tv CBS This Morning CBS June 9, 2021 7:00am-8:59am PDT
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♪ ♪ good morning to our viewers in the west and welcome to "cbs this morning" on this hump day, it is june 9, 2021. i'm gayle king, anthony mason and that's tony dokoupil. what's at stake, plus the criticism vice president kamala harris faces as she returns from mexico. a stunning new report reveals the richest americans really aren't like us when it comes to paying taxes. how multibillionaires like jeff bezos and elon musk legally avoid most income taxes. a new weight loss drug is approved by the fda for the first time in seven years. dr. jon lapook will break down the pros and cons.
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and the musical "in the heights" comes to the big screen this week. the project's creator, lin manuel miranda and director jon m. chu how it could rescue american movie going. >> it's that good. >> first, today's here's today eye opener. it's your world in 90 seconds. >> more than 12,000 devices sending more than 27 million messages across more than a hundred countries. >> one of the largest gang and drug busts of all time and get this, it was all thank to a fake app. >> the very devices that the criminals use to hide their crimes were actually a beacon for law enforcement. >> president biden is gearing up for his first abroad trip as commander in chief headed to the uk for the g7 summit. speaking to reporters in mexico, vice president kamala harris defended her decision not to go to the u.s.-mexican border. >> i will go again. >> a new report shows some of
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the richest americans pay almost no income tax. denver nuggets yokich wins the mvp award. arrests have been made after emanuel macron was slapped in the face during a visit to southern france. >> bonjour. on "cbs this morning". >> criminals around the world thought they were using an impenetrable messaging app. turns out that encrypted app was covertly controlled by the fbi and australian police say the whole idea came up over a few aftework years. >> i don't think they needed to say that they came up with the idea after a few beers. it's australia. we can just assume that that happens with everything they do. here you are, guys. i've had a few beers and now let's tackle that infected
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gallbladder. this morning's eye opener is presented by progressive. making it easy to bundle insurance. don't you just love a good burping sound with your breakfast? yeah, you do. whether beer was involved or not, it still is a genius idea. >> if you can't come up with a genius idea, a few beers can help sometimes. >> a genius idea for sure. president biden left washington for his first international trip since taking office hoping to show the world that america is different with him in charge. his schedule includes meetings with allies from the g7 countries, a visit with keep elizabeth and a face-to-face meeting with russian president vladimir putin. weijia jiang is at the white house. how has the presidenteen preparing for hisd rning, antho. his press secretary says president biden has been preparing for 50 years, and in a way he has, first asmiee and
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vice president and now it is his turn to set the agenda. he will kick off the meeting by meeting with boris johnson on thursday before corn wall england. it will be the first time the leaders of the largest economies will meet foes to face since the pandemic began. mr. biden has stressed he wants to renew america's commitment to allies after his predecessor sparred openly with them, to rally the world's democrat sees on issues like the pandemic, climate change and countering china. he and the first lady will then visit queen elizabeth at windsor cass ole sunday before heading to brussels for the nato summit. the agenda there is expected to include cybersecurity and russian aggression. mr. biden will cap off the trip wednesday with his first in-person meeting with putin since becoming president. his adviser says that is not about delivering deals, but rather setting boundaries with russia on everything from those cyber attacks we've been seeing to its nuclear program, anthony?
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>> weejijia, the president is leaving as an infrastructure deal fell apart yesterday. why did the president walk away from those negotiations? >> the two sides just could aren't reach a deal when it came to the scope of a package and how to pay for it. the white house wanted to invest $1 trillion of new investments in the measure, but the gop only offered $330 billion. the president wanted to change the corporate tax rates to help foot the bill while republicans helped to re-purpose unspent covid-19 aid. now a group of bipartisan senators will try to hammer out a proposal of their own and president biden plans to keep in touch with them by phone while he's in europe. anthony? >> weijia, thank you very much. as the president heads overseas, vice president kamala harris is back in washington after her trip to mexico and guatemala. she met with mexico's president and others it talk about the
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root causes of the immigration crisis, and she faces criticism from both parties on capitol hill. ed o'keefe is back from guatemala city. he was with the vice president. why the incoming for vice president harris from the republicans and the democrats. >> immigration is a sensitive subject on both sides of the border and here in washington on both sides of the aisle. it's been her big focus ever since the president assigned her to take it on in march. on this trip the vice president announced to tackle illegal border crossings and drug trafficking and political corruption. some say what she's ignoring what is the most important issue, the border itself. >> we need to prioritize what's happening at the border and we have to prioritize why people are going to the border. >> at a press conference tuesday night in mexico, vice president harris said she will visit the u.s. border with mexico in the future. >> think it's short sighted to suggest we're only going to respond to the reaction as opposed to addressing the cause. >> harris hasn't been to the
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border since the president tanked her with handling the increasing number of migrants. journalists repeatedly questioned her on this. >> we've been to the border. we've been to the border. >> you haven't been to the border. >> and i haven't been to europe. >> republican critics like texas senator jon corn incalled her out for skipping the stop. >> she hasn't even been to our southern border. she hasn't visited the facilities where tens of thousands of migrant children have been cared for. >> the biden administration officials defended and clarified harris' work. her assignment was to work with countries and leaders in the northern triangle it address root causes and address corruption and sure, we're working together to address humanitarian concerns. >> her message to migrants not to come to the u.s. was criticized by some fell fell democrats. alexandria ocasio-cortez called it disappointing. we can't set someone's house on fire and blame them for fleeing.
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this issue of whether or not to go to the border is pure politics. she may one day run for president herself. she viewed this as a success and she did demonstrate the way to go toe to toe to world leaders and all of this, tony, another reminder of how hard it will be to achieve consensus on the issue of immigration. >> and millions of lives on the balance. thank you so much. we are learning about an unprecedented law enforcement sting operation. operat operation trojan shield, preventing dozens of murders. jeff pegues has more. j t >> this morning more than 800 criminals across 16 countries have been arrested in a sting operation. law enforcement seized 30 tons of drugs, some hidden in everything from pineapples to cans of tuna fish, 250 firearms, luxury cars and nearly $50
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million in cash and cryptocurrency. the fbi says operation trojan shield also disrupted more than 150 planned killings. >> the amount of intelligence that we received was staggering. >> the historic operation was made possible by an app called anim designed by the fbi to lure suspects from the shadows. the agency made 12,000 devices with the software available on the black market advertising them as secure, encrypted devices. >> the criminals using these devices believed they were secretly planning crimes far beneath the radar of law enforcement, but in reality the criminals were not underneath the radar, they were on it. the fbi was monitoring those conversations. >> while the criminals messaged each other, they were unknowingly sending carbon copies of their communications to law enforcement. >> on anom, criminals communicated in 45 languages
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about things like trafficking, and drugs, arms and explosives and atf gas attacks, armed robberies and last, but not least, contract killings. >> over 18 months law enforcement intercepted more than 27 million messages, the vast majority related to criminal activity like drug trafficking and murder plots. >> the very devices that the criminals used to hide their crimes were actually a beacon for law enforcement. >> a beacon for law enforcement that is now shut down. investigators were asking yesterday why go public with this encrypted device if it's working for law enforcement and against the criminals. investigators told us that they believe it needed, they could create anothereviceike that ane. thank you very much. president biden's top medical adviser dr. anthony fauci is out with an urgent new warning saying more americans need to be vaccinated to stop a
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dangerous covid strain. the delta variant was first detected in india and is now the dominant strain in britain. delta is thought to be more contagious and deadlier than other covid strains. it's responsible for more than 6% of new cases in the u.s. the average number of new vaccinations has now fallen below 1 million a day. the biden administration is pushing to have 70% of the adult population get at least one shot by july 4th and rid now 51.7% of the u.s. have done so. we have an update on a story we brought you in march. it's about a young woman who disappeared in london on her way home from a night out. sarah everhart's murder prompted a debate over violence, harassment and abuse of women. roxana sebelius has more on this story. good morning to you. >> good morning, gail. everhart was walking home after a populated area here after
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leaving a friend's house one evening. she had just finished speaking to her boyfriend on the phone when she vanished. her body was found 50 miles outside london and wayne cousins pled guilty for kidnapping and raping her. her killing ignited widespread grief and the seemingly everyday actions on the night of her disappearance sparked outrage about women's safety in britain with women speaking out about their own experiences about being harassed and assaulted. that outcry was clear in a vigil here banned because of covid restrictions. the bless response sparked protests and condemnation in the days that followed. one newspaper here is quoting london's chief of police as saying london is one of the safest, large cities in the world and that female officers are now patrolling this area with help from the public.
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still many women from all walks of life say more needs to be done. >> roxana in london. thank you very much. a bombshell report from propublica show how little the wealthiest americans are paying in taxes. propublica obtained more than 15 years of never before seen irs information about the 25 richet americans and found that sometimes they paid little or no federal income taxes, that includes warren buffett, elon musk and michael bloomberg. also jeff bezos who is now the richest person in america. he paid no, zero, zip, zilch federal income tax in 2007 and then again in 2011. we reached out to all of them, but have not heard back. buffet and bloomberg did respond to pro publica saying they support an increase in taxes in the wealthy and they donate much of their wealth to charity. we should make clear that none of what these men did is illegal which is part of the scandal. the irs is investigating the
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source of the leaked documents and it remains to be seen if congress will take a look. jeffrey isinger talks about it more. you write in the book that we all pay our fair share. how are these wealthy americans able to avoid something as basic as a federal income tax. >> thanks for having me, tony. what we wrote about is exactly that, that the super wealthy, the ultra wealthy are completely out of the system. most of us have salaries and the taxes get extracted out of the salaries. we are in the american tax system, but the way the super wealthy work, the jeff bezos' and the elon musks of the world and the way their wealth builds, they are outside of the system so their wealth builds up and it is untaxed and then it is only
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tacked when taxed and styles they don't take income at all and they don't take wages and it is only taxed when they sell and they often don't sell. they borrow to fund their lifestyle. >> for the average american sitting at home, they get paid on a friday. the federal government is very good about taking money out of that check, but not so good it sounds like taking money out of the overall wealth and assets, it is stock, the home, the cars, the art, the yachts, you name it of super-wealthy americans. is that the basic picture of things? >> that's the basic picture, exactly. so warren buffett takes very, very little income and he only pays 10 cents for every $100 that his income grows. the average american making 60,000 or $70,000 a year they pay 14%. so they're getting $14 of every $100 that's coming in. so it's a completely different picture for the wealthy. the wealthy take very little income and even that income is taxed very low at low rates and
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lore than someone making $45,000, but the big you are picture here is the whole world of their wealth and what confers their power and what they're able to contribute to political campaigns, charity, and what enables them to keep control of their companies and that's untouched by the system. >> carl icahn, when is a multibillionaire and an investor and he responded to questions and said look, it's called an income tax and i may have billions in the bank, and i didn't pay income so why should i pay taxes? what's the response to that? ? it was a pretty astonishing admission and i enjoyed talking to carl about that. he's exactly right. we're writing about a system that doesn't tax this kiebdz of wealth. take carl, for example, we had hundreds of millions, half a billion dollars in income in
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2016 and 2017, income by the irs definition, but then what was is carl icahn's business is his personal fortune and his personal income tax and business income tax. it's all mixed together. so he borrows a huge amount of money to invest in companies and that gives him leverage and explodes his returns and then he pays interest on that. he gets to deduct that interest so that half a billion dollars of income got wiped out from the interest payments. in other words, you and i and all of the taxpayers in america are helping carl icahn borrow so that he can have better returns in the stock market. >> yeah, you know, people should know if you add up all of the wealth in america and make it one big, old pie, the super wealthy are getting most of those pieces and the rest of us are getting fractions of a slice and the bottom fifth of our society are getting crumbs or zero pie. they owe pie. they're in debt. jeffrey isinger, this is a landmark piece in propublica.
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ahead, prosecutors have a new weapon against el chapo's cartel. why the drug kingpin's wife could take down other cartel members with her. yikes. also, our "eye on earth" series looks at the terrible drought gripping the west. we'll show you how it's endangering the salmon populations, very dry there. plus, the massive effort to save them. you're watching "cbs this morning." whoa, susan! ohhh... i'm looking for coupon codes. well, capital one shopping instantly searches for available coupon codes and automatically applies them. it's called shopping smart... not hard. but i don't have a capital one card. you should get one! but you don't need it for this. just download capital one shopping to your computer. it's free! ooooo, save me some cheddar! so... when's the party? i love fondue.
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♪ you probably never heard my name of course i'm a fame ♪ that's a scene from the highly anticipated movie "in the heights." it's an adaptation of lin-manuel miranda's first broadway musical of the same name. ahead, we'll talk with the "hamilton" creator and the film's director, jon m. chu, about how they took the show to the big screen. it is a big film. it needs a big screen. >> i was going to say, run, don't walk. but you've got to see it in the theater. most people don't have big screening rooms. if you got one, great. most of us don't. you've got to -it's highly ant. for us, we've seen it. >> i'm still anticipating. >> it's good --
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>> gayle's excited about seeing it agai this is a kpix 5 news morning update . >> good morning, everyone. i am michelle griego. today the santa clara county water district plans to declare a water shortage emergency. they are hoping for a 15% reduction in usage and this suendentn custody. marin county the sheriff department started investigating him june 1. he was arrested yesterday.
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a san jose mother awaits extradition after she dumped the body of her son outside of las vegas. they arrested samantha rodriguez yesterday at a denver hotel. the bay bridge toll plaza is busy with pockets slowing as well. it is now coming off the eastshore freeway. if you are heading along northbounders you come away united to connect restaurant traffic slow but not any accidents. this is a live look with the treasure island camera as we head through the day today. bay area. it mid-at hine coast. be daytime high is well at worksman cycles, we've been building bikes for a hundred years. but our customers' needs have changed, so we expanded our product line to include electric cycles.
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now you know. sir, do you know what you want to order? yes. freestyle libre 14 day. try it for free. welcome back to "cbs this morning." we're learning more about the first weight-loss drug approved by the fda in seven years. about 70% of obese. that's a lot of people. and this drug could transform the lives of those who qualify. wegovy got fda approval a few days ago. participants in a clinical trial lost an average of 17% of their body weight over 16 months. the self-administered weekly injection is expected to cost more than $1,300 a month. dr. jon lapook joins us now to discuss. i hope you brought your prescription pad. >> i know -- >> i'm telling you a lot of people are interested. i have a friend who's on it and lost 15 pounds in one week. 15 pounds in one week. >> that's a lot of that, a lot
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of that must have water weight. >> we'll take water weight. we will take water weight. she's trying to lose 70. who qualifies for something like this? >> so gayle, i've already been asked this by half a dozen people. it is not for the person who wants to lose five pounds, eight pounds. >> what about 10, 15 -- >> okay. here's how you think about it. it's for people obese, bmi of 30 or more, we'll talk about how you calculate bmi, or 27, overweight, 27 or more bmi with one weight-related medical condition like high blood pressure, things like that. >> bmi is your body mass index -- >> for people out there, google bmi calculator, you put in your weight and height and get a number. >> brace yourself, probably overoov overweight. 70% of americans overweight or obese, including myself. >> over 40% of people over the age of 20 are obese. be of ways. one is it mimics a natrmhat wve
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decreases craving,re it to slow stomach emptying. so you get full sooner. then it enhances the release of insulin, and that helps. >> you have to get a weekly injection. >> it's an injection. >> once you start it, do you have to stay on it? can you take it for a while, get your desired effect, and get off of it? >> so in the studies, and i suspect to dr. robino, one of the study authors, after 20 weeks, some people continued, and other people just went on placebo. the people who went on placebo gained back more than half of their weight. it's something you have to continue to use. although for some people, because it head been used off label with a drug called ozempic for weight loss, for some people it gives them that boost, and then they get going, lose weight, and they're able to exercise -- >> did people lose enough weight to improve their overall health? >> absolutely. again, dr. rubino said that people decreased the abonly do,
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decreased -- abdomen, decreased blood pressure, but i want people to know there is a black box warning. in rodent th-- rodents, there w a rare type of thyroid cancer. >> are there side effects? >> there are, mostly gi, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, con skipation. you can get -- con skipation. you can get headaches. they tend to do better when you slowly ramp up. >> this sounds exciting to me. >> it does. you know, i want -- i think we have to say this. there is a huge stigma about being obese. >> yes. >> and people say just snap out of it, willpower. for a lot of people it's not willpower. this is going to be great for those people who just can't do it no matter all of their diet, all their exercise. they still can't lose the weight. >> what about after you have a baby and you have extra weight? asking for a friend. >> it's not knownea ding pregnancy about it. so that would be something that people should be aware of.
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for the second straight year, dry conditions are stoking fears of another devastating wildfire season. the lack of rain and the snow is also threatening the survival of the salmon. jonathan vigliotti shows us work to save the species that includes a surprising route to the sea. it was designed by wildlife biologists. >> reporter: captain sara bates has been reeling in salmon off the california coast for nearly a decade. >> catching fish never gets old. you know it doesn't really matter how many times you've done it. even when you're catching 100 fish a day or more, it's fun every time. wish it were a bigger fish. >> reporter: commercial and recreational salmon fishing generates more than $900 million annually for california, but with much of the state in a fis industry is feeling the stress. >> nobody can survive an entire season that looks the way that this one is looking. we are looking at an over 50% reduction of our traditional commercial fishing season. >> reporter: because the state
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experienced one of the driest years on record, waterways that would normally carry young salmon out to sea are now hotbeds of dirt and dust. i'm standing currently 40 feet under water. or should be standing 40 feet under water. >> reporter: governor gavin newsom declared a drought emergency from a cracked lake bed in april. >> the hot are getting hotter. the drys are getting dryer. >> reporter: iconic chinook salmon need cold running water to survive. they hatch in rivers, then migrate to the sea to mature. after a couple years, they swim back to where life began to reproduce n. bornn the will likely die. environmental scientist jason julian -- >> survival has been shown to be very dependent on temperature as well as flow. and the temperatures that we're seeing now are anticipated to have pretty low survival for fish that are released in the river. >> reporter: that's why hatcheries like there one near sacramento are jumping with activity to save the species.
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the california department of fish and wildlife has launched a massive operation. this is pretty incredible. you're looking at nearly 700,000 juvenile salmon being sucked up this tube and put into one of seven tankers. with rivers so low, there is what migration looks like, and it's just one stop along this very unusual journey. the fish are hitching a ride inside 146 trucks traveling more than 100 miles to the pacific. >> here we go. >> reporter: john mcmanus heads-up an association of fishermen who advocate for salmon and ecosystem protec protections. what does the effort mean for the salmon population? >> in the short term this gives us hope. we're happy they're moving these fish. it's also a sad testament to what's happening with our rivers in the middle of the state. >> reporter: what'sap to california's rivers first became a concern nearly a century ago when dams were built to distribute water to crops in the
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central valley. damming is believed to have destroyed as much as 95% of salmon habitat. hatcheries have helped make up for some of the loss, but this year's drought means they now have to make up for all of it. >> salmon are the canary in the coal mine. they're a proxy for many other species in the environment that also rely on the very same water, the very same environmental conditions to survive. so when salmon are going down, many other species are going down. >> reporter: to prevent the tiny fish from becoming a buffet for seabirds, release sites are rotated. these were freed at night beneath the golden gate bridge. we followed our school of fish as they were towed to a spot near mare island. >> in all more than 17 million will be released here into the san francisco bay. nothing about this is natural, but it's their best chance at survival. it's estimated about 80% of the young salmon taken for a ride will grow to maturity. sarah bates is appreciative of
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the work being done to protect the fish and preserve a way of life. >> every fish feels like a little tiny victory. in reality, they're just one part of a much larger ecosystem. and that ecosystem depends on water flows in the california rivers. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," jonathan vigliotti, san francisco. >> i have to admit i didn't realize the degree to which the drought would affect the fish population. this really is a hurricanebig en you're talking about moving the fish -- >> trucking them and taking them to the middle of the ocean. >> down the road we can catch them -- >> put them in the restaurant and eat them. >> you can order them. >> all right. next, vlad duthiers has the stories you'll be
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♪ time for "what to watch," and vlad i'm just glad to see you. i have questions, i do. the ceo testified and you're going to talk about that. >> let me give you the headline, two-factor authentication. put it on your accounts. >> even though he said it was a complicated password, he says he wishes -- >> you're telling me the colonial pipeline did not have two-factor -- >> that'scy exactly what i'm telling you. we have heard from the head of colonial pipeline in public for the first time since the company was hit by a major cyberattack trigger nears of a gas shortage. testified before the panel, the chief executive defended the company's decision to pay a $4.4 million ransom to russian hackers despite the fbi advising against it. investigators have recovered most of that bitcoin ransom, but some is still unaccounted for. the company safeguards against online crooks were not enough to stop the attack. take a listen. >> we had cyber defenses in
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place, but the unfortunate reality is that those defenses were compromised. >> so yeah, we all have two-factor authentication for our email here at cbs -- >> he said it was -- >> he said it was it not colonial 123. >> yes. >> it was colonial 345. >> what i want to know is if the feds got back about half of this money, does it go back to colonial? did they say, hey, federal government, heard you got the mope money? >> there was an interesting exchange about the amount of money that they pay in dividends to people who are affiliated or sit on the board of that company, and how much money they have devoted to cyber security. the number was $200 million over five years. that's not a lot when you think about it. >> to your point, shouldn't the company get the money back? >> it's hard to say it's their money. >> they paid the ransom. >> they paid a ransom. the federal government recovered some money. is it the same money?
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i don't know. money is money i guess. >> i would say i want my money back. >> i would just say people should really consider getting that multifactor awe thentication to keep your email, keep all the things that you hold dear safe. they should think about that, too. >> okay. >> i think maybe they know that now. >> maybe they know that now. the pocketbook's a little light. loving this story -- washington state is encouraging people to get covid shots by giving out the green. and i don't mean cash. here's what i mean -- adults who get vaccinated get a free pre-rolled marijuana joint. >> wow. >> i know. the promotion is called joints for jabs. >> joints for jabs. >> anyone 21 or older. the liquor and cannabis board pp so bummer. >> pre-rolled a good thing, tony? >> i was thinking -- >> if you have side effects -- >> i'm tony. >> fatigue is one of the common side effects from the vaccine.
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you may not want to roll it yourself. beneficial if someone else does -- >> i like that it's pre-rolled. >> okay. >> a good idea. pre-role that blunt. washington is also offering edible -- eligible -- not edibles, they're not edibles. it's eligible adults a free alcoholic beverage if you don't care for the weed. if you want to keep it clean -- i promise you i have not been to washington state -- krispy kreme is giving out free glazed doughnuts with vaccinated -- >> i can vouch for that. i did that. >> get the free kristy cream. i'll take -- krispy kreme. i'll take ten of them. we love this story. an 8-year-old boy made a sacrifice to help his sick pubby. bryson put his prize pokemon cards up for sale after realizing his family could not afford the vet bill to treat their dog, bruce, the dog's name, for a severe viral infection. once word got out, ankeith brys
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his granddad and their other dog and they're touched that people care about bruce. >> he's laid off, and i will do anything if he was -- if he's sick. >> in a time where so much is going on and we need it. we nedded some sunshine. we -- we needed some sunshine. we need some good. >> money came from all over the world. china, their neighbors. bruce is on the mend. family says the extra money will be used to help other people pay their vet bills. >> thanks. coming up, lin-manuel miranda and jon chu on "in the heights." feeling sluggish or weighed down?
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning. i am michelle griego. they want owners to pay a fee to compensate tax base for the public cost of responding to gun violence. a new illegal fireworks crackdown imposing violation fines as high as $500 per property owners will be held responsible for anyone setting off fireworks on the property. san francisco is expanding its museums for all program
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with free or reduced admissions year-round. as we take a look at the roadways, chp has issued a wind advisory for the altamont pass. >> some windy conditions. the travel time is 42 minutes to go from 205 toward 680 . heading toward the bay bridge traffic is stacked up. it is busy on 880 getting onto the san mateo bridge with brake lights. the winds gusting up to 40 miles-per-hour. it is definitely windy and this is a live look where you can see the sunshine and clouds . you
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♪ it's still hump it's still hump day, also known as wednesday, june 9th, 2021. we welcome you back to "cbs this morning." that's tony dokoupil. that's anthony mason. i'm gayle king. the wife of el chapo is expected to plead guilty to helping run his drug empire. what it could mean for the case against the cartel. the cicada invasion is hitting the peak across the east and west. how it's inspiring art, fashion, music, even food. >> and lin manuel miranda talks about a new movie. why critics are saying it has just the kind of energy we need right now. >> it's really good.
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first here's today's eye opener at 8:00. president biden left washington this morning for his first international trip since taking us a. president biden has been preparing for 50 years for this trip. first as the chair of the senate foreign relations committee, and then as vice president, but now it is his turn. on this trip the vice president announced his plans to tackle illegal border crossings, took on drug trafficking and political issues. the amount of intelligence that we received was staggering. >> investigators asked why go public with this encrypted device if it's working for law enforcement and against the criminals? they say they just want to keep the criminals -- >> how are the wealthy americans able to provide federal income tax? >> most of us have salaries the t exacted. ehe super, they are outside of the system, so their wealth bup i
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untaxed. >> a fashion house has just unveiled a new collaboration with a shoe company, and i'm not making this up, to create a stiletto croc. i would rather put my foot into a living croc than in that. they haven't announced the price yet. how about zero. that sounds good. >> no, but guys, they're over $1,000, some of those. >> are they? >> yes. >> someone will buy it. >> i don't get it. james doesn't mean a living croc, but he'd have no foot. >> i would prefer no foot than having to wear those. >> i don't think you would. >> you know what i'm saying. pay me $1,000. >> if you pay me $1,000, i'd walk around in them. >> all right. stick around. i think we can come up with that money. >> we could pass the hat and get $1,000 to have you wear that.
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>> $1,000, though. >> okay. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> you're so on. >> you're in trouble, anthony mason. >> yes, you are. >> if i'm $1,000 richer -- >> what size? >> 10.5 e. >> a long awaited massive invasion of cicadas is swarming east and the west. these bugs can be deafening. that's what they sound like, but if they're anywhere near you, we don't have to tell you that. this group of insects is called brood ten. it emerges from the ground every 17 years. the swarms are so big in the baltimore/washington area that they show up on national weather service radars. good news is they won't stick around much longer. we see what the bugs are doing while they're here and how the rest of us are coping. >> in thekyar of jessica helms' home, it is peak cicada
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season. her six-year-old olivia started counting them. >> we found many bugs. >> reporter: but quickly ran out of fingers and then buckets. >> we had to watch for them where we were stepping. >> reporter: shells cover the ground and hang from the trees. and while all of this mater if i many adults. do you think i'm lame? >> yes, i do. >> reporter: olivia is now invested in the insects. giving them names and rides on all of her toys. we are surrounded by cicadas. we are surrounded by not just the cicadas but their sound from every direction. >> sammy ramsay is an e meteorologist. all the that ere thend ieps this ishe sion the expece. >> reporter: the cicadas are letting themselves be heard.
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dr. bug says it's just the males making all that noise. at levels that rival a garbage disposal or vacuum cleaner. >> about 73 december december d. >> they get the chance to sit around and say i don't like him, i don't like him. that one. i like him. >> for the next four weeks, the cicadas will fulfill their 17-year mission, mating in the trees to produce the next generation while trying to avoid getting eaten by a bird while they do it. >> a majestic existence. are you sure you're a scientist at the usd sa? >> reporter: he's insects are inspiring art, fashion and music. a brewery in virginia created a cicada beer and named it brood x. >> no cicadas were harmed in the
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making of this beer. >> reporter: you'd expect the guy wearing this to enjoy eating that, but at this restaurant in virginia, they're selling 30 orders of cicada tacos every day. >> about 50% of those that come in order a second round of tacos. >> reporter: this is the chef. >> those look tasty. i say eyes looking at me. yeah. they'll look at you. >> reporter: and then it was time for my first bug bite. crunchy, nutty, pretty good. our anchor, gayle king really wants to eat a couple cicadas. can you send her these? >> absolutely. >> reporter: unfortunately the moment of glory for the cicadas is -- both the males and the females will die off after meatime mating. the eggs fall to the ground and
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the cycle starts over. >> i cannot describe the sense of dread that is already in my heart knowing that i am not going to be able to experience this again until i'm in my 40s. >> reporter: that's perspective. we soon say farewell to brood 10. we'll see you in 2038. >> i'm officially nauseous right now. yep. yuck. i'll stick with frosted flakes. >> for $1000 i would not eat a cicada tacos. >> tony, you made a good point. what's better than a cicada taco? one this comes in the mail. >> open it up and there it is. >> i could try the beer. >> and love me some dr. bugs. you're terrific. fun to watch. ahead an inside look at the film adaptation of lin manuel miranda's first broadway musical called "in the heights".
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cbs news confirms a "new york times" report that the wife of mexico's notorious drug lord el chapo is expected to plead guilty in u.s. federal court to helping her husband run his muil dempire. 31-year-old emma coronel aispuro was arrested in virginia in february, two years after her husband was convicted of multiple charges in the u.s. nikki battiste is here to tell
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us what her guilty plea could mean for other members of the cartel. good morning. >> reporter: anthony, good morning. the cartel's leader, joaquin "el chapo" guzman, is already in prison serving a life sentence in colorado. a legal expert we spoke with says his wife might have enough information to put others behind bars, as well, and she might have already told prosecutors what she knows. throughout her husband's trial in new york two years ago, emma coronel aispuro was a constant presence in the courtroom. a retired dea administrator says she was also by el chapo's side as he conducted his extensive criminal enterprise. >> she was clearly exposed to all of the things that chapo was in control of, the movement of narcotics across the border into the united states, and obviously the flow of money back. >> reporter: not just exposed, prosecutors say the former beauty queen participated in those criminal acts, as well. in february, they charged her with conspiracy to distribute
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illegal drugs, including heroin and methamphetamine. she's also accused of helping her husband's daring second escape from a mexican prison in 2015 through a mile-long tunnel dug from his cell. former federal prosecutor lori levenson -- >> i'm not completely surprised that she's pleading guilty. the real question is is she making a deal to cooperate. i suspect that she's offering something to get a more lenient sentence. >> reporter: levenson says as a mother of two who wants to get back with her children, she has reason to work with prosecutors. >> for the government, they want to make sure they have all the information they can get regarding chapo, his allies, his family members. it's not clear, however, that she's giving that information because there are dangers for her to do so. >> reporter: "the new york times" reports coronel will enter her guilty plea in a washington courtroom tomorrow. levenson says it's possible she has already given specific information to government
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prosecutors. we've reached out to coronel's lawyers for comment but have not heard back. >> i would thinking about able to be with your children is a great seknowothing about what's going on behind the scenes. that would be some incentive. >> reporter: certainly makes sense. >> anyone in that cartel would be feeling very uncomfortable with this news. >> major situation for everybody. >> sure is. thank you very much. ahead, bestselling author ibram x-kendi will join us to talk about why he's launching a podcast to help spread his message about anti-racism. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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♪ ♪ ♪ it doesn't take a superhero to help save the planet. small decisions make a world of difference. ikea. ♪ with triple the beef. triple the cheese. and triple the bacon... i call this burger the perfect triple threat. but you can call it the triple bacon cheesy jack. my $6.99 triple bacon cheesy jack combo. only at jack in the box. author and cbs news contributor ibram x. kendi is expanding on the lessons of his bestselling book, "how to be an anti-racist." in a new podcast. the weekly series "be anti-racist with ibram x. kendi" premieres today. he will interview guests like former cabinet secretary julian
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castro, tv personality don lemon, and author heather mcghee. the conversations will focus on how to build a just and equitable world. in the first episode, he and disability rights activist rebecca cokley, explore how racism and prejudice against disabled people are intertwined. take a listen. >> just as the notion of a colorblind society is bull [ bleep ], so is the idea of people say see the person, not the disability. no, i need you to see my disability and need you to see it as a fundamental part of who i am. >> and for able-bodied people to no longer imagine themselves as normal. >> yeah. >> just as white folks should not imagine themselves as normal and men should not imagine themselves as normal -- >> definitely. >> ibram x. kendi joins us now. good morning. thanks for being with us. >> oh, good morning. thank you for having me. >> at the beginning of that conversation you have with rebecca cokley, you ask about the terminology we should use
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when discussing disabilities. and you say that we should learn to humbly approach conversations. explain what you mean. >> well, i think what i've learned over the years talking to people from different communi communities, i've learned that people in different communities have their own languages, their own terms, their own way of understanding and seeing the world and identifying themselves. and in order for us to make bridges and cross bridges to different peoples, we have to understand where people are coming from, and we have to speak their language. >> yeah. and part of the reason for launching this podcast you say is that the topic of race and racism is much broader than many people think it is. >> it is. and i'm someone who is a student and a scholar of racism, but i'm always learning because there's so many different forms of racism. from racism in housing to the
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environment, from racism affecting native people, from racism affecting black womehaan really do is speak to experts to really learn and join with other people as they're learning, too. >> i learned a lot listening to your podcast, i have to say. i never thought about racism and ableism. you know, you tell a very pointed story about your brother who you said has some mental health issues, that the police were called to your house, and how fraught you were with fear about what could happen. could you talk about why you were so concerned? >> i think like many people all over this country who have a loved one who's a person with a disability, when i got a call that my brother was in a crisis and he had called the police, all i thi wasar o myparents' house as get fast as possible because i know unfortunately police officers are not trained to respond to a
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mental health crisis. and so didn't want anything to happen to my brother like has happened to so many people with disabilities all over this country. >> on the subject of learning, there's a push in schools across the country from republicans in particular to emphasize the more patriotic, in their view, elements of our history as opposed to some of the darker chapters. in particular, not teaching the idea of systemic racism. as a college professor yourself, as someone in the education business, what's your response to that? >> i think i am sympathetic to teachers and educators everywhere who are committed to doing our jobs, and our job is to tell the truth. our job is to tell the good and the bad. our job is to tell the light and the darkness. and i think that's what students want. and i know i've had so many students who have come to my classrooms and colleges angry that they did not learn about systemic racism and even about slavery during their k-through-12 leaders. >> you say at one point racism
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is harm follow to white people. i think white people and some blacks are going, huh, what you talking about, willis? i worknder if you could explain. you say when racism wins we all lose. >> let's just take a current example. we, of course, have talked about the way in which voter suppression policies are disproportionately disenfranchising black, brown, and indigenous people, but it's also disenfranchising and making it harder for white people to vote. it's making it harder for all of us to vote in these states. >> when you give people a lot to think about, ibram x. kendi. so bravo to you. thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> of course, thank you for having me. >> you're welcome. ahead, we'll talk with "hamilton" creator lin-manuel miranda about the film's adaptation of his very first broaaysi thheights," hrote in coe. he'll jois with thereor, jon m. chu, to tell us about bringing the show to the big screen. i can't wait for you to see it. you're watching "cbs this
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morning." we appreciate that. your local news is coming up. the santa clara county what district will plan a water shortage emergency and impose restrictions on county residents. they are hoping for a 15% reduction in usage. doordash is expanding services to japan marking the first expansion into asia. a san jose woman is awaiting actuation after she dumped her 7-year-old son's body outside of las vegas. samantha rodriguez was arrested yesterday in a denver hotel.
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taken out of the roadways, if you are getting ready to head out the door and are taking 101, there is some slow spots northbound. if you are near alum rock, there is a trouble spot. 280 is doing better. transfer a crash on the bay bridge with brake lights near treasure island. travel time to reflect this with a slow drive across the east shore. it is blue skies in the south bay. through the day today it is a breezy day with the daytime highs below average for this time of the year. it is upper 60s and low 70s inland
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's time to bring the stories that we call "talk of the table" this morning. and tony is in pole position. >> great. so you guys know what malicious compliance is? you ever heard of this -- >> i have heard of that. >> i had never heard of it before. the idea is that you follow the rules, but in doing so you kind of undermine the spirit of the rules. kids do it all the time to their parents. >> right. >> and an example caught my eye, and i love it. so a husband and husband couple in wisconsin were -- they were told by their homeowners association that they could not fly a gay pride flag on their front porch. so this is what they came up with instead in order to comply with the rules by not really complying with the rules. they did a light show of gay pride instead. now these guys point out that they don't feel targeted or
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discriminated against. they love their community, it's a great homeowners association. but it's an example of the rules being slightly too strict. >> yes. >> and them finding a creative way to get around it. they're part of a reddit group called malicious compliance. if you like examples like that -- >> i like that -- >> you can find more there. >> that's the perfect example of it. >> yes. >> it is. all right. i've got a followup to a story we did yesterday. we have another entry in our list of amazing photographers fast on their feet. as i mentioned yesterday, we showed you a chinese cameraman actually out running the sprinters at a track meet in china. there he is on the left. he's actually the pictures. but as you watch, he's faster than they are in the end. >> holding a camera -- >> there he is. now we've actually found someone else who's showing off their speed on video. check out our very own camera operator, jared hanna. he shared this clip showing himself chasing down quarterback eli manning at full speed during
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a new york giants game. this was back in 2019. >> my gosh -- >> i think he might have heard himself. now he's on the bookm mic. >> next up jared and the chinese cameraman are going to be in a sprint match relay race. >> jared, you took after your hat. it was slowing you down? it was so great -- >> we have never seen jared show those moves in this studio. [ laughter ] hopefully there will be an opportunity soon. >> that was great, anthony. that's a good one. >> i love it. i like mine, too. if you're in the mood for a block party, we've got an invitation for you, and it's coming from oprah. why? because oprah has seen "in the heights" movie, and this is her review. >> i had the great pleasure of watching the "in the heights" movie a little while back. and let me tell you, it's sensational. i decided i'm going to host a virtual block party this thursday, june 10th, on oprahdaily.com. there will be music and games,
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the cast is joining me, including lin-manuel miranda! so head to oprahdaily.com/intheheights to sign up for free. all you have to do now is turn up the volume of your dreams. ♪ >> i love this so much. that's oprah. that's rayana, some of her closest friends. i'm going to this party. this morning in our "spring into summer" series, we're getting an inside look at the highly anticipated new summer movie, and the words highly anticipated is so true. it's the film adaptation of lin-manuel miranda's first broadway musical. ♪ in the heights with the lights ♪ ♪ by day ♪ >> got goosebumps again. he started writing this when he was 20 years old, a sophomore in college. he was at wesleyan university in
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connecticut. it's about a tight-knit latino community in new york's washington heights neighborhood, as they say it in the movie. for the film, he teamed up with knockout director, that's jon m. chu. he's the guy behind the box office hit "crazy rich asians." ♪ [ singing in foreign language ] ♪ >> god. i want to get out of my chair, lin-manuel miranda and jon m. chu. joining us now. hello, lin, jon. bravo, bravo, bravo, guys. i don't even know where to begin. i love this movie so, so much. lin, did you see oprah's little tease about her block party? >> oh, oprah saying my name is my new outgoing voicemail and will be for the foreseeable future. >> listen, we've all seen the
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movie sitting here at the table. i have to tell you when i walked out of there, guys, i -- i wish i was latina. this is the thing about it -- i felt such joy. i felt the humanity of what you put into the movie. i felt the community and the spirit of the people. lin, what is the story that you want us to know? i walked out of there feeling so full. i recommended it to everybody that i know. >> well, that's exactly how we wanted you to feel, gayle. you know, i think that when i was 19 and started writing this, i just wanted to write it in a place that i knew felt musical, and i don't know a more musical place than washington heights, new york, especially in the summer when we all like live outside and there's dominos outside with your neighbors, and the hydrants are open. and it was a chance to write all of the music i loved growing up, latin music, hip-hop music. >> yeah. >> and then to film it on location in the neighborhood is a whole other level because we're filming it -- you know, that number you just played,
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that's the park where my wife's first apartment was on her own. her grandmother's building is in that clip. i mean, it's just like -- >> yes -- >> layers of not only our work but our lives. >> you know what, i felt so proud watching the movie. so i can't imagine how you feel. we'll get back to you in a second. bad ass director jon m. chu, hello, hello, hello. >> i like that. bad ass director. >> bad ass director jon m. chu. i saw "in the heights" on broadway when lin was in the starring role. what was so fascinating -- i loved the play. i thought i don't know how they could top it. the way you shot it was a visual feast for the eyes. the swimming pool scene, the dance scene on the side of the buildings. what were you trying to create? >> i went back to the source. i went to the cor of the piece. show meefring you love about this neighborhood. show me everything that you love. spent their summers at the pool, they showed me where lin used to shoot his home videos.
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for me it was like let's show the world, let's bring the world here. when they say heights in your heart, they mean it. it was like writing a love letter while falling in love with this neighborhood. and i'm excited for people to have that joy in their life, too. >> and oddly even though this went on broadway in 2008, it feels timely because the whole movie is in a build-up to a blackout where the city literally shuts down which is kind of like what we've just been through. >> yeah. i literally had to ask lin and kiara, so, you know, we have blackouts in california, why is this such a big deal? they would tell me like, you don't know how it feels to be powerless, to not know when you're going to get your power back. who do you turn to but the people you love most. and then now after a year, i think i'm so happy that washington heights gets to show the world how to get back up, how to dust yourself off and turn back to your families and communities. >> but lin, this movie took a long time to make. people came to you when you won the tony for best musical. but what took so long? why? >> oh, you know -- hollywood,
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hollywood-ing. you know, it really was -- yeah. fully -- it's so funny. i look back at all of the setbacks and all of the pitfalls and the times we wouldn't get a green light because they told us there are no latino stars that test international. and the catch 22 of that, of if you don't give latinos starring roles, they'll never test international. >> they won't be stars. >> and so to finally come around with jon m. chu who provided that magic with "crazy rich asians," it was able to make a lane where there was no lane for his community. and i'm so hopeful because leslie grace is a movie star. anthony ramos is a movie star. they just need the roles to do it. >> big time. >> so true. lin, the film has a 99% score on rotten tomatoes. we were all laughing because you tweeted your mom is wondering why you didn't get 100. what is your family's reaction to the film? have they seen it?
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>> jon, i think that's for you. >> for me. sorry. >> sorry. >> they -- they have seen it. my dad -- first of all, i'm not from washington heights. i'm from california. i'm from a chinese family growing up in a chinese restaurant. they came here without knowing any english but what i think lin's genius is that it spoke things that i couldn't communicate even as a creative person about my own family. and so my dad watched it the other day at the theater across the street from the restaurant. >> wow. >> and called me crying. he called me crying. he never cries. so i think it's so universal. i think music and dance communicate what language can't by itself. >> i also think maybe, guys, we're just so craving this kind of feeling. that's what you two have captured so brilliantly on the screen. we're going to take a break, lin and jon. we appreciate that you've agreed to stick around. we want your thoughts on the return to broadway and some more thoughts a
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this unplugged device is protecting our beautiful coastlines and more. put off chores and use less energy from 4 to 9 pm to help keep our state golden. ♪ we're back with lin-manuel miranda, creator of "in the heights" which is now also a movie and the film's director, jon m. chu. welcome back to you both. gentlemen -- and lin particularly, as you know, broadway is on the verge of coming back. musicals coming back in september. we heard this week bruce springsteen is going to go back on broadway this month.
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was talking to sara bareilles talking about going back to "waitress" in the fall. lin, would you go back into "hamilton" by any chance? >> bring the original cast back. to open up broadway. what a good idea! >> you know the original cast -- disney-plus. i'm thrilled to hear sara's coming back. >> she hasn't signed the deal yet. talking about it. >> she's incredible in that show. and you know, again, like in all things in 2021, like safety is paramount. >> yeah. >> and making sure that we have the protodolls make sure our -- protocols to make sure our actors and backstage staff are safe is so important. we've also had an enormous racial reckoning, and listen, it's not the great white way for nothing. that conversation is also happening in the theater world. so you know, one of the things that we hope to build back is a better broadway with more positions for folks of color behind the scenes and in staff,
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more diverse audiences. i hope that continues to be a part of the conversation as broadway comes back, as well. >> it was a really tough time for broadway, lin. i mean, seeing everything shut down. how did it affect yourtnd your show? >> oh, i mean, we had weekly zoom calls. it really was -- it's -- it's tough and also, you know, the fact that -- and we've had amazing virtual theater, and we've had folks putting on shows, you know, in popups in the street. but nothing really takes the place of gathering in the dark and telling a story. and i can't wait for our incredible companies to get to do that again. >> i want to go back to "in the heights" again because i just can't stop thinking about this movie and what you all have pulled off on the screen. it's clearly a love letter to the neighborhood of washington heights. and i'm wondering, lin, what it is makes that neighborhood oh special. that's a beautiful song that says "i'm home, just breathe, the streets are kinder when
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you're home. you feel better when you're home." you still live in that neighborhood. why? i mean, i get it. but i want to hear from you why. >> because i do -- you know, i think one of the most autobiographical here ex-in the show is i used to think we lived at the top of the world when the world was just a subway map. i grew up at the lastston stop the a train on the map. that was my mental image of the world. and i breathe easier when i'm here. >> yeah. >> i -- i grew up here, and my grandmother could walk around and be understood in every storefront she went to, whether it was latino owned or not. it was -- it felt like a very tight-knit community, and i still feel that when i walk these streets. when i'm in times square, people stop and ask me for a selfie. when i walk around here with my we lik t t himself, he's helin. writing. >> that's what i thought was great. it's so relatable. we can all relate to humanity,
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family. we can all relate to it triao trials and tribulations. i think there's something for everybody in the movie. jon, you have a son, you named your son jonathan heights. why is that name -- i thought that was cool, too. how old is jonathan heights, and why -- why is it so special to you? >> he's about to turn 2. and we're about to have another one this week. it could happen any time. i'm waiting for the call. >> okay. >> wow. >> we spent a lot of time in that neighborhood, and i -- i saw what it felt like to dream. i know what it felt like to dream. but today a community take care of each other and to know there's more outside the window, i just wanted to hear the word every day of my life and wanted my son to hear that word every day of his life. >> speaking of dreaming and dreamers, lin, one of the stoifrlines that wasn't in the play is about the struggles of dreamers. why did you decide to include it? >> well, first of all, all credit to my brilliant co-writer kiara who wrote the scayshete s
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characters, making him an undocumented immigrant. and the most new york of them. and i think that -- i think in doing that, first of all, it updates the show ain a smart wa because the rhetoric around immigration has gotten so crazy, particularly with the last administration. and also, you know, it humanizes it in a way. it's like, well, that character is not a headline article, it's not some other. it's -- it's that guy. like that guy doesn't belong in new york? >> yeah. >> i think it really puts a human face on a story we're talking about a lot. >> is it true that "in the heights" and "west sideory" in tameareat the same , did i read trigh i think we'll always be in conversation with "west side story." and that's great. in a lot of ways, "west side story" begets "in the heights." it's a masterpiece.
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and i think part of the impulse to write "in the heights" in college was out of fear that are we ever going to get another "west side story," will there ever be another opportunity for latinos on broadway, can we tell different stories and new stories about ourselves. and so in a lot of ways, "west side" begets "in the heights." i wanted to tell as different a story as possible and cut to us filming two blocks apart. >> oh, i love it. i love it. floor come. i can't wait for -- more to come. i can't wait for people to see this movie. it opens tomorrow. you've got to see it on the big screen. thank you both so much. really appreciate it -- >> thank you. >> thank you so much for having us. >> bye-bye. tomorrow in our "spring into summer" series, we'll take you to margaritaville. i want to go there, too. we'll talk with jimmy buffet about his plans for live concerts this summer and his newest project right here in new york city. we'll be right back. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update . >> good morning, i am guaranteed income pilot program has kicked off in oakland. it offers residents an extra $500 a month for a year and a half, 300 families with immediate income with less than $50,000 will be randomly selected. to a westmoreland school superintendent has been arrested after being charged with committing a lewd act with a child under 14. investigators said they started looking into the allegations against a x-year-old bob raines on june 1st. he was arrested yesterday. food banks in the south they are seeing less demands. last year, more than 1100 families picked up the box that san jose's school bank in two hours.
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now that number has dropped to 700 a day. as we look at the roadways now, if you're headed out the door, it's the the in some spots. but, 582 to 680 looking at a 33 minute can you. we have brake lines a lot of the east shore freeway, highway four looking better. is 29 minutes to antioch to the east shore. it is a slow right out of the san francisco and san mateo bridge. you have crowding westbound as you go over along the peninsula. if you are headed to the city on 101, there is a trouble spot north wound. cool and breezy day, daytime highs are elabisofyear. camera with lyclouskies and the rain the wind. with the sea breeze, daytime highs will be cool. mid-50s along the coast, low to mid ♪start spreading the news♪
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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. - i'm going for the big deal! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady. wayne: hello, america, welcome to "let's make a deal," i'm wayne brady, thanks for tuning in. three people, let's make a deal right now, let's go, let's start with you, waldo, yes, i called you. the magician... (cheers and applause) and let's go to one of our at-homies.
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