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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  September 20, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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knowing who has their stolen personal information. your children's digital identities were compromised. >> their doctors' information, their bus stop information, if they walk to and from school, what bus stop, their medical records, where we live, where we work, every bit of information about our lives, they have. >> reporter: that's frightening. >> it's terrifying. >> reporter: cbs news working with cyber investigation firm guide point security found evidence that tucson student and employee information has shown up on the dark web where it could be sold for a price. you're selling something to somebody on the black market. they're not good people looking for this information for nice reasons. >> reporter: on the advice of law enforcement, the district refused to pay the ransom. it was offline for two weeks and spent close to a million dollars rebuilding its computer systems. data shows school districts have reported more than 1600 cyber attacks across the u.s. over a
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six-year span. more than 300 involve ransomeware. those have steadily been on the rise since the pandemic when more students got online. we've seen students as young as first grade have their identities compromised and abused because of attacks against school systems. >> reporter: doug levin directs the cyber security nonprofit k 126. he says tucson unified could spend several million to build adequate cyber defenses. >> most are being launched from overseas. that's quite a significant ask of school systems to have to defend against. >> anyone know the definition? >> reporter: cyber educator bryan pittman says another layer of defense teaching these illinois summer campers to guard their pass words and spot scams. >> we're going to give students email accounts, you have to pass a cyber security class, very similar to corporations. they have cyber security training every year, every quarter. if you train the people how to protect the network, you've mitigated the risk. >> what should you do if you
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think your account has been hacked? i got it. yes! >> reporter: schools needing to prepare kids for a new threat, this one in cyberspace. this one in cyberspace. for eye on america, i'm ash-har (granddaughter laughing) when pain freezes you in your tracks... ...vapofreeze your pain away. penetrating pain relief... ...with vicks vapors. (granddaughter laughing) vapofreeze your pain away. now at walmart. introducing new advil targeted relief. the only topical pain reliever with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact to target tough pain at the source. for up to 8 hours of powerful relief. new advil targeted relief.
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the most feared person in the new york city restaurant world is coming out of the shadows. "new york times" food critic pete wells is revealing himself and calling it quits after years of dining out. martha teichner has the story. >> well, one area that was key -- >> reporter: tucked in a cabinet above the service station. >> in case it might be -- >> reporter: the photograph of pete wells just in case a server suspected "the new york times" restaurant critic might have been sitting a few feet away. that's the universal photo of him? >> yeah, the one photo. >> reporter: ryan bartlow, a chef and co-owner of ernesto's, a basque restaurant in manhattan, was willing to reveal the dirty little secret new york city restaurants don't like owning up to.
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>> this is our bulletin board. >> reporter: pete wells again along with pictures of other food critics, cheat sheets in the high-stakes game between restaurants out to spot reviewers and lavish them with special treatment and reviewers out to remain anonymous. >> i don't want to say i was terrified. there is always a little bit of nerve. maybe your throat is a little drier or you are more on edge. >> reporter: everything you put into this restaurant could have been destroyed by a bad review? >> yes. yeah. >> reporter: bartlow, we should tell you, had nothing to fear. pete wells gave him a great review in 2021. "new york times," the 100 best restaurants in new york city? >> yes. >> reporter: for the last two years ernesto's has been on his "best of" list. now, i happen to have with me the photograph that was always -- >> yes.
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>> reporter: how long ago was that taken. >> i think that's probably close to 20 years old. this is my entire disguise wardrobe. >> reporter: after slipping into restaurants in all sorts of glasses -- >> really, are you fooled? >> reporter: no. after concocting more than 100 different aliases and paying with multiple credit cards -- >> david malone, i felt was a nice invisible name. >> reporter: after eating out five nights a week since 2012, pete wells arguably the world's most powerful restaurant critic wrote on july 16th that he was done reviewing restaurants. for him the game is up. do you have any idea how many meals out you had in that 12 years? >> let's say between 2,500 and 3,000 meals maybe. is that a lot? i can't tell. >> reporter: sounds like a lot.
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with "the new york times" picking up the tab, for pete wells to eat out with friends, why quit? >> somehow i can keep going and going. >> reporter: doctor's orders. >> my cholesterol had gone out of whack and my blood sugar was in the prediabetic zone. i didn't need anyone to tell me my liver was working hard and needed a rest. the weight was no surprise. everything else was news to me. >> reporter: so it was a sobering wake-up call to think that being a food critic could kill you? >> that was sobering. >> reporter: this is what professional eating looked like for pete wells. >> mm. >> reporter: welcome to semma, a south indian restaurant in greenwich village. number seven on the 2024 "new
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york times" best restaurants in new york city list. vijay kumar is the chef. >> at a place like this, i would try to bring at least three other people, because you could order a whole bunch of food. >> reporter: typically he would visit a restaurant at least three times and try to sample everything on the menu. do you ever feel like the nathan's hot dog eating contest, stuffing yourself with literally dozens of hot dogs? >> it happens in slow motion. the end of the night i feel like i have eaten a mile of hot dogs. >> reporter: what is all this? >> a million different things. >> reporter: trinciti roti shop is a trinidad and tobago style takeout near jfk airport, and number 18 on his 2024 "new york times" best 100 list. wells has been criticized for ranking places like this above fancy michelin-starred temples of fine dining in manhattan.
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do you judge them on the same basis? >> i judge them in terms of how delicious is it. that's at the top, right. and then how well do they do the thing they are trying to do. so that's where you can get, you know, a trinidadian roti shop and jean georges side by side. >> wow. >> reporter: for ewere edoro, owner of ewe's delicious treats, a nigerian storefront in a remote part of brooklyn, and number 99 on this year's best 100 list, recognition was a miracle. >> and my son goes -- >> the image of the guy. >> i really appreciate. > there you are. >> reporter: showman tv chef guy fieri wasn't so thankful when pete wells, ever the wordsmith,
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eviscerated his now defunct times square restaurant in 2012. >> hey, did you try that blue drink? the one that glows like nuclear waste, the watermelon margarita? any idea why it takes like a combination of radiator fluid and formaldehyde? i'd always rather write a positive review. having said that, the negative reviews are often the ones that most people want to read. but where my heart is, is with the discovery, the ones that say, hey, stop what you're doing and put this place on your calendar. >> reporter: what's on his calendar these days is getting healthy. losing the weight he gained, overeating for a living. >> i really hope that all of the chefs who i torched over the years are enjoying this display of kitchen incompetence.
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>> reporter: what's on the menu? salad. >> fire away. tell me everything that's wrong with it. don't be cruel, but be honest. >> reporter: be pete wells? okay. this is really good. >> thank you. it's not, you know, necessarily company food, but -- >> reporter: he is not leaving "the new york times." only his job reviewing restaurants. but the day his last column was in the paper, his colleagues at the food section paid tribute to what it's meant to be pete wells for the last 12 years. >> cheers to pete! >> reporter: his permanent successor hasn't been named yet. >> when i first came to the "times" in 2006, a reporter warned me not to identify myself too heavily with my work. any job at "the times" is a rented tux, she said. it's time to return the tux.
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i have had the trousers let out a few inches, but a tailor can take them in again. as for the stain on the jacket, that's just pork fat. i think it adds character. >> and he is a character. that was martha teicner reporting. "cbs news roundup" will be right
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after 80 years of helping
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people keep their food fresh, tupperware has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. the company pioneered sealed plastic containers, but rival companies offer essentially the same products for a whole lot less. tupperware says it will keep going while it looks for a new owner. vladimir duthiers reports op the band that became part of the language in america. >> it's a tupperware product. >> reporter: tupperware, just the name can evoke kitschy thoughts of women in the 1950s gushing over kitchen products. the truth is, when it was introduced in 1946, the product was game-changing. >> it was a revolutionary product because it worked, and it kept food fresher longer with the vacuum seal. >> reporter: bob keeling is the author of "life of the party."" invented by earl tupper, tupperware wasn't exactly flying off the shelves. so they were removed from stores. >> the one way to buy tupperware is a fun way. >> reporter: and sold where the
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containers could be demonstrated to curious housewives. >> hear that? >> reporter: the revolutionary airtight seal, the tupperware burp. ♪ tupperware really locks it in ♪ >> reporter: was a sales practice spearheaded by divorced mom brownie wise. >> she would put grape juice inside a wohl and seal it up, and then in someone's very nice living room, she'd toss it across the room, and it would fall, and thank goodness it didn't spill open all over the nice carpeting. >> reporter: tupperware parties gave women a toehold in the job market, and the tupperware name became synonymous with food storage products worldwide. its products sold in 70 countries. and has been a mainstay in pop culture. but other less expensive, more easily available store systems have bitten into the upper tupperware's business, ultimately putting the iconic kitchen brand's future in question. >> that was vladimir putin reporting.
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when tupperware first came out, it was selling a three-piece set for 39 cents. now it's about $43. a lot more than a ziploc. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for over, tune in later for "cbs mornings." and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm carissa lawson. ♪ hello and thanks for staying up with us. i'm carissa lawson in new york. here are the top stories on "cbs news roundup." the middle east is on high alert
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as the militant group hezbollah vows retaliation against israel. there is a brewing scandal in north carolina's race for governor with racial and sexual comments being attributed to the gop candidate. and both presidential candidates are campaigning hard into the weekend with the election date countdown clock ticking. the iranian-backed militia group hezbollah is promising revenge against israel for a wave of targeted explosions across lebanon that killed at least 37 people and wounded thousands. and israel thursday released these images saying it struck hundreds of hezbollah rocket launching sites inside lebanon. cbs' imtiaz tyab reports from beirut. >> reporter: we're in beirut's famous late-night district. you can probably hear the music. but these bars, which would normally be full of people are as you can see almost completely empty. this comes at a time when the lebanese military is destroying pagers and any sort of
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suspicious devices and as hezbollah fighters go underground, fearing more attacks. in a televised address, a weary looking hassan nasrallah, the leader of hezbollah, admitted the synchronized pager and walkie-talkie attacks delivered a severe blow to the group. accusing israel of violating all red lines. for two terrifying days, low-tech communication devices, many carried by hezbollah members, exploded simultaneously in towns and cities across lebanon. injuring more than 2900. some so seriously, they lost limbs. and killing at least 37 people, including children. in the address nasrallah also said israeli would not achieve their goal of returning to their northern homes until the violence in gaza and the west
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bank ends. but while he was speaking, the sound of sonic booms from low-flying israeli fighter jets shook buildings across beirut. screams of terror echoed across the streets below. makram rabah is a local analyst. >> this would lead to a kind of slow depleting war for israel. and this would more importantly legitimize hezbollah. >> reporter: the israeli military has said that it had struck around 100 rocket launchers belonging to hezbollah in southern lebanon, while also confirming two of its soldiers were killed in a hezbollah strike along its northern border. a deadly tit for tat that is now in its 11th month. but with hundreds of hezbollah fighters injured, the group's communications networks in complete disarray, and with no major buildup of israeli forces at its borders, the war between israel and hezbollah may not be
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as close as many fear. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, beirut. a major scandal is unfolding in north carolina's race for governor that could have national implications in the key battleground state. there are growing calls for republican candidate mark robinson to quit the race after cnn found comments he allegedly made on a pornographic website. robinson has a history of making comments about women, jewish people, and others. cbs' ed o'keefe has details on his response. >> reporter: we are staying in this race. we are in it to win it, and we know that with your help, we will. >> reporter: but that's in question now. cnn first reported a series of past antisemitic and sexual comments by lieutenants governor mark robinson on at least one pornography website with a user name matching photos of him and his biographical information. in posts dating back to 2008, robinson called himself a black nazi, expressed support for reinstating slavery, recounted secretly watching women shower
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when he was a teenager, and made other lewd comments. he denied it all. >> those are not the words of mark robinson. you know my words. you know my character, and you know that i have been completely transparent in this race and before. >> reporter: but robinson canceled scheduled campaign appearances and didn't show up for a rally for vice presidential candidate j.d. vance. former president donald trump has praised robinson on the campaign trail. >> i think you're better than martin luther king. i think you are martin luther king times two. >> reporter: robinson was given a national platform by speaking at the republican convention, where we caught up with him. >> lieutenant governor, ed o'keefe with cbs news. how you, sir? >> we got run. >> how's your race? >> it's going fantastic. it's going fantastic, yes, sir. >> reporter: recent polls show him trailing democratic candidate josh stein, who said north carolinians already know mark robinson is completely unfit to be governor. members of both parties believe his unpopularity could drag down tump and help vice president harris win battleground north carolina.
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ed o'keefe, cbs news, washington. meanwhile, vice president kamala harris shared the stage with oprah winfrey on thursday night at a campaign event in michigan while in the nation's capital, former president donald trump met with members of the jewish community. cbs' danya bacchus has more. >> reporter: vice president kamala harris and oprah winfrey took center stage for a campaign event in the battleground state of michigan. >> i am here because i care deeply about the future of our country. and i know that all of you do too. >> reporter: organizers say the unite for america event is aimed at showcasing grassroot supporters and highlighting voter registration. harris and former president donald trump are virtually tied in the state. >> what's at stake in terms of fighting against hate and those efforts to divide us. and i do know that i'm in a position to do something about
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it. >> reporter: trump campaigned in washington thursday night, delivering a keynote address to the israeli american council national summit. >> 47 days from now we're going to defeat kamala harris. we're going take back our country, and we're going to quite simply make america great again. right? >> reporter: meanwhile, trump says he plans to visit springfield, ohio, the town shaken by his campaign's debunked claims about haitian immigrants there stealing and eating pets. >> you may never see me again, but that's okay. got to do what you got to do. whatever happened to trump? well, he never got out of springfield. >> reporter: trump has a rally saturday in north carolina. harris has campaign stops planned for friday in swing states georgia and wisconsin. danya bacchus, cbs news. >> cbs news will host the only vice presidential debate between senator j.d. vance and governor tim walz on tuesday, october 1st here in new york. watch our live coverage on cbs and streaming on cbs news 24/7
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and paramount plus. if you were lucky enough to catch the l.a. dodgers game on thursday night, you watched baseball history being made. shohei ohtani became the first player ever to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases in a single season. not only, that he also hit three homers and stole two bases, a record first in a single game. how about that. when "cbs news roundup" continues, the big moments for both presidential campaigns this week with our very own cbs news political director. [female narrator] climate change, vulnerable neighborhoods, threatened ecosystems. our challenges demand we do better, and a tree can be an answer. because a tree can be innovative, it can be unifying, it can be a home. now is the time for trees. let's plant millions of trees,
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that's my son, jarad. at the height of his fame, we lost him to an accidental drug overdose. i'm carmela wallace. i started live free 999 to remove the stigma and normalize conversations around mental health and substance abuse. i want to ensure that we never lose another jarad. go to livefree999.org to learn more. if you need urgent support, text lf999 to 741741. ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm carissa lawson in new york. the presidential election is just 46 days away. vice president harris held a campaign event in michigan on thursday, hosted by oprah winfrey. meanwhile, president trump is
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blaming last weekend's attempt on his life on the president and vice president saying their rhetoric about him is infla inflammatory. for more on the state of the race, we're joined right now by cbs political director fin gomez. let's get right to it. oprah winfrey hosted an event for kamala harris in michigan. what makes michigan a key area for this event specifically, and how could oprah actually help her chances? >> because detroit is in michigan, the battleground state. one of the seven key crucial swing states that could decide this election. and oprah winfrey is oprah winfrey. she is one of those folks that has -- that can go by one name because of the far reach and influence that she has. we did see her endorse vice president harris in chicago at the dnc. and by doing this, and it's a show host, of her talk show than
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ran over decades. but it's really to appeal to key constituency groups in the harris alliance, including women voters, suburban voters, voters of color, and also targets middle class voters. so for the harris people, the harris campaign folks tell me that this is a really big event that they think they can really appeal the a lot of voters and pull them into their camp, carriecar reries carissa. >> the vice presidential debate is just over a week away. how are j.d. vance and tim walz preparing? >> both -- advisers to both campaigns tell me, carissa, that they're in the midst, in the beginning their debate prep sessions, but we do know that governor walz has been working with transportation secretary pete buttigieg. they've been practicing some of -- preparing for debate. we do know that buttigieg, if
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you recall from 2020, is a very strong debater. but it's just a short time away, carissa, and it's going to be one of the most biggest events of this cycle and could possibly be the last debate of this cycle as well. >> high stakes. well, president trump has blamed the president and the vice president for the assassination attempt on his life last weekend, claiming that their messaging is inflammatory. the harris campaign actually changing their messaging after these accusations? >> the harris campaign, carissa, is not engaging. they essentially, what i've been told by those close to the campaign is they have this high road type of strategy of keeping things positive in that effort to contrast between what they believe is the tenor coming, emanating from the trump campaign. so they have not really engaged. and right now, with just 46 days away until the november 5th election, really, the harris campaign is not taking a lot of
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chance. and their strategy is quite simply to keep it safe. >> 46 days will come and go before we know it, election day november 5th. all right, fin gomez, thank you so much for being with us. well, when "cbs news roundup" continues, we'll take you to the battleground state of nevada, taking the pulse of voters over three meals in three different cities. i'm jonathan lawson, here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85 and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's. what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54.
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vaporize sore throat pain. a lot of families live by the golden rule, no politics at the dinner table. but with the presidential election just 46 days away, we sent adriana diaz to restaurants in the battleground state of nevada where she found voters willing to discuss their political views. ♪ >> reporter: spanish settlers called this nevada, meaning snowy. but down on the ground, the state is sizzling hot. just like what's cooking in the smoker. it's the outdoor kitchen behind the award winning brothers barbecue in reno. where the alluring smell of pulled pork pulls people in like these friends. do you always get together and talk politics? >> we do.
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>> yes. >> so it's our lucky day. we found the right table today. what issue is most important to you? >> i'm extremely concerned about the border. >> illegals. they got to go. >> people are coming here seeking asylum. baloney. they're coming here for the freebies. >> when people talk about immigration, they're thinking we're saying we don't want immigrants of any kind, and that's not what people are saying. >> no, no. >> reporter: i took my brisket and macand cheese with me to catch ken lasker with a to-go order. how closely are you watching pthis election? >> very closely. >> reporter: he was the only harris supporter we met at lunch, even though washoe county has historically been split. >> we had a democracy for 200 years. it's clearly being threatened now by trump and the republican party. >> reporter: with bellies full of barbecue, my producer and i hopped on a plane to where two-thirds of nevadans live. >> we're going to las vegas! ♪ viva las vegas ♪
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>> reporter: las vegas in clark county, home to casinos, elvis impersonators, and a vibrant latino community representing more than 20% of the state's electorate. a popular hangout is viva zapata's. rosy martins is originally from new mexico, and appreciates a moscow mule. her husband gary is from portugal. the republicans are concerned about the economy and the border. >> i want it to be secure. i want it to be something that the people will not be in danger when they cross and their kids and their families, and to know who is crossing too. if you're not following the rules, then you don't have nothing to do in this country. >> reporter: above the smoke of sizzling fajitas, we met harris supporter joey herbert. >> i've already taken the day off work. >> reporter: who is making sure nothing gets in the way of his vote. when you're going to sleep at night, what's going through your head?
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>> for me, i think it's the economy. that's what i really like about the current administration there has been nothing but job growth. >> reporter: this table disagrees. food truck owner francisco mara says he's had to raise prices. >> tacos used to be what, $1, $1.50. after the pandemic, they don't go under $3.50 to $4 because the meat is expensive. >> reporter: he is leaning towards trump, but he says both candidates talk a big game when courting latinos. >> they try to win their votes. but do they really deliver? >> reporter: you feel there are promises that aren't kept? >> yeah, for sure. >> reporter: we turned in early by vegas standards so we could rise with the sun. you can't tell the story of nevada without getting out to the rural, rocky and very republican rest of the state. so we're heading out to nye county for some much needed coffee. much needed. which is served with a smile at our place off highway 160. may i join you?
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>> leanne and stephen shafer were first to arrive and say they can't wait to vote. >> i want someone who is strong, who demands respect and gets the respect. and you can deal with foreign leaders. i think trump is the guy. >> there is so much going on throughout the world in this country as well, but do you remain hopeful about america? >> i tell you, i've never owned a gun in my life, and i own four of them now. >> reporter: really? >> yes. i fear for our country. >> i'm of asian descent, and this could be the possibility to have first asian president in office. >> reporter: neil plans to vote for the first time since 2008. >> i try to vote when somebody has the same kind of approach as me. >> reporter: so you didn't see that in biden? >> no. >> reporter: you don't see that in trump? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: is it nevada or nevada? >> nevada. >> reporter: at the next table over, we met business owners in telecom, real estate and mortgage lending. >> everything has gone up. everybody feels it at the grocery store, at the gas pumps,
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and yes, i do contribute that to biden. >> i think they keep thinking if they keep putting money towards something, it's going fix the problem. it's the same if you have an old house, oh, let's keep fixing it and fixing it. sometimes the solution is you got to tear it down and rebuild. >> reporter: and get a mortgage from you. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. a 2 or 3 k. the beard that doesn't itch. and you're using king c. gillette on that thing? king c. gillette? look! this beard trimmer pro's got 40 length settings and this beard oil's one of gq's best beard conditioner for soft, no-itch facial hair. the best a man can get... is king c. gillette. (granddaughter laughing) when pain freezes you in your tracks... ...vapofreeze your pain away. penetrating pain relief... ...with vicks vapors. (granddaughter laughing) vapofreeze your pain away. now at walmart. (♪♪) “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like life was moving on without me. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.”
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millions of americans go to the gym to build their muscles. but what if you could buy artificial muscles in a store. scientists working on that. tina kraus reports. >> reporter: robot engineers strive for their creations to mimic human movements, and scientists say they're a step closer to hitting the mortal mark with this new contraption. a robotic leg that runs not on electronic motors but artificial muscles. researchers in switzerland are using plastic bags filled with oil and covered by black conductive electrodes on the sides. when an electric charge is applied, electrodes move towards each other, simulating muscle movements. >> just like our biceps and triceps. they work against each other. if the biceps contract, the tricep stretches, and the other way around, the bicep stretches when the tricep contracts.
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>> reporter: artificial muscles are more energy efficient than robots that depend on motor, and the technology allows robots to jump high and move quickly without the need for complex sensors thinking naturally leads to new inventions in terms of anthropro morphic hands. >> reporter: researchers are deployed to quake zones and other disaster sites to maneuver tough terrain. for now, with testing still in its early stages, they're proud to have a leg up in the race to
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tina zimmerman: five years ago, i reconnected with my estranged father, and that's just something i never ever thought could happen. but when he became a believer, he just had this insatiable appetite to learn the bible, and he began to watch dr. stanley. dr. stanley: god always blesses obedience without an exception. tina: he teaches in a way that it just makes sense, and i feel like that's the way our heavenly father
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would teach us.
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it's friday, september 20th. this is "cbs news mornings." under fire. north carolina's governor's race jolted by allegations against a it's friday, september 20th. this is "cbs news mornings." under fire. north carolina's governor's race jolted by allegations against a republican candidate. what he's accused of writing on a porn website and how he's responding. star power. kamala harris joins forces with oprah winfrey in a star-studded

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