tv CBS This Morning CBS May 27, 2020 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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good morning to you, and welcome to "cbs this morning." it's wednesday, may 27th, 2020. i'm gayle king with anthony mason and tony dokoupil. demanding justice. protests turn violent after the death of a minnesota man following a disturbing encounter with police. we spoke to members of george floyd's family. it's their first broadcast interview. cautious optimism. wall street bets on an economic recocovery even as coronavirus deaths increase nationwide. how outbreaks at meat processing plants could complicate america's rebound. twitter fight. president trump threatens the social media giant after it fact
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checks two of his tweets. why his attack on mail-in voting led to the showdown. and countdown to history. today spacex is set to become the first private company to launch humans into space. we have the only broadcast interview with spacex founder elon musk before liftoff. >> big day for mr. musk and the country. first, here's today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> what we witnessed was state-sponsored execution. we're waiting to see if it will be state-sanctioned execution. >> reporter: the death of a black man in minneapolis sparks outrage. >> all four officers involved were fired. >> what i saw was wrong at every level. being black in america should not be a death sentence. 10 to 20 or more deaths if we didn't act the way we did. >> reporter: president trump is defending his response to the coronavirus as the death toll
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nears the 100,000 mark. >> at least 35,000, 50,000 were avoidable for lack of attention and ego. >> reporter: a manhunt continues for a senior accused in two murders. >> reporter: police are sending a directs message. >> the one thing we are missing now is you. >> reporter: in-person trading resuming on the floor of the new york stock exchange for the first time since the pandemic. >> reporter: the nhl is preparing for players to get back on the ice. it's going to skip the rest of the season and go straight to the playoffs. all that -- >> reporter: a 12-year-old boy had a close encounter with a bear. >> it eventually ran off on its own. and all that matters -- >> the diy disaster. >> why have you done that? >> oh, no. >> mom shares a hilarious moment on facebook. on "cbs this morning." ♪
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>> this makes me laugh. i love it. he might still be in diapers, but this baby is nailing the "renegade" challenge on tiktok. check him out. he keeps up with the older kids. he's rocking his stylish sneakers, jean jacket, and a diaper. no pants needed for this dance. ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." amazing, gentlemen, what you can do with no pants. it shows a little kid always steals the show. i saw that video, i love it. >> oh, i love it. he may be little, but he is fierce, gayle. >> yes. he knows exactly what he's doing. good to see you both. we're going to begin with sme very -- different kind of news instead of covid today. we're going to begin with the violent protests in minneapolis over the death of a black man who appeared to be suffocated during an attempted arrest.
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officers in riot gear fired teargas while protesters through rocks and chanted "i can't breathe," echoing what 46-year-old george floyd, that's his name, told police before he died, repeatedly monday night. the photos show people using milk to wash the teargas from their faces. >> george floyd's arrest can be seen on a ten-minute video. it shows a white officer using his knee to pin down floyd's neck. four officers have been fired for this incident, and the city's mayor says, quote, being black in america should not be a death sentence. jeff pegues is in minneapolis for us where he spoke to members of floyd's family. jeff, good morning. you also saw last night's protests. what were they like? >> reporter: yeah. they were peaceful to start, but they quickly escalated into violence. behind me you see the growing memorial to george floyd. it's right next to that bus stop where that cell phone camera
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captured his arrest and the last moments of his life. about that protest, they were right here at the scene where the arrest occurred. as they started moving downtown, the crowd started getting rowdy as they got closer to the police precinct where they believe the fired four officers worked. [ bleep ]. >> reporter: this was the chaotic scene in downtown minneapolis last night. hundreds of protesters clashing with police over the death of george floyd. teargas and smoke filled the air with some officers using rubber bullets to break up the growing crowd. earlier in the evening, chants for justice rang out at the site where floyd was killed. >> i cannot breathe -- >> reporter: the protests followed floyd's death on monday night. a white police officer pressed his knee into floyd's neck for more than seven minutes, as the 46-year-old pleaded for help with his hands cuffed behind his back before his body went still.
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>> oh, my god. >> they were doing what cops do these days. you know, just kill black folks. >> reporter: last night we spoke to rodney and philonise floyd. >> you don't believe -- >> you have eyes, i have eyes. you can see what you saw. and i saw and the nation, the country saw, and every black person saw the same thing because it don't happen to nobody else. >> reporter: police claim floyd was a suspect in a forgery case at a deli and that he physically resisted officers. now surveillance video obtained by cbs news from a restaurant nearby shows officers calmly detaining him. attorney benjamin crump is representing floyd's family. >> he was handcuffed long before they took him to that car. and you can see his demeanor from the security video. they did not have to use this excessive, lethal force that killed george floyd. they did not have to do it, and that's why simply terminating
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them is not enough because black lives matter. >> we need to see justice happen. in this case, this was clearly murder. we want to see them arrested. we want to see them charged. we want to see them convicted for what they did. he did not deserve what happened to him. >> no justice, no peace! >> i don't want the protests to just be for show. i want to see action. i want to see these people pay for what they did. we need to hold them accountable. >> reporter: i see you wiping tears from your eyes. what's running through your mind when you're going through this? >> just thinking, just like how amazing my brother was. he never did anything to nobody. everybody loved my brother. i just don't understand why people want to hurt people, kill people. they didn't have to do that to my brother.
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>> i can't breathe. >> hearing him holler over and over he can't breathe, he can't breathe -- nobody don't want to hear that. >> reporter: we took a look at the minneapolis police training manual. it says that neck restraints are only allowed if a suspect is resisting an officer's actions, and it is only allowed as a nondeadly hold. if it's not restricting an airway. so a team of local and federal prosecutors will have to decide if the officer's actions here on monday were justified for a criminal prosecution. gayle? >> it's still very difficult to look at that tape. i think one of the things that's so upsetting is that an encounter -- a black man's encounter with police can go from zero to death in a nanosecond. i think that's what's on
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everybody's mind when we look at that video. i'm curious about the actions of the mayor there. you know, he was clearly upset during that news conference. how unusual is it that action is taken so quickly? when i heard the news that the officers had been fired in the afternoon, normally there's an investigation, we have to look at the tapes, we have to interview witnesses. how unusual is this to happen this way? >> reporter: well, you know, we've had done a lot of work on this. it's fair to say that the city took swift action here. the reality is post ferguson, a lot has changed in policing. and what they have learned is that in situations like these where you have this cell phone video as dramatic and as troubling as it is, you have to take action or else it could lead to unrest in a community. when you saw the police department move quickly to fire the officers involved and the mayor's statement, these are lessons that have been learned post ferguson. gayle? >> all right. thank you so much. george floyd's death has brought an outpouring of support across the country.
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in chicago protesters marched to express their outrage. chance the rapper helped organize the event. other well-know figures spoke out on social media. presumptive presidential nominee joe biden tweeted that floyd's family deserves justice and called for police to be, quote, held responsible for their egregious actions. on instagram, former nba player stephen jackson remembered a longtime friend who he considered to be family. >> floyd was my brother, man. we called each other twins. everybody knows me and floyd called each other twin. my boy was doing what he supposed to do. you don't need to go and kill my brother, man. >> stephen jackson said he was heading to minnesota to do whatever he could do to help. anthony? >> thank you.
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turning to news of the coronavirus. nowhere in america has been hit harder by the virus than new york city. the numbers have been going down here for weeks. even as cases continue to rise in several other parts of the country. now there's talk of the city reemerging. our lead national correspondent, david begnaud, is on wall street. good morning. >> reporter: this morning. the governor came here yesterday to ring the bell and say it's time to start talking about reopening the economy, relaunching it, if you will, even though new york city remains closed. i have to tell you, from wall street this morning, it is still eerily quiet to be in and walking around new york city. out west in california, retailers get to reopen their doors today. >> with the proper safety measures and with extraordinary caution, we can now go back into all stores. >> reporter: that's the mayor of los angeles, eric garcetti, announcing the reopening of retail businesses, churches, pools, and drive-in theaters with restrictions. outside of new york, some
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businesses are reopening on long island today. that is despite the region having the state's highest number of coronavirus cases outside of new york city's five boroughs. >> we're hoping to just salvage the rest of the season. >> reporter: cases in the state of new york continue to decline. on tuesday, 27 states reported increases in their average daily new coronavirus cases. that's compared to two weeks ago. including minnesota, that is where the statewide number of covid-19 patients in intensive care hit a new high -- 258 people. icu capacity in the twin cities stands at 87%. meanwhile, there continue to be outbreaks at food processing plants nationwide. from a fruit facility in vancouver, washington, to a fish packing plant in santa clara, california. and in iowa, new outbreaks at two pork processors. on monday, jose ayala, a maintenance worker at a tyson meat packing plant in waterloo, iowa, died. he had been in the hospital for
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six weeks. >> he just has this laugh that spreads to the whole room. >> reporter: zac medhaug was jose's friend and his co-worker for the past year. he was also by his side before he died. >> when you grab their hand and they can't grab it back, somebody that you work with all of the time, and then they just aren't moving at all. it's scary. >> reporter: tyson told cbs news that he's deeply saddened by the lost of its team member, and they have implemented new social distancing measures in their plants that meet or exceed federal guidance. one quick thing about antibody tests. you've heard a lot about it. people using it to determine whether or not they've had it in the past. the cdc put out guidance saying the antibody tests are correct only half the time. so the cdc is saying antibody tests should not be used in determining whether or not people go back to school or even to work. tony? >> really good information
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there. thank you very much. let's go to the white house now. for the first time, twitter is fact checking some of president trump's tweets. the company added a link to, quote, get the facts. you can see the link there below two of mr. trump's tweets yesterday. those tweets claimed without evidence that mail-in voting leads to fraud. the link if you follow it takes you to another page with more complete information about those ballots. and there are questions this morning about why twitter has not taken this step earlier. paula reid is at the white house. good morning. twit othter is a private compan. it can do what it likes, i imagine the president is not happy about it. >> reporter: good morning. the president is accusing twitter of interfering in the 2020 presidential election and stifling free speech. since making the accusation last night, the president has tweeted or re-tweeted at least 20 times. >> thank you very much, everybody -- >> reporter: twitter has become a political flashpoint after flagging two of the president's recent tweets. in a statement, the company said, "the president's messages
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about mail-in ballots contain potentially misleading information about voting processes and have been labeled to provide additional context." the social media company has been facing pressure after another unsubstantiated claim by the president where he pushed a baseless conspiracy theory accusing cable news host and former congresswoman joe scarborough of killing his former staff member, lori klausutis. she suffered a heart condition that caused her to fall and hit her head in scarborough's office in 2001. a medical examiner ruled her death an accident. in a letter, lori's widower asked twitter to delete the president's tweets saying, "the president of the united states has taken something that does not belong to him -- the memory of my dead wife -- and perverted it for perceived political gain." president trump was asked if he'd seen the letter. >> i have -- i'm sure ultimately they want to get to the bottom of it. it's a very serious situation. >> reporter: twitter declined saying "we are deeply sorry about the pain these statements and attention they are drawing are causing the family."
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the debate over the accuracy of the president's twitter account comes as the administration faces criticism for mixed signals during the coronavirus pandemic. >> he's a fool. an absolute fool to talk that way. >> reporter: former vice president joe biden defended his decision to wear a mask tuesday after president trump shared a tweet mocking him. >> it presents and projects his leadership. presidents are supposed to lead, not engage in folly and be falsely masculine -- >> reporter: president trump questioned the decision even though his own administration recommends wearing cloth face coverings in public settings where social distancing is difficult. >> biden can wear a mask, but he was standings outside, with his wife, perfect conditions, perfect weather. they're inside, they don't wear masks. so i thought it was very unusual that he had one on. >> reporter: biden says not
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wearing masks is costing lives. in response to the president's accusations that he's been hiding in his basement, biden said that's working out pretty well, referencing recent polls showing him leading the president in key states. anthony? states. anthony? >> paula, thank you. a new york city woman has lost a high-level job in finance after a video of her racially charged confrontation with a black man went viral. the man who was bird watching in central park recorded the encounter. the woman called police and made a false accusation against him, specifically mentioning his race. now as mola lenghi reports, state lawmakers want to make calls like that a possible hate crime. >> there's an african-american man, i'm in central park, he is recording me and threatened myself and my dog. >> i wasn't going to participate in my dehumanization and feed that. so i just kept recording. >> you hear about birds, see them -- >> reporter: christian cooper is an avid bird watcher and was in the ramble section of central
quote
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park, an area that requires dogs to be leashed in parts to protect wildlife. >> yesterday was one of those instances where this dog was tearing through the plantings. >> reporter: the woman in the video is identified as amy cooper, no relation. she has since been fired from her investment firm, franklin templeton, who said in part they do not tolerate racism of any kind. in comments to cnn, she said, "i'm not a racist. i did not mean to harm that man in any way." >> we saw this, but what about all the cases that we don't see? >> reporter: new york state senator brian benjamin co-sponsored a bill which would make it a hate crime to call 911 on a person of a protected class when there is no emergency. >> this feels like terrorism to me, to be really frank. because it's just something that's so scary. >> sometimes in order to be anti-racist we have to admit those times when we were being racist. >> reporter: ibram x kendi is a professor at american university and a cbs news contributor.
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he says historic cases like 14-year-old emmett 'til who was lynched in 1955 after being accus accused of offending a white woman should serve as a reminder today. >> mr. cooper could have been the brother who was choked to death in minnesota. he could have been ahmaud arbery. >> reporter: that was mola lenghi reporting for [police siren] michael, your a singer.
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this is a kpix 5 morning news update. >> good morning, in the news this morning california has moved to phase 3 of reopening. with hair salons and barbershops given the go-ahead. napa and solano counties are the only two with approval. customers will have to maintain a social distance from each other and workers will need to wear protective equipment. a family has been displaced after a fire broke out at their home overnight. the blaze completely engulfed the garage by the time crews arrived. claims are threatening the house next door but they were able to contain the fire to the
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garage. no one was injured but three cars were destroyed. some parents are angry over a decision by the unified school district to give top administrators pay raises. 300 emails have been sent to board members protesting the salary increases. this comes as district officials are trying to make $8 million in cuts. let's check on traffic. good morning. >> good morning, a lot of brake lights, metering lights are on at the bay bridge. we have delays at the toll plaza back to the parking lot beyond their, slow and go as your work your way across. an accident in the right lane as blocks, chp is on scene. a heat advisory in effect for the inland locations topping out in the triple digits for concord and fairfield. 84 oakl d, 75 san
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." you're looking at the spacex "falcon 9" rocket at the kennedy space center in florida, and it is quite a sight. weather permitting, it is scheduled to blast off at 4:33 eastern time this afternoon carrying two nasa astronauts to the international space station. it will be the first time a private company launches humans into orbit. as part of our coverage, mark strassmann spoke to spacex founder elon musk. it's his only broadcast interview before today's launch. >> i'm the chief engineer of the thing.
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i would like to say, if it goes right, it's a credit to the spacex nasa time. if it goes wrong, it's my fault. >> reporter: you believe that? >> absolutely. >> reporter: we met elon musk and administrator jim bridenstine inside kennedy space cent center's launch control center. this is spacex's firing room where musk will watch today's scheduled liftoff. his "falcon 9" rocket stood on launchpad 39a, the same pad that sent "apollo 11" to the moon. >> it's an honor to be on this launchpad, for sure. 39a is like times square. it's not just opening a plant -- it's opening a plant on time square. it's the best pad in the world. >> reporter: what does this moment mean to you? >> this is the culmination of a dream. this is a dream come true. in fact, it feels surreal. if you'd asked me when starting spacex if this would happen, i'd be like, 1%, .1% chance. >> reporter: since spacex launched 18 years ago, musk has revolutionized rocketry, and the business model of space travel.
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his "falcon 9" rocket is reusable, a milestone breakthrough because it slashes the dominant cost of launching. bridenstine says that sort of corporate innovation is key to nasa, too. >> the government is saying, look, we want to be a customer for sure. we want to be one customer of many. we want to have numerous providers that are competing on cost and innovation. this is the beginning of a commercial marketplace in space. >> reporter: spacex has had 19 successful launches of cargo to the international space station. with this launch, for the first time, spacex will carry people, bob banken and doug hurley. by far the company's most pivotal test. is there one thing that keeps you up atity in about this launch? -- keeps you up at night about this launch? >> a lot of things. a million things have to go right. thousands of things can go wrong and only one thing that can go right. anything anyone can think of to improve the probability of success and make sure bob and
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doug are safely taken to the space station, that is the absolute priority. i've told the spacex team it is not simply the top priority, it is the only priority. >> reporter: how does that responsibility weigh on you? >> it weighs very heavily. it's really all i can think about right now. i kind of have to kind of mentally block it because otherwise, it would be emotionally impossible to deal with. >> reporter: it's that significant. >> yes. i was asking them just a few hours ago, like, you guys feel good about this? is there anything you want us to do? and man, they're cool as a cucumber. they're like -- nerves of steel. >> it's astonishing. they're ready to go. i sent them a text yesterday. i said if there's anything you want me to do to stop the test -- >> totally -- >> i'll stop it in a heartbeat. >> yes. >> both of them said, we're go for launch. both of them. >> reporter: the astronauts are cooler than you two? >> right. >> i think so. >> probably. >> reporter: one of bridenstine's goals -- get
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americans excited about space again. a successful launch would do that. nasa's also working with actor tom cruise to film a space movie. wait for it -- aboard the space station. what is the deal with astronaut tom cruise? >> actually, i think that remains to be seen. we're sort of -- i think nasa's supportive of anything that captures the imagination of the public. >> if they want to go to the international space station and make a movie and inspire a generation of explorers, that's what we're looking for. >> it's cool. >> i'm going to tell you something that i don't often admit. i became a navy pilot because i watched "top gun" when i was in sixth grade. it changed my life. the question is, is tom cruise making a movie about going to the international space station, is he going to inspire the next elon musk? that's the question. and if he can do that, then we win. >> reporter: for spacex to fly tom cruise or anyone else down the road, first they have to nail this launch and this mission. it started raining here just a few minutes ago, but launch
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conditions are actually 60% favorable in the weather department. there's growing concern, though, about whether out of the atlantic where the capsule would have to ditch if the launch ran into a significant problem. and anthony, if today is a no-go for weather or any other reason, the next launch window would be saturday afternoon. >> okay, mark. i saw the raindrops on your jacket, and i was thinking, uh-oh, i hope this doesn't hold up. i hope that moves away. listen, if they're trying to excite us about the space program, they're doing a really good job. i just -- i remember going out almost 18 years ago when they first started spacex. and i never imagined this, mark. gayle? >> i know. listen, i'm with you, anthony. when i saw the raindrops on mark's jacket, i went ruh-ro. i'm nervous but see excito exci. the imagination is limitless.
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i can't wait to see what happens this afternoon or saturday. if we have to wait a couple of days, that is okay. tony? >> yeah. count me excited, as well. i don't need tom cruise to make a movie to get my inspired about space. i think of the mess that we've made here from time to time on earth. maybe we can do better up there once we get there. if elon musk can help us, more power to him. i'm nervous with him. best of luck. i hope the rain moves off. if people want to continue watching -- and millions will -- join "cbs evening news" anchor norah o'donnell this afternoon for complete coverage of this very historic launch. coming up ahead in this hour, the update we have on the hunt for a college student accused of two murders. we'll tell you why his father is also in trouble with the law. and our daily reminder -- you can always get the morning's news by subscribing to the "cbs this morning" podcast. you'll hear the top stories in less than 20 minutes. as for now, we'll be right back. at 3 in the morning? who is this? its jake, from state farm.
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we have new information for the manhunt for a university of connecticut senior. he's accused of two murders. now police believe that peter manfredonia took an uber to a pennsylvania walmart after he allegedly killed an acquaintance on sunday. he was last spotted walking on trainracks nearby. as erroll barnett reports, police consider him armed and dangerous, and they're warning drivers he may try to hail another ride share. we're asking if anyone sees the suspect to please call 911. do not approach him. >> reporter: connecticut state police tuesday released a detailed timeline of a multistate crime spree allegedly involving 23-year-old peter
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manfredonia. >> the suspect had committed a home invasion sunday morning and stole multiple firearms. >> reporter: manfredonia's accused of killing two men including his acquaintance, 23-year-old nicholas eisele on sunday. he reportedly took eisele's girlfriend captive. she was later found safe. what is it you heard at 6:00 a.m.? >> someone yelling and banging. >> reporter: gino cesaroni lives in the same building as eisele said and he said noise from his apartment sunday morning. >> said, you had a sense of regret, why? >> because of what happened to him. we reacted and called the police at 6:00, who knows if they would have apprehended that wacko. >> reporter: police said a car was stolen monday near east strasburg, pennsylvania, where manfredonia was last seen. the black hyundai santa fe has pennsylvania plates reading kyw1650. cbs news has also learned
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manfredonia's father was charged with several crimes last month including second-degree sexual assault. he is free on $50,000 bond. manfredonia family attorney michael doland declined to comment on the father's charges but said the family wants peter to know they support him. >> i'm here to aid in your defense, to help you through this difficult process. >> reporter: police are exploding with manfredonia to surrender. >> your parents, your friends, all of us back here in connecticut, want a peaceful end to this. >> reporter: now the manfredonia family attorney does acknowledge that peter suffers with mental health issues. they won't discuss whether or not the family has been in contact with peter since this all began. that's a possibility. the fbi is assisting in this investigation. but what's puzzling so many is that the police have not yet detailed a motivation for these alleged crimes. so many people feel at risk, and of course, tony, if anyone see
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balanced nutrition for strength and energy. whoo-hoo! great tasting ensure with 9 grams of protein, 27 vitamins and minerals, and nutrients to support immune health. time for "what to watch." vlad, before we get to the stories people are going to be talking about, i want to talk about you and your apartment. it got an eight out of ten on room rater, the interior design community loves the light, the music, the plants. >> yay. >> it's a win all around. >> it's a goal. made it. shout out to my crew who helped me set up the shot. yeah, this is all my stuff. this is really all my stuff. and i'm glad the rate my room guy likes it. good to see all of you. how you all doing on this hump day? we're doing well here. we are all safe, socially distant me and the crew. some of the stories you'll be talking about -- the u.s. navy
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has released disturbing images of two fully armed fighter jets that the navy said flew dangerously close to a u.s. mayorti may plane. it flew over international waters in the eastern mediterranean sea yesterday. the u.s. fleet said the intercept lasted a little more than an hour. the navy says this is the third time in two months russian pilots have done something like this, tony. the russian jets are su-35th, supersonic jets. the p8 aircraft, the reconnaissance plane, is a modified 737. not a fair game of chicken there. >> no. look, the big "top gun" reboot got pushed off because of the coronavirus. we don't need "top gun" going on for real. a small miscalculation could lead to really bad outcomes. that's frightening stuff there. vlad, moving on, we've got welcome news for sports fans? do tell. >> oh, do we, indeed. we're getting new details about the return of sports. first on "cbs this morning," we are announcing the national women's soccer league will
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launch its 2020 challenge cup on june 27th, one month from today. the league's nine teams will compete in a 25-game month-long tournament. the tournament opener and the final will air on cbs. all games will be live on cbs all access and will re-air on cbs sports network. but wait, folks, there's more. the national hockey league has announced plans to abandon the rest of the regular season and skate right into the playoffs. skate right into the playoffs. you like how i did that, anthony mason? 24 teams will return for post season modesto of the usual 16. games will be played at arenas without fans. >> i like that -- >> we all like how you did that. yeah. i do, too. i like that, too. >> wasn't only me. i got to shout out the writers. >> yeah. we like you, vlad duthiers. we like all the stuff you do. women's soccer, i'm so excited to see megan and carlie and alex back on the field again.
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this is great. the same for hockey. sports fans are waiting.%-pyou' story. i like whenever we can have good news out of coronavirus. you've got one i hear. >> yes, indeed. we want to leave the folks at home feeling good this hump day. let me tell you about a mom in massachusetts who recovered from the coronavirus and just had a really, really special day. lisette hernandez and her husband oscar brought their twin babies, sebastian and aurora, you see them in blue and pink. sebastian and aurora. she brought them home after she delivered them ten weeks early by emergency c-section. she had been rushed to the hospital more than a month ago and put on a ventilator after being diagnosed with covid-19. folks, she is 24 years old. 24. doctors say she was on the brink of death. but thankfully, she's made a full recovery, and hernandez says she's grateful her new bundles of joy are healthy. take a listen. >> amazing miracle. i feel like this is a new
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chapter for me and for the babies. >> oscar said he is thankful his wife and their new babies will all be at home now, anthony. >> it's so rare to have twins discharged on the same day from what i understand, vlad. they're actually going home four weeks ahead of their due date which is great news. it is a miracle. congratulations to lisette and oscar. that's a fabulous story, vlad. >> all right. ahead, sports superstars rob gronkowski and venus williams tell gayle about their new cbs show "game on." stay with us. trust toyota to be here for you. many toyota service centers are open to help keep your vehicle in top shape. and may even offer no-contact vehicle drop-off. if you need a new vehicle, toyota is offering 0% financing and attractive leases on our most popular toyotas, like camry, rav4 and tacoma. you can even shop and buy online from the comfort of your home. it's our promise to you. today and tomorrow. toyota.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is 7:56. if you are out and about, you are not alone. there are a lot of cars. so many they have turned the meter lights on which is not something we have seen in quite some time. they have them on yesterday, they came on today at 6:57. a backup as you work your way, it is sluggish getting into san francisco. we have brake lights on the eastshore freeway due to a crush westbound 80 at potrero avenue. traffic is backed up through richmond into san pablo, give
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yourself some extra time. a traffic alert is in effect for 580. this is due to a crash involving a two big rig and pickup trucks. it is blocking the grant line, they will be out there for quite some time. delays back to mount has. heat advisory in effect once again for today. for most of the region except for the course an immediate shoreline, the inland locations under the heat advisory from 11:00 to 7:00 and temperatures are on the rise. here is a live look at the treasure island with blue skies, 60s and 70s now and we will watch the temperatures climb through the afternoon. a 10 due to sunshine and here's what to expect for the daytime highs. we are looking at triple digit heat in concord and fairfield, mid-80s oakland we're all doing our part by staying at home.
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you can save by using a fan to cool off... unplugging and turning off devices when not in use... or closing your shades during the day. stay well and keep it golden. it's wednesday, may 27th, 2020. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm gayle king, with tony dokoupil and anthony mason. >> police tear gas protesters demanding answers after a man died with a troubling encounter with police. a musician talks about his painful childhood in a cult. and gronk versus venus. the stars of a new sports competition show say how they hope to lift america's spirits? . >> let's say they like to play. first, here's today's eye opener
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at 8:00. violent protests in minneapolis over the death of a black man who appeared to be suffocated during an arrest. >> as they started moving downtown, the crowds started getting rowdy as they got closer to the police precinct where they believe the officers work. >> the governor came here yesterday to ring the bell and said it's time to start talking about reopening the economy. the president is accusing twitter of interfering in the presidential election. since making the acquisitions last night, the president has tweeted or retweeted at least 20 times. >> a new york city woman has lost a high level job in finance after a video of her racially charged confrontation with a black man went viral. >> this may be one of the best trick shots of all-time. >> the 70 -step machine went around his entire backyard.
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it took nearly three minutes. >> the neighbors love all that junk in his yard. >> remind me of that game mouse trap. >> that's a rub goldberg game. >> yes. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." i love anthony how creative people can be at home. i really do. it's fun to watch. >> i have the same reaction that man did when he said neighbors love all that junk in his backyard, gayle. right? we begin this hour with the protests in minneapolis. minneapolis police faced angry demonstrators last night after the death of a black man following an arrest and the firing of the four officers involved. demonstrators gathered at the scene where george floyd was detained and then marched for miles to a police precinct. some of the eprotesters vandalized the station and smashed a police cruiser.
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police fired tear gas into crowds and protesters threw objects at officers. >> a video of monday night's incident shows a white officer holding his knew on floyd's neck for several minutes while floyd said i can't breathe more than once. he died later at a hospital. what do you see there now? >> reporter: well, there were massive crowds here yesterday. right now you can see the intersection is clear. and right across the street you can see the makeshift memorial for george floyd. that's where the chilling cell phone camera captured his arrest. police moved relatively quickly, firing the four officers involved within 24 hours of that story making headlines. police say that floyd was resisting arrest when they were called to the scene for a reported forgery. the video that we obtained doesn't show floyd resisting
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arrest as police have alleged. the restaurant's owner told me he didn't see floyd resist either. last night i spoke with george floyd's family. his brother was very emotional, calling for justice. >> to hear him holler over and over, he can't breathe q he can't breathe. nobody don't want to hear that. i know good officers and bad officers, but right then and there, i didn't see a good officer. i didn't see nobody that had quality in them. they treated my brother like a scum bag. they left him down to die. they acted like he was a piece of trash. if my mom was here right now, she's rolling in her grave right now. she would be hurt. she loved him. she loved all of us. she loved the family. this doesn't make any sense. this is a tragedy, man. you know, i just don't understand -- >> words from george floyd's family last night.
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they obviously want justice. the fbi and state investigators are looking into this case. the question remains, whether there will be criminal charges against the officers. obviously that's something very difficult to do. you don't often see it. >> jeff, thank you once again. thank you for the -- that there's videotape. you can really feel the family's pain and anger there. online reaction to george floyd's death includes this from he onjames. he posted the incident next to coll collin kaepernick. he wrote do you understand now? this is why. and i think tony, when you look at the images side by side, it's powerful. kaepernick's supporters have said all along this was never about disrespecting the country or the national anthem. this was always about police injustice. and that's what he was trying to
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call attention to, racial injustice in this country. and yesterday we didn't even know george floyd's name. we just knew black man under a car. to see his family and what they're going through, it's difficult. sounds like there's more to come on this story. >> yeah. now we have a name and are tracking the aftermath and we'll continue to cover it with jeff in minneapolis. turning now to the coronavirus. the u.s. is nearing a gruesome benchmark in the fight against the virus. 100,000 dead. usa today had a special cover showing the faces of some of the victims. we share their stories every week in our lives to remember series. the virus has killed over 99,000 million of americans. that's more than the number of americans killed in the korean and vietnam wars combined and it could soon top the u.s. death toll from world war ii -- i. >> it's often compared to
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another global crisis, starting in 1918 the spanish flu killed around 675,000 americans. correspondent john dickerson joins us to offer perspective. john, good morning to you from my home to your home. this is one of the days where i'm sorry there's no green room so i can come in and greet you appropriately. but nobody bet tore talk about this than you when it comes to history. how does this crisis compare to others in the past when you look at it? >> it's kind of a hybrid. it is like war in the sense that it is a national acute moment of suffering. it's like a disaster in that we are all witnessing this together. but it is very different in this moment that we're in, because of the media environment we're in and there's a federal expectation of response. when you talk about 1918, woodrow wilson, never mentioned the flu. he got it but never mentioned
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it. there was no expectation that was partially because he was a tardy president, but it was also there was no expectation there would be a federal response. now there very much is and we have cameras trained on the presidency and the executive branch and there's an expectation. that's why they trained for it in the obama administration and the bush administration. it becomes a national political question, and in the current moment that means it gets a jaggedness that wasn't there before. >> yeah. let's talk about the executive branch, john. what's the mark of an effective leader during these times? >> well, there is kind of a play book, and you see a lot of leaders across the world and governors benefitting from three basic things. they tell the truth, even if it's brutal. when i interviewed experts about the disasters, they say tell the people the truth. even if it's hard, people appreciate that. they also take responsibility, because that aligns everybody in the same direction.
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it tells a leader tells their staff you can't explain your way out of this. don't spin your way out. you need results. the other thing is they inform people, because even if there is uncertainty, information helps people feel control. and people need to feel control and certainty to eventually some day start getting back to a more normal kind of life. if they don't feel that certainty and that sense of control, then everything feels sort of -- well, out of their control, and that means they're not going to be able to get back to life as they lived it before. >> so john, how does a good leader balance the gravity of the situation in trying to give people optimism? we saw stories of people on the beach saying the president doesn't wear a mask. why do i need to wear a mask? people are saying that and following his example. >> well, usually what a president does is focus on two things. unity, we're all in this together, and also stitches the current moment into the casual story. why do they do that? because psychologists tell us
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that in these moments where we're all experiencing something brand new and afresh, the brain reacts by wanting to fix it, wanting to flee. it operates at a kind of hazardous level. what a president or a leader can do is say look, americans have been through tough times before. we're all in this together. and that kind of brings people together and makes it either easier to endure this. a president obviously can't scare the country, but again, the experts say that if you're clear with people and you give them the information, even if it's bad information, they feel a sense of control over their lives and control is the precondition to getting through one of these things, because you feel some sense of tiny certainty in what is a big, huge moment of uncertainty. and so a president has to balance those two things. most important is giving people clear information so they can figure out how to plan for their future, because the future is the thing that is so uncertain. >> john, we're running out of time, but we're 160 days away
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from election. how do you see anything you can compare this to and how we move forward? >> well, i mean, there have been big national moments, and the real test is look at fdr in the great depressin. what he did was not only rewrite the social cam pact, basically tell americans this proves that we are all in this together, but he went the next step. there's something in disaster recovery where they talk about build back better. he took that opportunity and said this has exposed a lot of cracks in our culture. it is also elevating beauty and humanity in the american story. let's take the best and let's fix what's wrong. that should be the test of the election coming up. >> yeah. i like that. let's take the best. thank you very much, john. and fix what's wrong. thank you very much. friday in our weekly lives to remember, series anthony mason does we'll look at some of the many remarkable lives we've lost to the coronavirus. ahead, senator and pioneering
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senator martha mcsally was america's first female fighter pilot to fly in combat, and she rose through the ranks to become an air force colonel. the arizona republican was appointed to the u.s. senate back in 2018, taking over for the late john mccain. she faces a tough re-election this fall, however. in a new book, "dare to fly: simple lessons in never giving up," she writes about fighting adversity and sexism throughout her career. she joins us from tucson, arizona. senator mcsally, good morning. and welcome. there's so much to get to in the book. many wonderful bits of wisdom, lard won over the course of your life and career. but i want to get a couple of questions in on washington. the senate is talking about possibly picking up another stimulus bill. we've got tens of millions of
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americans out of work, possibly 20% unemployment. what would you like to see in that bill? >> well, back in arizona, we have so many people who are safely going back to work, but there's still so many more who are unemployed. in my neighborhood, all over our community. small businesses got access to ppp, but i have legislation that allows them to have forgivable the costs for ppe and other things. i think the next package needs to focus very much on the american worker, family, and small business, and getting things back on track while we still fight to defeat this virus which we will. >> what would that look like in supporting the american worker in your view? for example, would you be behind hazard pay for frontline workers? >> well, we're in the middle of conversations about this. i'm listening to my constituents every single day. so when i deploy back to d.c., to the new combat zone i'm in, i'm going to bring arizona's stories, arizona's needs, and we'll be in those negotiations going forward. >> it's interesting that you
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call washington a combat zone. you write in the book that working in washington is the most frustrating thing you've ever done in your life. you've done a lot of frustrating things. so let's talk about politics for a second. there's a bit of a democratic surge, it would seem, in arizona. you're trailing your opponent in your senate race. joe biden seems to be doing well against president trump there, according to polls. is there a democratic surge in arizona? and if so, what's behind it? >> well, i look at it like this could be the last year of my life. i learned that when i lost my dad at the age of 12. i talk about that in "dare to fly." i'm doing everything i can in this unprecedented time to help arizonans to get the relief they need to get through this. there's a big fight ahead. there's going to be an important choice. i will say in my race, the question who've is going to take on china is going to be very significant. i have never trusted a communist in my life. my opponent actually has been invested by the chinese communist party and companies. and he's invested in them.
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i'm going to take them on and confront them. i think going forward the voters will hear more about their choice in front of them. >> all right. well, as you say it could be the last year of your life, the way you live it. and politically speaking, that may be true. let's get into the book a little bit. you've made it through so much in your life that you say you have something called a misery data base that you draw on to get through adversity. what is a misery data base? >> well, i shared this story in "dare to fly" when i was climbing mt. kilimanjaro with friends. one of them brought his son. he was an elite athlete, and he was struggling. i shared that the rest of us, we've been throu a lot of difficult times. to put one foot in front of the other. we were tapping into that misery data base to give us strength to get through this challenge. and his data base was empty. but he was building it at that moment. if he could just get to the top of the mountain, it could propel him to do amazing things in his life. he made it, and he's moved on to do incredible things. i think for all of us, we can
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either reach back to our tough times and we can have it pull us down and hold us back, or we can tap in, and it can give us resolve and strength. and i talk about that in my book. >> all right. snare senator mcsally, thank you very much. in the book you attach to the coronavirus in this national response we're going through now, that is the lesson that you learned to do things afraid. don't wait for conditions. don't wait for the perfect some. don't wait for the perfect moment. that moment is now -- good words to live by. i appreciate you being here today. >> thank you. bring people into the cockpit -- "da "da dar daret daretoofly -- >> it's available in book stores today. we will be right back.
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ahead, from cult survivor to stanford university. only on "cbs this morning," musician mikel jollett talks about a lost childhood, the meaning of family, and how he good morning. things are easing up just a bit at the bay bridge, traffic is definitely improving. we have seen a lot more volume these last couple of days. if you are headed into san francisco you have a few brake lights. a traffic alert still in effect for the westbound 580, that traffic advisory was issued 45 minutes ago due to a crash involving a couple of trucks. there was another accident in the backup coming off at the 580 connector. as we look at travel time very are easing
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up, 19 minutes to go from highway 4 to the mccarter maze, back in the green on highway 4. once again we did have delays heading out of the pittsburgh bay pointe area. 101 is in the clear. the heat wave continues across the area especially for inland locations. heat advisory in effect for most of the region except for the coast. all the inland locations once again under that heat advisory. temperatures, we are in the 60s and 70s, we will continue to watch temperatures climb. topping out about 10 degrees above average. the east bay, concord, you will see triple digit heat, mid-90s in san jose, mid-70s
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." it is that time to bring you some of the stories that are "talk of the table" this morning. since we are coming to you from our respective homes, we're going to share a story with each other and all of you that is the talk of our table. and gayle king, you're going first. what have you got for us? >> i have, tony, a bear of a story, ba-dump-bump. corny but true. a family hike in northern italy. it turned into a heartstopper really. picture this -- no, you don't have to picture, we'll show you. a large bear started following a 12-year-old boy sunday. his stepfather who's taking the video told him just keep walking, just keep walking. the boy stayed calm and asked his stepfather to take a photo.
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now the mother and the grandmother were frantic. you can hear them off camera really getting a little -- crying and teary. eventually the bear ran away and everybody is safe. the family believes that the bear had been sleeping in the bushes where the 12-year-old boy was picking pinecones. i'd be thinking, how much do i like a pinecone. but this is something. the little kid's name is alessandro and he had watched a video of what to do if encounteenkournt encountering a bear. he said he knew not to yell. to stay calm. you can hear him saying to his dad, "go ahead, take the picture. this is cool." cool is not what i was thinking looking at that. >> that is one cool-as-a-cucumber kid. i would have been frantic like mom and grandma off camera. if i were the father, i don't think i'd be holding that camera too steady. put it down and picked up the i can and ran. all right. i got a parenting "talk of
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the table," as well. it's about the dinner table. this is something parents are going to be facing tonight. if your child is a picky eater, it turns out that your helicopter parenting may be to blame. this is according to a new study in the journal "pediatrics" which is adding insult to injury apparently. researchers followed more than 300 children as they reached the ages between 4 and 9. trouble ages for eating, anyone will tell you. when parents demanded their children eat certain foods, that actually led to the kids being pickier eaters. and for parents who imposed fewer restrictions on their children's food, those children were more open about eating. now, this may be perfectly solid medical advice, but it is going to be impossible to institute and practice -- for example, it's recommended that you don't say "finish your peas before you have your ice cream, no ice cream unless you eat your vegetables." that can lead to a negative reaction. what's the alternative? give them the ice cream? i don't know. help me out here. >> no. >> well, i can tell you this, i
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-- i can relate to this because i had an epic standoff with my mother over a mushroom when i was a kid. she won that night. i ate it, but it was decades before i ate another one, okay. >> there you go. >> all right. here's my pick this morning. and it's the compelling new memoir from the front man of the indy rock band the airborne toxic event. ♪ >> that's the band's 2009 gold record, "sometime around midnight." they released their six album last week. the lead singer and songwriter mikel jollett calls it the soundtrack to his memoir of the same name. only on "cbs this morning," jollett talks for the first time at length about being born into
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an infamous cult and how he's still dealing with the repercussions. >> we were never young, so begins mikel jollett's memoir. >> we were born in a cult. we were put in an orphanage. we escaped the cult. there was a lot of violence. a lot of fear. >> in the notorious california-based cult, synanon. kids were separated from their parents to be raised as children of the universe. as jollett writes in hollywood park -- >> our parents were like ghosts in synanon, haunting us, then disappearing, leaving us to wonders what their connection to us was supposed to mean. what is mom, what is a dad, what is a family? and if it's so special, then why did you leave me? how long can you live with ghosts before deciding to become one? ♪ the hardest part wasn't that i was in a cult. the hardest part was that i was lonely. >> synanon started as a therapeutic community for alcoholics and drug addicts. before gaining popularity with
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others like jollett's mother, trying to create a new way to live. >> in recent months, lawsuits and intimidation -- >> by 1978, the organization was forcing members to shave their heads and swap spouses. >> synanon has armed itself and taken a defiant stance against its critics. >> and founder chuck dederich had organized his own military. >> nobody is going to mess with us. nobody. ♪ >> jollett was just 5 when he says he watched a former member brutally beaten. >> i remember them hitting him, and i remember our eyes locking. he was beaten unconscious. >> from the way you write about it, it stayed with you for quite a while. >> oh, absolutely. absolutely. it followed me around. i had nightmares about it. >> mikel and his older brother fled with their mom to salem,
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oregon. after she became fearful of the group. he says she would frequently sink into depression or what his 5-year-old mind heard as the deep russian. >> my mother, she tried to outrun her deem oons. i really -- demons. i really believe that she tried. it just didn't work. >> at 11, he moved to los angeles to be with his dad, an ex-con, former synanon member, and recovering he ining heroin o would change his life. they loved going to the racetrack together. hollywood park. >> my dad and i had really important moments there. kind of looked out over the dirt oval and said, you know, you don't have to be like me. you're a smart kid, do something better with your life. >> what did hearing your father say that mean to you? >> oh, god it meant everything when he said that. it was -- he was telling me to be my own person. >> he had seen the alternative.
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>> i watched my brother start dealing with addiction by the time he was 13. i think it scared me. i think a lot of it was i decided to invent this person. >> who was the person you invented? >> i was the honors club president. you know, track and field athlete. ap, straight-a student. my high school yearbook, everything says, "remember me when you're president." >> jollett would graduate from stanford and distance himself from his mother with whom he has not spoken in years. how do you feel about what you went through with your mom now? >> it's really hard to hate someone whose pain you know so well. and there's there part of me that's, you know, conflicted. on the one hand, a lot of anger. like i didn't have a childhood. that's a tough one. >> what do you do with that anger? >> you know, you write books. you write songs. ♪ >> he wrote his new music --
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♪ ♪ hollywood bar >> and his memoir in his basement study filled with inspirational sayings. >> this one's good. you don't need confidence, just write. >> he saw his book as an artifact. a place to find his late father and other relatives. >> because you got to understand, so much of my life was spent looking for a family. so i could create this artifact where they're all there. >> how does that feel? >> it feels good. it feels mystical. that's probably the thing i'm most proud of is to have honored them in that way that it meant so much to me that i spent three years locked in a room trying to create a world where i could do that. >> mikel jollett is now married with two young children. he said becoming a father and seeing his son at 6 months, the age when many synanon kids were separated from their parents, really put into sharp focus the impact that has on children and that it had on him. he's now making sure to pick up and hug his kids as much as
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possible. jollett's memoir, "hollywood work," is on sale now wherever you buy your books, gayle. >> well, i tell you, anthony, that was a great tease. i really want to read that. i remember synanon. unfortunately i'd never heard of mikel jollett until to moment. what a story he has. my heart just opens it him. it's good to see that he seems to have come out on the other side and is okay. wow. >> yeah. he's thrived in many ways. and it's a beautifully written memoir. he's a wonderful writer, too. >> yeah. ahead, sports legends venus williams and rob gronkowski tell gayle about going head to head on their new show - why choose invisalign over other aligners?
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with no live sport to watch, the new cbs show "game on," exclamation point, i like that title, is bringing the spirit of competition back to tv. it's hosted by comedian keegan-michael key. "game on!" features three-time super bowl winner rob gronkowski and seven-time grand slam winner, that's venus williams, facing off in a series of challenges. so we spoke to rob and venus the other day about how they hope the show will lift the spirits of audiences at home. ♪ >> "game on," it's unlike anything on tv. it's unpredictable, fun,
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hilarious. we never take ourselves too seriously. >> we're very competitive. >> very competitive, too. ♪ >> super bowl champion rob gronkowski and tennis legend venus williams are going head to head in the new show, called "game on!" this game show pits the two athletes against each other as they lead celebrity guests through unique and sometimes heart-stopping competition. [ cheers ] >> it's a wonderful combination of comedy and sports, things that people, you know, live for. and it brings such happiness. >> you know, everybody thinks all celebrities, all athletes know each other. did you two know each other before this? >> no. not at all. it was really cool to actually be on the set and see his competitive juices. >> even though it's friendly competition, it's clear that you both want to win. >> we were battling hard. i'm not sure who the true champion was. ve venus, she won a lot. i've won some. i'm not sure who won the best.
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>> i think people have to wait and see. >> we don't want to give it away. >> i was a kid, when you're in grade school, and you have to pick people for your teams, standing there the last two. people saying, "we had gayle last time, it's your turn." you never had that experience. anything that gets your juices going must be appealing and attractive for you both. >> i got to be honest, there were a lot of women on the show, too. i was like, all right, now i'm up against guys. let's see what i could do. >> rob as a man, did you feel you had to give the women a pass? >> he never gave me a pass. >> the games were super fair, and if i didn't give it my all, wean us was going to whoop -- venus was going to whoop me every time. i couldn't take it easy. it was fair competition. that's what makes the show so great. >> what's the pitch for you that you said i want to do this? >> i just did it because i heard rob was on, and i've been a big fan. i was simply overjoyed when i heard of his comeback. and i feel like it brought a whole light to the country because it's been like very
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challenging. >> venus, i actually agree with you. i think people are very excited about that. >> you know, it lifted my spirits, too, coming back. >> gronkowski, who retired from the patriots last year, decided he's returning to football, playing for the tampa bay buccaneers and reuniting with former teammate tom brady. >> tom and i, we've always been in touch. i just like to put it this way -- he was the satisfying appetizer. and my mom, she's the main course because she lives like an hour and a half away. so she's going to be able to go to all my games. >> rob, that's so nice she'll be there. when we last saw you, when you were leaving, you said, football seemed to have taken a toll on you mentally and physically. >> i definitely needed a break from the game of football. i've played sports for my whole life. all about pounding on my body. i didn't know if i was going to get that spirit to come back to the game. after a year off, i regained that spirit. regained that energy. i'm just so pumped to be back on the field. >> are you nervous, rob? >> there's definitely times where i'm nervous. when i was first going back out there to throw the football
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again, i was like, oh, i wonde s if my skills are still going to be there. they were still there. >> you know, rob, i don't believe you, rob gronkowski, that you're nervous. >> sometimes, yes. sometimes. they're good nerves. one time my coach told me when i was a rookie in second year he said, if you're nervous, you're ready. >> rob said something interesting when he said he just needed a break from football. i don't get the sense from you, venus williams, that you need a break from tennis. i don't think -- >> everybody needs a break. i won't have the courage to come back if i stop. i love what i do. i have a lot to give. the beauty in tennis is that i can choose my own schedule. i've had the flexibility of trying to pace myself if i can. >> what do you guys both think about the timing of this show? >> it's unfortunate what's going on. there's no sports going on right now. there's no competition. so this is what the show's all about. laughing, competition. >> i think a lot of people aren't necessarily want to be as serious because this has been such a serious thing we've been dealing with every day in life. this is bringing back sports.
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there's comedy. i'm hoping that people will kind of get their fix out of this, and it will bring a lot of happiness. >> a lot of happiness. listen, my pin today says "think happy." i think everybody is trying to define happiness. these two clearly get along well. they're excited. i just have to get use today to rob gronkowski and tom brady in a buccaneers uniform. but they're ready for that. they're both really excited. venus and rob are very excited about this show. >> yeah. yeah. i can understands w-- i can understand why. you said you were picked last or near last on the playground for sports growing up. >> yes. >> if only there were some sorts of a game show where you could emerge and redeem yourself athlet athletically? >> yeah, right. yeah. if only there was such a thing. i can't think of it. listen, when you're in fifth grade, sixth grade, that's humiliating, tony dokoupil. you're an athlete, so that doesn't happen to you. i'm still traumatized by it and can remember the name of the person who said it, too.
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his first name is wayne. that's all i'm going to say in case he's still with us on this earth. >> all right. >> it's fun. "game on!" debuts at 8:00, 7:00 central, and will air on wednesdays here on cbs. all week on our "cbs this morning" podcast, we are honoring asian pacific american heritage month. today, bestselling author celeste eng discussings her book that's a series, "little fires everywhere." it's good. she talks about her effort to make the publishing industry more diverse. we're sharing the stories of other influential asian americans and pacific islanders on our "cbs this morning" instagram page. a lot going on there. we'll be right back.
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is a:55. if you are headed out, it's been busy, lots of volume, it is easing up. the lights are on but they are dwindling down for the commute as you head westbound out of the east bay. into san francisco. busy coming off the bay bridge as you go into the city but the toll plaza, things look better there. elsewhere as we look at traffic on 101 southbound, you have the usual brake lights, southbound 101, into san rafael, no accidents or incidents, stop and go as you head out of
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petaluma and southbound 880 still busy. headed into hayward there is a crash westbound 580 at fairmont drive and that has the right lane blocked with traffic is slow. we are seeing extra volume out of the south bay, as you head along gilroy on the southbound side, northbound is clear into the peninsula. we are warming up to the 60s, 70s and 80s at this hour with plenty of sunshine and we will continue to watch temperatures climb. heat advisory for most of the bay area except the coast and shorelines. the inland locations under the heat advisory. the uv index forecast is high at 10 and let's show you the daytime highs as we head through our day. triple digit heat for concorde and fairfield, mid-80s oakland and mid-70s for san francisco. slightly cooler but a warm and hot day for tomorrow, cooling down through the week. shower chances and the
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wayne: i just had chocolate! - i love it. jonathan: it's a trip to spain. breaking news! wayne: i like to party. you've got the big deal! - yeah! wayne: go get your car. - so ready, wayne. wayne: cbs daytime, baby. - on "let's make a deal." whooo! 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, thank you so much for tuning in. i'm gonna... you know what, i'm going to be crazy, i'm going to start the deal off with just one lady. i need a single lady... is there a lady? you've got to be single, i need a single lady. let's go with... are you single? come on over here, pirate lady.
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