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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 4, 2019 7:00am-9:01am PST

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several days. hope you're off to a good start on this monday morning. your next local update at good morning to you our viewers in the west, and welcome to "cbs this morning." i'm gayle king with anthony mason and tony dokoupil. whistle-blower testimony? the unnamed official who revealed the phone call at the heart of the impeachment inquiry says he'll answer republicans' questions. travelers murder mystery. a missing husband and wife from new hampshire are found in a shallow grave in south texas. why the manhunt for the killers could go international. safety in the sky. first on "cbs this morning," we take a test flight to show a new automatic landing system that could save lives at the touch of a button. and punk rock pioneer. op has perform way for more than 50 years.
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he tells us how his lust for life is changing with age. >> age will do that to you. it's monday, november 4th, 2019. here's today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> it's a phony scam. it's a hoax. and the whistle-blower should be revealed. >> the president rails against the anonymous whistle-blower. >> reporter: democrats are expected to start releasing transcripts of the closed door interviews in the impeachment inquiry as early as today. >> reporter: president trump is pointing fingers at california's governor for the condition of the state's wildfires and is threatening to cut aid. >> the governor doesn't know -- he's like a child. he doesn't know what he's doing. mcdonalds' ceo has stepped down after engaging in a sexual relationship with an employee. a manhunt underway after two murder suspects escaped from a california jail. >> this is not the first time that somebody escaped. makes you wonder how is it possible. >> reporter: another horse has died at the santa anita park following a leg injury.
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>> it's the 37th horse death since last december. >> reporter: protests in hong kong turned bloody. a man slashed several people and bit off part of a politician's ear. all that -- >> a philadelphia skyscraper springing a major league. part of a fire system test went terribly wrong. thousands laced up for the marathon. kenyan runners won the men's and women's races. and all that matters -- >> reporter: it took nine weeks but the new england patriots are no longer undefeated. >> recovered by the ravens. streaking down the sidelines -- touchdown, ravens! on "cbs this morning." >> football's loose -- what happened here? [ cheers ] another epic disaster for the jets. >> well it finally happened -- the miami dolphins won a game. >> close to the end zone -- it is caught for the miami touchdown! >> the dolphins were ecstatic. finally getting something to celebrate. >> how does it feel?
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[ cheers ] this morning's "eye opener" is presented by brought to you by toyota -- let's go places. >> really a tale two of cities. epic disaster for the jets -- yay in miami. all right. wow, wow, wow. welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with this -- a government whistle-blower who triggered the house impeachment inquiry is now offering to answer questions from gop lawmakers. president trump repeated yesterday that the person's name should be revealed. republicans on capitol hill have also been demanding that that official come out in the open. >> democrats say the whistle-blower's original tip about a phone call between the president and ukraine's president has been backed up by on-the-record sources. in two recent polls nearly half of americans support impeaching and removing the president from office. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. what exactly is the whistle-blower offering? >> reporter: he is offering to answer in writing questions put
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to him directly by republicans on the house intelligence committee. they would not have to go through the democrats. he would answer under oath, under threat of perjury. an unusual arrangement designed to try to protect his identity. but that's not what the president wants. >> you know who it is. you just don't want to report it. >> reporter: returning from a new york trip yesterday, president trump accused democrats and the media of withholding the whistle-blower's identity. >> the whistle-blower should be revealed because the whistle-blower gave false stories. some people would call it fraud. i won't go that far, but when i read it closely, i probably would. >> reporter: democrats called that a red herring, meant to distract from mounting evidence. >> witness after witness after witness says, yes, i was there,
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i listened, those are the facts. that's what's critical in any trial. you wouldn't call the whistle-blower -- what you call is the people who were actually there. >> reporter: the whistle-blower's lawyer told cbs news his client would be willing to answer republicans' questions under oath in writing. >> we're talking about the removal of the president of the united states. >> reporter: gop house leader kevin mccarthy was skeptical. >> that official could come down to the basement, but he needs to answer the questions. >> reporter: lawmakers have requested to hear today from four trump administration officials including the top national security lawyer at the white house, john eisenberg. last week the president's top ukraine aide testified that eisenberg told him not to tell anyone outside the white house about the president's july phone call in which he urged his ukrainian counterparts to investigate the bidens. >> president trump never said to the ukrainian president "do this and you'll get your aid," it's simply is not here. >> reporter: counselor to the president kellyanne conway defended the call but wouldn't say whether there was a quid pro
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quo. >>er notably won't say -- you very notably won't say yes or no. quid pro quo yes or no? >> i said -- i don't know whether aid was held up. >> nancy, the democrats are expected to release the transcripts of the closed door testimonies this week. who else could we see testify? >> reporter: well, there are nearly a dozen depositions scheduled for this week. we expect many of them to be no-shows. for instance, cbs news has confirmed that four officials from the office of management and budget will not be attending. omb is the department at the white house that would have handled the holdup of military aid to ukraine. an official from omb calls the inquiry a, quote, sham impeachment process. former national security adviser john bolton is also scheduled to appear on thursday. witnesses have said he opposed the administration's pressure campaign on ukraine, but it's
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still not clear whether he is going to show up either. >> nancy, thank you so much. the 2020 presidential election is now less than a year away. and the democratic nomination, that race is still wide open. a recent poll from the key state of iowa shows the top democratic candidates are all bunched up at the top. elizabeth warren, bernie sanders, pete buttigieg, and joe biden all within a few points of each other. ed o'keefe is in des moines. good morning. what does this poll say to you? >> reporter: well, what's happening here is a little bit different than what's going on nationally because buttigieg is starting to spend millions of dollars he raised over the summer. the biden campaign points out they've raised millions, as well, and they've just launched an advertising campaign they
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think will help. one thing we noticed over the weekend, the candidates are starting to go after each other a little more. it started with something mayor buttigieg had to say. >> you see it's coming into focus, you and warren? >> yeah, that didn't come out right. >> not before other candidates shot down his theory. >> it is naive of him. anyone that wants to be a leader needs to be able to walk and talk with every community. candidates like julian castro says the party needs a nominee to get them to the polls. >> if that permanent can't kw t connect with those communities
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they should not be at the top of the ticket. >> the top issue of conversation is health care, and it would divert the privately paid health care companies. >> the billionaires can afford it and i don't calm them middle class. >> moderates dismissed the plans saying that they should be building on obama care. even bernie sanders says he would raise taxes but that ultimately costs could go down and so would your co-pays and premiums. >> president trump is threatening to cut off ld funding. a major wild fire is 70% con taped this morning. galvin newsystmnewsome is calli
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them to get their act together. >> a manhunt is under way for two accused murderers that escaped from a central california jail. they broke free yesterday from the monterey county jail. >> this jail holds about 500 inmates. this morning the manhunt continues for two of them. they are leading this investigation and that the point it is unclear how they managed to escape. bot of them had been in this jail since 2018. they are considered incredibly dangerous. the alarm was first raises whed they did not show up for roll call if is unclear if they were working together or alone.
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salazar is 20 years old accused of killing one man in 2017. both inmates were set to appear before a judge early next year in is not the first time that an inmate has escaped from this jail. five years ago an inmate escaped after crawling through the ventilation duct. he was later captured. police are saying if you see these inmates please stay at a safe distance and call 911 immediately. >> texas police are going to release information on a double murder. james butler iii and his wife were found in a shallow grave on padre island, texas. what can you tell us about this
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couple? >> gayle, good morning, this is the beach they were last scene. the couple had been traveling the u.s. in an rv since 2018, but in mid october they abruptly went silent and their truck and trailer allegedly crossed the u.s./mexico border without them. >> more than 100 people gathered for a vigil in new hampshire, a small town where james and michelle butler fell in love in 2013. debra is james's older sister. >> they were always together and smile aeng hand having fun and what they loved. >> they had been on a cross country road trip in a used rv trailer taking odd jobs along the way to make ends meet. they were likely headed to
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florida next to sell christmas trees. >> they never missed phone calls. >> most recently they were on a beach on padre island. police say their bodies were found buried in the sand dunes on october 27th, several days after they were found missing. but the truck and rv trailer they were traveling in was nowhere to be found. investigators say both vehicles were last seen on surveillance video between october 20th and 21th crossing the u.s./mexico border. the driver was not james or michelle. police have not named a possible suspect. >> it is not very often that we have a mobile crime scene if the crime was committed say in the trailer. >> john matthew social security a former dallas police officer. he says u.s. authorities will have to work closely with mexican authorities to get answers. >> they will be looking for bullet casings, any evidence
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they tie back to the suspect. this is a horrific crime and we certainly want to bring those individuals into custody. >> the couple had five grown children and one grand child. james butler's birthday was over the weekend and he would have turned 49 years old. investigators are not saying how the couple died, but they're having a press conference later this morning. >> we'll be listening in, meg, thank you very much. >> mcdonald's is under new leadership this morning after ousting their ceo for having a relationship with an employee. steve easterbrook said he is stepping down as the chief executive of the largest fast food chain and leaving the company's board. this is a consensual relationship, so what happened here. >> they characterized the relationship in question as
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consensual, but it is against company policy. they say he demonstrated poor judgment. he called the relationship a mistake and added i agree with the board it is time for me to move on. mcdonald's saw steps toward modernization including investments in artifical intelligence. he touted 17 consecutive quarters of growth since he became ceo in 2015, but international labor group fight for 15 said that tenure is blemished by 50 plus sexual harassment problem that company executives have refused to address. mcdonald's previously announced a restaurant training initiative to promote a successful, safe workplace. it was set to begin last month. east
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easterbrook is succeeded by the former president of mcdonald's usa. just another example of when you're the company boss -- >> the boss, yeah. >> -- you can't necessarily have those types of relationships. >> very abrupt. thank you. the death of another horse at california's santa anita racetrack is raising new safety concerns about the sport. in saturday's $6 million breiters cup classic, the horse mongolian groom broke his left hind leg and had to be euthanized. this is santa anita's 37th horse death since december. this problem keeps getting bigger. don dahler joins us. >> reporter: the horse racing deaths are a national problem. it's not just here. inconsistent track surfaces, the use of performance enhancing drugs, as well as overracing horses, all those things contribute.
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there's not a uniform regulatory body that oversees the sport. the exciting breeders' cup racings, the world's unofficial world championships, had gone smoothly until saturday's final race. nearly 68,000 fans cheered a stirring win and soon realized that 4-year-old mongolian groom had suffered a serious injury near the end of the race. track officials and vets rushed to the injured horse, but after consultation with several mongolian groom was euthanized. protesters gathered outside the track yesterday demanding reforms for the sport that sees an estimated two or three times as many deaths in the u.s. as other countries. after the race, peta responded forcefully, calling for the suspension of all trainers and veterinarians of horses who died, pending full investigations, among other reforms. >> we really have to transform the way we've been racing. >> reporter: last week we spoke with veterinarian dione benson
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who was hired to investigate santa anita after they closed this last spring. her group oversees new medication restrictions and is hoping to bring new technology to scan for hidden injuries. additionally the track has a new drainage system. it hasn't stopped deaths entirely, but they have slowed. the research says something along the lines of ten horses a week die at racetracks around the country. is that just a part of the industry that people who don't follow horse racing don't understand? >> i don't know that they need to understand it. we need to get better. if we can get the rest of the country on the same page as we are at santa anita, we can improve that number. >> reporter: advocates are urging congress to create a national racing authority, kind of like baseball, to regulate the sport. the centers for disease control and prevention is investigating a multistate outbreak of salmonella and its link to ground beef.
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ten people in six different states have been infected so far. eight were hospitalized. one person died in california. investigators have not yet identified a single common supplier. the cdc is now advising people to please cook your ground beef very thoroughly. if you're thinking of taking a burger break, popeye's will let you know -- >> the burger still outsells the chicken sandwich, just tel good monday morning. a chilly start to the day. grab the jacket or coat as you head out the dar. also areas of fog along the coast and along the golden gate gap. clear skies. enjoy the sunshine. daytime highs above average running at 80 in concord for a high. 70 in san jose. 72 san francisco. we'll keep the sunshine going
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with above average temperatures through the week.
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new ahead, we go flying with a ahead, we go flying with a new safety feature that can land a plane just by pushing a button. you're watching "cbs this morning." "cbs this morning" continues ♪ find everything you need to get together this holiday, with low prices and free shipping on millions of items at amazon. i'long before i had moderate with low prices and free shipping to severe rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader.
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this is a kpix5 news morning update. good morning. it is 7:26. tech giant apple pledging 2.5 billion for the housing crisis and it will sub size affordable housing. the fire knocked down a fire around 5:00 this morning on geary boulevard. crews say everyone evacuated successfully with now injuries to reports. dozens are without water. crew as working to cre store service.
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drivers are encouraged to avoid the area. now a check of traffic. >> we start out eastshore freeway where traffic is in full swing. that is gone, but the damage is done. a lot of brake lights coming out of the hercules into richmond. that is where you'll find the metering lights on and all approaches very heavy this morning. north 880 also, slow through oakland. traffic along the peninsula. an accident here. lanes are blocked because of that p. clearing a crash at highway 9 and 35. >> a chilly start. grab a jacket or coat as you head out the door. clear skies for many of us. we are watching that fog roll in. we'll sea plenty of sunshine and warm above average daytime highs. we'll stay dry through the week with sunshine and warm temperatures. 74 in oakland. 72 for san francisco. there we go with that extended
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it's 7:30. here's what's it's 7:30. here's what's happening on "cbs this morning" -- the truth and the facts. >> democrats schedule more impeachment hearings while republicans push for the whistle-blower to openly testify. >> we should have all the facts. the public deserves the facts. not something that's leaked. >> makes you wonder how is it possible. >> two prisoners held for killings escape in california. >> these guys were in jail for murder, so you have to consider them dangerous people. mcdonald's ceo steps down over a consensual relationship with an employee. plus, mo rocca of "cbs
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saturday morning" will be here with more mobituaries. >> i thought they didn't get the sendoff they deserved. man. >> and punk rock pioneer iggy pop drops a new album after half a century on stage. >> my skills are better than they were 20 years ago. i can handle a tune now. i wanted to do that. >> iggy pop. >> anthony, how old is he? >> 72. the man who invented the stage dive. >> and was doing them until last year. >> until he was 71. >> looks good. >> looking forward to that. welcome back, i'm tony dokoupil with anthony mason and gayle king. we're going to begin with this -- the trump administration proposing a controversial new rule that would allow faith-based adoption and foster organizations to deny their services to lgbtq couples. this would be a rollback of a 2016 move by the obama administration.
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many religious groups support the change, but critics say it's a license for discrimination. jan crawford is in washington. jan, good morning. tell us more about the reaction to this. >> reporter: gay rights groups say there's tens of thousands of children awaiting adoption and the rule would make fewer families available to them. the white house maintains this isn't about preventing the lgbtq community from adopting, it's about protecting religious organizations from having to choose between helping children and honoring their faith. >> it was the most incredible gift that i could have received. and just want to give that to someone else. >> reporter: as someone who is adopted, kerry ann hamilton always knew she would do the same when it came time to expand her family. she and her partner l.j. are in the early stages of the process. but a proposed rule y the department of health and human services would allow foster care and adoption agencies to reject lgbtq families on religious grounds. the move would also apply to
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other programs receiving federal grants, including those that help with hiv prevention or homelessness. >> what this rule does is it eliminates the number of willing and loving and safe families for children who are in need of homes. that to me is very troubling. >> reporter: proponents of the new rule dispute that claim. travis weber is with the family research council, a christian advocacy group. >> this really just allows a bigger pool of organizations and parents who could pick from an organization that aligns with their own belief and philosophy on the family and where the child should be placed. >> reporter: in a statement, the family equality council, an advocacy group for lgbtq families, said the rule will further limit the pool of loving homes available to america's 440,000 children living in foster care, and puts providers' interests and discriminating over the needs of youth in care.
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>> it's really unfair to call someone's long-held religious beliefs, to classify that as discrimination. it's important that the organizations have the ability to place these children and operate according to their convictions. >> reporter: 114,000 same-sex couples were found to be raising children in the u.s. in 2016. the reports show that same-sex couples are more likely than different-sex couples to be raising adopted children. >> i think this issue is really bigger than politics. this is about children, and we are supposed to protect these children, not implement rules that hurt them. >> now, the proposed rule could reportedly be published in the federal register as early as today. that would be followed by a 30-day comment period. gayle? >> boy, hope they are work something out there. thank you so much. breakthrough new technology can automatically land a small
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plane in an emergency. wow. ahead and first on "cbs this morning" -- we like when this happens -- we'll take you to the air to show how anybody, anybody on board can activate the feature. and if you're on the go, here's an invitation. subscribe to our podcast and get the day's top stories in less than 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we'll be right back. there's the amped-up, over-tuned, feeding-frenzy-of sheet-metal-kind. and then there's performance that just leaves you feeling better as a result. that's the kind lincoln's about. ♪ i didn't have to shout out i didn't have to get you a lift. and i didn't have to call your wife to meet you at the doctor. because you didn't have another dvt. not today. we discussed how having one blood clot puts you at risk of having another,...
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first on "cbs this morning," we're taking the sky first on "cbs this morning," we're taking the sky to show you a new safety feature designed to save lives. two plane crashes last week raised new questions about the safety of small planes. around 250 people die every year in small plane crashes.
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but new technology gives pilots and passengers the option of hitting what is basically a panic button to automatically land an aircraft. it's currently being certified by regulators. kris van cleave took a test flight. >> reporter: good morning. we are flying over kansas right now, and we're about to show you some brand-new technology that really could save lives. it is an emergency auto land feature. the button's right there. if something were to happen to our pilot here and i pushed it, it would get us safely on the ground at the nearest airport. >> emergency, emergency, emergency. >> reporter: that's a student . pilot calling for help in australia in august. >> we're going to need an ambulance. >> reporter: he made his first-ever landing after his flight instructor passed out. but often on a small plane, there's only one pilot. while crashes due to pilot incapacitation are relatively rare they've killed 269 people in the u.s. in the last ten years. >> when something happens to the pilot going forward, people
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live. and today there's a good chance that's not going to happen if you have an incapacitated pilot. >> reporter: garmin has designed new emergency auto land technology it hopes prevents crashes like that of professional golfer payne stewart. his private jet lost cabin pressure, knocking out the pilots. the new auto land system is designed to self-activist when there's been a prolonged period of no pilot activity. it could also prevent more common accidents, crashes like the one that killed john f. kennedy jr. where it's believed he got disoriented in weather and lost control. or where the plane is dangerously low on fuel. >> that would be a situation that we'd hope they'd push the button and get the airplane and passengers down safely. >> reporter: eric sargent is a test pilot. he took us up in the piper to try the system. how confident are you to land any time it's activated? >> very. if i put my family in here and they pushed the button, it would
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get them down safely. >> reporter: all they have to do is lift this, push the button? >> affirmative. >> emergency activated. >> reporter: it picks an airport factoring in weather, terrain, and the amount of fuel on board. it radios the tower, declares an emergency, and updates passengers on the approaching landing. the pilot can override the technology at any point. >> the emergency auto land system is controlling all flight functions. >> 500 feet to go. altitude -- >> reporter: the plane is completely flying itself. >> the plane is completely flying itself. you can see, hands off. >> reporter: with the runway in sight and sargent's hands off the controls, we're going in. >> this brings us to the center of the runway. >> reporter: for what turned out to be a smooth, hands-free landing. >> pretty much as good as a human pilot. >> reporter: it's going to be available first in certain new piper airplanes and expand to other new aircraft. the hope is that in the near future, it will be able to be added to existing aircraft as well.
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for "cbs this morning," kris van cleave, flying over kansas. >> wow. >> does that give you comfort, gayle? >> i've got mixed feelings. i'm very impressed they can do that. very impressed they can do that. but what are the other conditions that go along with that? i don't know. >> it's pretty amazing. i don't know how they do that. find an airport and land the thing. they turn around in the seat, say everything is okay and tap your knee. >> the weather was perfect. conditions were great. >> self-driving planes, self-driving cars, we're on the way. >> i'm sweating. >> thank you. vlad duthiers looking at the stories you'll be talking about today. what have you got? >> what's happening? a new study finds high school girls who play soccer face nearly the same risk for concussions as read
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>> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by kohl's. on presents for them - or something just for you! you can spend your kohl's cash on anything! you'll find new gifts at every turn - this holiday at kohl's.
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i've always been the ringleader. had a zest for life. flash forward: then ra kept me from the important things. and what my doctor said surprised me. she said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain and helps stop that joint damage. ask about enbrel, so you can get back to being your true self. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal, events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been some place where fungal infections are common or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. visit enbrel.com to see how yor joint damage could progress. enbrel. fda approved for over 20 years.
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you got an extra hou t you got an extra hour this weekend. just give us a few minutes of it. >> we don't ask for much. >> a tiny bit. good morning. >> good morning. >> happy monday. here are a few stories we think you'll be talking about today. airbnb is cracking down on so-called party houses following a deadly halloween shooting. five people were killed last thursday at a rental home in a wealthy san francisco suburb. police said more than 100 people had gathered for a party when gunshots suddenly erupted. so far there have been no arrests, and no motive has been revealed. the ceo of airbnb announced on twitter that the company is expanding manual screenings of high-risk reservations. it is also creating a dedicated party house rapid response team and taking immediate action against users who violate guest policy. >> this is tough because they rented the house saying they needed to get away from the wildfires and all the pollution. >> yeah. >> but what does a high-risk guest --
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>> i think it's very vague right now but, say, for example, you rent a house for one night and you need 15 or 20 people to be able to stay there, that might give a red flag off to administrators that you're planning a big blowout. >> when you rent a house, do you have to say how many people are staying there? >> you do. it's a violation if you don't tell them that. >> you just don't tell the truth. >> that's why they have a rapid response team. >> i worry when they say high-risk renters, it's young people, people of color. it's going to end up drifting into problematic directions. >> we'll have to stay on this. a new study into high school sports finds girls who play soccer suffer nearly as many concussions as boys who play football. researchers at north carolina found football had the highest concussion rate with 10.4 concussions per 10,000 practices or games. that is followed by girls' soccer with just over eight concussions per 10,000 athletic ex-pours. boys had a lower rate of 3.57 concussions. experts speculate girls have smaller, weaker necks than boys,
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that makes their heads more susceptible to trauma. they also say girls may more likely be able to report a concussion. >> more willing. >> a lot of those injuries come from heading the ball in soccer. >> right. >> pretty alarming. if you have a girl -- you know, who daughter who plays -- >> for sure. soccer, you can take the heading out and soccer's still soccer. you can't take the hits out of football without changing the game. >> true. celebrity astrologer celebrity walter mercado has died. he became a hit before becoming nationally syndicated. he had dramatic televised readings of horoscopes. he ended each broadcast with a kiss and a signature signoff to fans. take a look. [ speaking foreign language ] >> i love that. above all, lots and lots of love. >> that's a big flourish.
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the peak of his popularity in the '90s he had a radio show, a syndicated columnist and the daily segment -- >> he was a big deal. >> a fan told me he was the latino liberace. people loved him. >> yeah. loved those outfits, too. now to something that will make you smile. i absolutely adore this story. so a father noticed his young daughter came home with a jacket that didn't belong to her. so he started grilling her about it. take a look. >> where did you buy it from? >> from the store. >> and how much did you pay for it? >> five. >> five what? >> five -- five moneys. >> five moneys? >> yes. >> who else has a jacket like this? >> i don't know. nobody has this jacket like this. >> i think we have to return this jacket. >> she was doing a great job, little mila, at dodging some of the tough questions. it appears she may have taken the jacket from one of her classmates obviously. mila's parents made sure she returned the jacket to her
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rightful owner. she turned 3 yesterday. she's been getting so much love on social media. >> she's sticking with her story, though. >> she held up very well in the interrogation. >> she could train some people testifying before congress. >> exactly. they're saying she's using the finders-keepers statute. >> thanks, vlad. you can watch vlad on our 24-hour streaming service on cbs and find it on cbsnews.com or the cbs news app. ahead, the god father of punk rock, iggy pop, talks about his decades' long career and why he stopped stage diving at the age of 71 coming up on "cbs this morning." oh, he's terrific. excellent tennis player. bye-bye. i recognize that voice. annie? yeah! she helped me find the right bonds for my income strategy. you're very popular around here. there's a birthday going on. karl! he took care of my 401k rollover. wow, you call a lot. yeah, well it's my money we're talking about here. joining us for karaoke later? ah, i'd love to, but people get really emotional when i sing. help from a team that will exceed your expectations.
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%fo this is a kpix5 news morning update. good morning it is 7:56. metering lights remain on. a lot of slow and go conditions this minutes. across the upper deck, a few brake lights into san francisco. this morning a live look at the golden gate bridge. pretty foggy so careful as you work across the span, a 20 minute right. to go from the bridge into the southbound side of 101.
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highway 4 probably our best route 45 minutes as you work from antioch to hercules. highway 4 to themize. mary. >> okay. well, it is a chilly start so grab a jacket or coat as you led out the door. you won't need it this afternoon with the sunshine and warm temperatures. we're looking at clear skies for many of us although areas of fox along the coast and parts of the bay through the golden gate gap and you saw that with the traffic hit there. sun above average for this time of year today. staying dry all week long with sunny and warm conditions. upper 60s for the coes. low to mid 70s for the bay. upper 70s, low 80s inland. specific conditions, concord at 80. also 79 for san jose. 72 for san francisco. we'll keep this weather going with sunny skies, above average temperatures into the work woke
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and through the weekend. have a great day. stone. holy smokes, this place is huge! i'm on a budget and i was able to go to floor & decor, and save a lot of money. you will be blown away by this experience. the pros come here. i come here. if you love your wallet, and you love your home, you have to go. floor & decor. opening november 14th in milpitas, off the 880 freeway on north mccarthy blvd.
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it's monday, november 4th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm gayle king. the white house whistle-blower offers to answer republican questions and john dickerson of "60 minutes" on how impeachment could affect next year's election. >> i'm tony dokoupil. how you can beat seasonal depression after the return of standard time. >> i'm anthony mason. we'll talk with iggy pop, the punk rock legend trying something surprising after 50 years in music. first today's eye opener at 8:00. the government whistle-blower who triggered the house impeachment inquiry is offering to answer questions
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from gop lawmakers. >> the whistle-blower is offering to answer questions under oath directly from republicans, an unusual arrangement designed to protect this whistle-blower's identity. >> this jail holds about 800 inmates. this morning the manhunt continues for two of them. it's still unclear how they managed to escape. they are considered incredibly dangerous. >> this is the beach where james and michelle butler were last seen. the couple had been traveling the u.s. since 2018. >> both easterbrook and mcdan-month-old describe it as consensual. but it was said they demonstrated poor judgment. horse racing deaths are a national problem. advocates are saying perhaps part of the problem is there is not a uniform regulatory body that oversees the sport. >> let's go, boys. >> the nationals continue their world series celebration at the washington capitals game, riding the zamboni shirtless between
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periods. >> yeah. >> it's terrific to take off your shirt at a hockey game, i think. >> announcer: this morning's eye opener presented by toyota. let's go places >> that's a baseball body. doesn't look like a football body. kind of a dad bod. >> any ideas? >> no. >> going shirtless? >> no, i don't want to drive viewers away. we want them to stay. >> you never know. welcome back to "cbs this morning." the whistle-blower who's revelations led to the impeachment inquiry is making an offer to house republicans. the whistle-blower's lawyer tells cbs news his client is open to directly answering republican questions in writing and under oath. now, that would bypass democrats on the house intelligence committee in response to republican complaints but the top gop leader in the house said on "face the nation" yesterday that more is needed. >> i think if the whistle-blower should come forward in an open hearing, i think that individual
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should come before the committee. he could come down to the basement but he needs to answer the questions, we need an openness that people understand this. >> more closed door hearings are scheduled this week in the impeachment inquiry but it's not clear yet who will show up. former national security adviser john bolton was asked to appear on thursday. his lawyer tells cbs news he will not comply without a subpoena. the russian woman convicted of trying to infiltrate the nra to influence u.s. policy tells "60 minutes" she was never a spy. maria butina pleaded guilty to acting as a foreign agent and was sentenced to 18 months in prison. in her first u.s. interview since her arrest, butina told lesley stahl she never tried to interfere in the 2016 election on behalf of the kremlin. >> the u.s. government says that you were making connections with republicans so that you could influence u.s. policy and you were doing it slowly but
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deliberately. pwould be called social , that networking. it's pretty explicit that our two countries establish friendship between each other and i don't mean governments. i mean people. >> butina was released from a florida prison last month and deported to russia. we're on the road to 2020 this morning with less than a year now to go before the presidential election. polls show the nation remain starkly divided on impeachment. the latest fox news poll shows 49% of voters want president trump removed from office. 4% say he should be impeached but not removed and 41% oppose impeachment. but will the inquiry have any bearing on how americans vote next november? ed o'keefe is in iowa where the first in the nation caucuses will be held in less than three months. what are voters telling you about impeachment? >> reporter: well, good morning from new hampshire to mississippi, nevada to iowa, we spent last few days talking to
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voters about what they're expecting in the upcoming elections and like that polling they're mostly split but far they're far more concerned about issues other than impeachment. >> in washington they're consumed by impeachment. what do you think ought to happen on that issue? >> i think they're doing the exact right thing. i trust nancy pelosi and gathering more information. >> nancy pelosi has a desk full of things she could be working on. they're taking all their time with the craziness. >> i think it's a bunch of made up stuff. they're trying to impeach donald trump and have no grounds. he's broken no law. >> you're thinking about who to pick. what are the one or two most important issues for you? >> sure, climate change is one of the most important issues for me. i thinks that so certainly affecting every single american and every citizen of the world. >> raising the minimum wage because there are too many people working too many jobs. >> i definitely think education,
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a lot of candidates are talking about student loan forgiveness, the coster of higher ed. >> i can't think of anything in the united states that's going right, you know, in terms of it's all broken. >> the country can so polarized right now. people get angry. there's people threatening other people over politics. >> i'm not so sure that medicare for all is the right way to go. >> why not? >> there ought to be a safety net where people can't get insurance, there ought to be a place for them to go, a public option. >> how closely are you paying attention to this go round as opposed to maybe years past? >> i am definitely paying more attention to this process than i ever have in the past because i think it is so incredibly crucial. >> i want to hear where both sides are coming from because you can't make an informed decision just listening to one side. >> reporter: now from the people we spoke to still no clear consensus on who they're voting for and some want to hear from all of the kates. with 17 democrats and 4 republicans running for president, that means they'll
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have to do a lot of listening. >> lots of people talking. thank you very much, ed. "60 minutes" correspondent john dickerson is here with a look at what the impeachment inquiry means for the 2020 election. john, always good to have you here. >> thank you, gayle. >> for the first time a president is running for re-election who is also facing an impeachment inquiry. so is there a way that both sides can use this to their advantage? >> oh, sure, and they're gonna. there's upsides and downsides. for the democrats it's a chance, the upside to define the president, define what they think he did wrong. downside they look vindictive and look like they're warping an honored institution for the purpose of just trying to get him out of office. republicans, the problem for them, the downside for them they shred the traditional american values. you saw it in some of the defense of the president with alexander vindman, and when the president's defenders said he had dual loyalties that was going too far. they get a chance to define democrats through the
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impeachment process. when you have an unpopular president and this president is unpopular what you often try to do is basically tear down the other party and so it's an opportunity for republicans not only to defend the president but also to characterize the democrats. >> this is more partisan than after, john, which is what is striking. you go back to nixon, i think it was all but four republicans voted to move forward. 31 democrats with clinton who voted to impeach. no republicans on this recent vote. >> right. we are in a more tribal period where the structure of politics incentivizes people to close ranks. in nixon's time you had senators from parties whose voters voted for nixon to for president but were democrats so they had voted for them so voters were switching parties. you had split ticket voting. that's almost gone now and have an instance where you have voters who are much more trib tribally aligned and the media landscape is different. you have people going to their preferred media outlets seeking
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affirmation. >> look, the economy has been doing great. he says if you impeach me it's going to crash. how important is that >> that's a great argument because they can say something simply and he can say you may not like my methods but, hey, the economy is doing well so he's got a good argument. that's traditionally been a good argument but this is not a traditional president and we see a gap with the economy and how he's behaving as president. for democrats, their argue s to say, sure, the economy is downsides to a disordered presidency and here they are, a, b and c and that's their sort of key argument for the next year between now and the election. >> to follow up, isn't this so much bigger than the impeachment question? what is happening here. >> yes, what happens when you have an impeachment going on while there's an election there's a chance to say how do we want a president to behave? should they listen to experts or create their own foreign policy channel? how do they sort their prioritys? is the president paying attention to the most important
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thing in the world when he's talking to the ukraine president or is he focused only on his set of priorities which are different from the country's. those kind of debates about the larger role of the presidency are all on the table now. now, we can all get distracted by the food fight in impeachment or we can step back and say, what are the standards of a presidency, is this president exceeding those standards, falling below them and what are the costs and we've never had a chance to do that about the presidency. >> with the most significant point of debate between the democratic front-runners seems to be over health care, do you think that's going to be the deciding factor here in the -- >> it's a proxy debate in a way which is to say whether medicare for all actually is ever going to happen is not as important as i get a signal from a candidate who is showing me their commitment on that issue. when donald trump said the mexicans will pay the wall. that was never going to happen. his voters knew that would never happen but sends me a signal of how committed he is to that idea. that's what medicare for all is
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as a debate. what a democratic president will face when they come into office. let's imagine they get elected they will be elected as a restoration of the american president, a democrat. that will be a busy job. a lot to do. most of it overseas. the political landscape will have been wheaten by a year of politics. getting medicare for all passed through the senate or doing it even through reconciliation or some clever method is going to be extremely difficult because they're going to be so busy doing other things and politics will be a much even coarser place than it is now and the conversation they're having is by aapproximately for things less about what will happen. >> it will get for partisan before it gets less so. >> it's in everybody's interest to keep their bases aligned. >> john, thank you very much. never coarse, always fine. we appreciate it. after more than 100 years a shipwreck stuck in the rapids above niagara falls could be headed for a big plunge. moroc rocco is in our green
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we have much more heed including legendary rocker iggy pop out including iggy pop. the godfather of punk tells aus about the one thing he's given up. >> i haven't stage dived all year. i did 12 gigs.
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i would work the crowd, get in their faces but can't do that anymore. i did it up through last year. >> coming up, he looks back at more than 50 year career. you're watching "cbs this morning." . fact! coffee stains teeth. unlike ordinary whitening toothpaste, colgate optic white has hydrogen peroxide that goes below the tooth's surface for a smile that's 4 shades visibly whiter. colgate optic white. whitening that works.
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to lose fear, to create hope. we believe that it takes a village of over 200-thousand dedicated, passionate, driven medical and non-medical professionals to deliver on our belief in total health for all. we are kaiser permanente. thrive. after moren after more than a century stuck above niagara falls, a historic ship rec may be headed over the edge. this iron skow was grounded in the niagara rabids. it got stuck there in 1918 after a breaking away of a tug boat during a dredging operation. two men onboard were saved during a daring rescue, though, they were there overnight. the ship was lodged in that spot until it broke loose during a
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storm on halloween night. it flipped on its side and turned, moving about 150 feet closer to the falls. the lesson is the water always wins. >> it's amazing it stayed there as long as it did. >> as long as it did. >> yep. >> did you enjoy joy that extra hour of sleep? >> yep. >> daylight savings time may have brought you more than a little bit of extra sleep. we have more on how changing your clocks can negatively affect your monday and what you can do about that. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back.
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♪ in our morning rounds, we're taking a closer look at a potentially negative outcome of the end of daylight saving time, seasonal depression. nearly all of us wound our clocks back yesterday. when we fall back the sunrises
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and sets an hour earlier. that can disrupt our natural rhythm and cause the winter blues or the more severe seasonal affective disorder. psychiatrist dr. sue varma is here with how to avoid the possible impact. good morning, sue. >> good morning. >> how does a one hour swing have such a significant effect? >> our body clock relies on two important things, routine and light, and even a 15 minute change in our bedtime or wake time causes a major disruption, and what we're finding is it's not just this one day, right? we think that magically we wake up and we have an extra hour, but the shorter daylight hours leading up to it is particularly difficult for people who are prone to seasonal blues or affective disorder. >> and this is something that affects women more than men potentially? it's seasonal affective disorder? >> yes. and if you can believe it, four times as many women are affected than men. >> wow. why would that be? >> it's not entirely clear.
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we think women are more sensitive because of hormonal fluctuations in general. what we're finding is serotonin is lower. serotonin is important to decrease our irritability. it's noted with carbohydrate changes. they want to slemore, they want eat more and the opposite is happening in the springtime. >> how do you know it might not be depression ask just plain old winter time blues, what's the difference between the two? >> 5% of the population depending on what part of the country you live in will be affect bid seasonal affective disorder. the person is actually missing appointments, they're not able to get to things. they're avoiding people, they're procrastinating this has an impact on their jobs, they're drinking more, fighting more with their family members. the blues which 15 to 20% people might have is more of the hibernation where you don't feel like it but you're able to get the stuff done. >> what do you do to keep the blues or depression at bay? >> start early. people often who have seasonal blues get it year after year
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starting in fall. light boxes are a very common thing. do that under the care of a professional. exposure to daylight in the early morning hours between 7:00 and 10:00 a.m., if you can get 20 minutes outside, that's really important. what it does is it shuts the melatonin off. we think of sleep and sleep hygiene as something you only do at bedtime. you have to start in the morning. physical activity is really important, social support, limiting caffeine after 4:00 p.m. and exercising every day is really important. >> so settle a debate online. from a medical perspective, daylight saving, should it be done away with? >> daylight savings is great in the sense that it gives us more sunlight. that is really important to keep away sedentary lifestyles. >> except it's dark at 4:00. i do think that part of it. >> we need the longer daylight hours. even childhood obesity is linked to when we have shorter daylight. we need exposure to daytime to get people out, motivated, exercising, connected and not hibernating. >> all right, so maybe medicine might be on the side of getting rid of it. dr. sue varma, thank you very
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much. what do thomas payne, farrah fawcett and dragons have in common? they're all featured in mow raqqa's new book called this is a kpix5 news morning update. good morning. it is 8:25. we start off with a traffic alert on 85 in cupertino. southbound at least one lane is blocked for a serious injury accident. a lot of delays on the southbound side. you can see traffic backed up and in the red. slow from highway 17. drive times out of the south bay, 65 minutes so over an hour due northbound to the 101. sig fled on the southbound
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side. northbound 101. 17 minutes there. speaking of 280 southbound, reports of an accident here. motorcycle involved. injuries reported as well. mary. >> chilly start to the day. grab that jacket or coat as you head out the door. clear for many of us, but areas of fog along the coast and the golden gate gap. staying dry all week long. over 60s for the coast. low to mid 70s for the bay. in per 70s to low 80s inland. specifically locations, 80 for a high in fairfield and concord. 79 in livermore and for san jose. looking at 74 in oakland. and 72 for a high in san francisco. 76 in san rafael. 77 for moundview. high pressure in control for us. that will be the dominant weather. we'll see plenty of sunshine and those warm above average temperatures through the workweek and into the weekend. have a great monday.
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at cracker barrel, we're cooking up
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." it is nome welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's now time to bring you some of the stories that are the talk of the table. we each pick a story we'd like to share with each other and all of you at home. >> that song is a clue to the story coming up. >> i kick us off, there's a changing of the guard for the record breaking broadway play "to kill a mockingbird." in new york city yesterday actor jeff daniels took a final bow as atticus finch. cbs news cameras were allowed behind the curtain on the original cast's final night. playwright aaron sorkin and the show's direction had words of encouragement for ed harris who takes over as atticus tomorrow
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night. >> this cast has been phenomenal. >> incredible. >> you become a family. you're going to knock them dead, there's no doubt in either of our minds. >> it holds the title as the highest grossing american play in broadway history. the production's now amassed a total of $100 billion. they say it hasn't played to a single -- $100 million. did i say that wrong? $100 million, they say it hasn't played to a single empty seat. >> i believe that. >> you'll see his interview next weekend on "cbs this morning saturday". >> don't you think ed will kill it? i love ed harris. i'm really excited to see him in this part. we've got an update on auction memorabilia from the movie "grease" over the weekend. hun hundreds of items were sold to raise money for her cancer treatment center. among the items that skin tight ensemble she wore for the song "you're the one that i want"
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♪ you're the one that i want you are the one i want ♪ >> those pants sold for more than $162,000 on saturday. her black leather jacket went for more than $243,000, and during a recent interview, olivia newton-john tried on the pants for us. how many people think olivia can get in the pants? show of hands! we believe in you olivia newton-john. >> ta da! >> sandy, yo du did it, come ou >> whoa, that's amazing. that's amazing. >> the buyers for the pants and the jacket were not revealed. the auction raised $2.4 million, and that was the goal she was trying to -- she wanted to raise money for her cancer center. just the fact that she could get in them after all this time. >> that's amazing. i don't know what you'd do with a $162,000 pair of pants. >> you display them. >> yes. >> you regard them through a
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pane of glass. i'm talking about my own creeping middle age and what i'm going to do with that, maybe buy a car. not the car a man in the u.k. bought, he had some trouble with his vehicle. this is paul hunt trying to exit his brand new bmw, not once, not twice, three times, four. come on, paul, you can do it. there we go. he'll figure it out. not quite how bond did it. that's at least $150,000 automobile right there. somebody on twitter joked, his daughter posted this video. someone on twitter joked imagine getting pulled over and the cop asked for a field sobriety test and that's how you exit the car. i love that. >> what's funny is he's so proud pulling up in this brand new car, then he goes and he has to crawl out. >> i'd be afraid to get out of my car. >> thank you, daughter, for posting that. that was hilarious. >> the elegance of the door lift and the elegance of the exit. >> he needs a slide. >> yeah. coming up next, we've got cbs sunday morning correspondent
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mo rocca, he's asking a key question about life and death in his new book. it's about who gets remembered and why. it's called mobituaries and it's a spinoff from mo's hit podcast. it is published by simon a& schust schuster, a mobituary is the way way mo rocca shows appreciation. it features famed artists, entertainers, and dragons. it includes marlene dietrich and fair rrah fawcett. how are you? >> i'm great, tony. i love the cover of this book here. you're in front of a tombstone with a reporter's notebook, eyes towards heaven as though interviewing those above. >> exactly. those from the past, from the great beyond. >> how did you choose who gets included? it's whether they spoke back or not? >> whether, yes, whether they spoke back to me really. honestly people and things that i'm interested in. it's dead people are so easy to
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deal with. seriously, they have no publicists. they're just really easy. >> they can't sue. >> well, some of them can actually. no, people honestly that i felt a personal connection to, and i thought that are worth remembering, even if people remember their names, somebody like marlene dietrich, they're not remembered for what i think they should be remembered for. >> you said she was a rule breaker. she wore pants gasp, what else? >> she was also -- she was a great screen star. she was also a great american patriot. this is a woman who was german to the core and renounced her german citizenship before hitler invaded poland. >> considered killing hitler. >> she told douglas burbanks junior that she had a plan that you know she would have executed if she had the opportunity to to seduce him and kill him with a poison hair pin. she spent 18 months in europe and north africa. danny thomas was her warmup comic. she said she almost got them killed. she was 100% in everything she
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did. >> you know what i thought was interesting, i had never heard of her before, elizabeth jennings, who you called the rosa parks of new york. i never heard of this lady. >> i found this story in a book of presidential trivia. a young chester allen who would go on and become president represented elizabeth jennings in 1864 when she was kicked off of a horse-drawn streetcar, the public transportation had of its day in lower manhattan while she was on the way to church. she ended up suing in civil court. >> she won with an all white jury. wow. >> male jury. and she won and it led to the integration of new york's transportation system, and it inspired movements in other cities, robert smalls who was one of the black congressmen of reconstruction then began the movement in philadelphia, and this is hauntingly and inspiringly almost exactly 100 years before rosa parks. >> you put thomas payne in mobituaries. why did you include him? >> i put the cbs polling unit on
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this really, and i asked -- >> we've got a great yuunit. >> we have a great unit. and they called a thousand people and asked to find out how well-recognized he is as a founding father, and he really isn't. even if you go up to the thomas payne house in new rochelle people there don't even recognize him as a founding father. i asked a bunch of tourists. he wrote "common sense" which per capita is the highest selling publication in american history. >> wow. >> it galvanized the american public behind the american revolution. >> he died reviled and impoverished. only six people came to his funeral. three of them were the house keeper and her two sons. >> that's right. >> that tells you something. >> i thought it was interesting too, that michael jackson and farrah fawcett we all remember in the news business. most people don't remember they died on the same day and many people thought if, arrah did not get her just due. >> michael jackson for good reason dominated it was a story
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about pop music, fashion, race. >> and it was also a shock. >> right, farrah fawcett had been sick for a while i wanted to write about her because i love farrah fawcett, and i think that an audience when someone's around long enough in the public eye, an audience can see into them and can sniff out a phony, and people liked farrah fawcett for a good reason. >> yeah, for her poster, no. ant anthony mason a man of a certain age. >> he liked her for different reasons. >> there's still one in anthony's office. >> ask about the beau brummel, the man who reduced all the frock ri for mens wear and gave us a suit and your sandals in summertime, which we suffer through. >> beau brum el is the reason the three of us didn't have to put on a powdered wig and high heeled shoes. >> quite a lot of powder. >> makes me think what your mobituary would say. >> i do know what i want the headline to be. >> go ahead. >> no mo. >> i like it. >> very nice.
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i did not see that coming, thank you, mo. >> m obituaries is on sale tomorrow, and the second season of the podcast is available right now. iconic rocker iggy pop is out with its 18th solo album, the god father of punk tells us why this shouldn't they go to prison for as long as the law allows? chesa boudin said he wouldn't seek maximum sentences
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as district attorney, even for murder. we are a progressive city, but letting violent criminals off early endangers everyone. ad paid for by san francisco police officers association. not authorized by a candidate or committee controlled by a candidate. disclosures at sfethics.org. hey, shaq. it's a 30 second tour. no man it's like... now it's 26. welcome aboard. ocean! skyride. mini golf. relax! relax! relax! you take this man to be your husband? i do. married. no time for basketball. pool. carnival. choose fun.
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♪ ♪ i'm a real wild child for more than 50 years, iggy pop has cemented his status as the godfather of punk. the iconic rocker is best known for his wild and often unpredictable on-stage antics. when we last spoke nearly three years ago, iggy said he might be done making music. but the rock legend is back with his 18th solo album "free." ♪ iggy pop has always been a primal performer. an artist who literally bled for his audience. ♪ it was iggy who invented the stage dive. at 72, he has finally stopped. >> i haven't stage dived all year. >> reporter: you haven't stage died all year? >> i did 12 gigs. i work the front, i'll get in their faces, but i can't do that anymore. i did it up through last year.
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>> yeah. >> if i do it now, i'll just -- something's liable to detach itself. >> reporter: his last album, "post pop depression," released in 2016 was the last to crack the top 20 on the pop charts. how did that feel? >> it sort of felt like -- okay. >> reporter: done that? >> exactly. it was, okay, for those of you who didn't think -- yeah, you don't have to do that every time. ♪ >> there time for his 18th -- this time for his 18th solo album "free," iggy is crooning over a jazzier group. ♪ >> my stills are better than they were 20 years ago, i can handle a tune now, and i wanted to do that. >> reporter: iggy made his name in the lay '60s as the howling front man for detroit punk pioneers the stooges. he remembers trying to explain his singing to a girlfriend's
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father. >> she had told him i was a vocalist. he said, well, you must sound like neil diamond. 1969, you know. didn't want to be neil diamond. although i recognize his quality. >> reporter: iggy is the alter ego of james osterberg jr. who's been married since 2008 to nina alou. she said i couldn't live with iggy pop, but i can live with jim. >> sure. >> are they two very different people? >> they should be. put it that way. >> reporter: jimmy grew up in a trailer park in ypsilanti, michigan. these are your folks. >> this is my father, my namesake. this is luella, my mother. >> reporter: jimmy was voted most likely to succeed in high school. but when music became his passion, his father, an english teacher, did not approve. >> it seemed like a head in the
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clouds dream to him. at the end of his life, he took my hand and told me that i'd made my dream come true. >> he did? >> yeah. yeah. he was a great man. >> reporter: what did it mean to you to hear your dad say that at the end? >> i was shocked at his generosity. he was trying to square things with me a little bit, you know. he also told me, "you were right about vietnam." ♪ >> this summer marked the 50th anniversary of the stooges' debut album. but iggy, the last surviving member, saw no reason to celebrate. you turned down a chance to do a tribute at madison square garden. >> yeah. that would have turned into such a hype fest, i'm not a madison square garden guy.
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>> reporter: but he did accept a lifetime achievement award from british "g.q." >> there was no speech. just thanks, thanks, thanks. i like it like that, yeah. yeah. >> in a new book of his lyrics, "till wrong feels right," iggy looks back on his career. >> it was really fun to do the '60s, the '70s. by the '80s, i'm getting grumpy. >> reporter: by the '90s he writes he'd become an endangered species. when it turns to the 20th century, you say i crawled out of my dark cave and into the limelight of love and acceptance. >> yeah. and it's -- that's tongue-in-cheek. >> reporter: but there's some truth to it? >> there's a lot of truth to. it. >> reporter: he remembers a moment driving in miami where he moved in the '90s. >> i pulled into a gas station in my old cadillac convertible. all the sudden -- from two opposite directions.
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two cop cars come screeching up and flank me. i thought oh [ bleep ], you know. and they both went, iggy pop! you know. man, you know, tell us about it, whatever, you know. and i realized, hey, i'm in. this is cool. not everybody. let's not get carried away. all right? yeah. yeah. >> reporter: i love iggy pop. >> so likeable. i see. >> he's an incredibly eloquent and sweet guy. >> yeah, very thoughtful. so interesting to me that even at 71, 72, you can still get so emotional about your dad. that father-son dynamic is very, very, very strong. >> and he has enormous respect for his parents. >> yeah. you can see that. >> james osterberg jr. is still in there. >> absolutely. he was most likely to succeed. he actually worked on kennedy's campaign. he thought he might be a politician one day. >> this may be a dumb question -- where does the blood come from? how does that happen? >> he was diving all over the stage. he actually -- would get cut. yeah. >> i didn't see that. all right. he's fine. >> he's okay.
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>> he is okay. >> he's still here. >> still alive. >> yeah. >> not a mobi at ttuary yet. and anthony talks to flea from the red hot chile peppers and talks about his memoir "acid for the children." and before we go, why playing tournist your own stay can help you live a -- tourist in your own city can help you live a happier life. announcer: 5 million kids use e-cigarettes. it's an epidemic fueled by juul with their kid-friendly flavors. san francisco voters stopped the sale of flavored e-cigarettes. but then juul, backed by big tobacco, wrote prop c to weaken e-cigarette protections. the san francisco chronicle reports prop c is an audacious overreach, threatening to overturn the ban on flavored products approved by voters. prop c means more kids vaping. that's a dangerous idea. vote no on juul. no on big tobacco. no on prop c. (vo) ♪ i know what you're thinking. electric, it's not for you.
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and, you're probably right. electric just doesn't have enough range. it will never survive the winter. charging stations? good luck finding one of those. so, maybe an electric car isn't for you after all. or, is it? ♪
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adjust your comfort with your sleep number setting. so, can it help us fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. but can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. will it help me keep up with him? yup. so, you can really promise better sleep? not promise... prove. and now, during our veterans day sale, save $1,000 on the new sleep number 360 special edition smart bed, now only $1,799. only for a limited time. productive life. part of our partnership with gle gretchen ruber and her podcast "hap "happi "happier. "people with a strong connection to community are happier. get connected to where you live. choose a day to explore places you've never been to, for example, visit a new museum or a restaurant.
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the research shows trying new things makes you happier and creates richer experiences. i always think that about the statue of liberty. i've never been. >> there's so many places in new york i realize i haven't been.
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this is a kpix5 news morning update. good morning. it is 8:55. we still have the stop and go right rest ride into work in the south bay. taking a look at traffic along 85 sluggish due to a trouble spot near saratoga where there was an accident involving injuries. there are delays because of that. westbound 80 slow and go. 36 minutes from highway 4 to the maccarthur maze. westbound 580 a slow ride. still sluggish northbound 101 out of the south bay. you can sea brake lights there.
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102 minutes your drive time in that area. looks like traffic is still sluggish towards the bay bridge where the metering lights remain on and brake lights. good news once you're across the span better into san francisco. marry. >> beautiful day ahead as we kickoff the new workweek. happy monday to you. there is a live look. you can see blue skies and we are looking north. you can see the fog rolling in right through the golden gate gap. clear with chilly temperatures. areas of fog along the coast and for the bay, sunshine and warming above average. daytime highs and staying dry through the week. for the coast, upper 60s. 70s for the bay. upper 70s to low 80s inland. enjoy that sunshine. 80 in concord and fairfield. looking at 74 in oakland and 72 for a high in san francisco. so high pressure in control. that will be the dominant weather feature through the workweek and into the weekend
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with plenty of sunshine and seasonal to above average temperatures over the next several days.
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wayne: ta-da! tiffany: whoo! jonathan: more deals?! wayne: tiffany, what's behind curtain number one? jonathan: it's a new mercedes benz! wayne: beep beep. - give it to me, tiffany! jonathan: it's a trip to fiji! - i am amazing! wayne: who wants some cash? - i need that! wayne: you've got the big deal! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." wayne brady here-- three people, let's make a deal, let's go. let's see, patricia. let's go, patricia. michael-- let's go, michael. and tiffany, let's go. everybody else, have a seat. you guys, line up in a straight line on the "let's make a deal." line up right here. patricia, what do you do, where are you from?

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