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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 2, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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it is july 2nd torms this m the season takes aim at the eastern seaboard. tens of could see your holiday plans swamped. team usa's staroalkeeper s us aboc performance during the heartbreaking finish at the world cup. the real life superman who twifrted metal with his bear stranger. >> but we beginour world in 90 seconds. >> the bottom line is if live from florida up through maine, you meade to pay attention. >> a tropical threat threatens the east coast. >> tropical storm arthur could become a hurricane later tonight. >> it could ruin sorry, your
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fourth of july celebrations. >> about 150 homes have been evacuated. >> come here legally then. come here the right way. >> a standoff in southern california. protesters blocking three buses carrying undocumented family. >> i'm sick and tired of seeing my tax dollars being wasted. >> in philadelphia a food truck explodes. 12 people were hurt. >> i was walking by and the truck just blew up. >> the referee calls time. belgium, 2, united states 1. howard with 16 saves, the most in world cup history in almost 16 years. >> can you put into words what you're feeling right now? >> heartache. it hurts. >> timo-mobile charged hundreds of millions for services to subscribers for services never doubles match after appearing disoriented on the court. >> whoa. she shouldn't be out there. >> the a truck carrying $100,000
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worth of lobster slammed into an overpass. the truck burst into flames. >> -- and all that matters. >> he doesn't want to work with congress. he intends to change the laws on his own. >> they don't want to do stuff, so sue me. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> i believe that we can win, i believe that we can win, i believe that we can win. >> well he believed in a lot of things that didn't quite work out. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." norah eeo'donnell is off and margaret brennan is here. what game. >> unbelievable. it was fun to watch. >> extraordinary but a heartbreaking loss. we begin with the weather.'s first tropical storm is building up. it's east of florida right now.
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a hurricane watch is posting this morning along north carolina'ses outer banks. >> forecasters say arthur could become a hurricane tomorrow as it roars up the coast. it could affect fourth of july plans for tens of millions of people. mark layman of our affiliate wkmg is in cocoa beach, florida, near the kennedy space center. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. things are relatively calm right now as tropical storm arthur sits off the coast. we're starting to get a little bit of rain right now. but the biggest concern is the rip current. the strong surf as you can see. they're very strong. because they could get worse it has many people worried. the national weather service has cautioned it could make swimming along the coastline extremely dangerous, this as they plan to make their way to the beach. they move edd over to the coast. by monday the storm made its way
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off the florida peninsula at times sending scattered winds ashore and bringing a threat for waterspot although the storm is not getting any closer it's staying about 90 miles off the coastline, we're expecting to get more winds along the coast here and strong surf conditions and scattered rain throughout the day, charlie. >> thanks. megan glaros of our affiliate wbbm has more.90 miles east of cape canaveral, florida. we expect that strengthening trend to continue likely becoming the season's first category 1 hurricane as we move over that time period. it will certainly be something to watch for the carolinas and frankly all the way up the eastern seaboard before it moves away from the united states about five days out as it dissipates. we're also looking at 57 from maine all the way to the
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carolinas. you see the possibility of strong winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes within that area. >> megan, thanks. in northern california this morning a fast moving wildfire is moving through. the fire covers more than foursquare miles in napa county north of san francisco. towns in the area ordered evacuations. the fire started around noon tuesday and spread quickly in 90-degree temperatures. thankfully no injuries are reported. this morning the world cup is overut players and fans are holding their heads high. belgium knocked the united states out of the tournament tuesday. everyone watched every moment. elaine ka a know is in rio de janeiro with the highlights and disappointments. elaine, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it ended with a desperate effort yesterday afternoon in the town
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of salvador. they weathered an offensive barrage until the very last. >> and the referee blows time on the usa's world cup campaign. >> reporter: team usa fell to belgium by a single goal in extra time. it was a gut-wrenching defeat for the americans who had their sights set on advancing deeper into this world cup. >> obviously it's a bummer. we were so close. i think we can all be very very proud of this team. what they've done the last couple of weeks has been unbelievable. >> playing what is finally his final world cup at the age of 35, american goalkeeper tim howard did everything he could to keep team usa in the game. >> how many times is tim howard going to save the united states. >> 16 shots. the most of any world cup since they started keeping record 50
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years ago. >> it's my job. it's what i do. >> reporter: despite being down two goals late in the match, the americans refused to surrender. 19-year-old julian green scored a flicker of hope that ultimately came too late. >> i don't think we could have given anymore more. what a great game of football. heartache. it hurts. >> reporter: now with aging stars likely to give way to youngsters like green, coachklinsmann said they'll continue on the stage. >> to score and we have many other youngsters waiting. >> reporter: the americans leave brazil short of the ultimate characterize but they defied the pundits and turned millions of fans into believers. the legacy of this world cup may
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be an energized u.s. fan base but american soccer has been here before. at the last world cup team usa also lost in the first game of the second round. the score then was 2-1. charlie? >> elaine thanks. the man of the match goalkeeper, good morning, tim. >> good morning. how are you. >> you're not only the man of the match but the man of america. after such an impressive performance and at the same time a heartbreaking defeat what do you take away from this game that you played yesterday? >> it's hard to dissect a loss especially one of that magnitude. we played a top team in belgium. we punched, counter punched, gave as good as we got. that's not something we've always done.
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we were proud and we were glad we were in the game. >> does it change american soccer do you think? >> we hope so. by the numbers and the reaction we hope that the momentum that we created, that the fans create over the last month we can push forward because it's been absolutely amazing. as once a young kid who loved the sport who couldn't find anything on television we've come a pretty long way. >> what went into the impressive performance that you had yesterday? >> hard work i think, you know. goal keeping is about rhythm i think. i've had both recently. it's been a good season for me. i just tried to carry that over. i believe in doing that and working as hard as you possibly can every day and usually you get your luck. >> tim what did your teammates say to you afterward? you really helped put the team
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on the machlt were they satisfied with the fight you put out? >> yeah. i think each and every one of us gave a pat on the back. yesterday i don't think we could have given anymore. we gave 120%. you couldn't have gotten anything else out of us. on certain occasions you lose those games but we're proud of that fact. guys don't have to say much in those big moments. it's just a look that we give each other. that's enough. >> you know, i think you probably created a bunch of wannabe goalkeepers after what you did yesterday. how does this change your life? >> it doesn't. you know this is what i've been doing. it's what i signed up to do, you know. getting in the way of balls and trying to block them. that doesn't change. i'll take some time off, you know, and hang out with my kids just love on them in a few
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weeks' time and then head back over to even gland where i live and go back to work. >> tim thanks so much. you carried the hopes and dreams of a nation in your hands yesterday. we thank you this morning and much continued success. >> thank you. a controversial system is set to continue. angry flag-waving protesters blocked the buses carrying the groups yesterday. john blackstone is in marietta california. john, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it's become a focus for protests here. res dechblts here have been resisting plans to bring hundreds through here for processing. 100 or more protesters blocked the road into the marietta border patrol station. for an hour they stood their ground blocking three buses
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carrying 140 undocumented immigrants. many arrived by plane from san diego from overcrowded housing facilities. they were supposed to be processed in the facility in murrieta, but angry residents got in the way. these buses gave up and headed to border patrol facilities but immigration plans to send more here. >> we have been told the immigrants will come by 140 every 72 hours in shift with no definitive end point and that's what concerns us when you look at the numbers and the magnitude. that's a significant impact on our resources. >> reporter: at a murrieta council meeting they worry immigrants will bring crime and disease to their city. lynn is from there herself and her family came here legally and others should too. >> reporter: can you have
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sympathy for those inside the bus? >> sure. as a mother, sure. but i can stand on the other side and say this is unacceptable. we cannot house them here. we cannot take care of them here. >> reporter: the buses that were turned away ended up at a bus station. advocates say the migrants are fleeing poverty and unsafe conditions. >> they're trying to find safety. they're trying to find a way to get away from that violence. if we want to preach human rights as a nation and we do we need to practice it right on our front door. >> reporter: in spite of the protests they're bracing for more to be processed. the next group is expected to arrive on friday the fourth of july. charlie? >> john, thanks. this morning suspicions of a revenge killing triggered new violence in israel.
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some believe a man was killed to avenge the deaths of three teenagers. alex ortiz is in jerusalem where tensions are boiling over. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. israeli police have cordoned off this largely palestinian neighborhood in east jerusalem where neighbors have been rioting since early this morning following the death of a palestinian teenager. violent clashes broke out between an is ray lan police in jerusalem following reports a teenager had been killed by israelis in an apparent retribution attack. mourners came out to mourn the three teenagers their bodies shrouded in flags. among them benjamin netanyahu.
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we're being kidnapped and a kidnapper yells keep your head down before the line goes dead. hearing it to be a hoax israeli forces initially delayed their search for the boys for several hours. two weeks they found them dead beneath a pile of rocks in a field near hebron. israel blames hamas for the kidnaps and killings. at least six killed including palestinian children. the family of israeli tina felly frankel has said if today ee killing is in fact an apriceal attack, it is a horrible attack. they also condemned the murder and has ordered an investigation. charlie? >> alex thanks.
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the new body gathered for first time yesterday but effort has collapsed. they walked out when the shiite majority failed to name a new prime minister. meanwhile isis which is running much of iraq and syria released an audio message. he appealed to fellow muslims to give up arms and come to the islamic state. they are building. t-mobile is hearing from the government today. they're accused of charge hen dresses of charging hundreds of thousands of dollars. it's called cramming. he says t-mobile stopped billing for those services last year offering full refunds. welcome. >> good morning. >> tell me what t-mobile says and what it's been doing. >> clearly this practice has
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existed. t-mobile has said that. the claim is they've stopped it they've taken actions to stop it. we'll see how this all gets sorted out in court if they even get that far. >> what implications could it have for t-mobile? >> it's interesting. of course, there's all the merger is with print. sprint. it can't be good news coming at this time. >> why not settle with tl fcc. does t-mobile claim they can beat this that. >> they claim the charges have been unfounded and they've offered a refund. they've been the disrupted force in the industry. they go by a carrier strategy. they've eliminated contracts and international roaming and stuff like that. this is black eye for them.
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they've gained customers and all of a sudden -- >> how you do know dwu f if you're a victim of cramming? >> you don't always know and that's tissue. it's always good to chesh your bill. >> an item ietz one. >> absolutely, lull. >> what impact do you think it will have on the merger? >> it's not clear. do i think it will stop a merger? probably not at the end of the dave. there's an expanded recall of car seats. nearly 2 million infant car seats made by graco are on the list. food and liquid hardened up can make it hard to open over time. it's models between 2008 and 2013. so far no injuries are reported. it's about 7:19. ahead we'll check on
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. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by macy's.
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serena williams talks about her stunning breakdown at wimbledon. >> ahead, the disturbing moment that forcehooder to walk away from the match. >> news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by hershey's milk chocolate. light is delicious. hershey's s'mores, the unmistakable taste that reminds us that life is delicious.
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good morning i'm ukee washington. mercury is going up, lets check with katie in the weather center. >> you said it, we are in for
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a hot day, steamy day as well and on top of it we are tracking storms and likely very indirect impacts from what is still tropical storm arthur expect to achieve her can status. at the moment it is quiet but muggy outside, at least we have got blue skies to start off but that heating of the take will help get things going later with showers and thunderstorms locally strong and severe. heat advisories go in effect at noon for that high of 94 feeling closer to the century mark. the tonight we will drop down to 37 with clouds overnight but there will be a thunderstorm around. tomorrow more widespread coverage of showers and storms and still steamy. by friday arthur is bypassing us and we are left with morning rain or showers, bob. >> 7:27. good morning. live look at the blue route sun glare around the board, every where as we can see it here in the interchange of 476 right here near route one stacked up trying to get on the blue route here. we have a water main break in norristown, elm and astor with water crews on the scene. best bet to use main street
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through morning rush hour and crash in flourtown at church and willow grove avenue ukee back to you. next update 7:55. up next on cw is. this morning legal trouble for tinder. for more local news weather traffic and sports we are keeping it local on the cw philly station. i'm ukee
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. a motor vehicle pulled up to a stop light on monday. he was suddenly rear ended by a drunk driver. he ended up flat on his back.
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he's oklahoma. he said he'll be riding just as soon as the aks and pains go away. that's commitment to a motorcycle. you know somebody that, charlie rose. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's a side of serena williams we have never see. her message to fans after the tennis great struggled to merely hit the ball at wimbledon. plus we are there for the reunion after a man stops a fiery tragedy on a minnesota highway. the victim and the hero tell us an amazing tail. that's ahead. time to show you this morning's headlines. the foreign ministers of ukraine, russia, germany, and france are meeting today in berlin. a last-ditch attempt to ease the crisis in ukraine. clashes with russian forces are up sharply after a ten-day cease-fire ended monday. "the new york times" looks add the man charged. khatallah is back in court for a
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detention hearing this morning. the justice department says he is cooperating with key facts about the 2012 asaumt but he's not incriminating himself. in vermont the times argus says the veterans administration show they treated him after he died. he was diagnosed with cancer back in 2011. the drive to a boston hospital became too much. his family wanted to move it to a nooern v.a. facility. last month it was approved 22 months after douglas chase passed away. "the wall street journal" says jpmorgan chase's jamie dimon is being treated for throat cancer. his prognosis is excellent. dimon says he'll limit his travel. and "usa today" says your chances of getting a primgs for painkillers depending on where
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you live. 259 million prescriptions were written in 2012. they find prescription rates vary widely by state. the highest are in the southeast led by alabama while hawaii has the lowest rate. serena williams is out of wimbledon this morning after a troubling scene. the 17-time grand slam champion abandoned tuesday ease doubles chance with her. her sister venus was also on the court. serena was seriously disoriented. it was trbling to see her that way. people thought, what's wrong, she couldn't hit the simplest of shocks. jim axelrod has more. good morning to you. >> good morning. the official word is that a viral illness was behind serena williams' performance. she had lost her third round singles match on saturday when she took the court for her
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doubles match and looked off her game even before the first serve. moments after stepping onto the core court for warmups, serena williams appeared unsteady. this tennis great couldn't get a handle on the ball. >> she's been tripping her own feet. she can't get a ball from the ball boy. >> she took a seat on the bench while the medical examiner examined her. >> it just seem like the crowd was concerned. it was bizarre. you never have seen a complete champion dazed and confused out there. she was stumbling around, off balance, she couldn't get her equilibrium and obviously was not well. there was a deep feeling of concern and also just confusion >> after a ten-minute delay the sisters faced off their opponents in a doubles match but
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williams still didn't look like her top ranked self. >> whoa. almost staggers back. >> the woman with one of the fiercest serves in tennis could barely clear the net. time after time. at one point the umpire checked to see if she could continue. after one more bad serve and trailing 3-0 in the first set the sisters forfeited the match, walking off the court hand in hand. in a statement williams said i thought i could rally this morning but this bug just got the best of me. from the bottom of my heart i thank all of the fans for their cheers and understanding. i look forward to returning to wimbledon next year. >> she's fought a lot of adversity, injuries health injuries but she generally finds a way to make an incredible comeback. >> after a highly successful 2013 when she once again became the i would champion she's failed to make it to the
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quarterfinals in any of the championships this year and this episode which certainly sharpens the story line for next month's u.s. open. >> it's scary. >> i hope she's okay. >> iwuh was going to say that too. it looked like she didn't know what was happening. when venus took her hand that was a nice moment to help her sister. >> absolutely. >> we'll watch that. >> in the meantime the mental health of blade runner oscar pistorius took center stage. a psychologist found that the double amputee olympian is severely traumatized after killing his girlfriend. pistorius is being called a potential suicide risk. debora good morning. >> reporter: good morning. three psychiatrists drew up a report while psychologists compiled a separate one with more information. the findings were read out in
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court that he had post-traumatic stress disorder and was a suicide risk. >> real anxiety and depression are present is significant. >> reporter: but the killer punch came from the defense with this psychological conclusion. >> he does not display the personality characteristics of narcissim and psycho pathieu which are associated with abusive relationships and have been related to rage-type murders in relationships. >> reporter: this colduld be a blow to the case. the case rests in part on the assertion that his rage was
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there and his girlfriend was afraid of him. don dahler shows us how a stimulant is being blamed for a teenager's life. >> good morning. caffeine is something u.s. adult valentine's daily. in small doses it can provide a quick pick me up but in high doses, it can be deadly. just days before his high school graduation, 18-year-old logan steiner was found dead in his home. the coroner ruled the cause of death to be a lethal dosage of pure caffeine. >> we had never seen this before. >> steven evans said steiner, a high school ressler was a healthy young man but the amount of caffeine in his system caused cardiac arrhythmia and a seizure. >> that's a dangerous regulation that needs to be regulated. >> it can be bought in bulk and because it's habled as a supplement it's not currently regulated by the fda.
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in this video, a man shows a package he bought for $10. and the white powdery substance is potent. >> be really careful with this stuff. >> this bag of pure caffeine shows the recommended dose is 216 milligrams or one teaspoon. that's the ee kwish lent of three red bulls. if they took a teaspoon it's the equivalent of 50 red bulls. dr. tara narula says that misconception even for energy drinks can have serious effects. >> the message is for parents, kids adult, everyone to use that. when you use thing that are not regulated, you don't know how much you're getting or what else is in there. >> reporter: she said for kids especially, the advertising seen here and caffeine supplements would be enticing.
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>> you feel good. and you think, hey i'm getting something in that's safe. i'm taking caffeine. they just don't recognize that in these unregulated doses that it can be so deadly. >> the fda tells cbs news it has repeatedly voiced concern about highly caffeinated products and that it's trying to determine what the next steps will be at this point. the next time the fda actually approved the addition of caffeine was for colas in the 1950s. but it did enforce a ban on caffeine and alcoholic drinks in 2010 when the malt drink for loco receive add lot of attention. coming up, he bent the door of a burning suv with his bare hands. see the powerful reunion of a roadside man and the man he pulled to safety. that's next on "cbs this morning."
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a minnesota man is being hailed as a hero this morning. an suv went up in flames this weekend. the driver couldn't get out until the other man defied the limits of human strength to save him. our cameras were there when the two reunited for the first time. dean reynolds shows us the new friendship forged by fire. with beer and cigars bob joe ha nas and body rehning got together last night to talk over an incident that turned out to be much worse than it did. on sunday night he was draving his 2006 chevy trailblazer on the highway north of minneapolis when he noticed smoke coming out the front. >> ibrakes. i don't now it stopped. >> cell phone video showed the intensity of the fire.
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rehning saw it too. he pulled over and ran to the burning wreck. >> i can't see who or what is in the vehicle itself until i get a little bit closer and i see the bottom of shoes kicking against glass on the passenger side. >> i felt like it was going to be my time. there's no way i wanted to burn. >> the car's door locks were stuck. johannes was trapped. neither man was able to pull our push the doors open but this photo shows what rehning did next. bending the door's frame with his bare hands. >> i still don't know how i did this. i managed to get my fingers inside the door frame along the time and starting pulling till the glass shattered. >> i saw the light toward the passenger side and i went for it. he grabbed my hands and pulled me out and we rolled into the ditch. >> johannes was treated for smoke inhalation. he suffer add few cuts and bruises and feeling a little
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sore but is thankful to be alive. >> i owe a debt of gratitude to bob. he saved my life. there's a 7-year-old girl and my wife that owe a lot, owe a lot. >> rehning thinks he did what most people would have done. he thinks johannes was the one who showed true courage that night. >> i can't even begin to imagine what he was going through inside that car. he kept calm and cool about the whole process and i think that's amazeing amazing. >> for "cbs this morning," dean reynolds, chicago. >> people are amazing in a time of crisis. >> that's right. that's a bond for life. considering he's not a firefighter. >> i disagree. not many people would do
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a flight fromos angeles to australia had to turn back overnight because of a water leak. a passenger aboard the flight took this photo. this inside the airbus 380 jet. inside you can see the floors flooded there. actress yvette nicole brown was also on board. she tweeted pipe burst on my flight. we were diverted back to l.a. water running through the isles. they say there was no safety threat but they turned back in the interest of quote, passenger comfort. >> that would be concerning. meanwhile a 19-year-old college cheerleader is not bag game hunter but kendall jones wants to put her african adventures on tv and now she's under fire. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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good morning i'm erika von tiehl lets get your forecast we have some big changes, right. >> we do, we are heating up easily kind of like yesterday but it is more extreme, heat advisories will go into effect
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for central portion of the delaware valley but storm scan three at least is on our side empty, but that solar heating, instant built creating by an approaching front will get some showers and thunderstorms triggered. we are at 82 degrees outside whitefeel elementary school and we have hazy sunshine. 94 degrees is expect high in philadelphia, feeling closer to triple digit territory and showers and thunderstorms do fire, they will be more widespread tomorrow and we are watching arthur bypass our area out to sea on the fourth of july, bob over to you. >> 7:56. live look at an accident scene plus a fuel spill westbound on the schuylkill expressway. look at how smashed in this rear end is here right the at the ramps for 476, so right now leaving philadelphia, only one lane on the schuylkill is opened and we are bum per to bumper from the boulevard pretty much all the way out to conshohocken. you can see puddle have of gas in the right lane and septa
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running with ten minute delays on the broadway spur, back over to you. next update 8:25. next up this morning more on serena williams bizarre behavior at wimbledon. your local news weather and traffic continues with us on the cw on these channels. i'm er we showed people a survey that stacked fios up against comcast. what's it like paying for internet that's rated 6th out of 7 in customer satisfaction? not good. it's not the best. no, that's not fun. look at it this way, you're kind of on top. if i was like this, all day. switch from the bottom to the top and see why millions of satisfied customers have made fios #1. sign
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it's wednesday, july 2nd 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including tropical storm arthur. the east coast face as july 4th
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washout or worst. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. topical storm arthur has increased. >> america's world cup dreams ended in a valiant and desperate effort it's belgium that goes through. >> we punched and counter-punched, and that's something that has. always been done particularly at this level. >> reporter: residents here have been resisting plans to bring hundreds of migrants through here. >> this is black eye for them. all of a sudden there's this hundreds of millions of dollars. >> how do you know if you're a victim of cramming? >> caffeine in small doses can provide a quick pick-me-up but in high doses it can be deadly. >> the official word is a viral illness was behind serena williams' unsteady performance. >> she's tripping over her own feet. she can't get a ball from a ball
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boy. >> the powerful reunion between a man who pulled a man to safety along the roadside. >> the oil gum and the cup on top of the hat. that's the oldest trick in the book. >> he has no clue. >> announcer: today's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by comfort inn. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and margaret brennan. tropical storm arthur threaten to become a hurricane just in time for july 4th. it's still off the central florida coast. hurricane hunter planes are in the air tracking the storm as it gets better and stronger organized. the hurricane is up for part of the carolina coast. >> surfers in florida are taking advantage of the rising surf but arthur could ruin holiday weekend plans for tens of millions of those across the east coast. megan glaros of wbbz is tracking
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it. megan, somebody should tell arthur it's a holiday weekend. >> i know. good morning, gayle. it hasn't strengthened since the last update but wu know that it sit as of the 8:00 a.m. advicely. there's some dry arks but it runs into more favorable conditions as it continues to work up the eastern seaboard. winds are right now sustained at 60 miles an hour. as it makes a turn to the north and east we see it ramping up to a category 1 hurricane. that will be the first of the 2014 season. we're going to need to watch the carolinas as well as much of the northern seaboard. margaret? >> megan, thank you. and the threat from arthur forced the coast guard to airlift six crew members from the cargo ship. it was three miles off cape cod. 19 people were taken off the
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ship tuesday with symptoms of food poisoning. this morning a wildfire in california's wine country threatens 200 homes. they ordered evacuations. the fire has burned more than foursquare miles. no word this morning how it began. fire crews battled temperatures in the 90s on tuesday. in washington president obama continues turning up the heat on congress. in his speech on tuesday he chided republican leaders who say they will go to court if the president alkts alone on immigration and other issues. >> it's not that hard. mid ld class families can't wait for republicans in congress to do stuff, so sue me. as long as they're doing nothing, i'm not going to apologize for try dog something. >> the president is also telling his cabinet to find creative ways to solve problems that lawmakers will not touch.
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millions of american world cup fans are still cheering this morning, even though their team lost to belgium in the second round. team usa was outplayed for most of tuesday's game. a record-breaking performance by goalie tim horde kept the other team scoreless, but then belgium broke the deadlock with two goals in overtime. 19-year-old usa newcomer julian green got one back but just was not enough. >> however effort did not go unnoticed. crowds poured into viewing parties all over the country. even white house staffers watched the game with their boss. >> i believe. i believe. i believe. >> i believe. >> i believe. >> i believe that we can win. i believe that we can win. i believe that we we can win. >> listen. what i learned is fan enthusiasm and cheering them on and having a lot of heart doesn't work.
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>> do you think americans love soccer now or they just love winning? what got people invested? >> they always love winning but i think it's the new acquisition to love soccer. >> i hope so. to me it felt different. we'll see. i hope so. i'm a believer. tim howard made 16 saves in the game. that's more than any goalie in the world cup in 40 years. before that the record was nine. this morning team usa fans are paying tribute online in an unusual way. some put howard's photo on the secretary's page in place of chuck hagel and it calls for ronald reagan international airport to be renamed tim howard international airport. he told us this morning he is amazed by the fan reaction. >> ever since i stepped on the field, empeople have been amazing to the u.s. fans that supported me. i feel humbled to represent our country.
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it makes he feel good. it lightens the mood of what's been a very difficult 12 hours. >> from soccer to tennis and a great shot at wimbledon during the second set of a fourth round match attitude 19-year-old nick kyrgio hit it. he hit 39 aces to bead nadal in four sets. that makes him the first man to get to the quarter fiejs in a wimbledon debut in ten years. >> wow. anti-hunting activists are taking aim this morning at a texas cheerleader who's also a big game hunter. 19-year-old kendall jones posted facebook pages showing her posing with kills. she's 19 years old. she's getting backlash for the photos and some death threats. the college sophomore defends
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her hobby saying it supports animal conservation. she hopes to host a tv show. there were among 16 people injured when a food trunk exploded. a food trunk tank blew up outside causing a huge fireball. they were working inside the truck. two cars driving by briefly caught fire. four passengers are oklahoma after a belly landing by a small plane. the pilot couldn't get the landing gear down and the plane circled the san antonio airport in order to burn off fuel. then it settled down very carefully and skidded for about 1,000 feet. everybody walked away. >> it was very nice to see. they were all high fiving each other. ahead on "cbs this morning," an emotional
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this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 comfort inn. truly yours.
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every day people send nearly 200 billion e-mails, that's with a b. does it seem like a lot of them are in your inbox. david is in our toyota green room. he said he can help. he's ready to help you manage your e-mail. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." i hope so. what's going on? it's this new paint. nothing stays on the wall. not any of these things. valspar reserve super stain resistant. and scrubbable. and this color! still perfect! introducing valspar® reserve™ paint + primer with hydrochroma™ technology. exclusively at lowe's. ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ canada what's with canada ♪ ♪ we got great big cities but a lot of trees and rocks ♪ ♪ yeah the winter's cold here ♪ >> that's recently retired astronaut chris hadfield performing with his brother. they're singing a tribute to canada. as you probably know this is not chris's first music video.
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he actually performed david bowie's classic "space odyssey" when he was up on the space station last year. he's got a sense of humor. >> and a love for canada. makes you want to go to canada. >> montreal is so fun. >> people are very very nice in canada. >> have you been? >> i have been. i notice people are very very nice uniformly so. america celebrates its 238th birthday on friday we know that. thousands are not waiting to thank those who served our country. they cheered they waved flags on monday. national guard members returning from afghanistan and citizen soldiers also got a hero's west coast in new jersey after their deployment. their missions included taking down bases and consolidating military assets. >> she stood shoulder to shoulder with cesar chavez. dolores huerta is 85 years old. that's next on "cbs this morning."
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50 years ago today president lyndon johnson signed the civil rights act. 76% of americans in a cbs news poll say the legislation was a very important event in u.s. history, but only 5% think all of the goals of the civil rights movement have been achieve. there's no question that the effort inspired many to speak up for social justice. michelle miller met one activist who's been doing that for decades now. good morning. >> good morning. while the rev rnld martin luther king was leading the charge in the south one woman in california was leading the front lines on rights. she believes there's much more work to be done and while her name is rarely mentioned in the history books, she may just be the most vocal activist you've never heard of. dolores huerta barely stands 5 feet tall. but she's been a giant. at 84 she's still at it.
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>> reporter: did you still expect to be marching in 2014? >> no. i think we see that many of the issues that we fought and won in the civil rights movement have been moved back. >> reporter: when we caught up with her, she was leading protesters to office of kevin mccarthy, the newly elected majority leader of the republican party. >> what would you like to tell the congressman? >> to do his job. >> reporter: her passion and daerlgs go back to a battle she began in the 1960s. hers was a rallying cry that would later come to define the presidential campaign of barack obama. >> yes, we can. >> president obama stole your line. >> well, when i met the president, he said that to me. he said i took your line. >> i'm pleased that she let me off easy because dolores does
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not play. >> reporter: huerta has received the nation's highest honors. she co-founded with say czar chavez and battled with gloria. >> i was a majorette. i was one of the first latino marriage may superiorette majorette in california. >> reporter: born to farm workers they opened her eyes. >> they used to call them the oakies. i could see that they were thread-bare and malnutritioned. >> reporter: about the time they were fighting on the civil rights issues in the south, she was working in california.
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by 1968 they gain add powerful ally, one they believed would soon become president. >> dolores huerta who's an old friend of mine and works with the union, i thank her. >> reporter: she stood by robert kennedy's side when he won the primary. >> it was absolutely joyous because we knew we had a president who caring about poor people, people of color. >> reporter: the feeling was soon replaced by worry. >> i remember thinking he doesn't have security. and that thought came to me three different times during the night but i didn't say anything because i just didn't want to put any kind of damper on the evening. >> reporter: he had just given you a squlout. >> right. and i felt guilty for years. i felt so guilty because i thought if i just would have said something. >> reporter: kennedy's assassination was just two months after martin luther king jr. was killed. despite the loss of those civil rights icons, dolores huerta
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continues to fight. >> who's got the power? >> we've the power. >> reporter: she's still speaking out and teaching a new generation to do the same. no plans for retirement any time soon. >> as long as i have health and energy and i want to keep on going. i want to teach people how to organize organize. we can do it. >> or as dolores would say -- >> yes she can. keeping up with dolores huerta is not easy. she raised 11 -- count them -- 11 children. she said she had a lot of help. but this is a woman who is pro-choice. 11 kids. >> wow. >> amazing. everyone has their own choice. >> i'm so glad you did this piece, michelle. i never heard of her and i'm feeling embarrassed. how did i miss her. it's great that you're introducing us to her, a whole
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new generation. >> she's still out there, still mentoring young women, trying to get them you know, to see their own worth, their own value, and the leader inside of themselves. >> with 11 children. >> true that. >> very much so. thank you, michelle. >> thank you. ahead mack car think and ben, they're married in real and on good morning, everyone in the news one person is hospitalized after a violent home invasion earlier this morning in north philadelphia. police were on the scene not 2300 block of north 20th street where investigators say
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two men broke in the home pistol whipped and robbed the home owner. victim was taken the two hospital for multiple head injuries. police continue to search for the suspects. katie has your forecast in the weather center good morning. >> good morning, quite a bit of heat building in the delaware valley. yesterday was hot to day is hotter and it will be steamy too. heat advisory is set to take effect at noon for central portion of the delaware valley. storm scan three is empty, eventually that solar heating will help create some instability, for to us see a few showers if not locally strong to severe thunderstorms to ignite here. 94 degrees. we have been hotter but not as humid as today is. it will feel wheres because of that. relevant i evening thunderstorm winding down leaving behind clouds and muggy conditions tonight as we drop down to the 70's and over next few days we see a substantial drop back to the mid 80's in the weekend. tomorrow cold front crosses, by friday, arthur will be passing us by out toe see,
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thank goodness, over to you. we are looking live at a brush fire in south philadelphia, this is just off of columbus boulevard, and i point this out only because it is not impacting major roadways as far as fire department, putting water on it but do you see background that is walt whitman bridge toward new jersey. if i go to the maps here, it is the smoke is what is causing a gaper delay right here that curve of i-95 near the walt whitman bridge. heading out that way be ready for the slow downs that white smoke is just a brush fire there off by the rail yards, ukee, back over to you. lets do it again at 8:55. up next on cb. this morning how do you cut down on e-mail cutter for more local news weather traffic and sports we are
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, we'll look at the inbox overload. you know what that's like.
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owe now how e-mail was supposed to make life easier not so stressful? >> he looks relaxed in studio 57. he'll show us the latest tool to weed out the spam. david, do you have one piece of advice quickly? just one? >> yes. don't check e-mail every minute of the day. set aside three times, set some discipline. >> easier said than done mr. pogue. >> i was going to say. you'll have a tough time with this one. >> yeah. plus they shared memorable moments in "bridesmaid. melissa mccarthy and ben falcone are back on screen together. they talk about their newest comedy creation "tammy." that's ahead. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. google is buying the online radio service, songza. it determines what kind of song you may want to hear next.
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"the wall street journal" says americans are becoming cereal snackers. more people are skip trag diggsal sales. snack sales are up. nuts jumped up 162%. compare that with soup. it reee yates the film. it has the same pops and psych ads but there is no sign of a gay couple like mitch and cam. that kind of defeats the purpose of "modern family". >> the krin"the christian science monitor" looks at how one mom handles a husband sailing. he's on the chesapeake bay hoping to travel 317 miles smiles.
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when his cell phone fails she set up a web program called s.o.s. or spot our sailor. he tweeted the morning, vince is fine. remember this guy, the sexy mugshot and green eyes? jeremy meeks. booking photo was such a big hit on the internet he's being offer add $30,000 modeling contract. meeks was arrested on five reps charged in northern california. and "usa today" says the use of mobile devices on airplanes isn't exactly taking off. a new rule allows passengers to power up their smartphones and computer devices from takeoff to landing, but a study by depaul university finds nearly 36% of passengers use the technology while airborne. the movie "her" imagined a future with e-mail is easier to handle. >> okay. let's start with your e-mail. you have several thousand regarding l.a. weekly but it looks like you haven't worked
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there in many years. >> oh, yeah. i think i was saving those because i thought i wrote something funny in some of them. >> yeah, there is some funny ones. i'd say there are 86 we can save. we can delete the rest. >> 182 billion e-mails are sent daily around the world. they're supposed to make communicating easier but they could make you feel overrun. yahoo! tell yahoo! tech columbia writer david pogue is here. good morning. >> good morning. >> i always thought e-mail might make you more productive. >> quite the opposite as it turns out. 182 billion? that's how many i get day. now it's our to do list. the calendar main marketing vessel of america. we're drowning in it. >> you say check it only three time as day, do you do it? >> do as i do, notsay, not as i do.
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>> how do you -- >> every time there's a new e-mail we stop our momentum to go soo what it is. sometimes it ooh's link we then follow. next thing you know we're down a rabbit hole spending 20 minutes on face boorks. if you can discipline yourself. turn off the rings and chimes agree to check it after lunch and at the end of the day. if you do that you gain so much time. >> if you can't do that -- you say the more e-mail you send the more you get. >> that's right. start preemptively ending e-mail chance. don't say when are you free. say here are my times, name it. then the conversation is over or say i assume i can get you a proposal. if not, will it me know. >> are more and more people shifting to tweeting -- texting
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rather than e-mails? >> they are. young people would rather have instant gratification like texting or twitter. they're leaving two fields empty. the home phone number of course because who has those, and the e-mail address. there are people now who don't have e-mail addresses. god bless them. >> or they don't leave them because they don't want all this spam and you actually know of some spam that actually filters that out. >> absolutely. there's two. advertising, herbal viagra. there's not much to do with that. but there's this whole layer of legitimate businesses. your e-mail box is probably filled with tons of this from linked in and online flowers.
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there's an app. it will show you a complete list of all those subscriptions that you've managed to acquire whether you signed up for them. it shows you this huge list you go down the list and go unsubscribe in one massive list. it cuts your e-mail way down. it's free. >> you recommended e-mail bankruptcy. >> look. if you've got 30,000 e-mails in your inbox be real. you're never going to get to those. some say already's the day, clean slate. they delete everything. the assumption is if anything was really important they'll write you back. >> it's become de facto recordkeeping. i do that. i'll search for this later, leave it in there. >> yeah. it's the story of our lives. >> what's your top one? >> one i like to use is typing
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expanders. this is built into the mac and iphone. basically it lets you set up believe yalted for things you type constantly. got it thanks so much. i type t.y. and it says thank you so much. you can save so much typing like thank you for your adoring fan mail, you know charlie, you get a lot of those. >> then we have to know your code. charlie said, yes, i do. >> no, did not say that. i did not. >> no. i said it. i said it. i said it. all right, david pogue. >> there's a summer er of all these tips. >> i can't wait to go to the website. >> e-mail bankruptcy. i'm still thinking about that one. thank you, david. "tammy" bursts into theaters today. here's a look at them checking out other big names who have
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stopped in our toyota green room. they'll tell us
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hey, air marshall joe, you do want to get in that restroom and rest? >> no. giercht to get back to my seat. >> yeah. you ought to get back on my
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seat. do you got it. >> no. yeah, i think i got. >> it what's that? >> i have to get back to my seat. can you move your leg, please. i've got to go. >> uh-oh, uh-oh. somebody found a souvenir. >> why can forget that moment. that's from brooids maids. here's something you don't know. melissa mccarthy was seducing her real life husband. they're in the new film "tammy." her character is a woman who loses her job and her husband all in one day so she ends up on a road trip with her alcoholic grandma. >> i'm terminating your ploim employment attaco. >> >> i need your badge. >> that's my name badge. >> i need it back. >> i need you to stop sweating through your shirt and grossing people out. >> it is hot.
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people are hot. tammy, you have already been fired. you're at least 40 seconds fire so please exit the topper jack's. >> what were you guys talking about? >> he's really snapping the -- he was doing a lot of weird finger snapping motions. >> i don't know how you kept a straight face during much of this movie because listen. tammy starts off having a very bad day. she gets fired. she goes home. her husband is having an affair with the next-door neighbor. she grabs a suitcase. walk outs the suitcase breaks. she heads on a road trip with her grandma. where did you find the mao hugh more in that ben fall kohn? >> i thought melissa could play a funny character. there's something funny about people who are kind of stuck in their lives you know like if somebody's wrong it's somebody else's fault and it's funny to watch them struggle to get out of it.
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it was a delay to watch. >> how was it to be directing your wife for the first time and how was it to be directed by him? >> can you imagine if we just stared at each other? >> he's a tyrant. help me. it was fantastic because i think we've been kind of leading up to this for 15 years. the day we met, we were improvising together in a class at the grambling theater. we were writing. >> was it love at first sight. >> it was. for me anyway. i immediately liked him. we sat next to each other. we were the first people to sit next to each other. right away we laughed at the same things. if someone was crazy we kind of went does that seem crazy to you? we kind of hit it off. it was quick and sunday. we didn't really date the first year. we became such good friends we were maybe thinking let's not ruin this. >> but you didn't.
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>> i'm curious about your writing process. i figure it's a home office an office on a studio lot. it's pretty well appointed. >> that would by lovely. >> that's how i picture you melissa. >> can you set that up for us? >> you draw vibes off of each other. what is it like? >> it's a lot of us -- we have two smalt kids a 7-year-old and 4-year-old. basically the house is useless. >> off limits? >> we can't get anything done. if we do, we drop the kids off and we have little pockets of windows, windows where we have no kids turn the phones off and nobody is around because we're in the a moving car and we write a lot in the car. >> in the car? >> on napkins and notebooks and i phone memos. a lot of napkins. like a starbucks napkin because we can actually finally just be alone and write and we've always kind of weirdly come up with some of our favorite ideas in the car. >> yeah. >> i have no idea it was.
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>> whose idea was it for her to do her own stunts? >> this one. did have a great stuntwoman but i think for some reason if i'm not going to kill myself i'd love to get it a shot. i think it's more fun when you're watching it and they're not so spectacular and you think, oh that's really -- it's really me out there. >> some of them i wonder when i was looking. how in the world was she pulling that off? i wondered if there was a stunt double. i also wonder this. susan sarandon plays an alcoholic grandmother. i thought, how do you make susan look bad and you did. to see susan sarandon wearing grandma clothes, how did you do that? >> it took a lot to take the shieb off the penny. there were times wither with shooting and she'd come up -- we've got her in baggy clotheses, a wig everything you can do to make someone look older and a little more haggard
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and someone was still coming in and saying yeah i don't know if it's the light, kind of hemming and hawing susan's kind of looking radiant i i'm like what about me? am i also looking radiant? >> no, you're fine. you look terrible. you're okay. but susan is glowing from within. >> do you have everyoning you have wanted to get and achieve when you set out on this great journey? >> i think i have a lot more. i don't think i ever expected that we would be able to make our own movies and be able to write them. i think being able to completely create them and watch these characters come to life have amazings people come in and play them only elevate them is kind of beyond surreal. i think every day on set ben and i were always aware like oh my god, dan aykroyd is saying things that we said and improvising great lines and kathy bates and sandy oh.
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when you say the list it starts to look like we've gone crazy. >> what was amazing with working with these people even though they're legends and they're so great they want to do a great job. they knew we knew the material. they were open to core elaborating and they had their own great ideas. it was a collaboration, a blast. >> a pleasure to meet you. >> likewise. >> congratulations to you both. >> thank you.u. >> melissa mccarthy and ben falcone. the name of the movie is "tammy," it opens in theaters today. got to go. the navy has a new second in command this morning and that appointment gets fourth stars. how this admiral is making history next on "cbs this morning."
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uncle craig, what's the deal? oh...you can't record that many shows at once. why? you can't save every single cartoon. why? you know you can't pause the tv here and play it in another room. why? it's time for fios quantum tv. store up to 200 hours in hd. record up to 12 shows at once. pause and play live tv, room to room. plus, watch live tv on the go with the fios mobile app. redefining what tv can be.
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admiral michelle howard is a
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boundary-breaking sailor. the pentagon's new vice chief of naval operations received her fourth star tuesday. howard is the first woman to become the first admiral in the navy's 200-year history. 15 years ago she was the first to command a navy ship. secretary of state ray mavis called her a wonderful role model. >> it's good to see role model loose thank beyond entertainment and sports. that does it for us
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good morning, i'm erika von tiehl. investigators believe a propane tank caused a food truck to explode in philadelphia's feltonville neighborhood. we have surveillance video right here of the moment of that explosion.
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it injured 12 people, two critically. the fireball rocked third and wyoming yesterday afternoon, eyewitnesses say impact, sent parts of the truck and propane tank flying across the street. right now lets get your forecast with katie because we are talking about potentially dangerous temperatures, right. >> this is kind of heat we definitely experienced on a yearly basis but if you are not prepared and smart about spending time outside it can get you. be smart. make sure you drink fluid we're expecting daytime high to reach 90's in many location is today but storm scan three is still empty, humid outside however and that solar heating will trigger instability that we need for some showers and storms to erupt later today. some of which could prove strong or severe. we are in the slight risk. heat advisories take effect. active day of weather. seventy-three is the expected low. we will look forward in the forecast. today is hottest day of the pack. tomorrow looks stormy with the cold front crossing and we are tracking arthur although thankfully expect to stay out to sea.
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we will draw on the moisture. we will get doused by tomorrow, over to you. >> 8:56. live look at the schuylkill expressway rough go here leaving the the city leaving town right now center city use kelly drive or martin luther king drive to get out to city avenue. right now we are bumper to bumper there say girard all the way out to probably gladwynn, bumper to bumper because of an earl are accident near conshohocken. lanes are opened, we have started to move as quite the way we should here leaving town so put a half an hour on the clock leaving the city and then crash in bala cynwyd at monument and presidential boulevard, and south on i-95 heavy from cottman in through girard. erika, back over to you. that is "eyewitness news" for now talk philly at noon on cbs-3 i'm erika von tiehl, i hope you have a good morning.
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