tv CBS Overnight News CBS March 4, 2020 3:42am-3:59am PST
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that's seen breweries skyrocket from a few dozen in 2011 to more than 300 today. >> i am the black woman brewer in north carolina. >> reporter: brianna break launched space way brewing in 2018. she and fellow entrepreneur nicole oxendine would like politicians to talk more about barriers for women of color. >> there are ceilings for black women, i think, it ripples into so many different layers of life. but -- >> i like people that say the most radical things. bernie sanders is saying some stuff that's like, like he's got my mom like, how is this man going to do all this stuff? there's no way. but i'm like, well, shouldn't you go with the dude or woman that's saying the most broadest thing? maybe you'll get some of ou psi. but brakes operation inside this old confederate cotton mill
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shows the area is changing. >> i've had people come up to me and say, you're here now. it's good. -all don't have anything in basically. please let's just drink this beer and not have this conversation. >> the people being here for year, that's black and white. they've been doing it this way for years and years. how can we as the next generation pull together and say we want something different. >> reporter: the same year president trump won in north carolina, the state elected democrat roy cooper as governor. do you believe that north carolina is moving from being a red state to a blue state? >> definitely, no doubt about it. >> reporter: trey nicks ran cooper's campaign. >> i think the state is way more competitive today than people realize. i think now that you've got so much growth, there will be a day when republicans will not win here very much. >> reporter: outside the city, farmers are struggling and tobacco, once the state's most profitable crop, has seen sales to its largest trading partner china plummet from $166 million
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agriculture and other folks say, you know, short-term pain for long-term gain. but you've got to survive that short-term pain or the long-term gaod >> reporter: brandon cut his tobacco production in half losing hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue. but he remains optimistic and supportive of president trump. >> i think he needs a little more time. it didn't get this way overnight, and i know it's not going to be fixed overnight. but i'm hopeful that, you know, the president's right and we'll need bigger tractors and more land but i haven't ordered any yet. >> reporter: we talked to nearly a dozen farmers here in north carolina who are hoping new trade deals will help turn things around and for th most part they're sticking by president trump. but here in the cities, democrats are confident the po .....
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and we better be sitting down now. believe it! geico could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. supermodel paulina who was in for an even bigger heart break when she read his will. anthony mason has the story. >> arriving on set. okay. >> reporter: the face on this fans of the '80s pop rock fashion shoot is likely familiar. paulina was a cover girl in the '80s and '90s. the super model is on an assignment for harpers bazaar. you haven't always loved modelling. >> it's true, i don't really love modelling. but what it afforded me was the world. >> reporter: she was just 17 when she made her first appearance in the sports
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illustrated swimsuit issue of 1983. that was about as big as you could get then. >> you know, and i didn't know. i thought it was a catalog for sports wear. once the issue came out, however, i got the significance of it pretty quickly. >> reporter: she made the cover the next year, and the year after. >> in the 1980s, i was exotic because i was from an eastern european country. i had this story. i was a refugee. it sort of catapulted me into the big time. >> reporter: she was born in czechoslovakia after the soviet-led invasion in 1968, her parents fled to sweden. paulina, then 3, was left behind in her grandmother's care. it was nearly seven years before she was reunited with her parents. at 15, she moved to paris to pursue a modelling career. >> in some way i still think i'm waiting to be found an imposter.
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>> reporter: after all this time? >> after all this time. >> reporter: why is that? >> i always like to say about myself, i'm a woman of very high ego, but zero self-esteem. but i think being left, that sort of just stuck with me forever, that i'm really not that great. and as soon as you find out how not great i am, you will also leave me. >> reporter: but the covers kept coming. and in 1984 she was also asked to audition for a music video. >> and i got the part, which was of the girl in a video for a band called the cars. ♪ who's gonna pick you up when you fall ♪ deal.y , yeah. i met my husband and it was pretty much love at first sight. >> reporter: the cars' frontman,
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rick, was also a czech man. he was 40. she was 19. what about the age difference? >> i loved that security of, of having a mate that was older and wiser. rejection and loneliness were such traumatic spectres in my life. and being with a man who, um, possessed me, who fully possessed me was really comforting. >> reporter: they became an "it" couple of the '80s. they kept turning out hits and she became the face of este lauder. her $6 million contract was the most lucrative in fashion history. now nearly 55, she says the modelling shoots are much rarer. >> i did one of my "look at me, this is my face without makeup and i've never used botox or
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fillers." and this job that i was up for went, well, we can't use you, then. >> reporter: how do you feel about that stuff? >> i used to be kind of judgmental about it. i used to go, oh, i can't believe everybody is injecting themselves and changing the way they look. and now i think, no, you know what, it's really freaking hard to be a woman and it's really freaking hard to be a woman over 50 because we get -- we really get dismissed from the table. we have like a weird sort of period between you're j-lo oking fabulous, and then betty white. and there is a dead zone between the two. i'm trying to fill that dead zone. >> reporter: on instagram in january, she posted a bare-faced selfie. so this is what i really look like, she wrote, just the real true me. grief is certainly no beauty maker. her husband,
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it was poriskova who found him. >> it was horrifying. it was the worst moment in my life. >> reporter: they have two sons together, but had been separated since 2017. you said the age difference became a problem when you were older. >> reporter: suddenly in our marriage, it seemed like only one of us wanted to aranas i just know that, that it's really hard to be married to somebody if you're the only one putting in all the work. and maybe it was age. maybe he just was tired. maybe i was too -- maybe i took too much energy to love. i don't know. it's possible. >> reporter: you were separated, but you still lived together? >> yeah. he was still the man that i loved and that i had grown up with and i couldn't really imagine life without him. >> reporter: she'd even accompanied ocasic and the cars to the induction of the rock and roll hall of fame. she wanted, she says, to stay
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friends. >> because i couldn't imagine not. i didn't know how life would work that way. >> reporter: yeah.prs en ocasic suddenly. but the real shock came when poriskova who said she put all of her modelling earnings into the marriage learned she'd been cut out of her husband's will along with two of his children from an earlier marriage. >> it's made the grieving process really, really tricky because i would love to just be able to be sad and miss him and not also feel this incredible hurt at his betrayal. >> reporter: you feel betrayed? >> oh, yeah, i feel betrayed. i sure do. >> reporter: do you have any seofe would have gotten to that point?
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so you're not going to get an answer to that question. >> i'm never going to get an answer. and that sucks. >> reporter: paulina poriskova through it, through the depression and the sorrow. where are you mentally now? >> yesterday i was kind of having a nervous break down. and today i'm feeling a little bit stronger. and in a way, this is freeing me. it's really, really scary. i didn't necessarily want it, but this is what i got, and so i
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the top restaurant in the country at least by one count doesn't take reservations and sometimes has a line that stretches around the block. jonathan vigliotti stopped in for a bite. >> reporter: in san diego's south park, the line stretches around the corner. >> okay, perfect. >> reporter: the shawarma guys don't have a michelin star but they have four tires. according to top 100 list customer reviews, the middle eastern cuisine cooked up in this food truck is so impressive it's now the number one restaurant in the country. so what's the secret to working in a small kitchen? >> lose weight. >> reporter: lose weight.
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rocky american chef and jack of all trades opened up in front of his friend's liquor store 11 months ago after he quit his job selling cell phones. his father is one of the sous chefs. >> everything is tough for us. >> pl ingredi e populdishes ralate fromaustralia. . we ve regs come three, four times a week. some people come twice a day. >> reporter: yelphose him after he got perfect five stars in all 100 online reviews. he's hardly a celebrity chef. he's most comfortable in the kitchen where he serves up to 900 plates a day. >> the business quadrupled overnight. we had lines a block and a half up. >> reporter: the best part, he says, driving a dream with his family in the passenger seat. >> anything for my kids. anything for my son to be successful. >> reporter: jonathan vigliotti, cbs news, san diego.
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>> pretty good. anand that's the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later. for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm tom hanson. a this wednesday, march 4th, 2020, this is the "cbs morning news." i have a report. we are very much alive! >> a beg night for joe biden. mouesday r vice president sweeps states, but senator bernie sanders scores a few, including california. the new shape of the race for the white house. deadly destruction. people in tennessee are pulling
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