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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  February 8, 2023 3:12am-4:30am PST

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precaution. they used a fireproof enclosure to smother the flames, and, norah, this is why lithium batteries are not allowed in checked luggage. you have to carry them on. >> teleare a no-no. carter evans, thank you so much. now to that smoldering, toxic scene in ohio. there's no timeline for when it will be safe for residents to return home. cbs's roxana saberi is there. >> reporter: tonight there is fear and frustration for thousands who remain blocked from their homes, not knowing when it will be safe to return. >> we're not hearing anything, and that's part of the confusion. there hasn't been good lines of communication. >> reporter: four days after a train carrying dangerous chemicals derailed, releasing toxic fumes near the ohio/pennsylvania border, officials say they continue to monitor the air and water in the
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one by two mile evacuation zone. but in a tense afternoon briefing, they offered few details about the possible dangers that remain. >> i want nothing more than to get my residents back home. i'm not an expert, subject matter expert on that. i'm a fireman. i put fires out, all right? we're done with questions. thank you very much. >> reporter: this afternoon, crews were carefully removing the damaged cars one day after authorities carried out a controlled explosion of some cars containing vinyl chloride, a hazardous carcinogen used to produce plastic pipes. but that explosion was expected to release hydrogen chloride and phosgene, a gas used as a weapon in world war i. jamie coza worries she and her family won't be able to live in east palestinian anymore for their own safety. >> i think i owe that to my daughter, no matter how much i
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want to stay. >> what makes it the hardest? >> my daughter. you know, it's all the kids in town. it's, you know, thinking about their future. >> reporter: this church behind me is open to help evacuees like jamie. schools and businesses in east palstein remain closed and there continue to be checkpoints coming in and out of the area. norah. >> roxana saberi, thank you so much. back here in washington, all eyes are on capitol hill has house speaker kevin mccarthy said today that disgraced new york republican congressman george santos could face disciplinary action in he's found guilty of ethics vices. today a bus load of angry voters descended on capitol hill to demand his resignation. cbs's scott macfarlane has the details. > santos has got to go! >> reporter: george santos' own constituents are trying to turn up the heat on the embattled congressman, delivering petitions to house leaders today seeking his expulsion from congress. santos told cbs news he's not
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deterred by the protests and insisted he was going to meet with the group. >> if your constituents are delivering a petition asking you to be gone, is that a distraction for your work? >> that's their freedom of speech right, and i'll entertain a conversation with them every single day. i represent them all equally. >> where is george? >> where's george? >> reporter: but when they arrived outside his office late this afternoon, they were not allowed in. have you actually tried to get in. >> we've been outside. > what's the response you've gotten from the staff? >> reporter: one month into his term, santos' troubles are mounting, includin an allegation he made off with money raised for medical treatment for a veteran's service dog. a complaint to the federal election competition sb suspicious campaign expenditures, and a mysterious $700,000 loan to his campaign. late last week a man who briefly worked in his capitol office sent a letter to the house ethics committee accusing santos of sexual harassment, something he denies. >> can he still function as a u.s. house member?
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>> who in congress would touch him? who would want to stand next to him? who would want to be part of his circle. >> reporter: congressman santos denies doing anything illegal. meanwhile, u.s. house speaker kevin mccarthy is not calling on santos to resign. he says it's up to santos' constituents and voters to decide. norah. >> scott macfarlane, thank you. well, now to a possible game-changing event in the world of big tech. microsoft today unveiled a new search engine powered by that advanced artificial intelligence chatgpt. we get more now from cbs's jonathan vigliotti. >> it's an exciting time in tech. >> reporter: in the online war for search engine dominance, microsoft is betting big, more intellceonnrticia nstio is how go treshape r tr: the company's search engine will soon integrate some of the popular ai
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technology known as chatgpt. microsoft says instead of merely answering factual questions, users will be able to ask complex questions in an interactive chat. >> do you think in this case these results, artificial intelligence is going to live up to expectations? >> i think the answer is yes and no. i really think that a lot of excitement around chatgpt kind of misunderstands how limited and flawed the technology can be, how it basically just gives you a sort of statistical average of what it's already read, and it can make things up. >> reporter: microsoft's ceo spoke with cbs mornings tony dokoupil ahead of today's announcement. >> it seems like everybody is coming out with new products this year. where is this going? >> well, as you said, it's a new race, and it's a new race and the most important software category or the largest software category in search. let's face it. google dominates it. >> reporter: google is also jumping in. this week announcing its plans to develop a similar chat bot
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called bard. and with concerns about ai's potential for plagiarism, misinformation, and bias, microsoft says it's taking measures to ensure the accuracy and fairness of results. the new search engine will slowly be rolled out to the public in the coming weeks, norah. >> jonathan vigliotti, thank you so much. well, tonight there are shocking new allegations against an officer in the deadly beating of tyre nichols. we'll have that story coming up next. sometimes, the lows of bipolar depression feel darkest before dawn. with caplyta, there's a chance to let the light shine through. and light tomorrow, with the hope from today.
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skin your face will envy? with olay hyaluronic body lotion 95% of women had visibly-smoother skin. be fearless with olay hyaluronic body lotion and body wash. exciting news tonight about one of earth's not so distant neighbors. telescopes in hawaii and chile have discovered a dozen new moons around jupiter, bringing the total to 92 moons. that's more than any other planet in our solar system. all right. honoring the women of world war ii. that's next.
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(male) there are many voices in today's world. everyone is voicing their opinions about everything, and jesus is no exception to that. what if there was a clear voice telling you exactly who jesus is? (male announcer) join dr. david jeremiah as he teaches who jesus is and what that means for your life. tune in to dr. jeremiah's new series, "christ above all", on the next "turning point", right here on this station.
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been
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designed for you. one of tonight's guest for the state of the union is a young woman who spent half her life advocating for the greatest generation of women who kept america running on the home front during world war ii. here's cbs's nikole killion. >> i'm so excited. >> reporter: 21-year-old rye na kenny is no stranger to capitol hill, but tonight is her first state of the union. >> our goal is to get a monument built. >> reporter: it was the same sense of exhilaration when her bill sponsored by d.c. delegate eleanor holmes norton won ssagnes late last year. it establishes a national memorial for working women in world war ii, known as rosie the riveters. >> these women were firecrackers. these women were trail blazers. i think it's really important that we get their work recognized as soon as possible. >> they have never received
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recognition. that's what's so important about raya's idea. >> reporter: we first met her when she was still in high school, lobbying lawmakers. she came up with the concept of a monument for a fifth grade project inspired by the movie, a league of their own. >> there's no crying in baseball. >> reporter: she reached out to 96-year-old may cryer, a former rosie who worked on b-17s and b-29s for boeing. >> i didn't think that a child in fifth grade, pipe dreams and sooner or later should would just quit. she never did. >> reporter: a can-do spirit transcending generations. nikole killion, cbs news, capitol hill. and that's the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you, the news tjz. for others, check back later for krt cbs mornings." and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from right here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell.
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this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. in his second state of the union address, president biden touted the country's economic gains and called on republicans to help raise the debt ceiling, reform immigration, and ban assault-style weapons. arkansas governor sarah huckabee sanders responded with a combative speech criticizing democrats, calling biden unfit to serve. lebron james breaks the nba's all-time scoring record in front of a hometown crowd, surpassing the record that six-time nba mvp kareem abdul-jabbar held for 39 years. and a hit hollywood musical is heading to broadway. producer mark platt is now developing a stage version of the 2016 oscar-winning film
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"la-la land." for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." president biden travels to wisconsin today, the first of several stops he'll make to flesh out the themes of last night's state of the union address. it was biden's second state of the union but the first with republicans in control of the house of representatives. the president billed it as a conversation with the american people. he stressed the accomplishments of his administration over the past two years and expressed his willingness to work across the aisle to get things done. here's some of what the president had to say. >> you know, we're often told that democrats and republicans can't work together. but over the past two years,
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we've proved the cynics and naysayers wrong. yes, we disagreed plenty, and yes, there were times when democrats went alone. but time and again, democrats and republicans came together, came together to defend a stronger and safer europe. it came together to pass once-in-a-generation infrastructure law, building bridges connecting our nation and our people. we came together to pass the most significant law ever, helping victims exposed to toxic burn pits. i signed over 300 bipartisan pieces of legislation since becoming president, from reauthorizing the violence against women act, to the electoral count reform act, the respect for marriage act that protects the right to marry the person you love. and to my republican friends, if we could work together in the last congress, there's no reason we can't work together and find consensus on important things in this congress as well. [ applause ] inflation is coming down.
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here at home, gas prices are down $1.50 from their peak. food inflation is coming down, not fast enough but coming down. inflation has fallen every month for the last six months while take-home pay has gone up. additionally, over the last two years, a record 10 million americans applied to start new businesses. 10 million. [ applause ] it costs the drug companies roughly $10 a vial to make that insulin, packaging and all, and you may get up to $13. but big pharma has been unfairly charging people hundreds of dollars, $400 to $500 a month, making record profits. not anymore. [ applause ] not anymore. the idea that in 2020, 55 of the largest corporations in america, the fortune 500, made
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$40 billion in profits and paid zero in federal taxes? zero? folks, it's simply not fair. but now because of the law i signed, billion-dollar companies have to pay a minimum of 15%. god love them. 15%. [ applause ] that's less than a nurse pays. my administration has cut the deficit by more than $1.7 trillion, the largest deficit reduction in american history. under the previous administration, the american deficit went up four years in a row. because of those record deficits, no president added more to the national debt in any four years than my predecessor. nearly 25% of the entire national debt that took over 200 years to accumulate was added by just one administration alone, the last one. out're the facts.
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check it. how did congress respond to that debt? they did the right thing. they lifted the debt ceiling three times without preconditions or crisis. they paid american bills to prevent an economic disaster to the country. so tonight i'm asking the congress to follow suit. let's commit here tonight that the full faith and credit of the united states of america will never, ever be questioned. next month, when i offer my fiscal plan, i ask my republican friends to lay down their plan as well. i really mean it. let's sit down together and discuss our mutual plans together. [ applause ] let's do that. time is running out for victims buried in turkey and syria after that massive earthquake with the death toll at nearly 8,000. officials are warning the end of a critical three-day time frame to rescue people is approaching,
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and there are freezing conditions that are making the search effort even more difficult. and we're seeing these heartbreaking scenes like this one. a grieving father holding the hand of his 15-year-old daughter, who died when their apartment building collapsed. a u.s. air force plane loaded with supplies and members of an urban search and rescue team from virginia took off just this morning headed to the disaster zone. cbs's chris livesay is going to start us off tonight from the quake zone in turkey. chris, good evening. that is quite a scene right behind you. >> reporter: that's right, norah. the devastation is hard to fathom. nearly 6,000 buildings destroyed just like this one behind me where the rescue effort goes on. and according to unicef, thousands of children could be trapped or killed beneath buildings just like this one across the devastated area. but tonight there are also extraordinary images of babies surviving despite impossible odds.
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in an instant, homes transformed into tombs. and then life at its most vulnerable. a baby somehow able to survive. in syria, a mother gives birth to a baby while trapped beneath the rubble. rescuers were able to save the newborn girl, her umbilical cord still attached, but couldn't reach the mother in time. astonishing scenes that push rescuers to continue the search, like here in the turkish city of adana. more than 100 people once lived in this building that's been reduced to dust. rescuers tell us they pulled 35 people, dead, from the rubble. only one survivor, a little girl now in the icu. and the rescue effort goes on. onlookers and rescuers hope to find traces of their loved ones, like ismet, a lawyer. as time goes by, do you have any hope that they're alive?
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>> probably they're cold so much right now if they're alive, and it's -- they have no water or something to eat to warm up their body. yeah, their chance is decreasing. >> reporter: but volunteers are desperate to help, like those flooding istanbul's airport. more than 20,000 are already racing to find life. however, getting to the devastated areas amid more than 300 aftershocks, over mangled roads covered in rubble, ice, and snow could prove the difference between life and death. now, these first three days are crucial. it's what search and rescue experts call the golden period in which the chances are highest of finding survivors beneath the rubble, like right behind me. and for the next three months, the president has declared the devastated area a national disaster area.
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norah. >> chris livesay right there on the scene. thank you so much. the "cbs overnight news" the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. ♪♪ allergies don't have to be scary. (screaming) defeat allergy headaches fast with new flonase headache and allergy relief! two pills relieve allergy headache pain? and the congestion that causes it! flonase headache and allergy relief. psst! psst! all good! one prilosec otc each morning blocks heartburn all day and all night. prilosec otc reduces excess acid for 24 hours, blocking heartburn before it starts. one pill a day. 24 hours. zero heartburn. [tap tap] my secret to beating sniff checks? secret dry spray. just spray and stay fresh all day.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." i'm nicole skang ga in washington. thanks for staying with us. there's a battle brewing in the kitchen over the safest way to cook. some environmentalists are pushing for a ban on gas stoves, especially in new construction. they claim the stoves and cooktops leak natural gas into the home and cause a host of respiratory problems. the head of the consumer product safety commission insists the government is not coming for your gas stove, but that hasn't stopped the debate. here's luke burbank. >> reporter: now they're coming
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for our stoves. you got to be kidding me. >> reporter: depending on which news outlets you tend to follow, it would be pretty easy of late to get the mistaken impression that someone might be coming for your gas stove. >> so the chinese government, by proxy, gets to decide how you cook your dinner. >> reporter: but how exactly did this most recent skirmish in the culture war start? well, it was almost a month ago when richard trump ca jr. of the u.s. consumer product safety commission told bloomberg news everything was on the table when it comes to addressing the potential health risks posed by gas stoves. >> because of the symptoms i was getting when i would be here in the kitchen, i would always have my window open a little bit, always. >> reporter: maria espata was only too happy to have her gas stove replaced. for 44 years, she's lived in the watson houses of new york city's housing authority in the bronx and with what she says are the
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effects of her unventilated gas stove, including asthma. >> it wasn't good. it wasn't good at all. >> we recorded our own data and showed that just by taking out a gas stove, we can reduce nitrogen dioxide in someone's home by 35%. >> reporter: annie car for row is with we act for environmental justice, the group that replaced 18 gas stoves in maria's building with stoves that use a newer technology called induction. because they and an increasing group of scientists, doctors and chefs say so-called clean-burning natural gas is actually not the most healthy way to cook food inside your home. >> what our data has shown is that natural gas is not as clean as we thought. it leaks inside your house, and these leaks are both damaging to the climate and to the health. >> reporter: eric labelle is a scientist for pse healthy energy, a nonprofit research institute. in a recent peer-reviewed study, he examined just how much methane and other chemicals gas
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stoves emit into the home. venting your kitchen is important, he says, but it isn't a perfect solution. >> nearly every stove that we measured emitted methane or natural gas while it was off, and that gas contains benzene. meanwhile, while you use your stove, nearly every stove emits some amount of nitrogen dioxide, which can be -- it's a respiratory irritant, and it can be damaging to your health. >> reporter: labelle's study is one of the many that link the pollutants from gas stoves to elevated levels of asthma, particularly in children. studies the gas industry strongly refutes. >> because it's gas, it seals in juiciness and flavor while it broils. >> reporter: it turns out america's love affair with so-called natural gas is no accident. it's the result of a concerted effort by the gas industry to sell its product, and it's worked. more than one-third of americans use gas to cook at home.
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>> say, now you're cooking with gas. >> natural gas. we use gas to cook our food, heat and cool our homes. >> there's something very human, very intimate about cooking over an open flame inside your kitchen. >> reporter: and for many years, gas stoves were inarguably superior to electric when it came to cooking. but these days, many chefs will tell you -- >> i much prefer this to using a gas stove. >> reporter: induction cooking has more than caught up. >> how fast does water boil when you're using this technology? >> so i just put this on. water boils twice as fast. we can watch water boil. it's a thing now. >> so this is a watched pot that actually is going to boil. >> i know. i have been working with induction for so many years, and i always still have a sense of wonder about it. >> reporter: ray shell boucher has been a professional chef for over 20 years. cooking for celebrity clients. these days, she's part of the
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building decarbonization coalition, a group funded by electric utilities, appliance makers, and tech companies that evangelizes for what she calls the magic of induction cooking. >> so instead of heating something up, it starts to move the molecules in the pan, and it creates friction, and that makes your pan into your heat source. >> reporter: induction doesn't heat up your kitchen. as she showed me with a little crispy skin salmon that she whipped up. it also doesn't put out the same emissions as gas stoves. >> now, if you notice something, we're standing here. there's a lot of cooking going on. what is not happening? what do we not feel around here? >> any kind of tremendous amount of heat. >> amazing. >> reporter: meanwhile, back in the bronx, maria esp ata was also cooking salmon on her induction stove. >> wow. >> albeit with a little less fanfare. a simple act she hopes to enjoy in her home for the foreseeable
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future. are you planning on cooking on this stove for the next 40 years? >> if i'm still here, yes. i did ask can i take it with me. >> reporter: that was luke burbank reporting. burbank reporting. the overnight news is back (peaceful music) - time to get up, sweetie! (kissing) - [child voiceover] most people might not think much about all the little things you do every day, but for me, just being able to do those little things is the best part of my day. - ready, mom! - [child voiceover] it hasn't been easy, but sometimes the hardest things in life rewards. and it's all because of my amazing friends at the shriners hospitals for children and people like you who support them every month.
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hip-hop has evolved from a musical genre to a cultural movement. kelefa sanneh spoke to some of the founders. ♪ >> reporter: it was 1985. hip-hop was entering its golden era. ♪ and slick rick and dougie fresh were putting on what they called "the show." on that singles b-side was lady dady. ♪ one of the most beloved and most sampled songs in hip-hop history. it features slick rick playfully describing his average day. ♪ i put the bubbles in the tub so i could have a clean, dry ♪ >> you my body and hair. that was in the 80s.
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>> did you have gucci underwear at that point? >> they didn't make gucci underwear. you had to fake it or just pretend. ♪ >> reporter: throughout hip-hop's 50 years, style has been a big deal. slick rick's style included an eye patch, the result of a childhood injury, and plenty of jewelry. >> so this is an old watch, but you throw this on it, it's a problem. >> reporter: rappers didn't just look cool. they rapped about how cool they looked, and that helped turn hip-hop fashion into a multi-billion dollar industry. >> hip-hop fashion is from the streets, the urban streets, the lowest income areas. those who have that ability to show swag, show swag. >> what does swag mean to new. >> you move with like a certain swag. a little personality you know. >> swag for my generation was stolen goods. >> reporter: no one knows hip-hop fashion better than dapper dan. he literally created it in his shop in harlem. >> you say, okay, gucci doesn't
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make a parka. >> mm-hmm. >> i'm going to make you a gucci parka. >> that's right. >> reporter: at first it was all bootleg and always spectacular. >> yeah, there was no gucci drawers. so we do what we need to do. we created all that. >> dapper dan is one of the most important fashion designers of the late 20th century. >> reporter: elizabeth way is a curator at the museum at the fashion institute of technology. in new york. >> he saw these logos as these powerful symbols and he marries it with street wear. >> reporter: she and elena romero, a professor at f.i.t., are co-curating an exhibit about hip-hop fashion that opens this week. >> if we look at what's happening on runways now and this idea of creating a dialogue of street fashion in new york and high end european luxury, he's the one that came up with that. >> reporter: by the 1990s, hip-hop fashion had gone corporate with companies like fubu, for us, by us. >> any other line but the gap is childish. >> reporter: ll cool j is
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filming a commercial for the gap and he sort of sneaks in the reference to fubu. ♪ >> it was actually two references. ll cool j at that time was an official spokesman of fubu and i'm assuming had to contractually wear something related. so that was where we saw the fb cap. but what wasn't monitored or noticed was the lyrics that he was able to sneak in. for us, by us on the low. that signaled a message to those who were in the hip-hop community like, oh. >> reporter: hip-hop stars didn't just change the fashion industry. they joined it. ♪ >> if you think about the 19 ain't, run-dmc records my adidas before they ever got any check from adidas. they were just bragging about their shoes, right? >> well, one of the pieces we have in the exhibition is a jacket from rap style, which was a line created by chuck d. he talks about i was wearing clothes from other brands and making other brands money, but
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people wante to dress like me. so i'm going to create my own line. >> eventually moguls jumping in, russell simmons. >> reporter: hip-hop style, like hip-hop itself showed up everywhere. >> you're seeing hip-hop fashion companies actually making real money. >> it requires, what, crossover. you know what i'm saying? so what rick and them was able to do through their lyrics was get them young white boys to cross over. >> right. >> from ralph lauren to fubu. so crossover doesn't necessarily have to be predominantly associated with music. >> right. >> it filters out to fashion as well. you can't have a half a crossover. >> right. ♪ >> reporter: in 2003, after hip-hop had popularized oversized jerseys and baggy pants, jay-z called for change. >> people stopped buying the
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athletic jerseys. jay-z single handedly changed fashion. when jay-z made that record, people come into the store saying give me two of them gucci suits. >> reporter: it would take another 15 years before gucci would acknowledge and collaborate with dapper dan. >> dapper dan re-emerges onto the mainstream cultural landscape in 2017 when he partners with gucci. >> it's funny. after playing so long with other people's logos fblgs he's got his own brand on the bark. >> absolutely. >> reporter: since then he's worked with gap, changing one letter on their classic sweatshirt. he has a collection with puma. when he wears gucci now, it's the real thing. >> there it is, dapper dan, gucci, made in har lemt. >> yeah, man. i'm ready for this boy. >> reporter: in the world of rock and roll, success sometimes seemed like selling out. but for dapper dan, slick rick, and hip-hop in general, it seems more like recognition. and it's long overdue. >> sometimes we got to carry companies on our back like this. come on, let's go.
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how many years have i told you to go and make these damn underwear? let's go. >> come on, gucci. >> rep bill loveless: i came toth charlean o imrtant in my life, just his teachings. one of the life principles is that brokenness is a requirement for god to use you greatly, is when you can become that conduit of what god wants to do through you to get to other people. it's just amazing of what god can do with you.
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technology has already changed the way we shop online. now it's transforming the shopping experience in the stores. elise preston reports. >> reporter: checking out at a convenience store is quicker than ever. the company radius ai has a device with cameras that scan multiple items at the same time. you can skip the checkout line at the supermarket with this shopping cart from custom mate. there's a built-in scale to weigh produce, and products can be scanned right at the cart. customers pay on a tablet and then walk out the door. for those looking to skip the trip to the store entirely, an electric fleet of vehicles is delivering groceries and other items without a driver. >> this is a street-legal vehicle. it operates up to 25 miles an hour. >> reporter: the autonomous noro
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can find an address on its own and is currently on roads in northern california and texas. walmart, fedex, and uber eats are among the companies using it, allowing customers to pick up items from their front curb. and in-store mannequins are getting a 21st century makeover. verizon is teaming up with company proto to produce life like holograms. >> why a hologram for an experience? >> well, as you can see here, it does create a very lifelike representation of actual products. so sometimes even when products are first launched, they may not actually be delivered to the store yet, but it allows you to debut and showcase items to your consumers as soon as they're released. >> reporter: verizon's jason stephens let us try it out. a special camera projects a live 3-d image to the proto box nearby. inside a store, a live or recorded hologram could interact with customers. >> hi. what do you think of this look? >> how about i have a sales associate grab it for you while
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you check out the shoes. >> that's the overnight news for this wednesday. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm nicole sganga. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. in his second state of the union address, president biden touted the country's economic gains and called on republicans to help raise the debt ceiling, reform immigration, and ban assault-style weapons. arkansas governor sarah huckabee sanders responded with a combative speech criticizing democrats, calling biden unfit to serve. lebron james breaks the nba's all-time scoring record in front of a hometown crowd, surpassing the record that six-time nba mvp kareem abdul-jabbar held for 39 years. and a hit hollywood musical is heading to broadway. producer marc platt is now developing a stage version of the 2016 oscar-winning film "la
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la land." for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." president biden travels to wisconsin today, the first of several stops he'll make to flesh out the themes of last night's state of the union address. it was biden's second state of the union but the first with republicans in control of the house of representatives. the president billed it as a conversation with the american people. he stressed the accomplishments of his administration over the past two years and expressed his willingness to work across the aisle to get things done. here's some of what the president had to say. >> you know, we're often told that democrats and republicans can't work together. but over the past two years,
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we've proved the cynics and naysayers wrong. yes, we disagreed plenty. and, yes, there were times when democrats went alone. but time and again, democrats and republicans came together, came together to defend a stronger and safer europe. it came together to pass once-in-a-generation infrastructure law, building bridges connecting our nation and our people. we came together to pass the most significant law ever, helping victims exposed to toxic burn pits. i signed over 300 bipartisan pieces of legislation since becoming president, from reauthorizing the violence against women act, to the electoral count reform act, the respect for marriage act that protects the right to marry the person you love. and to my republican friends, if we could work together in the last congress, there's no reason we can't work together and find consensus on important things in this congress as well. [ applause ] inflation is coming down.
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here at home, gas prices are down $1.50 from their peak. food inflation is coming down, not fast enough but coming down. inflation has fallen every month for the last six months while take-home pay has gone up. additionally, over the last two years, a record 10 million americans applied to start new businesses. 10 million. [ applause ] it costs the drug companies roughly $10 a vial to make that insulin. packaging and all, and you may get up to $13. but big pharma has been unfairly charging people hundreds of dollars, $400 to $500 a month, making record profits. not anymore. [ applause ] not anymore. the idea that in 2020, 55 of the largest corporations in america, the fortune 500, made $40 billion in profits and paid zero in federal taxes?
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zero? folks, it's simply not fair. but now because of the law i signed, billion-dollar companies have to pay a minimum of 15%. god love them. 15%. [ applause ] that's less than a nurse pays. my administration has cut the deficit by more than $1.7 trillion, the largest deficit reduction in american history. under the previous administration, the american deficit went up four years in a row. because of those record deficits, no president added more to the national debt in any four years than my predecessor. nearly 25% of the entire national debt that took over 200 years to accumulate was added by just one administration alone, the last one. they're the facts.
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check it out. check it out. how did congress respond to that debt? they did the right thing. they lifted the debt ceiling three times without preconditions or crisis. they paid american bills to prevent an economic disaster to so tonight i'm asking the congress to follow suit. let's commit here tonight that the full faith and credit of the united states of america will never, ever be questioned. next month, when i offer my fiscal plan, i ask my republican friends to lay down their plan as well. i really mean it. let's sit down together and discuss our mutual plans together. [ applause ] let's do that. time is running out for victims buried in turkey and syria after that massive earthquake with the death toll at nearly 8,000. officials are warning the end of a critical three-day time frame to rescue people is approaching, and there are freezing
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conditions that are making the search effort even more difficult. and we're seeing these heartbreaking scenes like this one. a grieving father holding the hand of his 15-year-old daughter, who died when their apartment building collapsed. a u.s. air force plane loaded with supplies and members of an urban search and rescue team from virginia took off just this morning headed to the disaster zone. cbs's chris livesay is going to start us off tonight from the quake zone in turkey. chris, good evening. that is quite a scene right behind you. >> reporter: that's right, norah. the devastation is hard to fathom. nearly 6,000 buildings destroyed just like this one behind me where the rescue effort goes on. and according to unicef, thousands of children could be trapped or killed beneath buildings just like this one across the devastated area. but tonight there are also extraordinary images of babies surviving despite impossible odds.
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in an instant, homes transformed into tombs. and then life at its most vulnerable. a baby somehow able to survive. in syria, a mother gives birth to a baby while trapped beneath the rubble. rescuers were able to save the newborn girl, her umbilical cord still attached, but couldn't reach the mother in time. astonishing scenes that push rescuers to continue the search, like here in the turkish city of adana. more than 100 people once lived in this building that's been reduced to dust. rescuers tell us they pulled 35 people, dead, from the rubble. only one survivor, a little girl now in the icu. and the rescue effort goes on. onlookers and rescuers hope to find traces of their loved ones, like ismet, a lawyer. as time goes by, do you have any hope that they're alive?
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>> probably they're cold so much right now if they're alive, and it's -- they have no water or something to eat to warm up their body. yeah, their chance is decreasing. >> reporter: but volunteers are desperate to help, like those flooding istanbul's airport. more than 20,000 are already racing to find life. however, getting to the devastated areas amid more than 300 aftershocks, over mangled roads covered in rubble, ice, and snow could prove the difference between life and death. now, these first three days are crucial. it's what search and rescue experts call the golden period in which the chances are highest of finding survivors beneath the rubble, like right behind me. and for the next three months, the president has declared the devastated area a national disaster area. norah.
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>> chris livesay right there on the scene. thank you so much. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." well, there were some frightening moments today aboard a united airlines flight from san diego to newark, new jersey, when a laptop battery pack caught fire in the cabin, injuring at least four people. we get more now from cbs's carter evans. >> reporter: flames broke out just moments after united flight 2664 took off from san diego this morning. >> there was a gentleman. his bag was smoking, and he threw something out on the ground, and it was -- it was a battery charger, a pack or something like that from his laptop. and it burst into fire. >> i hear somebody yell "fire,"
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look forward, and saw that -- i could see the glow. >> reporter: the boeing 737 with 159 passengers on board was in the air for a total of 11 minutes. it was headed to newark international before returning to the airport as smoke began filling the cabin. >> some were gasping, screaming. the guy next to me ran to the back of the plane. the flight attendants were grabbing fire extinguishers and running to the front. >> reporter: since 2006, there have been at least 414 incidents of lithium batteries catching fire or overheating on airplanes in the u.s., 49 involving laptops. here's what it looks like when one of those batri thdemonsation shhow intense the fire can burn. on flight 2664, united confirms a customer's battery ignited, and the crew acted quickly to contain the device. the airline rebooked terrified passengers. >> i'm shaking. i'm shaking. >> reporter: now, united says several flight attendants were taken to the hospital as a
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precaution. they used a fireproof enclosure to smother the flames, and, norah, this is why lithium batteries are not allowed in checked luggage. you have to carry them on. >> they are a no-no. carter evans, thank you so much. now to that smoldering, toxic scene in ohio. authorities there say the danger from that train derailment near the ohio/pennsylvania border, it's far from over, and there's no timeline for when it will be safe for residents to return home. cbs's roxana saberi is there. >> reporter: tonight there is fear and frustration for thousands who remain blocked from their homes, not knowing when it will be safe to return. >> we're not hearing anything, and that's part of the confusion. there hasn't been good lines of communication. >> reporter: four days after a train carrying dangerous chemicals derailed, releasing toxic fumes near the ohio-pennsylvania border, officials say they continue to monitor the air and water in the
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one-by-two-mile evacuation zone. but in a tense afternoon briefing, they offered few details about the possible dangers that remain. >> i want nothing more than to get my residents back home. i'm not an expert, subject matter expert on that. i'm a fireman. i put fires out, all right? no, we're done with questions. thank you very much. >> reporter: this afternoon, crews were carefully removing the damaged cars one day after authorities carried out a controlled explosion of some cars containing vinyl chloride, a hazardous carcinogen used to produce plastic pipes. but that explosion was expected to release hydrogen chloride and phosgene, a gas used as a weapon in world war i. jamie coza worries she and her family won't be able to live in east palestine anymore for their own safety. >> i think i owe that to my daughter, no matter how much i want to stay. >> what makes it the hardest?
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>> my daughter. you know, it's all the kids in town. it's, you know, thinking about their future. >> reporter: this church behind me is open to help evacuees like jamie. schools and businesses in east palestine remain closed and there continue to be checkpoints coming in and out of the area. norah. >> roxana saberi, thank you so much. back here in washington, all eyes are on capitol hill as house speaker kevin mccarthy said today that disgraced new york republican congressman george santos could face disciplinary action if he's found guilty of ethics violations. today a bus load of angry voters from santos' district descended on capitol hill to demand his resignation. cbs's scott macfarlane has the details. >> santos has got to go! >> reporter: george santos' own constituents are trying to turn up the heat on the embattled congressman, delivering petitions to house leaders today seeking his expulsion from congress. santos told cbs news he's not
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deterred by the protests and insisted he was going to meet with the group. >> if your constituents are delivering a petition asking you to be gone, is that a distraction for your work? >> that's their freedom of speech right, and i'll entertain a conversation with them every single day. i represent them all equally. >> where is george? >> where's george? >> reporter: but when they arrived outside his office late this afternoon, they were not allowed in. have you actually tried to get in? >> yeah. >> we've been outside his district office. >> what's the response you've gotten from the staff? >> reporter: one month into his term, santos' troubles are mounting, including an fbi review of allegations he made off with money raised for medical treatment for a givenchy's service dog, a complaint to the federal election commission about suspicion campaign expenditures, and a mysterious $700,000 loan to his campaign. late last week, a man who briefly worked in his capitol office sent a letter to the house ethics committee accusing santos of sexual harassment, something he denies. >> can he still function as a u.s. house member? >> who in congress would touch
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him? who would want to stand next to him? who would want to be part of his circle? >> reporter: congressman santos denies doing anything illegal. meanwhile, u.s. house speaker kevin mccarthy is not calling on santos to resign. he says it's up to santos' constituents and voters to decide. norah. >> scott macfarlane, thank you. well, now to a possible game-changing event in the world of big tech. microsoft today unveiled a new search engine powered by that advanced artificial intelligence chatgpt. we get more now from cbs's jonathan vigliotti. >> it's an exciting time in tech. >> reporter: in the online war for search engine dominance, microsoft is betting big, more than $10 billion on artificial intelligence. >> now the question is how is ai going to reshape the web? >> reporter: the company's bing search engine will soon integrate some of the popular ai
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technology known as chatgpt. microsoft says instead of merely answering factual questions, users will be able to ask complex questions in an interactive chat. >> do you think in this case these results, artificial intelligence is going to live up to expectations? >> i think the answer is yes and no. i really think that a lot of the excitement around chatgpt kind of misunderstands how limited and how flawed the technology can be, how it basically just gives you a sort of statistical average of what it's already read, and it can make things up. >> reporter: microsoft's ceo spoke with "cbs mornings" tony dokoupil ahead of today's announcement. >> it seems like everybody is coming out with new products this year. where is this going? >> well, as you said, it's a new race, and it's a new race in the most important software category or the largest software category in search. let's face it. google dominates it. >> reporter: google is also jumping in. this week announcing its plans
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to develop a similar chat bot called bard. and with concerns about ai's potential for plagiarism, misinformation, and bias, microsoft says it's taking measures to ensure the accuracy and fairness of results. the new search engine will slowly be rolled out to the public in the coming weeks, norah. so much. well, tonight there are shocking new allegations against an officer in the deadly beating of tyre nichols. we'll have that story coming up next. paradontax blood when you brush could lead to worse over time. help stop the clock on gum disease now. parodontax toothpaste... ...is 3x more effective at removing plaque bacteria, one of the main causes of bleeding gums.
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when a cold comes on strong, knock it out with vicks dayquil severe. just one dose starts to relieve 9 of your worst cold and flu symptoms. to help take you from 9 to none. power through with vicks dayquil severe. tonight, seven more memphis police officers are under investigation in connection with the deadly beating last month of tyre nichols. officials say the internal review is to determine if the officers violated city policies at the scene of the beating. six memphis officers have been fired in the case, including five who were charged with murdering nichols. and tonight this stunning news. "the new york times" reports that court documents show one of those officers allegedly sent out photos of nichols, battered and bloody, to at least five other people. coming up, a dozen new moons have been discovered in our
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solar system. that out-of-this-world news is next.
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suffering from sinus congestion, especially at night? try vicks sinex be fearless with for instant relief that lasts up to 12 hours. vicks sinex targets congestion at the source, relieving nasal congestion and sinus pressure by reducing swelling in the sinuses. try vicks sinex. exciting news tonight about one of earth's not so distant neighbors. telescopes in hawaii and chile have discovered a dozen new moons around jupiter, bringing the total to 92 moons. that's more than any other planet in our solar system. all right. honoring the women of world war ii. that's next.
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one of tonight's guest for the state of the union is a young woman who spent half her life advocating for the greatest generation of women who kept america running on the home front during world war ii. here's cbs's nikole killion. >> i'm so excited. >> reporter: 21-year-old raya kenney is no stranger to capitol hill, but tonight is her first state of the union. >> our goal is to get a monument built. >> reporter: it was the same sense of exhilaration when her bill sponsored by d.c. delegate eleanor holmes norton won passage in congress late last year. it establishes a national memorial for working women in world war ii, known as rosie the riveters. >> these women were firecrackers. these women were trailblazers. i think it's really important that we get their work recognized as soon as possible. >> they have never received recognition.
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that's what's so important about raya's idea. >> the v formation symbolizes victory. >> reporter: we first met her when she was still in high school, lobbying lawmakers. she came up with the concept of a monument for a fifth grade project inspired by the movie "a league of their own." >> there's no crying in baseball. >> reporter: she reached out to 96-year-old mae krier, a former rosie who worked on b-17s and b-29s for boeing. >> i didn't think too much of it, a child in fifth grade, pipe dreams, and i thought sooner or later she'd just quit. she never did. all of us rosies are so proud of her. >> reporter: a can-do spirit transcending generations. nikole killion, cbs news, capitol hill. and that's the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from right here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell.
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this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. in his second state of the union address, president biden touted the country's economic gains and called on republicans to help raise the debt ceiling, reform immigration, and ban assault-style weapons. arkansas governor sarah huckabee sanders responded with a combative speech criticiriticiz democrats, calling biden unfit to serve. lebron james breaks the nba's all-time scoring record in front of a hometown crowd, surpassing the record that six-time nba mvp kareem abdul-jabbar held for 39 years. and a hit hollywood musical is heading to broadway. producer marc platt is now developing a stage version of the 2016 oscar-winning film "la
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la land." for more, download the cbs it's wednesday, february 8th, 2023. this is the "cbs morning news." state of the union address. president biden calls on congress to work with him to finish the job of rebuilding the economy. hear his plea to republicans for unity. search for survivors. the frantic search continues following the deadly turkey earthquake. why getting volunteers to the affected areas may be extremely difficult. fiery midair scare. a laptop battery catches fire on a cross-country flight hospitalizing four. how passengers describe the terrifying incident. well, good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. president biden called on congress to work withim

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