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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 6, 2020 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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>> always a good thing. >> nice. >> thank you so much. thank you for watching the news this morning. we will get the update from dr. gally ♪ally good morning to you, our viewers in the west. welcome to cbs this morning. it's tuesday, october 6th, 2020. i'm gayle king with anthony mason and tony dokoupil. covid photo op. president trump stages a campaign-style return to the white house. downplaying the coronavirus and his infection. our experts weigh in on his message, don't be afraid of covid. pandemic politics. joe biden says every american should wear a mask for the sake of the country. how the president's covid diagnosis could shake up the campaign and the debates. officer charged with murder. a texas policeman is accused in the shooting death of a black man, jonathan price. but video of the chaotic aftermath and the father who
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watched his son slip away. and movie mayhem. delays in big releases force hundreds of movie theaters to temporarily close. we'll show you how the big chains are trying to cope with an industry in crisis. >> crisis is the word. first, here's today's "eye opener. it's your world in 90 seconds. i learned so much about coronavirus and one thing that's for certain. don't let it dominate you. don't be afraid of it. >> president trump returned to the white house where he immediately began recording a message for the nation without a mask. >> saying that, you know, don't be so concerned about all this essentially. there's a lot to be concerned about. 210,000 people have died. >> white house press secretary kay league mcenany became the latest in the president's circle to test positive for covid-19. >> i'm very blessed to have a mild case. >> the white house has blocked new guidelines that may have
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delayed a covid vaccine being ready before election day. >> the texas police officer is charged with murder in the killing of an unarmed black man near dallas. >> it's very difficult for this family. >> the irs is investigating national rifle association ceo wayne lapierre for possible criminal tax fraud. >> all that -- >> chiefs topping the patriots in a game that was postponed. >> and all that matters. >> zaiden has one dollar bill, one quarter and two pennies. >> there's a kid going viral online for this hilarious answer. >> he's broke. >> aaron judge. >> the yankees snagged first blood in their playoff series. >> curtis steels in the air. deep, and she's gone! it's a grand slam for giancarlo
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stanton. a game breaker for the yankees! wow! what a spot. for a salami for stanton. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by progressive. making it easy to bundle insurance. >> tony, salami for stanton, is that a baseball term? >> that little kid could be my accountant. >> you've got a dollar, two quarters and some pennies, he'd be broke. he'd be true. that's so true. welcome to "cbs this morning." we're going to start with the president. after three days in the hospital for covid treatment, president trump is still downplaying this pandemic that has killed more than 210,000 people in this country. so he's now receiving medical 7 care at the white house after being moved there from walter reed medical center. >> in an extraordinary event meant to project strength, he first climbed the stairs of the south portico, then removed his
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mask, despite being contagious and appeared to struggle to catch his breath. ben tracy is at the white house where mr. trump says we should not be afraid of the white house. his critics say he's prioritizing stagecraft over statement. >> his return was well choreographed, timed perfectly during the evening newscasts and the idea was to make it look like the president has beaten the virus. but, in fact, he is still on very powerful medication and his own doctors say he's not out of the woods yet. after stepping off marine one, president trump walked up the stairs of the white house monday evening. then flanked by american flags, he removed his mask and posed for the cameras. still infected with the virus, the president appears to be breathing heavily. >> don't let it dominate you. don't be afraid of it. you're going to beat it. >> reporter: his message to the country -- coronavirus is not that bad. that as more than 210,000 people in the u.s. have now died from the virus and most of the more than 7 million who have been
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infected don't have access to the advanced health care the president has received. still, mr. trump stood by his decisions. >> i stood out front. i led. nobody that's a leader wouldld t do what i did. and i know there's a risk. there's a danger. but that's okay. and now i'm better and maybe i'm immune. i don't know. but don't let it dominate your lives. get out there. >> reporter: there's evidence that having the virus does not confer immunity. and the president's own medical team confirmed he's still treated with a powerful steroid and the antiviral medication remdesivir. >> if we can get through to monday, with him remaining the same or improving, better yet, then we will all take that final deep cisigh of relief. >> reporter: but dr. sean conley didn't share important details like the results of a scan of the president's lungs which can be severely affected by covid. >> there are hipaa rules and regulations that restrict me in
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sharing certain things for this safety and his own health. and reasons. >> reporter: he also would not say when the president last tested negative for the virus. a detail central to understanding who else may have been infected. with at least 18 infections among the president's staff, campaign or guests at the white house, press secretary kayleigh mcenany said monday she, too has tested positive for covid-19, one day after she was seen without a mask talking to reporters. >> reporter: the president is expected to spend most of his time inside the white house residence and to be briefed on video or by telephone rather than in person. he'll also receive round the clock care from the white house medical unit. there s there is an icu here at the white house in case that's ever needed. >> our chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook joins us now. good morning to you. i want to begin with the president's comments that we should not let covid dominate our lives and not be afraid of it. what was your reaction when you heard him say that? >> you know, tony, you may not
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want to let it dominate your life, but it is having a huge affect on all of our lives. and you have to have a healthy respect for a virus that's wrecked so many lives around us. not just the people who have died but the people who are the families of the people who have died and people who have recovered and still have symptoms. so this was an opportunity for a teaching moment for the country where you could go out there and say, look, this is serious. and here's what you can do. just don't sit around being afraid. you want to wear a mask, have social distancing, and we heard from the cdc yesterday that now aerosols can go beyond six feet. so if you're indoors, have adequate ventilation and even more of a reason to wear a mask indoors. so there are things, there are messages with an opportunity to teach. >> i want to pick up on the idea of respect for the virus because we saw the president there take off his mask when he returned to the white house. the white house is a residence, but it is also the world's most famous office building. people work there. how contagious is the president at this point? >> we have to assume that the
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president still is contagious, that he's shedding virus. we know that can happen for about up to ten days after somebody -- you're not considered free of the ability to infect somebody else for about ten days after you develop symptoms. so we have to assume he's still infectious. we know that this virus can spread through the air. yes, it may spread to people who are within six feet but it absolutely can spread beyond six feet. so you have to think, what's the ventalation system in the white house? are everybody wear -- is everybody wearing a mask there? and i think you have to have respect for it. not just the president of the united states, which, of course, you want him to be safe, but for everybody else. everybody, all the employees there have to be safe. >> it's a little bit misleading to suggest the president has been discharged from the hospital. more accurate to say the hospital has gone home with him. he has an icu there in the white house. i'm curious, dr. lapook, what's ahead for him in terms of treatment and care? >> yeah, i -- tony, you have got it exactly right.
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i spoke to somebody who was intimately familiar with the abilities of the white house, and he said it's almost like a step down unit which is just one level below an intensive care unit. i look at it more like a transfer to another medical facility. and they are going to still be looking at him very closely. he's going to get intravenous remdesivir. they'll be looking at his vital signs all the time. i don't know what other tests they're doing because they're not telling us that, but there are physicians, nurses, physical therapists. i'd be shocked if there's not an anesthesiologist there in case he develops shortness of breath. that first week people can have symptoms that can be serious but they may be relatively milder than the second week when you suddenly get inflammation, this inflammatory phase. and that's where people can very quickly go south. when i was in april in nyu langone on the covid words, i was taking care of patients and they would come in the hospital looking fairly okay and then suddenly take a turn for the worse and an hour later have a breathing tube.
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>> you keep hearing those kind of stories. i am curious about the president's doctor because there's still so many answers that we don't know. we still don't know when he tested negative. that seems that would be important to know. but the doctor keeps saying hipaa rules. how do you balance the public's need and curiosity to know what's happening with the president. if the president said you can share the information, wouldn't it be shared? >> right. so it's not up to the doctor to do that balance. it's up to the patient. the patient, whether it's the president of the united states or you or me, we have the right to say what information is going to be released publicly. so what we're seeing here is a filtering of the information, right? it's not like we're saying, look, it's hipaa protected and i don't want anything told. here's the good news and when there might be some less than good news like does he have pneumonia or increase in
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inflammer to mainflamm er y markers. we don't want to be on the outside looking in and having all this conjecture and speculating. we'd like to have more information and we certainly are not his doctor. his doctors are his doctor. >> john, there's no -- there's no evidence so far that the white house is actually doing any contact tracing. is that a concern, and if the white house was a typical business, might it have been shut down to be cleaned at this point? >> yeah, i think that is a huge question. we found out that the centers for disease control who have tremendous expertise in doing contact tracing, or directing contact tracing, are on the sidelines here. it's like you have an olympic athlete who is training for the olympics for years and years and oh, you're on the sideline. why not call them in get their expertise. yes, you want to be able to have contact tracing and be able to get specimens from everybody and have -- save them for molecular fingerprinting so later on you can figure out where did this start?
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not to point fingers but how can we prevent this from happening in the future. >> what about shutting the white house down? >> i think you want to have a deep cleaning for sure, but the thing that i would concentrate on the most tony, and anthony, is that this can spread through the air. we know that now, without a doubt. so what's the ventilation. and is every single person wearing a mask? i cannot stress that enough? >> jon lapook, thank you. >> the president removes his mask with such flourish. joe biden says wearing a mask should be seen as patriotic. it's a word he used as a town hall last night. he says he's glad that president trump appears to be recovering but he also said the president does bear some responsibility for getting sick in the first place and he blasted mr. trump for the message he's sending to others. ed o'keefe has more on this story from washington. >> reporter: speaking to south florida voters last night, joe biden once again sent best wishes to the first family but
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said he isn't surprised by the president's illness. >> anybody who contracts the virus by essentially saying masks don't matter, social distancing doesn't matter, i think is responsible for what happens to them. >> reporter: shortly after the president took off his mask while re-entering the white house, biden implored americans to keep them on. >> what is this macho thing, i'm not going to wear a mask? what's the deal here? big deal! does it hurt you? be patriotic for god's sake. take care of yourself and take care of your neighbors. >> reporter: the former vice president said he isn't worried about contracting the virus despite being in the same room as mr. trump a week ago. >> no, because, look, i've been fastiduous about the social distancing. i've been fastidious about wearing a mask when i'm not socially distanced and even then remaining socially distanced. and so we never got closer than you and i are right now.
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>> reporter: earlier in the day his wife jill had to step in to remind him to keep a social distance from reporters. >> step back a little bit. >> i'm sorry. >> in his first visit to south florida since becoming the democratic nominee, biden also visited the little haiti and little havana neighborhoods hoping to increase black and latino support. and he said he's ready to debate the president again if doctors say it's safe to do so. but admitted their first meeting didn't go as he hoped. >> i think it was embarrassing for the nation to see the president of the united states ruruin mate california senator n kamala harris. the commission on presidential debates say they'll be divided 12 feet, 3 inches and with plexiglas dividing them as a precaution. meanwhile, president trump and the biden campaign say they are preparing for the october 15th debate in miami, but we expectations over how that will happen to continue in the coming days. >> all right, ed, thank you.
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as dr. jon lapook mentioned, there's new guidance from the cdc about how the coronavirus can spread. our lead national correspondent david begnaud joins us. this is the third change in less than a month. what is the new guidance? >> so the cdc is now confirming, yet again, that it's airborne. it can travel through the air in tiny particles more than six feet. less than a month ago they posted they removed it and infectious disease experts around the country said, why did you remove it? are you caving to pressure? that's, in fact, science. the cdc has it back on their website. >> it's not a surprise to any of us. we've known for months aerosols played an important role in the transmission. >> reporter: he is dr. michael osterholm, an infectious disease expert at the university of minnesota. he says the updated guidance on how coronavirus spreads is finally starting to reflect the science. >> what essentially are they acknowledging now? >> the cdc is finally
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acknowledging that these very tiny particles can float long distances and hang in the air for hours are actually part of the transmission of this virus from one infected individual to someone who is not yet infected. that has tremendous implications. >> reporter: the guidance on the cdc's website specifically states that the virus may be able to infect people who are further than six feet away. especially with an enclosed space that had inadequate ventilation and if someone is breathing heavily while singing or exercising. there is a report from "the new york times" that says scientists at the fda are being blocked by the white house from implementing strict new federal guidelines for the emergency release of the vaccine. those enhanced safety guidelines would almost guarantee no vaccine would be approved before the november election. >> the fda has good reasons for doing what they're doing. they have career scientists who develop these kind of models of what you need to do to assure
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safety and to assure efficacy. and right now, this is what they said and we'll see what happens. >> back here in new york city, we are in queens because yesterday you might remember we told you that the mayor wanted to shut down schools and nonessential businesses like restaurants in nine zip codes in queens and brooklyn. the governor weighed in because the governor has to approve it. the governor says you can shut down the schools because the cases issue spiking here, but i don't want you shutting down restaurants and nonessential businesses yet. the governor says he needs more information before he approves that. tony? >> david, thank you very much. before we move on, we're talking about the politics of the reaction. the president's comments and the politics of the virus. there's also the reality of the virus. i just jotted down a few numbers. 210,000 people dead in this country. many of them died alone. most of them did. 11 million jobs lost. that is net. that is not the total loss. that's gone. those jobs are eliminated. and 41 million kids this morning right now as we speak are
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preparing for another day of learning at home. so when we talk about the impact of this virus, these people were not afraid of it. they're not being dominated by it. they're living with it. >> exactly. and it's still raging. we covered amanda's story with her husband who ultimately lost his life after 95 days. she says unfortunately it did dominate our lives, didn't it? it is something to be afraid of. after you see the person you love the most die from the disease, you would never say what his tweet said. it is sad, it is hurtful, it is disgraceful. so while people are glad that he's recovering, we're glad that he's recovering. you're still very angry that it seems to be very cavalier. >> but in this moment, he is -- he seemed to be declaring victory before this fight is over. >> that he's still fighting. >> exactly. as jon lapook pointed out. many patients you see a resur resurgenresurg resurgence a week or so down the line and as we've heard from many people who have been through this and thought they had come out the other side,
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months later, they can have lingering after effects that in many cases still haven't really been explained. as we keep pointing out, there is so much we still don't know about this virus. >> but at least right now, please pay attention to the science. the mask wearing is so important. ahead, a white police officer is accused of murdering an unarmed black man in texas. we'll hear from the family of jonathan price was his name who say he was shot dead after he was breaking up a fight. but
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scram, go away. ugh. caring for each other because we are all in this together. so wear a mask and have a rotten day, will ya? ugh. . good morning. it is 7:26. right now california's coronavirus numbers are stable but the governor is warning people if they don't stay aware there could be a second wave. the alameda county da is reopening the oscar grant case. he was a 22-year-old shot and killed by a bart police officer at the fruitvale station. the da will look in to the circumstances that led to grant's death. today the santa clara county board of supervisors could vote to consolidate the fire district in to the santa clara fire department.
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it aims to better address the complex wildfires threatening the bay. and taking a look at the roadways. it's certainly quite busy as we start off with the travel times. you can see traffic is pretty slow on the travel times. we are seeing a lot of yellow and red. we have westbound east shore freeway. a 37 minutes to highway 4 to the maze. westbound 580, 205 to 680. that's a 31 minute drive time and web highway 4 we have a lot of brake lights there as well. a 36 minute drive time and taking a look at traffic. that's a look at your morning drive. all right. foggy start along the coast right around the bay subpoena some of the inland locations. we will see that sunshine and clearing inland. mid-80s's to low 90's around the bay, partly sunny, upper 60's to low to mid- in the bay area, we believe in science.
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traffic and air pollution will be even worse after the pandemic. that's why we support measure rr to keep caltrain running. which is at risk of shutdown because of the crisis. to keep millions of cars off our roads, to reduce air pollution and fight climate change. and measure rr helps essential workers like me get to work and keep our communities healthy. relieve traffic. reduce pollution. rescue caltrain. [all] yes on measure rr.
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welcome back to cbs this morning. president trump is back in that building, the white house, recovering from the coronavirus, but there are still so many questions about his health and the message that he's now sending to the country. the president, as you saw, removed his mask after his return for a photo op on the white house balcony. he went into the white house and came back out and took off the mask. before leaving walter reed he tweeted this. don't be afraid of covid. don't let it dominate your life. john dickerson joins us to discuss. john, it's always good to see you but really excited to see you today. i think you can add a lot to this conversation because i'm thinking 200,000 plus people
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have died from this and their grieving families may beg to differ with the position that the president is taking. so what message is he sending to the public today? >> reporter: well, the message, first look at his return to the white house. the message he's trying to send is that he is strong, that he's defiant, that he has beaten this thing. some people might take it that way, but 70% or more of the country according to an abc poll say the president contributed to his own condition. he didn't take the coronavirus seriously and they are likely to see this as a problem of his own making because he downplayed the threat. he didn't wear a mask. he didn't follow the basic rules of his own administration. and so if he is responsible for his own conditio, then he can hardly be try up fact in return from something he created. you don't get points for standing if you shot yourself in the foot. >> yeah. you know what, the latest poll -- that's a good analogy.
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2/3 of americans think he's acting irresponsibly with the messaging. do you think the white house will reconsider the strategy or no way? >> reporter: i don't think there's any reconsidering the strategy because the strategy is coming from the patient. the question whether the president behaved responsibly, if you look at the three main criticism of the administration and the president's response to covid as a national crisis, it's been that the president has downplayed the threat, that he hasn't put force behind the mitigation efforts and the protection efforts and then that he has misled the country with respect to how bad things are. those are the global criticisms of the administration. those exact criticisms are being echoed precisely in the handling of the president's own case and so since the majority of the country thinks the president mishandled the global situation, the mishandling of his own case that people think that he's engaged in only echos the larger problem for him, a problem that the whole nation is still going
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through. >> there's a danger in this strategy of declaring victory, too, isn't there, john? in that if he has a relapse in the next week or so, which doctors say can be a real possibility with the coronavirus, that he might have to go back to the hospital. >> reporter: that's right. so that's a personal danger for the president. it's also when he says don't fear covid and makes it look as though he's defeated it, one, it tramples on the feeling of more than 207,000 families in america who have lost loved ones. secondly, it exacerbates one of the things we know is at the heart of this story, which is if you have money, means, power you can get treated. you won't get covid in the first place maybe, or you'll be better off than people who don't have money, means and power. that's the story. the president is saying, everybody get back into the game. don't worry about this. people are making their own risk
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assessments about how they can inch back into normal life. they are not going to be cajoled into that. we've seen that over the months of the virus. they may look at the president and instead of hearing his message of get back into the game, they may think, wow, if the white house can become a super spreader location, the most protected place in america, maybe this virus is even more virulent than i thought and i should be more cautious. >> john, you mentioned money, means and power. many of the president's supporters don't have money, means and power and they support him because he fights on their behalf. when he goes back on the campaign trail, he'll go as soon as possible, maybe against expert advice, when he goes back on the campaign trail and he meets with the supporters, how is his message and posture going to resonate with them? >> reporter: i think what we saw, he endangered the health of his secret service body by going on that ride to waive to connect
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with them. the larger question is whether if he goes back out on the campaign trail it surfaces all of these questions that are at the heart of this, which is whether he is doing things for his own personal political benefit, his own standing that are not in the public interest. that's been a question throughout his administration. it's a question here with respect to his personal health and when he goes out there if he's not following the health guidelines of his own administration, then it reanimates all of the questions that are at the heart of his own personal sickness. there are people at the super spreader event, i haven't seen any statements from the president or anybody else expressing sympathy or care for those people who are going through a version of what he went through. public campaign events raise all of those questions again and keep this center stage which is an issue he doesn't want at the center of his re-election campaign. >> as we pointed out, no evidence of contact tracing by the white house at all.
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thank you, john dickerson. we appreciate it. ahead, a disturbance ends with a black man dead and a white police officer. shaun lucas and the small texas protest. >> you can get this morning's news by subscribing to the ""cbs this morning"" podcast. eliminate who you are not first, and you're going to find yourself where you need to be. ♪ the race is never over. the journey has no port. the adventure never ends, because we are always on the way. ♪ ♪ and mine's unlisted.. try boost® high protein... -with 20 grams of protein for muscle health-
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they do one of the most deven in normal times.s, our frontline health care workers. and when these heroes lack the resources they need, that risky job gets ten times harder. prop fifteen makes corporations pay their fair share. to invest in our communities, in our clinics, in the essential workers who treat everyone- rich, poor, and in-between. whether it's this pandemic or the next health crisis, vote yes on prop fifteen. for all of us. in north tecxas, there was the murder of a black man.
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jonathan price was shot dead while trying to break up a fight. his family's attorney said he was trying to break up the fight. >> reporter: wolfe city police officer shaun lucas was booked monday night and his bond set at $1 million. the texas ranger says lukas was responding to a call at a gas station on saturday. that's when officer lukas encountered price who the texas rangers say resisted arrest in a nonthreatening posture and walked away. officer lucas tased price before shooting and killing him. this captured the chaos. the circumstances surrounding his decision to use deadly force is under investigation. according to family members, it was price who intervened and de-escalated a fight between a couple. his father, junior price, said he showed up to the scene on saturday as paramedics worked to
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save him. what do you remember of that moment? >> watching my son die. i knew he was dead before they moved him. >> reporter: hundreds gathered to peacefully honor him about 70 miles outside of dallas. price's sister, april lewis, said he worked for the city. he was described as a hometown hero and a standup guy. >> he had a bright future. he was going to start up his own business, fitness center. he's just gone. i mean, didn't have to end like that. >> reporter: civil rights attorney lee merritt represents the price family. >> they deserve to know every detail about what happened and they need to know it immediately. >> reporter: still his big sister april is skeptical they'll get answer. >> i just want some kind of closure. that's all i want. >> reporter: the family attorney tells us there is surveillance video of the shooting and they are working with the texas
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rangers to see that very soon. they are also planning to file a lawsuit in this case. tony? >> thank you very much. part of what stands out in this case, in addition to the fact that the officer was charged and so quickly. >> quickly. >> price was childhood friends with will middlebrooks. he's gone online and taken to defend his friend and say, he wasn't a criminal. he wasn't resisting arrest. this is racism pure and simple and we have to look at it. >> i like how he says, no excuses this time. he resisted arrest just to comply with cops. nope, that doesn't work either. this was purely an act of racism. mr. middlebrooks is white. i am sick, i am heart broken and i am furious. >> he's telling other white people to take a step back. >> how many times do we have to keep telling this story and nothing seems to change? >> hopefully we'll get the surveillance footage that they believe is out there. >> try to do the right thing.
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>> thank you very much. ahead we'll be looking at the stories you'll be w many times your family touches the surfaces in your home in 24 hours. try microban 24. spray on hard surfaces to kill 99.9% of viruses and bacteria initially. once dry, it forms a bacteria shield that keeps killing bacteria for 24 hours, even after multiple touches. try microban 24. available in multi-purpose, sanitizing, and bathroom sprays.
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if your financial situation has changed, we may be able to help. families with young children could get nearly $7,000 dollars for child care. buying your first home, you'll get $15,000 dollars towards the down payment. if you get paid by the hour, your income could grow by as much as $14,000 dollars. older seniors, your yearly social security benefits could increase by $1,300 dollars. the biden plan: the wealthy and big corporations pay more, you benefit. i'm joe biden and i approve this message. you benefit. removes ten years of yellow stains. optic white renewal that's like all the way back to 2010. they're jeans. they're leggings. they're jeggings! whoa. remove ten years of yellow stains with colgate optic white renewal. eh, not enough fiber... chocolate would be good... snacking should be sweet and simple. the delicious taste of glucerna gives you the sweetness you crave
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don't wait... talk to your child's doctor about hpv vaccination today. the leads may be changing, but one thing that never changes is what to watch. i blew it. the leafs may be changing, one thing stays the same, what to watch. >> that's not what i said! >> norfolk, virginia. i understand you have a little gif there. >> i do. thank you, ashlyn. look what brian mullen, a member of our crew, got me as a gift. it is a hockey puck. >> why did brian give that to you, vlad? >> because i said that i didn't realize that tampa bay had a team after they won the stanley cup. and brian played hockey. >> plays hockey. >> he was very offended. >> did he hand it to you or did it hit you in the back of the head? >> he shot it at me.
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i was sort of dodging the whole time. thank you very much. >> brian was outraged. he doesn't get outraged. >> so outraged that he threw the hockey puck at me. >> now you will have a constant reminder. >> so will the lump on my head. thank you very much. thank you brian. thank you ashlyn. we are taking a look at the stories we think you will be talking about including this. the national rifle association's ceo is under investigation for potential tax fraud. they're studying whether wayne lapierre evaded taxes. he was sued by new york state's attorney general. she alleges he and other top nra officials received millions of dollars in unreported compensation from the non-profit to pay for things like lavish trips and expensive meals. we've asked lapierre to comment. an attorney said it would be premature to comment since they were not aware of any inquiry. >> there was a big board room
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rift within the nra and then these details started leaking out. the attorney general in new york, you wonder why new york is going after them, they're registered in new york, that's why. and the attorney general is actually seeking to dissolve the nra. they call it politically motivated. >> to be continued. this is an incredible story. vote. what i love about bea, guys, she says she's mailing in her ballot and she knows it's secure because she can track it electronically. she's 102. >> and she's tracking it. >> figured that out. >> very good for bea.
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>> she voted for fdr in 1940. >> he's not on the ballot this time. >> happy days are here again. break out the blue balloons. we've been waiting for this moment. we have learned our favorite baby panda is a boy. the cub's gender was revealed online using a painting created by tien tien. they determined his sex by swabbing his cheek. the 6 week old giant panda cub is strong and healthy. he weighs close to 4 pounds and is starting to open his eyes. there he is. >> so cute. >> all together now. >> awwwww. >> it's interesting, that's the only way they can determine. they don't have the usual let's look down there and see. can you imagine if they did that for us, swab our cheek to see what our sex was? >> i prefer that, actually. >> instead of looking down. >> i prefer looking down. quick and easy. >> if i were me and i was only a couple of hours old. privacy!
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>> i love the gender reveal. so the father painted a painting with blue? >> yes. >> the father painted -- there's a little individual qvideo show >> mom and dad are separated. >> father didn't have to burn down a forest. >> comes from a broken home but he's already so loved. it's okay. >> nice to have good news out of washington, vlad. ahead, pete buttigieg will join us to talk about trust in our democracy and president trump's battle against coronavirus. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." really make my dry skin healthier in one day? it's true jen. really?! this prebiotic oat formula moisturizes to help prevent dry skin. impressive! aveeno® healthy. it's our nature. impressive! i have the power to lower my blood sugar and a1c. because i can still make my own insulin. and trulicity activates my body to release it like it's supposed to. trulicity is for type 2 diabetes.
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. this is a kpix5 morning update. >> it's 7:56. santa clara county may know today if restaurants and churches will be allowed to reopen indoors. that's if the county moves to the orange tier. indoor dining and churches could reopen at 25% capacity as soon as next wednesday. the glass fire burning in napa and sonoma is now 50% contained. some evacuation orders were downgraded to warnings. the governor named judge martin jenkins to the
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california supreme court. jenkins is an oakland nat isp former seattle seahawks player. if confirmed he will be the first openly gay justice and third african american on the ben. the traffic center taking a look at the bay bridge. we have a couple of hot spots. brake lights on the upper deck due to a crash blocking lanes near treasure island. traffic is slow. a line of red through there which is backing traffic up again at the toll plaza. checking the travel times. 45 minutes. that's a tough commute. highway 4 to the maze. we are starting off with temperatures in the 40's and in the 50's and a beautiful look with our treasure island camera this morning looking at the bay bridge and san francisco with some patchy fog out there. as we head through the day looking at that sunshine inland. mid-80s's to low 90's around the bay partly sunny in the upper 60's proposition 16 takes on discrimination.
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some women make as little as 42% of what a man makes. voting yes on prop 16 helps us fix that. it's supported by leaders like kamala harris and opposed by those who have always opposed equality. we either fall from grace or we rise.
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together. proposition 16 provides equal opportunities, levelling the playing field for all of us. vote yes on prop 16.
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it's tuesday, october 6th, 2020. welcome back to "cbs th i am egayle king with tony dokoupil and anthony mason. return to the white house, the president projects optimism as he stages a homecoming from walter reed medical center. the latest in his covid treatment and why he's not out of crisis yet. the new james bond film, how theaters are trying to get people back into seats. the way of bruce lee, first on "cbs this morning," the legend's daughter talks about his philosophy for staying strong. >> we need some of that right now. first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00.
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after three days in the hospital for covid treatment, president trump is still downplaying this pandemic. >> the return certainly was well choreographed. the idea was to make it look like the president has beaten the virus but in fact still on powerful medication and his own doctors say he's not out of the woods yet. >> he has an icu in the white house so i am curious dr. lapook, what is ahead? >> i spoke to someone intimately familiar with the abilities of the white house, says it's a step-down unit one level below an intensive care unit. >> another debate tomorrow night against vice president mike pence and california senator kamala harris. the biden campaign say they're preparing for the october 15th debate in miami. we expect negotiations over exactly how that will happen to continue in the coming days. braves players and family members in houston ahead of the
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national division series, freddie freeman's son charlie taking some swings just like his dad. >> pretty good swing. >> yes. >> nor a little guy. >> what do you think he's going to do for a living? he's off to a really good start. good morning to you. the president is back the at the white house today, as he continues to battle the coronavirus. mr. trump returned last evening, could you call it a real truly made-for-tv moment after about three days at walter reed medical center but the president quickly removed his mask and then he poses for this photo-op. >> he downplayed the virus once again in a campaign style video on twitter. >> and one thing that's for certain, don't let it dominate you. don't be afraid of it. but don't let it dominate your lives. get out there, be careful. we have the best medicine -- >> the critics of the president say that message is reckless, given more than 210,000 people in the u.s. have died of the
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coronavirus. ben tracy is at the white house for us. good morning to you again. how might the president carry out his duties from a west wing that's returning to, despite a mounting number of cases there in his orbit? >> reporter: it's actually pretty quiet around here today. a lot of the president's team working from home because of the outbreak. the president is likely to get his briefings over the phone or by video instead of in person and with just 28 days to go before election day, the president's advisers are urging him to rest and get back to full health, so he can get back on the campaign trail after the second debate. and the president's campaign says he does intend to attend that debate on october 15th, but the president's doctors will likely weigh in on that decision based on the president's health at the time. meanwhile the president's doctor is being criticized for a lack of transparency. dr. sean conley refused to answer questions whether the president's lung scans showed any damage or when the president last tested negative for the virus. that of course raises questions when he was infected and who he
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may have been in contact with. dr. conley warned the president is not yet out of the woods when it comes to his fight with the virus, and last night, dr. anthony fauci said the president could have what's called a reversal in his case. anthony? >> ben, thank you very much. cbs news medical contributor dr. david agus joins us. as you heard ben say, the president's doctor said he may not be entirely out of the woods. dr. fauci said there could be a reversal in the next few days. how critical are these next few days for the president? >> well, he's still on dexamethasone, so dexamethasone and decadron the steroid we use until lungs improve so obviously his lungs aren't improved because he's still on the medicine. i've seen cases you get improvement from this point and also seen cases where there's a lull, and then things get worse. that's what we're worried about. he feels well. you take off the decadron steroide steroide steroids, he's not going to feel well and the energy we're seeing
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now will go away. >> what do you think is the significance of the doctor not wanting to show the president's lung scans? >> well, saying well it's hipaa, which is the patient privacy act really is inappropriate because the president, the patient can say it's okay for you to tell people about my lungs. what he's saying is the president doesn't want people to know about that lung scan. it's critical that we know whether there's 10% involved, 50% involved, 80% involved of the lungs, whatever that number s tells us how critical his disease is and likely what his course will be. >> david, we also still don't have an answer on when the president last tested negative. why is that information so important? >> well, it's important because it would say who he was exposed to, who was exposed to him. it's about other people. it's about caring for everybody who when you were positive or could have been positive, and you had intimate reactions, interactions with somebody, they need to be quarantined and
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tested. that's how we contact trace and that's how we stop the spread of the virus. that is critical, so other people don't get infected with this virus. >> so i have had da, why do you let someone out of the hospital who all the experts say is not out of the woods yet with so many uncertainties? i realize the white house has top of the notch facilities, but it's still not a medical center. >> so on friday, when it all began, he didn't really have a team. a team was built, and so now he was transferred, so i don't think it's a discharge as much as a transfer to the white house, where those same doctors will manage his care and if something goes wrong, if he gets worse, he has trouble breathing they could take him down to the icu unit and i've seen it. it is state-of-the-art. they can put him on a ventilator and transport him within minutes literally back to walter reed. i don't think that part is unsafe. i think it's obviously he's not out of the woods and i think that's critical but we're going
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to continue to follow him in the white house. >> the president raised a lot of eyebrows and i think hurt a lot of people's feelings especially when you think that 210,000 have died. i feel good. don't let it dominate your life, don't let it take you. i kept thinking about the families still grieving would hear those words. what did you think when you heard them? >> well, i thought about 210,000 people -- >> me too. >> would love to have a team of ten doctors dedicated to hem, would love to have access to medicines aren't fda approved and me as a scientist and doctor, i think there's hope with the medicines. they would have loved access to those medicines when they were sick. it's not necessarily genuine to say my story is your story when the president talks about people with covid-19. >> he plans to participate in the next debate. i think it's like nine days away. is that realistic or is it too hard to say right now? >> well, let's see what happens when the dexamethasone is
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dropped. i've seen patients a dramatic drop in energy. i had a patient two months ago put him on steroids. the next day he called an contractor to build an underground bowling alley at his house. several days later he said i hate bowling and have no money why would i do such a thing? we'll see what happens when the steroids stop and the doctors think he's noninfectious. >> that's quite a story. >> i hate bowling, okay, quite a story. thank you very much. >> i hope they didn't start construction. >> i think there's always a bowling alley in the white house, richard nixon built one. >> thank you, sir. we' talk with pete buttigieg about his new book called "trust" why trust in our institutions eroded and how we can bring i
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we have much more news ahead. first on "cbs this morning," the daughter of bruce lee who died in 1973 shares his philosophical side. >> even though i don't have these really vivid, long form memories of him, i have a very vivid sense of what he felt like, what his energy was like and then to match that with these words, it was really a beautiful gift. coming up, shannon leon the impact of her father's writings and how his legacy lives on.
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pete buttigieg is keeping busy after his democratic presidential run. he was spotted just yesterday in the lobby of a hotel where senator kamala harris is preparing for her vice presidential debate tomorrow. he is reportedly playing mike pence. buttigieg is on the transition advisory board and working at the university of notre dame. on top of that during his down time he's written a book, "trust" america's chance. mayor, good morning to you. you're in salt lake city now. you're from south bend. are you there for the skiing or something else? >> so can't speak to anything going on behind the scenes with the campaign but of course salt
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lake city tomorrow will be the venue for a very important conversation and i'm looking forward for the opportunity for senator harris to speak directly to the american people about why we need joe biden as our next president. >> you're a skilled debater yourself. i'm curious what you think the strengths of vice president pengs a pence are as a debater and how senator harris is preparing to meet those strengths. >> the truth is he's a very effective debater. i've seen him debating for governor and debating for vice president as well. he has an ability to deliver lines with a high degree of confidence. whether they're true or not. but of course saying something with a straight face doesn't make it true, and what's going to be really important, i think, is for americans to really see the difference between a message from an administration that doesn't seem to want to face reality and the biden/harris campaign represented by senator harris talking about what it will actually take to con front
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this pandemic that's now killed more than 200,000 americans and that the white house seems to still be in denial about even with the president getting sick. >> if the vice president wanders from the truth, as you say, how will senator harris respond? >> well, you know, it should be the job of the moderator so i'm hoping that we'll be able to rely on that fact checking so that she can focus on getting out the message about how this country's going to move forward, what it's going to take to -- as the vice presidedent l likeses , rerestorore t the soul o of tht and w whatt thahat issues that come up in the presidential debate from a couple of weeks ago was whether joe biden wants to expand the supreme court, and he didn't answer the question, but you're an interesting person on this subject because you have supported a plan to add justices so it's 15. not court packing, it's a little bit more complicated than that, but given your support for expanding the court, i'm curious, could we see an answer
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tomorrow night to that question? >> well, i think what we're going to see tomorrow night is a conversation about what's at stake right now. we've got less than 30 days until the election and a matter of weeks before the court may entertain a case that could decide whether pre-existing care -- pre-existing coverage is taken away from millions of americans as republicans try to overthrow the affordable care act in its entirety. i think those really urgent questions are going to command the day. this is a nomination not a theological exercise. >> what's the name of your book again? >> so the book is called "trust, america's best chance." >> i see it behind you. that was an attempt at humor. it's so interesting that i've gotten calls from both democrats
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and republicans, pete, who asked this question when the president first became ill, do you really think he was ill? i was shocked so many people were asking that question. what does that say about trust? you write in your book, society works best when people trust. what happens when people can't trust? >> well, it shows you the point that we've come to. i mean, consider the position of this physician, the doctor to he president. he represents three of the institutions that are supposed to be the most trusted in the world. he works for the white house, he's an officer in the military and he's a doctor. we should be able to trust people connected to those institutions implicitly, but today we can't. that is an incredibly dangerous thing. with americans unsure about something as fundamental as the physical condition of the president to the united states, but it's not just about his health. our own health depends on trust. right now researchers are racing against the clock to develop a vaccine, and yet there is
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polling indicating as many as half of americans would hesitate to get one. getting that life saving vaccine prevents individuals from getting sick. it also prevents individuals from spreading the disease. it's just one example of how a concept that sounds very theoretical like social trust, that's a life and death issue. >> you say the highest compliment you can pay a friend is i trust you with my life. i think that's a short list for people. trust is easily broken but it can be rebuilt. seems like that's needed now. >> that's right. look, if all of us -- if all of us were perfectly reliable, trust wouldn't even matter, right? trust is what you do when you can't be completely sure of what somebody else will do but you place some level of faith. you make yourself a little bit vulnerable to them. there were a lot of ways that as human beings we restore trust when it's been broken. we rebuild trust when it's been damaged. that's something america's got to think about a lot now, not
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just here at home where we've got to find ways to reform our institutions but around the world because we need countries around the world to trust the u.s. more. >> mr. mayor, trust has many enemies, one of them is lies. secrets don't help either. particularly when they don't seem to be that consequential. i am curious, why not say whether or not you're playing the vice president in these mock debates to prepare senator harris? >> yeah. good question, tony dekople. what do you say, pete buttigieg? >> look, i'm not going to talk out of school, but i am very excited for tomorrow night. >> we're going to take that as a yes. >> we'll take that as a nondenial confirmation. >> a lot of people will be watching. many people but vp debate who will be watching. this one seems to have been taking on a different tone, would you agree? >> absolutely. it's so important and i think a lot of americans are going to be tuning in to see just a dramatic contrast between the vice
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president defending the indefensible and senator harris who has the right message for the right ticket for the right direction for this country. >> pete buttigieg, thank you very much. the book again is called "trust" and it goes on sale today. we'll be right back.
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-mile-an-hour knee and tasha refuse to let their friendship be put aside. they decided to post these photos supporting their different candidates together. >> i may think one way about one subject and that's why i vote a certain way but that doesn't run my whole life. >> we're both mothers. you can demonstrate and have different opinions, look different and still respect and
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love one another. >> yes, you can, marne and tasha. they wanted to start a conversation about acceptance. i say it's hard to
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the unfair money bail system. he, accused of rape. while he, accused of stealing $5. the stanford rapist could afford bail; got out the same day. the senior citizen could not; forced to wait in jail nearly a year. voting yes on prop 25 ends this failed system, replacing it with one based on public safety. because the size of your wallet shouldn't determine whether or not you're in jail. vote yes on prop 25 to end money bail.
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about the covid-19 virus. it's real. it's dangerous. and we do know how to keep you and your loved ones safe. wear a mask. wash your hands. stay six feet apart. we can do this. if we do it together. they do one of the most deven in normal times.s, our frontline health care workers. and when these heroes lack the resources they need, that risky job gets ten times harder. prop fifteen makes corporations pay their fair share. to invest in our communities, in our clinics, in the essential workers who treat everyone- rich, poor, and in-between. whether it's this pandemic or the next health crisis, vote yes on prop fifteen.
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for all of us. welcome back to "cbs this morning." time to bring you stories that are talk of the table. >> i'm excited about mine, too, tony. we can have a game about who's more excited. i'm excited about jane fonda. why? because she's bringing back the '80s with a new workout video and a message for you, the voter. >> hello, class. we're bringing back the movement. we need you to be in shape for the upcoming race. >> you go, jane. look at the people with her. it's a message, exercise that vote. fonda's joined by other celebrities, shaquille o'neal, kerry washington. >> what's he doing up there in the corner?
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>> katy perry who just gave birth to baby daisy. jane fonda. there's shaquille. he looks like he's dancing. jane fonda's 82. she released her first workout video 38 years ago. number one, she looks fan tas if i can. >> yeah, she sure does. >> back in the day i loved her pastel suits, the head bands and the little ankle, leg warmer. i want to look like jane. there's amy schumer. here she is 82 and she says the most important thing we can all do is exercise your right to vote. exercise your glutes, exercise your quads and most of all exercise your right to vote. the video ends telling viewers and voters where to go to register. >> the voting one is one that already matters. >> if you are doing that thing, just vote. >> look at shaq. >> yes, exactly right. >> i think we're all looking for things to look forward to these days. >> yes. >> i certainly am. i'm looking forward to a new
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documentary offers a behind the scenes look at bruce springstein's album. >> i'll give you a cue. >> 1, 2, 1, 2, 3. ♪ ♪ >> the documentary features full performances from springstein and the e street band. it was recorded in five days completely live at bruce's home studio in new jersey. springstein called it one of the greatest recording sessions he's had. this will drop on the same day, october 23rd. can't wait for that. >> me, too. i love that he's taking us, anthony, behind the scenes. >> yes. >> frequent collaborator directed the film. fabulous filmmaker. i'm looking forward to their work. >> western stars. >> working with him way before that. >> that's great. >> tony, what have you got. >> october 23rd. >> i will take a look.
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>> so far anthony's winning with the stories. he had bruce. >> i'm about to lose. i have an otter at a sanctuary in cornwall, england, who is getting a second chance atz love. the otter's name is harris. long-time partner died a few weeks ago. he was very lonely. they naturally live in pairs. they sought a new partner for him in a modern way. created a dating profile for harris and sent it around to other zoos. the profile said, fishing for love. i'm very attentive, love a cuddle and i will love you like no otter. >> that's good, tony. >> i want to know who wrote his copy. >> harris got a note back from some zoo keepers nearby who had an otter named pumpkin. pumpkin was happy to welcome otter into her sanctuary. we hope, we are not sure yet, we
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hope they are going to become a lovely new otter pair. this is in scarborough, england. what's interesting is it can be a little bit tricky to pair up otters. >> why? >> the female otters are very particular about their habitat. >> yes, we are. >> this is interesting. you'll like this. so they wouldn't send pumpkin to live with harris in his bachelor pad, which i imagine had fallen into disrepair. >> it was a mess. >> they sent harris to accommodate himself to pumpkin's decor. >> what's the matter with that? >> nothing. >> do we know how it's going. >> kind of like people. we don't
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some big movie these terse are undertaking. >> reporter: from the moment you step inside, it's clear. things are different. >> come in. walk up to one of our kiosks. we'll do the comeback classic of jurassic park. >> the selection is slim. mostly classics with a cult following. >> this is all new, too. >> this is all new. all this plexi is brand new. you'll see it throughout the theaters. >> hanging next to upcoming movie posters are big, bright reminders of the pandemic. >> meagan, i can't believe i'm saying this. is this true? >> we are following the cdc guidelines and recommendations. no refills but awesome pricing.
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>> she helps keep the hallways clean and filled with hand sanitizer and after every show monitors a crew that disinfects every seat. the changes are definitely a draw for these families. >> little piece of normal and a little piece of something special for them to get to do after they worked so hard in school this week. >> reporter: what are you most excited about? >> the movie. >> and the popcorn. >> all i have for you is a word, "tenent." >> reporter: a handful of movies have been released like christopher nolan's "tenent" but it fizzled and the film industry has lost billions of dollars so far this year. >> it's been a big issue for studios which are dealing with a problem of how do we start producing films. this will be a big financial hit. >> there is some hope with the growing popularity of drive-in movie theaters, but as the fall
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traditional movie theaters hope box office sales will make a comeback. cinemark has reopened 200 movie theaters across the country this summer. they started promoting private watch parties. resurrection of the big screen is like watching the ultimate underdog plot against an invisible villain. in this case, coronavirus. >> it's been very difficult financially. >> reporter: mark seroti is the chief executive officer. they had to rethink how they do business to survive. >> the popcorn is less expensive, soda drinks are less expensive. we're trying to encourage people to come back and to experience how good it really is. >> reporter: meagan and her team are hopeful nostalgia will be enough to draw customers back in. >> when the lights go down in this theater, what sort of change do you see? >> the magic starts to happen. they start to let go of what's going on in the outside world and for getting everything and immersing themselves with the
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dimension or the universe being played on their screen. >> reporting from plano, texas. >> i'm glad they're trying that. i so miss that. >> we all could use magic right now. >> i really could. >> makes me long for a theater in new york. >> i want somebody to tell us what's the best seat to sit in in a pandemic? do you sit in the back -- >> the way back. >> that's what i'm -- >> i think that's a good question. i'm with you. what you said about missing movie popcorn. >> i heard from a lot of (garage door opening) it is my father's love...
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it is his passion- it is his fault he didn't lock the garage. don't even think about it! been there, done that. with liftmaster® powered by myq®, know what's happening in your garage- from anywhere.
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proposition 16 takes some women make as little as 42% of what a man makes. voting yes on prop 16 helps us fix that. it's supported by leaders like kamala harris and opposed by those who have always opposed equality.
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we either fall from grace or we rise. together. proposition 16 provides equal opportunities, levelling the playing field for all of us. vote yes on prop 16.
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you can take a day off fromy worrying about your packages. ♪ ohhh yeahhh! just connect your myq® app to key. ♪ ohhh yeahhh! get free in-garage delivery with myq® and key by amazon. oh, that's bruce lee, of course, in his iconic 1979 movie. the kung fu martial artist became a cultural icon.
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during his work lee fought to change the way asians and asian-americans were portrayed on the scene in the u.s. and around the world. first on "cbs this morning" his daughter shannon lee tells us about her new book exploring his less well known side as a philosophical thinker. >> my last name is lee, bruce lee. i was born in 1940. >> in the mid 1960s bruce lee did a screen test for a television show "the greenhorn net." >> you went to college in the united states? >> yes. >> what did you study? >> reporter: lee who landed the part of kato -- >> if he gets the h bomb, what are the chances of it exploding. >> reporter: he wanted to understand the philosophy behind the martial arts that would soon make him a global star in films like "enter the dragon." >> it is like a finger pointing a way to the moon.
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don't concentrate on the finger or you will miss all that heavenly glory. >> when you were growing up, did you think of your father as a philosopher? >> i guess not as much as i do now, you know? >> reporter: lee's daughter, shannon, shares his principles in the new book, "be water, my friend." the teachings of bruce lee. >> he planned his own life? >> yes. it seems corn any to say this, but he was a man of action. like literally. he was a martial artist in an action film. he put into action his goals, his dreams, his life. he trained his body and his mind. >> reporter: in 1969 he wrote out by hand what he called my definite chief aim, to be the highest paid asian superstar in america and declaring i will
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achieve world fame. it seems almost clairvoyant. >> yeah. yeah. but he really believed in putting your mind on what you want, you know? and -- >> reporter: yeah. >> >> reporte-- not thinking of impossible. >> empty your mind. like water. put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. you put water into a bottle, it becomes a bottle. you put it in the tea pot, it becomes the tea pot. now water can flow or it can crash. >> be water, my friend. >> reporter: shannon lee was just 4 when her father died from severe brain swelling in 1973, but it was only after another tragedy when her brother, brandon, died at 28 of an accidental gunshot on the set of
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"the crow" 20 years later that shannon was introduced to hundreds of pages of her father's writings. >> i was fresh at that time off the grief of my brother's passing, so i was in need. you know, even though i don't have these really vivid, long form memories of him, i have a very vivid sense of what he felt like. >> lee's words are there. it's adopting it. and it's on their way.
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>> they were swarmed wiin the 1970s. >> especially. >> it's so chaotic. i'm looking at my little girl. >> it helps me to have compassion for myself as an adult, quite frankly, because i see that the ways in which i've struggled with being shut down at times in my life stems from the loss of my father. >> when you lose your dad at 4, you spend time in a sense trying to find him again. it must be comforting in many ways to have these writings of his. >> oh, my gosh, it's like him being able to speak to me. >> reporter: you can still hear
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him talking to you? >> yeah. definitely. and i really mean it when i say he's still raising me. >> wow. >> "be water, my friend" is on sale today. one of the things shannon lee said, bruce lee was not fated to become famous. he was 5'7", rejected from the military because of his eyesi t eyesight. he was phenomenal because he worked relentlessly. >> that "be water, my friend" philosophy. just the shot of him fighting kareem abdul-jabbar and he's 5'6" and kareem is -- >> 7 foot whatever. >> 7 foot whatever. that he could interact with him. >> i think that was choreographed. i don't think they really fought. >> i think kareem actually did take lessons from bruce lee because he was a trainer to movie stars out in -- on the
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west coast before he became a movie star here. >> but i think tony's right. what i saw was choreographed. i do think that. >> i'm just kidding. >> i like that. >> i think in a fight it would have been close. >> i like that kira cleveland produced that. shannon's reading, bruce lee, shannon at the funeral at 4. very well done. >> sad. >> beautiful piece. on today's -- no, right back. stay with us. >> what were you going to say? say yes... to the best bargains ever at ross! yes!
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oh, yeah! yep. yesss! savings on savings on savings? that's yes for less. at ross. i'm voting 'yes' on prop 19. nineteen limits taxes on seniors. it limits property tax on people like me. nineteen limits taxes on wildfire victims. it says so right here. if 19 passes, seniors can move closer to family or medical care. i looked at moving but i can't afford the taxes. will you help california's most vulnerable? vote 'yes' on prop 19. to wear a mask out in public around other people. sure it'll keep you healthy. but more importantly, i won't have to see your happy smiling face. ugh. and if you don't want to wear a mask, i've just got one thing to tell you. scram, go away. ugh.
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caring for each other because we are all in this together. so wear a mask and have a rotten day, will ya? ugh. traffic and air pollution will be even worse after the pandemic. that's why we support measure rr to keep caltrain running. which is at risk of shutdown because of the crisis. to keep millions of cars off our roads, to reduce air pollution and fight climate change. and measure rr helps essential workers like me
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get to work and keep our communities healthy. relieve traffic. reduce pollution. rescue caltrain. [all] yes on measure rr. your shoulder seems to be healing nicely. well, dr. farrell, it feels really good... that's good. and... i'm sorry. baby, don't touch that... i don't want you to play with that... (singing) twinkle, twinkle little star. how i wonder what you are... (still singing) up above the world so high... like a diamond in the sky. i'm so glad that your shoulder is feeling better. but, how are you doing? i'm hanging in there... schedule a video visit with your doctor. and get quality care with no copay. kaiser permanente. thrive. and get quality care with no copay. oh, yeah! there's always somethiat ross.n store yep. oh yeah! say yes to those looks, the best brands... ...and "check you out" bargains! savings from top to bottom! that's yes for less. at ross.
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shannon lee.
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. good morning. the glass fire burning in napa and sonoma is now 50% contained. some evacuation orders were downgraded to warnings including areas along madrona. with the progress on containment, some have been allowed to return home but some told us it's not worth the risk. the small community has been saved from wildfires for the last few years. the august complex of wildfires has burned more than a million acres. it's the largest wildfire in recorded california history. the state has seen more than 4
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million acres burned so far this year. the traffic center taking a look at the roadways. golden gate bridge foggy. just a heads up if you are going out. it's limited visibility. give yourself a few extra minutes. other than that we are still seeing brake lights. also at the bay bridge toll plaza and over to the maps we go. we have a slow and go ride across the span due to debris and a broken down vehicle on the bridge itself at the san mateo bridge and the toll plaza. still earlier crash near treasure island. mary. all right. one more mild to warm day across the barry and then big changes with the cooldown for the rest of the week. check out the daytime highs. we are look agent that sunshine inland, mid-80s's to low 90's. upper 6o's to low to mid-70s and cool and cloudy along the coast. starting the cooldown tomorrow through the rest of the week and we are looking at rain chances by friday and for saturday with our next weather
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system. we will proposition 16 takes on discrimination.
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some women make as little as 42% of what a man makes. voting yes on prop 16 helps us fix that. it's supported by leaders like kamala harris and opposed by those who have always opposed equality. we either fall from grace or we rise.
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together. proposition 16 provides equal opportunities, levelling the playing field for all of us. vote yes on prop 16. monty: there are millions of deals to be made, and we'll make them every day on "let's make a deal." wayne: whoo! oh, snap! monty: thank you, and welcome to "let's make a deal." - (screaming) tiffany: more cars! monty: back-to-back cars! - big deal! monty: here it is, behind door number one, the big deal of the day! - big deal of the day! wayne: y'all ready for season ten? let's go! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal." this is wayne's favorite folks week. and who, who of all the people i know is one of my favorite folks, mr. monty hall, the reason why we're here. so we decided to do a monty hall legacy episode.

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