tv CBS This Morning CBS April 26, 2021 7:00am-8:59am PDT
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good morning to our viewers in the west on this monday morning. welcome to "cbs this morning." it is april 26, 2021. i'm gayle king. that's anthony mason, and that's tony dokoupil. new troubling signs that could jeopardize efforts to recover from this pandemic. how vaccine hesitancy can approach immunity as we approach president biden's first 100 days. many a man given a ride by sheriff's deputy is later shot by that same deputy while calling 911. and it was a night of milestones at the oscars with a surprise twist at the end. we'll have all of the highlights
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and moments that did not go so well. >> we love a good surprise twist normally. but first, here's today's "eye opener," it's your world in 90 seconds. >> new concerns about america's vaccine supply, vaccinations slowing as cases remain high. >> how concerned are you about those who don't want to get the vaccine? >> there's others that say i will get vaccinated but not anxious as 65 and 70-year-olds who lined up back in january. presidarked 100 days in office this week. >> the commander in chief will deliver his first address to giant session of congress. >> in indonesia they declared all 53 members of the submarine mission dead. and releasing the body cam video showing the deadly shooting of andrew brown jr. >> it is time for the release of this video so justice can be served. reality tv star and former
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olympic champion caitlyn jenner is beginning her campaign to become california's next governor. all of that and -- >> final farewell to legendary rapper dmx. >> a monster trek carrying his coffin through a funeral procession. and the oscars. >> and the oscar goes to -- "nomadland." >> big win for the oscars. >> chloe zhao became the first woman of color to win the oscar for best director. >> what a crazy once-in-a-lifetime journey we're on together. >> on "cbs this morning." ♪ >> for many the biggest moment of the oscars was glenn close with her amazing dance moves to "da butt." >> let me see you do da butt! let me see ya! ♪ you did the whole butt at the oscars! this is a black audience, y'all
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insurance. >> glenn close didn't win the oscar but may have won the night. >> she did win the night. that was quite a move. >> you can tell glenn close is a fun girl. we like that. welcome to "cbs this morning." we're a fun group, too. just saying. we're going to begin with what could be a major obstacle to recovery as we continue to fight this pandemic. a large portion of americans say they will not get vaccinated. so here's where we stand right now -- more than 139 million americans have gotten at least one dose of the vaccine. that's more than 53% of adults. >> but in a new cbs news poll, more than one in five people, 22%, said they would not be getting the vaccine, and another 18% answered only maybe. those numbers could make it hard to reach all-important herd immunity which is crucial for the country, and also crucial for president biden who currently holds a 58% approval rating after nearly 100 days in office. weijia jiang is at the white house for us. good morning to you. how's the administration responding this morning?
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>> reporter: good morning to everybody. the white house has always been clear-eyed about the challenge of vaccine hesitancy. that's why the administration is reithty organizations and public health groups to promote vaccines at the localfung to get one may be trickier than that. after spending the weekend in delaware, president biden returned to the white house on first joint address to congress on wednesday, on the eve of his 100th day in office. the president has already reached his goal of administering 200 million doses of the covid-19 vaccine by the milestone. on friday, the fda and cdc lifted an 11-day pause on the johnson & johnson vaccine. officials decided the benefits outweighed the risks after 15 women developed a highly unusual blood clot out of about eight
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million people who received it. the cdc says the vaccine is safe and effective for the vast majority of recipients. carlotta berry, who received a johnson & johnson shot right before the pause, is relieved to hear that it's over. >> i now know that what i have in my system is just as good as what i thought on the day that i got it. >> reporter: but new challenges loom. among the nearly four in ten people in cbs' poll who say they might not or will not get the vaccine, 53% say they're worried vaccines are, quote, still too untested. 40% are worried about side effects. looking deeper into the numbers, about half of republicans in our poll were hesitant about gvacce seemed to encourage that hesitancy. senator ron johnson, a republican from wisconsin, said he is, quote, suspicious of the ongoing push to vaccinate all americans. >> i think we probably should
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have limited the distribution to the vulnerable. to people that really aren't -- to the very young, i see no reason to be pushing vaccines on people. >> reporter: dr. anthony fauci warned against johnson's take. >> it doesn't make any sense. the more people you get vaccinated, the more people you protect, and there is the issue when you get a critical number of people vaccinated, you really have a blanket of protection over the entire community. >> reporter: in an interview with "the new york times," the president of the european commission said americans who are fully vaccinated will be able to visit countries in the eu this summer. this is the first comment from a top-level eu official talking about the reopening of nonessential travel based on vaccination status. anthony? >> thank you. white house senior adviser for the covid response team andy slavitt joins us now. good morning. as we just heard from weija, we've got 22% in our poll saying
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they will not get the vaccine. another 18% saying maybe they won't. how do you address that? >> well, good morning. thanks for having me on. look, aca important decision to make, and i think as americans do their homework they're going to realize that it's really smart for them to do. they really have to do that homework themselves. if they look at the over 130 million americans that have been vaccinated, they look at how much safer they are, the things that they can do now, they compare that to the incredibly modest if almost nonexistent risk of taking a vaccine, i think that that's where they'll end up. all you have to do is look at what's happening in india, even michigan. if you're a younger person, see what the risk is from covid. i think people will do their homework. i encourage people to talk to their doctors. talk to people you trust. talk to yoursts. don't listen to politicians. don't listen to senators. don't listen to me. talk to the people in your life i think most people end up making the decision.
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>> are you worried -- 51% of republicans don't want to get the vaccine. could this escalate as a principle problem? >> we're going to try to prevent that. we don't think in those terms. we think that people want to be informed, they want to be educated. some people have questions. some people are younger and don't feel as much of a threat as people who are older, so they need it to be more convenient. that's why we have thousands of people in communities who we call the community core who are basically prepared to answer people's questions. we talked to doctors and scientists and -- and the medical advice that people get. i think it's going to encourage them more than not to take the vaccine. so i think it's going to be step by step. i don't think it's going to be as fast as it has been over the first 100 days or so. i think we'll get there. >> to what degree do you think vaccine hesitancy will delay a return to some find of normalcy? >> you know, i think there's a community-by-community answer there. if we have communities in the country where we have very high degrees of vaccinations, i think you're going to see very much a
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2019-type of a life. if we have communities in the country where maybe only half of the people get vaccinated, then they're going to be at serious risk for these variants coming in, and having happened what's happened in michigan recently. thankfully, they're recovering -- beginning to recover from that. but the communities that don't have high degrees of vaccination are going to be a little more jeopardy. >> the johnson & johnson vaccine has now been deemed safe and effective for the vast majority of people. but it seems to have been tainted in some people's minds that it's kind of effectively a second-class vaccine. are you concerned that its reputation has effectively been damaged? >> i don't think people should look at it that way. i think the first c people shoulake away is our drug safety system is working great. that means that if there is even the slightest concern or the slightest issue, we'll know about it. the fda will take action on it. they'll study it. and they'll come back and make the right recommendations. there's no way the fda would
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recommend and the cdc would allow this drug to be put in people's arms if people weren't very comfortable with it. so people just do their homework. some will prefer a single-dose vaccine, johnson & johnson, an outstanding vaccine. some prefer pfizer and moderna. and we're in a fortunate position where we have three highly effective vaccines, and people i think have some options. but no, i think a lot of people will continue to want to take the johnson & johnson vaccine. >> yeah. dr. ashish jah, with us in this broadcast, said he considers it a highly effective first-class vaccine. andy slavitt, thank you so much for being with us. north carolina's governor is joining local officials and protesters demanding body camera video in a police killing of a black man. 42-year-old andrew brown jr. was shot last week by sheriff deputies serving a warrant in elizabeth city, that is about 45 miles south of norfolk, virginia. manuel bojorquez is in elizabeth city for us. good morning to you.
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what do you know? >> reporter: good morning. the family says they simply want to know what happened, and they've been asking for the release of that video for days now. they will finally have a chance to review it later today, but a judge must decide whether the public can see it. already in this downtown area, police officers have started to shut down some streets in anticipation of more protest. >> i never expected this to happen so close to home. >> reporter: for andrew brown jr.'s family, his death is yet another tragic shooting at the hands of law enforcement. >> and now i got to live every day, my newborn, without getting a chance to meet him at all. >> reporter: last wednesday, pasquotank county sheriff's deputies were serving search and arrest warrants for brown for felony drug offenses when witnesses said he tried to leave in his vehicle. that's apparently when deputies opened fire. scanner audio indicates that brown was shot in the back. >> advised we've got one male 14 years of age, gunshot in the back -- >> reporter: seven deputies
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involved have been put on paid administrative leave. [ chants ] brown's death, one day arch derek chauvin was found guilty of murdering george floyd sparked protests throughout the city with calls for the release of body camera video to the public. county sheriff tommy wooten says the tapes should be shown to the public if it won't hinder the state's investigation. >> once i get that confirmation, our counties will file a motion in court to have the footage released. >> reporter: the laws behind releasing body camera footage differ by state. for example, in columbus, ohio, the video of the officer-involved shooting resulting in ma'khia bryant's death last week is considered public record and was able to be released within hours. but in north carolina, a state law signed in 2016 requires a judge to sign off on its release. a law the city's mayor wants changed. >> this doesn't make sense. we have to wait forever to get the body cam. >> reporter: attorney ben crump represents the brown family. >> why have the taxpayers have
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to pay for body cam video on the police if when ans they won't show it to the public? >> reporter: now technically anyone can make a formal request for release of the video, but the judge then has full discretion on whether to do that. a decision that could come later today. gayle? >> transparency, so important in these cases. thank you very much, manuel. got to see the videotape. thank you. pandemic conditions made for a very unusual oscars ceremony last night, you could say. the event was held, number one, at a train station with fewer guests because of covid. and many of the traditional elements of the show were up-ended. regina king, let's say she wins for best dressed. she knockout. >> i agree. >> "nomadland" was the big winner. best picture, best director for chloe zhao and actress for frances mcdormand. "entertainment tonight" host kevin frazier joins us now. it was a historic night nature women and for people of color. but there was a big surprise in
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the end just like a movie they say. >> reporter: you hit it on the head, gayle. and, good morning, yes. this was an oscar show like no other. no musical numbers except in the preshow with the orchestra replaced by d.j. quest love who did a great job. he told "variety" he was instructed not to cut short the acceptance speeches which took up almost 43 minutes of the show. instead of ending with best picture, the last award was best actor which many expected to go to the late chadwick boseman. [ applause ] >> the academy award for actor goes to anthony hopkins, "the father." [ applause ] >> reporter: at age 83, anthony hopkins became the oldest person in oscar history to win an acting award, playing a strong-willed londoner facing dementia in "the father." it was an upset over the late chadwick boseman, and hopkins sunday night's final award.ccept >> we're back live --
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>> reporter: postponed almost two months because of the pandemic, the ceremony was a scaled down, socially distanced affair, taking place primary at los angeles' historic downtown union train station. >> we give this one to our wolf. [ howl ] [ applause ] >> frances mcdormand howled after "nomadland" won best picture. she won two awards as co-producer and best actress for the film about a widow choosing a nomadic life on the road. chloe zhao won as co-producer and became the first asian woman and only the second woman ever to win best director. what was it like being there with frances howling at the moon and also her winning tonight? what does that mean to you? >> the howling is for our production mixer wolf. we unfortunately lost him recently. my happiest moment was when frances won. >> frances mcdormand, "nomadland." >> i'm so happy. >> the oscar goes to -- yuh-jung youn. >> reporter: yuh-jung youn also
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made history as the first korean to win an acting oscar for her supporting role as a feisty grandmother in "minari." >> i don't believe in competition. how can i win glenn close, win over glenn close? >> i am -- >> i am -- >> a revolutionary -- >> a revolutionary -- >> reporter: daniel kaluuya won for his portrayal of frank hampton in "judas and the black messiah." he left the audience gasping as he said this with his mother listening in the audience -- >> it's incredible. my mom, my dad, they have sex, it's amazing. like -- i'm here. >> have you had a chance to talk to your mo no, going to avoid m phone for a bit, trust me. >> reporter: daniel's mom definitely looked surprised after the comment. her reaction became a meme on social media later in the night. it was somethi tony? >> oh, man. >> i'll take it.
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i love it was his sister who buried her head in her hands. >> yes. >> anthony hopkins was not on hand to accept his oscar last night. and it was also a surprise that best actor it was the final award of the but hopkins did post a message on instagram. what did he say, kevin? >> reporter: he thanked the academy, and he also honored chadwick boseman. you know, anthony hopkins is 83. he has returned to his native wales. he was in bed at 4:00 a.m. and he did not -- he was not awake for the award. now, speculation is that the producers shuffled the deck and moved best actor to the final award because they thought that chadwick would win, and it would be a perfect way to close the evening. but instead, it was another surprise in -- a year of surprises. >> yeah. all right. thank you very much. ahead, an inside look at what could be a breakthrough in the fight to prevent covid. how a new pilot program will enable people to take covid tests at home. first, it's 7:17. time to check your local weather. ♪
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news car safety investigation. we showed you how the front seats can collapse when a vehicle is hit from behind putting back seat passengers at risk. now there's a move to change the law and make hose seats stronger. sounds like a good idea. sounds like a good idea. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we will be right back. it's very common to have both sensitivity and gum issues. dentists and hygienists will want to recommend sensodyne sensitivity and gum. you get the sensitivity relief as well as improved gum health all in one. i've got moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. ♪arge cleare ♪ i've got moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. ♪ i feel free to bare my skin yeah, that's all me. ♪ ♪ nothing and me go hand in hand nothing on my skin, ♪ ♪ that's my new plan. ♪ ♪ nothing is everything. ♪ achieve clearer skin with skyrizi. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months.
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a beautiful shot of the capitol there. as two u.s. senators say they will reintroduce legislation today to require a new safety standard for vehicle seat. it follows a year's long cbs news investigation that revealed potential seat back dangers linked to a government safety standard that may be outdated. our investigation found front seats can collapse when a vehicle is hit from behind, launching their occupants into the back seat on top of other passengers. our reporting has identified more than 100 people, most of them children, who were severely injured or killed in alleged seat-back failures over the past three decades. the senators say they want to include these new safety standards in president biden's infrastructure bill. i will just say that i think about this piece all the time, every time at a red light.
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>> i was told we're not supposed to comment. >> as a parent, i'll say it's hauntsing, and i hope the right people are looking at it. >> i'll move us along then. ahead, the late good morning. it is 7:26. i am michelle griego. cal trains new hills day station opened in san mateo. it enables vehicle to pass under the tracks weill trains p safety and convenience. drought conditions growing worse in
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." we're getting an inside look this morning at a new pilot program to give americans the chance to test themselves for the coronavirus at home. yep, right there in your kitchen or bedroom, wherever you want to go. at first, the rapid testing indicakits will be handed out in north carolina and tennessee. the goal is this -- it measure how easy access to covid tests can affect the spread of the virus. our lead national correspondent, david begnaud, is here with why this program is so significant. you know what else is significant? david begnaud is in the studio which always makes me happy. [ cheers ] >> welcome, david begnaud. >> good morning, friends. this pam started out in pitt county, north carolina, in
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partnership with duke and unc researchers there. anyone can sign up, but they are targeting the unvaccinated. this is a region where poverty levels are two times higher than the national average and where access to regular testing could end up being a transformative tool in the fight against covid. welcome to pitt county, north carolina, population about 180,000. this is one of two sites chosen to be part of a new federal program to bring covid testing into people's homes. starting in places like this -- >> this is a happy day -- >> reporter: holly hill free will baptist church where after the services, parishioners were asked to say yes to the test. >> thank you. >> there are 25 tests -- >> reporter: eveangel savage is part of the outreach effort worship, some within our community. and so by reaching out to our churches, we have a greater
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reach for the citizenry in our county. >> here's your box here -- >> okay. thank you so much. >> reporter: that outreach includes pastors like manuel medina from greenville's grace family fellowship. what did you think when you heard these were coming here? >> oh, i feel great. i said i want to be part of that. >> reporter: pastor medina has firsthand experience with covid. over the summer it put him in the icu. it also killed a member of his family in puerto rico. his mother-in-law, julia medina. >> i understand what covid is and how good this kit will be for the families to avoid that. >> reporter: nancy hooks, a resident of pitt county, shows how it works. each kit has 25 tests to be taken three times a week. users swab their nose, place the swab inside the tube filled with a special solution. then remove the swab and put a test strip into the tube. ten minutes later, the strip confirms a positive or negative antigen test. >> three times a week testing with this kind of technology is just as good as the gold
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standard pcr. >> reporter: dr. francis collins is the director of the natinute home testing affects people's behaviors and slows transmission. by comparing rates of transmission in pitt county to similar communities that don't have those kits. is it a little late in the pandemic to be doing this? >> the technology to be able to do testing at home has really just gotten intervented. let's -- invented. let's be clear, we're not over the risks of the pandemic. we have 40,000 or 50,000 people a day testing positive. >> reporter: and with just about 20% of pitt county vaccinated at this point, there is still a long way to go before everyone is protected. which is why leaders like pastor medina expect these kits to be in high demand. >> i bet they're going to go fast. >> that's what i said. i know i'm going to be short. >> good to meet the good pastor. as of today, program managers have handed out more than 15,000 test kits so far. you know, director collins points out this could be where
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testing is headed -- giving people the tools to test themselves at home before going to work or going to see family. and since we could be living with covid for the foreseeable future, even after herd immunity, home testing could be the future of stopping the spread. >> and this looks actually surprisingly easy. >> yeah. i'm impressed. much easier than -- and more comfortable also than the nose tests when you go to a pcr place. >> the antigen, they don't go all the way back in your head. >> like the early test. >> i worry about people doing it properly because it can be uncomfortable. who do we know you're doing it properly? >> that's a fair point. some companies have you get on a facetime. they have somebody watch you -- >> i would like that -- >> and sign off on it. you bring up a good point. >> yeah. i'm not going to do something that i think is going to hurt -- i might -- you know. i wouldn't do it -- that's what i wonder. how do you know they're doing it properly? >> fair. >> that is a concern. at least there's an option to do it at home. >> absolutely. >> david, thank you. >> thank you. good to see you. we're learning new details about how a sheriff's deputy
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shot an unarmed black man shortly after giving him a ride home. we'll hear from the man's family in just a moment. you're watching "cbs this morning." morning." ♪ an f-150 isn't an f-150 because of the name on the tailgate. it's an f-150 because it's built ford tough. built to haul more. built to tow m e pe buwho count on it.. because they know that brawn can get the job done, but it takes brains and brawn to get it done right. tough this smart can only be called f-150. [sparse piano music starts] tough this smart [voice of male narrator] my parents were both born deaf. i was not. not being able to see each other over the last year has been hard.
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critical condition after he was shot while making a 911 call in the middle of the night last week. you can hear a sheriff's deputy saying, "drop the gun," on the body camera footage, but officials say brown was unarmed. his family says the same deputy had assisted brown a short time earlier. jeff pegues is following the story. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the brown family attorney says the sheriff's deputy who fired those shots thought that a cordless house phone was a gun. now the family attorney says 32-year-old isiah brown is fighting for his life after what the family says are completely avoidable errors by police and 911 dispatch. >> isiah, what's going on? >> my brother won't let me get my mom's room. >> reporter: the sheriff's office released the 911 call brown made wednesday at around 3:18 a.m. of what appears to be a domestic dispute between brown
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and his brother. >> give me the gun -- >> no [ bleep ]! [ bleep ] i'm not playing, bro. >> what is the problem? >> i'm about to kill my brother. >> don't kill your brother. >> somebody needs to come here real quick. >> reporter: brown can be heard repeatedly telling the dispatcher that he does not have a weapon on him before police arrive on the scene. >> do you have a gun on you? >> no. >> do you hav any weapons on you? >> no. >> you need to hold your hands up. hold your hands up. >> show me your hands now! >> reporter: police released this body camera video showing the tense 20 seconds after a sheriff's deputy arrived on the scene. >> drop the gun! >> he's got a gun to his head. >> drop the gun now! stop -- stop -- stop! stop! [ gunshots ] >> shots fired. one down. >> show me your hands!
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show me your hands! drop the gun! drop the gun! let go of the gun! >> reporter: moments later, body camera footage shows brown on the ground after having been shot. the sheriff's deputy can be seen giving medical assistance. less than an hour earlier, the same deputy had given brown a ride to his mother's house where the shooting happened after brown's car broke down at a nearby gas station. >> i'm just lost. someone's reaching out for help, they come to help, to end up like this -- >> reporter: yolanda brown is isiah brown's sister. >> you know, the fact that it's the same person who spent 15, 20 minutes-plus getting to know my brother, to bring him home, you know, you -- you build that trust. for him to have did the good deed, to do that, he was actually absolutely let down by everyone. >> reporter: brown's attorney, david haines, says his client
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complied with the officers' orders. >> isiah did everything as instructed by the dispatch officer. raise your hands up in the air. for the officer to make this terrible leap that this was somehow a gun, we know that ten shots tragically did hit his body. but that's just totally preventable situation. >> reporter: the sheriff's deputy is currently on administrative leave which is pretty standard in cases like this, while virginia state police investigate. there is additional dispatch audio that the brown family wants released. it is audio from prior to the shooting with the sheriff's deputy. they believe, the family believes that there was obviously a failure to communicate, that brown was not armed. tony? >> jeff, thank you very much. a lot of the details are -- >> big sigh. big sigh. t st, you know, just another onj
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shake your head. number one, looking at the body cam video, i can't tell -- >> no- what's happening. i'm going by the audio where he said "show me your hands," fire, how do you show your hands when you're on the ground and that he had just driven this person home. i just -- >> done the good deed and shows up -- >> hard to make sense of this. >> all police shootings are not the same. we have to make that clear. they are not equal. i believe the majority of the police officers are there to protect and serve. you keep hearing these stories over and over. people are feeling encouraged after the chauvin verdict that maybe, just maybe, yet you it ill see -- we all know we have so much work to do. >> i not officers are concerned. it speaks to the issue that there are so many guns in private hands. when an officer shows up, they have no idea who has a gun. that's a problem. >> they were told on the tape - concerned. but that's -- many questions there. >> yeah.
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>> let's hope that he survives. >> yes. >> hope mr. brown survives. tomorrow, we'll hear from oprah and the co-author of her book, "what happened to you." >> who? >> we talk about why she's not stone crazy, as she puts it. and are you part of the answer, gayle king. >> i am? >> a book are resilience and healing. all that -- >> me? >> yes, you really are. >> you've come up in a conversation about crazy. >> yeah. >> and how you prevent it. as you do for all of us. in our next hour, we're going to share a preview of that chat. first, vlad duthiers's got the stories you'll be talking about today. right now it's 7:45. time for local weather. ♪
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beautiful commotin. >> exactly right. good to see you. here are stories we think you'll be talking about today. as tony mentioned, crowds of fans gathered to remember hi weend. hundreds of bikers escorted r trucryg t pps center in brooklyn from his hometown outside of new york city. family and friends dress fried white and will red during a homecoming celebration. his daughter sonovah junior touched hearts when she took the mic and rapped his iconic song "slippin" with her only personalized lyrics. listen to this. >> i'm learning to hold me head up my daddy's holding my hand. >> so adorable. he changed the face of hip-hop, swiss beats was there. nas was there. swizz beatz delivered remarks. he will be missed. >> i hear it was a fitting sendoff for him. >> it was. all the monster trucks, the bikers. really cool. >> he did climate chhange the g.
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>> he did. in the '90s. absolutely. somebody else who changed the game, folks, tyler perry. >> yes. >> he got people's attention with there powerful speech while accept -- with this powerful speech while accepting an award at the oscars. >> i want to take this jean heshot humanitarian award and dedicate it to anyone who wants to stand in the middle, no matter what's around the walls, stand in the middle because that's where healing happens. that's where conversation happens. that's where change happens. it happens in the middle. so anyone who wants to meet me in the middle, to refuse hate, to refuse blanket judgment and to help lift someone's feet off the ground, this one is for you, too. >> tyler perry said he doesn't hate anybody. the actor/producer/director said his mom taught him as a young boy to refuse hate, and he encouraged others to do the same evenn challenging age of social media. he said he doesn't hate police officers. doesn't hate mexicans, lgbtq. >> anybody who wa's watched thi show is not surprised he got that award. >> not at all. it is worth going on line to
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see. i thought it was one of the most powerful moments of the night. he told about giving a homeless woman some shoes and she said, finally my feet are not on the ground. it does come from his mother. he was very tight with his mother and the lessons she taught him. it was a powerful speech. >> he's walked in those shoes. >> yes. i am you. love the idea of meeting in the middle which implies everybody's got to move some distance to understand the other person. >> we need a center table in american life. >> thanks. we'll talk with band leader, composer and now oscar winner jon batiste coming up on "cbs this morning." the light. ♪ it comes from within. it drives you. and it guides you. to shine your brightest. ♪ as you charge ahead. illuminating the way forward. a light maker. recognizing that the impact you make comes from the energy you create. introducing the all-electric lyriq. lighting the way. ♪
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good morning everyone. it is 7:56. i am michelle griego. ucsf reporting a bay area man in his early 30s got a clot in his leg after receiving the johnson & johnson vaccine. it's the first known case of a man in the u.s. developing a clot post j&j vaccine. today windsor city officials will file notice of intent to officially recall mayor dominic foppoli. this comes after the mayor was accused of sexual assault by six women. foppoli denies the allegations and refuses to step down. san jose sharks will
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welcome fans back to the s.a.p. center, proof of vaccination or negative covid test is the price of admission. rapid tests will be available at the gate. as we look at the roadways, north bound 280 as you approach guadelupe, that left lane is blocked for a crash causing ride out of san jose. for the north bound 101 is busy as you work your way. we are getting reports of a crash and traffic is sluggish as you approach the scene. 16 minutes north 280, 680 towards 85. sunshine already and that clearing with temperatures in the 40s. it's a chilly start to our day as we head through the afternoon, a cool day across the bay area in the 50s and 60s with mostly sunny to partly sunny skies. there is a chance to see isolated shower especially for the north bay hills. we will warm things as we look to
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♪, 2021. that music just cracks me up. welcome back to ""cbs this morning." let's go. a new cbs news poll shows many americans do not want to get vaccinated. we'll ask dr. dr. ashish jah about how to overcome vaccine hesitancy. anthony bourdain's thoughts can be heard again in the pages of a new travel book. how a long time collaborator is honoring him based on what she learned before he died. and jon batiste wins oscar gold for the movie "soul." he will tell us about becoming the second black compo oday'ye
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opener at 8: a major obstacle to recovery. a large portion of americans say they will not get vaccinated. >> the white house has always been clear-eyed about the challenge of vaccine hesitancy. that's why the administration is already working with community organizations and public health groups to promote vaccines at the local level. >> the families say they simply want to know what happened, and they've been asking for the release of that video for days now. they will finally have a chance to review it later today, but a judge must decide whether the public can see it. this was an oscar show like no other. speculation is that the producers shuffled the deck and moved best actor to the final award because they thought chadwick would win and it would be a perfect way to close the evening. but, instead, it was another surprise in a year of surprises. rob gronkowski now has claim to a world record when he caught
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a football from a helicopter 600 feet in the air. >> he got it! >> you have to raise that bar to another level, baby. and i just raised that bar to this level. >> you know whenever gronk is around it's going to be fun. >> i want him to catch a grape off of a building. that's his next challenge. >> he's up for that, too. i think he's just a fun guy. we're going to begin with this. president biden is preparing to mark 100 days in office this week with a variety of events including his first speech to a joint session of congress in a drive-in rally in georgia. a new cbs news poll finds 65% of americans approve of how he's handling this pandemic. the president set several goals when he entered the white house including requiring masks where he is really able to like federal buildings and during interstate travel. while masks are still required in those areas, some states have taken a very different approach. in fact, at least 13 states have
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lifted their mask mandate orders. only 26 states now require you to wear a mask in public. the president also saidet a initial goal of 100 million vaccines and increasing to 200 million. that number was achieved last week. we are at nearly 229 million. >> 64% are white. 12% are hispanic. more than 8% are black. and more than 5% are asian. and the new cbs news poll finds 22% of americans say they will not get the vaccine at all. from the kaiser foundation they suggest vaccine supply will likely outweigh demand in the coming weeks.>> dr. ashish jah . dr. jah, good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me back. >> we always appreciate you
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being on. we have a new survey out, a new poll from cbs, showing that about a quarter or a fifth to a quarter of americans say they will not get a vaccine of any kind. that is a big improvement, in fact, from february. the number is getting smaller. is it small enough? >> yeah, i think it will get smaller yet, i'm hopeful. and part of it is a lot of those people, i think, are still waiting and seeing. and if that number diminishes further it will be good enough. we don't need to have every american vaccinated but we do need to have most and i hope most americans see this as a safe and effective vaccine that is good for them, it's good for their families. >> we've also learned from the cdc that about 5 million americans have not returned to get their second vaccination, so the moderna or pfizer shot. is one shot good enough? does that provide any protection for people? >> yeah, one shot is definitely not good enough. it's very, very clear from the data that both people need
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shots. so what i say to people is if you missed your second shot, go back and get it now. there's no problem in having it been delayed a little bit, but it is critical everybody get their second shot because that's the only way we know that it's going to really protect you for any extended period of time. >> dr. jha, you wrote in an op-ed the u.s. has strategic interests to help india manage the coronavirus crisis there, which is escalating in alarming proportions right now. what more should the u.s. do, do you think? >> yeah, i think the u.s. can do a lot and even since i've written that op-ed, the president and the federal government has come out in strong support. i think it's fabulous. we should be helping them with their hospital supplies, with testing, and also helping them ramp up vaccinations. we have so many vaccines right now that i think we should be sending excess supplies, especially vaccines we're not using here, to india to help india out at this moment. >> i think it's important to emphasize how important it is to
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help other countries. when coronavirus first started, we were told if you haven't been to china, don't know anybody who has come from china, you don't really need to worry about it. and we see how quickly this has spread. so i think it's important to emphasize what happens in other parts of the world really does affect us eventually, don't you think? >> yeah, absolutely. this is a global pandemic. we know, for instance, when you see new variants arise anywhere, it ends up on our shores very quickly. we are really all in this together. and if we're going to get through this pandemic, we all have to help each other bring the pandemic under control. >> the cdc says they're thinking about adjusting the guidelines for masks, that we may not have to wear them outside. where do you stand on that? do you think it's time to rethink how and where and when we wear our mask? >> you know, absolutely, gayle. we have learned over the last year there's relatively little spread outdoors especially if you're not packed together in
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large groups. so i expect the cdc to come out with new guidance on this, and i expect a lot of states to begin to peel back outdoor mask mandates. i think that's probably pretty reasonable. we have to keep indoor mask mandates in for longer. that is where most of the spread is happening. pulling back on outdoor stuff does seem pretty reasonable at this moment. >> dr. jha, the other thing in the near future is the fall start of school once again. do you expect children to be available for vaccinations at that point? >> i think all kids should be back in school and should be. teachers have all been vaccinated. i expect older kids to be vaccinated by the fall. i think young kids under 12 probably not. i don't think that should slow us down. >> the possibility of having to wear a mask outdoors and not getting a mask tan, i like that
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oscar to his already impressive musical resume. the bandleader for cbs "late show with stephen colbert" talks to us about his academy award winning score from pixar's "soul." plus, laurie woolover tells how she captured the chef and tv host's voice in a new book about world travel. all that's coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ the thing about freedom is... freedom has no limits. there's no such thing as too many adventures... or too many unforgettable moments. there will never be too many stories to write... or too many memories to make. but when it comes to a vehicle that will be there for it all. there's only one. jeep.
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in the bestselling author brene brown, think of those two together, teamed up to co-edit a new book called "you are your best thing." love that title. vulnerability, shame, resilience, and the black experience. the collection of essays from black men and women is about their lives and overcoming racism. writer austin channing brown is one of the voices in the book. "this joy i have reflects on heartache and hope." she read excerpts from her piece just for us. >> racism is the silent stalker, always willing to wring joy from our lives. this level of foreboding joy is not in our heads, it's in the evidence of our experience. when my husband is in the car, i do not fear only the possibility of an accident but the
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possibility of a police officer harassing him. maybe even taking his life. we have learned -- [ chants ] -- that the only thing white supremacy would love more than taking our lives is for the lives we have to be diminished, lss than human, filled with despair, containing only fear. the joy of blackness persists. our joy is in the legacy of all that our ancestors have done for us, our joy is being able to participate in that legacy now. our joy is in having left a america in the world, being able to say "i was here." when i look into my little boy's eyes and wonder if his life will mirror trayvons, i silently thank trayvon martin for his life. i will love him harder, and in
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this become softer. i will be vulnerable, open to being hurt, because i trust that my joy in him cannot be taken away. >> beautiful picture of her with her little baby boy. tarana burke and brene brown join us now. tarana, we should say, recently signed a production deal with cbs studios. i didn't know that, tarana. i'll say welcome to the family. and it's good to see you both this morning. >> thank you. >> those essays, guys, are so powerful. i pulled out a couple -- laverne cox says she never leaves home without her armor up. i like that. professor mark lamont hill says therapy is a staple of his emotional diet. and in the beginning it was a badge of shame, and now it's key to survival. you just have one powerful reading after another after another. so tarana, i want to start with you. what were you trying to accomplish with the essays? what were looking for, and why did you think brene brown would be the first partner for this? -- the perfect partner for this? >> well, brene and i are
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friends, and i had many discussions with her about some of these topics, and when this came up, when george floyd and breonna taylor hit us like a ton of bricks last summer, i was really sad, and i watched a lot of black people around me who were also sad and felt a range of emotions, but nobody really was tapping into what we were feeling as much as they were asking how can we be better people, how can we be anti-racist and things like that. and so i wanted to talk to brene about, you know, how her work had helped me but how we can contribute to this moment and, you know, true to form, she was very, very, very much down with it as soon as i asked the question. >> were you reluck ants to ask her -- reluctant to ask her? >> i was very reluctant. i didn't know -- our friendship had been -- because our friendship had just been a friendship, right. we didn't really talk about work and things of that nature. and i was saying to her, i think your work is important for black people, but i also think that i can't really find myself in your
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work right away. and i want to change that. and that's a big thing to say to somebody about their body of work, and also it's a test of a friendship. >> brene, tarana said you were all in. were you hesitant at first yourself? >> no. this is something i had been grappling with for a long time. and because i had always had incredibly diverse samples, i knew that what needed to change was the telling of the stories that brought the data to life. i knew the data were representative of large groups of people, but i use a lot of my own stories, and i thought how -- i don't want people to have to work hard to find themselves in the work. and so when she teed up the idea of a collaboration, i think my answer was heck yes. or some version of that. >> but i understand at one point you said should a white person be talking about this? how do we navigate that? >> oh, yeah -- >> is that a conversation?
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>> yes. because i was -- i said, look, you can have the data, i can support it, i can help, but do you -- do we want to -- do you want me to co-edit this with you? she's was like, yeah, you're the expert in this area. i said, i'm white. she's like, yeah, i'm clear. >> i get it. >> yeah. but i thought maybe we can do this in a way that really models what co-creation should be around. and as long as there were some stipulations that lived experience has to always trump academic experience, she needed toe lead authorship. >> yeah. i did think that was interesting, brene. >> it was an incredible project. >> i did think it was interesting when you say, you know, life experience always trumps academics. and tranai've heard you say that -- tarana, i've heard you say that vulnerability is a word we all know but it's a different experience when you talk to black people than when you talk to white people. >> absolutely. brene talks about a story where she's feeling vulnerable because
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she's in a store with her daughter and her daughter's being silly. and you know, when we compare that to what my experience could be in the store with my daughter and i could be stopped for shoplifting, or i feel vulnerable in a different way because of my race and because of how people perceive me because of my race. and so when you talk to me about being vulnerability as a pathway to a wholehearted life, that feels scary to me because i don't know what vulnerability -- how that's going to affect me, you know, in the world. it's a very different experience for black people. >> and brene, i've heard you say that racism is trauma. what do you mean, and how does that connect to vulnerability? >> yeah. i think one of the greatest casualties of trauma is trauma pulls from us the ability, willingness, the space to be vulnerable. i mean, you see this -- i see that when i work with vets. i see this when i work with people who have been through violent crimes. you want me to take the armor
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off? i've seen what that looks like. i think what we don't understand is that racism persistent to humanization, that's trauma, as well. and so it's really important to understand that safety, emotional safety, physical safety, are prerequisites for vulnerability. and we all have a responsibility to create that environment because just because you're black or you've gone through trauma doesn't mean that you need less vulnerability in your life to know intimacy and trust and creativity and innovation. but it means it's harder to come by because -- >> yes -- >> we don't have the safety. >> what i thought that you both captured so beautifully in the book is about humanity. it's not a story we afternoon hear about, black and brown people. one of the strongest essays is from you, tarana burke, we're out of time, so people have to get the book, where you talk about for the first time having
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good morning. it is 8:25. i am anne makovec. east bay mud could declare stage 1 drought as soon as tomorrow. be asked to cut water usage voluntarily by 10% starting next weekend. steph curry has a new nba record. he made seven three pointers last night giving him 85 for the month. that is a singmonth record. warriors beat kings 117-113. cal trains new hills dale station opened in san mateo.
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vehicle traffic travels under the tracks while trains use an over pass, geared towards safety and convenience. it's a chilly start through the day. through the afternoon, a cool day into the 50s and 60s, 57 san francisco, 59 oakland, 61 san jose, 64 concord. as we go through today, mostly sunny to partly sunny skies, could see an isolated shower for the north bay hills. we will warm things up as we look to tuesday especially with high pressure building in, warming up wednesday and thursday. i am gianna franco in the traffic center. and it's a slow ride west bound out of the east bay into san francisco. you've got brake lights across the upper deck of the bay bridge as well. still slow off the east shore freeway. also still seeing brake lights for the ride into altamont pass and it looks like things
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's that time again, time to bring you some of the stories that are the "talk of the table" this morning. and tony is up first. >> so on thursday of last week, i sat down with your best friend, oprah -- >> i heard. >> to talk about a book she co-wrote with -- >> she said you were good. >> good. i appreciate that. >> she did. >> say more about that. a new book called "what happened to you." about childhood trauma, a serious topic, revolutionary new way of looking at it in the research world. here is a sample of our conversation. >> something went, whoa, inside me, and i got it in a way that i hadn't really understood in all the years i've been talking
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about trauma. >> so that is oprah talking about the subtle but important difference between asking what's wrong with you and asking what happened to you. how that can guide how you help a person and help ourselves. >> yeah. such a distinction -- >> just framing it that way. that came from working with "60 minu minutes." she's been working with dr. bruce perry for over 30 years. >> long conversations. the full conversation will air tomorrow. you remember when she did the "60 minutes" piece, she came here and said she would dance on the table if she could get people to pay attention to this issue, it's so important. >> the repercussions -- we're learning more and more about the repercussions of trauma throughout your life and passed on to your children, as well. >> will be nice to have oprah come and dance on this table. i would pay money to see that. >> that's a tease. >> maybe i shouldn't say -- unfortunately, there was no dancing in our interview. a great conversation. gayle? >> looking forward to that. mine is interest vhs tapes. does everybody remember vhs?
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gisele, alexis? >> they have no idea. >> i have to ask the young people in the room. they remember vhs tapes. imagine going to the dmv, nobody really likes to go to the dmv. it's always a long line, some kind of something. so imagine going into the dmv and as you go to change your license, you're told that the police are looking for you. this happened to caron mcbride. here's her story. >> the first thing she told me was felony embezzlement. i thought i was going to have a heart attack. they tell me that i had an issue in oklahoma, and this there was the reference number for me to call this number. and i did. meanwh meanwhile, i'm a wanted felon for a vhs tape. >> what? >> what? so this vhs tape back when we used to rent vhs tapes, somebody in her house rented "sabrina the teenaged witch." >> didn't return it -- >> did not return it. she said -- "sabrina the teenage witch," no offense to the people in the movie, not her cup of tea. she suspects it was her roommate who had young children. she said she believes that she's lost jobs over the years because
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when you go to check her out, it shows that she's wanted for a felony and embezzlement -- >> i hope netflix doesn't start looking for those old dvds. >> be kind and rewind. >> i could have a very long record. >> we're glad to see after the story aired locally in the cleveland area, they've -- her record is clear. so caron mcbride is an upstanding citizen as she's been all along the way. >> very good. >> if anybody has copy of "sabrina the teenage witch" please return it. my story is the hottest vaccination site in new york city. it is so cool, it is in the american museum of natural history. they opened their hall of ocean life as a vaccination site over the weekend. they can administer up to 1,000 vaccinations a day. if you've ever been there, you know that way up above in the hall is a 94-foot model of a blue whale. >> yes. >> suspended from the ceiling. and if you'll notice there, right in the middle, the whale has a band-aid.
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>> it is a cool building. >> it is. >> a great room. one of my favorite rooms in new york city. they made a giant band-aid for the whale. it took them five days to make. my daughter told me, dad, you have to say that it's 6'2" long. i've said that. she told me that because -- like so many new yorkers now, everybody wishes they could get vaccinated there. you can call and make an appointment. olivia, my daughter, went with her friend olly over the weekend, olly needed to get vaccinated. she took care of olly's dog. she got a souvenir -- photo of herself under the whale. always cool. >> very cool. as we get vaccinated around the country, we should visit the natural history museum. >> i didn't know they were doing that. >> it just started. >> very nice. >> all right. with so many of us itching to get out and to explore, a new book shares the travel wisdom and spirit of beloved chef, author, and tv host anthony bourdain. he had been working on "world
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travel: an irreverent guide" with longtime assistance laurie wollever before he died by suicide in 2018. she finished the book, incorporating bourdain's unique voice and observations about the world. i caught up with woolever in new york, a restaurant recommended in the guide. >> i love nature. what's going on here? >> master traveler anthony bourdain was not one to mince words about any destination. >> if you like food and you haven't come here to eat, you're really missing [ bleep ] the boat. >> he spent up to 250 days each year on the road. first for his series "no reservations," and later for "parts unknown," and had an opinion about every place he went. >> even people who are afraid to travel, who said, well, but i hear -- no, you know what, this uhould miss a place liken. this. >> he liked things messy. >> yeah. absolutely. >> laurie woolever was powhis
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assistant and co-author of their cookbook "appetites." in 2018 they started to collaborate on the travel guide, then came the news of his death. what did you think would happen after tony died? >> right away i thought, well, that's the end of that book. >> but bourdain's family urged her to finish it. imagine in some ways you can hear his voice all the time. >> oh, absolutely. there's so much of what would tony do in any circumstance. working with him for ten years, i was very steeped in his voice, in his work. >> she had the notes from their initial brainstorming session. >> i taped the whole thing, thank god. and i -- i had a list of every place he had ever been. >> that's a long list. >> a very long list. the ones he said yes to, he also would have very clear and sometimes very emotionally resernant memories --ies are minute to memories about those places. >> the result -- "world travel: an irreverent guide to cities,
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restaurants, and hotels." for those who want to travel like tony or at least to read about it. what does it mean to travel like tony bourdain? >> i think it means to be very open to whatever it is the place is offering and to try and not gowithour one set agenda of this is how i travel. >> okay this time -- just this one. >> he was willing and open to accept what it was that people wanted to give him. he was an incredibly gracious guest. >> i love good food. this is good. >> of course, a good meal was always a centerpiece of bourdain's adventures. >> mm. good [ bleep ]. that is good. good, good. a little more. can i get a little more? >> this is our charcuterie board -- >> we may not be able to travel like tony right now, but we can eat like him. >> pate -- >> at bar boulud, one of the recommended restaurants in the travel guide. >> this was something that tony
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loved. >> charcuterie specifically? >> yeah. it's signed of a die -- kind of a dying art. >> this was food for the gods. >> good food bourdain style often includes good company. >> hello. >> hello! >> good to see you. >> restauranteur and chef daniel boulud was a longtime friend. >> meeting daniel's dad, one begins to understand the roots of his perfectionism. >> reporter: in 2014, for "parts unknown," the pair traveled together to lyon, france, the place are boulud and so many other world-renowned chefs got their starts. >> the trip to lyon was fabulous. tony was almost intimidated. sometimes i was intimidated to be with tony. >> why? why were you intimidated? >> he had seen so much, and i felt like am i going to be able to be up to par and show him enough that he feels like it was worthhe >> it was worth the trip. the meal of a lifetime with the legendary chef paul bocuse
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evolved into a hunting trip and later an intimate gathering of friends. >> it is for me a dream to spend this time with a legend. but i'm thrilled that bocuse, too, seems delighted. >> the only thing he cared was to connect with people who really were connected with their life, their family, their country, through food. >> and for bourdain, that food didn't have to be fancy. you don't like being fussed over at restaurants? >> no, i don't want to be comped, i don't want extra courses. just serve me like anybody else. >> in 2016 for "cbs this morning saturday," we met at pastrami queen in new york which is also in the travel guide. this is your place when you come home? >> this is my go-to. this is what i crave. >> uh-huh. >> no matter how well i've been eating or where that might be, this is -- this is the first thing i want and need. >> bourdain made hundreds of
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trips and traveled thousands of miles, but writing the guide was a journey that laurie woolever had to finish for him. think he'd be happy with it in the end? >> i hope so. i was constantly asking myself how would tony feel about this or that, and what would be important to him. so i hope that i did a good job, and i know that he would be happy with the idea of being able to share this world view with people. >> fellow travelers, there is what you want. there is what you need. this is the path to true happiness and wisdom. >> i like that. >> i think he'd be happy with it. i think -- i think she's very glad she did finish it. >> yeah. i think so. but he -- just seeing him on camera, number one, really nice to see him on camera and to hear his voice again. he used to make everything look so good and exciting. he took such great pleasure and
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joy in food. >> and you could feel it in everything he did. you know, that was part of the fun of the adventure. it was. all right. jon batiste won his first oscar last night for the pixar movie "soul." ahead, he'll tell us about co-writing the score and serving as a watch cbs in bay area with the kpix 5 news app.
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10-years-old. put me at piano lessons with shirley, william -- so much, so much has happened, this moment is a culmination of a series of miracles. >> ah. jon batiste, the music director for "the late show with stephen colbert" is now -- listen to this -- an oscar winner. capital leaders, exclamation point. that is so cool. he shared the academy award for best original score with atticus ross and trent resner of nine inch nails for the pixar movie "soul." ♪ the oscar for best animated feature, too. jon batiste joins us from los angeles where i guess you've been up all night. congratulations to you, mr. oscar winner. part of the fun last night was watching you be so happy
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because, jon, you were so in the moment. what's it like floating up there with the clouds? >> oh, my goodness. i blacked out. you just go with the moment. it's hard to conceive of what's happening in that moment, but you just have to move with what's happening and accept it and be gracious. and that's what i tried to do. trent and atticus were there, we had worked on this film for two years. >> yeah. >> and -- >> is the oscar nearby? is it nearby? where is he? >> oh, yeah. yeah. watching over us. >> did he sleep with you in the bed last night? with you and your significant other? >> yes -- sitting right there watching over us tonight. hello. hello. >> does he have a permanent hom? eng live? wan to p i my - my grewp iny sanit. >> ah. >> i want them to be able to see this. so yeah. >> i like that you said it started with 12 notes.abt it th way. did that resonate with you?
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when you said it starts with 12 notes. >> yes. it's same 12 notes that we all have -- everybody takes those 12 and makes something out of them. that's what we did with this film. we just tried to figure out what did we want to say with those 12 notes, and how we want to reflect on the meaning of life in this film. >> jon batiste, you are having quite a year. not only bucket loads of awards for this movie, but a great album. "we are," and a hit, "i need you." how are you feeling after this? >> i -- i'm still trying to just let it sink in. oscar winner. it's amazing. i really have always loved c, andbviously i don't think about the achievements. i just love the music. but then when you get something like this, it -- it's hard to understand what that means, you know. i got to --
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>> it's a title that follows you for the rest -- like olympic gold medalist. tell always be there. >> go ahead -- >> for the rest of his life. >> i was going to say, watching you play piano is one of the great pleasures on this earth. you wrote all the jazz for this movie. but what's also interesting is you were physically the model for the animated character. >> yes, joe gardner. there were about 80 cameras around me in the studios. i didn't know how they were going to take the camera information and translate into animation, but they were amazing. even the band, every person in the band -- you know, tia fuller was the saxophone, dorthea oe sailor, marcus aracter's gilmore, eddie haines, legendary, 95 years old. he also played with us on the score. >> i didn't know that, anthony. i didn't know that he was a model. now that you pointed it out, i do see you in there, jon
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batiste. i do, i see -- >> you see? >> yep. no, i see it very clearly. but i'm wondering because you almost seemed shocked when you went up there. i wonder how you spent the day getting ready. did you -- this must be something that you dream about, you hope about, and then they call the winner is and it's you. >> oh, yes. it's something that you dream about, but cannot prepare for the moment. you -- you are there, and every second until you hear your name, you don't know what -- what's going to happen. and then when you -- >> does stephen colbert need to lock look for a new band leader? >> stephen sent me a message on the night. it was great. we were going to facetime, as well. but -- >> all right. >> didn't answer the question. >> that's all right. oscar winner jon batiste, thank you so much for being with us. congratulations. what a night. we'll be right back. >> bravo.
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with cheese baked right into the biscuit, hickory-smoked bacon or grilled sausage, and a freshly-cracked egg. only at jack in the box. good morning. it is five minutes before 9:00. i am anne makovec. ucsf reporting that a bay area man in his early 30s got a clot in his leg after receiving johnson & johnson vaccine. this is the first known case of a man in the u.s. developing a clot post j&j vaccine. a big run way overhaul at sfo starting today. the airport's longest run way will be closed four months for repaving, taxi way construction, expansion, lighting improvements. it is expected to reopen by labor day force windsor city officials will file notice of intent to recall mayor foppoli
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after he is accused of sexual assault by six women. he denies the allegations and refuses to step down. we are already catching the sunshine. it's a chilly start to the day. through the afternoon, a cool day in the 50s and 60s. 59 oakland, 61 san jose, 64 concord. as we go through today, mostly sunny to partly sunny skies, could see isolated shower for the north bay hills. mendocino, we will warm things up into tuesday especially with high pressure building, warming up wednesday and thursday. i am gianna franco. we look at the south bay now, just a little slow as you rk north bound 101 around the 280, 680 connector. an earlier trouble spot around 11th street is in the clearing stages but sluggish. slow out of richmond into berkeley, 22 minutes from highway 4 to the maze but looking better for
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wayne: hey, america, how you doin'? jonathan: it's a new tesla! (cheers and applause) - money! wayne: oh, my god, i got a head rush. - give me the big box! jonathan: it's a pair of scooters. - let's go! ♪ ♪ - i wanna go with the curtain! wayne: yeah! you can win, people, even at home. jonathan: we did it. tiffany: it's good, people. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady. wayne: hey, welcome to "let's make a deal, wayne brady here. thank you so much for tuning in, today is a very special show. we've got a special guest joining us today. golden globe winner, sag award winner, and she's hollywood royalty. so i'll let you guess on that for a second.
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