tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 25, 2020 3:42am-4:00am PDT
3:42 am
that, but obviously not going to change his mind. >> how would you compare the trump white house to previous mpgss you worked in? >> i had never seen anything like it. when you go out sailing and saying we'll know where we're going when we get there, that's where it can be dangerous for the country. >> on north korea, president trump is the first to sit with a north crane leader. he touts this as a foreign policy success. is it a success? >> no. it's a maup fest failure. donald trump doesn't confer jilt si on the other side, don't give them anything. i think that's dead wrong. countries all over the world retunned that he was prepared to reward the north cranes for their unacceptable behavior. after three meetings with kim
3:43 am
jong un we got nowhere. >> who is the safer choice for america's commander in chief? president trump or joe biden? >> i'm not going to vote for either one and it's a question of apples and oranges. it's a very bad election from my point of view at the presidential level what i'm going to do is write in the name of a conservative republican leader. >> write-in is not going to win. >> that's true. my plan is to hope for a marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! polo! sì? marco...! polo! scusa? marco...! polo! ma io sono marco polo, ma playing "marco polo" with marco polo? surprising. ragazzini, io sono marco polo. sì, sono qui what's not surprising? geico helping you save even more on car and motorcycle insurance. ahhh... polo. marco...! polo! now get an extra 15% credit when you switch before october 7th.
3:44 am
when ourkids, bedtime!her kids moved in with us... now get an extra 15% credit ...she was worried we wouldn't be able to keep up. course we can. what couldn't keep up was our bargain detergent. turns out it's mostly water, and that doesn't work as well on stains. so, we switched back to tide. one wash, stains are gone. kind of like our quiet time. [daughter: slurping] what are you doing? don't pay for water. tide is concentrated with three times the active cleaning ingredients. if it's got to be clean, it's got to be tide. did yocould be signs that syour digestive systemwn isn't working at its best? taking metamucil every day can help. metamucil supports your daily digestive health using a special plant-based fiber called psyllium. psyllium works by forming a gel in your digestive system to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down.
3:45 am
metamucil's gelling action also helps to lower cholesterol and slows sugar absorption to promote healthy blood sugar levels. so, start feeling lighter and more energetic... by taking metamucil every day. ♪ let's see. it's dry. there's no dry time! makes us wonder why we booked fifteen-second ad slots! dries instantly and keeps you protected there's no dry time! for forty-eight-hours. ♪ for forty-eight-hours. think you need to buy expensive skincare products [♪] to see dramatic results? try olay skin care. just one jar of micro-sculpting cream has the hydrating power of 5 jars of a prestige cream, which helps plump skin cells and visibly smooth wrinkles. while new olay retinol24... provides visibly smoother, brighter skin. for dramatic skincare results, try olay. and now receive 25% off your purchase at olay.com brand power. helping you buy better.
3:46 am
as the coronavirus pandemic explodes can across the south and west states and local gofs are rethinking their plans to reopen for business. for many small companies it's already too late. at least 100,000 small businesses will never reopen. ted koppel reported this story for" cbs sunday morning"". >> jenna carol is trying to breathe life back into her business, shchateau de nails. >> ok. 97.3. >> these days it means limiting the number of people in her salon while coaxing those
3:47 am
reluctant to venture out to come back. cleaning, sanitizing. >> wash your hands for 20 seconds, both you ladies. >> also to stifle her own worries about bringing something home. >> let me take your temperature. >> that might affect her daughters. she's a single mom. >> i am skaird. every day that i work i cull home thinking did i do the right thing today. i get scared to kiss my kid, wondering if i picked up anything today. >> reporter: david wood runs a dairy farm outside amsterdam new york. he's 78 and that makes his particularly vulnerable to the coronavirus. he doesn't like it but he needs to stay away. he can only visit his farm once a week. and a milk buyer called while we were there. >> i have tk
3:48 am
>> oflled lately. always something. >> reporter: 3600 head of livestock, all oblivious to the coronavirus. the cows do not care that 40% of the milk they produce normally goes to restaurants that are currently closed or heavily scaled back, nor do they care that one of the farm's tractors broke down that day. >> we got a bad computer. the four wheel drive caused to shut off. >> do you have what you need to fix it? we'll have to see. i always keep three or four extra just to tack date something like that. i sent one of our tractors out to be fixed that had a price tag of h 44,000. i thought it might be 20. >> this is an independent
3:49 am
trucker. he comes from a long line of truckers. his father drove a truck as did his father's father and several of his uncles. rodney does almost all his own maintenance. >> if i have to change the head on the engine, i can do that. pretty much anything that needs to be done to my truck, i do it. >> business is picking up in opelousas, louisiana. he spends more time at them than is good for business. l cancell. permanently believe carriage is a little cheaper. >> he hauls everything from soap to oil refinery equipment. he hasn't been landing contracts for the essential goods that are helping some truckers and companies prosper. >> i think i've moved two loads and i've had about six of them cancelled on me simply because i wouldn't reduce my rate.
3:50 am
they just got another truck that would do it cheaper. >> reporter: in the last month you've only had two runs? >> correct. >> reporter: is that enough to keep body and soul together? >> for the average truck driver, no, but i'm not the average truck driver. i changed two transmissions for two other people. i finished a welding job. i have another way to make money. i'm an old school trucker. >> when we now that are being made available for small business men, you're a small business man, right? >> yes, sir. >> huh? >> i'm a microbusiness. >> one that employs less than 10 employees. he got $600 in federal loan
3:51 am
assistance but that, he says, won't last long. >> right now we're using our personal credit to stay in business. >> i got to ask you a couple of questions. have you or anyone in your family been -- >> no. >> jenna's nail salon is open but the business remains limited. >> we're only limited at this point maybe two to three days a week. >> can you stay afloat financially? >> if you're asking if we're breaking even, no, we're ingleay but there's no demand right now. >> how are you! >> our clientele is 45-plus so a lot of them are still scared. they always call back and cancel. my daughter said to hold off. i've gotten so many of those phone calls. >> you were on the verge of opening a second salon, right? >> still trying to open the second salon. this is my new space.
3:52 am
>> it's in a brand-new shopping center that's still under construction. several of the other businesses, says jenna, have already folded. >> hearing that it's just really scary because if i don't open this business and i lose everything that i've already put in it. >> when you say a lot of money, what are you talking about? >> i've dumped about $40,000 of my own into it, my own money. it would be a huge loss for me. >> what's your biggest worry is you know, the business not surviving. >> do you drink lemonade there? oh did i say that wrong? >> this is my livelihood. >> stay in touch, see what happens. >> this man operates on a greater scale. he tells us in april he was losing about 25 to $25,000 a
3:53 am
day. >> we had to dump some milk. i lost about eight loads and that's expensive. >> a load, that is a trailer load of milk, about 75 a 00 gallons. eight loads, 60,000 gallons of milk, dumped over the course of three weeks. cows do not stop producing because of a changing marked. millions of hungry people and you have thousands upon thousands upon thousands of gallons of milk that you have to throw away. isn't there some way of letting organizations come and pick up that milk and feed people? >> well, the milk that we produce is raw milk. there is a chance that some type of back deer ya could be in it. so for us to have somebody come in and take our milk, we'd be glass to do it.
3:54 am
better than throwing it away. he can't do that for the risk and it's illegal. >> the challenges are staggering. but what david and rodney and jenna have in common, is an uplifting sense of optimism. >> i could be a negative thinker but i choose not to. i try to be ready for the unexpected if that happens. >> you're going to make it through this all right? >> oh, absolutely, because that's what we do. when we break down on the side to have road and we talk six miles, four miles to get to what we need and get back and get to our tluk and deliver our load and nobody knows the difference, that's what we want to do. >> what's the bottom line here jenna? >> we're all doing the best that we can and for everyone to be kind. everyone use their best (music)
3:55 am
(drumsticks rattle, feedback hums) (door closes in distance) ♪ (overlapping voices): we are producers, engineers, singers, songwriters, musicians, tour and live production crews, and thousands more of us. (male voice): without us, the music stops. (overlapping voices): we need your help (female voice): to keep the music playing. (male voice): support those impacted today at: musicares.org. we're still hard at work, because vulnerable students who already struggle with poverty, hunger and trauma, need our support more than ever. at communities in schools, we do whatever it takes. delivering meals, helping kids access remote learning
3:56 am
3:57 am
dogs have been shaking in their beds from a by raj of illegal fireworks displays. complaints are soaring during a time when people are already on edge. mola lenghi has the story from a rof top in new york where residents say they're losing sleep. retai sayhey have see set and ng dus they're in los angeles, baltimore, and new york city, powerful displays of illegal fireworks, disrupting neighborhoods across the country. >> it's 3:00 in the morning and
3:58 am
you're waking up to a big explosion. my baby takes longer naps during the day because he does not get enough sleep during the night and he wakes up cryingful he used to sleep in the -- some of them are firecrackers. some of them sound like bombs. >> communities nationwide have seen increases in complaints. in new york city, 911 calls about illegal fireworks shot up 1200%. in pasadena there was roughly 460% increase. that's pasadena sergeant keith gomez who's parts of the newly created fire work detail. >> we don't want people to unnecessarily burn down their home or their neighbor's home. >> it's unclear what's at stage but mauf rebound vogel told us
3:59 am
it could pose major risks. >> we see a lot of injuries to people who set the fireworks off and also to the people around them. >> those concerns prompted the mayor to launch a task force. >> there will be all sorts of actions taken. undercovering buying, finding the supply sand cutting it off at the knees. how do you find the right balance not to be heavy handed as we deal with a new sense of knapp violent infraction. >> for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for cbs this morning and follow us on line anytime at
4:00 am
♪ ♪ captioning sponsored by cbs >> o'donnell: tonight, coronavirus summer spike. america hits a dangerous new peak. more than 35,000 new infections in one day, the most since april. record deaths in arizona, i.c.u. beds in houston 97% full, lines for testing turn into traffic jams. tonight, new york now ordering visitors from hot spots to quarantine or face up to a $10,000 fine. sports in the age of the world'rgt,el. and, breaking news: five professional golfers pull out of a p.g.a. tour event because of an outbreak. "racing to a cure." prince william visits a lab that
82 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KPIX (CBS)Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1117995998)