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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 8, 2019 7:00am-8:58am PDT

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>> i will share with the rest of the group if you're hungry. it is breakfast time. chocolate for breakfast. that sounds okay to me. >> perfect. thank you for watching kpix 5 this morning. your next local update is that; 26. >> cbs this morning is coming up next. have a wonderful day. good morning to our viewers in the west. welcome to "cbs this morning." quake fear. california desert towns tremble after two big earthquakes and thousands of aftershocks. hear from homeowners working to prevent more damage as the entire state is urged to prepare for the big one. back-to-back champs this morning we're hearing from the u.s. women's soccer stars after their record fourth world cup win. how their success could help their push to be paid the same as men. brewing backlash. starbucks rushes to apologize to police officers who were asked to leave the store in arizona on the fourth of july after a customer complained he felt unsafe. and michele obama's moment. the former first lady says political opponents use raciala
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>> i have a clear vision of what i had to do when i went into the white house as first lady. >> here's today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> hold on. oh, my god. this is bad. >> a pair of earthquakes rock southern california. >> it is a wake-up call for the rest of the state and for other parts of the nation that are not immune from the same kind of activity. >> the acting homeland security secretary defends the conditions at border patrol stations following reports describing unsanitary conditions. >> i know what our standards are and i know they're being followed. >> more tensions between the u.s. and iran. >> tehran says it's raisie uranium enrichment. joe biden apologizes for comments he made about working with segregationists.
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>> i'm sorry or n th h ca onew chargf x i nor athficking. closittishipom venice, italy. >> a boat taking a direct hit from lightning in south boston. all that matters. >> goal! >> jonathan dell santos scoring the only goal, 1-0. >> on "cbs this morning." >> cutting, goal. back-to-back world cup wins. this is team usa's fourth world cup making it a women's record. >> yes, it's football but they've done so much more against all odds in the most
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challenging world cup we've ever seen supply don't know how to feel right now. it's ridiculous. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toy story land. let's go places. tony, i don't know what's more exciting the women winning or anthony mason back from vacation. >> the women are way more exciting. come on. not own a close contest. that was such a -- nothing but good feelings coming out of that. just overwhelmed. >> don't we like megan's pose. it's not arrogant. it's like, yay, we did it. >> from a player four years ago in her dorm eating pizza. >> but we're glad you're back. glad you're back. welcome to "cbs this morning." got some sun too. welcome to "cbs this morning." millions of people in southern california, they are on edge and they are worried about their safety after two large earthquakes and more than 4,000
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aftershocks. those continued through the weekend and some were felt more than 100 miles away. >> the powerful damaging quakes rocked the small desert town of ridgecrest. 110 miles north oos angeles. some people there are so concerned they refuse to sleep indoors. the second quake magnitude 7.1 was the strongest california has seen in 20 years. >> ctm lead national correspondent david begnaud begins our coverage near the epicenter of those two quakes. set the scene. >> reporter: thousands of aftershocks that we have heard about over the last 72 hour, most of which we have not felt have done just enough to rattle and make people feel anxious to the point where some folks don't want to be in their own homes so 20 or so people have been sleeping in tents behind the city hall in ridgecrest. 20 yards from where i am a government building has been transitioned into a red cross shelter. right outside is a parking lot where a dozen or so people slept in their vehicles overnight.
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i want to give you the context. we are in the middle of the mojave m o nowhere. 25,000 people live here and the reason the damage is not catastrophic is because a lot 6 it was centered in the desert. if you drive around ridgecrest looking for damage, you would find some of it, neighborhoods and businesses, in fact, carter evans virginia found damage five minutes up the road from where we are right now. carter, good morning. >> reporter: well, david, they've got a lot of cleaning up to do here. you can see how this wall is ollapsed against the home. overall in ridgecrest, things are beginning to get back to normal. roads are open again. water and power is back on. but scientists say the people of this community are going to be rattled by aftershocks for a long time. after living through something like this, the shock for residents in and around ridgecrest still hasn't worn off. >> how are you feeling? >> still nervous. it hasn't settled -- every time
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the ground starts shaking, the mind goes back. >> all of these people up here are here for you to today. >> reporter: a town hall local officials tried to reassure the shaken community with the steps they're taking. >> ptsd is a real thing. and we're all suffering from it right now. we have teams coming in that will help us with that. >> reporter: friday's earthquake rocked the desert townsending items off store shelves and people scrambling. >> let's go. >> reporter: when the 7.1 quake struck, brick chimneys just didn't stand a chance. they crumbled. this one went right through the roof of the home. >> when the chimney fell and all those bricks broke the joists. >> so that's why you're getting the stuff off the roof. >> so it doesn't end up on the floor of the kitchen. this was so awakening to what an earthquake can really do.
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>> reporter: this man and his family are so rattled they've decided to sleep outside of a red cross shelter. >> we ended up coming out here because my kids wouldn't -- every time a shake would happen they just started panicking. >> reporter: his daughter and her friends say it will be a while before they return home. >> do you feel safer out here? >> yeah. because nothing is going to fall on us. >> reporter: after two major earthquakes authorities call it a miracle nobody was killed or seriously injured. >> we were built and constructed and planned under earthquake precaution far a measures. >> you think that made a difference. >> i know it did. >> reporter: the good news is the usgs says the chances of another magnitude 7.1 or higher is now just 1% and the chances of a 6 magnitude quake happening are also diminishing. >> boy, that is good to hear, carter. to that point yesterday we spoke with seismologist lucy jones from caltech in southern california. you may have even her on
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television. she said one thing that surprised her is the decay following the 7.1 in that there had been many earthquakes but they've been so insignificant you haven't really felt them, right? she expected some stronger ones since friday but they haven't really materialized. in our interview yesterday i started with one question so many people have that most often they get wrong in what they i overard a manayt answer. increst it takes the pressure off and lessens the likelihood of more. is that true. >> unfortunately not. that is part of the human need to form a pattern. we hate randomness and the fundamental is the distribution of earthquakes is random. >> reporter: seismologist lucy jones says the recent earthquakes are sending a message. that an even bigger one is lurking. >> this is not the big one. i say that the term the big one you can only use it's such a big event you change the nature of society. you know, katrina was the big one for new orleans. >> maria in puerto rico.
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>> right. those are events, disasters that change society. >> reporter: if an earthquake like friday's were to hit the city of los angeles, jones estimates it could cause upwards of $200 billion in damages. cbs news science an futurist contributor says the likelihood of l.a. being hit by the big one in the next 30 years is inevitable. if you had a 7.1 in downtown los angeles what would happen gentleman. >> a lot more damage. we have a lot of buildings in the los angeles area that were built before we had any seismic buildings built so especially those built before the 1976 code are the ones that we're most concerned about. >> reporter: records at the california department of insurance show that just 13% of the state's residents have insurance policies with earthqake coverage. ronnie tolbert is not one of them. >> they're probably going to have to red tag my home. >> reporter: she and her husband dan who is disabled barely made it out when the second quake hit. she is not sure how she's going to rebuild their home that they've lived in for 32 years.
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>> i don't know what i'm going to do. i'm kind of old to start got laid off and so i don't know. i don't know what i'm going to do. >> reporter: the tolberts slept on a mattress in front of their home because they just didn't feel safe being inside. before we toss it back to new york i want to leave you with three pointers that are crucial to remember. have enough food and water to last you three day, have an emergency contact list that includes someone who lives out of state and try to secure those items on your walls, tvs, pictures when an earthquake strikes, you will be thankful that you did. >> all very good advice, david, tough times for some people out there, thank you. as we mentioned earlier the u.s. women's soccer team is coming home as repeat champions. the u.s. wrapped up i yesterday's final. now team members are speaking out this morning about the ongoing battle to be paid as much as the u.s. men's team. roxana saberi is in lyon,
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france, where she caught up with some of the players. what are they saying, roxana? >> reporter: good morning, anthony. the tournament's most valuable player megan rapinoe says she's on cloud nine after their victory here last night. she and the team celebrated overnight and now they're heading home for more celebrations and a fight for equal pay. >> in front with the high boot. >> reporter: it took this penalty and this shot by co-captain megan rapinoe for the reigning world champions to pull ahead of the reigning european champions. a few minutes later her teammate rose lavelle followed. and so to cheers in thed stadium and back home, the u.s. defeated the netherlands earning a fourth world cup victory and n weso tight ae'll do anything to win. >> reporter: as the cheers said.
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[ chanting "equal pay" ] >> reporter: chants called out for equal pay. a reminder they've been fighting for more than victory on the field suing the u.s. soccer federation alleging gender discrimination. what do you think this victory will mean in your mush for equal pay. >> it's always good to have in the back pocket that we're back-to-back champions. >> it's not good for them, is it? >> reporter: progress is inevitable says brandi chastain who helped lead the fight for equal pay after she and the u.s. team won the world cup in 1991 and '99. >> the ultimate reason and catalyst for change is eyes on the situation, right? you can't hide anymore. you can't say, well, nobody cares. this tournament is a global tournament. >> reporter: now that this tournament is over the players' lawsuit is expected to go into mediation. first the team will be honored in a parade in new york city on wednesday. gayle. >> we're all looking forward to that thank you, roxana.
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listen, they are champions in every sense of the word and i love the timing of going into the mediation, because, you know, i think they upped the prize money from $30 million to $60 million but still the men are $400 million. the gap is so high. >> enormous. >> it's not right. >> megan rapinoe is one cool customer. i'll tell you. > with the sunglasses on. love the shades. where can i buy those? >> congrats, looking forward to wednesday too. house democrats want top immigration officials from the trump administration to testify this week about the crisis at the border. the lawmakers want answers about reports of dangerous and unsanitary conditions at migrant detention facilities. ben tracy is at the white house with more. good morning to you. what can you tell us about what's actually being done? >> well, the president is promising more transparency. he even says he wants to get journalists in to see these facilities but there's also a bit of a mixed message coming out of the administration. on the one hand blaming democrats for the conditions and on the other the president is
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saying these migrants are actually in better shape in these facilities than where they came from. >> they had no anything where they came from, those are people that are very happy with what's going on. >> reporter: but a report from "the new york times" this weekend details horrendous conditions at the clint border facility in texas. outbreaks of scabies, shingles and chicken pox spreading among the hundreds of children being held in cramped cells. president trump called "times" report a hoax and kevin mcaleenan called the allegations unsubstance yachted. >> because there's adequate food and water, because the facility is cleaned every day, because i know what our standards are and i know they're being followed. >> reporter: even a report by his own department of homeland security's inspector general described overcrowding at detention facilities as dangerous and a ticking time bomb. >> we've been talking about this and asking for help. i'm not denying there are challenging situations at the border. >> reporter: acting director of u.s. citizenship and immigration
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services ken cuccinelli says congress passed the humanitarian aid bill, the situation has improved. >> we've gone from about 2500 children in facilities not designed for them down to a fraction of that. >> reporter: democrats who visited detention facilities in texas last week say the conditions are still unacceptable. >> they are in the facility that is dehumanizing. >> reporter: now the administration says that it is disappointed that congress appears to have no plans to address asylum laws before its august recess. they also say they are ready for mass roundups and depore takes of people who are here in the country illegally but it's unclear when those may start. tony. >> ben tracy for us, thank you so much. a wealthy businessman with ties to two u.s. presidents may appear in court today to face federal charges linked to alleged sex trafficking. 66-year-old jeffrey epstein was arrested saturday in new jersey after returning from paris on
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his private jet. mola lenghi is outside the facility where epstein is being held. from a private jet to a correction facility, what do we know about the charges. >> reporter: the charges against jeffrey epstein were just unsealed here at the white house this lower manhattan. he is facing two counts, one count of sex trafficking, another count of sex trafficking conspiracy and. we should note that this is not the first time jeffrey epstein has been facing similar charges. jeffrey epstein is now reportedly accused of molesting dozens of minors he paid for massages in new york and florida from 2002 to 2005. the details of his indictment are expected to be unsealed in federal court in the southern district of new york today. cbs news legal analyst rikki klieman says that is not a good sign for epstein. >> in the world of trial lawyers, we refer to the southern district as the most powerful law firm in the world. they do not go forward with a case unless they have
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investigated it from top to bottom and they are convinced that they will get a conviction. >> reporter: the well connected financier has admitted to sex abuse in the past. in 2008 epstein pleaded guilty in florida of soliciting and procuring an underage person for pross city 250ugs. they stemmed from sexual activity with privately hired masseuses. that landed him in a florida county jail for 13 months. he had to register as a sex offender but never faced federal arges. brad edwards, an attorney representing a young woman in the case, spoke to cbs news' jericka duncan. >> i don't think there is a person who would look at the facts and believe there was an actual punishment. >> reporter: epstein has had several high-profile friendships in the past, president bill clinton reportedly rode on epstein's jet more than two dozen times in the early 2000s. this a 2002 interview then private citizen donald trump called epstein a terrific guy. it is even said that he likes
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beautiful women as much as i do, trump said and many of them are on the younger side. >> we'll see where his powerful friends or former friends go once he appears in court later on today. >> reporter: now we have reached out to jeff sessions' attorney as well as the white house for comment, we have no yet heard back from either. epstein is expected to be arraigned here in lower manhattan at some point today on those two counts of sex trafficking and sex trafficking conspiracy. if convicted he could face up to 45 years in prison. >> mola, thank you. starbucks faces a growing backlash after a barista apparently asked a group of arizona police officers to leave good monday morning. a cloudy and foggy start to the day with patchy drizzle, especially along the coast. heading to the afternoon, because of the on tour flow, daytime highs are below average
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this time of year. 79 in concord for a high of 75 in san jose. 66 in oakland. 61 in san francisco. we will warm up heading to the week, as high pressure built in. above average temperatures by the end of the week. have a great day.
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we have much more news ahead. how can you have a hot spell in alaska? turns out you can. jonathan vigliotti is outside in the middle of the warmest temperatures this state has ever recorded. >> standing on an alaskan glacier, so warm i can wear a t-shirt. it is going through a heat wave. ahead on "cbs this morning" we'll tell you the warning scientists want to you hear. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toy story land. let's go places. let's go places. ♪ ♪ ♪
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mhmmm. i have to say, you seemed a lot chattier on tv. geico. proudly serving the military for over 75 years. you ok back there, buddy? former first lady michelle obama is revealing new details about what it was like to be a mother in the white house. >> imagine having malia and sasha come to your house for a sleepover. this is the call, it's like, hello, okay. we're going to need your social security number, we're going to need your date of birth. there are going to be men coming to sweep your house. if you have guns and drugs, j tell them yes because they're going to find it anyway. don't lie. they're not going to take them. they just need to know where they are.t. coming up at 8:00 the rst la in n orleans.
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morning. the time is 7:26. i'm emily turner. police investigating a deadly shooting in the san francisco mission district. it happened around midnight 24th and capp street. because of the shooting is under investigation this morning. in a deadly ghost ship trial, derek almeida will take the stand testifying in his own defense. there, the and meg farris face 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter. one for each person who died. fire crews in pleasant hill have cleared the scene of the fire that forced to families out of their homes. one firefighter hospitalized with an injured ankle while battling the blaze no word on what sparked a. news update through the day on your favorite forms including our website, kpix.com real-time traffic.
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we are tracking several accident this morning. let's start with the first one. this is a crash on northbound 101, right at brokaw road. it has been moved to the shoulder. as you can see, it is slow going as your crossing passed a 80 and slow going all the way out of the south bay, this morning. starting at the bay bridge where you're backed up to the foot of the maze, and the a 80 flyover. we are starting today cloudy and foggy. along the coast and heading to the afternoon, cool and beloved below average daytime highto 10 average. 79 in concord. 75 in livermore. 66 in oakland and 61 for san francisco. today is the coolest day out of the week with temperatures warming up over the next several days.
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it's 7:30 on ctm. here's what's happening this morning. two major earthquakes strike southern california and the governor warns people to get ready for the next big quake. >> top officials say the border crisis is improving after multiple reports of immigrants being held in unsanitary conditions. >> they are in the facility that is dehumanizing. >> that's it, u.s. wins their fourth world cup. >> the u.s. women's soccer team celebrates the fourth world cup victor. plus dacre montgomery talks with us about the new season of his hit netflix show "stranger thing." >> open the door. open the door! >> and i sat down with michelle obama at the essence festival over the weekend to about her trials in the white house. >> a lot of kids see us as the former first, they see us when
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we walked out of the white house but don't remember how much pumps we took to get there. >> they took a lot of punches and said those punches hurt. she was a keynote speaker at the essence fest, 50,000 people at the superdome came to hear michelle obama speak and through the whole conversation we got an hour it was -- you could hear a pin drop. people wanted to hear what she had to say. she is so beloved when she walks around the street. people were saying we miss you. > no pressure, 50,000 people doing an interview. >> i pretended it was just me and her. that's how you have to do that. >> alone with 50,000 friends. >> 50,000 of my closest ends. she had a lot of things to say and we'll play some of that later on. begin with this, starbucks is apologizing to an arizona police department after six officers were apparently asked to leave a store on the fourth of july. now, this was because a customer said the officers made him feel unsafe. jamie yuccas is outside the starbucks in tempe where it took place.
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help us understand. this isn't the first time starbucks has been criticized for its treatment of customers so what's the company's response this time. >> reporter: yeah, no, it's not. starbucks released a statement calling the incident completely unacceptable and mentioned that it's actually in the past partnered with the tempe police to host a community outreach event, coffee with a cop. now it sent executives here to apologize face-to-face. the association for the tempe, arizona, police department says on the fourth of july six officers were enjoying their drinks at this starbucks ahead of their holiday shift when a barista asked them to leave because a customer complained their presence made him feel unsafe. after the officers left the association tweeted, several of those cops are veterans who fought for this country, #zerorespect. alongside a starbucks image, it's a message that began trending online along with #boycottstarbucks. rob ferraro went on fox news and
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clarified his organization's stance. >> we're not asking for a w emp fired. hopefully this is a learning opportunity and we can move forward. >> reporter: some are backing the customer who complained. on twitter one user wrote, i don't feel safe around the police ever. you need to work harder to earn our respect and trust. and another wrote that perhaps the customer felt unsafe because of a history of racial profiling and police brutality in arizona. >> let me see your hands. >> reporter: in january a tempe police officer killed a 14-year-old boy suspected in a burglary. police say he was carrying an air soft replica handgun. the shooting drew outrage in the community. the officer resigned and the shooting is being investigated. >> what did they do? >> reporter: last year two black men at this starbucks in philadelphia were arrested after a white employee called police on them while the men were waiting for a business meeting inside the store. philadelphia pd later apologized. >> i think wha occurre was
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reprehensible at every single level. >> reporter: in an interview with gayle king shortly after former starbucks executive howard schultz also apologized and this response they closed its,000 stores for a day so employees could participate in racial sensitivity training. >> i want to personally apologize for anyone who has ever felt anything other than respect and dignity in our stores. >> reporter: the customer and officers involved in this incident here in tempe have not been identified but according to "the new york times," they are all white men. the department tells cbs news it met with starbucks executives yesterday and will continue to talk today as they work together to strengthen their relationship. >> all right, jamie, thank you. >> very confusing. >> i'm having a har mt -- liste have issues with the police in this country. but in most cases the majority of the police officers are here really to protect and serve and want to do the right thing so i want to know what those officers
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were doing that made this person so uncomfortable. >> apparently -- >> seems a better way to handle ha. >> what the barista thought was so urgent. >> cops are allowed to get a cup of coffee. alaska's biggest city breaks a heat record and rivals miami. ahead why high temperatures there may be the new normal and the dangers they pose to the state's environment. if you're on the go subscribe to our podcast. hear the day's top stories and what's happening in your world in less than 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ s stories and what's happening in the world in 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." as a home instead caregiver, for everything that i give, i get so much in return. join our family of home instead caregivers
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it'it's crepe dayday for a family traditiony's. we started about 22 minutes ago and now we can continue that tradition at home with free denny's delivery. see you at dennys.com mirk's coldest date was on the fourth of july and they're sounding the alarm. alaska hit a record 90 degrees with the sun beating down all day and most of the night, there's little relief. jonathan vigliotti is outside the byron glacier where the heat is having a noticeable impact.
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>> reporter: good morning to you. that july 4th record, 25 degrees above average. to put it all in perspective, it's go doing be as hot today as it is in miami. these glaciers are a natural air conditioner but this state is heating up twice as fast as the rest of the country and scientists warn these glaciers can't keep up. alaska's glaciers weren't enough to cool off hikers as the arctic state baked in tropical-like heat, from people sledding in shorts to wildlife like moose cooling off in backyard sprinklers. america's northern frontier at ti times looked like melt which frees up
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the ground to absorb more heat and water which causes more snow and ice to melt. it feeds off of itself in a downward spiral. >> reporter: that downward spiral has also been linked to alaska's growing wildfires. already this year it's burned more than 2,000 acres of land than lastier and there's still two more months left in the season. marine life shows heat-related distress as whales are washing up, many of them malnow issued. >> everything is visible here. we need to use it as an opportunity both education wise and how we think about our policy moving forward for how we're going the accommodate and stop the warming that has occurred and the warming that may or may not be baked into the
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future. >> reporter: globally glaciers are melting five times faster than they were 50 years ago. meteorologists say it will cool off to 75 by wednesday, but scientists say these alaskan heatwaves could be the new normal. for "cbs this morning," i'm jonathan vigliotti at the byron glacier. >> it really puts it in perspective for those who think about climate change. vladimir duthiers, he's here. he's following the stories. we can call him hot too. hello, you haitian sensation. >> what's going on, gayle? >> okay, vlad. what is going on today? >> so we've got some interesting news. music legend stevie wonder shocked fans over the weekend. what he had to say about a mysterious medical condition he faces. >> all right, vlad. we'll see you in just a
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good monday morning. it is a gray start with cody fog and patchy drizzle, especially along the coast. heading to the afternoon, cool conditions. little bit of fun inland, and the mid to upper 70s in concord, livermore, in san jose. we keep because around for the san francisco bay. mid-sixties in oakland. low 60s in san francisco. will embrace the on the coast in with a warm-up as we had through the week. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ graham? ♪ ♪ that's my daughter! hey. dad. what an incredible set!
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morning it is; 56. in san jose, and and are long standoff ended with the arrest. is all started with a welfare check. police were informed there had been a possible dispute involving a gun. the standoff is still under investigation. livermore city council is expected to pass an ordinance against labor tobacco products at electric smoking devices. the city leaders say the goal is to eliminate access to minors pick up approved to the law takes effect in 30 days. at least 11 homes and tracy are badly burned after a five ar ntils were called to the area, but it is unclear if anyone needs to be hospitalized. no word on what sparked the fire. we will have news updates throughout the day on your
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tracking trouble spots from the real-time traffic center. one of them is on the eastshore freeway. take a look at this crash. westbound 80 at pinole valley road. one is blocked and you can see it is low and go as you are approaching the accident right past hercules 40 for miles per hour want to get back up it will slow down again a little further, closer to the bay bridge slow going on the san mateo bridge with the gray skies a foggy and start to the day and as you saw on the live drive traffic, a great start. because along the coast and for part of the of sunshine inland her cool below average daytime highs. 70 and in concord. 66 in oakland. 61 in san francisco.
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good morning to you our viewers in the west. it's monday, july 8th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, why california's biggest earthquakes in 20 years have scientists worried that the big one could be coming. a woman gives birth to other couples babies. and michelle obama calls out her critics on race in a candid conversation on the stage in new orleans over the weekend. first, here is today's "eye opener" at 8:00. millions of people in southern california are on edge and they are worried about their safety after two large earthquakes. >> scientists say the reason the damage is not catastrophic is because a lot was centered in the deserts. >> the power and water is back on. scientists say people are going to be rattled by aftershocks.
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megan rapinoe and the team celebrated and they are heading home for more celebrations and a fight for equal pay. the president is promising more transparency. there is a mixed message. they are blaming democrats for the conditions, and on the other hand the president is saying immigrants are in better shape in the that facilities than whe they came from. the charges against jeffery epstein were unsealed here at the courthouse. he is facing two counts. one count of sex trafficking. another count of sex trafficking conspiracy. i thought i was going to be meeting a nerd, right? and then i talked to him on the phone and he had that barack obama voice. he is like, hey, how you doing? and i was like, okay. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. he does have a very distinct voice and a very distinct walk.
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>> 50,000 people there. i guess it was intimate. she was talking about the first phone call. >> it was surprisingly so with that many people. pretend it was the two of us on the stage. she talked about family. she talked about politics. she talked about health and wellness. it of a great conversation. >> looking forward to that. i'm tony dokoupil. this is gayle king. we have anthony mason back at the table. >> nice to be back. >> southern california braces for more possible earthquakes after the ground shakes for four straight days. more than 4,000 aftershocks with two big quakes. a 7.1 and a 6.4 magnitude. california's governor has declared a state of emergency in severalountie leationa corresponnt david begnaud is in ridgecrest, california, near the epicenter of those earthquakes. david, 4,000 earthquakes is a lot. what is the mood like there? >> reporter: anxious. restless. worried. that's why some people didn't want to sleep at home. these folks slept on the grass
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in tents last night and more families on this side. 26 people slept on the grass outside city hall overnight and another 60 slept inside at a shelter. friday's 7.1 magnitude earthquake near ridgecrest was the largest in california in two decades. homes and businesses were damaged. that followed the 6.4 magnitude earthquake that happened the day before on the fourth of july. the u.s. geological survey estimates there is $1 billion in damage. that's the estimate as of now. we spoke with seismologist lucy jones, the renowned seismologist in southern california who you may have seen on tv the last few days. she said there could be aftershocks that last for a year. >> i would think this is most likely that we are going to be reentering a period of more like the '70s and '80s where we had had a magnitude 6 in southern california every couple of years. >> reporter: really? >> right. that's more the long-term average. that's what geology says should
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be about what we're having. >> reporter: you know, so often people think when there is an earthquake it lets off some steam, relieves some pressure in faults. dr. jones said that is not the case at all. in fact, when you have a 7.1 on friday she started to look for others that would be of the 6.0, 6.5 magnitude. what's interesting, gayle, is she said there was a dramatic decay, a dropoff. she said it's been eerily quiet since then. that is the good news. every minute that goes by without another 5.0 or 6.0, it looks like we are more in the clear. >> it has to be stressful living in a place where you have to worry about earthquakes. what's being done to prepare for more earthquakes in a city like los angeles? >> reporter: well, so they are trying to fortunate fy the buildings in los angeles, some prominent buildings that line up the skyline there that would be collapsing. a total collapse if you had a 7.1 earthquake that hit in downtown los angeles. in fact, we spoke with a
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structural engineer who said that's the work that's being done right now to fortify those buildings. in 2015, the city of l.a. passed a measure that requires certain buildings built before the late '70s be retrofitted to today's standards to prevent the collapsing. california is working on transmitting an early detection system. that would be statewide. it would detect the first energy given off by a quake and alert residents before the shaking starts, and possibly shut down the transit system. one more thing, gayle, that was interesting. dr. jones said they retrofitted city hall in l.a. so they decoupled it from the foundation. so the foundation can move around in an earthquake, but the city hall, the building itself for the most part, would stay still. >> interesting, david. thank you. lonnie quinn of our new york station wcbs tv is here tosmoli learning about those earthquakes and how the rest of california could see an impact.
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lonnie, good morning. >> good morning. the two earthquakes we are talking about, 6.4 and 7.1, the largest to occur in california in two decades. they continue to give scientists more to study about california's complex geology. you see right here, give it a moment, you see how it split the land in two different directions. notice how the yellow lines are no longer lined up, right? the earthquakes occurred in strike slip faults. the plates strike parallel but in opposite directions. they didn't happen on one fault line but two different fault lines that intersect at a right angle. at the aftershocks associated there have been over 5003.0 or stronger aftershocks. you see them on two different fault lines. here is the major fault line here is the mi zone. watch this. we are going to zoom this out.
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keep going, keep going. this is the famous fault line. everybody knows about the san andreas fault. it's 100 miles away. it's too far away to have nimimpact on the earthquakes here. what does that mean? you heard david talk about pressure building up below the fault. this pressure continues to build up and it had no affect, over 100 miles way, that means the big one is out there. it's overdue. we don't know when. scientists believe it's been coming. there has not been a 7.1 on the san andreas fault since 1906 in francisco. >> if one of those 7 magnitude happens, what would the damage look like? >> i think probably the best example i can give you, go back to 1989 in san francisco. that was a 6.9. the famous earthquake. so many people watched it live on tv. remember the world series? all the damage in 6.9. well, the san andreas fault runs on major cities. san francisco to los angeles, inland from san diego.
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you put a 7.1 instead of a 6.9, you think similar, right? they are not at all. you are talking about a 6.9 versus a 7.1, twice as strong. i know it's only like 0.2. but in terms of energy, seismic energy, twice as strong as 7.1 versus the 6.9. double the damage you had in san francisco. >> thank you, lonnie. michelle obama is talking about painful political attacks from republicans and democrats when she was on her way to becoming first lady. ahead in an exclusive interview at the essence festival in new orleans over the weekend, how the criticism helped wshape who she became in the white house. and how a cloudy and foggy start today drizzle along the coast.
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as we head through the afternoon comedy daytime highs will be below average at this time of year. 79 in concord for a high. 79 in san jose. 66 in oakland. 66 and fear francisco. we are warming up heading to the week as high pressure building for us. above average temperatures by the end of the week
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50 years since the apollo 11 mission to the moon. norah o'donnell will have an exclusive interview with jeff bezos and carolyn kennedy on the future of space exploration. tuesday we will be at kennedy space center with a special report at the same time that apollo 11 blasted off 50 years ago. she will then a.j.er the "cbs evening news" from the space center in the same location that walter con kite broadcast on that day. and later that evening she will anchorman on the moon, a cbs
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news prime time special. no surprise norah o'donnell hitting the ground running. she has been shooting stories. she will be more than ready on monday. >> i am excited. >> i will be as well. i will be down there broadcasting for us. >> oh, okay. that's good, too. >> yeah. rocket man. >> we are doing something, too. you are watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we'll be right back. ♪
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♪ ♪ this is how driving should feel. the tech-advanced nissan leaf. the best selling electric vehicle of all time. this is nissan intelligent mobility. ♪ ♪ ♪ a new lawsuit claims a new york couple gave birth to other people's children after a fertility clinic impregnated them with the wrong embryos. they expected female twins and instead gave birth to two male babies. they had to give the babies up to their biological parents.
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meg oliver is following the case. what a disturbing development. what else did the couple have to say? >> it's heartbreaking. what's more, the couple alleged the fertility clinic knew about the embryo mixup and tried to concealed it. they claim to have fulfilled the dreams of tens of thousands of aspiring parents in 22 countries. this couple says it shattered theirs. >> reporter: after spending more than $100,000 on in vitro fertilization treatments, an unidentified couple succeeded. when they gave birth in march the american parents were shocked to found neither baby was of asian descent. the lawsuit confirms the babies belonged to two other couples, forcing them to give the babies up to their biological parents. they don't know what happened to their two embryos that should have been implanted. the lawsuit names co-owners of cha fertility center dr. joshua
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berger and simon hong as responsible for the unimaginable mi mishap. according to ivf expert jake anderson -- >> it's an ago nyenizing process to grow embryos. it involves 200 different steps. when you assume this happens to thousands of patients every year in that laboratory, you have a lot of moving parts. >> reporter: more than one million babies have been born in the u.s. through ivf. recent headlines about clinics destroying or mixing up embryos raise valid questions about the painstaking process. >> have we become reckless and too careless with people's most important genetic material in their future happiness? >> reporter: in 2009, carolyn and sean savage experienced similar loss. upon learning the baby they had just conceived through ivf was
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not theirs. >> you are so excited and you feel like finally. to have the rug pulled out from under you in this kind of manner is, it's so painful. >> reporter: the savages carried the baby to term before giving him to his biological parents they say hearing the news of another ivf mixiam was heartbreaking. >> i cannot express how utterly unacceptable this situation is. it is preventible. protocols need to be followed. they need to be taken seriously. >> the couple in this latest lawsuit accuses the fertility clinic of medical en, an 14 other counts. the lawsuit also says the couple has suffered significant emotional distress. have not heard about. a lawyer from cha fertility clinic declined to comment. in the lawsuit the plaintiffs said they were told they had one
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male embryo that wasn't transferred. when they found out they were having twin boys were confused. broadcom has secured, several lending commitments from banks. watching "cbs this morning." as always we thank you for that. we'll be right back. she overcame adversity on the road to the white house. you're watching "cbs this morning." lactaid is 100% real milk, just without the lactose.. ti yet some say it isn't real milk. i guess those cows must actually be big dogs. sit! i said sit! somebody burned down my she shed. your she shed was struck by lightning. is my she shed covered by state farm? your she shed's covered, cheryl.
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♪ perfect song for this, republic r-e-s-p-e-c-t. president obama is discussing hurtful and racist stereotypes she confronted in the white house and on the campaign trail. the best-selling author, this book is selling close to 12 million copies, sat down with me for an exclusive wide-ranging interview set the essence festival in new orleans saturday night. the expos, the 25th anniversary,
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celebrates black music and culture. mrs. obama talked about how both republicans and democrats targeted her for being a powerful black woman. an experience she chronicles in her popular memoir beco"becomin >> i know there are a lot of kids who see me and barack now, right, they see us as the former first. they see us when we were walking out of the white house, but they don't remember how many punches we took to get there. so now i'm michelle obama, and beloved, but for a minute there i was an angry black woman who was emasculating her husband, who was somebody to be feared, because that was part of the political game, was that as i got more popular and started being more of an asset to my husband, it was interesting that that's when people of all sides, and i stop to say people from all sides, democrats and republicans, tried to take me out by the knees.
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but the reason i share that story is because i want people to, especially young people, to know that we all go through those moments where people try to define us before we have an opportunity to define ourselves. so instead of letting it defeat me, i had a very clear vision of what i had to do when i went into the white house as first lady. i knew that it was up to me, that i wouldn't get the benefit of the doubt. i wouldn't get the benefit of being treated as the gracious honored first lady as i wrote. i would have to earn my grace. >> yeah, she said a lot of very powerful things. we talked at one point about being underestimated and overdelivering. she said at some point you get tired of being underestimated. we talked about being an empty-nester. sasha and malila are 18 and 1.
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in san jose, for men are recovering after a shooting late on saturday night in the cambria park area. neighbors said vehicles were doing donuts before crowds of people got into several dozen cars and drove off. pg&e set to host an open house to share information on the community wildfire safety program. the open houses at the marriott city center on dwet happeninfrom 6 ti tonight. san francisco city leaders could vote as soon as tomorrow to raise fees for checkout back to grocery stores and businesses. any proposal would hike that fee to $.25 her back. that is only $.10 now. if approved, the legislation would take effect in july 2020. news updates today on your favorite forms including our website, kpix.com.
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morning. we have a new crash just into the real-time traffic center. let's get down to it to the dunbarton bridge. it has been a rough morning for the dunbarton bridge. shut down earlier with a traffic alert and now that's. westbound 80 for the toll plaza has been moved to the shoulder. you can see the it is slow going as you are approaching the toll plaza down to 25 miles per hour or slower. are looking a little better once you get to 101, beta so no matter where you are, coming into palo alto. also getting to the pinnacle
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via the san mateo bridge, it is low in the westbound direction. not many brake lights. it is not going that quickly. eastbound direction is sta to hupbut icn y. bay bridge toll plaza if low uncle all the way backed up to the foot of the maze and the a 80 flyover. today is the coolest day of the week. strong onshore flow when you can see the gray start on a roof cam. heading to the afternoon, a cool below average daytime highs. 5 to 10 degrees below average. the upper 70s in fairfield, concord mid-70s and livermore. mid-sixties in oakland. low 60s and san francisco. the crowds hanging around along the cost and for the san franba sunshin ly s and partly sunny for the inland locations. there we go with the warm-up heading through the work week, and into the weekend with high pressure building and. above average temperatures by the end of the week, with plenty of sunshine. have a great day.
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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'd like to share with each other and all you. tony, why don't you start off? >> you are going to like it. >> this is painful, this story. >> there was a giant fire, people may recall, at a jim beam factory in kentucky. six million bottles ran not kentucky river. there are images of the fire. ever heard of the phrase drinks like a fish? apparently not because the river is turning up thousands of dead fish as a plume of bourbon, a plume of bourbon 20 miles long is making its way down the river. environmental authorities are in the river with barges. they are aerating the water to up the oxygen levels and hopefully save some fish. to date they have not made a special request. any bourbon drinkers with long straws to get in and suck up the
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six million bottles. >> i would be down there. i am sad for the fish. even sadder we lost all that bourbon. >> we thought about you last week. >> we have a new type of parenting coach on the rise. they are paid to help raise your child. listen to this. there that runs a network of 500 coaches. a training session charges $80 in smaller cities, $250 in larger cities. they come into your homes, schools, churches, synagogues. remind people how parents parented before. it includes movement, playing, painting. some say unde lifestyle change like getting an animal that children can spend time. all right. i have to tell you i read this and i thought this away ridiculous. it's called parenting and it's your job to say have that. >> put down your phone. >> yeah, i'm not going to pay somebody. >> as the one currently parenting someone in the age of
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screens, it's hard. >> it's true. but you wouldn't pay somebody to raise your three children how to navigate your phone? >> no. i would read an article and buy a dog to offset the phone. >> i do like that. >> all right. former president jimmy carter and his wife rosalynn marked their 73rd we hadden anniversary yesterday. congratulations to them. they are approaching george and barbara bush as the longest married presidential couple in u.s. history. the record is 73 years and 111 days, which the bushes were married until brash bush passed. what's special is that jimmy and rosalynn were married when they were 21 and 18 in plains, georgia. in fact, they have known each other since they were 3 and 1 because jimmy carter's mother actually delivered rosalynn carter as a baby. she was a registered nurse and she took jimmy to meet her when she was 3. >> i like a good love story. >> 111 days to go for the
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record? >> yes. >> we are rooting for them. the new season of the emmy award-winning series "stranger things" is being called frightening as hell b morfun.it supernatural forces in the summer of 1985. daker montgomery is a relentless bully in the new season he works as a lifeguard who flirts with housewives before things turn much darker. >> looking good out there, mrs. wheeler. >> thank you. >> perfect form. >> well, your form is amazing. sorry. i've seen you teaching lessons, swimming lessons. >> you know, i could teach you if you'd like. >> oh? >> i know a styles. freestyle, butterfly.
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>> okay. >> i wanted him to keep going. >> dacre montgomery for his first tv interview about the pseason. >> welcome. >> and you have your suit. you have your shirt on. >> i do. >> yay, dacre! >> your character takes -- it looks fun here but it gets dark real soon. >> yeah, that's fantastic. a really good season for my character and lots of fun. >> you have kind of become the bad guy? >> yeah, to have this story is complex. i think bad people are most oftentimes misunderstood. i think my duty is to empathize with that character. >> you did research i read, dacre, that you wanted to humanize billy. what did you do? >> it's the mor most organic way to represent someone. we can't be good and bad. we all have qualities of both. i did research on people with bipolar disorder and split personality disorder and tried
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to have this person suffering under the surface through the season. you will see what that means when you watch it, if you haven't already. >> if people know anything about stranger things, they know the monster. they told "usa today," the creators, said the monster is actually a beach ball on a stick? >> yes. >> oftentimes being thrown around in the background. >> how? how? explain how you can muster fear as an actor when there is a beach ball on a stick in your face. >> i think it's even more fun. it's like the imagination needs to take hold of what's going on. they are great. they show you a lot of pro views of what the monster is going to look like and how it will play out. we are fortunate to be a part of production that's so fantastic that they have the money to show us that sort of stuff before we go on. >> it's called acting. and you play a bully, but you remember being bullied as a kid yourself. and that did that play any part in how you prepared f characlied you with those eyes? let's start with that.
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let's just start with that. >> look, i think what i said before about empathizing with someone, because it's like when you look back and you're like that kid was bullying me at school but he probably had a lot of stuff going on at home for himself. i was lucky. i had a good family and i didn't have to go home to anything balanced. i think how can i empathize with that person? we all come from different backgrounds and it comes out in different ways. how can i make this person human. >> you went to the creators with an idea for billy's back story? >> i said i wanted to humanize him. they worked the scene with the father. i don't know if you guys have seen it. that's a good turn for the character. >> the argument with his father? >> yes, the argument with his father. in season 3 i spoke about the biological mother component. i said i want to meet his mother. that plays a part in his redemptive ending, let's call it. >> you said you like to bring ten crazy ideas to the set every time? >> yeah, i am not -- it's super
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embarrassing. but the good thing in the credit to the brothers is they will take one of the ten. they will make the cut. that's the great thing about the show. and i think that's what makes it "stranger things." >> you said you didn't want to be the cute guy walking around without a shirt. they changed your story line this season? >> i think it's strategic to present that objectification of the body and it takes a turn for the worse so quickly, as you have seen. >> speaking of turns, how has this changed for you? you were storing in 2017 as the red power ranger. not taking anything waway from that role. what is it like going to covers of magazines, interviews like this one? >> i grew up in western australia. i wanted to have a license in the amazing industry. i have been lucky. >> your family is in the industry, too? your mom dand? >> my mom worked in the film industry for 20 years as a production coordinator. my dad, too.
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i am lucky to have that ba background. >> is dacre an australian name? >> it's from my mom's side of the family. it dates back a long way. i don't know where it comes from in necessarily. >> you are interested in comedy now? >> i am doing a romantic comedy in canada. we start shooting next week. i think it will be a good ego-stripping exercise. you know what i mean? and kind of -- >> it's it you have. >> yeah, it's a different pace. and drama is slower and you have great pauses in between that i think you can lavish in. most recently we are hosting for this film. i was like, oh my god, i don't have that time. it's a new space. >> you probably do well in romance though. that. k, man, i don't knowbout >> i think it's good for everybody to get the piss taken out of them. >> we can say that on tv? >> good to see you. the new season of "stranger things" is available right now on netflix. ahead, how striving for perfection may actually set you
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back. "the new york times" smarter living editor tim herrera talking about his new article on why he thinks you should just ♪
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♪ ♪ 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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friday night plans. >> apparently. >> i got an a-minus. i have never gotten an a-minus. >> we hate those people. >> i would have loved an a-minus. >> gilmore girls drew gellar is a perfectionist, but in the "smarter living" section of "the new york times" says perfectionism is never going to happen so just get it done. putting too much research and time into progress whether writing an e-mail or making a presentation can damage the end result. the author of that article and editor of "smart living" is tim herrera. good morning. >> good morning. >> clearly you're thinking you're not perfect, so why should the rest of us be. >> nobody's perfect. >> what's your argument against
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perfectionist. >> the idea that we should achieve perfect results is something of a mirage and something we're never going to achieve. and even if we got there, what may look perfect to us may not be perfect to someone else some of rather than going through so much minor details that are incremental, focus on completing itting being satisfied with what you've done. >> you quote voltare who says perfect is the enemy of good. >> yes. a great kind of mindset to go into. >> we're so obsessed with perfection and achievements, we're setting ourselves up for failure. we should think about the journey. the road is the goal, right? >> so how do you know when good is good enough? when did you transcend? >> i've literally been wrietding it for a month because i wanted it to be perfect. it's one of those things where you have to have a little bit of
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interspectum and self-awareness and you reach the point of diminishing returns. maybe you're making it different rather than making it better. >> this advise doesn't apply to all lines of work. if you're in the nuclear lab, you should have gotten the label down right. you know, would you say this applies to everybody? >> it's generally applicable. you can apply it to didn't scenar scenarios. and built into this the idea of getting around it. so one of the things i write about in the ard cal is focusing on micro goals. slicing up a given progress or task into the tinous unit so you're racking up a lot of little wins, you're keeping yourself account so focused the end goal but the process that's going to get you there. >> you say there are two types of people, max myers and
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satisfiesers. >> is is that a word you made up? >> i did not make it up. that's a term. maximizers relentlessly refr every possible option when making a decision. sat is faficer are more satisfi with the decisions they ultimately make. >> i was always raised don't settle. when you're saying just get it done, is part of you actually settling on something, you always think you can make it better, why not try to d that. >> because you're never going to end that line of thinking because you're nesh going to achieve what you think is perfect. it's a little bit of a mindset. you have to be okay with the realization that it's not perfect but it's done and hopefully it's good enough. >> that's a very difficult thick
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for people who are perfectionist, knowing the moment when you let go. >> you reach that point of diminishing returns where you can keep making changes, but you're making it different, not better. >> you write something called the mostly fine decision. >> mfd, something i've written about before. it's that point where you think you've invested probably too much time in something and you think i may not reach the absolute most 100% perfect con cluive decision but it's mostly fine and i'm satisfied with thew the segment has gone. >> i am too. we've got to go. >> thank you very much. a boy stepped up to keep a holiday parade on track.ho hove perform an act of kindness for a police officer. on our "cbs this morning" podcast our dr. agus talks about
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the benefits of crisper, gene
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before we go, this moment captured the moment joshua brown ran out to tie the shoe lace of arlington, texas, police officer. he enlisted the boy's hands
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because his hands were full. he was carrying the american flag as part of an honor guard. >> i walked up there and he whispered, can you tie my shoe. it kind of made me really nervous. i wasn't sure i was going to be able to do it. >> i had a long way to go and it definitely saved me from worried about my shoe coming off while carrying the u.s. flag. >> the police chief promised to present joshua with a chief challenge coin to show joshua is a member of the force. now joshua says he wants to be a police officer when he grows up. >> when you say, can i tie a shoe? normally i can, i don't know if i can understood thiesz circumstances. >> imagine carries the flag with your shoe untied. >> you don't want that touching the ground. that's a beautiful gesture. >> the picture is very nice. >> very sweet. >> cap urs it. anthony mason, are you going to be here all
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i'm emily turner. police investigating a deadly shooting in the famidirict. it happened near midnight. the cost of the shooting is currently under investigation. they deadly ghost ship trial, derick almena will take the stand testifying in his own defense. he and max harris both faced 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter. one for each person who died in the 2016 fire. fire crews in pleasant hill had cleared the scene of a three alarm fire the first two families out of their homes. one firefighter was hospitalized while battling the one person was injured while battling blake the place. news update on your favorite pet from think hitting our website, kpix.com.
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a: 57 from the real-time traffic center. trouble spots that we are keeping a close eye on. self on are blocked. lane slow down to 30 miles per hour heading out at walnut creek. it is slow going. 24 in the westbound direction. also slow and go usual with the rush hour traffic. this crash westbound 580, lanes are blocked. you can see lanes find on
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pretty significantly heading towards the dublin interchange, down to about seven miles per hour. you can kind of see it from our live camera. it is super breezy blowing and. but it is certainly slow going as it is also on the san mateo bridge. a cloudy and foggy start also patchy drizzle. here is a live look with the golden gate camera. you can see the dog over the top of the golden gate tower. as we head through the afternoon, with onshore flow, cool below average daytime highs at about five or 10 degrees below average. for the inland locations in the mid to upper 70s, 79 in concord. 79 in the room or and for san jose. the mid-sixties in oakland. low 60s in san francisco and the upper 50s in pacifica. more sunshine for inland locations mostly cloudy for the baby a cloudy and breezy along the coast. the coolest day out of stof the week.
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wayne: wow. - yeah, boy! wayne: tiffany, what's behind the curtain? jonathan: it's a trip to italy! - i'm here to win big today. jonathan: it's in the bag. (grunts) wayne: go get your car! give him a big round of applause. you did it, you got the big deal of the day! and this is how we do it in season ten. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america! welcome to christmas in july! wayne brady here, who wants to make a deal? let's go! (cheers and applause) let's see, who wants to make a deal? men, carrie! (cheers and applause) everybody else, have a seat. carrie, welcome to the show! - hey, hi, hi! wayne: now, what do you do, carrie? - i'm a nurse practitioner.

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