tv Sunday Morning CBS September 6, 2015 9:00am-10:31am EDT
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captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations >> pauley: good morning, charles osgood is taking the weekend off i'm jane pauley. this is "sunday morning." we're midway through labor day weekend a time for honoring all those who work hard to make their american dream come true. but these days are all of them actually living the dream. martha will look into that for our cover story. and then we'll be asking you to
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look who's talking he's steven colbert the new host of "the late show" he's talking to our mo rocca. >> on comedy central steven colbert played a blow hard conservative pundit this tuesday he succeeds david letterman as cbs's the late show. what temperature is it going to be in here? >> colder the better. i'll keep it as cold as dave did. comedy weather. if your teeth are chattering you're that close to laughing. >> ahead on "sunday morning," steven colbert. >> pauley: captured family life for millions of americans over the years. now they're capturing the attention of video historians, who consider these movies a priceless window into our past. we'll take a look back. >> i haven't seen these in 30
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years. >> remember home movies? they show main street usa how much it's changed because they actually show how we used to leave. >> we wouldn't have them without the genius of george eastman who created kodak. >> wanted find way of making photography easier. >> ahead on "sunday morning" how home movies made george eastman enriched our lives. >> pauley: the great pretender is a story from tracy smith profiling authentic musical tall won't once had to force herself to get on stage. ♪ >> she was one of the best loved bands in rock history. at one time chrissie hynde couldn't even pretend to like playing for an audience. >> i hated it. hated it. i wanted to be in a band but i hated getting up there. >> how did you do it? >> well, i just weighed out how
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much i wanted to do that or be a waitress. >> back to ohio with chrissie hynde ahead this "sunday morning." >> the business world is very different challenge from what it used to be. they say checking out fashion then and now. >> there was once a time when getting dressed for work was like this. things have certainly changed. >> what does casual friday mean? >> i mean probably looks a lot like monday. >> offices go casual. later on "sunday morning." >> pauley: rita braver shows us the unique works of painter jose parla. with steve hartman we meet man who makes music to go, recap some of the highlights of summer 2015 and more.
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first, here are the headlines for this sun of sunday morning the 6th of september, 2015 scores of refugees fleeing syria and iraq have arrived in germany. joyful, cheering and relieved. solution or stop-gap measure here is charlie doing. that. >> exhausted migrants who finally reached germany were given the one thing missing a warm welcome. since yesterday morning 8,000 refugees have arrived in germany via austria with 2,000 or more expected today. but there's confusion on the hungarian side, desperate migrants fought against police in rush to get on buses before the government has a change of heart. the haunting image of the 3-year-old boy washed ashore in turkey sparked international outcry about the plight of the
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migrants. it is yet to leave a lasting solution. here in austria welcoming thousands of migrants, most of whom are headed to germany but hungary is quickly filling up with new arrivals and there's no guarantee that they will be allowed to travel onward. for sup day morning in vienna, austria. >> pauley: kentucky county clerk kim davis has spent a third night as inmate after defying court orders to issue marriage licenses to gay couples. yesterday some of her supporters demonstrated outside the jail where she's being held. officials have launched investigation into late august freshman cadet pillow fight that turned violent. cadets used pillowcases packed with hard objects like helmets. military academy says there were many injuries, 24 cadets suffered concussion s. the only
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japanese american known to have flown over japan in world war ii has died. he over came the military's discrimination policies to become a gunner. he flew 58 bomber mission. he died tuesday, he was 98. and now the weather. which is going to be nice across much of the country, allowing americans to give summer a pleasant send off. still, severe storms could pop up in the northern plains. tomorrow, labor day, another great day. then back to reality. >> being goofy. >> pauley: ahead -- >> not about me any more. >> pauley: we go in search of the american dream. and later, dressing for success?
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without the internet i would probably be like a c student. internet essentials from comcast has brought low-cost high speed internet into the homes of hundreds of thousands of low-income families. it lets students do homework and study at home. so far more than two million people across america have benefitted. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. the road to hell is paved with good intentions. mr. president, we know you tried to make a good deal with iran.
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>> good years to celebrate in port clinton, ohio. prosperous years for the little town on the edge of lake erie. port clinton's population, 6,000 or so. the local auto parts factory alone employed nearly a thousand. even without much education, there were well paid, blue collar jobs to be had. in 1959 when robert putnam graduated from port clinton high school, valedictorian of his class. >> was there a sense that you were living the american dream? >> that was the golden age of the american class. >> for putnam, now a professor at harvard opportunity for all is the american dream which he says is in trouble. port clinton his own hometown he
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sees as proof. this is what's left of the auto parts factory, all those jobs, gone. >> this is a rust belt case. in the rust belt the manufacturing disappeared undermined that social fabric and opportunity for kids but you can find the same thing all over the country even places that don't have rust belt stories. you can't have the american dream if there's not a good, solid economic base for the middle class. >> since 1979 a 200% rise with top 1 percenters the gap with everybody else widening, especially for middle income households earning between $42-82,000. in his recent book published by cbs owned simon and schuster, robert putnam argues that this widening income gap has led to a widening and dangerous
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opportunity gap based on social class. children's futures dictated by their parents' affluence and education. >> it's not just the american economy that's pulled apart leaving out the middle it's american society has pulled apart into which rich people and poor families. >> in the middle of port clinton adrian hines smiles down from a billboard advertising her services as a bankruptcy lawyer. >> when i see clients who have so very little. >> her husband, scotts a judge who settles workmen's compensation disputes. >> scary part is we realize a few bad choices we could have been them. >> which has shaped their definition of the american dream. >> i think it really comes down to security and for us, i think that's what the american dream is, is knowing that you are
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eliminating the worry factor from your life. >> they live well but not lavishly on the outskirts of port clinton. their 13-year-old since, zoe and avery take piano lessons. they have family dinners together. when they talk, education is a common theme. >> taking them to college campuses. >> they're 13? >> the art museum. i mean they have been to europe twice. >> do you feel that you're living the american dream? >> i do. i do. >> but according to a recent "new york times" poll, the number of americans who still believe in the american dream is slipping. it was 72% in early 2009 at the
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worst of the financial crisis. 64% this past december in spite of the improved economy. >> my mom wasn't around too much when i was little so i was mostly in my dad's custody, but he was always running around so i was raised by my grandmother. >> chris lawson from, a not so nice part of port clinton, ohio, did not grow up living anybody's version of the american dream. >> my dad was a little nuts. he's locked up right now. >> he's in jail? >> oh, yeah, he's in priss son. >> his childhood was chaotic just graduating from high school a slog. >> i didn't have many friends in school because i was kind of outkast. you know. >> he does landscape work but would like steadier job. in his early 20s, chris lawson
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is not someone you'd expect to be a big believer in dreams. but he is. or has been. ever since his 3-year-old daughter, camille, was born. he shares custody with camille's mother. >> since i've had her it's not about me any more. none of this, you know. i just got to make sure she's on the right path and i'm on the right path to getting her there. >> is she your american dream? >> oh, yeah, definitely. she's my age yes. >> just looks so happy. >> i love her. she does. she makes me so happy. >> the flip side of the news that faith in the american dream has slipped to 64% is that 64%, nearly two-thirds of americans still do believe in an idea that is often about much more than making money.
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for immigrants it can still be a beacon of hope. >> everybody, immigrant, have a dream when he come in american about freedom and nice living. >> a banker in pakistan, tasawar left because it was dangerous for anyone who opposed the party in power. he walks to afghanistan at night to escape. his family now lives in new jersey. he drives a taxi. tasawar, all his children and grandchildren are proud american citizens. you think coming to america gave you the opportunity you were hoping for? >> yeah, if you are a hard worker you can get everything. >> his youngest daughter, saba, started college last week. >> she was going to the university and she can get an opportunity if she is intelligent. >> you don't think of it on day-to-day basis like, wow, my
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father struggled so much. he's here. i think back, i think it's very respectful thing. >> if you happen to run across hussain tasawar's taxi take a look at the name of the company he works for. yes, really. ♪ >> pauley: coming up, still ♪ >> pauley: coming up, still burning brightly. it. what are you looking at? oh, cool. hungry. fish, anyone? hello, seventh waterfall of the day. hello, duck boat. hello, sheep? oh right! itchy icelandic sweaters and no foreign transaction fees. sweet. one last look. ahh. triple points. and we're off. what's next? wherever the journey takes you, carry american express gold.
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because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. zyrtec®. muddle no more™ . ♪ goodbye english rose ♪ tartare. >> pauley: now page from our sunday morning almanac. september 6th, 1997. 18 years ago today. the day a kingdom said farewell to a princess. and heard a musical tribute to her memory. ♪ seems to me you lived your life like a candle in the wind ♪ jane that was the day sir elton john sang new version of "candle in the wind" at the funeral of princess diana at westminster abbey in london. diana had been killed in a car crash in paris the week before at just 36 years of age.
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the sense of loss so many people in britain felt was captured by elton john's long time lyricist bernie taupin who updated the words of the 1973 song he'd originally written about marilyn monroe. ♪ more than you will ever know. >> a personal friend of diana's, elton john has never again sung his tribute to diana in public. however his studio recording of the song released a few weeks later, quickly became a musical phenomenon. with an estimated 33 million copies sold worldwide, the single topped the charts for 14 straight weeks with the proceeds going to the "diana, princess of wales memorial fund." ♪
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>> pauley: this "sunday morning" is by jose parla a former street artist whose works are anything but off the wall in fact they can now be seen in many high profile location in cluing one of the highest of all. here is rita braver. >> it is one of the most symbolic buildings in the nation, the new one world trade center rising resolutely after the devastation of september 11, 2001. and what was chosen to greet visitors as they enter? >> it wasn't a hurricane emily about the attacks. this is a mural about moving forward it's a mural about resilience. >> from the beginning, artist hoe jose parla says he knew it had to be a powerful piece. >> it's a mural about strength and unity. and i see it more about people coming together, like the
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diversity in new york city, it celebrates new york. >> called "one: union of the senses" parla painted it in a sustained burst of impassed creativity. >> over the weeks and weeks working into it, started to melt into it. i started to feel like i was one with the canvas. it was a lot of energy and action in this painting. i was almost tasting the paint with my eyes and i was touching the paint with my ears. >> the fact that jose parla was commissioned to paint this mural for a public building is slightly ironic, considering that his very first pieces were unauthorized works on public spaces in his hometown of miami.
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>> i was ten years old in this picture. >> ten years old when parla became part of what's now known as the graffiti movement. ♪ he went by the nickname ease. >> this is what i did for my mother an mother's day. >> you go make her a piece on the wall? >> feelings of emotions he was happy that i did something for her but then scared i could have gone to jail for it. you're going to get in so much trouble. >> parla did get in plenty of mischief. child of hip hop generation, he also had plenty of fun. his parents were cuban immigrants. it was a high school teacher who spotted his talent and helped v la get a scholarship to georgia's savannah college of art and design when he was just 16. >> it was like winning the
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lottery. i showed up for history and art class the rest i would skip. welcome to the studio. >> thank you. >> it is, where else, in brooklyn, that he creates his huge canvases which he says are direct descendants of his earlier graffiti works. >> every so often i'm inspired to write the story of my life and what's happening like the it was a diary. >> but i can't read any of the words in here. >> you're not exactly supposed to read. reading the gesture and layers of memory that's encap curated within each layer. >> today, parla's large works go for as much as a million, yes, a million dollars. but it was a long, hard road to success. he moved to new york in the late '90s living a struggling artist's life. >> you know, i remember at that
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time even like not having a proper shower, i had a huge bucket. i was like in the third world really in brooklyn. >> you had a bucket? >> yeah. i went through some pretty rough times but happy because i was doing what i loved to do. >> in fact par laughs invited to show his works in places like tokyo, hong kong, paris and london. all of it chronicled by his brother and best friend, rey. but it wasn't until about ten years ago that new york dealers came calling. his first big new york commission came from a brooklyn academy of music in 2012. a year later bark clay center. commissioned this piece because jay-z is a fan. >> he's one i did by hand. i used papier-mache to do the
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layering. >> the museum in atlanta. recently hosted parla's first one-man museum show. >> you got all this, it was made for this space would you like to see it go somewhere else after here? >> i'd like to see it stay here because it's so beautiful. >> curator says he understands why parla's work has started getting so much attention. >> for me it's about this astonishing juxtaposition of color and line and form and a painting that speaks to the past while also looking forward to the future. >> parla just showed his work in cuba his old family homeland. and if new york was slow to accept him, well, he's got not one but two important shows here this month. and at age 42 with a growing list of high profile pieces,
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jose parla believes he is creating work that will stand the test of time. does it hurt your feelings at all if people just walk in and they're oblivious, they don't notice this beautiful thing. >> my feelings are beside the point f. it doesn't get them coming in it will get them coming out. ♪ >> pauley: ahead, the pretenders chrissie hynde.
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♪ >> pauley: was the 1980 hit for the pretenders and for italy singer who you might call, the great pretender, chrissie hynde. she's an enduring rock legend and outspoken one as well. tracy smith has our sunday profile. >> why would you not want to be in a rock and roll band? every time i do a show i look out in the audience every guy out there wants to be a bass player, every woman wanted to be a singer.
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and i just think, you know, don't you guys wish that you were doing this? who doesn't want to be in a rock band? >> how does it make you feel? >> good. chrissie hynde is the face, the voice and the soul of the pretenders. ♪ for close to 40 years she's seen it all. and sung about it. but some of her best known work is about an old love affair, not with a person, but a place. ♪ i went back to ohio. >> when you think of cities that inspire songs. akron, ohio, might not spring to mind. they once produced so many tires here you could smell rubber in the air day and night. it was like that when christine ellen hynde was born in 1951. the second child of a secretary and phone company worker.
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both were decidedly old school. >> my dad was of the school of, you know, if he heard bob dylan, he can't even sing. >> chrissie had music in her blood. she was indifferent studenta bored middle class kid whose only real interests were music and drugs were you an addict? >> probably. yeah, probably. >> to what? >> going out and seeing bands and getting high. >> and as she writes in a new memoir she fell win a group of outlaw bikers and once wound upbeat enand raped. hynde partly blames herself for the incident and has recently come under fire for saying so. >> you know, if you hung out with those guys that's what happened. that's the way it was. >> it just kind of went with the territory? >> of course. if you go hang out with ought laws and criminals that's just part of it.
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>> did you at the time fear for your life? >> not really. but i should have. and other people around me should have. but we weren't thinking that way. we were just -- just trying to score pot and see bands. that's all we wanted to do. if motorcycles were part of it then even better. >> were the bikers part of the reason that you thought you needed to get out? >> i would say -- there was certain elements that i wanted to avoid, yeah. >> like -- a lot of these guys once you get involved in them you don't get out especially if you're a woman you become property. >> you could have been headed down that path? >> definitely. >> eventually she decided that there was nothing left for her in ohio. >> you don't want to move into the suburbs what are you going to do there? a lot of american cities lost their youth population when
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their downtowns collapsed they all bailed to wherever. denver or new york or -- >> london. >> well in my case it was is london but i had a destiny to fulfill. >> obvious in london she spent better part of five years struggling to be in a band. in 1978 lightning struck. chrissie hynde found three kindred spirits, musically, anyway, and formed the pretenders. ♪ almost overnight the group was critical and commercial triumph but there would be no happily ever after. by the spring of 1938 two of the band's founding members, guitarist james honeyman scott and bassest pete farndon would be dead, both had overdosed on drugs. when jimmy died at age 25 and then pete died less than a year
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later, did you think, maybe i won't go on with the band? >> no. i knew i wasn't going to go on with that band. i had to keep making records because i had to pay the bills keep my thing alive. that's good thing about taking long time to establish what you're doing making a lot of mistakes along the way you finally achieve what you were going for. if it suddenly is taken away from you you don't want to let it go. >> she's still holding it together. the akron she knew is gone but the city is coming back. and hynde, who still lives in londons coming back here more often than these, too. she still keeps her dream car here. it's a 1971 pontiac lemans t37.
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that's her pal gabe troppe at the wheel. when you were growing up how different did this look? >> totally different. >> you haven't seen akron until you've seen it like this. from the front seat of a muscle car with chrissie hynde as your tour guide. >> i like it because it's old and it's beautiful. >> took us by a place she hung out as a kid, the local cemetery. did it creep you out walking around here? >> , no i like ghosts. >> hynde is a strict vegetarian we skipped the burger joint but one akron landmark she just couldn't pass up. >> right near krispy kreme donuts. >> tomorrow is her 64th birthday but clear that the mother and grandmother doesn't hit the donut shop touch she's cut way back on the partying. >> comes to the same conclusion that they have to back off. is. >> when did you come to that conclusion? >> probably when i was 60.
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>> it just means i can sleep better. i'm not afraid to go out at night because i'm pretty sure where i know i'll be been midnight i know i'll get home. >> may be international rock superstar, but here in ohio chrissie hyped is just another customer in line. and that's basically how she sees herself. >> like the best city. >> i don't like calling myself an artist whatever i am. >> why not an artist? >> just sounds pompous. i think of vangogh as an artist. of someone really with a paint brush. anyway -- >> wait a minute, chrissie, do you think you're talented? >> i -- i never really thought of it like that. everyone has their talents. >> i know what mine are. mine is looking after a band and orchestrating a rock band, i'm
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kind of like an arranger. >> what about song writing? glike put a song together. only comes to life when i take it to the band. >> you're very modest about that. >> i'm not sure if that is modesty that's just the way i see that. >> you don't think that's modesty,. >> i wouldn't put in those terms myself. much better band leader than anyone else in the room. >> there we go. >> chrissie hynde has seen the best and worst life has to offer. but somehow she still finds it all pretty sweet. >> can't argue with that. ♪ >> pauley: coming up, the 1906 san francisco earthquake a survivor's story. what a surprise! you know what else is a surprise? shingles.
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and how it can hit you out of nowhere. i know. i had it. that's why i'm here. c'mon let's sit down and talk about it. and did you know that one in three people will get shingles? i didn't know that. i did. he's on tv saying it. but have you done anything? (all) no. that's why i'm reminding people like you to ask your doctor or pharmacist about your risk of getting shingles. because if you had chickenpox then the shingles virus is already inside you. (all) oooh. who's had chickenpox? scoot over. me too! when i got shingles i had this ugly band of blisters and look that nasty rash can pop up anywhere and the pain can be even worse than it looks. so talk to your doctor or pharmacist. we all in? (all) yes! good, 'cause if not we're gonna watch highlights of my career 12 hours straight. i know, talk about pain. seriously now, talk to your doctor or pharmacist today about a vaccine that can help prevent shingles. you can do it duck. let's go duck!
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jane it happened this past week. we received news of the passing earlier this summer of the oldest survivor of the great california earthquake of 1906. ruth newman was just four years old when the giant quake hit san francisco and much of the surrounding area, with a magnitude estimated at anywhere between 7.7 to 8.3.
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this film shot just days before the april 18th quake shows a prosperous and bustling city comparable to anything back east. the quake flattened building and touched off fires that burned for three days. 500 city blocks were destroyed. as many as 3,000 people were killed and some 200,000 were left homeless. as for ruth newman and her family the quake rocked their ranch north of city but left their home undamaged. ruth went on to enjoy a long and healthy life. dying at the remarkable age of 113. her passing leaves just one other earthquake survivor, bill del monte, three months old then. 109 now.
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jane what does dressing for success mean in today's changing workplace? not what earlier generations believed, that's for sure. >> there was once a time when getting dressed for work was like this. things have certainly changed. threes days, three-piece suits and pantyhose have been replaced by open collared shirts and skinny jeans. welcome to the new business
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casual. how have you seen business dress changed? less see simms is the creative director of young and rubican, akay&r, an advertising agency where employees are casual all the time. >> at place like this what does casual friday mean? >> it probably looks like monday. >> but it wasn't always this way, y&r dates back to the time when madison avenue meant advertising. this is what y&r looked like during that mad men era. and here it is today. >> we always encourage everybody just to be comfortable because we're here a lot. we have long hours. >> long hours, which often means punching the clock at home. >> i think in general in our culture because of our mobile devices we can and we do work from home. >> susan is the director of the fashion law institute at fordham
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university. >> we work all the time. but we also play all the time. so we really just stripped away the boundaries between work wear and casual wear. so we might not want to present ourselves to our colleagues in our pjs but we're probably writing our reports in our pajamas. >> the casual attire isn't for everyone, member of wall street legends and leading law firms are still strictly suits and ties. but they're in the minority. according to a gallup study, only 12% of men wear suits every day and just 6% of women report dressing in a similarly formal fashion. still, in an increasing number of offices, casual rules the day. and it seems to start at the top. >> the most powerful person in the room is often the most casual except for the accessories. look at the watch and shoes. but we're are showing status in
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different ways. >> facebook ceo and cofounder mark zuckerberg or the famously casual late apple ceo steve jobs both wildly successful yet with doctor natural dramatically simple wardrobes f. you're a ceo wearing a hoodie, what's your message? >> the message is, it's about my ideas. it's not about what i'm wearing. >> but the laid back look doesn't have its roots in silicon valley. dates back to hawaii in the 1960s to something called aloha fridays. ♪ workers would dress down at the end of the week. by the '90s levi's dockers picked up on the idea made it mainstream with an ad campaign proclaiming casual friday. >> we have a -- flash forward no 2015 and casual friday is dressing up. handshake is han mat --
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manhattan based mobile software company. they're swapping out the casual work for what else, formal friday. glenn coates the company's ceo. >> just to give us an excuse to traipse out the wedding suits we've got. or the cool blazer that we bought for whenever. >> formal friday. a sign of things to come? maybe, says susan. >> we're seeing young men coming to work in three piece suits with the fedora, pocket watches, absolutely. >> his company is sticking with the casual look, if for no other reason than it makes scooting around the office a whole lot easier. that's why it helps to be dressed in jeans and sneakers, right? >> you don't want to get into a three-way scooter race in heels. >> you tried. >> it doesn't go well.
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jane an order of music to go served up by steve hartman. >> cat skill park in upstate new york has 700,000 acres of emptiness. so of all the thing you might expect to see emerging from the morning mist here, a guy pushing a piano probably isn't one of them. >> i think i can do it. >> yet that's exactly what we found. fellow named dotan negrin pushing 400 pounds of piano through the wilderness. has he never heard of harmonica? >> i do it because not everybody can do it. >> why not a grand piano. >> i don't know about that. >> really this isn't just about the challenge of hauling a piano to improbable place. this is more about the joy it brings once it gets there. ♪
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needless to say for beach goers, it beats the heck out of listening to someone else's boombox. and for dotan, it beats playing pretty much anywhere else. >> i get to play piano in this amazing setting. this beautiful auditorium. >> cat skill park just latest stop in his piano around the world tour. he started in 2010 with his job as art mover in new york city began moving his piano instead. traveled from the red wood forests to the gulf stream waters of key west, he has taken the thing to south america and europe always finding unlikely place even enin the most well traveled city. dotan pays for this through tips and donations. >> he gave me a hundred francs. >> so far he's barely broken even. >> i wanted to wake up every morning excited to see what would happen next. that way like i'm on my death
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this, i can do. >> i have enjoyed watching obama's signature piece of legislation unravel like a loose burrito in a backpack. >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs. here again is jane pauley. >> pauley: that's steven colbert when he was hosting his late night show on comedy central. now, look who's talking with us about his new show on cbs it's steven colbert, one and the same. or is it? we sent mo rocca to find out. >> i started off as actor i
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really -- i thought, if i'll ever make it to broadway. well, i made it. through a fairly sear could you tucson route but i made it. >> amounts. >> he made it to broadway restored ed sullivan theater where he's succeeding david letterman as host of "the late show." >> giant chandelier. >> beautiful. >> when they were cleaning it they found tools, parking tickets of the 1950s a lot of cigars. >> all these ladders and scaffolding will be cleared out by the time he welcomes his first guests on tuesday night. >> will you greet the guests before they come on stage? some hosts don't. >> some don't. i got in the habit of doing it at the old show because i wanted to say the guy you're about to meet is a complete idiot he's well in tensioned, high status idiot. >> the poorly informed high status idiot steven colbert is
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referring to is the character steven colbert. he played for ten years on comedy central's "the colbert report." >> happy valentine's day nation. i love you so much that i got you this show. >> that character was a caricature of blow hard conservative pundit. >> there's one firework that will never be too dangerous for texas. this guy. >> there's been plenty of speculation of who exactly will be hosting tuesday night. three months ago you and i were talking at this party that cbs held. when i walked away after the conversation a cbs executive came up to me and said, so, what's he really like? is that funny to you this whole question of, who really is steven colbert? >> it's understandable, i've worked really hard to be that other guy for ten years. but i hope people think, you know who i am.
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i hope they will find out pretty quickly that the guy they saw for ten years was my sense of humor the whole time. i guess flattering that people thought i was an actual pundit or newsman over the years. but it's really nice to not have to pretend it any more. >> so what's the goal with the new show? >> the goal is to have fun with my friends and sometimes talk about things that you care about. or talk about what is going on in the world. but -- >> more transparently curious. >> exactly. that's a great word. i want to be publicly curious. exactly. >> if the initial line up of guests is any indication, his curiosity ranges far and wide. from stars like george clooney and amy schumer to the ceo of uber, to a sitting supreme court justice. how his show will distinguish frists all the other late night shows remains to be seen. you have to be keeping one eye
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on what the other shows are doing, right? >> i watch the other shows, i like them. but we're here to compete with ourselves. competing against our own time as real estate. >> like what battles has been taken, you know what i mean? >> no. you have to do what you want to do. those guys, i mean, conan and jimmy -- jimmy one and two, and they both are friends, they know which is one and two to me. i don't have to say it on air. i don't think you can do these shows defensively. so you have to go with your instincts about what you like and trust that there's somebody out there who feels the same way. >> the 51-year-old married father of three has always had an audience. the youngest of 11 children he was raised in charleston, south carolina. his mother, lorna was a homemaker his father was an immunologist, his parents were
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devout catholics as is steven today. everyone in the family was funny, the household as he puts it, a humorocricy. >> did you watch carson growing up? >> yes. and my elder sister, mary, margot would watch carson at night. and like in the late '60s, early 70s they would wake me up because they wanted me to watch it with them. sometimes as toddler as 3-year-old they would put me between them. my earliest memories are watching carson between mary and margot. >> when colbert was ten years old his father and two of his brothers, peter and paul, died when their eastern airlines flight crashed while attempting to land in bad weather outside of charlotte, north carolina. at the time his older siblings were already adults so for the next eight years it was just steven and his mother in the
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once bustling household. has it gotten easier to talk about your father and two brothers you lost? >> yeah. as you get older, more perspective over what made you who you are. we lost my mother two years ago. i didn't -- i didn't mind necessarily talking about dad and the boys. but i was always worried that something i would say would bring up a bad memory for her or somehow make her sad or really more likely worry about me. because mom would watch everything. that i did. every show, every interview and so nothing is easier without your mother here but i worry less about that i might worry her or make her sad with my own memories. >> do you think that your personality or the way you see the world would be different if you hadn't lost your father --
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>> absolutely. >> how so? >> it certainly gives you one step back from society or what is considered normality. because it's a shock to the system to lose your father and brothers at that age. and school and friends and homework and that value system, which suddenly doesn't mean anything any more. none of it made sense any more. i think that really helps if you are doing comedy or maybe even doing satire that what seems normal no longer has -- status. >> do you think you might be -- i'd be a lawyer. >> that's what i was going to ask. >> i would be a lawyer probably. >> you think so? >> a lot of lawyers in my family. we joke that the firm name
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should be colbert, colbert, colbert. >> he headed to northwestern university to study theater then on to chicago's second city for very different curriculum. >> when i was on second city i'd tried to be on stage do embarrassing thing. i'd walk on in my underwear, in my tighty eye whities at second city. not sexy. like high waisted, you know, fruit of the loom. >> an unembarrassment boot camp. >> yelling, singing too loudly in elevators. ♪ watch the men that -- >> that is crowded with other people feel fine with it. that will put hair on your chest. >> his first job in network tv comedy was with the dana carvey show alongside his old friend, steve carell.
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>> with a mint jelly. >> that comes with a caper sauce. >> at comedy central he starred in strangeers with candy. >> seemed to connect with the other students. >> standing by live with special report joined the cast of "the daily show." >> it's 11:10 my time. 10 after 11:00 your time. this is where erin brown attacked geraldo. >> yes, that's me. a fellow correspondent. >> is no where near the news desk. >> colbert's blow hard pundit character was born on "the daily show." would soon grow beyond the borders of his own series going on shows to sound the alarm on the dangers of super pac money. >> they are out spending the candidates two to one in south
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carolina. that just means according to citizens united there's just more speech than there was before. >> even running for president. and ironically throwing his support behind donors choose, a nonprofit that bank rolls under funded public school programs. >> go to donorschoose.org, pick a school in south carolina and give all you can. >> what he cares about will be clearer on the new show. yes, the new show. he'll be doing 200 of them each year. >> you don't get nervous do you? >> of course. >> not about perform glans really? >> yeah, sure. if i don't get a little bit nervous then i'm not trying. that i'm -- i probably -- i should be sweating a little bit by the time it's over and i should have butterflies before i go out. every night. >> how soon once it starts are you totally in it?
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>> seconds. first joke. how about that? first joke. first laugh. first laugh. because that's the drug right there. then i'm -- then i could do it all night. >> pauley: ahead. lights, camera, action. home movies for the ages. outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by over-producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance, flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. so go ahead, inhale life, excite your senses, seize the day and the night. flonase. six is greater than one. this changes everything. you ever think about how the cement of your driveway... ...connects to the ends of the earth? from roller coaster hills...
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love your laxative. miralax. >> pauley: you needed a projector and screen to enjoy the home movies of earlier time. home movies that modern day movement is determined to preserve. david has everything but the popcorn. >> at the durham county library in north carolina recently there was event celebrating the movies, not awards, but screening of home movies which, i know, some of you might think date to the stone age. >> i haven't seen these in 30 years. >> these are important cultural artifacts, we want to make sure
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that you're not throwing them away. >> people brought their movies to screen and transferred to dvd. it was all sponsored by the center for home movies, a national organization dedicated to the preservation of home movies. skip else i'mer is one of the directors of center. >> it's almost voyeuristic to watch somebody else's home movies. you get to see how somebody else celebrate christmas which is sometimes very different or very much the same. >> these days we watch ourselves on youtube and facebook. it's use to have remember this is digital obsession we have began with home movies. >> suppose these were your movies and on this reel you had movies of, let's say this young lady learning to walk. that would be worth a fortune, couldn't it? >> kodak made home movies a central part of family life just in time for the baby boom. you really couldn't afford not to shoot them especially because it was so easy.
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>> even if you've never snapped a picture before you'll make exciting movies indoors or out with the new brownie movie camera. >> the brownie movie camera is the grandchild of the original kodak camera. a brownie for still photographs. that was the invention of george eastman who created eastman kodak. beginning 130 years ago when he received his first patent kodak's slogan was, you press the button, we do the rest. >> first of all if the camera made a successful image you're going to use more filmment. it was a film business. >> todd is curator of technology at the george eastman house in rochester, new york, international museum housing 16,000 cameras, projectors, editing and lighting equipment. >> george eastman house really archives the history of photography, soup to nuts. >> today, george eastman's house
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itself is a living biography of the man who invented the modern era of photography. kathy connor is the curator. >> everyone looks says, it's all antiques, all old stuff. eastman didn't like antiques or old stuff. everything that you're looking at what was brand new at the turn of the century. he had electric light. most people had gas light. there was phone in each room. he had indoor plumbing. he was a scientist, an engineer, an inventor. >> east machine's great invention, simple camera and easy to use film might never have happened except that as a young man he was working in a bank and heard it was possible to make money investing in -- >> in some land in santo domingo. it was a risky invention. it was suggested before he do this that he should document the land. >> have to learn how to take pictures and take them yourself. proof that that property does
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ex. >> it's photography as we know is lot different. at that time people where the photographer had to be the photographer and the chemist. >> bought all the photographic equipment, his camera, his tripod took a lot of investment of money to be able to do that then took lessons. >> he got much more interested in photography than in investing in land, sets up kind of shop in his mother's kitchen. >> he cancelled the trip he never went because he got so into photography learning how to make it better and be better at it that he -- he also mentioned many times that it photography chemicals were bad traveling companions. he spilled them on his underwear, his clothes, ruined things when he was trying to pack them. trying to make photography easier that's how he got into the photography business. >> eventually he was approached by thomas edison to create film for motion pictures. 35 millimeter film, which is still the industry standard. but eastman wanted to take it a step further to the consumer
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level. movie cameras like the kind used in hollywood were big and expensive, the solution, the cine kodak, this is where home movies began. not even half the size of a professional camera it used even smaller 16 millimeter film introduced in 1923 may look primitive but it began a revolution. >> they had various songs to sting keep time with. basically 16 frames per second is about right here. >> even today the camera still works. i shot this in central park. >> still works. very well made. >> biggest draw back was the retail price, equivalent of about $2,000. so in 1926 kodak introduced the model b, instead of hand cranked it was spring wound. >> so you just flip the lever it
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runs, you don't have to worry about the right speeds. this frees the photography up to basically hold it at eye level. and shoot like so. >> the first time ever a family could shoot a record of their day at the beach. color film didn't come in until the 1930s, this footage of eastman, thomas edison this is early experiments. and while home movies are great memories for a family they are also a time capsule, i mean, look at those cars. it's one reason why the center for home movies has sponsored more than 100 events like this all over the world in hopes people will recognize what they have boxed away in their closets. >> traditionally people think that home movies are boring. but they show us main street usa and how much it's changed. because they actually show how we used to live. it's a cultural history.
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>> pauley: here is look at the week ahead on suffer sunday morning calendar. monday of course is labor day, a holiday to honor all americans who work for a living. on tuesday, steven colbert takes over as host of "the late show" right here on cbs. on wednesday, queen elizabeth surpasses queen victoria to become britain's longest reigning monarch at 63 years, 7 months, 3 days. thursday sees the nfl season kick off with the pittsburgh steelers facing the new england patriots with quarterback tom brady on the field. friday is patriot day and national day of service and
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remembrance. marking the 14th anniversary of the 9-11 attacks. on saturday, the abba-inspired musical "mama mia" closes in new york after 5,773 performances. making it the eighth longest running show in broadway history. low on gas. pit stop. fill up. double points. yep, that's cold. tired. day 2. coffee. eggs. double points. beautiful. majestic... nothing. where are you, bear? warm. warmer. warmer. yes. wherever the journey takes you, carry american express gold. it's more than a card. it's the gear that gets it done. many wbut hope...ms come with high hopes, doesn't work on wrinkles. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair has the fastest retinol formula... to work on fine lines
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>> pauley: as the summer of 2015 approaches its unofficial end, we pause a moment to take stock. the top movie at the box office this summer was "jurassic world commitment grossed $643 million in the u.s. alone. more than 1.6 billion dollars worldwide. ♪ "cheerleader" by the jamaican singer is on track to become the most popular song of the summer. followed closely by "see you again." two of the most talked about books by harper -- harper lee and "girl's in the spider wed" in the series created by late author steve larson. topping the list of the most
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visited national park service sites were the blue ridge parkway in virginia and north carolina, great smoky mountains national park in north carolina and tennessee. and the golden gate national recreation area in california. and just how hot was it this summer? the experts say july was the hottest month worldwide since records were first kept in 1880. the average temperature around the planet 61.86 degrees. our summer may be cooling down but the political season is heating up which takes us to john dickerson in washington. for look what's ahead on "face the nation." good morning, john. >> dickerson: good morning, one of the hot candidates carly fee reno and newt gingrich and book panel on innovation and
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exploration with buzz aldrin. >> pauley: next week, here on "sunday morning." actor johnny depp talks about "sunday morning." actor johnny depp talks about his music. d you can do it duck. hey, why the name duck? (mom) hey buddy... ...this is duke. hi duck. iams. ideal nutrition to help keep your dog healthy and active at every stage of life. go to iams.com for your $5 trial offer... ...and see a visible difference in your dog. this pimple's gonna aw com'on.ver. clearasil ultra works fast to begin visibly clearing up skin in as little as 12 hours. and acne won't last forever. just like your mom won't walk in on you... forever. let's be clear. clearasil works fast.
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you can't breathed. through your nose. suddenly, you're a mouthbreather. well, just put on a breathe right strip which instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than cold medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight mouthbreathers. breathe right >> pauley: we leave you this sunday at yellowstone national park. where grizzlies are best viewed from a safe distance.
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>> pauley: i'm jane pauley. have a good holiday. join us here again next sunday morning. it can feel like this. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva respimat does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva respimat. discuss all medicines you take, even eye drops. if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells, you get hives, vision changes or eye pain or problems passing urine, stop taking spiriva respimat
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and call your doctor right away. side effects include sore throat, cough, dry mouth and sinus infection. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. to learn about spiriva respimat slow-moving mist, ask your doctor or visit spirivarespimat.com captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
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>> dickerson: today on "face the nation." will the summer of trump become the autumn of trump. >> somehow the party of lincoln has become the party of trump. >> dickerson: donald may be clear he's in for the republican nomination for the long haul. at least until he changes his mind. >> i will be totally pledging my allegiance to the republican party and the conservative principles for which it stands. >> dickerson: we'll talk to carly fiorina about her outsider campaign, what we should look for in a president and hillary clinton's defense of her private e-mail server and hear from newt gingrich how does he think the g.o.p. will play out. joe biden is getting a lot of attention, but doesn't appear any closer on a decision to enter the race. >> honest to god answer is i dokn
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