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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  June 27, 2019 7:00am-8:59am PDT

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we will take a look outside. there it is. p or 39, you can see the sea lions if you look very closely. good morning to our viewers in the west. fighting to stand out. ten presidential candidates on one stage make their case to the voters. the winners and losers from the first 2020 democratic debate, and a look ahead to part two tonight. behind the fencing. we're in clint, texas, where we were allowed inside a detention facility where lawyers claim migrant children were held in inhumane conditions. >> joining a landmark study, asking if a career heading the ball damaged their brains. >> we can't ignore this anymore. it's not something we can just say, okay, tough it out. it's not that. >> and the black keys are back. see their only tv interview
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about the band's first album after what they say was a much needed five-year break. >> it's thursday, june 27th, 2019. here's today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> i think that you should do your homework on this issue. if you did your homework on this issue, you would know -- >> round one of the democratic debate gets heated. >> i didn't say squash them. i didn't say squash them. when we went in there, they started flying planes into our building. >> they didn't attack us on 9/11. al qaeda did. >> these were children who were being marched like little soldiers, like little prisoners. >> president trump is in japan. >> everything from tariffs to iran will be on the agenda for the g20 summit. >> reporters asked mr. trump whether he plans to bring up russian election meddling with russian president vladimir putin. >> what i said to him is none of
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your business. >> a flaw discovered on the boeing 737 max, officials say a computer issue could keep the nose down. >> this little girl watching basketball with her dad is going viral. >> all that -- >> center field. vanderbilt. atop the baseball world again. >> -- and all that matters -- >> 70% on the very highest earners. would you support that? [ speaking non-english ] >> to hear my answer in english, press 1. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> tim ryan identified what he thought was the biggest threat but had a ckoconfusing explanat why. >> china is out of question. they're wiping us around the world. >> and the award for best clip
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that sounds like it should have for the weird thing about china wiping us. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs i think comedians have gotten a lot of material. >> they sure did. i stayed up. did you stay up to watch? >> i stayed up to watch. i didn't see kobe who was live. but, yeah, i did stay up to watch. >> three candidates stood out. >> i wonder how that played. >> i have to learn it by 9:00 p.m. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin, of course, with the debate. voters got their first extended look at a histalofemocratic prel hopefuls. now, prime time tv debate last night, did you stay up to watch? ursing tfdates talked for two important issues but highlighting their differences in policy ideas. and more candidates
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including joe biden, bernie sanders, kamala harris, and pete buttigieg will take the same stage tonight. ed o'keefe has more for us. he has a bit of laryngitis, but he has more. what do you have to say. >> they got a substantive debate free of real nastiness. one name that didn't come up much, president trump. instead the democrats focused on their own ideas. >> when you've got an economy that does great for those with money and isn't doing great for everyone else, that is corruption, pure and simple. >> with the first answer of the night, senator elizabeth warren set the tone. >> we need to make structural change in our government, in our economy, and in our country. >> but the economy is something the ten candidates agree on. >> i live in a low income black and brown community. i see every single day that this economy is not working for average americans. >> the bottom 60% haven't seen a raise since 1980.
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>> there was less common ground on how to fix complex problems like health care. >> who here would abolish theirl ju a shoof hands to start t >> i'm with bernie on medicare for all, and let me tell you why. i spent a good chunk of my life studying why families go broke, and the numb ben one reason is the cost of health care. >> i'm concerned about kicking half of america off of their health insurance. >> when it came to the crisis on the border -- >> fathers and mothers and children are dying. if you were president today, what would you specifically do? >> if i became the first candidate to put forth a comprehensive immigration plan, and we watched those images of oscar and his daughter valeria,
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and it's heartbreaking, and >> he challenged his opponents to challenge the illegal immigration border crossings. >> i want to challenge all of the candidates do that. i think it's a mistake. >> i helped to introduce legislation that would ensure that we don't criminalize those who are seeking asylum and refuge. >> i'm not talking about those seeking asylum. i'm talking about everybody else. >> speaking to viewers watching on spanish television, some of the candidates delivered bilingual answers. [ speaking non-english ] >> it was a historic night. never before have three women been on a stage at a presidential debate. >> i am the only candidate here who has passed a law protecting a woman's right of reproductive health and health insurance. >> i just want to say there's three women up here who have
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fought pretty hard for a woman's right to choose. i'll start with that. >> one other name we didn't hear last night, former vice president joe biden, democratic front-runner. he, bernie sanders, and eight more democrats are on stage tonight. >> major garrett is with us. the highest polling last night was elizabeth warren. how did she do? >> so one thing i want to share with the audience because we're going to do this a lot. we should not be in the position of acting like theater critics. voters will tell us what they have thought over time. so i don't evaluate performance. elizabeth warren got over 45 minutes. it solidified her as being the most important person on the stage. >> i noticed that, too, elizabeth. >> she was less visible in the second hour, but just the prominence of getting that many questions, it signaled to the audience this is the most important person on the stage.
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whether she is or is not, we'll find out. >> didn't one of the sisters tweet about that? >> yes. she said it's clear nbc wants elizabeth warren to be nominated. we talked to people in ames last night. amy klobuchar who thought she didn't have a good night, others thought she did. julian castro, his name didn't come up at all in ames and des moines. what it tells you is voters look at this differently than you and i do. if i learned anything from 2016, we shouldn't tell the country what we think. they'll tell us over time. wait for the process to play out. >> we can't help it, major. we can't help it. >> i know. the poll and the temptation never ends. >> you're making a good point. >> we're looking at this every day. for many, it was the first time they saw it. >> precisely. the key is, okay, you have a
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good moment. what do you do? do you have a campaign structure that can implement it? can you do something to use this as a springboard? that's the next stage. >> all right, major. i will hold my question until the 8:00 hour. you'll be back with us for much more. >> now i'm scared to ask. >> i was trying to find a way to formulate my questions in a n non-theatric way. >> i know you can do it. >> thank you very much, major. >> we appreciate it. we'll be looking at tonight's debate. while in florida, some of the democratic hopefuls are spotlighting the immigration shelters. senators elizabeth warren and amy klobuchar visited the shelters this past week. they describe some of the shelters as, quote, prison-like." manuel bojorquez is at one of
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the facilities in florida. manny, one of the things is tracking everybody. do we know how many children are there now? >> reporter: good morning. what we do know is there are 2,300 unaccompanied minors age 1/2 to 18, which is not required to be licensed or inspected by the state. you can't see much from outside, so advocates concerned about the emotional well being of those children are showing support any way they can. for months protesters have been keeping watch at the homestead facility. >> we give them hope. we want them to know we're here. >> reporter: day after day they stand on stools and wave to the unaccompanied minors. >> the number one thing is keeping these kids in large detention centers. >> reporter: about 2,300 of the kids live under these tents next
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to an air base. court documents filed last month alleged there are prison-like residence and conditions here which is causing clear psychological harm. hope frye is one of the lawyers. >> it's a military interment camp, and we don't run those in america the last i heard. >> reporter: there was a statement issued that the candidates are attempting to mislead the public and score political points. it said the physical and emotional well being of each and every chide is their primary concern. frye disagrees. she said minors are sometimes held for months which violates the 1997 flores agreement, a set of rule which limits the detention to 20 days. but the trump administration argues the homestead act doesn't fall under that agreement because it's considered an emergency temporary shelter. >> homestead should be shut down immediately and forever closed.
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we should stop warehousing the children for the process of companies. >> reporter: homestead says the conditions inside are entirely inaccurate. but critics say they may be incentivizing them to keep the minors here longer than necessary. the company says it must release those minors to a vetted sponsor. vetting takes time. they say the average stay takes 35 days. >> omar, thank you very much. the migrant surge is overwhelming the health department too. omar villafranca is at another facility, this one in clint, texas. it now faces a new lawsuit facing unsanitary conditions. i know you got a tour of the building. the question is what did you see? >> reporter: good morning.
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immigration attorneys who toured this facy lasee descd the cldren living here for weeks in unsanitary conditions. our tour yesterday did not match up with those conditions. keep in mind this was a controlled guided tour. we were not allowed to take in cameras, cellphones, and we were not allowed to talk to children. we saw a full facility with 117 children, only meant to house 106. we saw the food crates, toiletries, and food supplies. yesterday, those who originally toured this facility filed a lawsuit accusing the trump administration of endangering these children. one 12-year-old boy told them, i'm so hungry, i woke up in the middle of the night with hungerw d my baby was throwing up and had diarrhea. th did not take us. now, they have not commented,
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but they have said in the past they're overcrowded and overwhelmed with these facilities. meanwhile cbs news has learned the inspector general plans to release an inspection report of this situation and calls some of the conditions at these facilities dangerous. >> thank you. coming up, a crucial overseas visit with the president on multiple fronts. he faces rising tensions with iran, a trade dispute with china. he plans to meet one on one with china's president and eight other leaders including russia's vladimir putin. the supreme court is saving its most significant rulings for its final day today. they're looking to add a question to the 2020 census. the justices are also looking at how congressional districts are drawn. jan crawford is at the supreme court. jan, i think it's going to be a
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busy day for you, but let's start with the census case. why is it causing some controversy? >> reporter: well, it would be the first time that the formal census, which is taken every ten years, to ask citizens since 1950. they haven't done that since back then. the administration says it needs that accurate citizenship information to properly process the voting rights. others say, come on. this is going to deter noncitizens from responding to the citizens at all, which means they're not going to be properly counted. why is that important? that census data is used for a whole bunch of important things like how many seats they each get in the house of representatives and funding for roads and schools. >> you touched on it, jan, but can you explain why the redistricting cases are so important? >> reporter: all right. it sounds like a very difficult
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case, and it is. the court has long held you can't discriminate based on race. you can't dilute minority votes, but what about efforts by the political party to hold onto that power and draw up the district for that purple. can that be too extreme? the justice today is going to look at those partisan efforts of redistricting and determine whether it's okay and when it's not okay. >> jan, thank you very much. we'll check in with you later on. a new flaw has been found on boeing 737 max jets, and it's expected to further delay the return to service. it was grounded worldwide after two deadly crashes overseas. kris van cleave is outside reagan national airport. kris, it soimds like another setback for boeing. what's behind it?mo failotve bg
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through changes with a flight simulator in seattle. it was during that testing that they discovering this new issue that they believed to be a pre-existing problem with the airplane. during what was described as a favored scenario where the nose was pushed down in both crashes, they discovered the flight controller can become overloaded. that slows it down, essentially allowing it to continue longer than it should. the faa's concern is if during the scenario it presented itself during an actual flight, it could increase the occurrences of a crash. boeing believes they could address this issue. if it doesn't, the company may have to face the company. yesterday ceo dennis muilenburg said by the time the boeing is up and certified, it will be one of the safest planes ever to fly. the faa says it will not conduct
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the flight board test until this issue is resolved. yesterday united airlines joined america and southwest in pulling the max off its flight schedule until at least january 3rd. >> thanks, kris. we're learning new details on a rare and deadly attack on a college student by three sharks in the bahamas. ahead, how warnings reportedl replay yesterday's numbers and how it felt you when you are outside to matter what part of the bay you were in, we will do the same thing, upper 70s for daytime highs inland and low 70s throughout the bay. 73 for redwood city and 60 in san jose and 74 for santa rosa. cities going to 63 today with an added 20 mile-per-hour breeze and it will feel a bit chilly. we warm back up to average for the weekend.
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we have much more ahead. a woman's soccer revolution. some are asking if that exposed them to long-term damage. >> knowing everything you know, would you do it again? >> i would not be heading a million balls like that. there's no way on earth i would do that again. >> ahead, world cup winners michelle akers and brandi chastain tell dr. jon lapook about the impact of soccer on women's brains. you're watching "cbs this morning." quit smoking cold turkey. so chantix can help you quit slow turkey. along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting. chantix reduces the urge so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking,
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every time i see that film, i think, they look like they're having a hard time. ahead, what prince william said how he would react if one of his children came out gay. the black keys will release their first album in five years tomorrow. ahead in their only tv interview, the band tells us what took them so long to get back in the studio and why their days of epic touring are over. your local news is next.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. it is 7:26. i'm michelle griego. a vigil's plan today for the victims of a deadly workplace shooting. evenly shot and killed two managers. he just lost his job on tuesday before the shooting. an investigation is underway now after a man and woman were found inside a castro valley home dead from apparent gunshot wounds. police say they have been dead for several days. they are not ruling out the possibility of this being a murder suicide. this morning another city in santa clara county is curbed electric scooters. mountain view has temporarily banned them. the band will remain in effect until a pilot program is launched next year. news updates throughout the
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day on your favorite platforms ing website, kpix.com.
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good morning. let's start with a look at your main commute travel times. you are in the right on the eastshore freeway and you are much better coming to the ultimate pass. that is easing up a little bit. 38 minutes and 45 minutes on highway 4 and on 10, 61 minutes. looking at the bay bridge toll plaza, you are better off in the cash lanes. daytime highs, back where we were yesterday. we will said above average. below average, that's the story. look at the numbers inland. only in the upper 70s, 74 in livermore and low 70s throughout the bay and for the seven-day forecast, this is it, we will start warming things back up beginning tomorrow and by the time chthe s inland again. that is pretty much average.
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it's 7:30 on "ctm." here's what's happening this morning. 2020 presidential hopefuls argue on a crowded stage in the first democratic debate. >> this democratic party has to be strong and bold and progressive. >> you'll hear from ten other candidates tonight. >> president trump arrives at the g20 summit where he'll meet with vladimir putin and other world leaders. >> plus the award-winning black keys drop their first album in five years. we'll find out what took so long. >> we toured too much and too hard. >> i wouldn't know which,0
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let's hope that was it. >> fourth of july next week already. >> it's coming up. >> it didn't even occur to me until you said that. >> june is almost over. >> get ready. all right, guys. we're going to begin with this. team usa taking on france tomorrow in the women's world cup's quarterfinal tomorrow. there's a lot going off the field as well. two former soccer stars are telling us how they're helping to protect other athletes. michelle acres score d to win te championship and later brandi chastain. dr. jon lapook spoke withot of them. good morning. >> good morning. it's most associated with football players who have repeated blows to the head and suffer symptoms like memory loss. now these women are helping to
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launch a landmark study of former female soccer players. >> a tremendous header. >> i was the one -- the target. so i won every punt by the go goalkeepers. heading the ball, probably 50 a game. >> i did a lot. very determined and very aggressive. >> reporter: two decades after michelle acres and brandi chastain celebrated those championship plays -- >> i love you, i miss you. >> that is hilarious. >> the former teammates are still close iei w in elementary school -- >> mush shell has suffered from mi migraines for decades and both women wonder if their occasional memory lapses are out of the ordinary. >> when you have those moments, what are you talking about? >> i can't remember the details of somewhere we went and
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somebody's last names but then my friends seem to reassure me they, too, are remembering that as well as people in my age group, so maybe i'm all right. >> one of the difficulties is how do you determine what's not normal and what is. >> that's why you're participating in the study. >> yes. >> what's par of normal aging and what's a senior moment or what is a problem. >> or what is just michelle. >> reporter: akers' question s mounted after she saw a video. >> i'm was watching that going, oh, my gosh. that could be me. it stop med in my>>ter: tp find answers, chastain and akers have >> they're at an age where there's going to be some worsening difficulty. this is when wr
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objectgy robert stern is leading the new study at boston university school of medicine. >> what we're concerned about for cte are all of those subtler repeated hits that we refer to as sub concussive trauma. >> reporter: the study will 234r08 former high-level female soccer players 40 or older. baseline testing includes an mri of the brain and evaluation of cognitive function. findings could impact soccer all the way from college to youth levels. >> i'm concerned that this game played by hundreds of millions across the globe might be played in a way right,000 that could lead to later in life brain disease. that's scary. >> reporter: now a soccer coach,
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mother and grandmother, she's determined to protect soccer players. >> i'm done with that. head-bunt i head-bunting 4-story balls, we're not going to do that. >> reporter: michelle akers is wondering about her own future. >> as i'm getting older, i want to have a great life. i'm planning on that. ift,n i need to prepare. >> reporter: you've had this huge career and you're at a point now where you're thinking, maybe it damaged me in some way. >> yeah. >> knowing everything you know, would you do it again. >> i would not be heading a million balls like ta. there's no way on earth i would do that again. >> fifa, the world soccer federation says it's actively studied and mortaring and saying, to our best knowledge there's no negative effect to
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heading or concussive blows. howev however, mris show repeated blows to the head. >> i think michelle made a good statement. when you walk in a room and forget what you were coming in there for or knowing somebody's name. how do you know, houston, we have a problem? >> right now this diagnosis can only be made definitively at autopsy and both said they're going to donate their brains. i have at times called my sons ash, which is the name of my dog. the point is can you do blood that's going to help you get an answer? >> what's your son's name? >> noah and daniel. >> okay, good. >> is there something we can say
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now for youth soccer? >> all michelle and brandi and bor bob, go out and do exercises. >> can i say it was great to see both of them. i remember both of them. >> they're such good pals. >> they seem to be in a good place. jon, thanks so much. you can see more on tonight's "cbs evening news," and for brandi chastain's tips on soccer safety, go to our website. it's on cbsnews.com. a family's vacation in the bahamas was shortcut by an unspeakable memory. a teen was attack and killed by not one, not two, but three sharks. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we'll be right back. pampers is the first and only diaper that distributes wetness evenly
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an american family is grieving after an american woman was killed by a shark in the bahamas. 21-year-old jordan lindsey was visiting from california. jericka duncan shows us how a
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family vacation turned into a horrible tragedy. >> reporter: police in the bahamas say jordan lindsey was attacked by sharks on saturday afternoon. her family saw the sharks approaching lindsey and tried to shout out a warning but she didn't hear them in time. this woman whoa was in the water earlier shows one tiger shark involved in the attack. she was bitten in the arms, legs, and buttocks. she died on the way to the hospital. the bahamas saw four shark attacks. only one was deadly. lindsey's family describes her as a beautiful gentle soul. she was a student at the university of southern california. they called her a devoted animal lover and climate change
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advocate. a neighbor reacted to the news overnight. >> my heart is pounding. i cannot believe. i don't know how they're going to go through this. >> lindsey's family started a gofundme page to pay for funeral and travel arrangements. th they've issued warnings to the public. >> this is so rare, they say, in the bahamas. >> a shark attack by three sharks is extremely ordinary. >> it's this one they say actually killed her, but it's a risk you take. people think about it. it rarely happens, but a story like this puts it out in the limelight again. >> we mentioned the go fund me page. they want $25,000. theyer about a quarter of the way there. ing that you very much. vlad duthiers is talking about a story we'll be following
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today. what's going on? >> we'll tell you how prince william responded how he would react if one of his doing the same numbers as yesterday below average across the bay area. that means we will keep the numbers in the 70s for inland location. 76 in fairfield and 72 in napa and low 70s throughout the bay. we warm back up to average beginning tomorrow. you will see that in the seven- day forecast for friday and saturday and sunday, another degree on top of that and a couple of more for that by early next week. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪
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helps with lgbtq. he was asked how he'd respond. take a listen. >> how many barriers, you know, hateful words, persecution that might come. that's the bit the really troubles me. >> you know what he said? he said it's up to us to try to help correct that. >> good for him. good for someone in his position to say that because we've all heard stories where someone says, my child is gay and someone says, oh, i'm so sorry. >> it's a big deal. there's symbolic power. the cbc points out in 33 nation s, homosexuality is still illegal. william barr blue everyone away with a surprise bagpipe performance. take a listen. ♪
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barr played alongside a group of bagpipers yesterday. the attorney general has a long history of playing the bagpipes. he used to play in competitions including world championships. >> that's impressive. >> it is. >> the late-night comics may have some comments. >> you think? the possibilities are endless. this story might bug some people out. a report from barkley's investment bank wrote edible insect proteins will become a big business. it will grow nearly 25% eacheer over the next decade. researchers say eating bugs is becoming mainstream because of their high nutritional value, widespread availability and
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there's a protein alternative. there's cricket protein power to grasshopper lollipops. in my experience, they have a nice crunch. you're on the go, you're a reporter, you've got to eat when you can >> i'm worried about you. i was going to say, who does that. >> what's the after picture like. there you're eating it. >> the after picture is on the side of the road. >> i've got one thing to say. not in my house. >> you know, i might. it's the single most important thing you can do in helping the planet. altering your diet. they say it has the biggest single impact on a choice you make. >> gayle. >> i'm going to keep unplugging my cellphone. >> there's no shortage of bugs to eat. >> that's true. you can always find a meal. >> there's a revenge factor.
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take that, you know. >> i have a different way. >> my heel is a better revenge factor than eating the bug. >> well said, well said. vlad, it's time to let you go. but vlad -- good-bye, that's it. the black keys built a musical career together but after years they had enough of each other. why they got back together ahead on "cbs this morning." g ] that's crazy! [ crowd cheering ] [ screaming ] let's go mets! ♪ [ cheering ] she's doing it again. (vo) no cover up spray here... cheaper aerosols can cover up odors, burying them in a flowery fog.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is 7:56. a memorial service for sacrament a police officer tara o'sullivan is set to take place. the 26-year-old officer was fatally shot while responding to the mystic violence call last week. the dog flew is running rampant at the oakland animal shelter and east bay spca and it is taking a toll on other bay area rescue groups. the berkeley animal services center is accepting dogs being turned away in oakland, and they are already near capacity. the biggest wildfire in california is burning west of patterson in stanislaus county. at last check, the rock fire is 22 acres large and 15% contained. news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website,
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kpix.com.
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good morning. we have your main travel times from the real-time traffic center. so far things are looking not so bad. it looks almost like a friday except for at the bay bridge toll plaza where things are back up wanted 880 flyover and into the foot of the maze if not into it. the eastshore freeway is moving slowly. the richmond san rafael bridge is slow and go in the westbound direction. once you get through, you are moving right along and you have a little delay on southbound 101 but not much. temperatures just like yesterday today. we will come in pretty much below average by 7 to 8 degrees. inland numbers, daytime highs stay in the 70s. 78 for concorde, 75 livermore and 63 in the city today and in the seven-day forecast, we will warm back up going into the weekend. it will not get hot, but it will warm back up to average and considering we are several degrees below that today, make the most of today. [ music ]
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♪ with china could blow up the fireworks business in the u.s. and the black keys reveal their long ang, long layoff. here's today's "eye opener." >> voters got their first look at an historically diverse field of presidential hopefuls. >> there seemed to be a sense of relief. a sub stan tiff debate free of nastiness. >> shouldn't tell the country what to think about what
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happens. >> we can't help but do it. >> i know. we can't help it, major. >> immigration attorneys describe children living near unsanitary conditions. our tour did not match up with the descriptions. >> the supreme court is saving the most significant rulings for the final day of its term today. >> very important issues. >> during that testing they discovered this new issue, a microprocessor in the flight control commuter can become overloaded. >> they like their private health insurance. i think we should be the party that keeps what's working and fixes what's broken. i mean, doesn't that make sense? >> that guy is cool. say the name, like a democratic deejay. that's what you've got to do. yeah. every time you end a statement, he should have been like, that's why i say pro-choice, bing, bing, bing. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. >> he does have a point.
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>> he really does. >> not bad idea. gayle king. >> tony dokoupil. go ahead, anthony. >> anthony mason. >> all right, you heard, i'm tony dokoupil with gayle king and anthony mason. we are going to begin with breaking news. the supreme court on the final of hits term, first the high court decided it cannot get involved in a dispute over congressional district maps that were challenged as being too favorable to one political party. >> and the court ruledmp administration needs to explain more fully why it wants to add a question about citizenship to the 2020 census. until then, it could not be added. jan crawford is outside the supreme court. she has been looking over the document. jan, what are the justices saying in this census ruling? >> reporter: i think the bottom line is that it's not over. the justices and a majority opinion by the chief justice john roberts joined by the four liberal justices are saying they are not buying the explanation that the commerce department gave for why it needed to add that citizenship question.
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remember they said that the justice department needed a citizenship information so they could properly enforce the voting rights act. but the court in its decision says, look, we are not buying that. there is a lot of evidence that you cooked up that explanation after the fact, after you already decided that that question should be in the census. this does not mean there won't be a citizenship question in the census. it just means the commerce department is going to have do a better job explaining why they want it. the question is time. the census bureau said it needed an answer by the end of this month. obviously, that's only a few days away. so there is a question of whether or not practically they can include it in the census. remember the census is going to be online this year for the first time, for 2020 for the first time. right now it's not over. they are going to need more information. >> jen, or gerrymandering, the justices by a 5-4 vote decided redistricting cannot be policed by a federal court. what does that mean? >> reporter: again a decision by
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the chief justice with the conservatives saying this isn't a question for the federal courts to get involved in. when state legislatures are drawing their electoral maps, if they are doing it for political purposes to preserve their own power, the federal court shouldn't be getting involved in that. state courts can look at it. state legislatures can come up with independent commissions for redistricting, but short of something like race discrimination they are just not going to get involved in these issues that they see as purely political disputes. a very strong dissent, by the way, by justice kagan with the liberals in which she summarized interest the bench calling it really a sad day for democracy. >> very interesting. jan, thank very much. presidential campaign is moving a little faster after a policy-driven first democratic debate. the ten-person field in miami last night included senators elizabeth warren and cory booker and former texas congressman beto o'rourke. candidates laid out their immigration. highlighted by a very tragic
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story from the border. we have to warn you once again this photo, you have seen it, it's heartbreaking, very graphic. we showed it to you yesterday. >> candidates pointed to this father and daughter who drowned eyi trying to get to the u.s. as an example of how our laws need to change. >> they went to a port of entry and they were denied the ability to make an asylum claim. they got frustrated and tried to cross the river and they died because of that. >> we need to make sure that we address the issues that made oscar and valeria come in the first place, by making major investments in the northern triangle, not like this president is doing by ripping away the resources we need to actually solve this problem. >> we would not turn back valeria and oscar. we would accept them into this country and follow our own wal. we would not put kids in cages. >> after the debate cbs news spoke with voters in iowa. the first state that will help choose the democratic nominee. >> i was taken by the governor of washington not just because
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i'm from there, but because he focused on one topic that he thought was more critical than anything. >> i thought cory booker did a nice job. one of my big passions is gun violence. >> elizabeth, i liked her views mostly because, like as a college student, college tuition being really expensive, it's a very important issue to me. >> major garrett is here with more on the debate. voters there evaluating candidates. >> exactly, not being a theater critic. let's talk about the issues. the economy, immigration, health care key points poured over by all the candidates. are those issues that democrats can win on in 2020? >> certainly health care helped them win in 2018. health care is not a settled issue. it's a priority. medicare for all divided some of that field. it's probably going to divide them again tonight. private insurance. do you want to keep it or eradicate it?
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elizabeth warren said yes, here's wihy. that's going to be the consensus for the democratic party if she is the nominee. it's a priority. they won with it in 2018. when you get deep near specifics, you find divisions. look at immigration. i think, because i spend a lot of time in the trump world for the last few years. when julian castro has a break out year and says it should be a civil offense, not a criminal one, trump supporters say are you kidding me? they will say if that becomes democratic orthodoxy, bring it on. >> in trump world, the trump campaign said last night was the best case possible for the re-election of president trump. >> lots of issues. they will also say democrats simply do not understand the economic reality. they consistently complain the economy is not working for everyone. the trump re-election campaign will say it's working better than in a long time and there are statistics to back it up. >> none of the ten candidates
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even mentioned the frontrunner. >> exactly. not even a glancing reference. a different kind of bipartisan or a generational shift. joe biden has to figure out why. they think he is foundering? or they think his support is broad but thin and is not that relevant. i think joe biden tonight has to look the that stage and say there is an opportunity, but i have to have dynamism, make sure people understand. i don't think this is a coronation and i am not going to be cautious about this frontrunner status. one of the biggest things that hurts frontrunners over time is looking at it as a coronation or you are so cautious about that lead you have. i think tonight that will be an interesting factor. >> nine other candidates take the stage tonight. do they have an advantage because they saw last night? can you explain who got to go first? >> the dnc did this by lottery. you had to meet a threshold. what night and what position. so it's not to appear to be doing anything to pre-bake who
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appears when or where on stage. that's point one. as for an advantage in the second night, we have seen how the moderators go, the flow of conversation, that's an advantage. the look-in audience might be lower tonight because four hours is a lot of time to commit even if you are a democratic activist. >> it's interesting. like my 23-year-old daughter watched the entire two hours. she wanted to see all of it. you mentioned earlier that elizabeth long island got a lot of the -- elizabeth warren got a lot of the questions early on. "the new york times" added it up and said cory booker and beto o'rourke spoke the most. did that have an impact, do you think? >> for cory booker what i was most interested, every time he gave an answer he talked about my community, meaning i'm from an urban part of new jersey. i moved there early. it's part of my being. not just my politics. and a place like south carolina where i was last week, the booker campaign is doing well. that reference to i'm person of color, i lived in difficult neighborhoods, i have seen people killed by gun violence,
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that personalization put together with a policy platform can and historically has been effective. >> all right. major, we will no longer make any judgments when you are at the table. >> wait until i leave like you always do. all the judges aboments after i. >> i love it. >> appreciate it. >> we love to have you here. thank you, major garrett. ahead, adriana diaz shows how one of the fourth of july' most celebrated traditions could pooch up in smoke for some americans. >> a reason you may not expect. we will show you how coming up on "cbs this morning." reasons you may not expect. we'll show you how
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the back keys are releasing their first album in five years. their only tv interview, we go inside their recording process and find out why they say working too much on a song can ruin the magic. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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as americans prepare to celebrate independence day, a fourth of july tradition faces a potential threat of the majority of fireworks sold in the u.s. are manufactured in china. but a trade war between the two countries may cause prices to skyrocket. adriana diaz is on chicago's lake front near where the city will set off its pyrotechnics display next week. adriana, what are the concerns for the fireworks industry? >> reporter: good morning. well, as we get closer to the fourth of july, which is celebrated here over lake michigan, fears that chinese tariffs could affect future shows are setting in. fireworks companies are worried that tariffs could drive up prices and drive down sales.
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as america prepares to ring in its birthday, with a bang, a trade war with china could shut down the party. >> how many of these products come from china? >> all of our products are produced in china. >> skip mccall manages a star for fancy fireworks, the country's largest consumer fireworks retailer. >> do you think it could affect your livelihood if these tariffs are applied? >> i think it will. i worry more about our employees. >> how many people do you employ? >> this time of the year, we're at max. we're probably around 3,000 nationwide. >> wow. >> bruce is the phantom ceo and at the 1.2 million square foot warehouse in youngstown, ohio, the shelves are packed with exploding novelties. all have traveled halfway around the world from china. but as president trump proposes tariffs of up to 25% on all chinese products, domestic
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fireworks sales could fizzle. >> we depend on china for a lot of imports of a lot of products. >> greg, the "the wall street journal"'s chief economics commentator. he says the prices of goods like fireworks are volatile because there aren't any american-made substitutes. >> a lot of the stuff that we import from china are only made in china, and american supporters can absorb the costs or pass the cost on to customers. >> even if the cost is up by 25%, for example, you will still buy? >> we will still buy. >> that worries bruce golden who hopes china and the u.s. reach an agreement before tariffs blow up his bottom line. >> it's my opinion that they're going to make a deal. i'm hoping but i'm also praying. >> this is prayer for you? >> it is. >> it is a fun fact. fireworks were invented in china more than a thousand years ago and i remember from my time being based there, seeing the big role they play in celebrations like the chinese
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new year, so we asked phantom ceo, why not make fireworks here, he said it could take a decade for the u.s. to catch up with china's efficient fireworks production. anthony? >> adriana, thank you. i always look at those warehouses and thinks what if they go up. >> i know. if the price goes up because of these tariff, i think americans on the fourth of july are going to, chicagoans are going to be like we want those fireworks, pay what it costs. >> whatever it is. that's right. ahead, facebook's new warning about foreign countries trying to influence americans. you're watching "cbs this morning." re watching "cbs this morning." with fordpass, rewards are just a tap away.
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facebook ceo mark zuckerberg warned about possible interference. speaking at the festival in colorado just yesterday he said there's little the company can do on its own to stop russia or other countries from spreading this information. he said the u.s. government must help. >> one of the mistakes that i
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worry about is, you know, after 2016 when the government didn't take any kind of counteraction, the signal that was sent to the world was that, okay, we eastern for business. >> zuckerberg says the weak u.s. response in 2016 led to an increase of bad behavior from other countries including iran. he also seemed open to the ban on deep fake videos. phony footage of video like this of mark zuckerberg on our cbsn, they repeatedly asked to have it taken down. >> he's open to having that conversation. ahead, we'll talk about the successes and challenges of young people
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning, it is a tech 25. a vigil is being held for victims of the shooting. the man lost his job on tuesday before the shooting. a man suspect in a deadly hit-and-run in oakland has been arrested. two months later and thousands of miles away in virginia. police say the 27-year-old roz naresh allen hit and killed a six-year-old boy and his mother. the city of richmond is severing ties with the company accused of selling license plate information to ice. in city council voted not to extend the vigilance solutions contract last night. we have updates that today on your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com.
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good morning. we have delays i want to tell you about and this is when it comes to public transit for those of you in the north bay. the smart train is delayed significantly. this is the result of a medical emergency. elsewhere, everything seems to be moving right on time. the main travel times, the only one in the right is the eastshore freeway, that is a 35 minute ride. 38 minutes to get there from highway 4 and starting to heat up out of the utway through the flyover and you are backed up onto the nimitz as you try to
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make it onto the bay bridge. now let's look at 880 in oakland, slow moving as you try to make it. another day below average temperatures. it will feel just like yesterday. the only difference is it will look different. we won't have the gray cloud blanket coming in by the time we get through late morning, some high clouds, and which looks different than the marine layer and it won't have a big impact on the day. 72 in san rafael and fremont and mountain view, 73 in redwood and san jose will go to 76 and the seven-day forecast, a warm-up into the weekend. that will bring us back up to where we should have been all along. that is where the average temperatures are for now. you have to go up or down on each side of that anyway. we will warm up a little bit more from their coming into early next week. it never really gets hot.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's time to bring you some of the stories that are the talk of the table this morning, this is where we each pick a story we would like to share with each other and all of you. tony, what do you got? >> there was a study that caught my eye, it seems like a conspiracy from the american association of bosses and managers. we've heard that, let me explain that sitting can't be great for if you you do it for a long period of time, this study suggests that all types of sitting are not the same. sitting at work is apparently totally fine for you at work. good for the bosses and managers. sitting watching tv, a 50% spike of your risk of early death, cardiovascular event. >> but watching this show is good for you. >> but why, do they say why? >> they speculate that it has to do with eating a big me extende hours or more, where as at work,
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you're up and down, a lot of sitting but a lot of breaks, too. >> i get that. >> the science. >> intermittent rising is a good thing. >> yes. >> we get up, and right, we walk over there. >> there you go. >> and you wear your apple watch and it says you haven't moved in an hour. that is a little clue, too. i'm talking about a community georgia, helping a homeless man shamed on social media last week because he was sleeping at mcdonald's. he happened to work at mcdonald's and somebody took a picture of him where he was resting in between shifts. it turns out that he is homeless, his mother recently died and he is 21 years old. his name is simon. he also recently had a baby. so when people heard his back story, they started donating clothes and money, and things for the baby. and he's been offered job interviews, people are saying, and he admits first came out that he was very hurt and take a picture and share it with friends and have a
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laugh at his expense and the woman who took it said she wasn't trying to shame him, just trying to bring attention, i don't know about that either and a barber offered to cut his hair and it worked out okay for him, and it goes to show, you never know the back story. and not just a bum sleeping there, very tired and taking a break. >> and i would argue not just a bum sleeping there -- that's true. you're right. >> absolutely right. >> i took notice, because i'm a new york knicks fan and we're in search of an all-star free agent and i think i may have found the candidate. >> all right. >> the robot named q 3. he or she is et a w rord for the most consecutive basketball free throws by a humanoid robot. it nailed 2,020 in a row. it took it about six hours to do that. but, i love this, because, i mean, you look at this thing, it's, look at that, i mean it is
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extraordinary, it's 6'10", it was developed by employees at toyota. did it miss 2,021. >> no, it stopped. it was for the 2020 olympics in japan, that's why they stopped at 2020. and interesting they used this method and not on the granny method. >> we can't give up on the knicks. they have some encouraging players coming through possibly. >> q 3 ain't going to make it. but you never know. tomorrow marks the 50th anniversary of the stonewall riots here in new york city which served as a catalyst for the gay rights movement. in our series issues that matter, we take a look at this morning at the process of the lbgtq community has made and the challenges that still persist. a recent survey by the trevor project reveals nearly one in five lbgtq young people attempted suicide in the last year. for more than two decade, the trevor project has worked to end this long-running crisis. it offers emergency counseling
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by phone, text and c and messages come in e c. amit paley is ceo and director of the trevor fund and joins us at the table. good to see you. you released a survey to put things in perspective and while there is progress to be made, there is progress made there is still work to be done. what concerns you the most? >> the discrimination and the sense of isolation that so many lbgtq young people feel across the country. the survey you mentioned that we just released found that 39% of lgbt youths seriously considered suicide in the past year. and that is heart-breaking and unacceptable, in 2019, and it shows how much work we have to do to make sure every young person feeled loved and supported. >> and sometimes you're on the phone answering when people call in. what are you hearing? what are they saying to you? >> i've been a volunteer for eight years. and a lot of what we hear from young people is this sense of fear of what will happen if they ever reveal to someone who they really are, and who they really
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loved, and they're scared of coming out to their parents or in schools and so we let them know there may be people in the community who will accept them. >> what advice do you give parents who have kids in this position to help that? >> the most important thing is to come from a place of love and we give a lot of advice on specifically how to respond but if you come from a place of love, if you come from a place this is this is my child and i love them no matter what and i will support them, it is very hard to go wrong. >> and on this point of a place of love, when you look at the long-term trends from stonewall to now, it is definitely a story of progress and increasing i cy surprise by the cover of usa usa which has a study from glad and harris showing that young people are actually displaying less tolerance in some respects. are we at risk here, 50 years from stonewall, of moving in the wrong direction? >> there is a lot of progress but we are definitely at risk those rights are hard-fought and a backslide in many regards and
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we have seen, since the presidential election in 2016, the day after the 2016 presidential election, our call volume at the trevor project more than doubled in a 24-hour period of time. when the president tweeted the tranr would be banned from the military, we saw transand nonbinary youth reaching out in record numbers. words matter. you can talk a lot about the policies. policies and laws protect people. but when people in positions of power use hateful words, young people hear that and it makes them feel like they're less than or not deserving of love and respect. >> focus on 2019 people still feel alone, because so many people have spoken out, publicly, and very proud of their orientation and you said not everybody sees that message. >> not everyone sees that message. and we have to remember there are young people across the country, if you're a young transperson in rural north dakota you might see on tv there is a lot of acceptance but then you look around your community and if you don't see any openly lbgtq people, if your faith
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community is not supporting you, if your school is not allowing you to use the rest room that corresponds with your gender identity, you're going to feel like people won't accept you, and that can lead to that sense of isolation. and feelings of wanting to kill yourself. >> conversion therapy is still something in 2019. >> totally unacceptable. >> that surprised me. >> i think a lot of people don't realize that. converse therapy, which is completely discredited practice of trying to force a change in gender identity, it is still legal in 32 states in the country. we estimate there are more than 700,000 people who have undergone conversion therapy in this country. and so we are working really hard, and we also know that when you undergo conversion therapy, it puts you at much higher risk of suicide. we need to stop that in every state of the country. >> much work to be done still with, despite all of the progress. thank you so much for being with us this morning. for the first time, in five years, the black keys are back with a new album. ahead in their only tv intervie
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that's the 2010 hit "tighten
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up" from the indie rock band to come out of ohio, the black keyes. their new album "let's rock" will be released tomorrow. it's their first in five years. they talk about rumors of their breakup and tell us what took them so long to get back in the studio. >> this is the first song we did, "breaking down." it's the first idea we had when we sat down. ♪ >> dan and patrick carney had not performed together in three years when they reunited last fall in nashville. >> when you came in here last fall, you had nothing. >> nothing. llrd >> but the simple approach has always worked for the blade keys. known for the raw rock sound of songs like
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"gold on the ceiling." on their new album "let's rock," the songs typically were recorded on just the second or third take. >> it feels like every time we work on something too long, we lose it, you know. it gets worse. >> what do you lose, do you think? >> the magic, the thing you don't have to think about to get. that's the cool thing. >> auerbach and carney started making music together as teenagers in akron, ohio. >> when we first started, past was just learning how to play the drums. i was learning how to play the guitar, but for some reason we were learning how to make things sound like music. >> i really didn't know how to play the drums. our first song we played, it was like drums exploded. there were parts everywhere. >> what did you do? >> washers, wing nuts.
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i was chasing drums around. >> i'm was watching everything just move away from his body. >> a gritty garage band, they recorded one of their earlier albums "rubber factory" in an abandoned tire plant. >> 6,000-square-foot building. there was just us. we could look to the floor and there was a hole in the floor and we saw stax of tires and we looked down and it was like, wow, there's a lot of tires, and nobody ever bothered moving them. it's like everyone died of cancer. it was like, come on in. >> there was an ascending smoke around the air. >> i'm smoked back there and i think the smoke actually cleaned the air. >> the black keyes broke through
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that won them three grammys. their album "el camino" won them more. suddenly the inde band was filling an arena. >> was there a point where the black keys got too big? >> it didn't get too big. we toured too much and we toured too hard. the reason we did that is we couldn't say no. >> we couldn't say no to the work. it's a lot of fun. gradually you're whittling down your sigh key a your psyche and what you're able to do. >> then they broke up they mike light of it in their latest video when a therapist sends them to a spiritual retreat. >> did you get sick of each
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other at that period in time? >> not in a legitimate way. you get sick of anybody if you're stuck on a boat with them for 15 years. >> yeah. >> you know what i mean? >> my brothers and i used to beat the crap out of each other. dan and i are more passive aggressive about it. it's not that we're sick of each other, it's just that you need space, you know. >> yeah. it's not that we hate each other. we're just sick of each other's faces. >> i can't stand the wave of smell, the fragrance. >> auerbach spent the past few years recording a solo album and producing other acts. carney married and toured with singer michelle branch. they have a newson and carney's enjoyed the time at home. >> it's the first time in my adult life like after the age of 21 where i was consistent --
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like for months i was able to wake up in the same bed. >> the black keys go back on tour in the fall, but auerbach and carney say their days of epic touring are over. >> we won't do that again. >> well, we might. it depend if it's like -- >> if the price is right. >> pay us and then we'll do it. >> yeah. >> everything's up for negotiation. >> i like them. >> their tours start in september. they have 33 dates. i hope they go longer. they're a fabulous band. >> i love that they say, no, we weren't tired of each other. >> we were sick of each other's faces. >> i like pat saying you can't say no to the work and dan saying, the magic that you don't have to think about imt they definitely have that. >> they sure do. they always have. >> i like that they went from a garage band to filling arenas.
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yo can still do that. >> they're almost unique. >> did you like "let's rock?" >> i like it. it's great. >> it's actually an album. >> it is. it's white vinyl. i'll pull it out. it's really cool. >> look at that. >> this is one of the first ones that came off the press. >> if only you had a record player. >> i do. >> he actually does. >> i'll have to borrow yours. >> come any time, anthony. >> okay. before we go, a $300,000 surprise for an afghanistan struggling to find his space zone and on our podcast, they talk about their new move, a world where beatles never everyone's got to listen to mom.
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when it comes to reducing the sugar in your family's diet, coke, dr pepper and pepsi hear you. we're working together to do just that. bringing you more great tasting beverages with less sugar or no sugar at all. smaller portion sizes, clear calorie labels and reminders to think balance. because we know mom wants what's best. more beverage choices, smaller portions, less sugar. balanceus.org
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we're reminiscing about michelle branch. we like her too. before we go, we want to share something to make your day a little better and brighter today. purple heart veteran got a life-changing surprise, you could say. seven years after coming back from war in afghanistan -- this is good. >> we're so excited to present this house to you, kevin. >> that's a former marine, kevin pc ios. volunteers and a nonprofit raised $300,000 to s zone. d ieto see my son grow up. >> palac ios is thankful beyond words. we're glad he h a ♪
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♪ a ♪ this is how driving should feel. the tech-advanced nissan leaf. the best selling electric vehicle of all time. this is nissan intelligent mobility. ♪
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. it is 8:55. very soon, a funeral procession for segment a police officer tara o'sullivan is set to take place. the 26-year-old officer was shot and killed last week. her memorial service will include two processions as the casket is taken from elk grove to roseville. the dog flew is running rampant at the oakland animal shelter. and east bay spca. it is taking a toll on other bay area rescue groups. the clock is ticking for governor gavin newsom to act on the $215 billion budget. he has until midnight to make a decision on the budget which lawmakers passed earlier this month. the governor has not said whether he will sign it. news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com.
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we are tracking travel delays for mass transit out of the northbay this morning at 8:57. everything is running on time with the exception of smart. in the last half hour, it was delayed and this is stuck at rohnert park due to a medical emergency. we are trying to figure out with the information is. stick with us and we will bring you the latest. the latest on your travel times, you are in the red now out of the south bay and almost 80 minute drive on 101 northbound heading towards the airport out of the south bay.
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the eastshore freeway is slowing go as well as a ri and highway 4 and 580 is better and better. but the bay bridge, not so much. we go back to the mid and upper 70s for the inland locations. another warm day, particular the i should say another cool day considering we are 7 to 8 degrees low average. an jose e number in san oakland and up on top, santa rosa at 74. this is the last day like this and tomorrow we warm up. it will be enough that you notice it. about four degrees warmer inland and subtly warmer and it keeps going so we are looking at the mid-80s were much of the rest of the seven-day forecast including the weekend and taking us into the early part of next week for inland spots near 70 for those in along the bay. [ music ]
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wayne: season ten! hit it! - i'm taking the money! jonathan: it's a trip to sweden. big deal of the day! wayne: what's in the box? jonathan: what? tiffany: selfie. - oh, my god! wayne: smash for cash. $20,000. let's go. "let's make a deal" season ten, baby. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: america, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." thanks for tuning in, i'm wayne brady. who wants to make a deal? who wants to make a deal? you do, in the polka dots. theresa. hey, theresa. - hi. wayne: welcome to the show-- everybody else, sit down. theresa, what do you do? - i'm a body image consultant. wayne: and so, so as a body image consultant, what does that job entail? - i help women who are trying to accomplish goals in their lives

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