tv CBS This Morning CBS June 10, 2019 7:00am-9:00am PDT
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through the week back down to where we should be for this time of year. but please, stay safe. i'm just going to stay in the studio. >> go see a movie. >> right. good morning to you viewers in the west and welcome to cbs this morning this morning oig. baseball legend shot. retired red sox star davidrtiz is wounded in an apparent am bish in the dominican republic. his condition this morning and whether he was targeted. sudden danger. a powerful storm causes a deadly crane collapse on a dallas apartment building while a california wildfire forces an amusement park to be evacuated. broadway best. the tonys bring inclusion together in a fast tempo after andre de shields wins and he'll
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be in studio 57. and praise be. what they say about today's america. it's monday, june 10th, 2019. here's today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> oh, my god. the crane is falling over. oh, my god. >> a deadly crane collapse during storms in texas. the building has suffered multiple collapses to include residential spaces as well as the parking garage. >> former baseball star david ortiz has been shot. >> he's in stable condition after surgery. >> firefighters battle several wildfires. >> a brushfire caused the evacuation of six flags north of los angeles. >> you couldn't breathe. >> mexico will not face new tariffs today after days of high-stakes negotiations. >> the president's willingness
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to use tariffs probably caused the result. >> they were running from what they thought were gunshots. >> all that -- >> mcilroy, the 2019 rbc canadian open champion. >> he scores! >> a tied series as the bruins force a game seven back to boston. >> -- and all that matters -- >> the host of "the late late show" led the 73rd annual tony awards in style. >> finally a straight old white man gets a break. >> -- on "cbs this morning." ♪ we're each better than on our own we do it with great division except "game of thrones" and flee bag and handmaid's tale and killing eve and walking dead and dead to me and stranger things and anything that ends with thinks orange is the new black
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mirror mrs. maisel ♪ ♪ and "the late late show" with me ♪ >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. >> i stayed up late watching. the two tonys -- >> yes, indeed. >> i thought james corden did a fantastic job. that opening number was a knockout. >> you can see how much raw talent he has on a show like that. he's fabulous. >> and the audience seemed to like it. >> he has a great vibe. >> he was terrific. and the after party at the plaza was terrific. very good food. >> you went out after the show? >> we did. >> he dragged me out. >> you can't miss the party. >> well, we're all awake this morning. welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with some tough news
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for boston red sox fans and people with a beating heart. david ortiz, a longtime baseball slugger better known as big papi is in stable condition this morning from a gunshot wound. he was shot at the dial bar in his hometown last night in santa domingo in the dominican republic. >> two others were also wounded. police say the suspect is in custody and several other people were detained. david begnaud is with us. where do things stand? >> it was not a robbery. it may have been a hit job. at this point they're not sure whether david ortiz was the intended target. as you're about to see, ortiz was blindsided. social media shows him outside a bar.
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you can see a motorcyclist approaching the group from behind and shooting ortiz in the back. police say it was nearly point blank range. the bullet went through ortiz's lower back and came out of his stomach. lopez was shot in the leg, and another person was also injured. a crowd of people immediately attacked the suspected shooter outside the bar, kicking, beating, and threatening him. someone shouted let him live. he has to talk. ortiz was rushed in to surgery at a clinic. outside the clinic his father said he was resting and the bullet did not hit any major organs. ortiz is a boston sports icon. his nickname is big papi. he helped the red sox break their world series curse in 2004. and in 2013 his speech at fenway
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park helped to unite the city that was reeling following the boston marathon bombings. >> no one's going to dictate our freedom. stay strong. >> he retired in 2016 but considered his charitable work in boston and in the dominican republic. overnight there was an outpouring of support for ortiz. former new york yankees rival alex rodriguez tweeted prayers for ortiz. and pedro martinez wrote, i am at peace knowing you are out of danger. >> ortiz is said to live at least half the year in the dominican republic. there's a journalist where ortiz was said to have told the doctors, please don't let me die. i am a good man. red sox have reported anything that they need. >> i'm glad somebody said don't kill the suspect. let him live. he has to talk. nobody knows exactly what happened or why.
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>> apparently blindsided. one bullet went through ortiz and hit the second person, same bullet. >> thanks a lot, david. investigators in dallas are on the scene of a deadly crane accident that triggered frantic rescue efforts. at least one person was killed after the massive crane slammed into buildings during a powerful storm yesterday. mireya villarreal is near the scene in dallas. what are we learning exactly? >> reporter: well, good morning, anthony. this crane was being used at a crux site across the street. in addition to the one woman inside the building, five others injured. two of them critically. >> oh, my god, the crane is falling over. oh, my god. >> reporter: it took just seconds for this construction crane in downtown dallas to collapse as winds as high as 80
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miles an hour went through texas. the twisted metal tore through the complex and parking garage. david mendoza rushed to help an uninjured driver. >> we look over to the right and we see a gentleman dangling in his car. it's facing straight down. >> reporter: cars were stacked on top of each other. dozens of emergency workers were responding to the scene looking for people trapped. >> we can't confirm the exact cause of the collapse but everyone is aware a storm did roll through. >> reporter: tower cranes like the one that crashed can rise hundreds of feet in the air and can withstand hurricane-force winds of more than 100 miles an hour. dallas wasn't the only area hit by sunday's violent weather. storms moved quickly across the region uprooting hundreds of trees, flooding roads, and leaving more than 300,000 customers without power.
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texas leads the country right now in crane-involved accidents where someone died. and since 2012, there have been nine deaths, but this is the first time where a person not working for a construction company was actually killed. the company says that they will fully cooperate with the investigation as it continues locally and firmly as well. >> the investigators have a lot of questions. so do the people there. thank you very much, mireya. a popular southern california amusement park will open later today after a dramatic evacuation. crews are battling at least six wildfires across southern california this morning. janet shamlian is near there, northwest of los angeles. janet, have you heard anything on the fire? good morning to you. >> there's no official word, but this area is a tinderbox. with the vacation season in full
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swing, the park was packed when it happened. a fast-moving brushfire pushed flames dangerously close to six flags magic mountain on sunday. hundreds were streamed out of the park. some were still on rides when the thick smoke turned the sky dark. >> we couldn't see for a little bit. they gave us masks to wear. >> this is what they gave you? >> yeah. >> did you put it on? >> yeah. i didn't want to smell it. it was pretty scary. >> reporter: park officials quickly evacuated guests for safety reasons. claudia aguilar was stuck in her car for an hour. >> was it frightening? >> yes, because the fire was getting big. palms were burning. >> reporter: this is one of several fires fueled by strong winds and excessive heat. north of sacramento, more than
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500 firefighters work order to get the sand fire under control. >> i'm racing home and i see the smoke, and it's -- oh, gosh. it's terrible. >> reporter: in a controversial move utility company pg&e cut power to folks in northern california as a precaution. they're under increasing pressure after an investigation found its power lines caused the camp fire which killed more than 80 people. >> we certainly understand it's inconvenient for people to be without power. we also want to keep communities safe. so when the extreme fire conditions call for it, we're doing public safety shut-off. >> reporter: the utility has restored power to most customers, but the threat is not over. there's an excessive heat watch on tuesday. it's going to be 102 degrees today. >> thank you very much. president trump is defending his deal with mexico, calling off a terror threat in exchange for more help keeping migrants from crossing the southern
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border. he's also suggesting that some of the deal was not new and it was also secretive. chip reid is at the white house where new announcements may be forthcoming. where are we going from here? >> reporter: the president is already tweeting about the deal. on sunday he predicted, quote, great cooperation between u.s. and mexico, but he warned if mexico falls short, he'll go right back to tariffs. mexico has agreed to accelerate its national guard presence starting today. and also to expand a program requiring asylum seerks ting ee remain in mexico while they file their claims. they claim it's all new, but homeland security secretary near son kirstjen nielsen announced it last december. in his tweets about the deal this morning, the possibility of another immigration and security deal with mexico. he said it will be revealed in the not too distant future.
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anthony? >> thank you, chip. the largest gathering presidential dic candidates so . joe biden was an absentee last night, though a new poll shows him leading the democrats. nancy cordes is watching the presidential hopefuls. why didn't he show up? >> he had a family commitment and he's lost some support in iowa since march, but he's going to try to make up for it. in the meantime 20 others descended, making their own cases. >> beating donald trump is the floor, it is not the ceiling. >> reporter: with only five minutes each to speak, the candidates had to get to the heart of their 3i67s quickly. >> we're not going to play it safe. we are where we are because we're broke. >> it comes to one central question. who does this government work for?
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>> reporter: a new poll shows big gains by senator elizabeth warren and south bend, indiana mayor peter buttigieg. they and biden and bernie sanders were among the only ones to crack single digits. elizabeth warren took a jab at the frontrunner. >> i'm not spending my time with high donors and corporate lobbyists. i'm spending my time with you. >> reporter: in fact, she wasn't the only one. >> i don't think there's room for a democratic candidate who doesn't support a woman's full reproductive freedom. >> reporter: biden came under fire last week for backing the hyde amendment, a long standing law blocking federal funding of abortion. he changed his think a day later. >> there are some who believe the best way forward is a middle ground strategy.
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that approach is not just bad public policy but a failed political strategy. >> reporter: the iowa democratic caucus isn't scheduled to take place until february 3rd, eight months from now, but it's the first, which explains why 19 democratic candidates would all hit the state at once this far out. >> it's when iowa voters feels very special. tony awards made history and sent an inspired message about inclusion. the musical "hades town" was honored on a night when 12 shows won tonys. jamie wax is there. how many did they get? >> they ended up with eight of those 14. the musical about the underworld did very well last night, but
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the biggest winners are all those who love live theater. that's because that's what the 73rd tonys were all about. james corden emphasized the live performances at the heart of every broadway show and in a field with big productions and grand recognition, the show with roots and a small community theater took home the most awards. "hades town" created 13 years ago won eight tonys including best musical. the show's director rachel chavkin also won and was the only female nominated. there were several calls to make theater more inclusive. ali stroker won for her role in the current revival of "oklahoma," becoming the first
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person in a wheelchair to be nominated and to win. >> this award is for every kid watching tonight who has a disability, a limitation, or a challenge, who has been waiting to see themselves represented in this arena. >> the media is not the enemy of the people. demagoguery is the enemy of the people. >> reporter: bryan cranston accepted his second tony for his role in the adaptation of "network," the world's addiction to screens large and small. >> it's remarkable what was the tube. and now the tube is in our palm. it's taking the place of reality. >> he's taking a break from his
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unbelievably demanding performance. "hades town" increased ticket sales by 1300%. >> they used to take it on a bus and perform it. >> it used to cost the performers to do the show. >> watching the performance last night, i think we're overdue. >> speaking of that, andre de shields will be joining us in studio 57 and share how it feels to finally win the honor after a 50-year career o we have a heat advisory for most of the day area. all because of hot temperatures that we are expecting as we head through the afternoon. triple digit heat for santa rosa, therefore, concord,
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we haveh we have much more news ahead. an auto rider disappears on a test ride. the latest search for him in the sierra nevada mountains. >> and we have more on a nuclear waste site. >> it's taken 30 years and $19 billion to get here, and it's nowhere near complete. we'll take you inside the mountain ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. what if i introduce you to my family now? ♪
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this is a tremendous update. i'm michelle griego. in siler city driver minutes using meth before causing a crash that killed one person and critically injured another. police of the suspect is under arrest for dui. the cause remains under investigation. firefighters in san jose are gaining ground on the so- called malech fire. the fire is 70% contained. investigators say it started behind a public shooting range. tonight is game 5 of the nba finals. kevin durant might play. it is a must win game for that
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i am tracking your real- time traffic and drive times are starting to creep up into the double digits. drive times, 43 minutes to the altamont pass. and certain the slowdown on highway 4 and 101 out of the south day as well. the bay bridge back up towards the foot of the maze. also backed up in the eastbound direction if you are leaving the city. thanks to a stall truck at the treasure island offered. the heat is on across the area pick even hotter then yesterday. we have a heat advisory in effect for most of the bay area today. due to the hot temperatures. check it out. triple digit heat from santa rosa, concord, fairford, livermore and san jose. mid 90s in oakland and 90 in san francisco and even warm along the coast. it will be another hot day in
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it's 7:30 on "ctm." here's what's happening this morning. red sox legend david ortiz is recovering after being shot at a bar in the dominican republic. >> oh, my god. >> a crane crashes into an apartment building in dallas. >> gnarliest crack of thunder you ever heard. >> wildfires are breaking out across arizona and california. >> they said we got one run to get out, basically. >> i'm very particular. >> plus, actress elizabeth moss talks with us about her long career and her latest leading success in "the handmaid's tale." >> may the lord open. >> and broadway star ann dedre
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shields is here to talk about his tony win. >> the top of the the mountain is the bottom of the next, so keep climbing. >> that's one of my favorite parts last night, the three little tips. keep climbing. i like it. >> a great performance and a 50-year wait. so well deserved. >> he said surround yourself by people whose eyes sparkle when they see you. >> when you walk in the room, yep. >> a lot of people in the audience, their eyes sparkle when they watch him. >> absolutely true. a massive search now under way in california for a long-time automotive rider who mysteriously disappeared on a motorcycle trip near the sierra nevada. ctm national correspondent jericka duncan is following the story. >> for starters, police found
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davie johnson's motorcycle on saturday. a team of 45 people, six dogs, two boat, and a helicopter have been deployed to try and find him. >> he is so full of life, and i have just never met anyone like him. >> reporter: jaclyn trop says she last spoke to johnson around 5:00 wednesday morning. the 44-year-old had been testing out a motorcycle for a story. trop says he did not text her for several hours. according to her, he said his cell phone died and he had been dealing with difficult riding conditions. i'm so sorry i worried you, he texted. yes, i'm okay and alive, but i'm wiped. i love you very much. >> i don't think he had a planned route. >> reporter: trop says she and investigators are now trying to piece together johnson's route.
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trop believes on sunday, june 2nd, johnson rode from los angeles to las vegas. the next day he went from las vegas to mammoth mountain in california, and from there on tuesday, he headed to the sonora pass. the sonora pass is the second tallest highway pass in the sierra nevada, known for its winding, steep, and sometimes icy roads, even in june. trop says despite poor conditions, she believes johnson made it over the pass by early wednesday, which was the last time anyone heard from him. >> he texted a friends of his to say that he was sitting in the creek at the rest stop, just enjoying himself. >> reporter: police found johnson's bike saturday parked at a rest stop in california. trop says the next day his clothing, cell phone, and laptop were found by a river about 50 feet away. his wallet is still missing. trop isn't giving up hope but says as each day passes t gets harder. >> we always talked about having
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40 years together, and we had a 40-year timeline. to have that cut short is horrible. >> wow. >> well, johnson is a respected contributor to the car and driver magazine. a spokesperson said in a statement the entire team is eagerly awaiting positive news about his rescue. trop told us that she and johnson had only been dating a few months but planned to get engaged in the coming months. >> any speculation whatsoever? >> you know, not right now. just the things they found, they put out alerts, asking for people to call them if they have any information. so we're waiting. this goes back last wednesday. >> a long time. we hope they find him. thank you. we're getting rare looks inside the multibillion-dollar project in the desert southwest that could become home to the nation's nuclear waste. ahead, the growing concern about shipping radioactive materials through the heart of las vegas. plus, how a man missing for
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days in the arkansas wilderness turned to mom for help. >> thank you, mom. >> indeed. vladimir is in our toyota green room. that means it's almost time for what to watch. you're watching "cbs this morning." for "what to watch." you're watching "cbs this morning." and a dock with a boat, maybe. why haven't you started building? well, tyler's off to college... and mom's getting older... and eventually we would like to retire. yeah, it's a lot. but td ameritrade can help you build a plan for today and tomorrow. great. can you help us pour the foundation too? i think you want a house near the lake, not in it. come with a goal. leave with a plan. td ameritrade. ♪
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a new push for the permanent storage for the nation's nuclear waste is leading to a fight over the massive radioactive stockpile. the u.s. is the world's largest producer of nuclear power, and the dangerous spent fuel is currently in about 80 sites around the country. they contain an estimated 88,000 tons. this morning we're getting a rare tour of the leading potential storage site outside las vegas for the material that will remain poise notice for thousands of years to come. jonathan vigliotti shows us why this is so controversial. >> reporter: deep in this remote patch of desert, there's a $19 billion hole in the ground. that's how much it has cost to fight over and build this test
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tunnel, now largely abandoned for almost a decade. it was designed to be the answer to america's nuclear waste, a problem still piling up at faraway places like this. >> we're entering the area now that's between the two units. >> reporter: midway between los angeles and san diego, where engineers produced power for half a century. >> this is spent fuel from the unit two reactor. >> reporter: ron helps manage the waste. >> how many years worth of spent fuel are we looking at? >> about 50 years worth of operation here. >> reporter: under this massive concrete slab, 536 tons of radioactive spent nuclear fuel from the plant is temporarily buried. >> the fact that yucca mountain failed to materialize as the nation's repository for spent nuclear fuel has stranded fuel not only at this site but sites across the nation. >> reporter: congress designated yucca mountain as the location
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for a national permanent nuclear waste repository back in 1987. a test tunnel was dug but never licensed. >> it is an isolated location, which has the right geology, which can make the difference for safe use of nuclear power and storage of nuclear waste for generations and generations to come. >> reporter: wyoming senator john barrasso is now pushing legislation that would restart the licensing of yucca mountain, a process the obama administration put on hold almost a decade ago after opposition from a bipartisan group of nevada politicians. >> i have concerns about the science here. >> reporter: senator catherine cortez masto of nevada has been fighting yucca mountain. >> part of the infrastructure that's necessary is to build all of the rail lines that need to come across nevada, across this country to bring it there. a lot of those rail lines and the shipment would come through the heart of las vegas. >> this will be a bottleneck for all of this radioactive waste if, in fact, yucca mountain does
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go through. >> it's a bottleneck. two shipments a day for 50 years. i mean, it's crazy. >> reporter: cortez masto invited us along on a rare visit to the tunnel, hosted by william boyle from the department of energy. >> how good of a site is this for the country's nuclear waste? >> well, the department felt it was good enough that we submitted the license application in 2008. >> do you agree with that submission? >> it wouldn't have been submitted if i didn't agree. >> what are you thinking? >> i disagree. >> reporter: cortez masto says some scientists worry that the water in the ground will mix with nuclear waste and enter the drinking supply of small nearby farming communities. boyle feels that risk is safely mana manageable. >> you say what's unfolding here is political science. what do you mean by that? >> because when they passed the nuclear waste policy act, we didn't have any seniority at the time in the state of nevada to be able to change that. so literally, it got crammed down nevada's throat. >> at what point does time just run out in the debate and it becomes such an issue that all
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this waste collecting and we just say, we have to put it somewhere? >> it's my impression that if we were to ask the people that live near san diego, that they reached that point a while ago. >> reporter: temporarily storing nuclear waste at places like san onofre is costing hundreds of millions of dollars. it's money subsidized by utility customers, taxpayers, and the very same federal government that can't agree on what to do with it. >> we collected money from our customers that went to the federal government, and they haven't used that money to build anything. we would like to see the government do their job and come get the fuel like they promised. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," jonathan vigliotti, nevada. >> thank you, jonathan. >> it's got to go somewhere. >> that's a problem that's got d how nevada feels. >> you don't want to wait until it comes to a crisis point where you have to have it somewhere by next weekend. >> exactly. >> right now they're having a discussion about jonathan's
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story. somebody do something. coming up next, a look at the stories that we think you're going to be talking about later today, including the growing fear about china that drew hundreds of thousands of people into the streets of hong kong. and how bob marley's family helped is going to be another hot day, even harder then yesterday. record heat expected. a heat advisory in effect for today for most of the bay area. all because of these hot temps. triple digit heat in santa ro,c jose. mid 90s in oakland, 90 even in san francisco and mid 80s along the coast. warm along the coast we will cool things down as we head through the week. ugh the week. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. what if i introduce you to my family now?
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the change in hong kong's extradition laws triggered massive protests that organizers say drew more than a million people. look at these crowds. >> wow. >> this morning, the protests turned violent when hundreds of people tried to storm parliament and clashed with police. this is important, guys, because if you are arrested, for example, for political reasons and you're extradited to beijing, that could be a problem. that's what the protesters are saying. a hiker missing in the arkansas wilderness for nearly a week has been reunited with his family. joshua mcclatchey was lost last week. he texted his mother asking for help. officials say he was dehydrated but in good spirits when they found him. he texted his mom he was in trouble. >> and what did mom do? she worked it out. >> that's what moms are for. >> that's what moms do. he said he was turning 38, he just wanted to do something special. he did. mission accomplished. >> well done.
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>> thankfully, he's okay. this is a great story. former president jimmy carter returned to teaching sunday school just a month after undergoing surgery for a broken hip. the 94-year-old former president thanked those at the baptist church in plains, georgia, for their prayers and good wishes. he broke his hip when he fell at home while leaving to go turkey hunting, guys. >> wow. that's a good way to celebrate a birthday as well. >> longest living chief executive in u.s. history. >> only one to support marijuana legalization. >> that's right. >> that makes you popular. >> jimmy carter is very popular. >> polls show that's popular. her heart will go on. celine dion's residency in vegas is over. she closed her run at the coliseum at cesar's palace saturday night. she paid an emotional tribute to her late husband.
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she also debuted a new single called "flying on my own." ♪ i'm flying on my own on the way to your love ♪ ♪ i'm flying on my own on the way to your love ♪ ♪ i'm flying on my own >> that's the new single. next up for the five-time grammy winner is a fall tour to support her upcoming album titled "courage." >> she looks great. >> she looks amazing. >> i like her. >> this is monumental. rumor has it you didn't really get the celine dion effect. everybody knows i'm a huge elvis fan. i always think of vegas and think elvis and the rat pack. there was a period after elvis died that, as you know, because
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tony wrote an article for "newsweek." i saw celine live and in person. it's impossible to be in the presence of that performer and not feel it. >> before celine, there was a real problem in las vegas. unemployment was high. there was a lot of crime. >> they were losing money. people weren't going anymore. she brought back tourism there. she made it okay for big-time headliners. >> j. lo, lady gaga. >> i saw the first show. >> one broadway legend waited half a century for his tony nod. we're going to meet him. he'll be here at the table. half a century for his tony nod. he'll be here in studio 57. k. now, with a2 milk®... ...i can finally enjoy cereal again. it's totally natural. and having only the a2 protein makes all the difference. cereal, smoothies... ...coffee, everything! my first latte in 12 years. a2 milk®, real milk that's easier on digestion.
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when it comes to type 2 diabetes, are you thinking about your heart? well, i'm managing my a1c, so i should be all set. actually, you're still at risk for a fatal heart attack or stroke. that's where jardiance comes in. it reduces the risk of dying from a cardiovascular event for adults who have type 2 diabetes and known heart diseas. that's why the american diabetes association recommends the active ingredient in jardiance. and it lowers a1c? with diet and exercise. jardiance can cause serious side effects including dehydration, genital yeast or urinary tract infections, and sudden kidney problems. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may be fatal. a rare, but life-threatening, bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this bacterial infection, ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or have severe kidney problems. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. so, what do you think? now i feel i can do more to go beyond lowering a1c.
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check it out! now you can schedule a callback or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd rather not. good morning. it is back to court today for teachers in the new haven school district. a new contract giving them a 4% rate through the end of next academic year and they will also get an immediate one-time bonus of 2.5%. a wildfire and yellow county continues to expand this morning. the sand fire broke out yesterday afternoon. it has now burned about 2200 acres. mandatory evacuations are in effect. a boater saw a plane crash in the delta near antioch and pittsburgh last night. about an hour later part of the
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plane's tail was found. search crews also recovered a backpack and aeronautical charts. they been doing sonar searches as they look for more records. news updates throughout the day on your flavored favorite platforms, and on our website kpix.com. nd on our website kpix.com. say yes to the latest spring trends at 20 to 60 percent off department store prices every day. at ross. yes for less. and you find that perfect spring dress at that "oh, yeah" price? yes! that's yes for less.
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score the latest spring dresses at 20% to 60% off department store prices, every day. at ross. yes for less. good morning. we're tracking more delays on the roadways this morning. let's start with a look at the travel times. they are no longer in the green. not anywhere. in fact it is starting to pick up out of the south bay. 61 minute drive on 101 towards the airport. 40 minutes on highway 4 to the easter freeway. it will be half hour drive through the maze. and 45 minutes out of the altamont pass due to an accident that has been moving through. in the meantime we are keeping an eye on your trouble spots and will be right here. stay with us. we are turning up the heat once again. record heat likely today for the second day in a row. a heat advisory as well as a spare the air alert.
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♪ . good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, june 10th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, former defense secretary ash carter on the biggest threat the u.s. now faces. he's here in studio 57. plus, the musical hades town won eight tony awards. we'll talk with co-star andre deshields who won his first tony in a 50-year career. first, the eye opener at 8:00. david ortiz, a long time baseball slugger, better known as big papi, is in stable condition this morning, he's got a gunshot wound. >> may have been a hit job
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according to local police. at this point, they're not even sure whether david ortiz was the intended target. >> in addition to the one woman who died inside the building, five others were injured, two of them were critically injured. >> this area is the tinder box, vacation season in full swing, the park was packed at the time. >> on sunday, he predicted great cooperation, but warned if mexico falls short, he'll go right back to tariffs. >> trying to make up ground this week, he's visiting the state and so is the president. >> the biggest winners of the night are all those who love live theater, because that's what the 73rd tony awards were all about. >> making an even dozen for rafa and rowland garros. >> the incredible moment rafael nadal claimed his 12th french open title.
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>> this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is presented by liberty mutual insurance. that was win number 12 for him. celebrated like it was win number one. >> just in one tournament he's won 12 times, unbelievable. >> you're right. at that one. >> really been a joy when he fell on the court and so happy. so happy for him too. >> i hope he has room on a shelf for all 12 of those cups. nice problem to have. sad story out of the dominican republic, david ortiz, big papi as he's known, is recovering after being shot at a night club in his home country of the dominican republic. the surveillance video shows ortiz sitting outside the dial bar and lounge in santo domingo when he was shot nearly point blank in the back. police say a man hopped off a motorcycle and fired at him.
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>> ortiz was taken to a medical clinic where he's in stable condition after surgery. police say the alleged suspect was captured after a crowd of bystanders caught and beat him. the shooting was not a robbery and ortiz or a popular singer was also there may have been the intended target. at least one person is dead after a construction crane collapsed on to a dallas apartment building. >> the crane is falling over. oh, my god. >> you can see the massive crane in the distance toppling over yesterday, it slammed into an apartment building and a parking garage. winds as high as 80 miles an hour across north texas likely played a role in the collapse. crews found a woman dead inside the complex. at leaste fiv other people were hurt. former president obama's defense secretary ash carter is offering a new inside look at the pentagon, one of the world's largest and most complex organizations. it comes at a time of rising tensions between the u.s. and other nations.
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iran's foreign minister says this morning that the u.s. cannot expect to stay safe. that's his words, after launching what he called an economic war against tehran. just last week, this russian warship came within feet of crashing into the uss chancellorsville in the philippine sea. carter tells the story of the pentagon and how it deals with security threats in his new book inside the five sided box. lessons from a lifetime of leadership in the pentagon and ash carter joins us first on ctm. good morning. >> good to be here. >> a lot to get to in the book and the wider world. two years ago, a little bit more, you said that you are outside of politics, you declined to comment on president trump and the trump administration. in this book, you do comment and you comment strongly. you say the president is not someone you would work for. you say the administration is characterized by offensive racist divisive language and you
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would fire an officer for it. what changed between you being outside of politics and today and are you worried that people like yourself commenting, wading in this way, could politicize something like the department of defense in. >> it is not politics. it is personal conduct. in the book i'm talking about what the way that public servants and my -- all the years i worked for presidents of both parties for 37 and other pentagon over 37 years. and i used to tell officers and soldiers that they needed to behave themselves, that part of the profession of arms was honor and trust. and it is not just the president. it is the kind of behavior and personal conduct that you see everywhere in washington today is not the kind of thing the book said that we tolerated in the military. i fired people for doing that. and my subordinates fired people for even less. so we held to high standards and
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i think that's important. on the question of whether to work for president trump or not, this is purely hypothetical. >> you also point out you weren't asked to work for him. >> no, no. i haven't been -- the point i was making in the book,e iing an order -- your first duty as a cabinet secretary is to serve the president to help him. and all i was saying there was i wouldn't know how to help him because he doesn't seem to take the advice of his cabinet secretaries. so i couldn't take a job knowing that i -- what i know and what i brought to the job, i wouldn't be able to apply to help. we need to help him succeed as the president of the united states. >> that's not wading into politics? these comments are not wading into politics? >> i'm just -- i was talking about the pentagon and giving advice to leaders in the pentagon about how to behave themselves and whether it -- when they're offered a job to say, yes, or not.
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and i was saying you only say yes if you believe you can be -- >> make a difference. >> you spent 35 years in the defense department. what do you see as the most urgent threat facing the country right now? >> we don't have one. we have china, russia, iran, north korea, terrorism, and i'll tell you, it is not a place, but i think the -- i'm confident in our plans and our capabilities with respect to all five of those today. i have great confidence in them. the future is more concerning to me. it is a competitive world. all five of those are potential opponents are focused on us, and we have to deal with all five of them and it is a fast technology -- fast moving world in technology. and so we need to make sure we stay competitive because being the best which we are isn't a birth right. you got to keep earning it in -- >> you're concerned about that, you say in the book the u.s. military needs to regain the competitive edge that slipped away a little bit from us.
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>> we used to are t ed td to ha union as a benchmark to compete against. the cold war ended and there was a decade when russia was weak, china was weak and we have been focusing -- i focused on them, i don't know -- no apologies for that, iraq, afghanistan, counterinsurgency, counterterrorism, i was all in for those when i was in the defense -- you ahave to be. >> it is massive you point out the defense department plays more more men and women than amazon, conducts more research, than apple, google and microsoft. >> combined. >> you said this is not a memoir. you wanted people to know how big it is and you felt uniquely qualified to do this job. you worked in all departments. >> just turns out, i first walked into the department of defense in 1981, caspar weinberger secretary of defense,
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ronald reagan president of the united states and i walked out just before the inauguration in 2017. and so i have seen a lot. it turns out i've been in every corner of the place. and so if you want to -- you're one of the people who wants to get behind the sort of mystery of what is the pentagon and how does it work, how do you buy fighter jets, how do you hire and fire people on basis of conduct, how do you conduct wars? what is the -- how do you manage the world's largest enterprise. >> you describe joe biden as an old friend in the book. he's running for president. you think that old friend is the strongest candidate in the field . >> that is politics. >> you don't do politics. >> we used to -- my wife lived in baltimore. i used to ride the train all the time from washington to baltimore. it is a lovely man vicious ni l
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man. i'm not in politics. >> we can say that today you're wearing a suit and a tie. you can tell a great story when you landed in the middle east and somebody said no tie today when you were meeting the -- >> my very first -- he looked at me and saw a picture, pictures taken all the time. and i got off the plane and the clothes i had worn on the plane and going to a hotel and i was going to change into a suit. he said no suit. and you always need to look proper. and it is another part of behavior. >> you said it looked like someone's mom was watching. very good advice. >> looking just like this, sweating like a wheel of cheese. but why did i do that? >> that's a good graphic, a
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we have a heat advisory for most of the bay area. all because of our heart a temperature that we are expecting as you head through the afternoon. triple-digit heat from santa rosa. fairfield, concord, livermore, and san jose. this afternoon, mid 90s in oakland. 90 degrees even in san francisco and warm even along the coasts in the mid-80s we're going to start to cool things down as we head through the week. back down to where we should be for this time of year. is time of year. what you need.
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in our morning rounds, the new concerns about previously rare types of tick born diseases being seen more frequently in this country. the black legged tick not only spreads -- look at that guy, lyme disease, it can transmit a serious virus that may have killed one man and made another sick in new jersey. in kentucky, a 2-year-old boy is reportedly recovering from another tick born disease, rocky mountain spotted fever. dr. david agus is in las vegas and joins us with everything you need to know about ticks today. how widespread is it and how serious is it if you happen to get bitten by a tick? >> they are ugly. let's get that out of the way. >> they are. >> it is growing. a year ago of tick born diseases and that's how many were actually reported. the real number is probably over 300,000. ticks are parasites, they jump on to a mouse, a rat, a squirrel, and their viruses and bacteria that live inside of them, they draw their blood and
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then in their life cycle they'll bite us and they can transmit these diseases to us. >> why are we seeing more cases now? >> well the weather can changing. climate is changing. there are more mice and food for the ticks as well as the ticks. as reforestation happens, as climate change happens, different areas of the country are getting more of these. >> what is best way to remove a tick if you find it and if you have no desire to torture the tick, is that common? >> take a pair of tweezers, pull straight out and put the tick into alcohol. the kiquicker you remove it the better. saliva contains the bacteria and the virus. wear pants tucked into socks. have someone check you after a hike. >> is there anything you can do to avoid tick bites?
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>> yes. stay with gayle indoors. or walk in the middle of a trail. >> no fair. sometimes i like to go on a hike. >> i believe you. and i think -- >> are the diseases treatable? smarty pants? >> benefit of being outside trumps the risk of getting one of these diseases. bacterial diseases like lyme disease are treatable. in northern new jersey, who cases of parasin virus which is not treatable. so it have someone search you for ticks and pull them off afterwards if you have it and avoid it, wheear deet. >> okay. >> dr. david agus, thank you very much. jamaica is making the women's world cup debut in france. why the reggae girls wouldn't be there without a reggae beat. you're watching "cbs this morning." e shreds!
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one of the biggest underdogs at the women's world cup is jamaica known as the reggae girls, but they've overcome it with the famous marlie family. why it's such an achievement for jamaica to be in the world cup. >> reporter: with three goals by brazil, jamaica lost its first game in its first women's world cup. but just stepping onto this field was a victory. a few years ago the reggae girls didn't even exist. without enough funding, the s k country's soccer administration disbanded it. enter bob marley's daughter who was a fan of the sport. >> i didn't know jamaica had a
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soccer team. >> reporter: noting soccer wasn't only for men. >> there are women being told they cannot play a sport that they love and that wasn't -- that wasn't cool. >> marlie also found a coach, hue menzies, experiencend and unpaid. >> what a piece of history. >> though they entered as underdogs, sydney schneider isn't skpepg defeat. >> our nerves should be behind us. we have to go out for the next game and be ready. >> roxana saberi. >> that's so cool what cedella
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marlie's done here. >> the u.s. team is going after it tomorrow. >> it's nice to see tunds dog win. andre de shields, he's just arrived after a knit >> announcer: this is a kpix 5 news morning up day. >> good morning, everyone. it is 8:25. in san jose, a driver admitted to using meth before causing a crash that killed one person and critically injured another. police say the suspect is under arrest for dui. the heat didn't keep people from getting out and attending the livermore rodeo this weekend. bay area air district says livermore valley and south santa clara county are some the hottest spot. the rodeo wrapped up yesterday. the happening today, defense
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attorneys in the ghost ship warehouse child will try to prove that the deadly warehouse fire was arson. mr. tenet derick almena's is expected to take the stand. his attorney says he could testify for as many as three days. we will have news updates throughout today on your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com. ding our website, kpix.com. togo's fans, the pretzelrami is back,
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with our famous pastrami and a bigger soft pretzel roll. and try the new turkey bistro with warm turkey and smokehouse bacon. or the new hot club chicken dijon with dijon mayo and black forest ham. how far would you go for a togo? good morning here. at 8:27, we are keeping track of your real-time travel updates. most of them are out of the green, actually, all of them, with the exception of the altamont pass. that's in the red at this hour. that's going to be your slowest travel time. 45 minutes driving through. elsewhere, your travel times are in the yellow.
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this morning. now, let's head over to the bay bridge, where things are stacked up towards the foot of the maze. the eastshore freeway is moving. but is movie relatively slowly. now, once you get past the toll plaza, you're moving along at a relatively good pace. now the richmond/san rafael bridge, where it looks like there's an issue at the toll plaza. you can see these cars are trying to peel off around it. slow and go past the toll plaza. last but not least, the seminole bridge has recovered little bit from that earlier stop it but it is still with plenty of volume. all right, thanks, emily. while, the heat is on once again today. likely hotter than yesterday. the record heat expect to once again. it heat advisory for most of the bay area. due to the hot temperatures we are expecting for today. likely the hottest day out of the year. and triple-digit heat for the first time this year.
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so from santa rosa, 100. 104 in fairfield. it concord, 105 in the romare. 100 bird san jose. 90 for in oakland. he 90 even in san francisco. 84 for pacifica. it it's still going to be a hot day in the tomorrow. cooler along the coast for your tuesday. and we're going to continue to cool down as we head through the workweek and into the weekend. into the weekend.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's time to bring you some of welcome back to "cbs morning news." we pick a story that we'd like to share with each other. anthony you're up first. >> a new study says google made $4.7 billion last year from the work of news publishers through search and google news, that's a conservative estimate. entire news u.s. in industry made 1.5 billion. google is getting this content free and making all of this money off of it. a lot of people in the news business are going we want some.
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>> local newspapers tying left and right. those are people watching your wallet. >> 40% of clicks on google's trending queries are fors now. >> google is calling it smart business. >> what have you got? >> focusing on a story about how okay, uf' probably dealt with a situation your son or daughter doesn't do their homework and online instead. in 17% of households the internet doesn't go to the house at home. kids can't do their homework, connected to the web these days. they go to libraries and parking lots, disproportionately affects low income students, students of color and it's a major problem. sometimes it doesn't reach, sometimes it's too expensive. the digital divide is real. >> it's interesting. we've got the technology to the different schools now.
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but not extend it to home. >> you can't do it on phone. >> i'm stuck on the tonys and fashion. it was fierce with a capital "f" and start with billie porter's gown, part pants, drape, made from the curtain from the broadway stage where he performed as lola during his kinky boots run in 2012. thousands of embroidered flower clusters, pants made from the curtain. he said i want to flip the question what it means to be a man. >> i'm ten feet to the right and >> how can i get one of those? i want to go to jordan roth a prominent, you know him, anthony. >> the producer. >> a major producer, major theater mogul, on fire.
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fiery red head to too, a floor length red sequin cape. inspired by the musical hade se town. jordan says he sees his red carpet appearances, this sounds so jordan to me as short performance pieces that allow him to express who he is. they turned the fashion game o its ear. people aren't talking about the women. they're talking about the men, well done. should we put in an order for jordan's suit for you? >> if he's wearing one i need to wear one. >> i'd pay to see that. >> hades town was the big winner, the musical took home eight awards, the most of the night including best musical best director, the tenth woman to win a directing tony and broadway legend andre deshields won his first tony after an
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acting career spanning 50 years. a modern day musical rooted in ancient greek mythology received praise fit for the gods. ♪ >> hadestown nabbed eight trophies including best musical. rachel chavkin won best director. she expressed the importance of having minority voices represented in theater. >> there are so many women who are ready to go. there are so many artists of color who are ready to go. ♪ >> broadway legend andre deshields, who originated the title role of the wiz on broadway took home his first tony for best featured actor, after a 50-year career. >> the top of one mountain is the bottom of the next, so keep
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climbing. >> the 73-year-old told us last week he's living out the dream of his late parents, after receiving the call about his nomination, he turned off his phone. >> i shut it off, because i needed to have that conversation with mom and dad, and say, this might be the one. >> i hope it is. >> i hope so, too. >> and it looks like someone was listening. >> i am making good on my promise that i would come to new york and become someone you'd be proud to call your native son. >> andre deshields plays hermea in hadestown, here fresh off his win and very little sleep and a lot of celebrating. good morning, congratulations. >> good morning and thank you very much. >> i'm so excited for you. you're amazing at hadestown. >> kind of to you say. >> everybody should go see you. we mentioned you turned off your phone because you wanted to have
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a conversation with your late parents. you essentially lived their dream, didn't you? >> yes, carrying their dreams to be performers, vicarious through my career. >> this meant an enormous amount to you. >> absolutely because i've always considered that to be a comic debt that i needed to pay to my parents, because it was there at conception time that absolutely formed the purpose of my life. i've never had to question, andre, what are you supposed to do with your life? i knew exactly. >> did you talk to them after you won the award. >> yes. >> what'd you say? >> i said, debt paid in full. >> yes. >> i wrote down your three things that you said last. we talked about it earlier, surround yourself with people whose eyes light up when they see you coming, the top of one mountain is the bottom of the next so keep climbing. slowly is the fastest way to get to where you want to be. >> exactly. >> you just said to me that this was your plan, that you had planned to win, because i said
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were you disappointed when you didn't win the first two times? you go no, not really because this was my plan. i go i don't believe you, you weren't disappointed. you said this was your plan. what do you mean? >> well, i said slowly is the fastest way to get to where you want to be. now, what do our parents always say to us? haste makes waste. >> right, yes. >> not everything that glitters is gold. not every shut-eye is sleep. not every good-bye is gone. you have to take that into consideration when you decide to enter a profession that guaranties two things, which are not fame and fortune. it's rejection and insecurity. you can't be in a rush for that. >> so hitting it at this time in your life, 73, is sweeter for you? >> sweeter for me. just the other day, a colleague of mine, who just had a baby on his 47th birthday, said to me, you know, andre, i'm
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experiencing a mid life crisis. do you have any advice for me? i said, i have to disappoint you, friend, because i've yet to reach my mid life. so i can't talk to you about mid life crisis. so at 73, 50 years in the industry, the comic debt paid in full to my parents, i'm now to begin my life. >> i love that. >> beautifully said, yes. >> great way of looking at it. >> yes. >> and you stayed up late, anthony told me they left you at the party. >> i stayed there all night. there's a difference. >> well, congrats. >> you can stay up all night, i don't know what you do. >> andy was raving about you after he did the story, he came back and said he's a knockout, a great man, a great performer. it's an honor to meet you. thank you for staying up with us. >> staying up, yes. >> andre deshields, congrats. the hand's maid's tale a
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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? 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. xfinity xfi gives you the speed, coverage and control you need. manage your wifi network from anywhere when you download the xfi app today.
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going strong. they took home the big prize. elisabeth moss is the star and executive producer too. you go, elisabeth moss. we talked with her about the impact of the show and her decades-long career. >> i do understand how rar it is to get to where i've gotten to. there's many more yours of being unemployed or broke than the opposite. sometimes i wake up and go, it's nice to have a job. >> elisabeth moss admitted her television and film career was no overnight success, but now many of her roles are hard to forget. >> i'm entitled to a -- >> don't, oh, please me. >> from zoe bart let in "west
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wing" to peggy in "mad men." >> do you like dark? they say she does dark very well. >> i do. yeah, i do. and i'm not a dark person, you know. i don't know why. it's the kind of acting i like to do. it's very interesting. >> you girls will serve the leaders of the faithful. you will bear children for them? and perhaps her starring role as "ju june osborne in "the handmaid's tale" is it. >> it's a society where women's rights are restricted and hand maids are forced to bear children against their will. >> when you read her character, what made you think, i want this role? >> i thought she had this need to survive and the need to
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survive for the love of someone. i also love that she's a hair row win, but she has no special powers, you know, she has the special powers that a mother has and a wife has. >> she is a haeroinheroine. how? >> she becomes more and more of a heroine. >> i talk to my tv a lot. sometimes i put it on pause. i dome want to see it next. it's like i have to get myself ready for what's going to happen. >> i understand that. >> don't you hear that a lot? >> yeah. i hear a lot of talking to the tv. there's a lot of, no, don't do that. >> reporter: it's based on martha atwood's 1975 novel inspired by real events throughout history. >> she said nothing i've written
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didn't happen. >> yeah. i was sort of blown away the that. 1985. people are always so shocked by what we do on the show. we never, ever do anything that isn't real and hasn't happened never. >> they should have never given us uniformed if they didn't want us to be an army. >> you see women showing up in protest in those robes. what do you think of that? >> i think it's incredible you can see this costume and no exactly what side they're on and what they stand for. >> i get to put that on every day. that's my work outfit. such an honor and so empowering >> i'm fascinated by the women element in this show. >> yeah rngs we have a pretty
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clear message we've explored which is together we're so much strongering and divided we're weaker. and when we turn against each other, the bad guys win. as soon as they band together, they're stronger, and you can actually challenge everything. >> she hopes people are inspired. some are questioning if the actor's longtime belief in scientology can be compared to the show's lot. >> i see people compare it to scribetology. what is it? >> the mem to our show, you have to be who you walk to be, believe what you wabl to believe, love who you want to love, and there are so many dercht choice that can make and should bible to -- beable to
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make. we're not saying anything that people in gilead would say are bad. family is very important. that's a great message, but we believe in choice. >> listen. the cast is stellar on this show. she's the linchpin. she can say so much without saying anything with those steely blue eyes that she can rage, despair, fear, and joichl she said, for her it's one of the ben shoes. she say i've been doing it for 30 years. when you think of that -- how old are you. >> if you wham to get more of gayle ee interview, it's on
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today ee's "cbs this morning" podcast joobd california phones offers free specialized phones... like cordless phones, - (phone ringing) - big button, and volume-enhanced phones. get details on this state program. call or visit 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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tell you about a minnesota family who credit "old town road" for giving their autistic son a breakthrough. ♪ old town road >> that's 4-year-old daniel. he had only spoken about three words in his entire life until last week. that's when he went up to his mother singing "old town road." she recorded it and shared it on
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. good morning. in san jose police say a driver admitted to using meth before causing this crash that killed one person and critically injured another , hours ago . the suspect is under arrest and lanes are shut down for the investigation. firefighters in san jose are gaining ground on the malech fire, which is 70% contained. it started behind a public shooting range. tonight's game 5 of the nba finals. he leads the series 3 to 1 so
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the warriors would be eliminated if they lose tonight. will have news that dates throughout the day including our website, kpix.com. does not provide half of what you provide.my ccer and to know that i could save money? i'd be thrilled. this sounds like a whole business package, which would be incredible. so what are you guys waiting for? let's do it. (laughs) comcast business gives you a full suite of products with great performance and value. get fast, reliable internet on the nation's largest gig-speed network for less than at&t. that's 120 dollars less a year. better, faster. i mean sign me up. comcast business. beyond fast.
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highway 430 is six minutes with delays of the westbound accident. highway 101 is 74 minute drive time, it is not smooth sailing out of the south bay this morning. let's take a quick peek at the bay bridge where things are stacked at. as you can see you are moving through there which is good news and under sunny skies the of sunshine, temperatures heating up. a warm start to the day we will see temperatures climb and likely record heat once again. a heat advisory for the day. east and north east bay valleys, stay hydrated and limit your outdoor exposure with this heat. check out temperatures this afternoon triple digit heat for the first time this year, 100 santa rosa, 104 fairfield, concord. 105 livermore.
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wayne: ah! - i'm gonna take the money, wayne. jonathan: $15,000 in cash! wayne: we do it all for the fans. jonathan: my personal guarantee. tiffany: yummy. wayne: two cars! that's what this game is all about. she's leaving here with the big deal of the day. ten years of deals, right? jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal." wayne brady here, thanks for tuning in. one person-- who wants to make a deal? cookie, come on, bradley. everybody else, have a seat, i'm making a deal with a cookie. everybody else, have a seat, bradley, welcome to the show, how are you doing? - hey, wayne. wayne: bradley, what do you do? - i'm a professor. wayne: you're a professor. of?
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