tv CBS This Morning CBS December 6, 2019 7:00am-8:58am PST
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>> friday! >> happy friday. >> that will do it for 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. battling billionaire. in his first tv interview as a presidential candidate, mike bloomberg unveils a new gun-control plan and goes after his fellow democrats. >> i watched all the candidates, and i just thought to myself, donald trump would eat them up. caught in the crossfire. a shoot-out on a busy florida highway leaves four people dead after two suspects rob a jewelry store, hijack a u.p.s. truck, and d take the driver hodge. violent rides. for the first time, uber confirms thousands of reported assaults involving its drivers. including hundreds of allegations of rape. and a powerful voice. linda ronstadt talks about her bad with parkinson's disease and earning one of this year's kennedy center honors even
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though she thinks she's no good. >> i see what she did there. >> it's friday, december 6th, 2019 -- that's nice -- here's today there's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> reporter: a violent robbery attempt turned into a hostage situation. >> mayhem on the streets of florida. >> the suspects engaged law enforcement, opened fire. [ sirens ] >> reporter: democrats will two dead in addition to the shooter. >> democrats be draft formal articles of impeachment. >> do you think donald trump should be impeached? >> i think yes, sad, but yes. >> the pentagon is considering sending thousands of troops to the middle east. >> it will be considered very
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strongly. >> people talk to the streets across france over pension reform. >> prosecutors charged two russian hackers with ripping off american businesses. >> it is being called one of the biggest cyber crimes in history. >> right down michigan avenue. >> two, one -- >> president trump and the first lady melania trump took part in lighting the first christmas tree. >> joe biden had a heated exchange with a person -- >> he say no malarkey and i think he meant it, you know? >> the merger between cbs and viacom is>> thengviacom and cbs
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means we'll get great new crossovers like rupaul star trek and gayle king. >> welcome in this morning, as you wake up in the west, we have breaking news, the second shooting incident this week at a u.s. navy base. a gunman and two victims are dead at a navy air station in pensacola after the shooter open fired a few years ago. it was quickly locked down at least eight people have been taken to local hospitals. this follows a deadly attack on wednesday. an active duty sailor wounded another and then killed himself.
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>> we spoke to mr. bloomberg yesterday in his first television interview since jumping into the race last month. the former mayor informs colorado to talk about one of his signature issues, gun violence. we asked him why he chose to enter the cam and pain to late. >> when you were on "cbs this morning" in september. >> are you wishing you had done it? >> no, i never think back, there was no road for me when joe was in because we would have political thee votes. >> what happened between september and now? >> i looked at our national government getting worse, the way we're behaving overseas. i said he is the wrong person for the job. he doesn't have the temperament,
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and i watched and i said we can't have another four years of this, and i said that trump would eat him up. >> you think all of the candidates would eat him up? >> i think i would do the best job of competing with him and beating him did you talk to joe biden ahead of time? >> no. >> do you consider him a friend? >> yeah, sure, why would he not be? >> i'm thinking with friends like you, who needs enemies. >> you are friendly with other tv reporters. >> neither do i, the person that
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as is it is trump. is it an ego stroke, how do you respond to those? >> i have the aim rights as anyone else. does it take an ego? i guess it does to think that you could do the job. i have 12 years of experience in city hall and i think if you go back today and ask most people about those 12 years they would say the team that i put together made an enormous dirchlgbenefit it. >> stop and frisk, you recently apologized for that. >> the mark of an intelligent competition permanent is when
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they make a mistake and they say sorry. >> nobody asked me about it until i started running for president, so, come on -- >> are you saying you realized you made a mistake before and you didn't mention it until now? >> i think we were over zealous at the time to do it. our intent was to do anything we could to stop the carnage, the murder rate, and when we stopped doing it, we thought that crime would go up and it didn't, it went down, should have, would have, could have, i can't help that, but looking back, i made a mistake, let's go fight the nra and find other ways to stop murders and incarceration, those are things i'm committed to do. >> the next debate is december, and corey booker said it could possibly be on that debate stage
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no one of color. >> corey booker endorsed me a number of times and i endorsed him a number of times, he is very well spoken, he has good ideas, it would be more diverse and it would be better, but they're narrowing down the field. why you aren't there as you nar you it do you, you have to talk to other peoplele. >> another old white gentleman, isn't it time for change and something new? >> maybe, but lots of people can enter. if you want today enter and run for president you could have done that, but don't complain that you're in the race.
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there is a group of democratic aspirants. you're saying if you want diversity, then get in. >> mayor bloomberg had a lot to say about a lot of issues and he is clearly up for the fight, he know it's is not going to be easy. and he said i have been doing a lot of things. he he is so distressed. >> but he plans to go to every state, and he said i'm talking to you right now. but yeah, he says at the navel
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why a and he did not apologize then, a federal judge said it was a policy of indistrict racial profiling. it will be interesting to see how people say that. >> i think people were jumping on the timing of it and he says look, i made a mistake, i want to do better and let's move on. >> in our next hour we will hear his plan for tackling gun violence. and if he wins, he'd be the first jewish president, and he'd be the first unmarried president in modern times. how he feels about that. now to a wild story out of florida. a frantic 20-mile police chase near miami that ended with a shoot-out on a busy highway. [ sirens ] [ gunfire ] >> just terrifying sounds there as police shot it out with two
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alleged armed robbers. that was yesterday. both suspects were killed, along with their hostage and another person caught in the crossfire. our lead national correspondent, david begnaud, is at the scene in miramar, florida. david, good morning. that video, my goodness. >> reporter: tony, you look at that video and wonder how the person who recorded it was able to keep their composure given what was happening right in front of them. our cbs miami station reports as many as 200 rounds may have been fired by police at the u.p.s. van in order to take down the suspect. remember, this all happened in 5:00 traffic. it started south of here at a jewelry store. the suspects went in, attempted to rob it. got into a shoot-out with the store owner. then hijacked the u.p.s. van. they started driving north and apparently put the hostage, the u.p.s. driver, in the middle of the front part of the truck. he's on his knees during the chase which ends right here when the suspects hit traffic, and they could go no further. that's when the cops moved in. police swarmed the busy intersection in miramar, florida, as they closed in on
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the two armed suspects and the driver they had abducted. the chase started in coral gables, about 24 miles away. after the two suspects attempted to rob a jewelry store. >> we heard in the back alley eight to ten rounds fired. >> reporter: the armed suspects got into a gunfight with the store owner, injuring one of the employees before fleeing the scene, reportedly with some of the diamonds. right after that, they hijacked a u.p.s. truck and took the driver hostage. they led police on a high-speed chase, swerving around vehicles multiple times avoid capture. but when they hit bumper-to-bumper traffic, they had no option but to stop. and that's when the police moved in, appearing to use some of the bystander vehicles as shields as they fired at the u.p.s. van. [ sirens ] >> the armed suspects engaged law enforcement, opened fire. and unfortunately, the suspects are now deceased. >> reporter: a senior law
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enforcement source confirms to our miami station that the 19 officers who opened fire on that u.p.s. truck worked for five different agencies. after the shoot-out, at least one body was visible next to that vehicle. the gunfight killed an innocent bystander who was in their car nearby. and we've learned the other victim who died is the abducted truck driver, 27-year-old frank ordonez. >> our condolences go to the families of the deceased after today's unfortunate incident. >> reporter: yesterday was apparently frank's first day as a solo truck driver. he had just completed his training. listen, there are a lot of people,many on social media, raising questions about whether the police were right to fire as many shots as they did into open traffic with a lot of bystanders. anthony, the head of the local police union, miami-dade union, was clear in telling "the miami herald" the suspects opened first, and that's why the officers did what they did. >> a very scary scene.
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thank you. investigators are trying to learn why an army black hawk helicopter crashed in central minnesota. it went down shortly after takeoff yesterday from st. cloud, about 60 miles northwest of minneapolis. nar si c-- nancy cordes is there for us. >> they have until 5:00 p.m. did decide if they will participate in future hearings. they are looking at all of the evidence that has been gathered to far. >> speaker pelosi defended her decision to embrace
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impeachment saying last night that it is not about politics. >> if we were not to proceed, it would say to any president, any future president, whoever she or he may be, democratic or republican, that our democracy is gone. the president is king. he can do whatever he wants in violation of the law. >> reporter: her announcement earlier in the day was a big turnaround for someone who said earlier this year that this president wasn't worth impeaching. >> the president leaves us no choice but to act because he is trying to corrupt once again the election for his own benefit. >> all impeachment all the time. >> reporter: republicans insisted democrats had planned it all along. >> they've always wanted to impeach the president, to watch him at their words, watch them at their actions. >> reporter: the white house called pelosi's move a blatant partisan attempt to overturn the results of a free and fair election. one reporter asked pelosi if she hates the president. >> as a catholic, i resent your using the word "hate" in a sentence that addresses me. i don't have hate anyone. i pray for the president all the
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time. so don't mess with me when it comes to words like it. >> reorter: on twitter, the president quickly accused pelosi of having a, quote, nervous fit. she fired back last night. >> the president is a master at projecting. when you call somebody else nervous, he's the nervous one. >> reporter: one potentially explosive variable coming on monday is the justice department internal watchdog's highly anticipated report into how the fbi handled the trump campaign investigation into whether the campaign had ties to russia during the 2016 election. that could create a whole new firestorm. gayle? >> all right. so much more to come. thank you so much, nancy. the u.s. government is targeting what it calls one of the world's most sophisticated international cyber crime operations. prosecutors announced cyber hacking and bank fraud charges against two russians yesterday. as jeff pegues reports,
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investigators say the men stole from at least 300 different organizations in 43 countries over the past decade. each and every one of these computer intrusions was effectively a cyber-enabled bank robbery. >> reporter: government accounts of brazen acts of online theft match the alleged criminals' lavish lifestyle on full display in moscow. one of the accused hackers is seen here seeming to dare investigators to come after him, driving an expensive sports car that prosecutors say he paid for with his victims' money. >> these cyber criminals allegedly stole tens of millions of dollars from unwitting members of our business, nonprofit, governmental, and religious communities. >> reporter: according to the ten-count indictment, aqua and igor turashev operated a hacking group through phishing tech phoenix and were able to install malware on computers from abroad to steal information. >> the methodology was similar each time. in fact, the business computer obtained bank account numbers and security codes. >> reporter: among the u.s.
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targets, a school districts in western pennsylvania and an assisted living facility run by nuns outside chicago. will these victims ever get their money back? >> that is our aim is to follow the money wherever we can. how successful we're able to be in that, time will tell. >> it is very hard to stop malicious actors abroad who are trying to trick us into giving up our banking information. >> reporter: cbs news contributor and "wired" editor in chief nick thompson says the coders' sophisticated makes it extremely difficult to stop them, and the u.s. should be concerned about similar attacks going forward. >> the truth is even if these guys are arrested, even if they stop, other people are going to take their place. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," jeff pegues, washington. and the latest on a massive measles outbreak in samoa. good friday morning.
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it is a dry start to the day but that will change as the strong cold front pushes across the bay area. it will take some time to get here but shower start to move in this afternoon and especially by this evening. they went will ramp up as well with the wind advisory in effect for the entire bay area the actual call from pushes in tonight. that will bring heavy rain and the strongest wins. looking at scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms even for your saturday. a few showers on sunday.
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ahead. see what uber says it's doing to stop thousands of sexual assaults by its drivers and passengers. you're watching "cbs this morning." "cbs this morning" continues in a moment. i'm anne-marie green with a look . plus - get kohl's cash! you'll fgifts at every turn - this holiday at kohl's. i'us become just a littleyou part of your holiday. and we sincerely hope that jimmy dean sausage might make your holiday just a little bit brighter. happy holiday to ya. drill? cordless. noted. introducing the capital one walmart rewards card.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. two suspects wanted in connection with a string of home invasion robberies in lafayette have been arrested. investigators say the men are wanted for at least four violent home invasion robberies in oakland and venetia. san francisco-based uber release a safety report saying that the ride-hailing companies passengers reported more than 3000 sexual assault last year. there were also nine murders and if the eight 80 crashes. property owners and crews are preparing for more rain in areas scarred by the recent kincade fire. the work includes the placement of straw waddles along highway 128 trying to protect the soil from washing away.
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>> take a look at the roadways. a live look at the bay bridge. we have reports of an accident at one of the toll lanes. traffic is backed up to the maze. northbound 880 stopping go just past the coliseum. no crashes southbound we have an accident and that is was causing delays in both directions of the nimitz freeway. is blocking one lane. mary. a dry start to the day with cloudy skies and areas of fog but that will change. we're tracking a strong cold front that will take a little bit of time to get here. the showers will increase this afternoon for the northbay first and then spreading as we head through the evening for e re the cold front lives in tonight. that will bring heavy rain amber strongest winds. daytime highs seasonal looking at low 60s and looking at scattered showers and thunderstorms tomorrow. we'll be right back.
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hey, it's 7:30. here's what's happening on "cbs this morning." mike bloomberg shares why he feels he's the only one who can challenge donald trump. >> i said back in 2016, he is the wrong person for the job. he doesn't have the temperament or the ethics, the intellect. the armed suspects engaged law enforcement -- >> questions in florida about how a hostage and a bystander lost their lives in a highway shoot-out. the president leaves us no choice but to act. >> speaker nancy pelosi makes it official. house democrats will proceed with articles of impeachment. ♪ i can feel your love plus, a tribute concert for avicii who died after struggling with his mental health. > anedcenteronoree linda ronstadt on why she thinks she doesn't deserve the praise. >> the only thing i can say
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about my career is i wasn't very good when i started out. i got better. >> reporter: that's the whole thing? >> i love her voice, tony. >> i know. it's a beautiful voice. the kennedy center may convince her, she is pretty good after all. >> more than pretty good. yeah. >> she's incredible. she really is. i can't wait to see this. >> yeah. said it at the same time, can't wait to see it. ♪ welcome back, i'm tony dokoupil with gayle king and anthony mason. for the first time, uber is confirming thousands of sexual assaults involving its passengers and drivers. in a new report, the ride-sharing company says about 3,000 assaults were reported last year alone. and more than 200 of those were
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allegations of rape. national correspondent jericka duncan is with us. good morning. what else does -- does this report reveal? >> uber says there were hundreds of reports of attempted rape and more than 1,000 reports of nonconsensual touching. uber maintains that a very small percentage of its total rides were affected. a company spokesperson says uber is committed to transparency and taking concrete steps to address these problems. in its long-anticipated safety report, uber, which was responsible for 1.3 billion rides last year, took an unprecedented look into reported sexual assault assaults. >> if you want to improve something, you have to measure it. >> reporter: uber's brooke anderson says the report was necessary for both customers and the company. >> the public has a right to know. and secrecy about the hardest issues that we face doesn't make anyone safer. >> reporter: in the two years they measured, 2017 and 2018, there were nearly 6,000 reports of sexual assault involving passengers and drivers.
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>> these are some very alarming figures. >> reporter: faiz siddiqui is a technology reporter at the "washington post." he says the numbers are significant for uber and for the entire ride-sharing industry. >> that's a large number, it suggests that there is a huge societal problem or extension of a societal problem that's happening on our ride-hailing trips. >> reporter: uber and lyft have faced harsh criticism and lawsuits for not doing enough to protect the safety of riders. most recently, dozens of women are suing lyft -- >> serious safety incidents are exceptionally rare. in fact, 99.9% of trips end without any safety issue at all. but i think it's also a reflection of the responsibility we have to constantly improve safety on our platform. >> reporter: uber says it's rolling out new safety features that will allow riders to verify
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their driver with a secure pin code, send a text message directly to 911 operators, and report safety incidents to uber before their trip is even over. uber's ceo tweeted, "doing the right thing means counting, confronting, and taking tookz end sexual assault. cbs news spoke with him about the issue in september." >> we're not perfect. i wouldn't claim to be perfect, but i believe that we're significantly better than we were last year. and next year, darn it, we're going to be better. >> you're seeing two reactions, two sides, two say it's absolutely shocking that this number is now out there and it's in the thousands, and then you have another side that says, but it's good that the company is coming clean about it. >> a spokesperson for uber says the company plans to share driver deactivation information with other ride-sharing companies to make sure when a driver is kicked off uber for a safety violation, other companies are also made aware. but uber reps say drivers are also victims, too, making up a significant portion of those saying they were sexually
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assaulted regardless of who the aggressor is. uber says it will permanently ban any user found to have committed an assault. >> passengers assaulteding drivers? >> yeah. yeah. i mean, we've seen it on camera, you know, a lot of times -- >> male passengers assaulting female drivers? >> well, not necessarily male or female. but i think uber was making the point that sometimes you have the riders that are assaulting the drivers. >> it goes both ways. >> it does. by and large, they recognize their job is to help keep people safe. it is a risk you take when you think back to 20 years ago, the idea of getting in a car with a stranger is something you couldn't fathom. >> i think it's good they're coming clean. i think it's good they're showing that they're working on it. to your points about getting in in a car, i used to think child locks were a good idea when you had kids. now i'm concerned. i think about it when i get in a
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car. you are trapped like a rat with nowhere to go. >> check before you get in there. >> thank you. i thought it was, that's why i hesitated. it says "gayle." g-a-y-l-e. vaccination rates in one country have plummeted, but now thousands have the measles. that's not good. inside the country battling the outbreak. an invite from us to you, you can hear the top stories, what's happening in your world in less than 20 minutes every weekday morning. here's the invitation. subscribe to our "cbs this morning" news on the go on your favorite podcast platform. that's clunky to say. >> a podcast on podcast platform. developing technology to help the visually impaired. we are so good. we built a guide that uses ibm watson... to help the blind. it is already working in cities like tokyo. my dream is to help millions more people like me.
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a massive and dead measles outbreak in samoa has forced the government of that south pacific nation to shut down all public services. the resurgence of a worldwide epidemic has infected more than 4,300 peopn land least 63 of them have died. most of them were 4 years old or younger. allyson blair of our honolulu affiliate kgmb-tv went to samoa and filed this report. >> reporter: samoa declared a national emergency last month and mandated that all 200,000 people living on the island get vaccinated. the government has closed all schools and banned children from public gatherings. a sign of how serious this crisis has become. red flags hang outside hundreds of homes across samoa, a sign to alert officials folks who need here need measles vaccine. >> if you look at the top of his mouth, he's got the red spots.
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>> reporter: medical teams are going door to door screening for the disease and giving vaccines in an effort the island's prime minister calls unprecedented. >> very hard to lose a child. sorry. >> reporter: more than 60 people have died on the island including this woman's 1-year-old daughter. >> we have a lot of dreams that we need -- for our little ones. but ones they lost -- we don't know what to do. >> reporter: only about 30% of the residents were vaccinated when the epidemic exploded last month. that's down from 90% in 2013. the drop may be partially to blame on fears that spread in 2018 when two babies died in samoa after being immunized. officials later determined
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doctors had incorrectly mixed the vaccine with other medicines. hospitals on the main island are now inundated with patients. >> we're not designed to deal with this. the minute you get hospitals running at 2-00% and 300% it's a problem. >> reporter: it's hoping for change. >> a lot realize the benefit of being vaccinated. >> reporter: last year, unicef confirmed 350,000 cases, more than double the previous year. health officials say measles is a disease that's entirely preventable, as long as you're vaccinated. for cbs news, i'm allyson blair. >> that's tough. we all know accidents happen. but did it happen because people mixed up the vaccinations, that's -- >> that is tough, we know accidents happen, going around
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for 50 years, a beatble die.>> . >> we're looking at the stories you'll be talking about, what do you have, vlad? >> a new study showing how your cell phone may be physically bad for your body, especially your face. >> bad for m good friday morning. it is a dry start to the day with connie skies and areas of as we head to the afternoon. will start to see some showers moving later this afternoon especially by this evening. the winds will ramp up with the wind advisory in effect for the entire bay area but the actual cold front which is in tonight and that is when we will see the heaviest rain and strongest winds and we are not done yet. we will see showers and isolated thunderstorms for your saturday and showers on sunday. welcome to toyotathon! ready for a great deal?
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do you really need to go to work today? just saying, it's december -- >> friday -- >> hang out with us. >> take a sick day. >> vlad's here. good to see you all. here are a few stories we think you'll be talking about today. r. kelly is facing a new charge linked to his marriage to the late singer aaliyah. the new indictment alleges in 1994 kelly bribed an illinois official to get a fake i.d. for an unnamed female who has been
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the alleged bribe happened one day before the r&b star secretly tied the knot with aaliyah, who was 15 at the time. the falsified paperwork allegedly listed her as 18. that is the minimum age in illinois to marry without parental consent. kelly's attorneys call the latest charge, quote, ridiculous and absurd. the singer maintains his innocence on all previous charges. >> and he's behind bars in chicago. >> behind bars. >> adds to the narrative of r. kelly. not good. yeah. okay. in france, strikes over president emmanuel macron's pension reform plan took a violent turn. more than 800,000 people nationwide took to the streets ned. demonstrators smashed windows and torched cars. riot police charged crowds and used teargas in response. in paris, the eiffel tower was closed and the louvre shut down some of its galleries. the demonstrations even grounded some flights. protesters are angry over planned pension reforms that could see them retiring later or
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facing reduced buyouts. france still gets millions of -- of people visiting, and in paris alone they get 30 million, even though the yellow vest riots were happening. >> there were 65,000 people on the streets of paris. >> this is a french g, but if you're planning on a retirement and x amount of dollars and you find out you're not going to get it, i can see taking to the streets. >> emmanuel macron is trying to streamline the economy but facing that opposition. and people are going to keep striking. france is known for its striking. >> they are. >> the tricky thing is there's no good time to make reforms. at some point someone's going to be angry. >> exactly right. a new study finds cell phone injuries are on the rise. >> i believe it. >> yeah. cell phone injuries. >> i believe it. >> researchers counted 2,500 patients with cell phone-related head and neck injuries from 1998 through 2017. the uptick in injuries started after 2006, around the time of the first smartphones. injuries included facial cuts -- >> what? how do you get a facial cut from a cell phone? >> lying in b y're>> someone th
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you. >> you're lying in bed and boom. >> or walking -- texting -- you're texting and you walk into something. >> that's right. >> that's a problem. >> you're talking facial cuts,e. >> exactly. >> i was expecting broken toes. i like drop my phone on my toes all the time. >> that is true, too. >> you're walking and you're trying to find directions on google maps. and smack into a pole. >> you fall -- >> can you blame a cell phone? you can blame ice cream cones for that, too. i was licking the cones -- >> i don't stare at my ice cream cone -- >> an ice cream injury. >> an ice cream cone injury. >> it happens to us, but a higher incident with the younger generation. >> good news, it's minor injuries. no one was really hurt. to something that's going to make you smile. we played the beatles "all you need is love" for this story. a 5-year-old michigan boy invited his entire class to his adoption hearing. you can see them holding little
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hearts for their friend, michael clark jr. the young boy became a couple's foster child a year ago. yesterday they became his forever parents. the kindergartener could not contain his excitement. watch this. >> i love my daddy. >> wow. i -- >> i lov in i ahead, more of our exclusive to interview with mike bloomberg. me. so skin looks like this and you feel like this. aveeno® skin relief. get skin healthy™
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is 7:56. we start up with the traffic alert as you head into the maze this morning. westbound 580 out of the 880 overpass we have a car that hit the center divider and is stuck off to the side. it is possibly a bus. there trying to figure out what's going on. traffic alerts have been issued immersing lanes blocks of both directions seeing some delays. we will keep our eye on that. that bay bridge looks like traffic is backed up. your slowest approach coming up westbound 580. the traffic alert, northbound 880 your oakland you can see traffic crawling along on the north side.
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southbound brake lights in the fremont. a dry start to the day. cloudy as well as foggy conditions. the check the visibility. this is ahead of the strong cold front that pushes in but livermore down to zero for the visibility. a half-mile in concord and a 10th of a mile in fairfield. showers start to push in later this afternoon especially for the north bay. and then after that shower activity pushes out by this evening, the winds will also ramp up later today but the actual cold front pushes through tonight so that is when we will see the heaviest rain and strongest winds with the wind advisory in effect the entire bay area. daytime highs low to mid 60s. timing it out for you in futurecast, scattered showers by 4 pm and there we are at 7 pm with the heaviest rain expected tonight with shower and storm activity for your saturday. at cracker barrel, we're cooking up
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so, come on home for the holidays. the ones that make a truebeen difference in people's lives. and mike's won them, which is important right this minute, because if he could beat america's biggest gun lobby, helping pass background check laws and defeat nra backed politicians across this country, beat big coal, helping shut down hundreds of polluting plants and beat big tobacco, helping pass laws to save the next generation from addiction. all against big odds you can beat
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him. i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. happy fry-yay happy fryay to you. december 6. eating a bagel and cream cheese and try to swallow without choking. welcome back. mike bloomberg on why he says his millions shouldn't be held against him in a presidential race. >> see a star studded concert to honor the deejay and stop the signature mau around mentality health. >> and join linda rondstadt and kennedy honors. >> an exclusive interview with
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mike bloomberg adding his name to a list who think president trump should be impeached. >> i said in 2016 he is the wrong person for this job. i have watched and said, we can't have another four years of this. another two rounds were fired at the ups man. this all happened in 5:00 traffic. >> hundreds of reports of attempted rape and more than 1,000 reports of nonconsentual touching. claiming the total percentage of rides affected. >> president trump has until 5:00 p.m. today to decide whether the white house will participate in future house hearings. >> a reporter asked nancy pelosi if she hates donald trump. >> as a catholic, i resent you are using a word hate when addressing me. >> well said, we catholics don't
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hate anyone, okay. we are not allowed to. we don't hate anyone. that's why we waged the crusades to remind those people how much we love them. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. >> welcome back, we have breaking news from penflorida we a gunman opened fire at the naval air station there. the shooter and two other people have died. at least eight people were sent to local hospitals. the base is west of the city along the gulf of mexico. more than 20,000 people work at the naval air station on an average day. the base is still locked down and will stay closed the rest of this day. this is the second shooting incident on a u.s. naval base this week after wednesday's attack that killed two people at pearl harbor in hawaii. mike bloomberg is pushing
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back against claims that he wants to buy the democratic nomination. gayle spoke to him in his first tv interview since joining the 2020 race. >> the former new york city mayor discussed his plan to fight gun violence. we met him in colorado yesterday where he addressed that issue with the community that lost 12 people in a rampage in 2012. >> we are in colorado because you chose this place to launch your big gun initiative. i am wondering looking at the families. they have heard this before. we are going to do it and get some changes. why do you think you are different this time? >> i understand the problem. you have to go look at the victims before you can really understand what they are going through, the emotional problems they have, financial problems. someone in your family gets killed. how do you take care of
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everybody? part of the answer is, you've got to go out and look at the problem rather than talk about it in an academic sense. you've got to be able to go to the legislate your and convince them, at least argue them, ask them to participate and say, look, here is why you should do it is leadership. we don't have that when it comes to guns. we have the nra which was the leader. they've been beaten. they've lost most of their funding sources. >> you think you can work with the nra? no. or beat them. >> so you intend to work around the nra is what you are saying? i think you don't make much of the nra. you don't have to go talk to them at all. >> it would be no surprised to you that your fellow candidates are not so happy you are in. elizabeth warren says you are trying to buy the election.
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bernie sanders says as even the dumbest person on earth and pay for it. you see the point you are making. >> point they are making it is it okay to ask other people for all their money that will help their careers. whereas if somebody goes out and makes the money themselves and gives it away. virtually all of my income goes to public health issues education and the arts and environment and things i care about. i think i could do a lot of good for the country if i could become president and so using some of those monies to fund the campaign is fine -- >> but i think -- >> wait. my father made $6,000 a year the best year of his life. nobody gave me a headrt.e me an
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in the public school system. they taught me ethics and hard work. i worked my way through college. i worked for years and got fired a company that has been successful. i give 100% of that away. what's wrong with that. ask them what they are doing? why didn't they do that? how much of their own money do they put into their campaigns. >> i think the point they are making is that you are a billionaire who is buying this election. what is your response to that? >> i'm not buying. i'm doing same thing they are doing except i am using my own money, they are using someone else's money. other people expect something from them. i don't want to be bought. >> i want to get to a couple of personal issues. would be the first modern day single president. we all know in new york, you are
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not egibler significant other is a highly accomplished woman, would she be your defacto first lady. >> we've been living together for 19 years. i don't think we need to change. >> do you think about getting married? >> not a subject i care to discuss with you. >> i only ask. i didn't know it had been that long. but would she be our de facto first lady? >> of course. >> who is mike bloomberg. you were a democrat, a republican, then independent, now a democrat. who are you? >> i am a social liberal, fiscal
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moderate, who is basically demo massachusetts. there are no republicans. i moved to new york where i was a democrat. there are no republicans. i couldn't become mayor on the democratic line. republicans said well you can run as a republican. in new york city, the mayor's john is not a partisan job, so i did. >> don't you think most of america is in the middle? >> i do believe most of the public is in the middle. but i think most people would say whether they like my views or not, they would say he's at least honest and genuine. probably say smart but not everybody would agree with that. i think they'd all say hard working and honest. >> everybody who knows him definitely says that. in the words of a great
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philosopher, he ready. he's ready for the fight. he's up for it. he said he's a people person. he said, yeah, i'm very much a people person. he likes being out there on the campaign trail. we talked over 45 minutes. there is so much more in the conversation. he's going to add a lot to the race. it will be interesting to see. >> gun control is a tough issue. >> he said even if i don't win this, this is something i'm going to focus on and work on and make a change. he feels that strongly and that passionately. >> if mike bloomberg didn't enter a race unless he sees a path to win it. >> he's obviously heard of support he can receive but haven't said who that is both democrats and republicans. it adds an interesting dynamic to this campaign. you can hear more of our discussion. we talked over 40 minutes.
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kennedy center honoree linda rondstadt said looking back over her career is not so easy. >> if you go back and listen to one of your records, you think of all the things you could have done differently. >> i think i'm a terrible singer. it would ruin my week, my month. >> says some of her music felt like life or death. you are watching cbs this
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join us every evening as we bring you cbs news original reporting from around the world keeping our eye on what is going on here in washington. >> lawmakers are responding to a cbs news report showing a problem of racial disparity in schools. the congress womb introduced a bill meant to end harsh school policies meant to target black girls. inspired by a documentary froml extreme punishment. >> so often we are told our her is disstrakting, our bodies are
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and we are the most likely to be criminalized at every stage of our lives. >> one of the girls in the documentary was on hand for the news conference. video like this where an officer slams the girl to the ground capture the sometimes violent punishment of black girls in schools. reporting the research shows black girls are more than five times more likely to be suspended than white girls. generating a huge response of people from elizabeth warren to julian castro and padma lakshmi. it is definitely a problem. >> that video, no matter how many times you watch it is so disturbing. a california police officer was murdered one week after he
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♪ "48 hours" has disturbing new information about the relationship bet a >> 48 hours between the relationship of a murder of an officer and his wife. the officer was shot to death inside his home in 2015. at first erika sandoval denied being involved but then she changed the story. green's twin brother said sandoval seemed capable of violence. >> 2016, midafternoon, time stood still. >> that was the day that police
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officer was ambushed by a killer that shot him four times in succession. >> this was not anything other than a cold blooded calculated execution. >> daniel was 31 years old. an 11 year veteran of the police department in central california. almost immediately sheriffs deputies were aware of a possible suspect. green's ex-wife who had in the past seemed capable of voi lent. matt is his identical brother. >> she had cut up the couch and bed springs. stabbed a hole in the wall and took a bottle of pancake syrup. a ridiculous amount of vandalism. >> they had a toxic relationship. she was eventually arrested and charged. killed him one week after he
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posted this instagram photo featuring his new 20-year-old girlfriend. >> is it possible he would still be alive if he never posted that picture on social media? >> it is an impossible question. you wonder. it is such a tragedy we'll never know. >> it does point to motive. in the three days leading up to the murder. erika bomb barted him with 167 phone calls. she admits she killed her ex-husband but says it was to protect their young son. >> i regret it. every day. >> wow. err inn moriarty is with us. why did she take the stand? >> she had no choice. e know she pulled t. she couldn't really say
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self-defense. she shot him -- this is hard for me to talk about. he was most vulnerable. he was sitting on the toilet. >> she had to take the stand and explain to the jurors what was going on in her mind. why we picked the story, everybody called it the toxic relationship. we don't think of men being victims of domestic violence. >> especially a male police officer. they regret they didn't take it more seriously. they blamed the two of them. certainly both of them. >> there was an interesting similarity between the looks of the two women. >> interesting that social media played a part in this. domestic violence posting a picture set things off at least that is what the prosecution believes. >> you can see the report, the killing of officer green on "48
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hours" here on cbs. n cbs. >> real this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. is 8:25. appear heading out the door and plan on commuting out of the east bay we have a traffic alert and effect into the maze. is down 580 as you work your way near the 880 overpass just under we had a broken down bus stuck in lanes. they were trying to get the passengers off the bus and onto another once a traffic cop backed up. just a heads up it's in the clearing stages and are still some activity in the traffic alert is still in effect. bay bridge once again the metering lights are on it is slow heading into san francisco. the rest of the bridges safe to say san mateo bridge is light. and north 880 in oakland still busy and southbound 80 you
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still have brake lights and it looks busy on a diaper catching some sunshine out there here's a live look at treasure island, foggy for the tri-valley at east bay this morning. things are going to be changing for us. tracking a strong cold front that will push through tonight. so some showers to start to move in ada this afternoon for the north bay and pushing south high this evening. the winds will wrap up with the wind advisory in effect for the entire bay area. the actual cold front moves into night and that is when we will see the heaviest rain and strongest winds i could get some isolated thunderstorms with daytime highs topic in low to mid 60s. a timing it out for you. here we are at noon, mainly dry. here we are at 4 pm with scattered showers and as we head to this evening we will see some more showers at the actual cold front pushes into night and by saturday we are looking at scattered showers and thunderstorms so unsettled active weather for the weekend. showers sunday and sunday or next monday.
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mike bloomberg's created on tover 400,000 jobs.ue leader. as president, an opportunity economy that works for us. tax fairness -- where the wealthy pay their fair share. education .. affordable college and high skill vocational traieconomy.inhe new economic security .. lower cost health care and affordable middle-class housing. proven leadership on jobs .. to build an economy where people don't just get by, they get ahead. i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. and you realize you are the the hostess with the mostest. you know when you're at ross yes! yeah! that's yes for less. entertain in style all season long. it feels even better when you find it for less-at ross.
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yes for less. welcome back. we c thi welcome back to "cbs this morning." we call this talk of the table. a table, we're talking about stories we think are >> welcome back. stories we think are interesting. you are up first. we hear these great job market figures. those numbers can sometimes mask some suffering underneath. there is a segment that is not benefitted. in particular men without a college degree. men in large numbers have left the workforce for good. this is according to a professor at the university of maryland. going back to 1968, 95% of american men had jobs. today that number is 86%.
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over 1 in 10 men are not in the work force. >> what are they doing? >> they are just not getting jobs. they don't have the qualifications, facing competition from overseas, maybe not transportation. that is a big problem. >> they want to work you are saying but can't get a job? >> right. you are seeing 3.9% unemployment and you think everything is great. there are pockets of people and this is one where the benefits are not shared equally. >> mine is about a radio analyst for the san francisco 49ers. he's been suspended for the game against the saints. he made a controversial comment on the radio show abouten player and his dark skin color. >> he's really good at that
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fake, lamar jackson, when you consider his dark skin color and dark football and dark uniform, you could not see that thing. you could not see when he was in and out of the mesh point. >> he said i regret my choice of words. i want to apologize him and anyone else i offended. >> looked at the tape. i get the point he was making. it was a poor choice of words. i was disappointed he was suspended. i don't think he was a racist or trying to be insulting. the way it came out, there was a better way to do it. >> the popular radio personality gave him the donkey of the day otk ftball players came behind him saying look behind the intention or just not say it at all and focus on the
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uniform. >> we are so quick to jump. >> especially these days. a record breaking crowd came out to honor the late deejay, avicii. he was 28 years old when he died by suicide. after his death, his parents started the foundation to advocate at suicide as a global emergency. they put on a two-hour tribute to raise awareness of mental health with performances of some of his biggest collaborators. >> an all-star tribute to one of the world's most beloved recording artists with singers like adam lambert, rita ora and aloe blacc. coming together for the first time to perform avicii's biggest
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hits. ♪ ♪ wake me up ♪ when i'm wiser and ♪ when old >> singers performed alongside anorestra dreams. what is your foundation? >> trying to get the stigma away from talking about mental illness and suicide. we hope we can be a voice through tim because tim had so many millions of fans. >> everyone knows that i've been anxious. >> in a documentary film before his death, he talked openly about his anxiety and addition. >> i can't see a way to do this and be happy about it.
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>> he quit touring in 2016 to focus on making music. less than two years later, tim took his own life. >> what do you say to fans of his that might be dealing with the same things he dealt with? >> we have to talk about this. you shouldn'traid to ask for help. ♪ ♪ i don't care you want to ♪ tear me apart >> the money raised will go to organizations that provide mental health resources honoring tim's life. >> tim was one of those bright and shining stars who impacted the world with the music he gave us. >> and with his life. >> the 55,000 tickets sold out in 30 minutes. everyone who performed performed for free. i know how much that meant to his father. >> what a beautiful tribute. >> so important to the family.
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songs on the billboard hot 100. she earned 10 grammys and an emmy before parkinson's disease took away her singing voice. the kennedy center calls that voice a defining voice of a generation. >> with that voice and personality, linda rondstadt dominated music in the 1970s. she went on to sell more than 50 million records leaping between genres and even languages. trying to explain all that success to her toughest critic. first name, linda. >> you go back and listen to
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yourself. >> i go, what am i thinking. >> you'll be thinking of all the things you should have done differently? >> i think i'm a terrible singer and never could sing. it would ruin my week, ruin my month. ♪ ♪ come what may ♪ through blue bayou >> even worse, she says is the thought of her music living on forever on line. >> it is terrifying. all those bad performances just froesen in time. not plastic or elastic, not growing, not building, not learning or improving. >> you remind me of these authors who write and ask their families to burn them when they die. >> yes. i burned mine already. i never keep anything. nobody's business. >> all the money and magazine cover were just a byproduct of
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songs she had to perform for her own reasons. >> there will be a line or two i really relate with and i think i have to sing that or i'm going to die. >> share the feeling. it tells my own story. >> born and raised in tucson, she moved to los angeles in the early '60s where she established herself as a rare performer ♪ ♪ its so easy to fall in love >> she owned the songs of others through that singular voice. >> you could argue you are coauthor of every one of your hits. it is not a cover. it is a linda ronstadt song. one stat is famously itself critical, no denying she kept good company. ♪ >> two members of her back up
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band, glen fry and don henley went on to form their own group, the eagles. and she shared the stage with other stars in a career defined by change. ♪ >> i don't think anybody has more different sounds than linda has. >> could you help me with this. >> counting backwards were cageous music, america qana. >> revisiting '60s style music. mexican music. and then pop cover.
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the blue's cover. the cow boy song ♪ >> country. >> country. >> i'm out of fingers. ♪ >> i sang some classical music. i forgot about that. >> we are on my toes now. >> latin. afterecades vocal chords. >> you tell them to do something and they wouldn't do it. >> the diagnosis, parkinson's disease. >> what was it like emotionally to feel it fall away? >> not as bad as being a ballet dancer. they only last until 30. i miss singing with my family and friends. most of the music i sang wasn't in public. it was in the shower, the car,
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driving. i sang all the time. the best of it was the stuff i did with my friends in the living room. >> so you were never working to please the fans. you were working to pleasure self? >> never, no. when you do that, you are already artificial. >> now aik kennedy center honor, she admits it is nice to see her work so celebrated. >> the only thing i could say is i wasn't very good when i got started. i got a little better. >> that's the whole thing? >> butt put it on my grave ston. despite how she started, she improved a little bit. >> i think her entire career is built on a process of improvement and she really loved that. she has 10 grammys.
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doesn't have any of that personally. she has a metal of arts and keeps it under her bed. nothing in her living room says she was a rock star. >> gosh. brought back a lot of good memories. next week, we'll hear from other honorees. earth, wind and fire and more. watch on sunday december 15 at 8:00 p.m./7 central on cbs. >> we'll look back at all that matters this week. be right back. ♪
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that will do it for us. we invite you, of course, to tune in to the "cbs evening news" with norah o'donnell. that's tonight. as we leave you, we want to take a look back at all that matter thursday week. it's been a long week. so glad it's friday. have a great weekend, and we'll see you on monday. >> bye-bye.
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saying that -- >> yes, yeah, yeah, yeah. dancing in south africa is very big. dancing in -- >> did he pass the test do you think? effort. >> my gosh, this is our first dance. >> does he get you? >> he gets me. are you the sentimental one in this relationship? >> that may be where the interview is going. ♪ three, two -- >> i'm gayle king. >> i'm anthony mason. >> you read the part that says " "tony." >> i'll do the "tony" part. >> gayle -- >> gayle, g-a-y-l-e. >> time to make your bed and found the couch.
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you make that every morning? >> make that bed every morning. >> i don't. >> right -- >> i make it right over my wife who's still sleeping. shove those leftovers in the freezer. no more leftovers. >> he makes it up -- >> on the fly. >> on the fly. the merger between cbs and viacom is now official. >> spongebob -- >> spongebob wore yellow in celebration of "ctm." >> yes. sponpongebob isn't very chatty seems lovely. we'll get to know him soon. ready? >> yes. >> now -- >> a peloton? >> some people accuse the ad of promoting an unhealthy marriage dynamic. >> it aep's awkward for any many husband to be beginning exercise equipment. i allow katie to say i already have a peloton. i said, that's going to become a coat rack in two weeks. she's using it. >> that's not insulting -- peloton -- we're in trouble -- >> i know. i know. i'm already red in the cheek. okay. ♪
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> is 8:55. take a look at the roadways. if you were commuting into the me this morning we had a bus stuck in the lanes but they have to unload them to a different bus. it looks like they managed to clear that out of the roadway and things are moving a little bit redder. traffic is still -- of her head across the bay bridge there doing ok there. the usual slowing go stuff but if you're taking 280 south down the offer there are reports of a stalled vehicle. issued a traffic alert. taking a look at the south bay heading along northbound 101
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lookout for . is a dry start to the day and catching some sunshine and spots in dealing with. now, as we head to the day we are going to see increasing scattered showers especially later in the afternoon for the north bay and though showers pushing at least further south as we head to this evening. the winds will also wrapup. a wind advisory is in effect the entire bay area today and into tomorrow morning and then the cold front, the actual front was in tonight and that is we will see the heaviest rain and strongest winds and isolated thunderstorms. a mild day temperature wise. and on future cast by noon, we are dried at 4 pm the shower start to move them from the ing anthy 9:00 or shugh an tesa
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e 20 to 60 percent off department store prices. at ross. yes for less. department store prices. we all have things we love and long for. bu kerryld can take you moment. there. to ireland's lush, green pastures. where grass-fed cows produce rich, creamy milk for the most delicious taste imaginable. that's no ordinary cheese. no. it's kerrygold. kerrygold. the taste that takes you there.
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on gifts they're gonna love. at ross. yes for less. at ross. wayne: ta-da! tiffany: whoo! jonathan: more deals?! wayne: tiffany, what's behind curtain number one? jonathan: it's a new mercedes benz! me, t 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. now, today one of these lucky audience members, one of these people, they will be going home with a $20,000 super cyber shopping spree, thank you to our folks over at rakuten.com. $20,000, man. three people, let's go, who wants to make a deal? let's see, you, right there. yes, ma'am, you.
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