tv CBS This Morning CBS June 18, 2021 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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the socks. think outside the box. >> right. >> was that a suggestion? >> i mean, anything. some jewelry, a watch. i don't know. >> all right. stern grove festival again coming up on sunday. taking a live look good morning to our viewers in the west and welcome to "cbs this morning." it's friday, june 18th, 2021. i'm anthony mason with tony dokoupil. gayle king is off so elizabeth diaz is with us. we're looking at the heat dome that's worsening a drought and promoting dangerous fires. >> a contagious fear across the west in people who aren't vaccinated. what you need to know that is so
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critical. paid family leave between two guys holding their babies. i talked to a congressman who was the first to take paternity leave and why he wants to make it available to all new dads. juneteenth is america's first federal holiday in decades, but it didn't happen without fighting. the hidden history of how we arrived at this deeply symbolic moment. >> it's a big one. but first here's "your world in 90 secondnds." more than 200 records broken across the cocountry. a mega heatt wave coming days before the official start of summer. palm springs at 122, the hottest june day you have ever had. and tomorrow it's still just as hot. the supreme court upheld obamacare 7-2. >> the majority include two justices appointed by former president donald trump. >> this is a landmark victory. two people in custody after a shooting spree that killed one
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person and injured 12 others. the delta variant of covid-19 could soon become the dominant one in the country. blm protesters with guns last year have pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges. we have never seen this before in baseball. the yankees turn a ridiculous 1- 1-2-6, 2-3-6 triple play. president biden signed a bill making juneteenth a federal holiday, commemorating the end of slavery in the united states. >> the enslaved people of texas learned that they were free. and they claimed their freedom. >> on c"cbs this morning." opal lee reacted this way
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when the bill passed. >> the bill is passed! >> oh, oh, oh, oh! >> i'm calling it now. that is the song of the summer. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is brought to you by progressive, making it easy to bundle insurance. >> that's a wonderful reaction. she worked so hard for this. >> she did. it actually reminds me of what my mother-in-law did when we told her we were pregnant. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin this morning with the relentless heat wave pummelling much of the western half of the country. scorching temperatures have broken hundreds of record highs. within 75 million people from iowa to california have been under excessive heat warnings this week. in california and texas, people are being told to conserve electricity to present rolling
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blackouts. this is all happening during a historic drought that is making that situation worse and it's also increasing the danger of wildfires. jonathan viglioti is in the town of hellsberg, california. that area has the danger of fires right now. >> reporter: we're in fire country and the water has all but dried up. business and homeowners are asking to lessen their water consumption by 45% or face a fine of $200. the water here could run out by the fall. >> that over there used to be an island. >> reporter: for brianna ramirez, it's hard to believe this is the same lake her family used to take their boat out on. >> we need water to survive and it's scary, it really is. >> reporter: severe lack of winter snow and rain and this week's punishing heat wave has transformed lake mendocino into a desert, causing ramirez to
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rethink how she uses the water she does have. >> i tell the kids, you can't take as long of a shower, cutting back loading the laundry. >> reporter: tens of millions of americans have endured sweltering temperatures of 100 or above. >> this western slope heat dome is a dramatic reminder that when mother nature bats, she bats a thousand. >> reporter: another big concern for brianna ramirez is fire season. last year flames destroyed more than 4 million acres across california, setting a new record. this year's excessive heat is already fueling brush fires throughout the state. lake mendocino was once a reliable source with water to dump on flames. >> it seems like this really highlights what is going to be a volatile wildfire season for you. >> during past seasons, i sat here with my kids and watched the planes pick up water out of the lake, you know, and there's nothing. it makes me wonder, is this what
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we have to look forward to? is it going to recover from this? >> >> reporter: and temperatures across part of the west will exceed 110 degrees today. one doctor warning that surfaces could get so hot that touching it for even one second could lead to second to third-degree burns. >> jonathan vigliotti for us, jonathan, thank you so much. we're also looking at a dangerous storm system along the gulf coast. let's bring in cbs news climatolo climatologist. bha do yo what do you got? >> this is a disturbing heat wave, as we've been talking about. death valley yesterday 128 degrees, the hottest on earth so far this year, and palm springs tying an all-time record, the heat dome on top of the worst drought in at least centuries across the west. now, the number of heat waves has increased by three times across the united states. you can see that drought across
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the west. now, temperaturewise, we're not going anywhere for a couple of days. today we're 112 in fresno and salina 106. stays hot saturday, stays hot sunday, a big heat buster as we come to monday. that's good news, but the heat only eases in the southwest. we'll see claudette bring a ton of rain overnight tonight and during the day tomorrow on top of around two feet of above normal rainfall in new orleans, and that means flooding rain is likely in parts of louisiana and other parts of the gulf coast as well. i'd adriana, it's a case of opposite extremes across the country. >> reporter: the supreme court is moving into its busy season with two major end of term decisions and several more on the way. the justice has ruled unanimously yesterday that philadelphia's foster care program cannot exclude a catholic agency that does not allow same-sex couples to take in children. the court also rejected the
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latest challenge to obamacare, ruling 7-2 that a group of states and two individuals supported by the trump administration had no legal standing to challenge the health care law. jan crawford is at the supreme court following it all. jan, these are two big rulings. >> reporter: big rulings, really, these were the first controversial cases to be taken up by this newly conservative court with the three new justices a poppointed by former president trump. i got to say, what was most surprising, there was so much agreement. ever since former president obama signed the affordable care act, the law has been the center of a political shouting match. >> repeal and replace obamacare. you have to do it. >> reporter: conservatives have now taken three cases to the supreme court, arguing the law should be thrown out. >> for millions of americans, this is very good news. >> reporter: on thursday, the third case failed.
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>> the aca is here to stay. >> reporter: the decision found four conservative justices siding with their three more liberal colleagues, including amy coney barrett who was attacked by democrats as a staunch opponent of the law during her confirmation. >> it's hard to think of another way to bring down the aca. >> reporter: jeffrey rosen, president of the national constitution center, said opponents may be out of legal om om options. >> there were a lot of options rejected by the court and there may not be another swing of the bat. >> reporter: all nine justices ruled unanimously that the city of philadelphia was wrong to end its contract with a catholic foster care agency because it refused to work with same-sex couples. >> it's a battle over the balance of lgbtq rights and the religious community will continue. >> reporter: rosen says the real
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takeaway from these rulings is more fundamental. >> reporter: justices from steven breyer to john roberts said they don't want americans to perceive this as political. >> reporter: next year this court is going to tackle the most divisive and contentious issues in our society. they have a case on abortion rights, gun rights, possibly affirmative action. it's also unclear if this supreme court is even going to look the same. progressives are urging liberal justice steven breyer, who is 82 years old, to retire while democrats control the senate. his replacement would most certainly be more liberal. anthony? >> jan crawford at the supreme court. thank you. the highest delta variant of covid first discovered in india is on its way to becoming the dominant strain in the u.s. it has spread to at least 42 states. we also learned just one dose of a two-shot vaccine is probably
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not enough to fight it. a recent study found one dose of the pfizer vaccine is only about 33% effective against the delta variant, while both doses offer approximately 88% protection. data on the moderna and j&j vaccines are still being studied. more than 13 million people skipped their second vaccine dose in the u.s. that's about 10% of people who have had a shot. dr. david egas joins us right now. david, good morning. is the delta variant the worst version of the virus we've seen. >> i think no question about it. it's more infectious so it's easier to catch. and because of that receptor, it can get to more cells in the body at a higher level and make you sicker. this is kind of a perfect storm happening when we're vax nccinig people, which is great. one of the two shots worked, but if you haven't had both shots,
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you're not protected. >> so what do you tell people who skipped that second shot? >> fade prior shot, please get the vaccine. this variant is causing significant spread in the united kingdom of people who have yet to be vaccinated or partially vaccinated. we're seeing they're getting pretty sick. we have to prevent that in the country. we're up to 12% of cases in the united states of the delta variant, last week it was 6%. it will become the dominant strain in the country. >> we mentioned the johnson & johnson vaccine is still being tested and studied. what do we know about its effectiveness against the variant? >> the j&j vaccine was a one-shot vaccine and it gives slightly lower immunity, both t-cell and antibodies, than the two-shot mrna vaccines. the hope is that's enough. it's kind of a threshold effect. i need a certain level of immunity in order to be protected against this particular delta variant. my hope is that the j&j will give you enough.
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we're going to know over the next week or two, but there is talk among people of a second shot for people who had the j&j vaccine. a second shot too close to the first shot can cause real side effects, so we'll wait for data over the next few days. >> reporter: they are investigating pills for covid and for other viruses. how does this work exactly? >> if you had covid-19 and you were with your family, i could give your family these pills and they wouldn't get sick. we see that with flu where we can give a pill and protect people. the virus isn't alive. it gets into our cells and uses our own machinery to divide. what these pills do is they block those interactions so it can't divide. pills are cheap, they're easy to distribute, and we could distribute them globally to stop the spread. it's in our self-interest to
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stop the spread of the virus around the globe so there won't be new variants to take over like this delta variant is now. >> thank you very much. i appreciate it. now to a terrifying shooting spree that unfolded near f phoenix. one person was killed and 12 injured in eight separate shootings over just 90 minutes. police say they all involved the same gunman. while officers were investigating the first shooting, reports of other attacks started pouring into several police departments in the area. three of the injured victims were shot, the others suffered different types of injuries. police finally took the suspected shooter into custody during a traffic stop. the motive is still unclear. also this morning, voters in iran are electing a new president who will still be under the control of religious leaders. the election comes in the middle of talks on reviving the nuclear deal with other countries, and voters there are still more concerned about the country's severe economic troubles.
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elizabeth palmer is in iran's capitol for us. ie liz sfwhet. >> reporter: good morning. with a large religious population, voters have begun to show up. you can see them at this table behind me. but the question is how many eligible voters overall will actually bother to cast a ballot? the authorities are worried about an embarrassingly low turnout. the leading presidential candidate has no appeal for middle class people or especially the young. he's a senior judge close to iran's supreme leader and a real hardliner. if he wins, he would be the first iranian president to take office sanctioned by the united states. that's after his part in the crackdown of the protests in 2009 and his executions during
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the revolution. rice said he would respect it if it's signed, but in the three years since president trump pulled the u.s. out of that deal, iran has ramped up its nuclear program. reise would take stockpile close to a weapons grade than any other time in history. >> that was elizabeth palmer reporting from iran. tomorrow marks the first celebration of juneteenth as a national holiday. president biden made it official yesterday. they commemorate june 19, 1865, the day union soldiers told enslaved people in galveston, texas they were free. that's two weeks after the emancipation proclamation. opal lee says it's her life's work to bring attention to the
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day. >> i'm joyful, i'm humble, i'm wanting to do a holy dance. i'm not suppot supposed to expr the years we worked and it's come to fruition on the backs of so many people. >> so many people . earlier in the day, speaker nancy pelosi joined with members of the congressional black cau caucus. they sang "lift every voice and sing." the black national anthem. we will have more on juneteenth and the fight to end slavery later in the broadcast. >> such a great moment. i mean, and you look at opal lee and think -- i can't imagine what she's thinking after all that she's put in for all these years. >> she said last night, this is not a black thing, this is not a texas thing, this is an all of us -- >> it is. she's absolutely right. >> remarkable. amazing to think that it took 2.5 years for news of the emancipation proclamation to go from washington all the way down
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to texas. and then 150 odd years for the news to get back to washington for them to pass this law to make it a federal holiday. >> what's incredible is last year at this time, i did a story of how awareness was growing about juneteenth. a year later we have a federal holiday. >> a federal holiday. all right. ahead, our "school matters" series looks at how the pandemic intensified a trend of teachers leaving the profession. see what's being done to
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ahead on "cbs this morning," we talk about taking parental leave with congressman colin allred who, like me, has his hands full as a new dad. you were a new member of congress, you flipped a district. were you worried taking time off? >> i was. you know, there's always the concern that it's going to be used against you politically. but in the end for me, you know, the politics is not the most important part of it. >> forgive us if we're low
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introduces her daughter to the family business. olympia has a very good teacher. >> look at that. over the net. there we go. this is kpix news update. the morning. police in walnut creek are investigating a shooting that happened at target late last night. police have not given out any information on a suspect nor how many may have been injured. extract the person accused of stabbing a 94-year-old asian woman in san francisco is set to be arraigned. daniel is set to face several charges including attempted homicide. the board of directors will hold a meeting to declare an emergency as a result of the may 26 mass shooting.
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the result could mean light rail service could resume over the next few weeks. good news to report if you are commuting toward castro valley. we had a broken down truck. it is cleared. still pretty slow. travel time 60 minutes to go from 680 over to the connector. in northbound 101 the crash has been cleared. things are improving. slow as you approach 880. at the bridge were backed up just beyond the overpass. hot day inland. heat advisory and excessive warnings. how hot will it get? another day of triple digit heat. 93 in san jose. 99 in santa rosa. mid to upper 70s at the bank. at the case. for the weekend. much cooler as we look ahead to
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monitor,r, check andnd lock dowown you moneney with secucurity from m chase. contntrol feels s good. chase. make m more of whahat's yoyo. welc . welcome back to "cbs this morning." with father's day coming up this weekend, there is a renewed push in washington to give new parents maybe the best present of all, more time to bond with their babies. but here's the thing. paid time for dad is available in just nine states in this country, and even when dads can take time off, many don't feel they should and most take two weeks or less. we spoke with texas democrat conrad allred. he's a former linebacker turned u.s. congressman who has now twice taken time off to be a dad in dallas. as both of us cared for our
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newborns at home, he explained to me how he's openinhoping to the very same opportunity to everyone. >> this is a whole new meaning to politicians kissing babies. >> reporter: as parents like conrad allred will tell you, babies are a full-time job. >> a bttlittle spit-up? >> a little spit-up. >> reporter: which is why conrad took two months off to be with his new son jordan. it was the first paternity leave recognized in congress. >> i grew up wanting to be a father and i thought i'm going to be a good dad and i'm going to be there. in our household, my wife and i try to keep things as equal as possible, and this was part of that. >> reporter: earlier this year when allred's wife ali gave birth to their second child cameron, he took another leave,
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this time for a month. >> what gave you the confidence to go firturther? >> two weeks wasn't long enough for my wife, for me, for our son jordan. i really felt like i needed longer. >> reporter: the truth is most dads get less time than that, despite proof that paternity leave shows better health in children and there is increased employment and pay for mothers. >> reporter: men, when they get a chance for paternity leave, they don't always take it. what's going on there? >> there is an expectation in the workplace that, you know, you didn't have the baby, so what do you need the time off for? and there's also, of course, kind of the cultural expectation in many cases that the mom is going to do all of the child care. of course, what we've seen -- he's going to sleep --
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>> reporter: well done. look at that. he's a veteran. >> reporter: . >> women are asked to do all the child care, all the housework and still work. that's just not fair. >> reporter: papua new guinea does not offer paid leave to anyone. >> let's support working families by supporting paid family leave. >> paid leave makes a big difference in ordinary people's lives. >> i can't think of a better issue that both former president obama, president trump and president biden have all mentioned in speeches in the state of the union, and yet it doesn't get done. >> that's one of the things, i think, that makes people so frustrated with washington in general, is that you can have a lot of agreement around something, but still, it's very difficult to get anything done and to get it through and to become law. >> reporter: president biden has
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proposed giving workers 12 weeks of paid leave under his american families plan. but that would cost about $225 billion. and while democrats want to raise taxes on the wealthy in order to pay for it, republicans do not. >> whether or not it can be bipartisan, i don't know. but i know that we're going to get it done either way. that was both ends. we've got a diaper that has to be changed here. >> that was the cutest thing i've ever seen. that was so amazing. >> it was difficult to maintain a train of thought while caring for our newborns. i think baby cameron's reaction there at the end is a stand-in for much of the country where it's, look, bipartisan support for this. let's get it done. >> it is miraculous, as you point out, given the fact that both sides are speaking out about it in favor of it, but they can't get this done. >> at the beginning of the piece
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you said he was the first man to take parental leave and it was in 2019. i had to double-check the script because i thought, that cannot be. >> there is no official leave for anyone in congress and people have presumed to have snuck in some days here and there, but it's a big deal for a father to say, i'm doing this, this is important, it's for my family. i've noticed that since my oldest son was born to now, who is 12 years old, it's why aren't you home? i will be taking additional leave in july, so enjoy me while you have me. >> is that the first time you've used a baby bottle? >> yes, it was. >> very effective. a look at the nationwide shortage of teachers. we hear from bun one who retire early about why so many are leaving the profession. we'll be right back.
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there are hundreds of good-paying jobs, with most new workers hired from bayview-hunter's point. we don't just work at recology, we own it, creating opportunity and a better planet. now, that's making a difference. in our series "school matters," we're looking at the growing teacher shortage in districts nationwide. the potential crisis is expected to stretch into the fall. a recent survey looking at more than a thousand districts found a record two in three reported having a teacher shortage and few were immune from it. in cities, 75% of districts reported a shortage compared with 65% in rural areas and 60% in the suburbs. meg oliver looks at what's behind the problem and how it
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might be fixed. >> reporter: these days scott shivern's life feels more free than free-falling. but that wasn't always the case, especially this last year. how hard was it to say goodbye to your students? >> it was extremely difficult to say goodbye to my students. >> reporter: the 55-year-old spent 29 years teaching science in livonia, michigan. but after contracting covid and increased demands of work, it pushed him into january, the middle of the school year. >> reporter: did you ever feel like you were letting your students down, retiring in the middle of the year? >> yes, very much so. it was an extremely tough decision. >> reporter: if the pandemic hadn't happened, would you have retired early?
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>> reporter: defini . >> definitely not. >> reporter: many districts are having trouble finding teachers to fill vacancies, many offering signing bonuses to recruit them. >> have you ever had this many teachers retire in one year? >> no. >> reporter: will you be able to fill these positions? >> we'll work very hard to fill these positions. i'm worried. >> reporter: in new jersey where she is, 68 teachers have retired. why are we seeing this national teacher shortage? >> i think it's been coming for a few years. there are fewer candidates going into education to begin with. i think some of that stems from the fact that over time there's been less interest. there's been a little bit of public pushback on the respect with which teachers are treated. >> reporter: pay has also been a deterrent for many teachers who
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feel they aren't compensated properly for the demands of the job. and in the pandemic, we all saw the challenges teachers had to face with remote learning. >> reporter: if it wasn't for the pandemic, do you think some of these teachers who are retiring may have just held on a little longer? >> i think the pandemic was certainly perhaps the last straw. >> reporter: so how do you turn the teacher shortage around? what needs to happen? >> some of it is just the messaging that exists out in the world. education is a phenomenal career. it is -- it sparks joy. ♪ >> reporter: for shivren, the joy of working with students was the hardest to leave behind. he says he doesn't regret retiring early. >> i'm all in on teaching, and yerk yes, you felt a good amount of guilt and trepidation when i made that decision, but for myself and my family, it was what we felt we had to do at
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that time. >> shivrin now co-owns a real estate business. there is a bill in the senate that would allow retired teachers to come back for two years receiving a salary and their pension to help with the shortage. many applauded that move. >> i know so many teachers felt incredibly stressed, including my wife who is a teacher. but it's a real dilemma now because there was a teacher shortage before this. it's only gotten worse.
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and, we're back! itit's timeme to see which chchew providedes the longngest-lastining flea and tick p protection.n. brbravecto's t the big winin. 12 weeksks of powerfrful prototection, nenearly 3 timimes longerr than a any other c chew. bravavo, bravectcto! bravo! time for "what to watch." and vlad you've got news on my favorite industry, the cruise industry. >> it is you're favorite industry. >> i want to go on one.
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>> did you know it? tony loves cruises. >> i'm not surprised by that. >> here are stories we think you'll be talking about. the centers for disease control, tony, has new safety guidelines for vaccinated people who plan to hop on cruise ships this summer. the agency lowered its warning from level four to level three which still indicates a high risk. the cdc is advising all passengers, even those who are fully vaccinated, to be tested for covid three days before a trip. this as royal caribbean gets ready for its first test cruise this sunday. >> maybe my wife will come around. >> all right. maybe she will. maybe she will, tony dokoupil. we've got a preview of a documentary that will air on our streaming service cbsn this weekend. it examines how the pandemic has widened the gender leadership gap in the workplace. two female secondives told -- executives told us it's asto astonishing how covid has affected people on the job. listen. >> a single year we wiped out three to four decades worth of progress on women coming into the work force, on being able to make a living for themselves and
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their families. >> so women have a different road ahead of them, no matter how good they are. it's just societal norms and human nature. >> they say a lot of women suffer professional setbacks in part from serving as their family's main caregivers for more than a year. you can catch women in the workplace, the unfinished fight for equality, this sunday at 8:00 p.m. eastern on cbsn and across all of our digital properties. 1.5 million fewer mothers of school-aged children are in the work force. >> it's a story of inequality feeding inequality. if women are already making less in a two-income household, the family says, all right, i'm making a little more, i'm going to keep my job and you stay home. that's on top of the cultural expectations. >> knocking things back three decades is startling. >> this is scary. i worn how the new kind of shift to working from home might also impact women in the work force. maybe, you know, it might boost women in some ways. >> we don't still know the full
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repercussions of the pandemic on the economy. we probably won't know for quite some time. all right. serena williams has been busy on the tennis court, but it's not what you think. she's training her mini me. take a look at this. >> run, run, run, run, run, run. run, run, run, run, run, run. you have to be ready. you have to be ready. yay. >> do it again -- >> let's do it again. that was firecrackers. high five. >> oh, my -- >> i know. right? wow. that is her 3 1/2-year-old daughter olympia practicing her already smooth swing. the 23-time grand slam champion shared a series of videos on her instagram page showing the pair going over techniques, hitting balls, even warming up. it looks like olympia is a chip off the old block. >> look at that. i still can't swing like that. i'm a terrible tennis player. >> this is -- this apparently happened not because she's one of those mothers who pushes her kid to do just what she did. because during the pandemic they
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were looking for something to do, and tennis is a socially safe sport. >> right. >> they're like, let's do tennis, you know. and that's how that got started. >> i'd like to be a prodigy someday. >> and having so emuch fun with mom. nothing like having mom teach you. >> love it. you go, olympia. >> thank you, vlad. ahead, we'll ask president biden's national security adviser if this week's talks with vladimir putin changed anything about the u.s./russia shape. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." yes! there e you go. ♪ ♪ runun wild, runun free ♪ ♪ the skyky's beneneath our fe♪ ♪ r run wild, r run free ♪ ♪ wonon't hidede what we were m meant to bebe ♪ ♪ ohhhh oh oh ohhhhh ♪ go wherevever your wilild sie takes yoyou.
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totoyota. let't's go placec. if you h have moderarate to s severe psororiasis, little t things can n become yoyour big momoment. ththat's why t there's otete. otezla i is not a crcream. it's's a pill ththat treats plaqueue psoriasisis differen. withth otezla, 7 75% clearer skin i is achievabable. don't use e if you'ree allergrgic to otezezla. it may cauause severe e diarr, nauseaea or vomititing. otezlala is associciated with hn increaeased risk o of depressis. tell your r doctor if f you haveve a historyry of depresessn or suicicidal thoughghts or if f these feelelings devele. some peoeople takingng oteza reporteded weight loloss. your dococtor shouldld monitor r weigight and mayay stop treaeat. uppeper respiratatory trtract infectction and headacache may occccur. tell youour doctor about yoyour medicinines, and if youou're pregnanant or p planning toto be. ♪ ♪ ototezla. showow more of y .
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if therere was a bututton that d hehelp you usese less enerer, breathe clcleaner air,r, and even take on climate change... would you press it? this is a kpix morning news update . good morning. today a man accused of stabbing a 94-year-old asian woman near san francisco's pastry wednesday is set to be arraigned on a list of charges including attempted murder. the victim is recovering this morning. california's department of health is set to unveil a digital vaccination verification tool. it will allow californians to show electronic proof eythare protected from the virus. th weisend. the longest-running music festival in the bay area is
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making a comeback. the kickoff is sunday night with one of the biggest con musically diverse lineup to date. taking a look at transit. it is a spare the air alert. caltrain is dealing with delays. 52 minute delay. it's from an earlier trouble spot where a light pole was down on the tracks. everything is clear. it will take time to get back up to speed. travel time looking good. another hot day inland with heat advisories and heat warnings in effect. we are looking at the high soaring into the 90s and triple digits. 103 in concord. 93 in san jose and close to 100 in sin josc ♪ ♪ ♪
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it's it's friday, june 18th, 2021. welcome to "cbs this morning." i'm tony dokoupil with anthony mason. gayle is off. president biden's first foreign trip rallies u.s. allies and challenges vladimir putin to change course. national security adviser jake sullivan on our new direction. history is made as juneteenth becomes a new federal holiday. we look at some of the unsung heros who made it happen. and max wineberg beats the drama for the e-street band and also cancer. how his struggle reinforced his bond with his daughter.
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first, here's today's "eye opener" atat 8:00. > scorching temperatures hav broken hundreds of record highs. the heat wave pummelling the western half of the country. homeowners are being asked to reduce water consumption by 50%. this is a disturbing heat wave. death valley yesterday, 128 degrees. the hottest on earth so far this year, and palm springs tieing an all-time record. >> these are the first controversial cases that have been taken up by the newly conservative court. i have to say what was most surprising, there was so much agreement. the delta variant the worst version we've seen of the virus? >> it's more infectious. it's easier to catch. and because it binds so well to the receptor, it can get to more cells and potentially make you sicker. >> summer is here with a
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vengeance. from montana to california they're experiencing one of the most extreme heat waves ever observed. let's go to the forecast. >> thanks, steve. it's a scorcher. over to chip thin sports. >> kevin durant is on fire. so you know, that's a pretty accurate picture of the temperatures trending upward across the coronuntry. the worst drought in 120 years is affecting more than 40 million people in the west. and now a disastrous heat wave is making conditions even worse. we are seeing record highs well into the triple digits. a high pressure system combined with historic drought pushed the temperature in phoenix up to 118 yesterday. excessive heat warnings and advisories are in effect across much of california and nevada. and into the weekend. new wildfires are popping up across the region. the power company, pg&e is
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warning customers to conserve energy or face rolling power outages. severe water restrictions around silicon valley. they are recommending thermostats set at 78 degrees or higher and limiting the use of appliances. the biden administration said don't expect much from the president's meeting with russia's vladimir putin. and many say not much is exactly what the president got. white house officials point to successes including a deal to bring back each country's ambassadors after they were brought home earlier this year. mr. biden says he told putin cyber attacks by russia will not be tolerated. putin refused to commit to stopping the attacks in the future. the president's national security adviser jake sullivan was involved. he joins us from the white house. good morning, thank you for being with us.
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>> thanks for having me. >> you say the summits were unusually productive, but the president as we pointed out, did not get concessions from mr. putin on the issue of cyber attacks and cyber security. my question is what is the u.s. prepared to do if these attacks continue? >> well, first let me say that we didn't set the measure at a verbal commitment from vladimir putin that russian criminals would stop hacking. we set the measure at whether over the next 6 to 12 months attacks against our critical infrastructure decline coming out of. we believe we set the basis for that. as the president said, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. so we will see over the course of the months to come whether this was, in fact, a productive session that the president spent with vladimir putin. on the question of consequences, the president was direct with president putin and was direct publicly. he said that we have significant
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capacity, and that we're prepared to use it if the cyber attacks continue because ultimately the president of the united states is going to defend the national interests of the united states, and he will do so via russia if russia didn't get this under control. >> are you talking about retaliations specifically? >> well, let me say something the president said in his press conference. this was not about threats or ultima ultimatums. it was about a statement of reality. if the attacks continue, the president will have no choice but to take responsive measures against, including in cyber. he said that clearly and definitively to president putin and publicly as well. he's mincing no words on what he's prepared to do as we go forward. >> if you say including cyber, should we stoop to use cyber attacks against russia when we're asking them not to do it against us? >> look, what it comes down to here is that the united states will take every effort to stop
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criminals on our soil from conducting attacks on critical infrastructure elsewhere in the world. and we're asking other countries to do the same thing. but, of course, if other countries continue to attack us in any way, then we reserve the right to use all means at our disposal to protect our people, our gas lines and water systems. and this president is not going to take any tool off the table in response if it is ultimately going to advance and defend the interests of the united states. >> jake, as a difficult task trying to protect american infrastructure from cyber attacks despite the best efforts. given that, do you think it would help if congress steps in and sets requirements for american companies to secure our infrastructure to prevent the inevitable? >> right now what the biden administration is doing is working closely with the private sector in key critical infrastructure areas to get them to accept and apply those
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standards now voluntarily. of course if it turns out that that's insufficient, we should look to congress to take additional steps. but the immediate need today is for the private sector across the board to step up the cyber security game and just as we've minced no words with president putin about what we expect of him, we've done the same with ceos across the country. >> you're saying you're unsatisfied with the level of security at many of the companys? >> it is certainly the case that a number of companies in a number of areas of the american economy have not applied cutting edge state of the art cyber security, and that they need to do so, because the costs and consequences to the american consumer to american working families, is grave if, in fact, they get attacked in ways that hurt the meat supply or raise the price of gas, or make it harder for americans to have safe drinking water. so yes, we expect better as we go forward, and we in the federal government also need to step up our game which president
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biden instructed from the day that he took office. >> jake, the president spent a lot of time also talking about china with our allies and he recently launched an investigation into whether the coronavirus came from a leak from the wuhan lab. why do we think an investigation will be frooutful when china is only going to show you what they want you to see? they keep a close watch on you when you're in the country. >> there are two facets. one facet is the intention community analysis that president biden asked our intelligence experts to undertake. it's a 90 -day review. we're scrubbing everything we have in terms of our intelligence, and where we're reaching out to allies and partners around the world. that will give us more clarity. the second facet is what you're describing. ultimately, we need access. the international community needs access to china to be able to get that initial data that will tell us the most about where this virus came from and how it enter into the world.
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and you're right. so far china has said no, we won't allow that. but we just can't take the no lying down. we have to continue to raise the public pressure and do so in a concerted way with allies and partners and that's why it was important that at the g7 the world's democracies came together to insist on a phase 2 investigation in china of the origins of covid-19. >> everyone wants those answers. jake sullivan, thank you very much for joining us. >> thanks for having me. after his trip to europe, president biden signed a law making tomorrow juneteenth, a federal holiday. ahead, michelle miller shows us a new effort to remember the unsung heros who risked their lives to fight for freedom and
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♪ that was the hit song "badlands" by bruce springsteen and the e street band. now the ban's longtime drummer, max weinberg, is sharing details of a difficult journey. ahead, how it strengthened his relationship with his daughter. you are watching "cbs this morning." (vo) jack was one of six million pets in animal shelters in need of a home.
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♪ yes, that is the congressional black caucus and house speaker nancy pelosi singing "lift every voice and sing." the group got together yesterday to commemorate the signing of a law that makes juneteenth a federal holiday. juneteenth or june 19th, marks the day the last enslaved americans finally heard they
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were free. the fight for freedom began long before the civil war. "cbs this morning saturday" co-host michelle miller visited the schomburg center for research and black culture in moment possible. ♪ we have people who were enslaved. ♪ strategizing with one another to make freedom possible for themselves. >> reporter: every wall inside this exhibit at harlem's schomburg center tells a tale of survival, resistance, and ultimately emancipation. ♪ really led the charge for who - abolition. rebelling on slave plantations and major revolts, but they were also resisting in small ways. >> reporter: it's a journey to freedom michelle commander has helped curate. how is juneteenth in your mind connected to abolition? >> juneteenth is a moment of great liberation, federal troops
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came after the civil war to galveston, texas, to let the enslaved people there know that they are free. and indeed had been free for the past two-plus years. and abolition was a sort of longer cause. >> reporter: a cause that saw everyday people, black and white, demanding the immediate end to slavery. >> of course we had speech magers and famous folks like frederick douglass. there were also the people whose names we'll never know. >> reporter: those names are the topic of a new book, "unsung: unheralded narratives of american slavery and abolition." you came across the story of david walker. >> yes. david walker was an abolitionist who was writing in a way that was so forceful it would take your breath away. to crown the whole of this catalog of cruel tees, they tell us that we, the blacks, are an inferior race of beings, incapable of self-government. >> reporter: abolitionist propaganda like walker's appeal
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traveled the globe. the strategy -- to use the horror and inhumanity of slavery to shock those still on the fence into action. >> we had people who were also poets and musicians who were writing abolitionist-minded hymns. ♪ >> reporter: one of most important written by former english slave trader-turned-abolitionist john newton. >> what "amazing grace" did for a lot of people, especially those who may have taken part in the slave trade -- ♪ -- that demonstrated to people who had been caught up in an institution that they could redeem themselves somehow. ♪ in fact, you had preachers who would actually go against these sort of very famous interpretations of scripture and rewrite it for the abolitionists' cause. and of course when you start speaking like that against an
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institution that is so profitable, you put a target on your back. >> reporter: so many people out there say slavery was so long ago. >> uh-huh. it wasn't. that's the first thing i would say is it really wasn't so long ago. the earliest institution that impacted how it was that we relate to one another based on skin color. ♪ was slavery. and so today we can see disparities in education and our law enforcement. >> no justice -- >> no peace! >> we think about the sort of policing of black bodies. we very much start seeing the roots of that in slavery. >> reporter: if nowhere else, commander says that history is safeguarded here. what does it mean that we have the history at the schomburg preserved? >> we do not have an excuse for saying we don't know what happened with slavery. we have the repositories, he and we can do some -- here, and we
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can do some work ourselves. >> reporter: one of the things i discussed with michelle commander was the issue of critical race theory. you know, that you have institutions, you have, you know, governments that are xing out this idea of having these discussions in classrooms, where our kids are educated -- you said you didn't know anything about john newton and his connection to this amazing song, "amazing grace." it is until we start talking about these things, that she says we can't really get over it. >> right. >> we can't get through it. >> yeah. 30% of americans still to this day say they don't know what juneteenth is. it's now a federal holiday. think about that. there's still work to be done. >> all right. unusual, thank you. you're watatching "cbsbs th morning." we'll be right back.
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juneteenth holiday with a negro league legend. 82-year-old pedro sierra met with players before last night's game at city field in queens. he was just 16 years old when he left cuba to join the indianapolis clowns as a pitcher. his time in the negro leagues lasted just four seasons before he was drafted into the u.s. army. he now works to educate others on the negro league's impact. >> this is what i love to do, talk to the generations about what negro league was. you know, all the hardships, it wasn't that easy. the hardships that we had to go through. and then but you were doing it because you love the game. >> sierra threw out the first pitch at last night's game. he was met with huge applause from the crowd. he looked terrific. and he was -- he was introduced again later in the game and got a really thunderous applause. it was great to see. >> yeah. >> i heard it was a
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minute-long-standing ovation. yeah. >> way to go, mets fans. >> they lost the game, but offing else was great. >> i'm glad he had fun there, anthony. ahead we will show how to good morning. walnut creek police are investigating a shooting that happened last night at a target store. police have not been out information on a suspect or how many may have been injured. the suspect accused of stabbing a 94-year-old asian woman in san francisco is set to be arraigned. daniel is set to face several charges including attempted homicide. santa clara will celebrate the first juneteenth as a paid holiday. they were first to pass a resolution commemorating the
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emancipation of slaves in the u.s.. we still have a few slow spots for your friday commute. if you're headed 80 westbound it is sluggish. 24 minutes to go from highway 4 to the maze. everything else looks good. no issues on 4 or 580. 26 minutes 205. look at the toll plaza. no delays. a few pockets at the upper deck as you head into san francisco. 12 minutes from the maze to 101. castro to the marine site 12 minutes. another hot day. heat advisories and warnings in effect inland. 90s up to triple digits. 100 to livermore. 93 in san jose. mid to upper 70s, low 80s around the day. as we look to the weekend.
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>> ♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." sort of. instead of our usual talk of the table, we're going to talk about something that we've mentioned before. how all of us, me included, desperately need to get back to our gym routines after a year of quarantine and in my case, a newborn, as will smith has shown us, the strugle is very real. take a look. that is will smith using all of the machines at gym the wrong way by the way. but all joking aside, finding that inspiration to get to the
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gym in the first place is not easy. and that is why we have liz plosser with us. she's the editor in chief of women's health magazine and she'll help us get through tips to return to the gym. since i'm still dressed like the guy interviewing the national security adviser, i'm going to get a little more comfortable as maybe you could tell us how people can reignite their interest in exercise. >> yes. absolutely. well i think we're all feeling a little bit of that will smith energy, the sun is shining, the weather is getting warmer, gyms are starting to reopen so maybe inspiration is in the air. you want to stay healthy for your fitness journey to keep that momentum going strong which means you need to ease into it. >> ease into it. and you don't have to go the gym. you don't need a lot of fancy equipment. >> this is so true. it is super convenient to work out at home. you need a little bit of space and a yoga mat and a water bottle and you're good to go. i recommend when you get started that you start with foundational
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basic movement patterns. don't go right into the weights or try to do those crazy compound movements that you might see on social media. so this is really simple stuff like lungs and squats. let's start with a stationary lung. are you with me, tony. >> i'm with you. >> and you're going to step forward. and backward. yep. and then you can repeat it on your opposite side. perfect. and i love your knee position because you're not going over your toes which makes it very safe. >> paramedics are standing by. >> so eventually you could add weight to that, trying going into multi directions but let's move on. to an isometric squat. so your feet are a bit wider apart for this and now go down as far as you can until your quads are just about parallel to the floor. get your booty back. >> if anyone here hears a tear, it could b fabric, it could be muscle. >> so these are great strength
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training moves. if you're into cardio, don't pick up kaktly where you left on. if you're a runner stick to the 10% rule which means you don't want to add more than 10% mileage week over week to help you stay healthy. >> and i will wear dress shoes, to avoid that, how might we work on our core. >> well, women do that too, often with our high heels. core is so important and a lot of us need to reacquaint ourselves with our core. they might have gotten weaker. so we have a couple of awesome moves to fire up the power house. many people think abs when they think core. and yes that is part of your wore but it includes your back and muscles and pelvic floor. to do that is the dead bug. are you ready? >> we have to get down on the
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ground. >> so you're on your back and you have to lift your legs and move your feet. >> i have to move the microphone. here we go. >> and now your arms reach straight up to the air. that is it. if you want to make it harder, you could eventually go opposite and opposite. but this is perfect. you have great form. >> this is not one -- >> the key is to have your lower back pushed against the ground which might be hard because the mic right now and that is going to protect you and that is great when you are transferring weight from your upper body to your lower body. >> i think we should show people if we have the graphic, the child's pose. >> this is a great cooldown move which please don't forget to cool down. you want your body to slowly ease the heart rate back down. >> it doesn't have to be post workout, it could be post zoom call. >> if the zoom call is really bad. >> yes.
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i often need a child's pose after that. and you're going to stretch your arms forward and get your nose and your forehead toward the ground. perfect and then breathe deeply and relax and enjoy that moment. >> lovely. >> i think the next pose is the fetal position. >> or the nap. >> that was amazing. the peanut gallery have been judging this. i gave you an eight. >> i was harsher, but i decided to upgrade, because the dead bug was so good. >> liz, don't worry, those ratings are only for me. stephen colbert, i'm on
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we don't follow the heherd. nevever have. nenever will.. becaususe those whwho build te fututure aren't found inin a p. they fororge the wayay forwar- on a p path of theheir own. and, jusust when youou think e dust h has settleded, wewe're herere...to kicick it t back up p again. ththe all-new,w, all-electctc 202021 mustangng mach-e isis . ♪ ♪
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musicares.org. ♪ glory days well they're passing by ♪ in honor of father's day this sunday, we have a story that highlights the unbreakable emotional and genetic bond between a father and a daughter. max weinberg is the longtime drummer for bruce springsteen's e street band. his daughter, ali rogin, is a journalist and author. we recently sat down with the father/daughter duo in washington, and they reflected on their relationship and how it's changed because of something they never wanted to share. >> the guy who comes off stage with a bathrobe and gets into
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the van and put his hands into an ice bucket, you know, that's dad. he never stops being dad. that's who he is on stage. ♪ >> max weinberg earned his nickname "the mighty max" because of his muscular style of drumming. ♪ >> bruce springsteen has said the steam rolling rock music lies upon max's shoulders more heavily than anyone else's. but that doesn't phase weinberg. >> i mean, they all come to see bruce. i'm the guy out of focus behind bruce. >> stop. >> in the pictures, right? >> after the e street band broke up in 1989 -- >> max weinberg and his max weinberg send -- [ cheers ] >> weinberg became the band leader for "late no with conan o'brien." his daughter was 6 at the time. >> he did have a nine to five job, as much as you can have as a musician.
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my favorite memories are sitting on the couch watching tv together, sharing a blanket. those were really the moments that shaped me. >> those moments are just -- they're up here and in here. ♪ >> weinberg has grown accustomed to playing soldout stadiums worldwide. but his favorite job has always been at home as dad. >> actually these are the drums that i recorded the album "born in the usa" on. ♪ >> he's the keeper of the family archives. >> things to do in the girls club. one, have meetings. two, maybe adopt a whale. ♪ >> i think in terms of what i inherited from my dad, i'd like to think i got his great hair. >> i got lucky in that department i guess. >> i think i got the hair, the musicality, and yeah, i got this
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kind of bum gene from him. >> that gene is the brca mutation which increases the risk for breast, ovarian, and prostate cancers. >> for a lot of men there's a stigma to even -- >> yeah. the whole thing. and i'm here to tell you that prostate cancer is extremely curable if it's caught early. >> weinberg, who says he was proactive about testing, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2011. >> what do bosses do? bosses take charge. i've always found that better to know than to not know. >> doctors removed his prostate, and he's now cancer free. >> one, two, three -- ♪ >> but he's passed that proactive gene to his daughter. >> we were driving in the car in new jersey, and they said, listen, your dad has this gene, the brca mutation, and it comes with a risk of breast and ovarian cancer. and i said in that moment, there's no question, obviously i'm going to get the test. >> it was a little bit of an
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out-of-body experience watching my daughter handle this news and then making a decision several years later with such determination, grace, and just, you know, work the problem. ♪ >> as a 20-year-old college student in 2009, roggin decided to have a preventive double mastectomy with reconstructive surgery. >> that was a real challenge because when you're that age, none of your peers are thinking about anything this morbid. so i really felt very alone. >> it inspired her to write "beat breast cancer like a boss," a collection of stories from 30 successful women who have beaten cancer. have you discovered if there was an underlying thread? >> even women at the top of their field experienced similar challenges.
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the reason i wrote the book was hopefully to provide those stories that can empower women to go into those doctor's office and be able to feel comfortable that they deserve all of the answers that they are searching for as they make their decisions on this journey. >> reporter: ali and her husband josh have begun the process of in vitro fertilization which allows them to screen out embryos that have the brca mutation so they can ensure their children will not inherit it. >> a little bit choked up because i'm sitting here with this accomplished, formidable woman, but she is always and will always be my little girl. ♪ when you need me call my name ♪ >> max and ali acknowledge how privileged they are to have insurance and access to good health care. we spoke a lot about that. as for bruce springsteen and the e street band, there are rumors they will hit the road for a much-anticipated tour in 2022.
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weinberg told us he has no plans to tour any time soon, but he, of course, is happy to be of service when he is called by the boss. >> wouldn't say that -- >> indeed. this was such a wonderful story for me to do. ali and max were so wonderful. and the idea that they have all these traits in common but also what she calls this bum gene -- >> yeah -- >> was a fascinating story. for her to make that decisin as a young child -- college student -- >> courage us on and impressive. she was so present and ready to face it. >> when you said in the piece 20 years old, there was a collective gasp. we couldn't believe she was so young. that was before or after angelina brought the attention to -- >> before. she told me now it's easier to explain because angelina jolie made it known around the world. also, she was a young reporter at the crusades d. you know that? her father has video of her friending to be a reporter report at the crews aids when she was a little girl. >> the father/daughter
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relationship on camera is so warm and so loving. >> yeah. >> a model. happy father's day to you. happy father's day to you. happy soon to be father's day to you. >> thank you. and you're father to little cat mimi. >> that's all the work i can do. >> thank you so much. on the podcast hear from three powerful black voices about their original video essays honoring our newest national holiday, that, of course, is juneteenth. next we'll look back at all that mattered this week. we'll be right back.
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at w worksman cycycles, we''ve been n building b biks fofor a hundrered years. but our cucustomers' needs s have changnged, so w we expandeded our produt line t to include e electric c . we used ththe unlimiteted 1.5 5 percent cacash back from o our chase i ink busines unlilimit ® crcredit cardd to help p purchase t tools ad materialals to buildld new mod. anand each timime we use o our, we earn cacash back to help p grow our b busines. it''s more t than cyclining, it's fifinding innonovative ways to momove forwardrd. chase for r busine ® . mamake more ofof what's s ® .s
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ itit doesn't take a a superheo to helelp save thehe planet. small l decisions s make a world d of differerence. ikeaea. there is perfect. you have great form. the key here is to have your lower back pushed against the ground which might be hard with the mic right now. >> yeah. >> that keeps your spine in a neutral position. >> that was a very special angle. copies of tony dokoupil's new exercise video, "how to do the dead bug," available on our website. that does it for us. see you monday on "cbs this morning." before we go, let's look at all
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that mattered this week. have a great weekend, everybody. >> see you. >> i did what i came to do. >> president biden's historic meeting in geneva with russian president vladimir putin. >> the tone of the entire meetings, good, positive. >> reporter: the truce of geneva as the president said could be several months until we know whether the summit was worth it. >> reporter: ukrainian soldiers are on this side, and russian-backed rebel fighters are about 300 yards that direction. >> reporter: the first celebration of juneteenth as a national holiday. [ cheers ] a brutal heat wave in the west, heat, drought, and fires are a bod combination. >> we have all of that. in "live your life: my story of loving and losing nick cordero." >> i was struck by your positivity. >> the head doctor said, amanda, we look at this in a positive light. there's possibilities. i'm your host stephen
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colbert. >> i was in the pit. that was my dressing room. largest crowd since the pandemic hit. >> i just bought tickets to a mets game. >> why? >> oh, come on. don't say that. ♪ some people call me the space cowboy ♪ mic is howso is the weather. did you know that tin-tine and the smurfs were here. i hear my 5-year-old saying why is daddy wearing a stuffed animal on his tie -- >> the sweetness of water. >> a person who works in imagination, did you imagine a moment like this one? >> actually got hives. then i get the call from her, and there's no better cure for hives than a call from oprah. >> oprah is fda approvd to cure hives. >> reporter: the russians' message to the u.s. has been blunt -- >> very young anthony mason. who is that guy in moscow? >> i have no idea. >> you haven't aged a day. >> i still have the tie. >> i'm pretty sure that tie is on "harry potter." the color scheme at least. >> that's right. that's right. ♪ ice cream, ooh. apple and ginger.
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thank you. the swiss are taking such good care of us here. thank you. thank you. could be a gift from the russians. if i'm not here tomorrow, you'll know. ♪ wasabi is the best in show winner. [ applause ] >> the pekingese wasabi. >> is that a dog or an ewok? my makes it. let me show you who i wanted to win. look at that cute dog here. >> aww. >> that's bubba. ♪ i'm still watching it. >> you are? >> yes. i just saw the "little bit alexa" episode and went, "yes, it is!" >> jeff bezos and his brother are going to be going up on a suborbital space trip and auctioned off a third seat. >> sold, $28 million. >> the winner of that auction is still anonymous, and gayle king is not at the table. >> an astronaut gayle. >> gayle said it's a hard no.
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it's another day. and anytything couldld happe. it couould be the e day you welcomome 1,200 guguests and d all their r devices. or it t could be t the day there's a a cyberthreaeat. geget ready fofor it all w h an advanceced networkk anand managed d services from comomcast busininess. anand get cybersecururity solutitions that let y you see eveverythg on youour network.k.
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plplus an expepert team lookining ahead 2424/7 to help p prevent ththreats. every daday in bubusiness is s a big day.. wewe'll keep y you readady for whatat's next. cocomcast busisiness popowering posossibilities. this is a kpix news update. good morning. today the man accused of stabbing a 94-year-old asian woman near san francisco's pastry wednesday is set to be arraigned on a list of charges including attempted murder. the victim is recovering this morning. california's department of health is set to unveil a vaccination verification tool today. it will allow californians to show electronic proof they are protected from the virus. this weekend, longest- running music festival in the bay area is making a comeback. the kickoff concert is this sunday night with one of its biggest and musically diverse
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lineups to date. as we take a look at the roadways. a quick look at travel. a little busy across the east shore freeway. trouble spot westbound not far from the bay bridge toll. highway four as you head toward the maze. at the plaza traffic looks like it's moving at limit with no issues once you are past this point in san francisco. sluggish out of san leandro. break lights going into oakland. a crash involving vehicles sap 680 at street boulevard. the three left lanes are blocked. we are looking at a hot day inland. the last of the heat wave. heat advisories for north, south bay. excessive warnings for the hills, interior and northbay mountains. triple digit heat once again concord, fairfield, livermore, brentwood. mid 90s for south bay, sa
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wayne: hey! over 50 years of deals, baby! jay: monty hall! monty: thank you very much! jay: a brand-new car! monty: the big deal of the day. - whoo! monty: back-to-back cars! wayne: go get your car! you've got the big deal! tiffany: (singing off-key) jonathan: money. - (screaming) - this is the happiest place on earth! - on "let's make a deal"! whoo! (theme playing) jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal"! now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal," thank you so much for tuning in. i'm wayne brady. i need two people. we're going to make some deals today. who wants to make a deal? you do, yes, the unicorn. right there. and, you do, come on over here.
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