tv CBS News Mornings CBS January 17, 2025 3:30am-4:00am PST
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? (son) hey dad, can the guys stay for dinner? (dad) no... (vo) learn more at wellsfargo.com/getfargo. heidi covey: so, i have an eye disease that causes blindness. i have moments where i get a little bit sad because i just can't see things that i used to. dr. stanley taught me to trust in the lord even when you don't want to. god is such a faithful father. nothing that happens to us isn't without his eye upon it. it's friday, january 17th, 2025. this is "cbs news mornings." breaking overnight, done deal. israel signs a cease-fire agreement with hamas that could
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bring dozens of hostages home. how will it work? tick tock, the clock ticks down on the ban of the social media app as the highest court considers whether to uphold the law. and lost in space. a fiery end to a spacex test flight and the impact it had on air travel. good morning, i'm michael george. we start with breaking news out of the middle east. israel and hamas have signed the hostage and cease-fire deal after a holdup. the israeli cabinet is meeting this morning to approve it. that means the full parliament vote has slid from today to saturday, and the first hostage release could slide from sunday into monday. two americans, sagui dekel chen and keith siegal, are said to be on the list to be released in the first phase. a third american, eden alexander, would be released later because he serves in the idf. four other american hostages are
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believed to be dead. cbs' jarred hill is here with the late developments. there's a lot of hope this deal will hold. >> as we speak, israeli officials are meeting right now to formally approve this cease-fire hostage release deal with some pushback from the country's conservative right. still, though, it seems as though this is basically a done deal. although only the first step. this morning an end to the brutal war between israel and hamas is one step closer. overnight israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu said his country had finalized its cease-fire and hostage release deal with the militant group. soon his security cabinet will meet to approve it. >> after more than 400 days of struggle, a day of success. >> reporter: still, huge blasts lit up the sky in gaza. dozens of palestinians killed in israeli strikes since the deal was first announced on wednesday. that's according to hamas officials. the fighting would stop under the first six-week phase of the agreement.
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during that time, 33 hostages would be released in exchange for nearly 1,000 palestinian prisoners. the deal brokered by qatar, egypt, and the u.s. is expected to take effect early next week. >> i'll believe it when i see it. >> reporter: udi's cousin was killed during hamas' october 7th attack that sparked the war. he says he's worried the fragile deal could still collapse at any time. >> one of our biggest concerns is that once they start negotiating part two, they will not reach an agreement and back to work. >> reporter: yet for some displaced palestinians, there's new hope. >> i am so happy about the cease-fire because all of this going to end. that's why i am so happy. >> reporter: news of the initial agreement sparked celebration in israel and around the world including here in the u.s. >> the cease-fire must hold. >> reporter: the cease-fire deal also includes plans to surge humanitarian aid into gaza as world leaders push both sides to
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reach a permanent end to the 15-month-long war. and again, we're only talking about phase one of a three-phase plan to release all the hostages and start rebuilding gaza. getting to the end of this is going to take months of carefully coordinated movements by both israel and hamas. so there will soon be a signoff it seems at least on part one. the long-term piece here is still on very shaky ground. >> all right, jarred hill. thanks for joining us. back here at home, new worries and new dangers for the los angeles area. landslides. hillsides have become unstable amid the burned out rubble and water-logged soil. and one house that survived the palisades fire ended up split in half by a landslide. while some residents have been allowed to return home, others are in for a much longer wait. cbs' rob marciano went along with a team of fire officials assessing the damage. >> reporter: thousands of structures have been damaged or completely destroyed by the firestorm. now comes the arduous task of making sure these fire-ravaged
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communities are safe as residents and business owners start to return to survey what's left. if anything is left. >> the properties have been damaged beyond belief. they are full of sediment, debris, silt, and hazardous materials. >> reporter: pesticides, fuel, and lithium batteries need to be removed. utility companies are also working on power and gas lines. >> these workers are digging down to get to the gas line. they need to shut it down, seal it off so it's safe for residents to come back. this has to happen in neighborhoods throughout the fire zone. altadena homeowner aaron lubeley has already seen his home. >> you stand there staring like, how am i going to tell my kids that everything is gone? and why didn't god answer my prayers and do this to me? >> reporter: many are enduring an agonizing wait, relying on information passed down from damage inspection specialists. >> i'll take a photo.
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>> reporter: natasha foutz is one of the 60 assessing fires, assessing up to 40 homes a day. >> if it is damaged we'll mark it. >> reporter: the data she gathers is verified and sent to local officials. that info is used by aid organizations bike the red cross and fema to determine who needs money and housing right away. it allows residents to start insurance claims remotely. what you do is very important to a lot of people. >> it is. >> reporter: does that weigh on you when you're walking around the property? >> it does. sometimes the hardest part is not knowing if you have a home to come down to. getting that information out to people i think is really important. so that they just know either way. >> reporter: so many people working so hard to get these people what they need for next steps. 44% now of those properties impacted have been assessed by inspection teams. the weather has improved, winds have shifted to moron shore, that should last at least through the weekend. rob marciano, cbs news, pacific palisades, california. well, the fate of tiktok is
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hanging in the balance as the supreme court could announce today whether or not to uphold the ban which is set to go into effect sunday. president biden says he will not enforce the bipartisan measure he signed into law last year leaving the issue in the hands of president-elect donald trump who will be sworn into officers the following day. and among the tech titans who will be sitting near him at the inauguration is tiktok's ceo. the story from cbs' nancy cordes. i, donald john trump -- >> reporter: when president-elect donald trump is sworn in at noon on monday, tiktok ceo shou chew will have a better seat than most members of congress. the invitation disappointed lawmakers from both sides. >> not my favorite thing. not my favorite thing. >> democrats and republicans agreed that tiktok is a huge national security concern. >> reporter: back in 2020, trump agreed and tried to force tiktok's chinese owners to sell
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the social media platform to a u.s. company. ♪ but an avalanche of pro-trump content on tiktok during the campaign appeared to change his mind. >> you know, i have a warm spot in my heart for tiktok. >> reporter: now the trump team is looking for ways to buy tiktok some time with a u.s. ban on the app set to take effect this sunday. chew will be seated monday alongside other tech titans including tesla's elon musk, meta's mark zuckerburg, and amazon's jeff bezos. those three alone have a combined net worth close to $1 trillion. >> an oligarchy is taking shape -- >> reporter: president biden issued a warning about what he described as the tech industrial complex and the rich men who run it. >> that's the dangerous conversation of power in the hands of very few ultra wealthy people. >> reporter: trump's pick for treasury secretary, scott bessent, who is a billionaire
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himself was asked about that at his confirmation hearing. >> with so many people have so much wealth and power, do you think that that is an oligarchy form of society? >> i think it depends on the -- the ability to move up and down the -- >> no, that's not really dancer. >> reporter: nancy cordes, cbs news, west palm beach. and cbs news will have extensive coverage of the presidential inauguration starting monday at 9:00 a.m. eastern here on cbs and our streaming channel cbs news 24/7. this inauguration will be the todaye est -- coldest in 40 years. a polar vortex is bringing cold air to nearly 300 million people across the u.s. this weekend and into next week. windchills are expected to be in the single digits in washington, d.c., on monday. that cold air will stretch from the northern u.s. to as far south as the gulf coast and northern florida for several days.
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windchills will drop below zero over parts of the midwest. coming up, test flight failure. an uncrewed spacex rocket experiences a catastrophic malfunction. and rudy giuliani pays up. the former trump lawyer settles a defamation case with two election workers. so will he get to keep his prized possessions? he get to k prized possessions? screeneth for colon cancer! here on my land, not theirs. give me cologuard®, or give me— excuse me. we can do that for you. what, no battle? nope. just a prescription. victory! cologuard is an effective and non-invasive colon cancer screening test. false positive and negative results may occur. those at high risk should use colonoscopy. skip the drama. ask your provider or request cologuard online. sore throat got your tongue? mucinex instasoothe sore throat medicated drops, uniquely formulated for rapid relief
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protesters interrupt the outgoing secretary of state, and rudy giuliani pays up. those are some of the headlines on the "morning newsstand." "the new york times" says rudy giuliani reached a settlement in his $148 million defamation case that will allow him to keep his personal property. he was earlier found liable of defaming two former georgia election workers and ordered to turn over his assets to them. giuliani had falsely accused them of ballot fraud during the 2020 presidential election. now the deal will let him keep his new york apartment, a vintage mercedes, and other items in exchange for an undisclosed payment. the "associated press" says secretary of state antony blinken's final state department briefing was interrupted by protests. >> genocide and extermination, to respect the process. criminals. why aren't you in the hague? why aren't you in the hague? why aren't you in the hague? >> in separate incidents minutes
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apart, two people at yesterday's news conference forced blinken to halt his remarks as they shouted and accused him of complicit in israel's military action against palestinian civilians. they were both removed by security. and the "atlanta journal-constitution" says a far right georgia state senator was arrested for trying to enter the state house after he was banned. republican senator colton moore got into a shoving match yesterday as he tried to force his way into the house chamber for the governor's state of the state speech. the speaker banned him last year after moore denounced the late house speaker on a day he was being honored. moore was taken into custody and charged with a misdemeanor. ahead, miracle rescue. a dog brings her sick puppy to the vet, and you won't believe what happens next. (vo) is your asthma rescue a dinosaur? airsupra is the only asthma rescue inhaler fda-approved to treat symptoms and help prevent asthma attacks. airsupra should not be used as a maintenance treatment for asthma.
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the country. ♪ take a look at this. an incredible story of a mother's love and determination out of istanbul, turkey. a dog is seen carrying her lifeless puppy in her mouth to a veterinary clinic. doctors there gave the pup an adrenaline shot and warmed it up with a hairdryer. people heard the story and brought her other puppy to be helped as well. the good news, they are all doing great. in cbs "moneywatch," california's largest insurer rethinks airing a super bowl ad, and banking issues for capital one. here's cbs' shanelle kaul. >> reporter: u.s. stocks took a tumble thursday, struggling to build on wednesday's rally. the dow last 6 points. the nasdaq was down 172, and the -- 68 points, the nasdaq was down 172, and the s&p 500 lost 12 points. capital one is working to resolve a technical issue that had thousands of customers reporting problems with direct deposits.
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more than 2,000 customers said the money was not showing up in their bank accounts. the majority of customers saw their accounts updated. state farm has canceled its 2025 super bowl ad in the wake of the los angeles wildfires. the company serves more than eight million customers in southern california and said it is directing its efforts to helping customers impacted by the wildfires. the company has been criticized because it stopped offering new home insurance policies in california amid surging costs from extreme weather linked to climate change including 1,600 policies in pacific palisades. and if you're tired of slurping soup this winter, here's a new way to eat it. progresso is introducing these chicken noodle soup candy drops that resemble a cough drop. the savory drops are available during national soup month. that's your cbs "moneywatch" report for in friday morning. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york.
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up next, remembering two giants in their fields. tributes to mr. baseball and an eccentric hollywood director. o eccentric hollywood director. whe temperature drops... you've got two choices. close your eyes and think warm thoughts. or open your eyes and get out here. there's only one vehicle lineup that embraces everything the cold has to offer. the official vehicles of winter. jeep, there's only one. right now, during the jeep start something new sales event, get 20% below msrp for an average of $13,000 under msrp on 2024 jeep gladiator rubicon and mojave models.
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what's your favorite bob uecker line? >> get outside, that's where my wife put me sometimes. >> legendary sportscaster bob uecker died at the age of 90. he was the voice of the milwaukee brewers. he began baseball as a player but his humor and enthusiasm transcended to movies and television. he was a regular guest with johnny carson on the "tonight show" and starred in the sitcom "mr. belvedere." the entertainment world is mourning a loss. visionary director david lynch has died. ♪ blue velvet ♪ >> lynch brought us films such as "blue velvet," "mulholland drive," and "the elephant man," and he was the creator and director of the '90s series "twin peaks." his family announced his death yesterday. they didn't provide a cause of death, but lunch had been battling emphysema. david lynch would have turned 79 next week. actor and director justin
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baldoni has now countersued his "it ends with us" so star nine -- blake lively and her husband, ryan reynolds. baldoni's $400 million lawsuit alleges the couple tried to use their influence to defame him and hijack the movie's production and marketing. lively accuses baldoni of sexually harassing her. and bruce willis was seen out and about in los angeles thanking first responders for their efforts during the wildfires. willis' wife posting a video of the "diehard" actor shaking hand -- hands and posing for a picture with a police officer. one of the first times we've seen the actor in public since his revelation that he's battling dementia. stick with us. we'll be right back. his revelation that he's battling dementia. stick with us. sore throat got your tongue? mucinex instasoothe sore throat medicated drops, uniquely formulated for rapid relief that lasts and lasts. that's my babyyy! try our new sugar-free cough drops. instasoooooothe!
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heidi covey: so, i have an eye disease that causes blindness. i have moments where i get a little bit sad because i just can't see things that i used to. dr. stanley taught me to trust in the lord even when you don't want to. god is such a faithful father. nothing that happens to us isn't without his eye upon it.
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