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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 13, 2020 7:00am-9:01am PST

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>> thanks for watching. don't forget the news continues all day on cbsn bay area. >> cbs this morning is next. have a great day. we'll leave you with this beautiful shot on ♪ shot on good morning to you, our viewers in the west. welcome to "cbs this morning." it's friday, november 13th, 2020. i'll gayle king with anthony mason and tony dokoupil. >> a terrible new milestone in the pandemic. the u.s. smashes another record for coronavirus cases. while many hospitals are on the brink. we'll talk to dr. anthony fauci who says help is on the way. former president obama gives his first tv interview since the election to cbs news. we'll preview that conversation with him, including his thoughts on president trump's refusal to concede. why he says it puts democracy on a very dangerous path. >> breaking overnight, president-elect biden flips arizona for democrats for the
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first time in decades. we'll talk to cindy mccain about his achievement and her role in the biden transition team. plus y more republicans are side with the president-elect on a matter of national security. >> and the dawn of a new era in space travel. we'll have an inside look at a landmark mission for four astronauts launching this weekend. >> but first, here's today's "eye opener." it's your world in 90 seconds. >> we're running out of time and we're running out of options. >> we've gone through hell. keep going. >> this is literally a matter of life and death. >> the u.s. sinks deeper into the coronavirus pandemic. the country isn't just breaking records. it's blowing through them. >> wearing the mask, they think it's uncomfortable and annoying. >> you know what's really uncomfortable and annoying? when you die. >> republican senators are calling on the administration to give biden intelligence
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briefings. >> there's no legal basis. >> he's getting support from members of the republican party who are not challenging him. >> and that's been disappointing. they, obviously, didn't think there was any fraud going on because they didn't say anything about it for the first two days. >> extreme flooding in north carolina has turned fatal after record rainfall caused by tropical storm eta. >> the water was so swift. just couldn't get away from it. >> joe biden has officially been projected to win the state of arizona. pushing him further past the 270 threshold. >> all that -- >> a golf course looked like a scene from jurassic park. look at this giant alligator. >> this is 2020. could be a dinosaur. >> the first regional hub for flying cars is being built in orlando. >> how long do you think it will be before someone is texting behind the wheel and flies into the epcot center? >> i guess we'll find out. >> on cbs this morning. >> according to another new report, not only will trump run for president again in 2024, he may announce it before the end of the year.
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>> i mean, the guy is 74. for pete's sake, by 2024, he'll be 78, which is -- exactly the right age for a president. >> just a number, joe. >> you go get them, buddy. drink that ensure. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by progressive. making it easy to bundle insurance. >> i've heard ensure comes in many flavors? >> i've only seen chocolate and vanilla. >> four years is a long time. >> a lot could change. welcome to "cbs this morning." >> all right. we begin with record-breaking new numbers on the coronavirus that take this crisis into uncharted territory. yesterday the u.s. added more than 150,000 daily cases for the first time according to the covid tracking project. 1 in every 378 americans tested positive for the virus in the past week. >> and in the past month, the number of people hospitalized with the virus in the u.s. has
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nearly doubled. doctors and nurses are reporting shortages of essential protective equipment, some hospitals are also running out of beds and staff to treat covid patients. our lead national correspondent david begnaud is at a testing site in suburban chicago as state and local leaders there consider new restrictions. good morning to you. is chicago headed for a new lockdown? >> well, look, we don't know that just yet. the mayor declared a stay-at-home advisory for now. doesn't have a lot of teeth to it in terms of enforcement. the governor of illinois is saying i may come back at you very soon with a stay-at-home order. here at the testing site they've already lined up. they'll open at 7:00 a.m. they've been closing early because they're running out of tests. and a lot of labs are telling testing sites, hey, listen, don't go over what we agreed to because we're going to start getting backed up and we may have delays in testing like we had earlier on in the pandemic. i mentioned the governor of illinois. it's really the governors that are stepping up to the plate right now. especially here in the midwest. a lot of them are saying, when i
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come back to you, you're not going to like what i have to say. with cases and hospitalizations rising, chicago is telling its residents to stay inside. >> do not have guests over. avoid unnecessary travel. and cancel your traditional thanksgiving plans. >> reporter: dr. benjamin singer at northwestern memorial hospital says the number of hospitalizations in chicago is fast approaching levels they haven't seen since the worst days back in april. >> the pandemic is real. it's deadly. and we need strong cooperation within our communities. >> reporter: chicago, the nation's third largest city, is among the first to announce a stay-at-home advisory. and it probably won't be the last. in states across america, governors from both parties are sounding the alarm. given the silence from the white house. listen to what they're saying. >> the curve that we have flattened, right now, this curve is a straight line and it is
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straight up. >> we can't keep expecting the hospitals to meet the demand. >> we're running out of time. and we're running out of options. >> limit your social gatherings to just those of your immediate household. >> to the west now, california is the second state to record more than 1 million coronavirus cases. in utah, all of that state's staffed icu beds are now full. so the governor has called nearly 200 traveling nurses. and in north dakota, they have just nine icu beds left statewide. one in every 83 residents tested positive this week. the system is so strained that the state's republican governor issued an order clearing nurses who are infected with the virus to continue working with covid patients as long as those nurses are asymptomatic. but the nurses association says they are asking the governor to implement a mask mandate first. but he just won't do it. >> and the numbers are much, much worse than we've ever seen before.
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>> that's dr. ashish jha. she says with vaccines on the horizon, there is an end to this pandemic, and it's in sight, but the worst is far from over for us. >> i understand the fatigue, but people really do have to pull it together. we're not talking about forever. we're just saying for the next couple of months. those are the critical months. >> we hear you, doctor, loud and clear. he told us at the end of the interview that california and new york, for the most part, are keeping things under control. he pointed to them as models for other states to follow. as we continue on in this pandemic. gayle? >> david, thank you. dr. anthony fauci is the director of the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases. also a member of president trump's coronavirus task force. good morning to you, dr. fauci. it's very good to see you. we've just done a piece where -- >> good morning, gayle. good to be with you. >> i'm so glad you're here. we all know the cases are climbing, things are getting out of control, and people are very afraid. why is this happening again right now?
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you predicted it, though, earlier. >> you know, unfortunately, i did, gayle. there are a number of factors feeding into this. our base line of infections all along has never gone down to a level that would allow you to be easily controllable when you get cases that soar up for a variety of reasons. right now, as we end the cool season of the fall and soon to enter the cold season of the winter, that makes it very problematic because people out of necessity will be congregating indoors more than outdoors. this is a particular issue as we're approaching the holiday season of thanksgiving. >> i've heard you say the calvary is coming but it doesn't mean you put down your weapons. people are letting their guards down. >> you know, it's understandable. i don't want to be critical of that, but we want to just plead with them to understand the dynamics of this outbreak. if you do that, we'll continue
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to soar. if we do the things that are simple public health measures, that soaring will level and start to come down. you add that to the help of a vaccine, we can turn this around. it is not futile. >> dr. jha has told us the testing we need in this country is far below what it needs to be. do you agree with that, and what does that mean exactly? >> well, i think what dr. jha was saying is what many of us have been saying is that there is community spread right now. which means that there are people in society who are infecting others. they don't have symptoms. they don't know they're infected. the only way you can get at them is if you only test people who are symptomatic. you are going to miss the asymptomatic people who are silently spreading the outbreak. so we need to pull more testing into the community to get a feel and identify who in the community is spreading the
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infection because it isn't only a symptomatic person. >> i want to talk to you briefly about thanksgiving. i'm changing my plans after listening to you. you are saying you're not even going to respond thanksgiving with your lovely daughters. you are keeping your thanksgiving celebration very small. if you are with a small group of people, do you need to wear a mask indoors? somebody told me that even if you're in your house, you have to wear a mask. is that true? >> you know, yes, it is true. now, obviously, it's kind of difficult to be eating and drinking at a dinner with a mask on. you can't do that. but to the extent that you can keep that mask on, i mean, nothing is going to be perfect in this. but if you are indoors and gathering with people, even if it's a relatively small group, to the extent possible, keep the mask on, even if you are indoors. now, obviously, the -- >> even if we've all tested -- even if we've all tested negative, dr. fauci? >> well, that's a different thing. i mean, then the risk goes way down. and then you make a risk
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assessment. you know, we always talk about things. nothing is risk-free. but when you do a risk/benefit ratio and say to yourself now, i just got tested. my husband or wife just got tested. our children are coming in. they just got tested. of course, it's not 100% that they could have gotten infected from the time they got tested to the time they got there, but when you get that degree of minimization of risk, then you really use some common sense and say i'm willing to take that very, very small risk so i don't have to be walking around the house with a mask. people who say wearing a mask indoors, they are really talking about when you get into a setting where you really are unsure what the status of people are. but when families go the extra mile of either quarantining or getting tested, then i don't think you really have to say every moment you're in the house you have to have a risk. you have to use some common sense and make sure you look at what relative risks are because the relative risk is going to go
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way down if everyone has been tested or people have been quarantined. so it's just really common sense in that regard. >> and before you go, i want to know how you're doing. you get death threats. you work 24/7. there are issues with the white house. i am wondering how you're holding up through all of this. i know it's your job. i get it. but i want to know how you're holding up physically and mentally. >> well, thank you for asking. i'm actually doing fine. and the reason i'm doing fine is twofold. i have taught myself over the years to focus like a laser on what my goal is and what i need to do. and to me, that's a big thing. it's the health and safety and welfare of the american people. that driving force makes all that other stuff that you're talking about become peripheral noise that i don't pay attention to. and the other thing, i have a spectacular wife who is amazingly supportive of me and has been now for the last 36-plus years. so i'm doing fine, but thank you for asking. >> we thank you, dr. fauci.
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thank you for taking the time today. >> thank you. this morning, cbs news has projected, based on the hard count in the state of arizona, that president-elect joe biden has won arizona. mr. biden now has 290 electoral votes and the popular vote count shows him ahead by more than 5 million. >> the trump campaign is still challenging the vote count in the closest states but the federal agency in charge of protecting election security released a statement saying, quote, there is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised. the head of that agency has told associates he expects the president to fire him. according to reuters and politico. paula reid is at the white house. good morning. >> good morning. anthony, several advisers to president trump tell cbs news the president is increasingly aware that he just cannot litigate his way to 270 electoral votes. but they also tell us the
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president wants to be seen as a fighter so he can continue to fundraise and pay down campaign debts. now last night, the president-elect, joe biden's new chief of staff, he did an interview where he laid out the risks of continuing to delay this transition. in his first interview since being named president-elect joe biden's chief of staff, ron klain warned the trump administration's refusal to cooperate in the transfer of power will soon begin to have real impacts. >> we're in a covid crisis. right now, right now there are officials inside the department of health and human services who are busy planning a vaccination campaign for the months of february and march when joe biden will be president. and so the sooner we can get our transition experts into meetings with the folks who are planning the vaccination campaign, the more seamless the transition from a biden presidency to a trump presidency can be. >> but like his boss, klain was optimistic about being able to work with the republicans.
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>> spoken to some republican senators, some republican governors. i'm not going to go into the names. he has not spoken though to senator mcconnell. they'll have a working relationship when the time comes. >> reporter: president trump's refusal to concede is, among other things, blocking president-elect biden from getting access to classified intelligence briefings during the transition period. klain said he was encouraged by the growing number of republicans who say that biden should at least get that access. including the president's allies like lindsey graham and ted cruz. >> for the sake of protecting the country, you want whoever is going to assume that office to be aware of the significant threats because the first responsibility of any president is to keep the american people safe. >> some republicans say the briefings should wait until all the votes are counted or recounted. >> let's finish counting the votes. there will be plenty of time. >> he's not president right now. don't know if he'll be president january 20th. but whoever is, will get the
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information. >> reporter: this morning, china reached out to president-elect joe biden to congratulate him. becoming the most recent world power to do so. but it's nearly been a week since the results were called. and notably russia has not reached out to the incoming president. historically foreign leaders have waited for the loser to concede before reaching out to the new president, but as we've seen, president trump at this point appears to have no plans to admit defeat. gayle? >> paula, thank you. former president barack obama is speaking to cbs news in his firstv interview since the 2020 election. he's about to release his long-awaited memoir called "a promised land." scott pelley interviewed him for "60 minutes" and we got to sit down with him for cbs sunday morning. he reflected on the start of his administration and how his experience was very different from the transition that president trump is blocking right now. >> when donald trump won, i stayed up until 2:30 in the
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morning and i then called donald trump to congratulate him. his margin of victory over hillary clinton wasn't greater than joe biden's margin over him. >> yeah. >> but if you were listening to some of the talk radio that trump voters are listening to, if you're watching fox news, getting these tweets, those allegations are presented as facts. so you've got millions of people out there who think, oh, yeah, they must be cheating because the president said so. >> i think about john mccain calling. george and laura bush welcoming you and michelle obama to the white house. >> could not have been more gracious. >> i remember you inviting donald trump to the white house. i'll never forget it because you said, i wish that you succeed because we want the country to succeed. what is at stake here? >> well, look, joe biden will be the next president of the united states. kamala harris will be the next vice president. there's no legal basis. there's no -- >> he's getting support from members of the republican party who are not challenging him. >> and that has been disappointing. they, obviously, didn't think
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there was any fraud going on because they didn't say anything about it for the first two days. but there's damage to this. because what happens is that the peaceful transfer of power, the notion that any of us who attain an elected office, whether it's dog catcher or president, are servants of the people. it's a temporary job. we're not above the rules. we're not of about the law. that's the essence of our democracy. >> and you can see more of our conversation this sunday on "cbs sunday morning" and scott pelley's interview with former president obama sunday night on "60 minutes." so i think cbs got a one-two punch. we're very grateful for that. we were at the national portrait gallery which is a very interesting setting. you have the portrait of president obama and the portrait of michelle obama. and the book, as i've mentioned a couple of times, is over 700 pages. so there's a lot of information to cover. so there's a lot of information.
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but he talks about the start of his presidency, the bumps along the way. regrets he's had. rediscovering life and love with michelle again. >> it's a great setting. that gallery is about legacy. >> yes it is. >> there's a little plaque next to every picture and it's a legacy plaque. >> we all felt very proud to be
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ahead, why the airlines are planning for a rush of thanksgiving travelers, even though we're being urged to stay home because of the coronavirus. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." it's my 9:12, no-days-off migraine medicine. it's ubrelvy. for anytime, anywhere migraine strikes without worrying if it's too late, or where i am. one dose can quickly stop migraine in its tracks within two hours. unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks cgrp protein, believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors.
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good morning everyone. it is 7:26. i am michelle griego. starting at 11:59 tonight, indoor dining will be banned once again in san francisco due to a spike in covid-19 cases. fitness centers and movie theaters are limited to 25% capacity. in alameda, they are slamming brakes on additional reopenings there as it anticipates dropping back to the red tier. in recent weeks the county has seen daily increases in new cases and hospitalizations. the pandemic could drive up the cost of crossing the golden gate bridge. the bridge district will
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consider a temporary $2 toll hike in an attempt to save jobs among other options. let's get a look at our conditions at the bay bridge. it's a little busy across upper deck as you head into san francisco. no accidents or incidents but just some extra volume. at the toll plaza, no metering lights this morning and traffic is light as you work your way through which is the case for most bridges and still slow for the altamont. you can see the clouds on our mark hopkins hotel camera. it's dry now but things will be changing as we head through the day. a look at high def doppler with the dry conditions, we have the rain that will slide in by this afternoon and for this evening, picking up a few hundredths, tenth, to a quarter of an inch of rain. low to mid 50s to (garage door opening) it is my father's love... it is his passion-
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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. welcome back to "cbs this morning." tens of millions of americans will drive or fly for the thanksgiving holiday, despite the pandemic. according to aaa. cbs news has learned the tsa expects to screen more than 6 million people in the days ahead. that's leading to concerns about an even bigger surge in the virus nationwide. kris van cleave reports now on how families are responding. >> a socially distanced thanksgiving came early for laura douglas' family celebrating outside in october. >> now the numbers are really rising. very, very sharply. and even just having it this coming weekend, i think we would
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have felt very threatened about getting together. >> there were fewer guests visiting family were spaced apart at separate tables and masks were worn. it allowed the family to be together but not too close together. >> my mother is a cancer patient. so she's at high risk. and we knew that there would be no way to spend time with my parents if we didn't figure out something that was very, very different. >> this year will be different. aaa's newly released thanksgiving travel forecast expects up to 50 million will travel, down at least 10% from last year. 95% will drive as people opt for last-minute trips and stay closer to home. >> right now it's really determining the factor of people decide to go or stay are the number of covid cases as they increase but also looking at state restrictions. >> aaa believes those flying will drop nearly 48%, but airlines are gearing up for their busiest stretch since the start of the pandemic. this travel holiday comes as the cdc warns even small household
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gatherings are an important contributor to the rise in covid-19 cases. 50 million people hitting the road sounds like reason for concern, doesn't it? >> it's a big concern because again, when people mix from higher prevalence of covid to lower, you end up raising the level at the low covid places. >> former cdc director dr. thomas frieden. >> because so many people may get together during thanksgiving at a time when covid rates are so high, we might see explosive spread through the month of december and the holidays would become a very un-merry christmas. >> we know millions of people are going to gather for thanksgiving. the cdc is urging people to keep those gatherings small to your immediate household or a small group of close contacts. ideally who live in the same area you do. the cdc also recommends keeping a mask on when you're not eating trying to be outdoors if possible. if you're inside, open as many windows as you can to increase
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ventalation and stay out of tight or cramped spaces. for many of us that means staying out of the kitchen. >> don't have to worry about me being in the kitchen, but i think it's very important to keep emphasizing the advice that you're giving us, chris van sleeve. the best way to travel is by car with people that you know. but i want to take a minute to talk about air travel. can you talk about the safety of air travel these days? because a lot of people will be traveling, even though you're told stay home. but what about the safety of air travel? is it okay? >> absolutely. we've seen a growing number of studies come out in the last month or so that reinforce that between the mask mandates that the airlines are enforcing and the ventilation systems on board. they have a hospital great hepa filter. the way they move air, refreshing cabin air every two to three minutes that the risk of spread is relatively low. so, keep in mind, you are getting into a metal tube with other people, but research
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continues to show that it is a low risk effort, at least from the gate to the gate. the places where you might run into risk is if you get -- if you let your guard down in the uber on the way to the airport or while at the airport or as you're getting to your destination after you get off the plane. you have to look at it as a whole process where you're on guard the entire time. but it appears, based on the research we keep saying, that the gate to gate experience if you will, on board the plane, is relatively low risk. >> got it, kris van cleave, thank you very much. the most important thing in your arsenal these days is a mask. we can all get one of those, a variety of price ranges. thanks again, kris. prosecutors trying to keep ahmaud arbery's accused killers in jail has offered evidence that one of the men used racial slurs online. travis mcmichael and his father gregory appeared at a bond hearing yesterday. they were arrested and jailed back in may, more than two months after they chased down
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arbery jogging in his neighborhood. they say this killing was in self-defense and had no racial past. >> they want to go home because in their selfishus minds, they think that they are the good guys. and i and my family is left literally to pick up the pieces. >> co-defendant william roddie bryan who recorded the shooting on video has already been denied bond. he's pleaded not guilty. if i was the arbery family i'd take pleasure in seeing that roddie bryan is still in jail. when you think about the -- he was looking at a construction site. >> he was out jogging in the neighborhood. >> and they chased him down. >> and the challenge for their lawyers is saying you're going to call it self-defense but you chased after him. so that's the complications. >> you are the ones with the guns. ahead, we're at the kennedy space center to mark the start
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of a new era in travel to the international space station. how one astronaut is making history by breaking barriers. you're watching "cbs this morning." there's smart. and then there's street smart. like a hybrid with an available best-in-class, epa-estimated range of 582 miles. and ford co-pilot360 technology... to help you outsmart some of the things you'll encounter on the road. with an available best-in-class second row legroom. this is the completely reimagined, street smart, 2020 ford escape. hey! ♪ your whole team can see your upper thigh ♪ ♪ pour that smooth roast and aim that camera up high ♪ ♪ the best part of wakin' up is folgers in your cup ♪
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four astronauts are scheduled to blast off from the kennedy space center to the international space station this weekend. joint spacex/nasa mission called crew 1 is set for liftoff from florida at 7:49 eastern time tomorrow. here's a look at launch pad 39-a, at kennedy space center
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this morning. this mission will mark the start of regular crew rotation flights to the iss, using american-made commercial spacecraft. mark strassmann is there. how is it looking? >> reporter: good morning, anthony. take a look. a much closer look now at the rocket sitting on legendary launch pad 39-a, home to apollo liftoffs, to space shuttle launches, and now the spacex era. for the company, all the test flights are over. this is the first regular operational flight to carry people into space. take a look now. that's the falcon 9 rocket behind me on top is the crew dragon capsule. with this flight, spacex could solidify its place in the new commercial era of space. commander michael hopkins and his crew arrived in florida by chartered jet. they plan to depart tomorrow by rocket ship. >> we're starting this new era where we're going to rotate
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crews to the international space station from american soils with our commercial partners like spacex, and so we're very excited to be a part of that. >> ignition. liftoff, as the falcon 9 and crew dragon, go nasa. go spacex. godspeed. >> reporter: their mission follows this summer's successful demonstration flight of crew dragon. spacex's new ship. america no longer needs the russians to get to the space station. >> even though we had the demonstration mission, and this is a certified vehicle at this point. we're still going to be doing a lot of firsts. >> reporter: crew dragon will carry four astronauts. more astronauts means more science. aboard the $100 billion orbiting lab. astronauts hopkins, shannon walker, and soichi noguchi of japan are all space flight veterans. pilot victor glover is the rookie. >> every single bit of the mission, it will be the first time i have been able to do that thing in space. just getting up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom,
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i don't know, every piece of the mission is going to be the first time i get to do something in space. >> reporter: glover is 44. the former navy pilot is the father of four girls. in the lab's 20-year history, he'll become the first black astronaut to stay for a long duration mission. does that mean something to you? >> it will once i get there. i try not to think about that too much. i think it is important for our astronaut corps and the accomplishments of our agency to represent the bueautiful variet of our country. it's important for kids to see someone they can relate to that way. >> reporter: on thursday, in teslas, the crew rehearsed their drive to the launch pad. the road to any launch is long and hard. covid-19 made this one harder. that's why the crew named their spaceship resilience. >> it just felt right. it's been a tough year for everybody. for a lot of different reasons. and we felt like if the name of
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our vehicle could give a little hope, a little inspiration, put a smile on people's face, then that is definitely what we wanted to do, and we felt like resilience was the name that did that. >> reporter: for tomorrow night's launch, weather conditions are considered 70% favorable. and for nasa and for spacex, this six-month mission and this moment are what they have been aiming for all along, tony, which is the start of regular scheduled crewed missions between florida and the space station. >> a very big deal. mark, thank you very much. we like victor, don't we. >> the ultimate girl dad, i think. and resilience is very beautiful. >> i love how compartmentalized astronauts are. you ask them a question. we'll talk about that tomorrow. >> i'll feel that when i get there. i think resilience is such a great word in all things. >> we needed that more than anything this year. >>
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...to get you the help you need, whatever your story may be. with dual complete from unitedhealthcare, there's more for you. all right, america. it's friday the 13th, but don't worry. vlad is our lucky charm. it is time for what to watch. that intro from sue, of parker, colorado. >> thank you very much, sue. i hope i'm a lucky charm. >> like a leprechaun. >> on a keychain, vlad. >> do my leprechaun dance. i try. thank you very much for that, sue. here are a few stories we think you're talking about today. heart pounding video shows a reporter on part of a bridge that collapsed. >> not too long ago washed up here. we're backing up. >> got to be careful on the live shots. amber roberts tweeted she's
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thankful she and her photographer were not hurt. that bridge collapse was caused by severe flooding in north carolina triggered by tropical storm eta that killed at least seven people. >> i would be getting off the bridge, not backing up. >> rescue crews saved dozens of people from floodwaters at a camp site about 50 miles north of charlotte. crews are going back this morning to search for those still missing. >> as she was saying it was scary, it really did become scary. >> she's thanking everybody who said to her she did a good job. >> get ready for blinding lights. the weekend is set to headline the super bowl show. the nfl, pepsi, and roc nation making the announcement. he said he's humbled by the opportunity. super bowl lv is scheduled for tampa on february 7th. you can see it all right here on cbs. excited for that. >> great for him. that's huge. a great gig. >> this is mief favorite story and i thank john tower for
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alowing me to do this. here's the original sculpture on a building in spain. it's in need of repairs. after this attempt at a makeover, oh, my god, no way. it's now being called, tony, the potato head of pulens yeah. look at tony's reaction. >> if you could get a tight shot of the face, it looks kind of picasso like. the eyes are in weird places. you wonder, as he was working on it, vlad, what was he thinking? >> this isn't the first work of art in spain to be damaged by an attempt at restoration. earlier this year, a painting of the virgin mary in valencia was unrecognizable after not one but two failed repairs. a 15th century wood sculptural got a fluorescent makeover. one visitor told the guardian, you don't know whether to laugh or to cry. >> cry. cry. >> the restorer said, i thought they were the right colors. the neighbors liked them.
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>> so one of the most famous botched restorations, of course, became known as monkey christ. that's the fresco at a spanish church that was lovingly repaired by a devout parishioner who had more faith than skill. >> restoration work, it seems, is hard. >> it's not that hard if you're a proeffessional arltist. >> that's almost criminal, but apparently, tourism is up because people want to see monkey christ. >> 16,000 tourists now to that city. >> thanks. >> stay with us. we'll be right back on "cbs this morning." before nexium 24hr,
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the number the state average 6300 cases a day. that is nearly double the figure from a month earlier. fremont public school district will remove officers from campuses. a overnight vote came after task force found school resource officers disproportionately have a negative impact on black, latin
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x and. scot peterson has a resentencing hearing. a judge will allow him to move to the san quentin county jail to allow easier access to his attorneys. >>it is still busy and some spots as you work your way on the freeway southbound break likes building. no crashes right now. on southbound 880 things are getting a little slow in the fremont area. elsewhere across the upper deck of the bay bridge things are sluggish there working towards treasure island. also a hotspot on the lower deck as you work your way on the richmond side. bay bridge toll plaza doing okay. good friday morning. it is a dry start to the day. changes are ahead as a cold front pushes through and that will bring the retu
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ye yes, it's f yes, it is friday the 13th of november, 2020. so far, so good. welcome back. the covid crisis explodes. spreading so fast, many classrooms may be forced to close. how families are balancing safety with education. >> and cindy mccain says why she supports biden and what she thinks of today's republican party. >> living history, wise words on where we are and where we are going in this unprecedented
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moment. very wise and here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> record breaking new numbers. yesterday, the u.s. added 150,000 new cases for the first time. >> a lot of labs telling testing sites don't go over what we agreed to because we are going to get backed up. >> right now during the flu season of the fall and the cold season of winter makes it a problem. people will be congregating in doors. >> several advisors to president trump, the president is increasingly aware he just cannot litigate his way to 270 electoral votes. >> when donald trump won, i stayed up until 2:30 in the morning and i then called donald trump to congratulate him. his margin of victory over hillary clinton is no greater
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than joe biden's victory. >> a top court in germany just ruled that techno is in fact music. things got out of hand when the judge was like order, order, order, ♪ wa, wa, wa, wa. order. let's go! >> before you know it, you are a rock star. thank you for that. we needed a laugh. >> welcome to cbs this morning, for the third day in a row, the u.s. has broken its single-day record of coronavirus. more than 153,000 cases were reported yesterday. just 10 days ago that the u.s. topped 100,000 cases for the first time. coronavirus hospitalizations also hit another record high
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surpassing 67,000 people. the situation is especially dire across the midwest where situations are happening. both parties have announced measures to slow the spread. officials are begging residents to take this stuff more seriously or more lockdowns may be on the way. >> as cases surge, schools across the country are scrambling to respond. america's largest district new york city is on the brink of stopping in person learning. right now, 2.6% of tests in the city are positive. the mayor says if that number hits 3%, he will close public schools immediately. how schools across the nation are struggling to keep kids and teachers safe. >> there is no just if i indication not to try. >> katie dempsy, a high school
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image math teacher is desperate to resume. >> is it far different than being in person? >> absolutely. >> two kids both with severe communication orders. her older son is back in school full time. her younger daughter is struggling in an all-remote situation. >> surprisingly, she hates to zoom. she wants to go back to school. >> we are terrified. >> a different story for this second grade teacher in florida. two small children and an immuno compromised relative at hope. she returned to in-person, scared for her family's safety. >> i didn't sleep. didn't eat. there was a lot of tears. >> covid cases in children up 17%. and america's biggest school
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districts are split. >> in-person learning in houston with plans to switch to hybrid in las vegas and in-person learning put off in los angeles. the executive direct year of staten island hospital. >> is it safe for teachers to go back? >> if you do it properly, can you safely have people in school but the reality is when you have certain populations where the incidents goes high, there is that concern of general spread because of the likelihood of more and more people having it is there. >> in new jersey, the most densely populated state in the country, the rate sits above 12%. schools like here are all remote because of those numbers. the governor says he will not issue a state-wide school shut down. >> thank you. talking to the governor asa
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hut hut hutchinson. governor joins us now. you are in the position of many governors right now facing hospitalization reports. case number records. i know you don't want to shut the economy down and impose new restrictions but you might have to. what are the red lines as you look at the unfolding crisis? >> we have been looking at this on day one as we take a focused effort to bring in our hospital team to look at it from a state-wide perspective because you don't want to have to reduce elective surgeries that are so important in order to accommodate covid patients. we want that focused effort. we want to increase compliance with our mask mandate.
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i've issued that in arkansas. whenever you do that, you don't have to shut things down. we don't intend to shut our schools down. we have to keep them open for our you stoo dents but do it safely. >> sounds like if people don't follow that mask mandate, following on that point, are you satisfied with the federal leadership when it comes to masks and social distancing from president trump in we haven't seen tweets or press conferences of that and in fact seems to be m modelling the opposite of what the cdc is saying. >> president trump and vice president pence have done a very good job making sure we have the anti-again testing and gone into warp speed on vaccines. we could have got into
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conversation about wearing a mask. now everyone is in the message of what is needed. it is not complicated what needs to be done. the three principals of wearing a mask and cleaning your hands. >> are you ready to say the words president-elect joe biden? >> well, it is very likely that vice president biden will be the next president of the united states. i've indicated that you want to give time for the process to work because particularly in pennsylvania, there are some important constitutional issues that president trump has raised -- >> those will not affect the outcome. they are not large enough percent number. what do you need to see before you turn from likelihood to congratulations president-elect? >> well, i think you've got to give it a little more time.
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it is getting close to that. you look back to 2000, the contested race. they did not ascertain a winner. they have not ascertained a winner. the media has ascertained a winner. >> florida was one state with hundreds of votes. now we are talking five states and tens of thousands of votes. it is not a comparable situation. >> vice president biden is a likely winner of this election. we are looking forward to helping him get prepared. it is important he's prepared as he looks at the likelihood of becoming president of the united states. i've advocated for him to receive the intelligence briefing. the public needs to be patient as the preparation goes on for vice president biden and the likelihood of him becoming president. >> the reason i press on this, the polls are showing
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republicans overwhelmingly not believing this was a free and fair election. that has a cost that goes beyond 2020, perhaps for future republican candidates. but governor -- >> but. >> go ahead. >> that's an important point. i don't believe we should undermine the election. let's don't undermine the election. let's make sure we have confidence in it and when it is conclusive, let's support it and get behind our president. >> 65% of the vote more than any other in arkansas including mr. bill clinton. maybe we'll see you in 2024. >> when we come back, we'll talk to cin
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first, it is 8:10. much more news we have much more news ahead, boxing sensation kristi martin, now opening up about what happened after she was shot and almost killed by her husband. >> when clammon boxer martin was violently attacked, she lived to testify against her own husband. who would believe a prize
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cbs news now projects president-elect joe biden has won the state of arizona. he leads president trump by around 11,000 votes there, with the vote count nearly complete. the victory extends the democratic majority in the electoral vote. cindy mccain, wife of the late arizona senator john mccain, is a member of the biden transition advisory board. she was one of the biggest republican names to support the next president during the campaign. cindy mccain joins us now from phoenix. good morning. thank you so much for being with us.
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>> good morning. >> joe biden becomes the first democrat in more than two decades to flip arizona. a lot of people think your endorsement played a big role in that. why do you think the president-elect was able to do this at this moment? >> well, first of all, it wasn't just me. there were many of us that got behind joe biden, as you know. i think the time right now, people were looking for the opportunity to have compassion, to have empathy, to have leadership, to have someone that put country before party, and that's who joe biden was. this white house has totally lost track of that completely. so that's why. >> cindy, many republicans are not publicly acknowledging joe biden's victory. have you talked to any of the republican leadership about this, and do you think this might change anytime soon? >> oh, of course, it will change, and for this reason. because we have gone through the
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process. we have determined that nothing illegal or anything else happened, and he's been declared the winner. so with all due respect to those who were on the opposing side of all this, it's time we get behind joe biden as our next president. and make sure that he has the transition money, he has the opportunity to meet with the people with regards to the pandemic, et cetera. so we can get this ball rolling and make sure he hits the ground running in january. >> one of the people who has not yet congratulated joe biden yet, as we know, is senator lindsey graham, who was a friend of your late husband, who is also a friend of joe biden's. have you spoken with him?? >> i have spoken to lindsey, but not about this. i have a new grandbaby so that's why he called me. lindsey, it's his own prerogative. he's a good friend of mine, like
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a member of my family, so i love him regardless. >> as a member of your family, cindy mccain, i think you need to take him in a private room and have a private chat with senator graham, but people are listening to you. but i like in the letter that you wrote with the paper in arizona the other day, you said, i know what it's like to lose, when the outcome doesn't go your way, but i also remember john's example back in 2008, and the example that he set. president obama also mentioned john mccain in a very gracious way. he is certainly in his book. can you remind us what john mccain did back then and why it's important we follow that again in 2020? >> well, as you know, we lost, but john believes, like i think all americans do, that it's time to move on. there was a free and fair election. there are winners and losers. we knew that chance at the beginning of it. and we did not prevail. but it's very important to remind the american people that
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we must come together, heal our differences, and move on for the good of the country. and that's really not only the message my husband gave but what he truly believed in his heart. >> you said he said democracy is at stake here, and democracy should always prevail. >> mm-hmm. correct. you're exactly right. he believed that. he lived his entire life by the code of conduct, and the belief in free and fair elections and democracy, most of all. that's the gracious good of our country. >> as we said, you're part of the president-elect's transition advisory team. has the transition been affected in any way as far as you can tell by president trump's refusal to concede to this point? >> oh, no. president-elect biden has moved on. the transition team is in full force right now. we're all working together to make sure that he has an administration that represents all people. it's really fun to be a part of it, and it's fun to watch happen
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as well. >> you know, we should also point out that 72 million people voted for president donald trump. that is no small number. so he clearly has strong support in this country. what do you think joe biden needs to do to reach out to them? he says he's going to do that, but what would be your message on that? >> well, i don't need to give him a message because he always practiced that. he and my husband worked across the aisle for many, many years. that's who joe biden is. so i don't believe anyone needs to tell him. he's going to do what he knows is right, and that is work together for the good of the country. >> cindy mccain, thank you so much for joining us this morning. we really appreciate it. good luck with the transition. >> ahead, john dickerson on the strange aftermath of this election. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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ahead, boxing champion christy martin became famous for
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her power in the ring. but behind the scenes, she says she suffered domestic abuse. this week's "48 hours" she tells david begnaud about the strength it took to good morning i it is 8:25. alameda county is slamming the brakes on reopenings as officials are dropping into the red tier. there have been daily increases in new coronavirus cases. the pandemic could drive up the cost of the bridge. the bridge district will consider a temporary two dollar toll hike in an attempt to save jobs. the city of san francisco is helping it's school district get ready for reopening. 20 disaster service workers will help to assess and inspect school facilities. the possible date is january
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25th. you might the activity along highway one due to a earlier accident. they have recovery work to do. if you you may see a few brake lights. otherwise it is fairly quiet. a live look at the bay bridge. everything is pretty quiet from here as you go into the city you will have some slight slowing near the incline just as you come off the skyway. overall an easy ride. about 13 minutes to go from 880 over towards 101. if you are heading out the door, don't forget your umbrella you will need it later on. it is quiet on high def doppler. you can see that rain up to the north near crescent city and the far northern california area. as we go through the day the rain will slide in first from the northbay then the rest of the bay area this afternoon and
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♪ welcome welcome back to cbs this morning. as we are talking, you are in poll position. >> thank you. i'd like to wish an early happy birthday to artist and national treasure who turns 100. you know him from the pop art movement. his confessionry creations he's best known for.
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i spoke to him in 2001 when he was only 81 about his sweet legacy. you could have picked anything. you picked pie. >> i don't know. i painted these 8 or 10 pies on plates and thought no one will take me seriously now and i couldn't leave it alone. >> one of those sold for $8.46 million at auction. >> i didn't know their name. >> they are used all over the place. >> he came new york in 1961 to try to get a dealer. he lives in california. no one would take him. one dealer, allen stone, he showed up on his doorstep. he said, i thought he was nuts. he showed his work. the rest is history. >> when asked what he would do
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on his 100th birthday, he said going to work. >> piece of pie. >> i'm going to put up a picture of crazy covid precautions a the a soccer game in northern ireland. a covid disinfection pod. i cannot imagine this is that effective. people are not getting the virus from touching jackets it is coming out of your mouth. even the people who provide this says hand washing is more effective. it is interesting and bizarre. i'll point out that the match between an ireland and slovac team. i'll mention i am czech, not slovak. i get that question every once
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in a while. viewers were obsessed over his nonstop coverage. in the fashion world, the khakis he wore on the air from the gap in palamino brown. they are now on sale for $30. steve is 41 years old. he was awake from 5:00 a.m. election morning until the following day friday. >> he's amazing. >> his curiosity and interest got him going. his passion, not the diet coke.
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>> our hearts belong to anthony here. >> they do. the other anthony. that's right. >> our lead national correspondent doing double duty this morning. and a preview of this morning's report about a championship boxer who was feared for her strength in the ring. kristi martin is her name. the first female boxer to appear on sports illustrated. in 2010, she was shot by her husband, she nearly died. here is the report. >> this is the fight that made kristi martin a world-wide sensation. 1996 event headlined by mike tyson. her nose bloodied and she stole the show. >> the most profitable bloody nose in history.
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>> then made the cover of sports illustrated. she won 49 fights with her sights set on 50. behind the scenes. her husband, also her boxing coach was abusive and controlling. >> i keep thinking the people who are watching this say how does a woman so powerful, how is she not able to stand up for her self at home? >> i know people think that. i didn't have the same mental strength to overtake him. >> when she tried to end the marriage, he went on the attack beating and stabbing her. >> alababam, just like that, th switch flipped and i told him, you cannot kill me. >> he stands over her and shoots her in the chest. >> the bullet missed her heart by three inches. he would stand trial for
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attempted murder. defense attorney says it was kristi attacked him. >> the way jim described it was that she was aggressive. he was constantly afraid of physical attacks by her. >> she became famous beating the hell out of people. >> exactly. >> so pretty plausible that she could beat up her husband? >> absolutely. >> it is a remarkable story. you have a world famous boxer and she could still be in an abusive relationship. that isn't about physical strength, it is mental abuse. >> despite what happened in that courtroom, she says she already won. >> when i got up off the floor and out of the house, that was
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my 50th win. >> she's shot in the chest. how does she survive that and what does her ex-husband say happen? >> incredible. she told us she played dead on the floor. she hears him get in the shower. grabs the keys, the gun which was hers. she flags down a passer by. the husband says it was self-defense. >> acting in self-defense but he hops in the shower. a lot of questions there. squoo if you or someone you know needs help, counsellors available 1-800-799-7233. we'll put it up on the wiebsite too.
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you can see christ martin, the fight of her life on cbs. >> reflectin come experience the grand opening of floor and decor's newest location in the east bay area! our expansive store is fully equipped with safe distancing guides, so you can browse our wide aisles and be amazed with our even wider selection. or easily order online,
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we have the power to harness california's abundant solar and wind energy, but it's not available all day long. use less energy from 4 to 9 pm for a cleaner california. we are living we are living through an historic moment in our country in an election that has been
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contentious and all during a global pandemic. president trump still refuses to concede. cbs political analyst has covered three presidential transfers of power. it took a moment for us to reflect on what's happening this time. >> this week in the drama, the a actors seem to be changing costumes on cage. the president-elect acting presidential. the previous president shouldering his nearly 800-page memoir on the marketplace. we have something close to it. the sitting president thinned to a shadow. president trump was out of the limelight. he still hammered away on twitter but other than attending a properly rev rent ceremony on
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veteran's days, he was out of camera frame. his team working to find sufficient fraud to overturn hundreds of thousands of votes. in the meantime, the president-elect in it self notable. in the past four years, the president has done nothing expected. president-elect created a task force and named the teams and a chief of staff whose history in washington suggests an orderly operating model after the roller derby carnival of the trump years. enthusiastic, they might refer to him as joe from scranton.
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when prime minister gushed. >> can flowed overall the things that have traditionally united the uk and the u.s. >> republicans weren't yet gushing about the new guy, backing their president. they know better and how poisonous it is to say that. still they say nothing. some is have been exhaling since saturday wonder if they should tighten their breath again. those who feel understood by trump are uneasy ease on his way out. the president-elect was asked. >> it is all going to come to fruition on january 20. between now and then, we hope an expectation is that the american people do know and understand there has been a transition.
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i think the majority of the people who voted for the president, they understand we have to work together. >> how do you expect to work with the republicans if they don't even acknowledge you as president-elect. >> they will. >> instead of turning up the heat, he decided to turn it down. this was something new. the office created by one where the occupant would cool public passions rather than inflamed them and also to note, the president-elect did not tweet about it. garrett nook now, the john dickerson nook. wonderful and elegant distillation of everything we're seeing right now. it does make me wonder if we have been here before as a country. >> we have never been here before as a country, because we have never had a president who says the election was fraudulent. i mean, that's what's different here. mitch mcconnell said the president is looking into fraud. no, the president has said basically the election was
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stolen, and we have never had a president treat the democratic process so cheaply. >> what's the impact of that, john? >> the impact of treating the process so cheaply is that going forward, people won't believe in the new administration and they won't believe in the democratic process. and also, it undermines the members of the president's party who know better and who were elected by the same democratic process. so but not all hope is lost because there could be a situation where you might have a concession speech, but even if the president doesn't do that, you have republicans who some day might come forward and say this was a free and fair election. and the results are legitimate. >> john, we keep hearing the word unprecedented with this president, from the very beginning, actually. we had cindy mccain earlier on today, and she said john mccain said democracy always prevails, will prevail. d you think that's true this time, too? >> yes, because basically the process is going forward, but that is the question that hangs in the balance. and it shouldn't hang in the balance, but it's what's up in
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the air, and the important thing to remember here is that when you make a claim of the kind the president is making, that this is a fraudulent election, you have to have evidence. you have to have pictures or it didn't happen and he only has shadow puppets. >> burning the furniture of democracy, as you put it. well said. >> we'll be back with a look at all that
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and let's take a look at all that mattered this week. >> i just think it's an embarrassment. >> president-elect joe biden is reassuring americans about the transfer of power. while president trump refuses to admit defeat. >> all rational republicans know these lawsuits are essentially
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heresy, meaningless, and distractions. >> the coronavirus is reaching levels we have never seen in some areas. more than we saw when the pandemic began back in the spring. >> pfizer said yesterday that its vaccine candidate was more than 90% effective in early testing. >> let us play "jeopardy." >> when you see the clips how he ages over time, you realize how long he's been part of people's lives. >> and people say you're a good guy, nice guy, that's pretty good. >> we love you. thank you. >> our favorite young drummer finally got to meet her idol. >> i love that she sounds so little but she plays so big. >> very exciting. >> you know what i love? her little voice. ♪ makes me so happy to rock out with you ♪ >> do i look like the devil? >> am i shiny?
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♪ feeling good feeling right across the floor ♪ >> not bad for myself, right? not bad. >> how do you think journalists in general handle this year's very unique election? >> go nick mason. >> good hair. everything is working. >> then he interviewed you. i think that would be hard to do. >> any curveballs? >> a little trouble with that one because he was like, what do i call him? >> it literally skimmed the surface. boop, up, got onto the green, curved all the way to the hole. what? >> jim, that music. i just love that music. it just makes me feel warm and fuzzy and peaceful. ♪ santa tell me if you're really there ♪ >> not even covid can cancel the visit with santa claus. but this year, st. nick will sit behind a glare-free clear protective barrier.
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>> so clear. >> it will make for some memorable photos. my mom loves a photo of me crying on st. nick's lap in a mall when i'm 5.
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good morning it is 8:55. san francisco is rolling back reopenings due to a coronavirus bike. there is a new ban on indoor dining starting tomorrow. restrictions are necessary to try to keep the city in the yellow tear. the number of coronavirus cases in california has passed the 1 million mark. the state averages 6300 new cases a day. that is nearly double the daily figure from a month earlier. the warriors have a plan to bring fans back with testing for everyone. they hope to send testing kits
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to season-ticket holders and do rapid testing outside chase center. san francisco officials are reviewing the plan. >>we have brake lights this morning along 880 southbound. slow conditions out of hayward and you are tapping the brake lights as you pass 92. there is a trouble spot on surface street. keep that in mind. checking the bridges, bay bridge is good. all clear heading into san francisco out of east bay. same story on the golden gate bridge. just volume on the southbound side. so far so good on san mateo bridge. it is a cloudy start to the day. drive for now but that will change. here is high def doppler, dry conditions across the area. as we go through the late morning, northbay picking up rain and the rest of the bay area as we go into the afternoon and evening. that wet weather will move in, not a lot of rain is expected,
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we're making sure that somebody is getting their very important items. it makes me very happy. ♪ wayne: ah! - i'm gonna take the money, wayne. jonathan: $15,000 in cash! wayne: we do it all for the fans. jonathan: my personal guarantee. tiffany: yummy. wayne: two cars! that's what this game is all about. she's leaving here with the big deal of the day. ten years of deals, right? jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, hey! welcome, i'm wayne brady, this is "let's make a deal," and this is our zonk redemption week. this is the last day. all week long we decided to do the zonk redemption week, to bring back all of these people that, they've been zonked. they all had stories of losing, of going home with teeny-weeny cocktail parties,

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