tv CBS News Sunday Morning CBS January 12, 2025 7:00am-8:30am PST
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♪ good morning. i'm jane pauley and this is "sunday morning." we'll start off today with the latest on those devastating california fires. residents of some los angeles neighborhoods are beginning to return home to see what, if anything, remains. even as threatening new flare-ups continue. we will have reports from jonathan vigliotti and our lee cowan. and then one week from tomorrow donald trump assumes the presidency for the second time. poised to take the nation's economic policies in a very different direction. but just where will those
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policies take us? one person with some informed opinions, very informed opinions, is jamie dimon, ceo of one of the world's largest and most powerful banks. he shares some of those views with lesley stahl. >> did you say, when i grow up i want to be banker? >> no. >> reporter: no? his company, jpmorgan chase, has $10 trillion a day and banks people, industries and countries. we have unbelievable numbers of billionaires come up. billionaires. what's out of whack here? >> you have to be careful to say what's out of whack. >> reporter: jamie dimon ahead on "sunday morning." brooke shields, whose modeling career famously began when she was just a baby, has been in the spotlight nearly her entire life. with her 60th birthday
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approaching, being allowed to age gracefully so very much on her mind. she'll tell all to our faith salie. >> we all are these human beings that are just want to feel good about ourselves. >> reporter: as a young model, brooke shields helped define just how we view beauty. now, at age 59, she is locking to redefine the way we see middle aged woman. >> there is a sex appeal and then wrinkle cream. like, there is no in between. >> reporter: the age and wisdom of brooke shields later on "sunday morning." seth doane will be taking us on an excursion inside an exclusive, some would say secret passageway built by one of it's hi's richest and powerful families 500 years ago. >> reporter: it's a secret
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corridor that runs through the heart of this tuscan city. you might have seen pictures of florence and not even realized where the corridor is or that you are looking at the corridor. >> true. it's a hidden gem. that's why it's so fascinating for people. >> reporter: this renaissance era vip skyway has just reopened to the public and we'll get to peek inside. that's coming up this "sunday morning." mo rocca hits the road for a look at congestion pricing. the first in the nation gridlock relief plan that made its debut this past week in new york city. martha teichner catches up with america's top diplomat, outgoing secretary of state antony blinken. plus, nancy giles with versatile stage and screen actor wendell pierce now starring in the cbs show "elsbeth." and more this sunday morning for the 12th of january, 2025.
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taken such a toll across los angeles. jonathan vigliotti has the latest. >> reporter: the smoke first appeared in the pacific palisades neighborhood west of downtown los angeles around 10:30 a.m. tuesday morning. in just 20 minutes, a flicker exploded into a 200-acre monster. fanned by 80-mile-per-hour winds and fueled by bone-dry vegetation. then, came panic. >> there is a lot of fire right there. that's why we -- >> reporter: when our team arrived in the palisades an hour later, there was already gridlock in the streets. we watched as the homes residents fled were quickly engulfed. one after another after another. >> this entire mountainside is covered in flames. the wind pushing them up to 50 feet into the sky. >> reporter: all week long, the same scene repeated itself, two
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other large plays blazes erupted. the itay in altadena and the hurst fire in sylmar along with several smaller brush fires, placing los angeles under siege. by last night, the scope of the disaster became shockingly clear. at least 16 deaths. more than 12,000 homes and structures destroyed and nearly 40,000 acres burned. an area larger than the entire city of san francisco. the fires are still uncontained with tens of thousands of people still under evacuation warnings. on thursday, in the pacific palisades, we met laura pistotnik and her partner jeffrey swartz, as they first discovered their home destroyed. >> i can't even put this into words. i'm just sick and numb. that's the two words i will say. >> reporter: as the fire still rages, angelenos are left asking how and why.
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while we still don't know the cause of the fires, the conditions were perfect. southern california's annual santa ana winds at their mightiest paired with drought in l.a. county. there has been less than an inch of rain since last july. and all this in areas where nature with its dry brush and vegetation abuts civilization. this is known as a wild and urban interface. what is that? >> it's where the houses meet the habitat. >> reporter: it's that simple? >> that's it. that's it. >> reporter: that's where the threat exists? >> absolutely. >> reporter: travis longcore is adjunct professor of environment and sustainability at ucla. he says whenever humans and an ecosystem like the palisades meet the risk amplifies. >> so if you think about where the palisades fire started in palisades highlands, the fact that there is a road up there that creates the access for people that gives you the spark, that then gets you the fire. >> reporter: the fire in the palisades exploded so quickly, that there was a common refrain.
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>> there is not a single firefighter on the street. >> reporter: crews were stretched thin and officials are facing criticism for their response. but reinforcements have since arrived. more fire crews from out of state, canada and mexico are here, and the national guard has been activated in part to help stop looting. and it's all eerily familiar from lahaina in maui to paradise in northern california. a distraught public and entire tunes singed off the map. and still while containment is growing, the dangerous santa ana winds returning on monday. los angeles, glamorous home of the nation's entertainment elite and wildfire capital of the west, will now have to envision a new, more resilient path forward in our climate changing world.
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>> reporter: were you surprised that donald trump won the election? >> no. >> reporter: why do you think he won? >> people were angry at the, what they call the state, you know, the swamp. ineffective government that people wanted to kind of more pro-growth and pro busy policies that they didn't want to be lectured to on social policies continuously. i think it's the lecturing part of it, the social superiority, my way or the highway. i traveled around the country. i felt it wherever i went. >> reporter: there is a sense of gloom out there about the economy. do you understand that? >> i do understand that. i think there are a lot of legitimate concerns that americans have. for example, ineffective government. they are angry about it. they are angry about immigration. there are people legitimate issues. >> reporter: despite lower unemployment, a calming of inflation and a soaring stock market, even he says he is, quote, cautiously pessimistic about the economy.
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and as chairman and ceo of the largest bank in america, it matters what jamie dimon has to say about things. listen to him on bitcoin. you have called bitcoin a ponzi scheme. you said that it's as useless as a pet rock. what do you think? >> some digital currency at one point. i am not against crypto. bitcoin is itself has no intrinsic value. it's used heavily by sex traffickers, money launderers, ransomware. so i just don't feel great about bitcoin. i applaud your ability to want to buy or sell it. i think you have the right to smoke, but i don't think you should smoke. >> reporter: since he took charge of the bank 20 years ago, the company has doubled its number of employees to 320,000 and grown the assets by nearly $3 trillion. that probably would surprise his grandparents, who came to the u.s. with little money from greece in the early 1900s.
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>> the neighborhood was like this block. >> reporter: he took us to his old middle class neighborhood in queens, new york. which is your window? >> on the top. >> reporter: penthouse? >> rental, i think. that rn could up there. >> reporter: he shared one bedroom with his two brothers and they played outside on the monkey bars. >> i broke my arm on those monkey bars over there. >> reporter: did you dream growing up in a million years that you would be running one of the biggest banks in the world? >> no. my dad was a stockbroker. i was conscious of that part of the world. i never met a ceo this will until i pass in charge. >> reporter: he grew up to be one of the samoas successful ceos in the country, processing $10 trillion day. his bank is thriving and healthy, but dimon, now 68, has had two major health scares. the first was throat cancer a decade ago. you are now, can we say, cured? >> yes.
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remission, yeah. i know a little bit more, people with have been told they have cancer know more than other people, it's staring you in the face and may happen. you are a little more deliberate, more thoughtful. you don't want to have regrets. >> reporter: you also had a heart scare? >> yeah. >> reporter: it happened at the beginning of covid in march 2020. >> my heart, i just, i mean, the pain was extraordinary. i thought i -- >> reporter: was it a heart attack? >> aortic dissection. i had a tear in the aorta here. >> reporter: did they tell you might not make? >> yes. >> reporter: going in for surgery, you note, at least you think in your mind, i lived the life i should have lived so far? >> yeah, not enough of it, but yeah. >> reporter: how long were you on the table? >> seven or eight hours. >> reporter: were you surprised when you woke up? >> the doctor told me i was one of the only people he ever saw wake up immediately after surgery like that.
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i waved to my kids. they had been sitting there the whole time. and then i was back to sleep. in the icu for -- waking up in ecu, when you are a man who never had to rely on other people and all of a sudden you have tubes everywhere and you can't do anything yourself, you got tubes in your heart and tubes in your lungs and jugular. >> reporter: he was in the hospital for a week, back at work a month later and soon traveling the world, we he saws he says 40% of his time. we met him in the executive suite on the 43rd floor of the bank's manhattan headquarters. >> you might be able to see the actual building i walked by in jackson heights, queens. >> reporter: he sees where he grew up and to the left the twice as high dazzling new jpmorgan headquarters going up next door. it will be one of the biggest office buildings in new york.
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i cannot see the top. >> this building much taller than the empire state building. equal to the freedom tower. >> reporter: with all the big things he deals with, it's interesting one of the things he is most proud of is opening branches in lower income and underserved communities around the country like this one in harlem. >> first ever community manager. >> we learned a lot from you. >> yes, you did. >> they took them in. they visit their money. the documentation is hard to do. one of the community branches, a guy said he bought a home he lived in for 30 years. he said there is no way he could have got that mortgage if one of the officers didn't call every day for months, taking him through it, making him feel comfortable, getting the forms. got our homeowners grant and it works. >> celebrating five years in harlem this morning. >> reporter: this isn't a not-for-profit. these local branches make money for the bank. but what about the other end of
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the spectrum? a lot of americans have gotten very rich. they have gotten filthy rich. we have had unbelievable numbers of billionaires cup. billionaires. why? what's out of whack here? >> you have to be careful to say what's out of whack. you want a healthy economy. that's all citizens. you want to help all americans, grow the economy. you can wail at the moon. that's not going to grow the economy. if there are unfair things, they should be fixed. >> reporter: i am not hearing you say there is something wrong here, that there are these billionaires growing like poppy. i mean, what is it? tas laws? >> if i was king for a day, i would probably change a bunch of the tax laws, too, which i am not going to give you specifics on. it won't reduce it as much as you think it see should be reduced. >> reporter: no. but i am interested that you are not saying this is wrong. this is not working. >> i think the wrong part is
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that the bottom 30% didn't do better, not that the top 0.1% did so well. >> reporter: what's wrong with saying that? >> they may be unrelated. what we need to do to fix it for everybody -- >> reporter: but you haven't said what's wrong at the other end. >> i don't know what's wrong at the other end. >> reporter: dimon himself is a billionaire. we asked about the richest person in the world, elon musk. he is the man of the hour. what's going on there? >> he is clearly an extraordinary talent. i mean, to look at tesla and spacex and -- you know, well, we should make government more efficient. is this the way to do it? i don't know. do i want them to succeed? asolutely. >> reporter: it's odd to have a man who is so wealthy with so many important companies that matter to our economy and even to our national security now sort of insinuating that he can influence right-wing politics in europe. doesn't sound right.
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>> i am not responsible for his behavior. let him do it. when you say it's odd, it's not that odd. it's going on in the country for a long time, go back to lindbergh, to the more interfering in, you know, atlantic politics than you think. >> reporter: are you distressed by it? >> no. >> reporter: take it in stride. >> take it in stride. >> reporter: someone called him an american oligarch. >> that's name-calling. >> reporter: jamie dimon has been in banking more than 40 years, which leads to question when is jamie going to retire? >> less than five years. when you say retire, i am not going to retire like that. i may write a book. i may teach. i may work with my kids if they want. i would never pressure them to work with me. >> reporter: i didn't hear you say i might become chairman and, you know, just give up the ceo part. >> that's likely. that's likely to happen. again, that is up to the board, not up to me. but if it makes sense, i may be
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chairman a couple years. >> reporter: do you know who your successor is? >> no. >> reporter: you must love your job? >> yeah, i do. i love my job. i love what it does. i like our people. it motivates me, like a lot of people, by friday i am exhausted, i want to go home, have a martini and go to sleep. but i do love my job. it's great to have a purpose in life and to paint your picasso. aveeno introduces new daily moisturizing cream. it's clinically proven to moisturize dry skin for 48 hours. and instantly strengthen skin's barrier. for softer, smoother skin. aveeno. the power of oat for sensitive skin. (woman) purina one true instinct unlocked her true instincts. from day one, it's high-protein nutrition with real meat #1, aveeno. supporting her healthy energy and strong muscles. and the life she was born to live. (vo) purina one true instinct. a difference from day one. ♪today my friend you did it, you did it♪ pursue a better you with centrum. ♪♪
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secret of the italian renaissance. some 500 years in the making. >>. >> reporter: in ron howard's film inferno, tom hanks uses it as an escape route. the helps them evade police in the center of florence, emerging into the uffizi gallery. this passageway was a world war ii escape path in roberto rossellini's 1946 film "psisa" and has been a fascination long before the advent of film. it dates back to the renaissance. this is a lot of fuss over a hallway. >> this is a very special hallway. >> reporter: eike schmidt met us in this very special hallway which was closed in 2016 for repairs and fire code updates.
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>> you are the first to shoot in here. >> reporter: we visited in march last year when it was still under renovation and when schmidt was still director of florence's uffizi gallery, which manages the vasari corridor and reopened it in december. >> that was a daily pedestrian commute of the grand dukes for several centuries. >> reporter: it was built in 1565 for the powerful cosimo de medici and his family. >> nowadays we have skyways in houston, especially in minneapolis, for climatic reasons. back then it was unique. >> reporter: and constructed, let's call them practical reasons. >> the medici moved backwards and forward. no one knew where they were. the vasari corridor served to listen people on the street. there was no technological surveillance back then. but opening the windows even today you hear every single word
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being spoken on the street. >> reporter: this was about convenience, it was about safety for the medici, it was about security? >> absolutely. >> reporter: the skyway snakes for more than half a mile through florence, stretching from the uffizi, then the seat of government, above the streets across the river past the boboli gardens to palazzo pitti. >> it was a long hallway which connects to the most important buildings in florence. but originally it didn't go that far. it ended in the boboli gardens, and that changed with ferdinando de medici, who connected it with the pity palace, which became the new home of the medici family after they had acquired it. >> reporter: what does the reopening meaning? >> it means a lot of emails and a lot of requests. >> reporter: elaine ruffolo is an art historian to does tours o florence. what is the fascination? >> the fascination is because
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people like to enter a space that is exclusive, they feel like it's secret. how do you build a kilometer longcore dor through the heart of florence in five months? hots off to giorgio vasari, the architect. there is big money behind it. it was medici money. medici ducal money. >> reporter: who were the medici? >> the medici only on the scene as early as the mid 13th century. like so many other families that are pouring into florence to try to make some money after this period of the middle ages. they began as merchants, but then they became bankers. and the medici got their hands on the papal bank account. from then on it was an explosion of wealth. >> reporter: we met ruffalo on the banks of the arno river. >> giorgio vasari built this in 1565 in five months. one reason he was able to to so, he was using pre-existing buildings to help carry the
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vasari corridor. if you look up this way, you can see that there is a series of arches at one time was the old fish market. then he turns left at the top of the ponte vecchio, uses the oldest bridge in florence. >> reporter: the aptly named ponte vecchio or old bridge was built in 1345. today it's home to jewelers and goldsmiths. another legacy of the medici. >> this bridge originally was a place where they would selfish and meat and tanners and anything you could imagine like a medieval souk almost. >> reporter: why the change? >> because when the medici finished their corridor, it was ferdinando de medici in 1593 who didn't want the smell of all that fish and meat as he was making his way to the palazzo pitti. >> reporter: pesky vendors removed, a fancy skyway installed for vips. it all sounds pretty familiar. >> above the medici are walking over your heads and you are not even aware of it.
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>> in our town, it helped a lot. >> reporter: it's been a few years since wendell pierce attended a drama class at the julliard school in manhattan. >> shakespeare. >> reporter: 40 years, to be exact. >> i remember it well. high windows and gray floors. >> lucas johnson. >> reporter: he said that nothing in his career bring as much anxiety as strange here. >> the anxiety of, you know am i doing the right thing? i am going to an unknown world. will i have what it takes to be a working actor? and so i was reminded looking in that class, it was very touching to see the young people at a point in the journey that i recall with fondness and with a lot of anxiety, too. i knew i was exactly where i wanted to be. >> reporter: and it's where he belongs. at 61, pierce is among the most
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prolific and respected actors his generation with standup roles in "the wire," "treme," "raising kanan," "selma" and now the quirky cbs drama "elsbeth." >> you are a good man. >> officers, please remove her things. >> reporter: later this year, he will play editor-in-chief perry white in the newest "super mario bros. movie." he will also take on a fellow at the shakespeare theater company in washington, d.c. . >> we were tipped off. >> reporter: no matter the part, pierce brings his own humanity to it. >> in every role, there is a little part of wendell in it. at the end of the run, i turn the lights down low in the dressing room and i see the silhouette in the mirror and i have a good cry and say goodbye, right? i say, man, you taught me so much about myself. i have learned so much from you. i hope to see you again and i
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know there will be times where i will see you again. >> reporter: that sense of self-discovery began in his hometown of new orleans and the historical black neighborhood of pontchartrain park. >> it was like a black mayberry. the first black mayor came out of there. the first black d.a., lawyers, doctors, postal workers, maintenance men. that was the community i grew in. it was absolutely wonderful and it was totally destroyed by katrina. we were part of the deepest flooding. we brought it back. now we are on the national register of historic places. >> reporter: his mother, althea, was a beloved schoolteacher. >> she taught everybody in the neighborhood. i just remember how everywhere i went, i knew that i had to live up to being her son. >> reporter: and your father, amos pierce jr., was a world war ii vet. >> he was army unit attached to the third marines in the invasion of saipan.
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and after that his unit received medals of come on dags. because he was there in the black unit, officers didn't believe him when he told h he said, listen, i think we received medals and it was a woman who said, yeah, right, you. you didn't receive anything wrichlt it would take 65 years for the injustice to be corrected. >> we gave him his medals on veterans day 2010. i tell that story to say that he was a man who loved his country even when the country didn't love him back. and even after receiving the medals, it was a great pride. but he didn't let the anger destroy him. that was a great lesson. >> reporter: pierce sees his own life as a series of lessons. >> tried to look casual like you know what you are doing. >> good. >> reporter: acting is part of that journey. >> every audition for me is an opening and closing night. you get to perform, this is what
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i would do with this material. you do whatever you like from this point on. you then you leave the room. >> reporter: he says his best work, be it as detective more land on "the wire" -- >> wasn't about guns. so much as knowing what to do with your hands. >> reporter: or in "malcolm x" comes from the writing. >> the really good material is the thing that will define it, you know? and make it classic. something that speaks to people across time and place to matter where you are, speaks to people years from now. >> reporter: a career highlight in 2022. >> 34 years into this firm and now i can't pay my insurance. >> reporter: when pierce became the first black actor to play willy loman on broadway, in arthur miller's "death of a salesman." why do you think it took so long? >> the ignorance of biases and bigotry and when people just
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don't have the ability to see others' humanity. it's something that people very conscious of at times, and then sometimes they are not very conscious of it. >> reporter: and it's pierce's own compassion that draws people to him. like kerry breaston, his co-star on "elsbeth." >> you know, this kind of connection isn't always guaranteed. and we got it here. i'm grateful for it. >> reporter: and it's also what his fellow julliard classmate bradley whitford recalled when "the west wing" and "get out" actor surprised pierce with message during our interview. >> wendell, i miss you. i love you. i am so proud of you not only for the great actor that you are and the dear friend, but what an amazing citizen you are. i love you. bye. >> that was, that's very special.
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brad and i were a part of a very special group here at julliard, our class, you know. when you go through the fire together, you are connected forever. that's a very good surprise. >> reporter: oh! >> wow, okay. >> reporter: yeah. >> you got me. >> now, that's jazz. that's the improvisation. that's genius. and we invented that. >> reporter: you said, i want to make my mark, and do you think that you have? and what is that mark? what do you want to leave for people? >> i was afraid i may not have the opportunity to leave my mark, that my best days were behind me. i had that fear, and i tapped into that fear when i did "death of a salesman." and while i still have the fear,
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unveiled a much talked about anti-gridlock traffic program, which, if it makes it here could be coming soon to a city near you as mo rocca explains. >> reporter: new york traffic. excuse me, i'm walking here! i'm walking here! you have heard that line before. >> i'm walking here! >> reporter: but by some measures, new york's traffic is more congested than it's ever been. enter congestion pricing. since last sunday, during most hours cars crossing into the lower half of manhattan are charged $9. there is a higher toll for trucks. 1,400 cameras keep tabs on the roughly 150,000 commuters entering the zone by car. >> if we can just impact on a proportion of those people, we can make a difference and make it a better place for everyone. >> reporter: janno lieber heads the mta, the metropolitan
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transportation authority. it runs new york's sprawling subway, bus and commuter rail systems. >> we are wasting a ton of money, billions of dollars, having people stuck in traffic. >> reporter: the haul from congestion pricing will go largely to the mta to improve mass transit. >> that means we are going to raise somewhere between $500 million and $800 million a year. >> reporter: the pricing idea began in 1952 and gained traction in the early 2000s. but there have been a lot of bumps in the road. >> congestion pricing now! >> reporter: and there were lawsuits and protests for and against. >> no more tax! >> reporter: new jersey drivers were none too happy. they already pay more than $15 in bridge and tunnel tolls to get into the city. singapore began congestion pricing in 1975.
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stockholm in 2006. but new york based its plan on london's. opponents in new york say this is just a cash grab, another tax that will hurt mainly working people. how long have you been driving cab in new york? >> over 40 years. >> reporter: john mcdonagh is also a playwright and radio host and not a fan of the plan. >> it will not reduce congestion here. the streets of new york, we have bus lane one side, a bike line on the other, concrete barriers. so ten cars gives you congestion. but the money is go to go to improve public transport and that helps everybody. >> it does? we had a woman that was burned on the subway. we had people being pushed on to the tracks. there is robberies. if you take the subway in new york, jumping the turnstiles is an olympic sport. >> reporter: it's called turnstile jumping, or more politely, fare evasion. and the mta projects it will lose $800 million a year because of it.
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around the same figure congestion pricing may bring in. >> 47% of people taking the bus aren't paying at this point. >> people quit paying on the bus fares, et cetera. the mta has installed cameras so that they can catch people. they are providing police, even the national guard is in our system to make sure that people pay their fare. >> reporter: kathy wylde is president of the partnership for new york city, which mobilizes business leaders to help the think thrive. she is a long-time advocate for congestion pricing, and has advice for other american cities. >> you have to explain the benefits clearly. you have to have transit options in most cases. otherwise, it's just another tax because if somebody has no choice, they are going to resist. >> reporter: other cities maybe have to work on that first? >> the lesson from london, they put in 200 new bus routes before they turned on congestion
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pricing. and that was how they got the public to accept it. they had a choice. >> reporter: it's hard to tell how it's working after a week. but -- >> we are excited that in just a few days of congestion pricing, we are seeing a significant reduction in traffic already. >> reporter: yet the battle may not be over in new york. among its opponents, once and future president donald trump. kathy wylde isn't worried though. >> president trump has property in new york. he, i am sure, has been stuck in traffic more than a few times here, and i think having new york be a more productive city, i think he will appreciate it.
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passion for education. say it louder. for science teacher clay morton, that guiding light was walt manger. >> there was nothing he wouldn't to for his students. he is a hell of an pa, you know? there is my parents and there is walt. >> reporter: walt was clay's geology professor in college. he says they state close for a while, but eventually lost touch. until a few years ago, when clay learned his old prof had alzheimer's. the thought of all that genius andendleness going to waste was more than he could bear, so he set out to save as much of his brilliance as possible. the plan was to meet monthly here at the high school where clay teaches in fayetteville, arkansas. >> he doesn't remember where my room is, what we talked about last time, but he knows we do this. >> reporter: what they do is look at walt's old geology slides.
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>> look how flat it is. >> reporter: in the beginning, walt could explain each picture in great detail and clay would take notes. >> i remember you talking about this in general geology. you explained why these people would about build these structures way up in the mountains. >> yes. >> reporter: but now, three years on -- >> who took that picture? >> reporter: he doesn't remember taking most of them. >> these are really nice pictures. whoever took these, yeah. >> it's hard to see him. still it's the best week of the month. >> reporter: when you get to spend time with him? >> yeah, because he is still walt. he still laughs. he is still funny. he still is willing to help you do anything. yeah. i can't even imagine whether i would be without walt. >> reporter: which is why clay plans to continue these sessions as long as walt is able and why he will always end each one with same words of gratitude. >> almost everything i learned about teaching was from you.
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>> oh, well, thank you. >> reporter: and although walt will soon forget that compliment, clay says that's actually fine by him. >> walter, it's nice to tell it to him over and over again. >> oh. >> reporter: walt and clay. rock stars of compassion. >> you done good. dupixent helps people with asthma breathe better in as little as 2 weeks. so this is better. that too. dupixent is an add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma. it works with your asthma medicine to help improve lung function. dupixent is not for sudden breathing problems and doesn't replace a rescue inhaler. it's proven to help prevent asthma attacks. severe allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for face, mouth, tongue or throat swelling, wheezing or trouble breathing. tell your doctor right away of signs of inflamed blood vessels like rash, chest pain, worsening shortness of breath, tingling or numbness in limbs. tell your doctor of new or worsening joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection.
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but what if we didn't quit right after starting? or 'cause it's raining or something? [notification chime] what if we had some extra motivation? ♪ “follow me” by special interest ♪ this year, what if a little bit [notification chime] of help on our wrists... [chime] siri: goal achieved. ...could help us quit, quitting? ♪ hey, it doesn't scare him away. it brings him to the top where i
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can spear him. >> i'll spear you. >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs, and here again is jane pauley. >> brooke shields was just 14 years old when she starred in the film "the blue lagoon." she has been in front of a camera nearly all her life, and with a milestone birthday on the horizon, she tells faith salie why she is inspired to write her own script. >> kids will be like, oh, golden globe night. get the bottle of wine from mom. get the tequila. >> this is the first time i have ever won anything as an actor. >> reporter: last sunday, demi moore accepted her first major acting award at the golden globes. watching from home was brooke shields. >> it's so interesting. these awards shows, right, they can be torturous. if you sit there and go, like, why am i not valeant to get
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that, whatever. >> reporter: you felt that? >> my entire life. >> none of the other men like me. don't you like me? >> reporter: it can be surprising to hear that a veteran actress like shields yearns for acceptance. turns out she is totally human. >> i was listening to demi, we aren't the ones that got awards. i got people's choice awards. like, the people loved me, you know? >> reporter: you get the people's choice awards but you wanted the emmy, the oscar? >> you wanted to be a part of the group, the cool kids. that's where the little insecure girl comes out. >> reporter: at this point in her career of six decades, the comedian has earned the right to laugh at herself. >> oh! >> hey! >> oh, oh, oh. >> how old are you? >> i am 59. >> reporter: and how old do you feel? >> i feel 38. i definitely feel a youthfulness that i didn't feel in my younger years.
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>> reporter: she started modeling while wearing diapers. later, she turned heads wearing calvin klein jeans. >> you want to know what comes between me and my calvins? nothing. >> reporter: shields was expected to sell products and say her lines all while looking gorgeous. she delivered. >> it was a once in a lifetime thing, david. >> reporter: as she approaches 60, she found a cultural script she is powerfully rejecting. what kind of story do you think our society tells women about aging? >> by the time you get to 50, they have completely, you know, written you off. >> reporter: you are done? >> you are out to pasture. society says, oh, if you are not the hot 20 something at the bar, you're an old lady. there is this whole demo in the middle that gets just over, like overlooked. >> reporter: it's those
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overlooked women whom shields wrote her fourth book. "brooke shields is not allowed to get old." who says that? >> when you are someone that has been noted for looking at certain way, by virtue of just growing older you become a disappointment in a way. i have watched people get sort of personally affronted that i dare to be 60. >> reporter: what do you say to them? >> i sort of feel bad for them. i am a part of the problem because i was that symbol, maybe unwittingly, but i didn't set out to do that. >> reporter: nearly 44 years after being named the face of a decade, shields hopes to be a voice for her generation, empowering women by sharing her personal and at times vulnerable experiences. you say you know this will make headlines, and you reveal this story in which a doctor performed a surgery on you that
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you didn't consent to? >> yeah. >> reporter: what happened? >> i was asked by my gynecologist if i experienced discomfort, and i said yes. >> reporter: in the late 2000s, shields went to a surgeon to help reduce libya discomfort. but after the operation she found out he performed an extra procedure. an unwanted vaginal rejuvenation. >> he literally looked at me and said, like, i tightened you up a bit. i was like, what? he just sort of was like boasting that he threw in a little bonus for me. and i was in such shock that i just -- i was -- i became numb. i didn't even know what to do. >> reporter: what did you say? >> i didn't say it. i didn't say a thing. because it sounded like he wanted me to thank him. >> reporter: you didn't say anything then? >> i didn't say anything then and this is the first time i have said anything.
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>> reporter: that so-called bonus surgery has had lasting side effects. the actress and model says sex can be painful. >> i feel outrage. and i am not you. >> and i, this was, you know, a long time ago. we didn't know what we could fight or complain, and to be honest i finally had a life and kids and it was, like, dear god, i don't want that kind of attention. >> reporter: why are you saying something now? >> because i daughters and there is no shame around it. the more we have those conversations with them, conversations i never had, the more progress i think we will have as women. >> can we expect you back? >> i would love it. >> reporter: shields is looking to make progress in other ways, too. in may, she was elected president of actors' equity association. the union representing 51,000 actors and stage managers around the country. >> on with the party. >> reporter: as a five-time broadway star, she felt a
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responsibility to give back to a community that's embraced her. she has already taken her fight to washington for more funding and to change tax policy. how has it been going so far? >> it's been a learning curve. trial by fire. i have never gone on the hill and met with congressmen and senators and, you know, producers need to take care of the people that bleed for them on a daily basis. >> reporter: besides a union boss, shields is now a ceo. >> first up, commence. two and one instant shampoo. >> reporter: she found the beauty brand commence after hearing concerns from aging women about their hair. >> they have felt overlooked. and that's just the truth. they are not being marketed to. >> reporter: what has been the hardest part of being a ceo? >> money raising. keeping the money flowing because you have to put it right back into the company. and nobody's getting salaries
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yet. so at least i'm not. >> reporter: don't ask brooke shields if she is ready to slow down. age has brought wisdom, and she is just getting started. >> you are going to be 60 years old. i am still here. i feel like i am at the beginning of a new really exciting stage. the more confident you get, isn't it interesting, the more opportunity you get. yet, you couldn't have arrived at said confidence without going through all the time to get here. known for creating memories. no one wants to be known for cancer, but a treatment can be. keytruda is known to treat cancer. fda-approved for 17 types of cancer, including certain early-stage and advanced cancers. one of those cancers is a kind of bladder and urinary tract cancer called advanced urothelial cancer.
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keytruda may be used with the medicine enfortumab vedotin in adults when your bladder or urinary tract cancer has spread or cannot be removed by surgery. keytruda can cause your immune system to attack healthy parts of your body during or after treatment. this may be severe and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you have cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, diarrhea, severe stomach pain, severe nausea or vomiting, headache, light sensitivity, eye problems, irregular heartbeat, extreme tiredness, constipation, dizziness or fainting, changes in appetite, thirst, or urine, confusion, memory problems, persistent or severe muscle pain or weakness, muscle cramps, fever, rash, itching, or flushing. there may be other side effects. tell your doctor about all medical conditions, including immune system problems, such as crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, or lupus, if you've had or plan to have an organ, tissue, or stem cell transplant, received chest radiation, or have a nervous system condition, such as myasthenia gravis or guillain-barré syndrome. keytruda is an immunotherapy and is also being studied in hundreds of clinical trials exploring ways to treat even more types of cancer. it's tru.
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keytruda from merck. see all the types of cancer keytruda is known for at keytruda.com, and ask your doctor if keytruda could be right for you. some people just know they could save hundreds on car insurance by checking allstate first. okay, let's get going. can everybody see that? like you know to check your desktop first, before sharing your screen. ahh..that is not. uhh, oh no. no no no. i don't know how that got in there. no. that, uhh. yeah, checking first is smart. okay, uhh. everybody get out. so check allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds. you're in good hands with allstate. this weekend southern california is in a state of shock. grappling with damage and devastation after fires that almost randomly ravaged neighborhoods from the pacific palisades to pasadena. here is lee cowan.
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>> we have a potential for structures being threatened. >> reporter: first it was one. then two. the two became three. and then four and five, and on and on it went. fires burning from the mountains to the ocean. sparks rode the hot breath of the santa ana winds across l.a. county. what some described as a hurricane without the rain. >> my heart is in my throat. pray. that doesn't stop this wind. >> reporter: terrible choices had to be made in an instant. stay or run, what to take, what to leave. what about elderly neighbors, pets, and livestock? and then there is us. the relative lucky ones who are looking in from the outside. from the safe side of the fire lines. left to wonder about our friends and our families. >> oh, i am at the end of the hose. >> reporter: my cbs news colleague carter evans was in
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the heart of the played fire. not reporting the store. >> reporter:. he was the story, saving his own house as well as others. >> asking for help because he couldn't get over the gate. >> reporter: this is what my cousin saw when he was evacuating his home. >> there is the drop. >> reporter: and this is what another dear friend of ours saw when they returned to theirs. will they rebuild? that's hard to say. their neighborhood is no longer the place it was. all the things that make up a community, schools, doctors offices, nursing homes, barbershops, grocery stores, gas stations, rec centers, parks, neighborhoods need that kind of infrastructure, and everywhere you look it's all gone. places residents count on for prayer and counseling during moments of grief like this, like the altadena community church, the al taqwa mosque and this pasadena synagogue, they all
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seemed forsaken. there is so much loss that many don't realize what's gone until they need it. can you think of a place more useful during a massive cleanup than the local hardware store? they are gone, too. of course, this is also home to those we know from stage and screen. people like billy crystal, eugene levy, ricki lake, mandy moore, paris hilton. fame didn't block the flames from their homes, either. misery for all. the reel inn, a buffalo fish shack on the pacific coast highway, a place for fam get-togethers. food was great. there is nothing left but the sign. moonshadows was another island of tranquility, where my wife and i toasted buying our first home. now i can barely tell where it was. the personal landscape and certainly the business landscape are going to be changed forever,
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but so is california's cultural landscape. old california architecture like the slap board ranch house of the cowboy will rogers didn't survive. neither is the rustic row of cabins that was the topanga ranch motel, built in 1929 by willie nelson. the worst might be over. seems like a distant mirage at best. (vo) sail through the heart of historic cities and unforgettable scenery with viking. unpack once and get closer to iconic landmarks, local life and cultural treasures. because when you experience europe on a viking longship, you'll spend less time getting there and more time being there. viking. exploring the world in comfort.
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the exit for antony blinken. with exactly eight days left as secretary of state, he is only just concluded what is likely his last trip. back and forth, across the globe, with meetings in seoul, tokyo, paris, and finally rome. blinken has traveled more than a million miles on the job. >> every minute, every hour, every day of the time that we have left, we are focused on getting results. >> reporter: we flew with him in early december. >> welcome onboard. >> reporter: three trips ago, from washington to brussels for the most recent nato foreign ministers meeting. >> we have a new nato strategic concept. it recognizes russia as the most direct threat to the alliance. >> reporter: the main topic of skug was russian aggression in ukraine. but there was a lot of well wishing going on.
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there is blinken right in the middle of the so-called family photo. and now watch this. he photobombs the picture of all the women foreign ministers. >> a staunch alley and people like you very much. >> reporter: mark route a of the netherlands is secretary general of nato. all of this ceremonial show and tell might be seen as subtle messaging to the incoming trump administration about the value of nurturing alliances. the stronger together argument. >> the instruction i got from president biden on day one was, get in there, rejuvenate, re-energize and reimagine our alliances and partnerships. >> reporter: here was one more chance for blinken to hold up the biden administration foreign policy reporting card and his own. >> if the united states is not engaged, if we are not leading, then probably either someone
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else is and probably not in way that reflects our interests and values, or maybe just as bad, no one is. what we have done the last four years is we've re-engaged. >> reporter: as for ukraine? >> all told, the united states has provided $102 billion in assistance to ukraine, our allies and partners $158 billion may be the best ex burden sharing i have seen in the 32 years i have been doing this. >> reporter: president-elect donald trump wants to end russia's war with ukraine. critics fear not to ukraine's advantage. ever the diplomat, blinken won't say he is trying to trump-proof the potential outcome. >> for any of us to really speculate at this point, i don't think that makes a lot of sense. what does make sense is to make sure that we give the next administration, the incoming trump administration the strongest possible hand for it to play, whether on ukraine or anything else. >> reporter: 62 years old, antony blinken was practically
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born to be secretary of state. his father, financier and philanthropist donald blinken, served as ambassador to hungary. his stepfather, international lawyer and humanitarian samuel piz ar, was a holocaust survivor from poland. >> he was on a death march out of the camps and they, he and friends managed to escape the death march-march, hid in the bavarian woods. they saw a tank with a five pointed white star and the hatch opened up and a very large african american g.i. looked down at them. he got down on his knees and said the only words he knew in english his mother taught him before the war. god bless america. and the g.i. lifted him into the tank, into freedom, into the united states. those are the stories that i grew up hearing. and it made me feel that there was something special about our country. >> reporter: blinken grew up in
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paris. he went to harvard, columbia law school, and in 1993 during bill clinton's first term began his diplomatic career at the state department. during one administration after another, antony blinken was always in the room where it happens. there he is in the famous picture when president obama took out osama bin laden. blinken was national security advisor to then-vice president joe biden. they are exceptionally close. here he is with his family, clowning with biden at the white house last fall. >> one of the things that's been an immense privilege is to have the kind of relationship where he would seek my counsel, and i always felt with him the ability to speak my mind. >> reporter: it was reported in bob woodward's recent book "war"
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that after biden's shaky debate performance last july, blinken met with the president and asked him to consider whether he wanted to be doing this another four years, adding, i don't want to see your legacy jeopardized. blinken and biden, their legacies linked for better or worse. blinken has defended the chaotic u.s. pullout from afghanistan on their watch, reminding the world the first trump administration made a deal with the taliban, forcing withdrawal. on their rocky relationship with prime minister benjamin netanyahu, over the devastation of gaza in response to the october 7th, 2023, hamas attack on israel. blinken said this. >> it appears that at least to some people on the outside that netanyahu's government is not particularly respecting the role
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that the united states is trying to play and has helped to finance in its support of israel, that calls for protecting people, feeding people have been ignored. >> the quickest way, the most effective way to get people what they need is actually through what we have been trying to achieve for many months now, a ceasefire with the hostages coming home, massive assistance going in. we are very close to a ceasefire and hostage agreement. >> reporter: even this late in the game, blinken is hoping a deal with be reached before inauguration day. but if not -- >> when that agreement is reached, it will be on basis of what president biden put forward. >> reporter: who will get the credit? >> ultimately, it doesn't matter. what really matters is whether the united states can bring real change, real change to people's lives. >> reporter: he still sounds
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idealistic. there is something a bit square about antony blinken. after all, he is the guy who promoted music diplomacy -- ♪ by performing the muddy waters blue standards "hoochie coochie man" in a suit and tie. what will he do now? he is vague on that. and there is what he said to me in brussels. as left nato headquarters for the last time as secretary of state, you can't not have strong feelings knowing that you are leaving this building. >> sure. look, there will always be a moment someone says something to you. there is some generous recognition, and for about 30 seconds you feel that, you take it to heart. but then it's back to work. that's really, that really is my focus. now, talk to me on january 21st.
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