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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 29, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EST

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good morning. it is monday december 29th 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." new includeclues in the search of flight 8501. deborah hirshman takes us inside the investigation. targeting l.a. police officers on patrol. plus a scathing review on the hit series "homeland" from the pakistani government. why they're so upset. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. crews spotted debris in the water off indonesia. >> there's no evidence yet it's
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from the aircraft. >> the search for flight 8501. >> airasia vanished en route to singapore. 162 people onboard. >> officials said they believe it's at the bottom of the java sea. >> thick smoke and poor weather have created dangerous conditions. >> a tactical alert after two suspects fired on an lapd police car. >> the longest war in u.s. history officially over. >> the combat mission in afghanistan coming to an end with a ceremony in kabul. >> a man is recovering after being attacked by a shark off california's coast. >> lava from that hawaiian volcano is creeping closer and closer to less than 700 yards from the whole of the market place. >> some of the officers turned their backs when the mayor spoke. is that something you support?
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>> it was very inappropriate. >> steelers clinch the nfc north. >> and all that matters -- >> harrowing video shows a young child escape a raging fire by jumping from a second story window. >> heit gives you a really good feeling. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> the ravens are going to the playoffs. >> did you play attention to the chargers scoring? >> hell yeah. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose and gail are off so we have jeff glor and vinita nair. a multi-national search effort
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for the missing airbus 8520 is focusing on the java sea and there are reports of possible debris being spotted but nothing has been confirmed. >> the plane left indonesia heading to singapore. in less than an hour the jet disappeared from radar. it's the second to disappear over waters this year. elizabeth palmer begins our coverage from london this morning. good morning. >> good morning. it's now been more than 36 hours since that airasia flight vanished and investigators still don't know what happened to it. family members clung to hope as long as they could needing to believe that no news was good news. but search aircraft have reported oil slicks and debris in the area where the plane disappeared, and the head of indonesia's search and rescue his working hypothesis is that the plane is at the bottom of the sea. airasia flight 8501 took off
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from the largest city. over the java sea the pilot asked for permission to climb from 32,000 to 38,000 feet to avoid storm clouds. minutes later sometime between 6:17 and 6:24 with no distress call the airbus disappeared. the pilot had 20,000 hours of flying experience. on board were six more crew including a french co-pilot and 155 passengers, most indonesian. but there were also three south koreans, a malaysian, and a britain. 16 children and a 2-year-old are among the mission. tony fernandez is the ceo of the budget airline airasia. >> until we have a full investigation, we know what went wrong, we really can't speculate. we really don't want to speculate until we find the aircraft, we know what went
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wrong, and then we'll look into it and see what we need to improve if we need to improve, but it's speculation at the moment so it's premature to talk at the moment. >> and there will be few facts to work with until the planes combing the crash site and the boats find wreckage that contains some answers. some of those boats are, in fact, war ships, military vessels. they're looking east of indonesia, and they're reporting right now the weather and visibility are good for the search to continue. jeff? >> liz, thank you very much. 17 of the 162 paem onboard are children. as you just heard, passengers' families are waiting desperately for any news this morning. jeff pegues is checking the history. good morning to you. >> good morning. the missing plane was a relatively new airbus 320. it was put into service in late 2008. the jet is typically used for
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shorter flights like the two-hour trip it was supposed to complete on sunday. at the moment 8501 disappeared from radar it was flying at safe altitude and traveling through heavily travelled airspace. data showed several planes in the same area before the airasia flight disappeared. there are a number of things that could have happened to this aircraft. there'll be interviews from the pilots in the area at the time. they'll also be talking to the air traffic controllers. >> the jet and airbus a320 log logged over 23,000 miles. according to reports, they have the least amount of issues. it's drawn similarities to
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malaysian air flieftght 370 that disappeared in march. but unlike that this plane disappeared into the java feet that only reaches depths of 150 feet. we're going to have a much easier time finding the debris field and ultimately finding out where the black boxes came to rest on the ocean floor. given that it's a much shallower area than what we're looking at. so far the transportation safety board has not sent a team to indonesia but the agency said it's monitoring a search for the plane and is ready to help if needed. norah? >> all right, jeff. thank you. deborah hirshman is with us. she's now president and ceo of the national safety council. good morning, deborah. >> good morning. >> they've been dealing with three airline catastrophes in a year.
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what do you think happened here? >> it's unprecedented to e see three missing aircraft losses coming from the same part of the world. in this case it's a very different situation. the investigators are going to be looking at the flight track, the last communications and really trying to target the debris field and recorders. >> what about the issue of the weather? could that cause a plane to be taken down? >> usually you don't see that but it is possible with smaller planes. we don't usually see that with commercial large transport category aircraft. >> there is some discussion of ice accumulation which can interfere with the pitot tubes.
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like what happened with the other plane. >> there could be a malfunction of pitot tubes. it's how the pilots in the aircraft are responding to any equipment failures or anomalyies and they're going to be looking at that closely. >> you mentioned that. the sad fact is we've heard about flight issues and distress signals. do we know that they were able to send an alert that something was happened? >> so far what we've heard is they asked for clearance to a higher altitude. there wasn't any signal of distress. but i'll tell you they have responsibilities. aviate navigate and communicate and communication in an emergency is the last thing they
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focus on. they've got to handle the airplane and make sure that that is their priority. it's not necessarily a surprise if you're in an emergency that they're narrating play by play what's happening. >> how does a flight like this just disappear from the radar. >> i will say that this is one of the biggest issues today is after the disappearance after mh-370 is why we don't have better tracking of aircraft in these dead spaces. >> deborah hirshman so many thoughts and prayers with those family members. thank you so much. flight 8501 is raising ominous comparisons. captain sully sullenberger tells us why it's different this time. that's ahead. go gunmen opened fire on a police patrol unprovoked. part of los angeles under a
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tactical alert. the two gunmen with rifles fired at officers last night in southern los angeles. officers did return fire. police have one suspect in custody but say another is on the run. none of the saers were hurt. and new york police are winning more high profile support. giants coach tom coughlin wore an nypd ahh during sunday's matchup with the eagles. players players wore warmup shirts that said "peace." but they're not getting support from city hall. >> good morning. bill de blasio's support of new york's finest was never anything but lukewarm at best. and it has now pushed that relationship near the breaking pound. >> reporter: streets were turned into a sea of blue on saturday
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in trib putte to officer rafael ramos. >> our hearts are aching today. >> reporter: but as mayor bill de blasio addressed the mourners, many officers outside turned away. new york police commissioner bill bratton criticized the protest on "face the nation." >> i do not support it. he is the mayor of new york he was there representing the sit tens of new york that depth. >> reporter: even though former mayor rudy giuliani feels, he feels he should not have. >> i do believe mayor de blasio should apologize to the new york city bless department. >> after ramos and his partner were killed last weekend, de-blass owe received a similar reception. on friday a group of officers
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claimed responsibility for this banner that flew over the city. many officers believe de blasio stoked a hostile environment when he said he feared for his biracial son. >> we've had to train him as familyies have all over the decades in how to take special care with in encounters he has. >> when do we want it? now. >> the funeral for ramos's partner whenenjian liu are scheduled for this weekend. vinita? >> vlad, thank you. this morning many passengers and crew are still trapped on a
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ferry that caught fire on sunday. strong winds and rough seas have prevented a full evacuation. five people died. earlier this morning a cargo ship with 49 survivors reached a port. ail foplphonso is reporting. >> there were more than 480 on crew when the rescue started. rescue helicopters lifted stranded passengers to safety from the top deck of the crippled ferry as people tried to stay far away from the fire below below. coast guard boats from italy and greece hampered by 16-foot waves assisted with the rescue and many of those taken off the boat were taken to the hospitals. a video was recorded showing how
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the intense flames broke. it broke just before daup on sunday. it reportedry started on the ferry's lower level car deck. others called relatives to keep them updated. >> he started the fire started town on the vehicle deck. he said it's actually a lot worse because we're standing out here in the pouring rain and thunder and lightning and we really don't know exactly what's going to happen. >> italian officials say they're launching a criminal investigation how the fire started and passengers on that ferry came from countries including greece italy, france and here britain. it marked the end of u.s. combat missions in afghanistan.
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in 13 years more than 2,200 american troops were ill kill in a fightling. they saved countless american lives. 18,000 international troops including 11,000 americans will remain in afghanistan helping to train troops there. >> firefighters are being praised for preventing a tragedy from being much worse. some are recovering after a fire in san antonio, texas. vicente arenas spoke to a 92-year-old survivor who was determined to leave on her own. >> reporter: they broke windows and used ladders to evacuate residents and smoke billowed through the building. 260 people live in the senior living complex. >> e just said, lord, help us.
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>> reporter: this 92-year-old was in her tenth floor apartment and never heard the alarm. thick smoke woke her up. minutes later she couldn't breathe. >> i put my nose on the oechlk the window and i found a tiny crack and i put my nose in there and i could feel that my throat was clearing. >> so that was your breath of fresh air. >> that was my breath of fresh air. >> reporter: she packed up her medicine gathered her walker and stayed on the phone with her son. firefighters tried to carry her to the balcony out to the escape ladder but she said she would walk. >> he kept saying we're holding the ladder and i said, i know you are but i want to hold onto it myself. >> the fire gutted the third floor, killing five and injuring ten. >> we're very fortunate that we're not standing upon it talking about greater loss of life.
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>> reporter: it was a chilly 39 degrees when residents escaped with very few cloektss and were taken to a temporary shelter. she's staying with her son. >> do you feel lucky you made it out of there? >> i feel a second chance of life. >> for "cbs this morning," vicente arenas san antonio, texas. >> i would say they have a wonderful will to live. >> that's my hometown. the firefighters deserve such credit. it could have been much much worse. >> we should hope to be spunky at 92. >> love her. in alabama, a 3-year-old boy's dramatic escape from a fire was captured on video. take a look at this. >> come on. your mama right here. your mama say do it. oh god. >> so while a boy jumped from a second story window into his cousin's arms he's in fair
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condition at the hospital this morning. this fire happened on christmas day. firefighters also rescued a second child inside that burning home. well, after weeks of trying to recover from an embarrassing hacking scandal, sony pictures finally has something to celebrate this morning. people rented or bought the controversial video online more than 2 million times. it raked in more than $15 million. sony calls it its top grossing online film of all times. it earned another 3 million. it makes you wonder if online is where it's headed. >> streaming, i've heard about that. >> it's 7:19. why pakistan is calling thehe sri lanka.
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new controversy this morning over keeping the president safe. ahead, volunteers suddenly offered a job out of nowhere for the driver and commander in chief- chief's motorcade. why they're taking the heat again. the 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 toyota. let's go places. [thinking] started my camry. drove to her wedding. did not forever hold my peace. [laughing] wow! the bold new camry. one bold choice leads to another. toyota. let's go places.
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>> let's check your forecast for this is the last monday of 2014. katie, good morning. >> makes it feel like a year's just flown by, when you stay like that, doesn't it? my goodness. looking ahead to very quiet finish to the year 2014. and a pretty quiet start to it, as well. let's get you out there. show you view on storm scan3 still a little active. >> dropping to the south for south most counties, of kent, sus he can, cape may cumberland atlantic, could still see perhaps residual shower out of that. otherwise partly sunny certainly noticeably chillier. thirty-one the nighttime low no clouds, the next few days, quiet but definitely colder, that's the trade off here. we won't break the 30's for
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few days, jess. >> man, i know. well, we got lucky last christmas. good morning everybody, and speaking every being lucky if you are headed out the door in the next couple every minutes all of the roadways having real quiet morning so far on 95, at cottman generally slammed in the southbound lanes by this time, everything as you can see moving along just fine. pretty much the same story out on 202, you can see nothing really going on in any of the southbound or northbound directions, right around 422 as well. we have one accident that we have had all morning route 55 northbound near route 674 using caution when traveling through, ukee, back to you. >> thank you let's do it again at 7:55, up next, one pakistani official, fewer russ jujust with the popular drama homela
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and the category is character. matt. >> the lone ranger? >> yeah. that's it. >> nice. contestant matt de-santo gave a very quick correct answer on the "wheel of fortune." he went on to win $191,000 ich is a new record. >> one letter. that's impressive. >> and the first guess too. >> first guess, very good. >> psychic. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour flight 8501's disappearance in s a reminder that flight m370 is still a mystery. also the secret service's
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ability to protect the president this morning. why they're under scrutiny for allowing volunteers to keep the white house on the move. that's ahead. a panel of independent experts is helping the pentagon understand the psychology of isis to figure out how to defeat it. they even look at the tangible assets and why they're so magnetic to recruit. starting next year 2.r55 million americans will get a raise. the federal hourly minimum is $7.25. the "houston chronicle" says george h.w. bush could be headed home from the hospital. he'll remain under observation for now but doctors could decide to discharge him shortly. he was taken to the hospital tuesday after experiencing a shortness of breath.
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thousands of drivers in the french alps. it forced about 15,000 people to abandon charars and trucks on sunday. some families spent the night in their vehicles. two deaths are blamed on the blizzards. a new animal welfare law is driving up the cost of eggs. it abolishes the cramping. prices are expected to rise 10% to 20%. >> we return now to the search for airasia flight 8501 that was flying from indonesia to singapore. it is a reminder of another mystery, the disappearance of malaysian airlines flight 370. it vanished after takeoff from
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kuala lumpur. >> the airline and regional governments have so far failed to explain how this happened but the circumstances surrounding its disappearance at the reaction of all involved are shaping up to be very different. airasia flight 8501 left the indonesian city of surabaya headed to singapore. they lost contact with the plane over the java sea. it sounds eerily similar to flight 370 which disappeared last march on the way to beijing. >> it's possible they'll look for paerchs and look at all causes and contributing factor tos. >> investigators are now search for any sign of flight 8501.
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unlike the vast indian ocean where cruise spent months combing the surface and depths the java sea is a busy shipping area and fairly shallow. >> the fact that the water on average is shallower means it will not be as difficult to recover parts of it and recover and analyze it. >> the airasia plane disappeared from radar suddenly a clue that severe weather may have been a factor. strong thunderstorms were reported in the area shortly before contact was lost and the pilot's last mission requesting to go from 32,000 to 38,000 feet was presumably to fly over the storm. flight 370 was tracked by another hour before disappears. the aircraft made a sharp left turn recrossed peninsula and flew into the indian ocean. the skies were clear and the cockpit's last transmission implies all was normal.
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>> the search has been difficult, complex and challenging but despite in spite of all this our daemgs remains undiminished. >> reporter: while they were criticized for slowing down the search effort they have frequently updated the public. scenes of upset and angry families that dogd families have so far been absent and crisis have society up a spot. it was tweeted our priority is looking after all of next of kidnap for my staff and parliamentarians. we'll do whatever we can. another difference. the malaysian plane was wider for longer trips and this one was a smaller one. >> he's convinced, captain
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sully, they they will find it. >> he does think so. just the idea that it's a shallow air force ya could make all the difference. >> thank you so much. this morning the secret service faces new accusations that it's ignoring potential security risks. the agency's newest headache centers on the use of untrained drivers. they say the practice is unsafe. bill plante is at the white house and has seen this practice at close range. i know we've rinne in a hoff o of these, good morning. >> it's usually how the president gets to one or two events. it's two or more vehicles zooming through closed off streets at 40 to 60 miles an hour and it can get pretty hairy. trust me, i've been in dozens of
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them. here's the thing i bet you didn't know. some of the drivers are students local party volunteer s or people with friends in the white house. >> in august of 2010 nelson received a call from the white house. >> she said ellison, the president will be in town next week. would you be interesting in being a volunteer motorcade driver. i kind of froze for a second and said what? >> trinidad was recommended. a week before pom arrived in the city he went through a full background check and was told he couldn't tell anyone what he was about to do and he had no idea what to expect. >> we were told to get in the vehicle and start the engines and then we saw the helicopters descend from the sky and before we know it a group of people from the white house press pool
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came into my van which was called wire one. >> reporter: for two days they chauffeured white house staff, press, and local dignitaries around the streets of los angeles. former secret service agent dan emmett calls it a security risk. he recently told "the new york times" he was more concerned about that than an attack on the motorcade. >> in terms of it being a concern for the president of the united states, i just doan see it. >> reporter: former direct ore f the excite service defending the practice which he says has gone on for more than four decades. >> the president is in one of the safest places anywhere perhaps including the white house when he was in that vehicle, bus he's surrounded by agents and followup cars and vehicles vehicles. >> the president's limousine and security vehicles are driven by secret service personnel and
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safety is not an issue. >> the president put him in a lead box six feet under ground. he's be protukt and safe but he couldn't go about the people's business >> it was said the secret security which was called the secure package would peel away. the secret service said it's not responsible for the staff or the press. well, the rest of us -- the rest of urs would be out of luck. norah? >> i have to ask you in all of your years of experience you must have known that. >> oh yeah. the motorcade can be so long, 80 cards -- i meanwhile there's a volunteer driving there's a
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secret service agent next to him. >> someone's always there to grab the wheel. >> what are you doing to do? dwlou're in a motorcade. >> coming up what pakistani governments are disputing and taking a look at top production governments and how facebook is losing some friends over a controversial new feature that some say has backfired. you're watching "cbs this morning." what if getting ready was this easy? now teeth whitening is! with the colgate optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen. just brush whiten, and go! its stay-on formula deeply whitens for whiter teeth in 2 days. optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen. brush, whiten, go! >> i'm alex trebek. if you're age 50 to 85 this is an important message.
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only production sparking controversy. last week pakistan says it's racist. now they're accusing the show about its inaccuracies. >> we're getting out of
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pakistan. >> i can't be surprised. the attack was clearly state-sponsored. >> there are a lot of bad guys in season four showtime's emmy-winning series "homeland." pakistans working with the taliban. of course, it's fiction, but in a statement to cbs news pakistani officials said insinuations that an intelligence nation of pakistan is complicit in protecting the terrorists at the expense of innocent pakistanis is not only absurd but an insult. a little research would have gone a long way in correctly portraying the culture, language, people and landscape. showtime, a division of cbs has no comment. >> yes it's just a tv show but unfortunately a lot of governments don't see it that way. they see it as an assault on their national pride.
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>> reporter: it's hardly comparable to the cyber attack to sony over the fictional assassination of kim jong-un. >> no one's calling for censor but they're ticked off. foreign governments losing their heads over depictions of their countries is nothing particularly new. >> reporter: iran denounced the 2007 movie "300" about a battle between the greeks and persians saying the film was distorted history and then there's the documentary "borat." >> officials in kazakhstan were not at all pleased with his depiction of them as raging dumb sashages. they went as far as to sousa sa.
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>> it's an extraordinarily powerful thing and the pakistanis and other governments know that. >> for "cbs this morning," carter evans, los angeles. it goes to show you how powerful american entertainment is. >> a lot of people were talking about it. >> norah hasn't watched it yet. >> i know. i'm catching up. all right. it was anything but an icy reception. a birthday greeting for the creator of the ice bucket challenge. did you see sri lanka.
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of the ice bucket challenge. pete brady spending his 30th birthday at the stadium as a guest of bob kraft. he was diagnosed with als in 2012. the ice bucket challenge has raised more than $15 million this summer. very appropriate indeed. coming up what happened to that missing air jet. peter greenberg joins us. ring ring!... progresso! it's ok that your soup tastes like my homemade. it's our slow simmered vegetables and tender white meat chicken. apology accepted. i'm watching you soup people. make it progresso or make it yourself
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from the cbs broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning i'm erika von tiehl. want to get right over to katie because we enjoyed that nice mild weekend. but not sticking around, right. >> it certainly is not. definitely trainless eggs g into much more after wintery feel, out there and today is really just day one of that. but it will get colder before it gets warm again. so storm scan3 we start things offer looking here at the last three hour loop, generally just clouds, but there are few showers showing up there, in the shades of green. south most counties, will likely be the ones that see. that will so you definitely got gray skies looks certainly very dreary outside cape may courthouse here in middle township high school. that location. but you again could still see residual shower. everybody else gets in on little sunshine, and certainly looking colder by tomorrow.
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>> we had good week. had good run we can't complain too much. also, can't complain about any of the majors, doing just great. i imagine a lot of people are still out on vacation, you can see, 59 around cottman avenue, southbound lanes headed toward center city everything moving along just fine, so far. but we do have some ongoing construction that's going to be from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., closing old arch road between germantown pike and plymouth road. back to you. >> next update at 8:25, and next on cbs this morning cutting edge robots that could soon be helping you out in your home. your local news weather and traffic continues with us on the "cw philly". on these channels. i'm erika von tiehl. hope you have a great day.
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it is monday, december 29th 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." peter greenberg shows us what airlines could do to make it easier to find a missing plane, but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> this is one of the biggest issues today is why we don't have better tracking of aft in the dead spaces. >> the missing plane was a relatively new airbus 320. >> investigators still don't know what happened. >> parts of los angeles are under a tactical alert. police say gunmen fired at officers. one man in custody, the other on a run. >> after a week of protests and
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maw yore de blasio's kmernlts have pushed them to the breaking point. heading to italy with more than 480 on board when the fire started. >> do you feel lucky? >> i feel like it's a second chance of life. >> would say people in san antonio have a will to live. >> that's my home stand. >> yes, it's just a tv show but unfortunately a lot of governments don't see it that way. they see it as an assault on their national pride. minnesota fan, you put him in an outfit with pom-poms and sit back. >> wow. that is one of the most frightening things i've ever seen. >> i'm norah o'donnell along with jeff glor and vinita nair.
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charlie rose and gayle king are taking well deserved time off. after 36 hours after it disappeared the search has been suspended but ships are still looking in spite of bad weather. >> they were on board from indonesia to singapore. they assume the airbus crashed into the java sea. ee lizlizabeth palmer is following the story from london. good morning again. >> good morning. the ships are still out. they're including fishing boats and warships. they're combing that area of the java sea just east of indonesia. the indeeonesian navy says oil slicks have been spotted and there's debris floating in the area of the presumed crass asia. the working high pocket sis is that the plane is at the bottom
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of the sea but specialized equipment will be hunting for the electronic signals coming from the plane's black box wherever it is in the area of the ocean that is shallow and relatively accessible. vinita? >> thank you. travel editor peter greenberg is with us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. >> there was a change in altitude and he asked to go higher. you say that's not. >> it's denied because there's other traffic in the area. it's not an unusual situation. >> could severe weather take down a plane? >> it depends what you call severe. when you see big blotches of red, every pilot knows, don't go there. he has time to get around it. remember, he asked for two
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things. a route change and out. >> can we talk about this airline airasia and tony fernandez? soo he bought the name for 35 kreblts. they've been filleting for 18 years. >> great reputation for safety and for maintenance. he's a good guy. he's sort of like the richard branson of asia. >> around he's a celebrity. >> he is. he held a press conference he did it himself. there are terms on how not to deal with information which is what he's doing. >> how does a plaep this size just disappear? >> that's the key here. i can't rent car without the agency know where i'm driving or how fast. >> nor any of us with our smartphones.
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you need live 24-hour data streaming to the cloud. that would have solved the problem. they were in a dead zone. deborah hersman talked about it. >> what do you mean dead zone? >> it's not tracked. you can get on the radio. there's not much going on out there? >> does that mean there was pinging? >> pinging is difficult. a different situation. what pinging is if they can find the elt, asuchling it's on the floor of the ocean, they can hear it on sonar, they have to get within five or six hours and there's a better chance because they can actually narrow the search. >> we now have three airline disasters in this part of the world in the past year. how many of these dead zones are there that we're not tracking? >> more than you can imagine.
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other most of that area it's a dead zone. it's not tracked. but if you had live streaming of voice and data you'd no exactly where they were, how they were talking, what they were thinking. >> certainly seems like we need live streaming. >> it's not that we don't have the technology. it's there. >> in just a few minutes peter will answer questions on flight 8501 on our facebook page. for the second week sports pros honor officers gunned down in their cass. giants coach tom coughlin and singer darlene love who performed the "national anthem" wore nypd hats. in miami they showed support as the team took on the dolphins. baltimore clinched the final afc playoff spot. the ravens in cleveland.
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pittsburgh beat cincinnati lacht night to win the afc north position. in nfc aaron rodgers left the game with a calf injury yesterday but he came back to earn a week's rest. and carolina bead atlanta to take the nfl south with a losing record. san francisco won its final game but lost ilts coach. jim harbaugh announced his leaving. it's a mutual thing. it's very toxic out there. apparently he's going for quite a lot of money and the bills didn't make it again. >> good news for the harbaugh parents as the ravens made i it into the playoffs. >> you can watch the bengals and colts this sunday. it begins at 1:05 eastern time
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12:05 central sfloo and ahead on "cbs this morning," how do you teach a machine to act naturally. we're going to go inside where a rowboat sri lanka.
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are you used to seeing this on your facebook feed this morning? it's reviving memories but sparking criticism. he'll look at the emotional human response to the digital dilemma. you're watching "cbs this morning." i never really gave much thought to the acidity in any foods. never thought about the coffee i was drinking having acids. it never dawned on me that it could hurt your teeth.
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facebook is under fire for a controversial new feature you may have seen. the year in review app on your news feed. it's supposed to help you share the best moments of 2014. but it led to awkward moments
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and an apology by facebook. nick, good to see you. >> good to see you. >> they really push this. you saw it a lot. what happened here? >> well they started to push it out there and people started to get annoyed. they thought it was sappy, they thought it was generic. people weren't really into it. and then in that climate of negativitity a lot of bad things popped up their dead pet or burning apartment and one story went very viral. that's the story of a man whose daughter that died. here's a year in review and she died. >> she died in the middle of the year and he saw pictures -- >> the way it works is it puts the pictures most shared or most commented on. so gnarly all sort of catastrophic things appear there. >> you had a personal experience as well. >> did. one of the things they're constantly pushing the line of privacy. they want to take stuff you want to have private and make it
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public. what happened to me is my year in review is piers of my children and all sorts of other things but all of these things are private. facebook defaulted to make it public so instead of going to just my friends it went to 100,000 people. >> i don't want it to happen. that's the way they operate. >> why would facebook do that? >> facebook makes money by knowing as much as it possibly can about you, your friends and what it talks about so it can target ads. if it knows i have kids it can send me ads telling them what to buy them for their birthday. >> so this isn't just a service that facebook is providing. you think it's a business practice. >> well, that's everything about facebook. everything about facebook -- >> facebook is a business disguised as a service. >> could you opt out of this? if you're someone who said i don't want anything shared did you want the option?
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>> some like the year in review. you have to actually share it on your own timeline. >> you didn't know then when you were -- >> i wanted to shart on my timeline and the small circle of friends. not the public. >> are there general guidelines you would recommend moving forward into 2015 for people using facebook or coming to facebook for the first time? >> yes. assume that facebook will always be pushing every single possibly way it can legally get away with it to take everything you do and make it as public as possible. with that assumption set your privacy seths stricter than you think you should. >> where are we in this overall fight? >> in the overall fight is we keep giving up more and more. their view is people don't care about privacy and more and more we'll share more and more and be more comfortable with letting
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details into the world. and he is rye. over time we are getting more comfortable and people don't complain. >> facebook is looking at the app. sorry they got out there. >> still didn't. still just nigh friends. coming up mark strassmann with a machine with a personality. >> do you ever experience frustration? >> i think all the frustration comes from this side. >> we go to the lab where whichers are developing robots that could eventually be part servant, part companion. you're watching thchl np this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by abcmouse.com. help your child love to learn with abcmouse.com.
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so you can always put your best face forward. a face in need deserves puffs indeed. try puffs softpack today. it's the flexible pack that fits anywhere. in disney's animated movie "big hero 6," he finds a friend. but they want to make computers like him a reality to be both servant and companion. mark strassmann gives us a personal look at the social robot. >> what color should the wall be? >> i don't know. >> reporter: this is simon. a robot at the intelligence machine lab. the focus here is human robot interaction.
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>> reporter: aluminum covers his system and ee moerjing personality. associate professor andrea tomas runs the lab. >> we think about robots that will be in human environments and how they should interalkt with people and what that should be like? >> in a realistic way roer than a jet son's sort of way? >> i'd like to have a rose cityie robot robot, but we're not there yet. >> reporter: the getting to know you experience is eye-opening. >> this is a camera, that's a camera? >> yeah. that's camera there. >> kurie. ph.d. expert todd her how to serve pasta. >> go here.
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>> sure. >> go here. >> all right. >> globally robotics is ever evolving. some have been taught to dance or slither like a snake. on the battlefield robots can retrieve and disarm bombs, but georgia tech is working on the latest generation of social robots suitable for the home which means making them less robotic. >> my name is curi. >> we're focusing on human interactions. we try to build those things into a robot. >> in other words, how to build relationships. >> you spend a lot of time with curi. >> i have, yes. >> you two get along? >> most of the time. >> reporter: students here can also program a robot's personality. for instance make it more
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passive, less aggressive. >> do you find yourself getting attached to simon who is listening, by the way? >> well they definitely -- i don't think we get attached but we do spend a lot of times thinking about how they should act. how their personalities should be. >> reporter: researchers hope to develop a robot that would be part command and part service. it would learn the layout of your home and then perform a series of tasks. then it would be compatible because you programmed it. >> definitely the future. >> don't get any ideas about co-anchoring. we're coming in. >> nobody could match your personality. lily tomlin.
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>> from the cbs broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning i'm ukee washington. in the news, investigators are working to find the cause after overnight garage fire in frankford. authorities say two police officers were injured africa car inside the garage caught fire and exploded sending metal fragments everywhere. two people living in the apartment above saferly got out. police say the flames broke out on the 1100 block of arrott street. happened just before 1:30 this morning. katie has your forecast in the weather center. good morning. >> good morning, overall pretty quiet one despite what you might see over my shoulders here the retreat thankfully of cold front. but that cold front will live up to its name. knocks our temperatures back starting today and specially by tomorrow, you will really notice that winter chill setting back in, notice though, it is not cold enough
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to produce anything other than residual light rain showers. so most of us, actually, evening out some sunshine here today. but you will notice, it is a little cooler by comparison. we frankly spoiled with the mild air we just recently enjoyed. cloudy intervals chilly one low dropping to 31, then won't break out of the 30's until at least friday. soap, it is a cold end to the year, cold start to a new one we can expect to see some sunshine. there is good news there, too jess. >> some good news, good news for most of the morning, i don't any more. we go outside check out the vine street expressway. you can see ambulance on the scene, police activity here, due to some disabled vehicles pushed over into the right hand shoulder right-hand lane. everyone casino of squeezing on by to the left-hand side, i'll show you what delay, see it just spring every brake lights almost at complete stop and stands still approaching the accident just up ahead. dealing with some equipment problems on the market frankford line. delayed until further notice. so just use some caution. and give yourself little bit
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of extra time, ukee, back over to you. >> next update at 8: 55 up next on cbs this morning comedian lilly tomlin. more local news weather traffic and sports we're on the on the "cw philly". you can find us on these
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new year's eve is like the death of a pet. you know it's going to happen but you're not sure how awful it's going to be. there are three thing. forced to be with strangers, being drunk and tired and staring at ryan seacrest. >> new years is coming up this week. do you guys have celebrations planned? >> we'll be here with you for part of it. >> yeah. why not. party on the set, baby. >> coming up. our conversation with lily tomlin. see how her performances come with principal. plus hgtv's "property
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brothers". we look at the sibling rivalry changing homes across the country. that is ahead. "the new york times" says chefs are starting to experiment with recipes using cannabis. a bakery in colorado sells true confections which are dosed with marijuana and one chef came up with a dish of marijuana laced eggplant. >> they say they can't crow control how high people are getting but the taste is just bad. >> it could really be a party on the set. the cousin of champagne rose 32%. that's according to nielsen.
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>> the actor who played screech on "saved by the bell" is facing consequences. he stabbed a man with a switchblade. >> what happened to this dude honestly. >> i know. and "the hollywood reporter" says bradley cooper is proving to be a hit on broadway in "elephant man." >> it was the character that motivated you to want to be an actor. >> yeah. it was the movie, david lynchs's film. it was infectious. >> it's played to capacity crowds. tomorrow night cbs brings you the 37th annual kennedy center honors. among the five winners, lily tomlin
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tomlin. since the 1960s she's lit up the stainch the stage with her humble humor. >> was trying to think of something i could do that would get me on the 11:00 news. >> her face has launched a thousand laughs. >> oh, jeff, go to your room right now. >> even when she's sharing a scene, she's usually stealing the show. >> you yelled at me. that's great. that helps. >> perhaps because lily tomlin's humor has always packed an ever so gentle punch. >> mom, you look bigger. >> these fake. they get in the way. they're so unbelievable. i'm thinking of getting something mid-size. >> jean carol's jokes, i never
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forget my husband standing on the hill his hair blowing in the breeze and he's too proud to run after it. my mother would just crack up. she thought it was hilarious. and i could sense there was something subversive about her. >> is there something that's sub versish about being at the heart of comedy? >> i think so yeah. >> the other element she discovered during childhood was the power of observation, an easy hobbit for a lita little girl. >> just everybody was so interesting and funny or sad . >> they could be so brutal and horrible and so tender and soft and i was just privy to all of it. >> in her early 20s tomlin took
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people-watching professional. she scratched her plan for becoming a doctor to the stage. >> tell me miss. what do you think about the rule? >> there's a whole -- the revolution -- i didn't want to speak. >> fame would come in 1970 when she joined the hit comedy rowan & martin's ""laugh-in."" >> and america fell in love with a telephone operator named ernestine. >> everybody hated the phone company. >> why? >> because it was a monopoly. they had no recourse. they count get a phone repaired or installed. ernestine would say are you going to be home between april and november it was sort of the truth. >> one rinkgy dingy.
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>> can you do the snort? >> it's because the face is so tight. >> what about -- >> they say when i die her picture will be running with my obituary. >> if that's true ernestine was first in what seemed like a never-ending cannon of tomlin's iconic. she was everywhere. on small screens, big screens, broadway, cover of "time" magazine crowned the queen of comedy crowned a femme is in. >> you would never play a role that you thought undermined women's power. >> i wouldn't want to play anything that undermined humanity. i don't want to deliberately stab someone. now that makes me a weak artist in some fashion, i think. >> so you've never played a role where you've murdered someone.
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>> i can't think of anything where i shot someone or stabbed someone or slit someone. >> but you almost slit someone's throat. >> i thought i did. >> you thought he was a rick. >> yes, i did. now i get it. i lose my spot. >> spare me the women's libya grab, okay? >> did you think that would resonate? it filmed so well, touched so many women. >> it did, i know. i don't know that we did. everybody was sort of scared the first opening weekend. then it went to number one. it was like the second highest grocer of the year. >> they were scare at the time because -- >> it was a women's cast and they were leery of it. people thought it wouldn't catch
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on. ♪ all of me ♪ why not take all oh me ♪ ♪ >> "all of me," one of my favorites. >> mine too. >> why? >> it's tender lyrical, funny, flat out. >> you're going to have to take it out. >> take what out? >> the little fireman. >> i like it because it had -- it's a sweet movie. it has a tenderness to it. and at the same time it's very funny and outrageous. >> if all the world's a stage how come so many people have to get in. >> a dichotomy that can usual easily be used to describe her body of work. >> will you be spying on me in the bathroom? >> yes. >> in the bathroom? >> yes. >> why? >> there's nothing too small. >> likeable as well.
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>> i've also had an act since i was a child i could pull of my back child they said was an act that could catch me in a match game. >> i always loved her. it was such a pleasure. edict ann was someone inimtatd. to go back and watch "nine to five," "incredible me," it was nice to see her honored. i should mention the producer jane wagner has been with her for some 40 years. she didn't want the recognize but she's part of the genius whiend her. >> i want to see "nine to five". >> it's a classic. you can see her and all the
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recipients of the 37th kennedy annual honors. it airs tomorrow night right here on cbs. before that you can see another tomorrow on "cbs this morning." you don't want to miss this. tom hanks talks with gayle king. his famous character and his selfie. it's one of the best interviews. it was really really good. >> with one of the all-time favorite questions from gayle. >> that's a good tease. coming up, home remodeling stars tear down the walls to share a few secrets. >> if the homeowner starts to cry, the big tough contractor starts to cry. just to let you sri lanka.
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known by millions at the "property brothers," drew and jonathan scott have four shoes on hgtv. they just finished building the home of their dreams. barry petersen visited their home in las vegas where they put down roots.
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>> it's time to plot a course for house hunting. >> put up your seats. it's take offtime. >> really. you're doing that? >> yes. >> good natured, they're identical twins. >> he's four minutes older and he holds that over my head. >> their home improvement homes, property brothers buying and selling and brother versus brother have become obsessive viewing on hgtv for more than 700 million fans. >> you know, the things that you do are kind of fun because you really go in and i think you actually change people's lives. >> well, that's what we always say. we're not renovating a house. we're renovating their lives. a lot of families feel they can't live in their dream home or give it to their children.
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>> i'm going to give you a scoop here. if the homeowner starts to cry, big-time contractor starts to cry. >> reporter: the twins grew up on a ranch in vancouver. buddies as kids but competitive at everything including the bagpipes. >> many brothers don't speak and you've been together for a long time and you're very competitive. >> it doesn't matter if he gets to the car first. >> it's not a malicious competition. it's for fun. >> yet. >> they were just 18 when they bought their first fixer-upper with a $250 down payment. they renovated and their sweat equity turned into a cool $50,000 profit. jonathan studied to be a contractor. drew got his real estate license
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and they were already businessmen. >> drew has a steady girlfriend. jonathan says he's still looking. their charm earned them a spot on the list sexiest men alive. >> who's the sexiest? >> from what they say, the contractor. >> i can cook sing, dance, and build your home. >> they were in the midst of building their dream house in las vegas. >> this will feature all of the pieces we picked up over the years from our travel. >> while the inside of their home is beautiful and practical, they created fantasy and fun out back. >> we've completely transformed the backyard from a dezsert wasteland and the jewel is my waterside. >> oh, my god.
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oh, my god. i did not expect it to be that fast. >> but the fundus not stop there. drew believes no home is complete without a basketball court. >> all day, every day. >> they first discovered las vegas after the recession and started buying homes. >> we started buying them up and fixing them up and keep them as rentals for people but we would make the rental price only about 80% so people could afford to get back on their feet. >> they relished the work shooting in different city constantly on the road. they live at a frantic pace to create something for others that is quite the opposite. >> in today's society there's so much chaos in the world, you need one place, that place where you can hail and spend time with people that you love and that's what we try and deliver.
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>> oh my gosh i love it i love it i love it. >> for "cbs this morning," barry petersen petersen las vegas. >> you can't help but get sucked into those shows. >> you like it. >> i do like it. >> you're a big fan. >> we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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and that does it for us today. be sure to tune in to the "cbs evening news with scott pelley." i'll be sitting in for scott pelley.
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for news any time
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>> good morning, i'm erika von tiehl. officials in south jersey are investigating the death of a ten year old boy who was struck by a franklin township police cruiser. it happened last night along delsea drive near paul road. we're told that ten year old boy and two of his friends were heading to a slumber party at the time. authorities say the officer hit that boy while responding to an emergency call. >> all courtesy every frontal boundary, actually brought in more clouds than the showers we saw yesterday. but still hanging around, you can see some of the wet weather associated with it, but, we are really right on the edge, so, unless you reside and maybe cumberland, atlantic cape may or across
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the bay there into central southern delaware, probably won't see anything other than hands full of clouds and generally some sunshine today. so we call it partly sunny day for most of us. so cooler by comparison, and drop to 31 tonight. looking forward in the forecast, very quiet weather week for us, ruling the roost here, right through friday, so although it is colder, certainly, we can expect some sunshine, every single day of the forecast, as we ring in the new year, that also means fireworks weather is looking pretty good. it will be chilly, though, jess, over to you. >> thanks, good morning as we come up on 9:00 we do have incident out on the vine street expressway, been out there for quite some time now the westbound lanes. >> see crews on the way we still see taking out the right hands shoulder part of the right hand lane still causing small delays. everybody we squeezes on by into the two left hand lanes. over the on the ben franklin bridge, no problems on the jersey side westbound into the sitment all lanes open, everybody moving along nicely,
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but we do have house fire, north 28th street between master street and thompson street. take 29th to get on by for the time being erika back over to you. >> jessica, thank you, that's eyewitness fuse for now, talk philly coming up at noon on cbs-3. i'm erika von tiehl. hope you have great morning.
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>> announcer: today on "the doctors"... >> this is so disturbing we did our own inveion. >> announcer: do it yourself plastic surgery and what is really in the box that is ordered online. >> we will send this to a top lastigat the country. >> announcer: and how a vicious teen prank nearly killed a mother of four. >> it wasb in scarring. >> announcer: the exclusive on "the doctors"... [cheers and applause] >> welcome, everybody, thank you for being with us. when it's breaking news we're here to cover it. today we'll start with a risky trend in plastic surgery. it is so disturbing we did our own investigation. hollywood is the butt. would you perform plastic

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