervention when we have no idea what the downside of this is. >> are you saying we have no idea what the downside of this is? >> mick jagger still has dance
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moves six weeks after undergoing heart surgery. so love this video. >> i love the way he dances. he's got quick feet. the greatest team on television >> i'm wearing blue because it goes with her eyes. >> where? on cbs. >> tony pointed to me, hey, gayle, your hair is sticking out. i said, we did that on purpose. he said, well, it looks weird. thank you, tony. >> do you think president trump is a good role model? >> no. >> bill de blasio is the answer to what question that isn't being asked? >> god bless the "new york post" this morning. new yorkers laughing on the cover. >> what's your next chapter, johnny? what's yours, kaley? >> i'm not ready to start crying
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yet. >> there we go. >> i made it to the top. >> our democracy is under assault. >> what's at stake here? >> you've done your homework on this. >> for seven years we've made news, we're in the news, and we've made headlines. >> what's your name. >> i'm a transfer student. >> i'm leaving the program to go to "60 minutes." >> you look good with your pocket square. >> i'm going to use it to mop up tears. everyone who's on the air who works in the offices abovg or the edit bays below make us what we are and without you we would collapse. >> what's the o.g. for? >> original gayle. >> i think you can be an
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entertainer without going to silly school. >> i'm a graduate of silly school do not man, that's a cool looking hot tub. we should check on the baby. he's so sweet. maybe too sweet? internet's down. go! your home is only as smart as your internet. get reliable at&t fiber and get speeds up to 300 megabits per second and directv. bundle for 75 dollars a month for 12 months. limited availability. may not be in your area. more for your thing. that's our thing. call 1-800-call-att.
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(vo) ♪ i know what you're thinking. electric, it's not for you. and, you're probably right. electric just doesn't have enough range. it will never survive the winter. charging stations? good luck finding one of those. so, maybe an electric car isn't for you after all. or, is it? ♪
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good morning. it is 8:55. i'm michelle griego. a uc berkeley student is charged with sexually assaulting two women. the first attack allegedly happened in 2017. police say the second victim came forward while they were investigating the first report. dozens of people are facing charges after a series of raids in the east bay. the targets, several gangs that police say had started working together. 16 people were arrested in all. a new study shows the homeless population is on the rise across the bay area. it's up 43% in alameda county in just the last two years. santa clara county has seen a 31% increase. and in san franthe county showed a 17% increase. news updates throughout the
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day, on your favorite platforms, including our website, kpix.com. al sale on te
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sleep nu 360 smart bed. it senses your movement and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. save $1,000 on the new queen sleep number 360 special edition smart bed, only $1,799. only for a limited time. well, good morning here at 8:57. we are tracking some trouble spots for you this morning. let's take a look the our maps, where we is can zoom into one of those trouble spots. that's in the south bay. there is a stall. something in one of those lanes in the southbound direction at 880. right as you are connecting to 237. back up to the richmond san rafael bridge. that accident there. slowing things down in the
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westbound direction. also in the westbound direction, on the east shore freeway, two accidents, right there past 580. another a little further south by ashby. those are slow and go as you're making your way to the maze this morning. your drive times are out of the green on the east shore freeway and out y looking ow. but once you get out of there, you're looking good. mary? [ inaudible ] here's a live look with our treasure island camera. with the blue sky out there. now, we are tracking a few isolated showers and hi-def doppler. and you can see, some very light rain showers, milipitas and wayne this morning. but as we head through the day, we are going to see clearing with afternoon sunshine. cool daytime highs, upper 50s in san francisco. low 60s in oakland, mid-60s in fremont and san jose.
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a rainy day tomorrow. looking at rain sunday morning. drying out after that. have a great weekend.
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wayne: whoo! oh, snap! jonathan: say what? - let's make a deal, wayne! wayne: you're going to tokyo. tiffany: more cars! jonathan: a new jaguar! - big deal! wayne: $75,000! who wants some cash? - big deal of the day! wayne: y'all ready for season ten? let's go! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." wayne brady here. who wants to make a deal? ♪ who wants to make a deal i think... the curtain, come on over here, curtain. everybody else, have a seat. let's get it started, hey there, what's your name? - jeed. wayne: jeed?

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