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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 5, 2019 7:00am-9:00am PDT

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long. will give you updates on the situation with all of the chickens on the road on i-80 that will affect your morning commute all morning long. cbs this morning is coming up next. have a great day, everyone. good morning to our viewers in the west and welcome to "cbs this morning." we bring you breaking news from charleston, south carolina as hurricane dorian lashes the coast. it's now a major category 3 storm expected to make landfall in the next 24 hours. we have team coverage all along the coast in the carolinas as dorian threatens tornadoes, flooding, and life threatening storm surge. also this morning the desperate race to find survivors in the bahamas where at least 20 people have died. we talk with survivors about the terrors of the storm and the potential dangers in the aftermath. >> we got to get out of here. we can't live here. plus norah o'donnell's exclusive aerial look at the worst of the hurricane damage. >> know her name. she talks exclusively to cbs 60
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minutes as the woman attacked by a stanford athlete who spent just three months in jail for his crime. >> andrew yang's angle the 2020 hopeful who qualified for next week's presidential debate tells anthony how america could become like "the hunger games" without bold solutions. it is thursday, september 5th, 2019. here's today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> georgia, south carolina, north carolina. it's on its way up. >> now to a category 3 growing again in strength. >> time to get out is running out. >> hurricane dorian marches up the coast. >> if you are where an evacuation has been ordered, leave now. >> bracing for impact at home and the death toll is rising in the bahamas. search and recovery operations continue. >> we are over there in a very big way with the coast guard and will be spending quite a bit more people. >> lyft faces a lawsuit over allegations of sexual assault and rape among drivers. >> i was held hostage for five
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hours and lyft did not even know. >> google will pay a record $170 million to settle claims that youtube violated child privacy laws. >> this is an historic penalty. >> the bodies of 33 people killed in a boat fire have been recovered off the coast of california. one person is still missing. >> all that -- >> a woman in vancouver found this dog riding around an empty parking lot. >> way too comfortable on that. >> all that matters. >> critics are questioning the map president trump used during his hurricane press conference. >> it looks like someone drew on the map to show dorian hitting alabama. >> did he draw with a sharpy? like, guys, what is l life righ now? >> on "cbs this morning." >> take a look at this. families who are separated in the bahamas by dorian brought back together. you can see them running to embrace each other, falling to the ground with emotion. >> mommy!
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>> so heart warming to see these emotional reunions. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. >> we hope there are more reunions like that. welcome to "cbs this morning." tony dokoupil is in south carolina covering the life threatening approach of hurricane dorian. gayle king is off so jericka duncan and dana jacobsson are with us. as you wake up in the west dorian is bashing the carolina coast after restrengthening into a category 3 hurricane. its outer bands are dumping heavy rain as far north as north carolina and virginia. hurricane warnings are up along the coast and more than 1 million people in the carolinas have been told to evacuate. >> this storm is causing all sorts of problems including at least a dozen tornadoes that touched down this morning in north and south carolina.
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forecasters now predict dorian will make landfall somewhere in north carolina during the next 24 hours. tony dokoupil is in charleston where flash flood warnings are in effect and catastrophic flooding is expected. tony, what are the conditions right now? >> reporter: well, good morning. the rain is coming inside ways here in charleston and just a few moments ago the wind really picked up. behind me is the churning river and beyond that the barrier islands of south carolina, a shield from what is now an angry atlantic ocean. we actually made it out to those islands yesterday and we found out that more than 50% of the people there plan to hunker down which means right now they are riding out the storm even though dorian is knocking on their front door and first responders are unlikely at this moment to be able to respond quickly. back here in charleston the historic life threatening flooding is expected through the next 48 hours. in some parts of the carolinas a storm surge could reach eight feet.
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evacuation orders are out covering about 830,000 people all along the south carolina coast and more than 1500 are in about 28 shelters statewide this morning. what you're seeing right now is video we shot yesterday about ten miles south of us showing intense winds whipping away the protective sand dunes on folly island. that's wheresome. let's bring in jamie yuccas at charleston's historic sea side landmark the battery. it's getting windy where i am and tough where you are. what are the conditions you're seeing so far this morning? >> reporter: you talked about a violent atlantic. this is what it is. this is what it looks like right now. here are the waves. usually there are container ships parked here. we're half way between the battery now and the water front park. so you usually see those giant container ships parked in here with supplies and goods but obviously they had to leave because of the storm. we've seen lots and lots of rain. we could get up to a foot of rain throughout the day today. i can tell you from driving around this area that means
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flash flooding and it could also mean some historic flooding in charleston if the storm surge comes in at the same time as high tide. this is what we're talking about as those waters make their way up to the streets here in charleston. you can see this storm surge right now making its way as it just kind of rolls in and then goes on to city streets. i know 200,000 people right now are without power. i can tell you that the winds have been very, very gusty. we've been told we've gotten gusts as high as 75 miles per hour. and a little further offshore there was a record of about 90 miles per hour recorded just a short time ago. but those are the conditions that we have happening here. every once in a while you get these big gusts. i can tell you, they almost knock you off your feet. i'm not a small person. i'm -- and they really whip us around, all of us, as a crew. i can tell you the conditions have deteriorated. we're supposed to continue to see that strong rainfall throughout the day today and there was a report of somebody
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actually kayaking down historic king street this morning, so that's the type of flood waters we're already seeing as more rain is falling, tony. >> all right. thank you very much. a dangerous surge there in the low lying areas. local authorities now say that they -- actually we'll move on to video now from an area near wilmington, north carolina. damaged by a tornado this morning. dorian could make landfall in north carolina and it is important to point out within 24 hours. that's where wein our jonathan vigliotti in carolina beach. jonathan, what's the latest where you are? >> reporter: yeah, tony, we can confirm three tornadoes have touched down in this area, one of them about 40 miles away in the farming community. that's where the video came from. the brunswick county sheriff's department providing it. you can see how the quick moving twister caused a lot of the destruction but we're being told there were no injuries. we're here on carolina beach. we've been here all morning long watching as quickly this weather
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deteriorates. the wind picking up along with the rain. we're expecting at the height of this storm and it's more than 20 hours away from where we are to reach about 100 miles per hour, the storm surge another big issue here, 4 to 7 feet. that's taller than me. taller than some of the sand dunes. the community on the other side of this worried about flooding. it is why there is a mandatory evacuation in place. the rainfall another big issue here. inland flooding is going to be a big deal, about 10 inches. authorities here saying anybody that has chosen to ride out this storm needs to seek higher ground and stay off the roads as dorian approaches. tony? >> reporter: jonathan, thank you. moving out to the atlantic a massive rescue and relief effort is under way right now in the bahamas where there is widespread devastation. at least 20 people were killed there and our lead national correspondent david begnaud traveled to the hard hit abaco islands to get a first-hand look at the destruction. he joins us now from the bahamian capital of nassau. david, what did you see?
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>> reporter: well, tony, what we saw was people sitting on the tarmac in treasure key waiting to be rescued. we're in nassau which is the capital of the bahamas and there are more planes on the tarmac this morning than yesterday. every one of these aircraft is being used to either deliver aid or to pick up people. we were able to get five seats on a medical charter that was looking to find people. they dropped us off on what was an abandoned runway and when we landed there were close to three dozen people waving for help. >> never, ever seen anything like this. >> this was just so far beyond anyone's imagination. >> reporter: shock and horror. >> everything you have, everything is gone. everything. >> reporter: while waiting to evacuate the island of treasure cay locals told us their stories of surviving hurricane dorian. >> the wind sounded like a huge tornado coming. >> the roof went off. we had to run to another house. >> reporter: the red cross says
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nearly half of the homes on the abaco islands and grand bahama are damaged or destroyed. are you trying to get out of here? >> i am. >> reporter: nancy was one of the dozens of people who showed up at the airport asking the various pilots who kept landing here if she could get a seat off the island. her home was in a nearby community called man-o-war. this is what it looks like now. she rode out the storm in her home. >> the house had broken up around us. when you crack the door open and there was nothing left. >> reporter: we found senthia gedeon sitting with her three children on the roof of a building blown off during a storm. what are you going to do tonight? >> i don't know. go to nassau? i don't know. >> reporter: she didn't get out last night. the family was going to sleep on a slab of cement inside of the heavily damaged abandoned home near the airport. someone had given her and the kids bread and water bottles. the airport is also serving as a
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meeting place for relatives and co-workers. >> when you see what's left of your home what do you think? >> we got to get out of here. we can't live here. we got to go to somewhere safe like in the states or somewhere where there is no hurricanes and no tornadoes. >> reporter: just about everyone evacuated from a disaster zone is air lyfted to the capital of nassau, which was not damaged by dorian. all of the survivors sent here are triage and either sent to a hospital or somewhere to find a place to sleep. >> it was a harrowing ex-peer yejex-peer -- experience, difficult to put into words. just unparalleled. >> reporter: those people are also hungry. of course they have no cell phone service or television. i just heard from chef jose andreas who says he and his team will flying to treasure cay today with food they are going to deliver. listen, tony, before i toss it back to you big thanks to the folks at medic corps many from northern arkansas.
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they brought their plane here and literally have just volunteered to go and land on runways that really weren't even cleared for landing and land to see who needed help and get them out. so many samaritans doing incredible work here including the u.s. coast guard which has really led the effort to rescue folks. >> reporter: and including you, david. thank you very much. this morning we are also getting an exclusive look with the u.s. coast guard at the damage in the bahamas as seen from above. cbs evening news anchor norah o'donnell took off from the coast guard air station in florida yesterday and she saw the devastation from a coast guard plane. >> definitely this will be something we'll be working with for a while. >> reporter: coast guard luntz flew us over the battered islands of the bahamas. >> we requested to fly along with them to see what is this unfolding, humanitarian crisis. standing in the back of an
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hc-144 cargo plane the destruction was clear. >> almost indiscriminate. one house looks okay and the next completely devastated. >> reporter: grand bahama island also took a beating. >> three-quarters of the homes on this island wiped out, under water. the airport, we can't land. but we did land briefly in nassau. >> it is incredibly busy here at this airport in nassau. you've got the navy, the u.s. coast guard. robert and phyillis cornea are seeking refuge in nassau and say the storm destroyed their home in abaco the island they lived on for more than 50 years. >> all the buildings, main buildings gone. everything is gone. >> this is all i have left. what you see me in. >> reporter: that's all you have left. >> i've been in this four days. >> reporter: restoration abaco co-founders heather hunt and sandra cooke described the
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devastation. >> the looting has begun and these people are armed, going after homes still intact. they of course have generators maybe, food. you know, it's bad. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning" i'm norah o'donnell. >> we'll have more in our next half hour including a look at the search for missing people in the bahamas. but right now we continue our coverage of dorian with jericka duncan in new york. >> tony, thank you. great job to you and the crew out there. meteorologist megan glaros of our chicago station wbbm-tv is here. megan, good morning. >> good morning to you, jericka. we still have a major hurricane on our hands at this hour. the center of circulation pretty obvious. charleston. what i see though in the northeast quadrant, which is essentially that top right one, is the greatest potential for tornadoes. we've already had reports of tornadoes. there could be more activity. that entire swath of yellow a tornado watch. we've got warnings in that as well. and that will likely continue through today and potentially
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into tomorrow. again, category 3 right now winds to 115 miles per hour. movement is north and northeast now which means it is going to start to make the curve away from the u.s. if we get a full northeast movement, that is good news for folks along the south and north carolina coast lines. at this point it is pretty much north carolina still in the cone of error for the potential for there to be some sort of landfall from this storm. possibly as a category 2 here and likely within the next 12 to 24 hours. and then it accelerates out and away and by saturday the storm is no more. at that point we'll just be talking about what happened, but right now still ongoing. obviously. anthony? >> thanks. president trump is at the center of a hurricane controversy this morning as he stands by his inaccurate claim about the states threatened by dorian. at a briefing yesterday the president displayed a forecast map that raised eyebrows and appeared to be altered with a black line showing dorian
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possibly striking alabama in one of the early models. here is the actual map from that day put out by the national hurricane center. it does not show a threat to alabama. ben tracy is at the white house. ben, what is this all about? >> reporter: well, for the last couple days the president has been playing the role of meteorologist-in-chief tweeting out updates about the hurricane, his thoughts about where it may hit, often at odds with his own government forecasters. now, on sunday mr. trump tweeted this, talking about alabama, saying that in addition to florida, other states, including alabama, will most likely be hit. a few minutes later the national weather service in alabama tweeted, alabama will not see any impacts from dorian. but the president kept insisting he was right. he then displayed this map in the oval office yesterday, which looks as if someone used a marker to include alabama in some sort of effort to prove the president was correct. when asked about it, the president said this. >> i know that alabama was in the original forecast.
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they thought it would get a piece of it. >> that map you showed us today looked like it almost had like a sharpy written on it. >> i don't know. i don't know. i don't know. >> reporter: knowingly misrepresenting a government weather forecast is actually a crime punishable by up to 90 days in jail. the president is not letting this go. he has been tweeting about this this morning defending himself, saying that what he said about alabama was accurate. dana? >> all right. thank you. mandatory evacuations are in effect in part of southern california as wild fires burn dangerously close to homes. the fire is burning a little over an hour south of los angeles. people living in the la cresta community were told to leave their homes. it is believed lightning may have sparked the flames. when thunderstorms moved through the area yesterday. firefighters say the fire has grown to roughly 1400 acres. in the past hour officials said the fire was 7% contained. the woman who wrote a powerful impact statement about her sexual assault by a stanford
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college student is telling her story exclusively to "60 minutes." ahead why she decided good thursday morning to you. stronger onshore flow meeting temperatures will be cooler today. seasonal if not a little bit below average for this time of year. we catch them clearing today, 87 in concorde and fairfield and livermore, 81 in san jose. pleasant conditions, 68 in san francisco. we continue to cool down by the end of the work week. and into the weekend. have a great day.
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we have much more news ahead. democratic presidential contender andrew yang tells us why the government should give every american adult $1,000 a month.
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in the bahamas, one father's horrific story of losing his young son amid dorian's wrath. >> i can still hear people crying for their lives in my ear. i still can see my son getting dragged across the roof, reaching out. >> ahead, his emotional message as the search for his son continues. you're watching "cbs this morning." nature's recipe knows a dog's big life is measured in wags. so we carefully choose every ingredient - like chicken, sweet potato and pumpkin to fuel their best life. also try nature's recipe true treats and prime blends. these days we're all stressed. i hear you, sister.
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ahead we'll continue our coverage of hurricane dorian. and how facebook is responding to the latest privacy mishap. >> what joe biden told late show
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cohost stephen colbert about this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is 7:26. a huge mess on i-80 in the east bay that left police scrambling to catch chickens that escape from a wrecked a great. it was reported about 3:30 with no major injuries. jury deliberations continue today in the ghost ship warehouse trial. derek almeida and max harris face 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter, one for each person killed in the 2016 fire. federal investigators are working round-the-clock searching for clues near the site of the boat fire tragedy. they have met with victim families and interviewed crewmembers. five were tested for alcohol and the results were negative. news updates throughout the
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day on your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com.
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eastshore freeway. all lanes are shut down working your way westbound on 80 at san pablo dam road. this is from the big rig accident that happened earlier this morning with live chickens running across the roadway. they are working on cleaning this up. you will see delays in and around the area. i heard from caltrans and chp who issued a hard closure. use an alternate. it is a cloudy start to the daalthe baarea due to the onshore flow. temperatures will be cooler as we go through the afternoon. seasonal if not below-average. 87 in concorde and livermore, 81 in san jose and 73 in oakland and upper 60s in san francisco with clearing. temperatures cool down friday into the weekend.
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it's 7:30. here's what's happening on "cbs this mor." it's 7:30. here is what's happening this morning. dorian batters the carolina coast. >> i'm so glad to see you. >> relief efforts intensify in the bahamas where dorian killed at least 20 people and destroyed up to 30,000 homes. lyft sue bid women who says the ride share didn't protect driv mers fromexual b >> what happened to me must never happen again. >> plus in the series "a more perfect union," a man teaching kids to shoot for the stars on and off the range. >> bows and arrows who shoots bows and arrows?
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candidate andrew yang, entrepreneur with no political experience who still made it to next week's democratic debate. >> some advisers have suggested to you you should be more optimistic in the way you paint the future of the country. >> yeah. i have gotten that advice. that's true. i think most politicians have been sold on the fact that the american people don't want to hear hardened truths and i think that's wrong. welcome back to "cbs this morning." gayle king is off. "cbs this morning" saturday co-host jericka duncan is with us. tony dok ochoupil is in south carolina where the storm is expected to bring life-threatening flooding. to tony, how is it there now? >> reporter: good morning. while the sun has been out close to 30 minutes but it's hard to tell. barrier islands behind me are truly being masked by monster waves. buoy reading came in moments ago, measuring a 23-foot wave,
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more than a two-story a concern. heavy wind and rain left several streets in charleston flooded in the overnight. dorian's biggest impact is expected after midnight tonight when the storm surge could reach seven feet. jamie yuccas is already seeing some of that. >> reporter: this is what we're looking about right now. a foot of rain is heading our way. we're getting battered along the coastline in charleston. we're between the battery and waterfront park. i can tell you, every time this rain hits, it feels like ice pellettes hitting your face. about 160,000 people without power at this point in time. you talked about the sun coming up. that's been good news for our crews, who have been roaming around looking for floodwaters. flash flooding throughout the night as you can imagine, as this rain started to come in. this is why. storm surge is also a concern. we're shutting down roadways. you can see the water coming in
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here along the coastline. when that wind picks up, it really starts moving toward the roadways. 70 road closures throughout the county of charleston. that number is expected to go up. sometimes what happens, you get a flash flood and it recedes. we're going to continue to watch as tides come in later today. tony? >> reporter: incredible pictures there, jamie in the thick of it for us in charleston. the race is on for-to-find survivors in the bahamas as hurricane dorian flattened some of the islands. the monster storm battered the area for 48 hours and many people are unaaccounted for. nikki batiste, what's the situation where you are? >> reporter: good morning, tony. storm and then rescued, now e being treated here. there are still thousands of people missing on the islands. i spoke with one patient who says he was separated from his young son when the hurricane hit their home on abaco island.
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>> broken leg? >> yeah, i have a fracture. >> adrian farington sr. said he broke his leg when trying to save his young son's life. >> off the roof, back into the search water. >> reporter: he thought he was keeping his 5-year-old son safe by holding him on a roof, away from floodwaters. richard johnson is a.j.'s older brother. he's trying to find him. how hopeful are you that adrian is still alive? >> given the circumstances, i'm not that hopeful. only i can rely on the lord above. >> reporter: adrian, a carpenter, says he was rescued by civilians and brought to the hospital on monday in nassau. while fighting for his life, he saw at least 12 others drown. >> i can still hear people crying for their lives in my head. i still can see my son getting
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dragged across the roof. >> reporter: rroug this flyer with photos of aj to the national emergency agency. >> they are still looking around in terms of shelters. there's a possibility he might be in a shelter. >> reporter: his family hopes to be as lucky as some others. but adrian fears the worst. >> i want him to understand is that i love him and i tried everything possibly as human to save him from the natural disaster. >> reporter: adrian farington says he just wants to hear that his son is alive. they had to break the news to aj's mother he is missing and, as can you imagine, she was extremely emotional. adrian says aj was wearing a blue hoodie and blue sneakers when he slipped out of his hands. tony? >> reporter: nichlt kki battiste for us in the bahamas where the
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human toll continues to rise. thank you very much. we continue to take hits here in south carolina. meantime let's go back to studio 57 in new york. >> tony, thank you. just to hear those stories, people are in such shock right now. >> there's no doubt. and just heartbreaking. >> the second story we've heard in two days of somebody slipping out of the hands of a loved one. it's really painful. >> prayers for that family. >> the woman behind a powerful impact statement about her sexual assault by a stanford student is coming forward to reclaim her story. what michelle miller said why she's going public now. here are today's top stories in less than 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." go, listen to our podcast. you're watching "cbs this morning." t off. [ "to love somebody" by bee gees playing ] that's crazy!
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a magical place...that's lookin' to get scared! halloween time is back in disneyland and disney california adventure parks!... the woman who delivered a powerful statement about her sexual assault against a stanford student and gave voice to riders nationwide came forward. previously known as emily doe, chanel miller is sharing her
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story with bill whitaker, writing a memoir set to be published later this month, based on her impact statement that was viewed 11 million times in four days after it was posted online. many who saw her letter said it inspired them to come forward with their own stories. inspired them to come forward with their stories. >> you cannot give me back the life that i had. >> reporter: three years after her words became a rallying cry for victims of slassault, chanel miller is showing her face for the first time. cbs recorded reading her impact statement. >> i had to force myself to relearn my real name, my identity, to relearn that this is not all that i am. >> reporter: miller first read these words back in 2016, at a sentencing hearing for her assailant, brock turner. he was found guilty of three counts of felony sexual assault. turner attacked miller behind a dumpster at a college frat party
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while she was pass ed out. two good samaritans intervened. >> in newspapers, my name was unconscious, intoxicated woman. ten syllables and nothing more than that. more than that. >> reporter: many were angered after judge aaron persky sentenced turner to just six months in jail. millions read the powerful words about her assault. >> it was a pivotal moment. it focused our attention not only on the devastation of sexual violence but on pursuing a case through the criminal justice system. >> reporter: her statement led the passing of minimal sentencing for sexual assault cases. >> she gave voice to the feelings of shame and isolation that so many survivors of sexual violence experience. now speaking with her name is
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one farther step toward her healing. >> you know, in that original impact statement she said that that judge lit a tiny fire inside of her because she wanted other people to feel empowered. >> you can tell from that statement the way she's taken owner ship of this, i will control the narrative, i will speak for my name. >> exactly. you can see bill whitaker's full interview with chanel miller on september 22nd on "60 minutes." then chanel will join us on september 24th, the same day her book "know my name" will be released. vladimir duthiers will be looking at the stories we have today. vlad, what do you have? >> we're going to tell you more about privacy problems with facebook after millions of phone good thursday morning to you. get ready for cooler
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temperatures. the cooldown starts today through the weekend. we will have clearing through the day today, 87 in concorde and livermore and fairfield. 81 in san jose. pleasant conditions inland and 73 in oakland and 68 for san francisco. recent conditions along the coast and for parts of the bay and we continue to cooldown heading through friday and especially by the weekend. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by chronic migraine treatment.com because chronic migraine is treatable. c migraine with botox®. what if you had fewer headaches and migraines a month? botox® prevents headaches and migraines before they even start. botox® is for adults with chronic migraine, 15 or more headache days a month, each lasting 4 hours or more. botox® injections take about 15 minutes in your doctor's office and are covered by most insurance. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection
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when you switch to unlimited. that's verizon. all right. stop butters the toast, put away the jam. tony dokoupil is in charleston, but vladimir duthiers has our stories. >> you did it well. here are the few stories we'll be talking about today. the ride company lyft is being accused of hiring people who sexually assault people. they're accused of failing to report rapes to police. it also alleges between 2014 and 2016 lyft received nearly 100 sexual assault complaints in
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colorado. they said, quote, we do not tolerate harassment or violence on our platform, and such behavior can and does result in a permanent ban from our service. >> this is recent. five women were raped. one woman was blind. >> some were hurt by some of the drivers. >> disturbing doesn't even begin to describe hearing that. >> when you think about the beginning stages of ridesharing, i have to admit i remember thinking, this is weird. i don't know who these people are, this is a stranger, i'm not sure what their background is, you don't know if they've been through the system. >> some give warnings to be careful and look out for a couple of details. hundreds of millions of phone numbers lived to facebook accounts have been found online. techcrunch says an exposed server contained millions of databases around the world.
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it includes 133 million in the u.s., 50 million in vietnam, and 18 million in the uk. since the server was not password-protected, anyone could find and access the database. the users' names and phone numbers appear to have been exposed last month. facebook says the information is old and the information has been taken down and there's no evidence the users' evidence was compromised. >> is it wrong to assume that everything i have is out there. >> that's the best way to think of it. did you see this last night on stephen colbert? democratic presidential candidate joe biden was asked about the gaffes he's made on the campaign trail. he's mixed up the names of states he's visited. take a listen to this. >> is it fair or unfair to get after you because of your gaffes? >> look. i think it's fair to go after a
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political figure for anything, okay? i mean we stand up and it comes with the territory, but here's the deal. any gaffe that i have made -- and i've made faffs like every politician i know has -- have been not about a substantive issue. >> all right. so biden said though he may have had a few verbal slip, the essence of what he's saying is true, arguing it's more about the sentiment rather than the details. stephen colbert pushed back saying a lot of the details are relevant. a lot of people are scratching their heads. he said he wasn't intentionally trying to mislead people. >> it's concerning that he's mixing up details. there's a real question there about why that's happened? a lot of people have a lot of questions about that. >> yeah. >> that's what we've got today. you guys are waiting for more, i can see. >> we always are. >> i'll be back in the it 30
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hour. >> a great more perfect union. you can watch vlad because he's a busy man on our 24-hour streaming cbsn. find it on cbsnews.com or the cbs news app. hurricane dorian strengthens as it heads to north carolina. we'll be back to talk with north carolina's mayor about his biggest worries. chocolate would be good... snacking should be sweet and simple. the delicious taste of glucerna gives you the sweetness you crave while helping you manage your blood sugar. glucerna. everyday progress those darn seatbelts got me all crumpled up. that's ok! hey, guys! hi mrs. patterson... wrinkles send the wrong message. sorry. help prevent them before they start with new downy wrinkleguard. that's better.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is a 7:56. a huge mess on i-80 in the east a that left police scrambling to catch chickens that escaped from a wrecked big rig. no major injuries. and the man accused of plowing at eight people in a sunnyvale crosswalk in april will be back in court. isaiah peeples is facing hate crime charges along with eight charges of attempted murder. the army veteran targeted two indian american victims he believed were muslim. residents and visitors with an parts of sonoma county will receive an emergency alert, but it is only a test. it is all in an effort to test disaster preparedness.
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it will be from 10 am to just after 11 am. we have news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com.
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omba t door, the eastshore freeway is completely shut down with all lanes at san pablo dam road because of the ongoing big rig crash. expect delays and use alternates in the meantime. the drive time is about 26 minutes from highway 4 to the macarthur maze. busy along highway 4 antioch to eastshore freeway, 57 minutes with a crash. a great start to the day and going to the afternoon, we catch some clearing and temperature is cooler from yesterday, 3 to 5 degrees cooler than yesterday and seasonal to just below average. let's check out eyes, 87 in concorde and livermore, 81 in san jose and 73 in oakland and
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68 for san francisco. we will continue to cooldown through the rest of the work week especially into the weekend.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is in south carolina hurricane dorian is lashing the city and threatening historic damage. plus, anthony's exclusive visit with andrew yang, "the apprentice" turned presidential candidate. and in our "more perfect union" series, how a man uses archery to turn kids into role models in their community. first, today's "eye opener" at 8. dorian is bashing the carolina coast after restrengthening into a category 3 hurricane. >> the rain is coming in sideways here in charleston. just a few moments ago the wind
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really picked up. >> you usually see giant container ships parked in here that have supplies and goods. obviously, they had to leave. >> three tornados have touched down in this area. one of them about 40 miles away in a farming community. >> more planes on the tarmac this morning than yet. every one of these aircraft is being used to deliver aid or pick up people. a category 3, winds to 115 miles an hour. movement is north and northeast it's go move away from the u.s. >> the president has been playing the role of meteorologist in chief, often at odds with his own government forecasters. >> for the last few weeks you have confused new hampshire for vermont, said bobby and jfk were assassinated in the late '90s. follow-up question, are you going nuts? >> look, the reason i came on the jimmy kimmel show is because i'm not.
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[ laughter ] >> this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. i'm anthony mason. tony dokoupil is in south carolina tracking hurricane dorian. gayle king is off. so jericka duncan and saturday co-host dana jacobson are with us. dorian picked up steam around and is moving along the southeast coast. the carolinas will get top winds of more than 80 miles per hour, a foot of rain, and the storm surge that could be close to seven feet. the latest track predicts dorian will make landfall in north carolina within the next 24 hours. as said, tony dokoupil leads our hurricane coverage from hard-hit charleston, south carolina. tony, what are you seeing there? >> reporter: seeing more wind, more rain. to give you a sense of the scale of dorian, off the coast right now it is, in terms of area, the size of south carolina and north carolina combined. just a short time ago we got a buoy reading showing waves up to
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23 feet. that is a major concern here in charleston because there is no doubt that dorian is picking up strength as it moves closer to shore. there is already a flash flood warning in effect here in charleston. heavy rains have knocked down trees and powerlines and the storm could cause more than 700,000 outages in the carolinas alone. duke energy says it has brought in resources from 23 states to respond. as soon as it is safe to do so. jerusalem a jam /* john mcca-- they have b bombarded by wind and rain along with jamie yuccas herself. what are conditions like now? >> reporter: we have just started getting some very, very strong gusts of wind and rain. these raindrops feel like ice pellets, if you have been up north during a winter storm. it's coming in sideways here. i want to show you what's happening. this is the atlantic ocean as you head into charleston. normally, there would be container ships full of goods
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docked at this dock. right now you can see the ships have gone out to shore. the coast guard has also reconfigured some of their vessels an gotten them out of the way with anticipation that this hurricane was going to come very close to charleston. as you were talking about, flooding is a big concern, and you can seeshe into these inlets and the low-lying areas, including marshes. the water is whipping into this area. we will continue to watch high tide a little bit later to make sure that local streets around flooded out. there are several that have flash flooding. tony. >> reporter: jamie, thank you. incredible pictures where you are. and where we are the boats behind me have heavy-duty nylon sails, but this this wind they are being torn like paper napkins. theres no doubt dorian is getting stronger as it makes its way towards the coast. earlier we spoke with the mayor of charleston and asked him what his biggest concerns are right now. >> we're concerned about the
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continued wind and flooding potential for today. thankfully, our citizens are staying put. i'm asking for everybody to stay indoors until this passes so everyone remains safe. >> reporter: you say thankfully the city zble citizens are staying put. 830,000 should get out of town. your people are staying. does that concern you? >> it's too late to evacuate. a number of folks left. a number of folks stayed. but they are hunkered down inside. we ask them to remain that way for the rest of today. today is dorian day in charleston. we have a number of reports on trees down and traffic lights out and that kind of thing. we have crews standing by to recover all those things, but we are also waiting for the weather to get better before we send them out. >> reporter: charleston is a unique city. it has a triple threat from dorian. the storm surge, the wind, the rain, and also the high tide. what concerns you the most as we
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head to high tide around midnight tonight? >> i was really worried about last night's high tide at 1:00 a.m. it wasn't as bad as had been predicted. they are predicting a nine-foot tide for 2:00 this afternoon. so we're concerned about that in conjunction with the rain. but if everybody just stays put, we'll be safe and then later today and tomorrow we'll be cleaning up and pumping out and getting back in business. >> reporter: all right. mayor john tecklenburg, thank you very much. glad to hear things are better than expected in charleston so far. you are keeping a close eye on it. >> come back soon. >> reporter: as we mentioned, dorian could make landfall in north carolina within 24 hours. north carolina is where we find our jonathan vigliotti. he is on carolina beach just south of wilmington. jonathan, good morning. >> reporter: tony, good morning to you. carolina beach is the front line for this storm. 20 hours ago, you could see a lot of the flooding starting to take place as those outer bands
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reach us. we have moments of relative calm like now followed by a lot of rain and heavy wind. i want to show you the biggest concern. it's the ocean. it's the storm surge. four to seven feet, that's higher than me, enough to flood in coastal community. that is why there is a mandatory evacuation underway. police telling people if you didn't evacuate, go up to the highest floor you have got and stay off the roads. tony. >> reporter: jonathan, thank you. and we should point out there is a massive search and rescue effort underway right now at this very moment in the bahamas. we will take you back to those islands to see the race to find survivors. we will also bring you some moving reunions. important to note that as well. at the moment boack to all of yu in new york to continue our coverage. >> thank you so much. remember you can keep track of hurricane dorian 24/7 and watch our streaming service cbs n or by
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there is much more news ahead. democratic presidential hopeful andrew yang knows he is an unconventional candidate. he tells anthony why tough talk about america's future is the right message to voters in a "cbs this morning" broadcast exclusive. voters in a cbs broadcast exclusive. e sensor with your reader, iphone or android and manage your diabetes.
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search and rescue efforts are intensifying in the bahamas this morning. the country's official death toll from hurricane dorian has risen to at least 20. our lead national correspondent david begnaud is in nassau, the capital of the bahamas. david, good morning. >> reporter: jericka, let me set the scene. we moved to this position of the airport. i want to show you what's going on inside of there. that's the triage area where doctors and nurses ready to receive people being brought in with injuries. yesterday it was literally a continuous, almost every five minutes an ambulance was pulling up taking someone else to the hospital. some people don't need to go to the hospital, so they are taken on to a bus. as one woman said, where do i go? i don't have a place to seleep. thousands of people are missing. this website is very helpful. dorian people search dot-com. you can find the status of a loved one or add a missing
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person to the database. very valuable. people are continuing to show up at the airport. more rescue crews today than we saw yesterday. thousands of people right now are waiting in the devastated areas, anthony, to be rescued. they are still waiting. >> yes, so many people trying to be reunited. thank you. ahead, presidential hopeful andrew yang tells us about his proposal to give every american adult $1,000 a month. you're watching "cbs this morning." you're watching "cbs this morning." a paraíso. meet sergio. and his daughter, maria. sergio's coffee tastes spectacular. because costa rica is spectacular. so we support farmers who use natural compost. to help keep the soil healthy. and the coffee delicious. for future generations. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee roasters.
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ahhh, you're finally building that outdoor kitchen. yup - with room for the whole gang. ♪ ♪ see how investing with a j.p. morgan advisor can help you. visit your local chase branch. ♪ in houston the next democratic presidential debate will take place a week from today. the ten candidates who made the cut include nine politicians and andrew yang. the 44-year-old entrepreneur who made millions running a test prep company had zero political experience, but his campaign took off with his proposal to give every american adult
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$12,000 a year. his early success has surprised almost everyone, except yang himself. in a "cbs this morning" broadcast exclusive for our road to 2020 series, we met up with yang at his spartan campaign headquarters here in new york city. >>? national headquarters? >> yes. this is it. where the magic happens. >> reporter: this feels like a modest space from which to launch a national campaign. >> it was more modest than this before. this is actually like -- >> reporter: now it feels plush? >> yeah, this is with furniture and stuff. >> reporter: on the walls headlines chart the course of the campaign. >> when we started in early 2018 i was a longer than long shot. >> reporter: but andrew yang thrives on being underestimated. you actually thought you could get somewhere with this? >> well, i was apparently correct. >> reporter: in the first two debates you were given the least amount of actual speaking time. >> the opposite of donald trump is an asian man who likes math. >> reporter: you expect that to change this time?
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>> i do. but after the last debate we raised over $1 million in the 48 hours afterwards. so now i have developed a reputation for making the most of whatever time i get. >> do you -- >> reporter: his more than 200,000 unique donors have given an average of $25 apiece. many attract to his blunt assessment of america's future. how do you feel about the american dream? the idea of it. >> i love it. i lived it. my family immigrated to this country. >> reporter: do you still believe in it? >> i am a numbers guy. so the numbers say that you have a 50/50 chance of doing better than your parents if you were important in the '90s. that chance is 93% if you were born in the '40s for '50s. the american dream is dying by the numbers, and americans know it. >> reporter: his dark outlook is similar to president trump's, but he blames the rise of a.i. and automation. >> we automated away four
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million manufacturing jobs in michigan, ohio, pennsylvania, wisconsin, and if those states sound familiar, those are the swing states donald trump needed to win and did win. this is a straight automation story. immigrants are being scapegoated for economic problems they have little or nothing to do with. it's not immigration,et automation. >> reporter: and it will lead to widespread despair he writes in his book "the war on normal people," creating a hyper stratified society like something out of the "hunger games." some advisors have suggested you should be more optimistic in the way you paint the future of the country. >> yeah, i have botten that advice. that's true. i think most politicians aresode on the fact the american people don't want to hear hard truths. i think that's wrong. >> reporter: they want to hear it straight? >> yeah, they want solutions, not happy sound bites. >> reporter: yang's solution the cornerstone of his campaign is the freedom dividend. he would pay every adult $1,000
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a month, no strings attached, and funded in part with a 10% value-added tax on business production. the tax foundation, which is a conservative think tank, says they don't think your math adds up. that you couldn't pay for a benefit that significant with the funds that you are talking about raising here. >> they are correct that it's not that revenue pays for it dollar for dollar, but what they overlook is that if you put this money into american's hands, the money doesn't tdisappear. it goes back in the consumer economy. >> reporter: the argument is it would discourage people from working. would to make more sense to guarantee people jobs like bernie sanders is promising? >> the first thing is that there is no data that shows that us getting $1,000 a month would reduce work levels overall. in terms of bernie's federal jobs guarantee, i understand the spirit of it, but in practice it would be very, very difficult to
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implement and manage. imagining that all americans want to work for the federal government is something that bernie might think is in our minds, but that's not the case when i talk to most americans. >> reporter: yang says he doubled his campaign staff of about 30 last month and will soon double it again. if for some reason you were not to get the nomination, would you consider -- you're laughing. >> i know. i like that. >> reporter: would you consider a third-party candidacy? >> my job is to help get donald trump out of office. i would do nothing to increase the odds of him sticking around. i think a third-party candidacy would do just that. >> i is a long shot, polling between 2% and 4% nationwide. so he has a lot of work to do. he has put some ideas on the table that most politicians have not wanted to talk about. >> very bold. >> very bold. and he is betting that americans feel that things are not getting
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better and want to hear about that. >> it's also interesting to see if some of those ideas spark other ideas within other candidates as we move forward as well. >> yeah. he wants the idea of a unique -- i mean of a universal income to actually become policy. he said he doesn't want it to just be talked about. he wants it to happen. >> never heard anything le acte household his role in "lord of the rings" trilogy. now he is returning to a new fantasy "carnival row." we will talk to him about the show's made-up world which touches on real issues we face today. your local news is next.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. good morning. it is 8:25. protests are planned in san francisco in an effort to improve conditions for so- called gig workers. as part of a broader event called national raise days. it takes was also the headquarters of the insta cart post mates and door dash. it is official, the california vaccine bill decide to crackdown on doctors that sell bogus vaccine exemptions has landed on the governor's desk. the state senate approved it yesterday. today is the day the music died. a longtime bay area radio station k fog will change its format overnight. it will revert to airing a
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simulcast. it will pay tribute to the morning host dave mori. news updates throughout the day on favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com.
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good morning. it is eight at 27. we start with mass transit, caltrans delays, 84 minutes behind schedule. due plan for that. the freeways on to bed, still slow on the northbound side, but troubles for caltrain. bart will provide aid.
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make sure you show your ticket if you take bart instead of caltrain. capital corridor on time. is he on eastshore freeway commit. a closure westbound 80 at san pablo dam road. an earlier trouble spot involving a big rig has the freeway shut down for most of the the morning. highway 4 out of antioch into pittsburgh, also to the ultimate pass around 580, lots of stop and go conditions in the traffic alert continues in san pablo. it is a great start, a great start to the day. areas of fog and patchy drizzle. you can see that on the sfo camera. the wet camera due to the drizzle. that's the kind of onshore flow kicking in for us. temperatures as we go through the day will be cooler. we are talking about 3 to 5 degrees cooler committee yesterday. seasonal if not below average for this time of year. livermore and fairfield, 81 in san jose and 73 in oakland and 68 for san francisco.
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we should catch some clearing. temperatures will be cooler friday into the weekend. morning."
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it's time to bring you some of the stories that are the talk of the table this morning. that's where we each pick a story we would like to share with each other and with all of you. dana, start us off. >> you saw crazy rich asians, right? fantastic movie. good news, we have two sequels but a female writer for the hit movie has quit the sequel, both of them. the reported reason is she was offered about a tenth of the pay offered to her co-writer who is a white male. it's adele limand peter sherely. he was offering $800,000 to $1 million. he offered to give her a portion, about half of his fee. she said no thank you, and she brought up the opinion that
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women of color are often overlooked. as far as women have come and people of color have come, it's still happening. >> $100,000 is very nice, but $800,000 is a lot better. >> certainly is. >> good for her for being in a position to take stand. because that's the other thing. a lot of times you don't have the option. >> you don't feel you have the power. >> the more people who do it, the more we're reminded we should be equal. >> britain's princess charlotte started her first day of school today, and she arrived with her look at her with her brother, the head teacher said in a statement released back in may, we are delighted that the duke and duchess of cambridge have decided that princess charlotte will join her brother prince george. >> wonderful accent. >> i have to admit, i'm a little, you know, i have a certain affinity for this story because my daughter went back to school today. little journey. there she is. she started first grade. >> so cute.
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>> excellent. >> i saw that also in the story that kate middleton wasn't able to make george's first day because she was going through morning sickness. heart goes out to the little kids when they can't be there, but i'll be picking her up from school. she's excited about that. anthony. >> my story, elle magazine announced the theme of its october issue, women in music. on the cover, billie eilish, camila cabello, and lizzo. each artist played a word suggestion game with the magazine where they were given one word and had to link it to the first song that popped in their heads. watch. ♪ dreamgirls boy we'll never hurt you ♪ ♪ wdreamgirls boy we'll always ♪ got some chicken grease in my throat. i was eating chicken earlier. >> that's lizzo, of course. who we featured yesterday on talk of the table because she
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has the number one song in the country this week. elle is very smart about who they picked because billie eilish had the number one song two weeks ago, camila cabello three weeks ago. take a look at that if you have a chance because they're great, all of them. >> rock stars, just female rock stars out there. >> all right, actor orlando bloom got his big break playing the elf in the lord of the rings trilogy. now he returns to fantasy in amazon's new series carnival row with actress cara delevingne that takes place in a victorian world where humans and mythical creatures live together. bloom stars as a detective. delevingne plays a fairy from the past who knows his secrets. >> the raven. i know you know better. >> what do you care? give it to me. you're without that flag. >> i'll arrest you. >> just think of all the things
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i could tell them. they don't know, do they? they don't know the truth about you. >> are you threatening me? >> maybe. or maybe it's -- >> you would never. you'd never tell them. >> do you really want to take that chance? >> orlando bloom is with us. good morning. you were just saying it's dark. it's heavy, but it takes you back to where we all remember you from in the ginning, this idea of fantasy in lord of the rings. what attracts you to this type of movie or role or series setting. >> when i read the script, and lord of the rings was really my start, i felt whilst this was a fantasy, i had never seen a world like it. there's a wonderful kind of theme running through the story. we kind of look at the -- there's a social commentary on the refugee migrant crisis. i play a detective who is investigating the murder of a show girl on carnival row.
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the fay were our kind of -- they really represent the migrants and refugees and cara plays a fairy, and there are all kinds of mythical creatures, and they represent these refugees and migrants really coming to the burb, which is for all intents and purposes like our london, and looking for sort of a safe place. and they get sequestered into carnival row, and their lives play out there. and so yeah, it's a sort of dark, interesting noir story and it's a love story, and it's nice to be a part of something that comment a little bit on what's going on in the world. >> your first tv starring role. >> it is. >> in a tv series. is it different work in any way? >> you know, honestly, the way they're making tv today, it really isn't. i mean, the sets were phenomenal. the biggest, we shot in prague, the location was fantastic. but they had a back lot, and it was just so detailed.
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and vivid and real. and as an actor, that's what you want. you want a great stage so you can give a performance. >> not in front of a green screen if you can help it. >> they spared no expense, so it doesn't -- i think there's sort of been -- sort of felt a little bit like tv was like a little brother to movies at some point, and i think that's kind of, with the way people stream and consume content these days, we're on amazon prime now, as you know, and like you can stream eight hours and it felt like an eight-hour movie. like a big movie. >> you said that this character that you play is very dark, and he has secrets. and we see that in the first episode that there's something he's not willing to share just yet. how do you relate to this character when you think about someone who has these secrets or how much do we all sort of relate to someone who doesn't want to share whatever it is that's bothering them and not allowing them to be vulnerable? >> yeah, i mean, look. i think with phyllo, he's an interesting man. he was institutionalized his
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whole life. he was born in an orphanage and raised into the army, and then he becomes a detective. you know, this secret he has, i sort of like, and as it evolves, you'll see. i can't give it away, obviously, but for me, it was like his superpower, because it enables him to become this empathetic being and to have a certain sense of empathy and compassion for that plight, which i think is such a wonderful thing to be able to do in a show. >> can i take you a little off the show, because we have to mention katy perry here. >> yeah. >> your fiancee, the two of you have such an amazing relationship that a lot of people see play out a little bit. respect for each other, support of each other, but recently, you were on a show. she called in. >> she did. >> to sing. you didn't know it was her. >> you were judging impersonations. >> and someone was supposed to be impersonating your fiancee.
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>> you didn't know it was her. did you take heat for that? >> listen first. ♪ i liked it ♪ the taste of her cherry chapstick ♪ >> yeah. >> that was great. really well done. not convinced, but -- >> i do live with that voice, true. >> hi, katy perry. >> really got thrown under a bus on that one. really did. >> well, i will say that she is incredibly good at doing a faux english accent. you're not bad yourself, by the way. >> thank you. >> so i was really thrown. i was like -- but it's nice. >> your show runner suggested she might come on the show in a cameo. have you talked to her about that? >> no. >> you can throw her under the bus. >> but she would be fantastic. she could be amazing. >> thank you so much for being with us. carnival row is streaming on amazon prime video. one man is using a bow and
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arrow to help people in this community. ahead in our series, a more perfect union, how his archery skills are hiya! queen of all knowledge here reminding you creeps out there on the internet hack, scam and trick savvy cyber users every day! but we can fight back! it's as easy as i.c.3. if you're a victim of online crime, don't give up!
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visit ic3 - the fbi's internet crime complaint center. your tips help the fbi track down cyber criminals around the world. report your crime to www.ic3.gov today. the ross fall fashion event has all the looks for way less... ...so your new outfit... whoa! ...can just keep getting better. yes! oh, yeah, you're getting that. or you can find that one dress... - yes! - yesss. ...that's perfect for you... ...or that jacket that says, "check me out," at a price that makes you say... check this out! that's yes for less. get the brands you love and save 20 to 60% off department store prices. at the ross fall fashion event. on now.
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at the ross fall fashion event. isn't about chicken nuggets and taco tuesdays. it's about bows and arrows and one man's desire to help students aim for greatness. >> this was your first, that was your second, that was your third. not bad at all. >> larry brown has dedicated his life to archery. >> can you describe the feeling you had when you first pulled back an arrow? >> my father, one day, he took myself and my two brothers out to a garbage dump in queens. got a cushion and taught us how to shoot. that's how it started. i have been doing it ever since. >> you didn't have a coach? >> no. >> he wasn't just missing a coach. his bow was carved from a
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neighborhood tree. >> he said i was crazy. bows and arrows, who shoots bows and arrows. i'm in the backyard, and the next thing i knew, i had other kids wanting to learn how to shoot. >> growing up in a tough queens neighborhood, brown's skill launched him into the ivy league, as head coach of the woman's archery team at new york's columbia university. >> columbia had 14 students for four years. varsity, ncaa division i, the whole nine yards. when i went to tournaments, i didn't see black and brown children. i said, you know what, i'm in my 50s now. let me make a change here. >> it was a big change. brown stepped away from columbia and went back to his roots in the public school system. teaching archery basics to hundreds of new york city children. >> put your bow in here. >> it wasn't about a job. it was about a mission. and that's what made it much more comfortable for me to do. and i have been doing that for now going on 16 years. >> brooklyn native dallas jones
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is one of brown's prized pupils. >> drop it down just enough so it went dead center. >> so you first came here when you were 10 years old. now you're 16, and you're nationally ranked. >> yes. >> now you're getting ready to compete for a spot on the united states olympic archery team. >> yes, sir. i can tell it's going to be a fun experience. i'm not going to try to put too much stress on myself. archery is about having fun. if i don't have fun, no point in doing it. >> dallas jones. >> jones is the first african-american in history to win a u.s. archery tournament and has his eyes fixed on competing in the 2020 olympics in tokyo. >> do you see yourself not only as a pioneer but also as a role model? >> i surely hope so. i can be a role model to anybody else that didn't know really too much about the sport. i surely hope i can get more people into the sport, especially people of color. and not just to section it off. i want to get everybody to the sport. >> when you see how successful
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dallas has been, what goes through your mind? >> the same joy and happiness, to answer your question straight up, but the success that i see with him, i also see in children who don't get as far as he did. but they came through the program and they learned from it. one of my students started the program here in brooklyn at 11. she just got her mastered degree. so they both rose to the top. different fields, but they came through the same channel. >> even or odd? >> even. >> brown's teachings impact students well beyond the bow and arrow, imparting wisdom they can carry with them even off the range. >> the greatest reward is them. outside of a medal, outside of getting paid, outside of all the external attributes, the true growth is the reward of a living person doing what you taught them to do and it changes their
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lives. >> dallas is looking beyond the olympics, setting his goals to make the olympic team three times at least. >> that's what i love about sports. no matter what sport it is, that discipline people learn at such an early age. >> can't say it enough times, a great teacher is such an important thing. >> the school is center shot archers. he teaches in a basement of a school cafeteria, but the kids all flock to this. little brown and black kids, and that's just not common in archery. it just isn't in this country. >> as we talk about all the time, you just need to see one person who looks like you doing something you wouldn't have expected to open that door. >> i love larry brown started in a garbage dump in queens. >> did you do it? >> i did. i was terrible. arrows went all over the place. people were running. >> thanks, vlad. on today's "cbs this morning" podcast, james mattis discusses what makes a successful leader in his new book. he writes about his experience
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rising from a marine corps recruit to a four-star general. listen on your favorite podcast platform, and before we go, tony reflects on the personal toll for people impacted by hurricanes. that's when we come back.
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before we go, the people i have talked to here in south carolina and the pictures of the destruction in the bahamas remind me of the long-lasting impacts hurricanes can have on a community. hurricane hugo destroyed my late stepfather's home on st. thomas back in 1989. three years later, hurricane andrew, a massive category-5 storm, destroyed my childhood home in homestead, florida. we were lucky. we had moved just a short time
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before. and so we watched on tv as our neighborhood emerged in images of near total destructio trees, landmarks i had known by heart as a kid. hurricanes have that kind of power. they break time into before and after. and so as people on the coast wake up this morning, whether their homes have been damaged or not, their lives and their memories may be changed forever. that's what these storms can do. that's how they stay with us. they mark not only the land but time. anthony. >> that's such a good point, tony. they make you remember. they really do, and they're landmarks in their own way. >> all right, great work down there today, tony. thank you, and everybody else down there with you. we'll have more tomorrow. this does it for us. tune in to cbs evening news wit. we'll see you tomorrow on "cbs this morning" with continuing hurricane coverage. bye-bye.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. good morning, five minutes before 9:00. we have a big mess on i-80 in the east bay that left police scrambling to catch chickens that escaped from a wrecked big rig. it was reported around the 3:30. no major injuries to humans. a huge cache of stolen art from the los angeles area in the 1990s has just been found. more than 100 pieces were recovered including two picassos and a jewel on marrow. in a picture, also a picture a letter oeon fy
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get tht fear, the dubbs golden ale. the can is reminiscent of the old golden state jerseys from the 90s. we have news updates on all of your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com. aetna takes a total approach to your health and wellness with medicare advantage plans designed for the whole you - body, mind and spirit. that means aetna is helping you get ready to be the best
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grandmother the world has ever known. we simplify medicare by connecting you to the right coverage,atterst. aetna medicare solutions. welcome back. 857, busy on the roadways and for mass transit. bart is on time.
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we are dealing with caltrain and capitol corridor delays. capital corridor train number 524 is five minutes behind schedule. caltrain had an earlier incident involving a trespasser on the tracks. the trains are recovering. check the schedule heading out the door. 101 is busy for folks. delays on mass transit. westbound eastshore freeway continues to be a busy ride from an earlier trouble spot. 54 minutes highway 4 to macarthur maze. all lands shut down westbound 80 at san pablo dam road after the big rig accident we mentioned earlier. and gray start to the day. patchy drizzle along the coast. as we go through the afternoon, because of the onshore flow in the seabreeze, temperatures will be cooler running about 3
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to 5 degrees cooler than yesterday but seasonal if not below average for this time of year. the highs today, 87 in concorde and livermore, fairfield, 81 in san jose and 73 in oakland and upper 60s in san francisco.
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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, everybody. welcome, welcome, welcome to "let's make a deal." wayne brady here. two people-- let's make a deal, shall we? you, right there, lori. come on over here, lori. and the mardi gras... yes, christina, on the end. everybody else, have a seat. welcome to the show.

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