tv CBS This Morning CBS February 26, 2020 7:00am-8:59am PST
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is pretty awesome. >> gorgeous. ♪ 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. clash of the candidates, presidential contenders slam heits bk in a heated cbs news debate. what they said in their final confrontation before the south carolina primary and super tuesday. stark coronavirus warning. federal health officials say the disease will spread in the u.s. and the disruption may be severe. we'll ask the cdc's principle deputy director. cruise ship plea, why the grandfather of a young girl who fell from a cruise ship accepted
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a plea deal. and suze orman, on how to make your money last for the rest of your retirement. >> can't wait to hear. it's wednesday, february 26th, 2020. your world in 90 seconds. nobody has dealt with world leaders i'm the only one that has. vladimir putin thinks that donald trump should be president of the united states and that's why russia is helping you get elected. >> mayor bloomberg has a solid and strong and enthusiastic base of support, the problem is they're billionaires. the cdc expecting the coronavirus to trigger a global pandemic. >> not a question of if this will happen but rather a question of when. the indian indiana man accu dropping his granddaughter off a cruise ship is now pleading guilty. >> the president gives his opinion on harvey weinstein. >> i was never a fan of harvey .
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he was goi to work hard to defeat me in an election. how did that work out? surprise, bob iger going to step down. all that and -- ♪ >> and all that matters. >> bernie hasn't passed much of anything. >> i do not think this is the best person to lead the ticket. >> i'm hearing my name mentioned. >> your name wasn't mentioned, bernie, people were screaming at you. although shouting is normal, so when people shout at him, what a pleasant conversation. "cbs this morning." bernie had a message for one mr. vladimir putin. >> mr. putin, if i'm president of the united states, trust me you're not going to interfere with any more american elections. >> because if i'm president we won't get any more many shechin
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can hack i'll make sure everyone gets a pebble to put in the coffee can of their candidate. >> you got in late. >> my eyes are like this today. it was quite a night. sort of running on adrenaline this morning. >> i was worried about you: there was so much incoming. i'm thinking one or two of those people want to be president. >> they do. welcome to "cbs this morning." democratic candidates unloaded on each other on cbs's democratic presidential debate in south carolina. last night the front runner bernie sanders was repeatedly attacked over his ideas and electability. he argued he had a grass roots movement behind him that can lead democrats to victory. >> in a news poll after the
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debate, nearly half the viewers we spoke to said they were nervous about the candidates. almost the same amount said they were optimistic. ed o'keefe in north charleston covered the last debate before saturday's south carolina primary and super tuesday next week. is this going to shake up the race, do you think? >> reporter: sure could. we're outside a civil rights breakfast here, former vice president joe biden is trying to maintain his slim lead over senator sanders so he was on the attack, but he wasn't the only one trying to land blows. >> i'm not going to be quiet anymore. >> reporter: often talking over each other. >> first of all -- >> let me -- >> tom, i think she was talking about my plan, not urs. tking o math and it doesn't take two hours to do math. >> reporter: the candidates made their final arguments before the south carolina primary and super tuesday. >> i will win south carolina. >> reporter: senator bernie
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sanders went after new york mayor michael bloomberg. >> the economy is doing great for mr. bloomberg and other billionaires. >> bernie and i agree on a lot of things but i think i would make a better president than bernie. >> i like bernie, we came into the senate together but i don't think this is the best person to lead the ticket. >> i'm hearing my name mentioned a little bit tonight. >> reporter: sanders was pressed on his recent comments to 60 minutes about fidel castro. >> what i said is what barack obama said in terms of cuba. that cuba made progress on education. >> we're not going to win these critical, critical house and senate races if people in those races have to explain why the nominee of the democratic party is telling people to look at the bright side of the castro regime. bloomberg who will be on the ballot the first time next week
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faced his own attacks. >> the fact he cannot earn the trust of the core of the democratic party means he's the riskiest candidate on this stage. >> i have the experience, the resources and i have the record. and all of the side shows that the senator wants to bring up have nothing to do with that. >> reporter: in a state where nearly 60% of voters are african-american, issues of race were center stage. >> i'm the only person on this stage who believes in reparations for slavery. >> my entire life i've been involved in the black community. >> we can no longer pretend everything is race neutral. >> i'm conscious of the fact that there's seven white people on the stage talking about racial justice. >> reporter: and they weighed in on what they would do to stop the spread of the coronavirus. >> the president fired the specialist in this country two years ago, so there's nobody here to figure we should be doing. >> i would better coordinate for
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the next pandemic and prepare for this one. >> i would be on the phone with china, we need to be in your country, you have to be open, you have to be clear, we have to know what's going on, we have to be there with you and insist on it, insist, insist, insist. >> reporter: in our cbs news poll of debate watchers, viewers were most impressed by senator sanders followed by biden and warren. campaigning continues across south carolina and super tuesday states today. this breakfast hosted by the reverend al sharpton, candidates making their way here as voting is set for tuesday. the former vice president sounded confident when he spoke to major garrett right after the ke bait. >> i'm going to win. >> reporter: you're going to win? >> i'm going to win south carolina. >> reporter: by how much? >> i don't know. >> reporter: does it matter. >> it's important i win. >> reporter: one point is
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enough? >> one point is enough.n-erican knows me and my record. they've known me for 40 years. >> major garrett is with us now from charleston. good morning to you, major. late night for you too. >> good morning. very much so, good morning. >> the vice president row fefuso entertain any conversation he won't win. i know a lot of people said they hadn't made up their minds going into last night. >> reporter: his camp feels good about the night and after we had a chance to talk on the center stage there's so many people who came up and wanted to shake the vice president's hands. here in south carolina i'm asking what are they telling you? he said they felt like we did what we needed to do last night. there's no word that the momentum dissipated last night for joe biden. it is crucial for him to win, as he said.
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one point for him will be enough. i don't think that's true for the long ark of this campaign but a victory is a victory, joe biden hasn't had any. he's had distant fourths, but he feels tonight got him closer. >> everybody pointed their attacks at bernie sanders last night. do you think that made a difference? how did sanders do? >> reporter: after the debate, talking to mayor pete buttigieg, the vice president and others, they said senator bernie sanders is the undisputed front runner but his record in the senate isn't known. they're not evaluating yet as a potential president let alone nominee. lots of attacks on the senator's legislative record, rhetoric about other countries we heard references to cuba, et cetera. whether or not his record is vetted, will be up to voters here in south carolina.
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what voters here will suggest on saturday and give a signal to super tuesday states is do they want to take a second deeper look at senator sanders or run with the momentum he has built into this point in the campaign? >> major, senator warren her performance rated favorably in the cbs poll, do you think she broke the streak last night and may see a bounce in terms of her performance? >> reporter: what's fascinating about her approach to the last two debates in the last two weeks has been to do two things, if she's going to attack, first attack mike bloomberg and if she says things about bernie sanders there, progressives are good, he's on the right track, i'm a better alternative. that tells us that senator warren also believes there's something about senator sanders that's not going to last. because he hasn't been vetted he's going to fall and she wants to be the progressive alternative and at the same time make sure, helpful to sanders
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but also possibly to her, keep michael bloomberg and his millions and millions of dollars at bay. that's a fascinating strategy. i'm not sure it's going to work, but it is the one she has played now consecutively in two straight debates. that tells you that's the one she's sticking with. now to our other big story, the cdc says americans should prepare for a likely coronavirus pandemic now. they say an outbreak in the u.s. is inevitable and the disruption to everyday life may be severe. nancy cordes is on capitol hill where lawmakers were briefed yesterday. is it being taken seriously on the hill? >> reporter: good morning, the cdc's warning about coronavirus coming here possibly runs counter to the president's message that everyone with coronavirus is getting better. now some lawmakers from both sides are starting to question what they're hearing from the white house regarding coronavirus, even as the president insists via twitter this morning that it's the media that is doing everything
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possible to make coronavirus look as bad as possible. >> the coronavirus, which is, you know, very well under control in our country. >> reporter: even as the white house downplayed the disease. >> we have tightly contained this. >> cdc officials warn an outbreak could be inevitable. >> it's not so much a question if it will happen but rather a question of exactly when this will happen. >> they don't have a plan. >> reporter: lawmakers from both sides challenged the white house tuesday on its $2.5 billion budget for fighting coronavirus. >> if you low ball something like this, you'll pay for it later. >> you're the secretary of homeland security. >> yes, sir. >> and you can't tell me if we have enoughs arepy raters. >> and the plan for stock piling supplies. >> do we have enough face masks? >> for the department of homeland security we do. >> i'm asking for the american people. >> for the entire american
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public? >> yes. >> no, i would say not. >> reporter: other countries struggled to curb the virus, italy now reporting more than 350 cases. south korea reported nearly 1,3 1300. in iran the deputy minister has now contracted the virus. >> it seems to be getting worse not better. >> reporter: president trump seemed to say a vaccine is right around the corner. >> when you're talking about a vaccine, even to a scale it up, you're talking about a year to a year and a half. >> reporter: that's causing confusion on capitol hill. >> the white house is saying this is all but contained. >> i can't comment what the white house is saying. the people who work for the house is not saying that. >> reporter: that's exactly what the people who work for the white house is saying.
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the secretary of hhs argued yesterday afternoon that because the number of coronavirus here in the u.s. has essentially not changed over the past two weeks it's a sign that the virus is contained here in america. at least for now. >> nancy, thank you. dr. ann shook, principle deputy director for the centers of disease control joins us from cdc headquarters in atlanta. thank you for being here. >> a pleasure. >> as we heard nancy cordes allude to, there's mixed messages that seem to be coming at us on the coronavirus. on the one hand you have the white house saying it's tightly contained and you have the cdc saying the spread of the virus here is inevitable. what are we supposed to make of this? >> it can be a confusing time right now as we've seen the coronavirus spread in china and now in a number of other countries. the good news is here in the united states the virus is contained with an aggressive approach we've been able to keep
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the numbers down, only 14 cases detected through our public health system and medical system and 43 other cases detected among people repatriated from hot spots in china or the cruise ship. but as we see in other countries we need to be prepared for when things change here. >> your when and if scenario is unsettling for people. do you have a timetable in mind and are you focussing on a certain part of the country? >> we need to be ready everywhere. we've seen in other outbreaks there can be a popcorn outbreak, one community has an outbreak and another doesn't. you can see it in northern italy right now. we can't predict exactly where there may be community trance
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mission, we can't say for sure we'll get community transmission but based on what we're seein in europe and the middle east it's more likely we think than what we thought a week or two ago. >> what steps is the cdc taking to prevent a wider outbreak here in the u.s.? >> we have been working aggressively on a border strategy at airports and a strategy with clinicians to detect individuals who have the virus early and manage them appropriately. we learned a lot in the last few weeks about the virus. it doesn't seem to be as severe as we first feared but it seems to be quite transmissable and some people have mild symptoms or no symptoms at all. >> we're hearing you say the screening is in place for people coming here. what about the people that were infected but already here? what about those people? >> one things we're doing is increasing community surveillance so we can find cases earlier so we understand
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whether there is virus circulating that's been undetected. >> who's most at risk for getting infected by coronavirus? >> based on what we know so far, the severe cases are primarily occurring in the elderly, in adults with chronic conditions like diabetes or chronic lung disease, we haven't seen disease to any great extent in children, that's a difference with seasonal flu or other influenza. one of the drivers of our flu outbreak each year is the high rates of illness with children, but we haven't seen that with this virus. something we're on the lookout for but that hasn't been detected so far. >> thanks so much for being with us this morning, doctor. >> my pleasure. this morning president trump announced he will hold a news conference on the coronavirus outbreak with cdc officials at the white house. it's scheduled for 3:00 p.m. pacific. and cbs news will be there.
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firefighters battled a fire from the largest refinery along the west coast. no reports of injuries, all lanes of the 405 trey wefreeway were closed. heir to the hot pockets fortune is the latest to be sentenced in the college admissions scandal. a judged sentenced michelle janavs to 45 months for paying to get her children in school. she admitted to paying $100,000 to have a proctor correct her daughter's answers on the a.c.t. exam. prosecutors say she agreed to pay $200,000 to get her daughter into usc as a fake beach volleyball recruit. what a grandfather
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good monday morning to you . it the clear cool start to the day. as we head through the afternoon hania sunshine, mild to warm above average daytime highs. upper 60s to near 70 for san francisco. 72 in oakland, 75 concord, 78 san jose and 75% of rosa. similar for tomorrow. more clouds on friday, much cooler for the weekend with a slight chance of a shower on sunday.
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we have much more news ahead. a juror in the harvey weinstein trial tells what it was like to reach a verdict. >> every last woman that took the stand, i wish them the best. i hope this is now a chapter that they can close. >> coming up,ons. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. pense (warning siren) there's no room! go on without me! woman: nooooo! i got room. hop in! go! i'll hold it off! mondays, right? you guys go! (horn honking) get in, bryan. thanks, mom. hey! howdy! hello! again? go wherever they need you. toyota. let's go places.
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i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> a murder trial is set to begin in italy today for two marin county teams as accused of attacking two italian police officers in july. one officer was fatally stabbed. san francisco has followed the lead of santa clara county and declaring a state of emergency related to the worldwide coronavirus outbreak. the declaration is a precautionary measure in case the outbreak becomes a serious situation locally. crews remain at the scene of a fire at a refinery in southern california. the fire at the marathon petroleum refinery in carson began late last night. so far there are no reports of injuries and the cause is still unknown. this morning and traffic michelle has her eyes on the
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road. >> we've got trouble spots this morning especially on the bridges. let's take a look at the san mateo bridge where you can see the slowdown and a lot of break lights heading in from hayward to fost city. it will take you about 30 minutes. takeat id la you okcan losee stop and go traffic with the metering lights still on but once you get past that it should be good across the span into san francisco. that's a look at traffic pick now here is mary with the weather. >> we are starting off the day with plenty of sunshine. it's a cold start and as we head through the afternoon get ready for a warm-up. we will see plenty of sunshine, daytime highs topping out in the 60s and 70s. mild to warm and above average for this time of year. upper city to near 70 in san francisco, 72 oakland, 78 in san jose, 75 for santa rosa. as we go through the week, similar for tomorrow. n iday an
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can you also tell me what it is? chase. make more of what's yours. we choose to go to the and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. president kennedy knew settling for half-measures wasn't good enough. so when candidates say we can't guarantee health care for all, make college affordable for all, combat climate change, or create a world at peace, remember that america is best when we strive to do big things, even when it's hard. i'm bernie sanders and i approve this message.
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hey, it's 7:30. here's what's happening on "cbs this morning." >> and that's why russia is helping you get elected. >> oh, mr. bloomberg. >> candidates trade punches during last night's fiery cbs news democratic debate. >> what we're talking about with bernie. bernie in fact hasn't passed much of anything. >> the cdc warns americans the coronavirus outbreak could soon become a pandemic. >> if you low ball something like this, you'll pay for it later. >> a hot pockets heiress gets five months in prison for her role in the college admissions scandal. >> she understands the harm that her choices caused. plus a father fights his insurance company to get his daughter's medication at an affordable price. >> you're taking a predatory stance on families in need.
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>> and financial guru suze orman comes to studio 57 with her ultimate retirement guide. >> can you tell me what my benefits would be if i were to retire right now? >> well, as it stands, this will be your monthly benefit. >> $3.42. >> yeah, that's what we're all afraid of. >> he needs to work a little bit longer. suze has some ideas about that. welcome back to "cbs this morning," i'm gayle king with anthony mason and tony dokoupil. we are hearing from one of the jurors who convicted harvey weinstein of two felony sex crimes. the disgraced hollywood mogul spent the night in the hospital again last night after being taken there in an ambulance shortly after the verdict was read the other day. his attorney said that he suffered chest pains. jericka duncan was in court covering the trial and joins us now with more on the story. what's the latest? >> we know that weinstein is being treated for heart
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palpatations and high blood pressure. this morning jurors who were part of that historic trial are now finally settling back into their normal lives. one juror asking not to be named is speaking out about the experience. >> i felt like my heart was literally going to pop out of my chest. >> juror number two told "inside edition" tensions in the deliberation room were very high as they reached a decision to convict former hollywood mogul harvey weinstein on two of five charges. >> every last woman that took the stand, i wish them the best. i hope that this is now a chapter that they could close. >> reporter: after five days of deliberations, the jury found weinstein guilty of rape in the thirdegrend crimina sexu in fis geutes to 29 years in prison. >> we will continue to fight. >> reporter: the focus now shifts to los angeles, where weinstein faces four additional
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felony charges for rape and sexual assault dating back to 2013. >> harvey, you messed with the wrong women. we will see you here in los angeles where hopefully your conviction will leave you in jail for life. >> reporter: on the steps of city hall in los angeles tuesday, women who call themselves the silence breakers said they hope in the city where the oscar-winning producer built his career he will find himself a convicted felon once again. around 100 women have come forward to accuse weinstein of sexual misconduct, among them tv anchor lauren sivan. >> he probably definitely has health problems but that does not mean he should escape justice. >> reporter: she says she's now confident weinstein will be found guilty in l.a. >> all the women that you tried to silence the last 30 years, those are the ones that put you in jail. >> weinstein is supposed to be sentenced in new york on march 11th, but one of his attorneys said they are trying to get that
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moved up. why? because they say his team plans to file an appeal, but that cannot done until his sentencing is complete. the los angeles d.a.'s office is still not saying when it plans to move forward, only to say it will definitely proceed. >> so this case definitely not over. >> not over for weinstein. >> all right, thank you. "the new york times" jodi kantor who helped break the story of harvey weinstein's sexual misconduct, we're going to speak to her in our next hour about his conviction and the me too movement. and on "cbs this morning," a new statement from the grandfather of a toddler who fell to her death from a cruise ship. why he's made a major decision about his criminal case. if you have to go, you can keep watching us live. download the cbs app and subscribe to cbs all access. you can also subscribe to news on the go on your favorite podcast platform. we'll be right back. re stronger so strong. you power through chronic migraine,
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in affordable housing. the difference between words and actions matters. that's a lesson politicians in washington could use right now. i'm tom steyer, and i approve this message. we have a major update on the criminal case of an indiana man who prosecutors say dropped his 18-month-old granddaughter to her death from a window of a cruise ship. cbs news has learned that salvatore anello will plead guilty to negligent homicide. chloe died in puerto rico last year. david begnaud has been following this story for months and has the latest details. david, good morning. this is a surprise. >> good morning to you, anthony. so mr. anello had initially pleaded not guilty, but he was offered a plea deal that will spare him from going to jail. he will not have to admit to any of the facts in the case as
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alleged by prosecutors. and he isected tget probation. we're told he will serve that in indiana where he lives. in a statement you will hear first on "cbs this morning," mr. anello told us this about why he took the plea. >> i took a plea deal, anello said, to help end part of this nightmare for my family, if that nightmare began last july, he was on vacation with royal caribbean. the ship was docked in san juan when he dropped 18 month old out of the window. it is apart of the court filing in the public record. you can see chloe running over to a bank of windows. he leaned over the railing to look out and he reaches down and picks her up. he holds her over the railing before chloe falls 150 feet below.
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at the moment the accident happened, it was as if this wall of protective glass disappeared. i was in complete disbelief. i was not drinking. i wanted to knock on the glass we her as we did together so many times before. i was placed in charge of keeping my granddaughter safe and i failed. pictures in the past like this one showing him in a hockey game holding chloe up to the glass proves that he had done this before. he said there was nothing prosecutors could do to him that would be worst of the guilt he's feeling already. >> my family is supportive and i understand. >> this has been a difficult process for the whole family. michael winkleman represents the
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family, begged prosecutors not to charge anello. >> they can grieve as a family and set their site on and continuing to grieve. >> chloe's parents filed a civil lawsuit against royal caribbean of the cruise ship not compliance of safety standards. anello please plea deal is not final. the judge has to sign off on it. >> so sad, all the way around. i am sorry he's even charged. >> there is a divide on social media, those who say i can't believe they charged him or prosecutors making this kind of deal. >> if they felt so strongly to charge him. >> yes. >> it is very hard to watch. it isheayaround.>> david,nk you.
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>> what do you have this morning? >> a lot of people will be doing this. raising the roof. we'll tell you about a woman who caught right-handed trying to swipe a package in the front porch. what happens to her before she sets foot on the streets. >> >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by quaker oats.
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put your peloton instructor on silent, it is time for what to watch. it feels like a sweat and purge kind of morning. >> we flew back last night very late and said are you on tv tomorrow? yes, gayle, that's why i'm on the plane. >> we're running on fumes but we're going to try to tell everybody what they need to know
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because we think there are a few stories we believe you'll be talking about today. a new chapter is unfolding at disney. ceo bob iger announced he's stepping aside immediately. iger will stay on as disney's executive chairman until his contract expires at the end of next year. he's been at the helm of the company since 2005. since then, disney's profits have grown more than 300%. the company shares have jumped more than 400% in that very same time period. iger oversaw mega disney ak wi sixes including pixar, 21st century fox and marvel. he launched disney plus last november. iger is set to be replaced by bob chapek. stock was down yesterday. >> i'm so sorry to hear this news, though. i was really sorry. he's such a great human being and has such a great track record. >> they knew there was a potential that he might step down at some point.
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>> the effective immediately part is what surprised everybody. >> yes. >> disney has become the box office behemoth. they made $13 billion last year. >> he made a lot of people wealthy with the rise of disney's stock and so, yeah, it's going to be a sad time to see him go but a lot of people believe the company is in good hands. all right, this story, because it's happened to so many people. one porch pirate did not score the getaway she had hoped for. so let's roll this tape. this woman was caught on a doorbell camera walking up to a house in canada. she pauses before bending down pto pick up the package. before she set foot on the street, unmarked police cars pulled up -- tony is clapping. those are unmarked police cars that roll up to the street. officers ordered the woman to get to the ground and arrested her. the homeowner was at work at the time and he said, guys, watching the arrest happen in realtime was very satisfying. >> i bet it was.
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>> she's been charged with theft under $5,000 and possession of stolen property and four counts of a controlled substance. she had possession of a controlled substance. there have been a couple of incidents in the neighborhood and so police were watching. >> i always think the nerve of somebody, though, to do that in the first place. >> i know. >> walk up to somebody's house and take something that is clearly not yours. >> and you don't know what's in that package. it could be baby formula, diapers, medicine, anything. >> we don't like them. >> i think there was a collective shy of people watching the video that will feel the same way as the owner of that package. all right, this is a funny video that we founding. >> what? >> you know what that is? >> no. >> so it's gusty winds that kicked these tumbleweeds up causing some trouble in washington state. this is what it looks like in the barbershop when i get a haircut. the pile of my hair. jordan bradfield says more than 500 tumbleweeds are up against his house, so you can see that's
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his front door. >> where does he live? >> in washington. washington state. >> why do tumbleweeds like his house? >> i don't know. he said he can only leave through his garage door. people are driving by,bradfieldr affiliate he's getting rid of the tumbleweeds this weekend by burning them. >> which is legal in that area because they have a tumbleweed issue. >> it's like when you were in high school and you would tepee, toilet paper somebody's house, you'd think somebody had done that deliberately, it's so well organized. >> tumbleweed troubles sneindee. imagine you're on a scenic hike in the woods and you run into this. it's a nearly 600-pound sea lion. >> whoa! >> yeah. it was spotted wandering through the wooded area over the weekend about 200 miles from the nearest body of water. the poor thing looks so scared.
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as multiple agencies worked together to trap it and get it into this huge crate, the sea lion was taken back to a river. the animal's health was checked before it was released back into the water and it was okay. >> a sea lion, how did it get so far? >> there is a body of water, a river that runs through. ahead, a royal return. prince harry goes back to the uk coming up on "cbs this morning." , little things can become your big moment. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated... ...with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression... ...or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment.
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[wood rolling] alexios, add toilet paper to the shopping list. [chiseling on stone] oh, and camel milk. and a chicken. and moisturizer. alexa: thanks, guys. i'll take it from here. vomike bloomberg has a recordgue of doing something. as mayor, he protected women's reproductive rights. expanded health coverage to 700,000 new yorkers. and decreased infant-mortality rates to historic lows. as president, he'll build on obamacare, cap medical costs, and will always protect a woman's right to choose. mike bloomberg: a record on
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health care nobody can argue about. mike: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. i'm michelle griego in the traffic center and we're tracking trouble spots on the bay area roads. you can see speeds in the red especially in the east bay. as we head to west bound 580, there is a crash at canal boulevard. one lane is blocked in that area. speeds about nine miles per hour. this is a look at your travel plans. heading to the bay bridge toll plaza on 80 it will take you about 38 minutes to get from highway 4 to the macarthur maze. and taking a look at the golden gate bridge, the bridge looks beautiful and the traffic coming into san francisco is not too bad but the san mateo
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bridge, a different story. it will take you about 30 minutes to get from hayward into foster city. and a look at the bay bridge toll plaza. metering lights are on backing up into the macarthur maze but not too bad once you get on the span. that's a look at traffic. it looks beautiful out there right. >> with all of that sunshine, a beautiful day ahead. mild to above normal highs. here's a live look with our salesforce tower camera. start. sunshine, mild to warm conditions as we head through the day. changes by the end of the week. clouds on friday and cooler for the weekend with a slight chance of a shower on sunday. today, 78 santa clara as well as san jose. looking at 75 in concord , upper 60s 70 in san francisco, 72 oakland, and 78 for ukiah. similar for thursday. clouds on friday, cooler for the weekend. creates thousands of good paying green jobs in california. and provides a 10% tax cut for
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everyone making under $250,000. tom's plan also makes health care a right, by adding a public option to obamacare. protects union negotiated plans. and ensures californians can make their own health care choices. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message. and the breadwinner arrives home from a long day at work. now the family can sit down at the table, where everyone knows to be mindful of their manners. dinnertime has changed. our quality hasn't. reynolds wrap: foil made in the usa since 1947.
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2020. good morning to you our viewers in the west. how the contentious democratic debate could affect the race next tuesday. >> and a father tells us how he had to fight his insurance company to save tens of thousands of dollars on a drug for his daughter. >> i'm anthony mason. personal finance guru suze orman comes to studio 57 with money stretching ideas for retirement. >> first, here is today's eye :0 democratic candidatesth las nighcharleston, south carolina. >> former vice president joe biden is trying to maintain his slim lead over senator sanders so he went on the attack last
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night but wasn't the only one trying to land final blows. >> so many people who came up and wanted to shake the vice president's hand. it is not uncommon after debates. i asked him what are they telling you? he said they felt like we did what we needed to do last night. >> the cdc's warning runs counter to the president's message that everyone with coronavirus is getting better. >> here in the united states the virus is contained with an aggressive approach we've been able to keep the numbers down. >> moderator gayle king asked the candidates what the biggest misconception is about them. bernie addressed the biggest misconception about him. >> misconception and you're hearing it here tonight is that the ideas i'm talking about are radical. they're not. in one form or another, they exist in countries all over t world. >> in countries like venezuela, cuba, dr. doom, they all make it work. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota.
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let's go places. >> bernie was certainly the center of attention last night. >> he certainly was. >> and the jokes, too. >> and they're beginning. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." the democrats in last night's cbs news debate held almost nothing back in their last confrontation before saturday's south carolina primary and next week's super tuesday. candidates desperate to stop front-runner bernie sanders' momentum took him on from start to finish >> medicare for all will lower health care costs in this country by $450 billion a year. >> the math does not add up. >> it adds up to four more years of donald trump. >> it doesn't show enough about how we're going to pay for it. i dug in. i did the work. and then bernie's team trashed me for it. >> former new york city mayor mike bloomberg hit sanders over intelligence claims that russians are trying to help him in the election. >> vladimir putin thinks donald trump should be president of the united states and that's why
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russia is helping you get elected so you'll lose to him. >> hey mr. putin if i'm president of the united states, trust me. you're not going to interfere in any more american elections. >> a cbs news poll taken after the debate shows 47% of viewers came away feeling nervous about the available candidates while 42% were optimistic. 45% said they were impressed by sanders' performance, the largest number for any candidate. >> senior political analyst and "60 minutes" correspondent john dickerson is here along with cbs news political contributor and democratic strategist, joel payne joining us at the table to discuss. last night was a raucous night. i ask that you keep your answers to a minute and 15 second. [ laughter ] >> and follow the time cues please gentlemen. i'll start with you. because bernie sanders entered the debate as a front-runner. after last night's performance does he remain in that position do you think? >> i think so. they all discovered he was a front-runner in the way. >> he had the biggest bulls eye
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on his back. >> it felt like a disaster film where somebody rum ajs through the drawer throwing anything. they went at him on guns, electability, effectiveness. that was part of the problem. it was a defuse kind of yelling at bernie sanders and so he was able to stand there and carries on. nobody was able to really prosecute the case against bernie sanders. if you don't do that, he's marching forward and if you're unable to stop him, then it is a good nate for him even though in the aggregate it was a night full of kind of messness for democrats. >> pete buttigieg made the argument that a sanders nomination would be a drag on the rest of the ticket, possibly cost the democrats congress. did he make his case in that argument? >> sure. buttigieg is always very eloquent on nights like this. the problem is we haven't seen these debates be real game changers. you know, elizabeth warren certainly had a nice debate last week but did it really carry her to any success in nevada? not really. these debates while in the past maybe in previous cycles have been game changers they haven't been this cycle. i think people were looking for
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a moment. that's why you noticed it felt like a rugby scrum. gayle, i'm sure you still have your flap jacket on from last night. >> yes. >> i'm not sure if anything changed fundamentally about the race. i do think that joe biden had some good moments and probably was able toaybe help run up the score a little bit in south carolina. he needs a big victory. a small, modest victory and south carolina really does him no good. he needs a ten point plus victory to change his trajectory. >> he had been slipping among black voters. do you think he won some back? >> i think potentially. you look at the moment with tom steyer where he went after him on private prisons. it is clear he was going after some of that vote steyer has siphoned away over the last couple months. if he can pull 3% or 4% from steyer maybe he can pad the number is a bit. >> a point about elizabeth warren, with bloomberg she has an instinct for the jugular, right? she was going after it. with bernie sanders she has an instinct for the capillaries which is to say he is the front-runner and she needs to go
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after him and she made a very interesting case at the beginning which is we believe the same stuff but i'm so much more effective and it is going to get done if i get in office. that is the lane for her to make the case you must stop this person because he's, even if he gets in office he is not going to deliver. she made the case and then moved on and walloped bloomberg again and again. i suppose the conclusion she has drawn is let me show my stuff rather than are tick laltingtic against sanders. >> i like your visual, the capillaries going back to biology class. let's talk about bloomberg for a second. he by his own admission it was not his finest hour that last debate. did he redeem himself last night? >> not when you asked him the question about stop and frisk. pete buttigieg gave the best answer by the way on the stage full of white people about the lived experience of being an african-american. when you asked bloomberg what he had learned he sort of gave a tactical answer. it seems to me he did a little bit of this but the argument for bloomberg is you're not going to like a lot of things about me but here is the deal.
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you care about x, y, z. i've run big things, been in a pinch. if you look at the coronavirus it is a challenge for a president in two ways. one you have to believe in the system that sets up the american government to handle these things. then when bad stuff happens you have to be able to manage it. bloomberg's argument is i've done that. i've been tested. you can't come into this job if you haven't been tested. that is his argument and he should have given it to every question he was asked. he didn't. he was all over the place. >> you look at the poll at the end of the debate it shows people were most impressed it seems by bernie sanders. basically that says all the other candidates failed last night. >> sure. you could say that again. nothing really changed about the race. i do think that folks were starting to also look past south carolina, to super tuesday. amy klobuchar talked about texas. she expects to do well in minnesota and colorado. i think it is interesting too outside of the debate bernie sanders is making -- he is not in party unification mode. he is still very aggressive, on his tippy toes trying to attack.
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trying to take out elizabeth warren, amy klobuchar. he has not decided to bring the party together yet. he is still deciding i want to go after people and be on the attack. >> as an anti-establishment candidate all the attacks against him validate his underlying argument. >> yes. >> john dickerson, joel payne, thanks for being with us. a jury's decision to convict harvey weinstein could change the way alleged sex crimes are handled. ahead, what the g
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we have much more news ahead including why prince harry is back in the uk even after he and an dsihe partf our bill of the month a essential drug costs eight times more for children than adults. you're watching "cbs this morning." children than adults. you're watching "cbs this morning." when i lost my sight, my biggest fear was losing my independence. mmm... good. so i've spent my life developing technology
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vomike bloomberg has a recordgue of doing something. as mayor, he protected women's reproductive rights. expanded health coverage to 700,000 new yorkers. and decreased infant-mortality rates to historic lows. as president, he'll build on obamacare, cap medical costs, and will always protect a woman's right to choose. mike bloomberg: a record on health care nobody can argue about. mike: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message.
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in our in the morning rounds. a at dramatic disparities in drug prices. our continuing bill of the month partnership with kaiser health news and npr examines unexpected medical costs. today we're highlighting one father's fight to get his daughter the hormone blocker medicine she needs for the right price. he was stunned to learn the drug costs eight times more when used for children than for adults. >> reporter: last summer they
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started to notice something different about their daughter. >> she was developing a lot faster than seemed appropriate. >> reporter: now at #8 years old she is taller than her 12-year-old brother. >> just started to get the changes you typically see for an older child. >> reporter: doctors diagnosed her with central precocious puberty a rare condition that causes early puberty and can stunt natural growth into adulthood. doctors recommended a proven treatment. >> some form of medication would be given to basically stop the hormone pulsing that was causing her to have early puberty. so basically kind of turning off the switch. >> reporter: an implant placed under the skin turns off that switch. every day it releases low doses of a hormone blocker. taksali researched the two implants available to his daughter. one option, supprelin la is a treatment fda approved specifically for children with central precocious puberty. an implant for one year has a staggering price tag, $37,300. a cheaper option has a list
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price of $4,400. it is the exact same hormone blocker with slightly lower doses but is fda approved only for late stage prostate cancer. both drugs are made by the same manufacturer endo pharmaceuticals. in a statement endo said they are fda approved for two unique indications appropriate only for that particular patient population. >> i'm looking at this big cost difference for no clinical reason. >> reporter: doctors we spoke to say the cheaper drug is just as effective in children. so taksali wanted his daughter to get the less expensive option but his insurer united health care would only approve the more expensive drug, leaving the family with a higher out of pocket cost. for this father, the problem goes far beyond money. >> i feel like a patient consumer is completely blind. i think it is just to me like kind of morally reprehensible. you're taking a predatory stance on families in need.
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>> united health care told cbs news in a statement, quote, our coverage policies are aligned with fda regulations and vantas is not fda approved to treat central precocious puberty. when the provider expressed concern over the cost of supprelin la we worked with them to allow for coverage of vantas. dr. liz betelizabeth rosenthal . i don't think people can understand why two drugs with the same underlying active ingredient are two different answers. >> the simple answer is because drug makers can do this. they apply to the fda for different purposes using the same active ingredient and call it two different drugs but it is the same drug. >> almost a $30 price difference. you are saying they do that because they can? it is almost a $30,000 price difference. >> they do it because they can. they are approved for different
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conditions. insanely your insurer will say we'll approve the more expensive one but not the cheaper one. these things come in bundles so you get it implanted. they ended up paying about $12,000 for the implant which they were told with all the faes would ha -- fees would have been closer to a hundred thousand dollars if they used the approved pediatric version though they're basically the same. >> i like how you said insanely because it does sound insane. >> this consumer happened to be lucky because he was a physician and said, whoa. that doesn't make any sense. i think what normal people should do is ask your doctor, is there something cheaper? sometimes, this is an extreme example. the adult dose may be cheaper than the pediatric. sometimes it may be you've been prescribed a 500 milligram pill which is expensive but the 250 milligram version is really cheap so you could just take two of those. so always ask the price of a
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drug. >> are the doctors obligated to tell you there is a cheaper option? >> they should be looking out for you. they're not making money from these drug sales so they should be looking out for patients more. >> it would be nice if they could make this easier for folks. >> right. you know, that is my mantra. why do we have to call it investigative journalism or do research in order to just do the right thing, get the best price? >> by the way, how is his daughter doing? >> she is doing great. she got the implant in late january and she is thriving and they're already seeing some good effects. so it all worked out well for this family. because the dad went the extra yard. >> what for people who aren't doctors? >> ask your doctor. just say is there a cheaper version of this same drug that would work just as well and often there is. >> i didn't know if you could google. >> i was going to say all is well that ends well but we'll be back with another bill next month. >> yes. endless supply. thank you. >> thank you.
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ahead, prince harry is back in the uk for his first official engagement since the big move to canada with meghan. how he is being less formal now. you're watching "cbs this morning." vo: he had already taken the giving pledge to give his money to charity, when this californian walked away from his billion dollar company for good. he drives a chevy volt, flies commercial, and spends his days building grassroots campaigns for social and environmental justice. why? tom steyer believes every child
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deserves the same opportunities as his. a healthy planet. good schools. quality healthcare, living wage jobs, and life without fear of discrimination. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message. i work hard and i want my money to work hard too. so i use my freedom unlimited card. even when i'm spending, i'm earning 1.5% cash back on everything i buy. earning on my favorite soup... got it. earning on that eclair. don't touch it. don't touch it yet. let me get the big one. nope. this one? nope. this one? no. let me get them all. i'm gonna get them all. it's just the basics. can you double bag this right here? earn 1.5% cash back on everything you buy with freedom unlimited. can you also tell me what it is? chase. make more of what's yours.
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prince harry is back in the uk to begin his final serie uk to begin his final series of engagements as a senior royal. this is his first public appearance since he and his wife meghan markle finalized their split from the royal family. charlie d'agata reports from buckingham palace. >> he's made it clear we are all just to call him harry so, ladies and gentlemen, please give a big, warm, scottish welcome to harry. >> reporter: ready to shed the royal label just harry was back on the job this morning. his appearance in edinboro is
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his first engagement since he and meghan plunged into a messy divorce with the royal family. in their first official statement since the queen's decision to rip the use of the royal brand away from them last week they questioned the crown's jurisdiction on their website. while there is not any jurisdiction by the monarchy over the use of the word "royal" overseas the duke and duchess of sussex do not intend to use any iteration of the word "royal" in any territory. they had planned on using sussex royal as the brand for their charitable foundations and business ventures. the royal fuss has only widened the rift within the family, itself says "sunday times" royal please correspondent roya nikkah. >> by putting out that statement it was a little petulent. >> reporter: for now they are serving notice. by the end of next month appearances like this will come to an end. while harry and meghan may be shedding royal obligations gone, too, will be all the perks and
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privileges that come with it. as for meghan and baby archie it is believed they are still back in canada. her first official public appearance here will be on march 5th. anthony? >> charlie d'agata at buckingham palace. thank you. >> something tells me it will work out okay. i have to get used to not saying prince harry. just here's harry. >> i'm okay with that. >> i am, too. ahead financial tips on how to plan your retirement. suze orman is in the toyota green room. >> there she is. >> coming up. your local news is first. ♪
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. i'm michelle griego in the traffic center. we're tracking are morning commute and taking a look at the bay area roads some areas in the red and also in the orange especially in the east bay. we're tracking this noon crash on 880 at tennyson road. one lane is blocked. it does not seem to be affecting speed too much work 42 miles per hour. taking a look at your travel times, a trouble spot on 80, it will take you about 34 minutes but once you get to the toll plaza the metering lights are on so you will be backed up into the maze but once you get past the toll plaza it should
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be okay. smooth sailing across the span. taking a look at the san mateo bridge this has been a problem all morning long. it will take you about 30 minutes to get from hayward into foster city. and a look at the golden gate ridge. traffic is moving into san francisco. i see the sun shining after. >> we will see plenty of sunshine through the afternoon. mild to warm above average daytime highs. clear and cool this morning, we will see plenty of sunshine, mild and above average as we head through the day. changes by the end of the week. more clouds on friday, cooler for the weekend with a slight chance of a shower on sunday. for today, 70 campbell and san jose, los altos 74, concord topping out at 75 and upper 60s to near 70 in san francisco. mid-70s in santa rosa and 78 for ukiah. similar for thursday. a few clouds on friday and cooler for the weekend peerage. we choose to go to the moon in this decade
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and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. president kennedy knew settling for half-measures wasn't good enough. so when candidates say we can't guarantee health care for all, make college affordable for all, combat climate change, or create a world at peace, remember that america is best when we strive to do big things, even when it's hard. i'm bernie sanders and i approve this message. which of your devices are protected by daily security updates? daily security updates... daily? i don't know. the only thing... i'm struggling with this. some providers you have to manually download updates to each device. comcast business securityedge updates every 10 minutes to help keep your connected devices protected against new ransomware, malware and phishing threats.
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every 10 minutes feels pretty good. get secure, reliable internet and voice for an amazing price. call today. comcast business. beyond fast. grand now we have to deal withed us this.rs. climate change is an emergency. that's why i wrote the nation's most progressive climate law. and that's why i'm endorsing tom steyer. because when big oil tried to stop our clean air laws, he led us to victory. same with the keystone pipeline. when tom says we can save the world and do it together believe him. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message.
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♪ ♪ ♪>> welcome back to be "cbs this morning." it's time to bring you some of the stories that are the talk of the table this morning. this is where we each pick a story we'd like to share with each other and with all of you. tony is up first. >> i've got a demoliton story itself turned into a bit of a wreck. a company in texas, dallas, made a very big mistake. it bulldozed the wrong house last week. they were thrown off and they ended up bulldozing a 100-year-old pink home under renovation. the gas was off, nobody was living there. the demo company is taking the heat for it and the responsibility. the owner told our local affiliate there, all i can say is i'm sorry. this the worst mistake i've ever
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made and i'm going to make it right. it's a big oops. >> can you imagine if that was your house. >> the actual house was supposed to be -- it was down the street. they bulldozed 5532 and they needed 5536. >> you can't even say they trans posed the numbers. i was going to say it was that. >> during the renovation of the pink house, the numbers were taken down. this has got to be the house. >> looks like something that needs to be taken down. >> how do you make that right. >> i think you rebuild it unfortunately. >> mine is about a reporter in north carolina. he's going viral for his unexpected forecast. he's covering the forecast when he said he accidentally turned on the face filter on facebook live not realizing the effect was turned on. he continued his report while he shuffled through some very funny faces. >> i like this. >> oh, man. there's one with googly eyes.
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he said he's happy he was able to give people a laugh and smile. i like that, too. there's one with googly eyes. he said he had no idea that this was happening. that's the one i think is hilarious. he had no idea this was happening until he stepped off camera and people started calling saying, what are you doing, which makes it funnier he debate know what was happening. >> what people don't know, local news is what's called a one-man band. one person out there with your own camera, your own lighting effect. >> it's very entertaining but you do kind of miss the forecast. what's the weather? >> a rarity in this area. your turn. >> my first on "cbs this morning," grammy winning artist is embarking on a new tour. ♪ can i get a hallelujah can get an amen ♪ >> that is marin morris singing
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"any church." the music star kicking off on june 5th in boston, which might surprise you because she's right now about eight months' pregnant. her husband is a country singer. before she hits the road, she is going to be playing in about 10 days the houston rodeo on march 7th, which will be her biggest show ever while she's eight months pregnant. >> i just love her. >> you're doing something with her? >> we're going to be joining her at the houston rodeo. >> you're lucky. i've always wanted to meet her. i like her voice, her song writing. she's really good. >> anyway, she's due to have a baby soon so we wish her the best. >> does she know you're coming. >> she doesn't. they called ahead. >> i can't wait to see it. the criminal conviction for harvey weinstein is a milestone for #metoo movement.
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weinstein faces up to 20 years in prison after a new york jury found him guilty of first degree sexual act and third degree rape monday. the verdict comes nearly 2 1/2 years after "new york times" investigative reporters broke the story of weinstein's sexual assault allegations. it helped ignite the #metoo movement. around 100 women came forward accusing weinstein of sexual misconduct and assault. jodi kantor, contributor. good morning. what do you think this verdict means for the #metoo movement? >> we've talked about harvey weinstein many times at this table. for the first time we can sit here and say he's a rapist. he's a convicted rapist. >> a convicted rapist. >> the significance of that is enormous. what people may not realize, the importance of this goes beyond the symbolism of seeing him go off to jail. this was a long shot case. >> how is this a long shot case
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when you had over -- i know there were two women but you kept hearing over 100 women. >> i know. but only two women were at the basis of the charges despite all these other allegations. >> the circumstances were very complicated. >> it was tricky. they both had consensual sex with him after the attacks. that happens in real life all the time, experts say, but juries are often not willing to convict. it's too messy or i don't believe the women. >> what does this say? >> this has potential to reshape our sex crimes are prosecuted, whose voices are heard. it may be an indication -- we're in new york city but it may be an indication that juries are shifting in terms of what they will believe. >> what message was the jury trying to send here? >> i think they believed the women. the overwhelming message is they believed the women and a rejection ofharvey weinstein's lawyer. she could have argued this case on narrow surgical grounds.
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not everybody is crazy about him. let me tell you the facts. she did some of that. she made a much broader argument. she said this is about the #metoo case going too far. she tried to paint the women as manipulators and harvey weinstein as the victim and the jury rejected that. >> she was making these really bigral statements about how it's an overcorrection. women can't be women, men can't be men. but one of the first women to come forward, in fact the first actress to come forward, ashley judd, what was her reaction to the verdict. a minutes after we got the decision, i called ashley and i told her the news myself. and she paused and took it and, and she said, this is how it's supposed to be. this is how it's supposed to be. then she said something else. what she said she still craved from him was an apology and understanding of the pain he caused. that's exactly what he did not
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say. he stood there after the verdict was announced very still and then said i'm innocent. >> how can you get an apology from someone who doesn't think they have done anything wrong? >> i'm not sure that's coming. but what this verdict i think does provide is some resolution. the harvey weinstein story now has an ending. >> yes. >> i don't know if it's the final ending. he's still going to be tried in l.a. his lawyers say they may appeal this decision. but right now he's at bellevue hospital, he appears to be on the way to rikers island. he was remanded, sent to jail before sentencing. >> chest pains. >> exactly. so i think we can say even at this contentious time, even though #metoo is controversial, the story has come -- is beginning to come to a close. >> jodi, you broke it, this story in 2017 and spent a lot of time on it. when you heard that verdict, what did it mean to you?
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>> i always was focused on the journalism, and i was focused on doing my job as a journalist, which, by the way, involves being fair to harvey weinstein as well. meghan and i were always operating -- part of the reason we wrote our book, which we called "she said" to represent this idea of the women's voices, we knew the book had to stand no matter whether he was convicted or not. we said journalism may be the only form of accountability he faces. but you know, i was in that courtroom during the trial. i can't tell you what a solemn exercise in democracy it did feel like. it felt like those 12 anonymous manhattan jurors were really listening to every word and thinking this over. they had to go into that room and not just decide sort of clear matters of this fact and that fact, they had to talk
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about issues of sex and power and consent, and this is what they came away with. remember that a jury decision has to be unanimous. the moment was extremely meaningful when we heard the news, but then i think in the last two days when i see it reflected throughout igs of other people, that's when it sinks in. >> do you think other witnesses will want to come forward now? >> it's a fascinating question. people may feel that he's behind bars, or soon will be, now i feel i can tell my story. i'm less afraid of reprisal. what we've also seen throughout this process is that accountability drives more women coming forward because you're not going to want to come forward if you don't think anything is going to happen as a result. >> even if it's the end for harvey weinstein, it might be the beginning for other cases.
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it's dinnertime in america, and the breadwinner arrives home from a long day at work. now the family can sit down at the table, where everyone knows to be mindful of their manners. dinnertime has changed. our quality hasn't. reynolds wrap: foil made in the usa since 1947. steyer: wall street banks took of millions of americans during the recession. so, my wife kat and i took action. we started a non-profit community bank with a simple theory- give people a fair deal and real economic power. invest in the community. in businesses owned by women and people of color. in affordable housing. the difference between words and actions matters. that's a lesson politicians in washington could use right now. i'm tom steyer,
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expert. her name sake show ran for 13 years and she's the author of nine "new york times" best-sellers and she counsels fans on a podcast. winning strategies to make your money last a lifetime. suze orman, good morning. >> good morning. >> i have to say i'm a little surprised to see you here because you wrote yourast book nine years ago, then you retired at 65. >> yes. >> you went off to an island. >> yes. >> living the good life. >> still am. >> what brought ythis book? >> so here's the thing. as i got older and i start seeing things happening, i realized that there were many people out there that were going toir theidn't know ho to retire. meaning where were they going to invest. the market is still at its all-high time even though it's gone down. you have interest rates at an all-time low. real estate is up there. where do you get the money to retire and invest and do this?
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i decided there are no books out there for people who are 50, 60, 70 and 80. a lot of things for millenials, a lot of thing for the youngins, but nothing for those who are older. now that i am older, i bring a different perspective to it that i didn't have before. >> one of the things you say is that we should delay taking social security. >> absolutely. >> how long? >> till you're 70 because understand most people go, oh, at 62 i can start getting my social security. if you wait from 62 till 70, you will get 76% more. and it's not just 76% more for you, if your spouse hasn't worked and they're going to claim half of your social , s mr em o you you just nee to soou'rge shou wait and work at least until 70 because we'll probably if we do it right live to 95. but when you retired at 65, were you nervous? were you thinking -- did you have apprehension? you said you wanted to do a trial run to see how it would work. what was your mindset at the
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time? >> my mindset was who is suze orman if she doesn't have a standing ovation, her own tv show, interviews on all of these shows, then who am i when all that goes away? i didn't want to wait until all of that went away on its own for me to know who i was. so i retired. i sold all of our homes, all of our cars, quit my tv shows, stopped appearing on qvc, everything. >> you literally went fishing. >> and discovered you were a very good fisherman. >> and discovered that you really liked it. >> yeah, so -- >> you're writing this book for people who are thinking about retiring or people who are still retiring and don't know quite what to do. >> correct. because when you make mistakes, and the truth is the biggest mistake you're ever going to make with your money are the ones that you don't even know that you're making. >> like? >> and everybody is making mistakes. >> what's the biggest one, the mistake of inaction? >> the mistake of inaction but also we hold on to our homes for too long. you know how all of a sudden you're there and you have this home >> and you're all by yourself.
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>> youe by yourself and you- still have this big home and you're thinking, oh, my god, i have all my money in the house but i don't have any. sell your home. the conversations that you have with your kids as well. this book runs the gamut. i can tell you out of the 11 books that i've written, this book is the most complete book and guide. >> but to me it feels the most personal book that you've written. >> yes. >> you could 60s is a decade full of transitions. >> it is. gayle, how do you define yourself if you don't define yourself by what you do, your job title. it's like who are you when you don't have all these things around you? >> did you decide who you are? >> yeah. i am one of the best fisherwomen ever. >> suze, in all the years i've known you, when you first started, when i was first listening to you, you said you need at least three months of savings. now it's gone up, you need to keep two years of living expenses, you say, and eight months for an emergency fund. >> once you retired and need to
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know what you do with your money, in this book i guide you every year what you should do with your money. you need to keep some of it at least for two or three years totally liquid in a good savings account because if the markets start to go down and you're used to taking money out of your retirement account to live on, you don't want to sell when the markets are going down. >> right. >> and you're getting -- you know, you're taking out money in a bear market. you need to let it go down and come back up. what allows you to do that? the money that you have in your savings. >> how old are you now, suze? >> i'm actually very proud of it because i think i look quite good now. >> how old are you? >> i'm going to be 69 in june. >> and you say the ultimate retirement is when you wake up with joy. >> yes. >> you seem to have that. >> i do have joy. and i'm now at a time in my life that i don't do anything that i don't want to do. my goal for everybody who reads this bookndlloes strategies in this book, that they never do anything that they don't want to do as well. >> i like it. >> sometimes easier said than done.
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>> sometimes the fish don't bite. >> you look great, suze. >> thank you very much. "the ultimate retirement gui for 50 plus"if you want to read head to cbsthismorning.com. we'll be right back. mckissack and mckissack is the nation's oldest black-owned design and construction firm. before mike, we were desperate. there were not a lot of opportunities for black-owned businesses to compete. mike saw that and he leveled the playing field for black-owned businesses. over the years, we have heard a lot of talk. but mike came in, and he actually did something about it. and that's how mike will get it done as president. i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message.
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before we go, are you ready for an ahh moment? two adorable cheetah cubs just made history in a ground-breaking scientific breakthrough. these 1-week-old cubs are the very first born through in vitro fertilization. they were developed by their surrogate mom named izzy at the columbia iological mother is 6 years old which makes pregnancy difficult. cheetahs are considered vulnerable, meaning they're likely to become endangered
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unless something changes. everybody is doing well. >> that was a multiple ahhh moment. we choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. president kennedy knew settling for half-measures wasn't good enough. so when candidates say we can't guarantee health care for all, make college affordable for all, combat climate change, or create a world at peace,igs, even when it's hard. i'm bernie sanders and i approve this message. which of your devices are protected by daily security updates? daily security updates... daily? i don'nld updates
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to each device. comcast business securityedge updates every 10 minutes to help keep your connected devices protected against new ransomware, malware and phishing threats. every 10 minutes feels pretty good. get secure, reliable internet and voice for an amazing price. call today. comcast business. beyond fast.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. i'm michelle griego in the traffic center. there's a lot of congestion on the roadways. some of the speeds in the red. we want to take a look at san mateo on the peninsula. there is a crash near third avenue . it has been moved over to the shoulder but you can see speeds dipping to 24 miles per hour. this is a look at your main travel times. 101, to airport access road, looking like an 82 minute drive. so that is really backed up. a like cars are moving along pretty nicely past the toll plaza and across the span.
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the san mateo bridge still backed up a bit. it will take you about 29 minutes to get from hayward into foster city. that's a look at traffic how's it looking outside? >> plenty of sunshine for today. our temperatures on the rise. mild and above average for this time of year. it is a beautiful look from our treasure island camera. here's what you can expect. sunny and warm today, changes begin on friday. a few more clouds and cooler but still mild on friday. cooler for the weekend. strong onshore flow kicks in and a slight chance of a shower or sprinkle on sunday but it doesn't look too promising. upper 70s and santa clara and san jose. mid-70s in concord and pleasant hill. upper 60s in san francisco, 72 oakland, mid-70s santa rosa, 78 for ukiah. sunshine and warm weather will continue for tomorrow. a few clouds on friday and cooler for the weekend. fighting climate change
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isn't just about polar bears. we're fighting for our lives, we're fighting for clean air and clean water. that's why i wrote the law to send billions from polluters to communities suffering the most. and only one candidate for president was with us back then, tom steyer. and he's still fighting for us, pledging to make clean air and clean water a right for everyone, regardless of your zip code. that's the truth. that's tom steyer. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message.
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vomike bloomberg has a recordgue of doing something. as mayor, he protected women's reproductive rights. expanded health coverage to 700,000 new yorkers. and decreased infant-mortality rates to historic lows. as president, he'll build on obamacare, cap medical costs, and will always protect a woman's right to choose. mike bloomberg: a record on health care nobody can argue about. mike: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message.
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can i get a witness? - i am feeling real good! wayne: let's take a ride on the cash train. jonathan: it's a new audi! wayne: how's that? cat, that was pretty funky. tiffany: for sure. jonathan: zonkaroo! - move on up! wayne: let's do it. you did it! make it rain with cash! - oh, my god! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hello, america. thank you so much for tuning in to "let's make a deal. wayne brady here, i need three people, let's go. you, right there. come on down, stand right there, over there. and let's go with you, right there. you, with the afro. and, lastly, the racer. racer, come over here. everybody else have a seat. stand right there. stand right there. welcome to the show.
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