tv CBS Overnight News CBS July 21, 2016 3:08am-4:01am EDT
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choices -- take expensive drugs with potentially serious side effects, suffer painful and bloody surgery that often must be repeated, or try and live with it. you don't have to live with it anymore. introducing prosvent, the all-natural solution so good it's guaranteed to give you relief in less than 30 days. prosvent is a unique combination with naturally occurring substances shown to reduce the symptoms of an enlarged prostate, helping return men to comfortable and happy lives. and no side effects. it has pygeum africanum, stinging nettle, saw palmetto with beta-sitosterol, and pumpkin-seed oil, all with long histories of limiting overnight urination, lessening urgency, even improving urinary flow. powerful antioxidant lycopene, clinically proven to support prostate health, plus vitamin d and zinc to round out this powerful prostate-health
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formula, all in an easy-to-swallow gel pill with bioperine to increase absorption. so, what's getting your life back worth to you? painful and bloody surgery costs thousands of dollars, and prescription drugs with potential side effects could cost hundreds of dollars. but prosvent won't cost you $100, not even close. a full two-month supply is only $79.95. but it won't cost you that, either, because we're going to let you try prosvent for 30 days for free. that's right -- free. you pay only shipping and processing. plus, call in the next 20 minutes, and as our free gift, we'll include a 30-day supply of provigor, the all-natural formula for those intimate moments when you want to put the spark back in your life. that's a $40 value free. plus, this guide to prostate health to answer all your prostate questions. try prosvent. try it for a full 30 days, and if it doesn't help you sleep through the night, reduce
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urgency, frequency, or just make your life a whole lot better, return the unused portion and your credit card will never be charged. that's how sure we are it's going to work for you. get your life back. call now. have your credit card ready when you call. don't suffer through more sleepless nights. don't let urgency and frequency ruin your days. an enlarged prostate may be inevitable, but it doesn't have to be a life sentence. prosvent can help restore your life. sleep peacefully through the whole night. sit comfortably through a ball game or movie. drive without worrying about the next rest stop. remember, call in the next 20 minutes and get a 30-day supply of provigor for those loving moments as our free gift. don't wait. call now to get prosvent for 30 days. all you pay is shipping and processing. >> so, it's pretty obvious that men should start using prosvent way before symptoms start to appear.
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>> absolutely. because the prostate begins to grow long before symptoms. here's our normal walnut-sized prostate in the 20's. no symptoms. by the 30's, there's often enlargement occurring, but still no symptoms. by the 40's and 50's, the enlargement continues, but now symptoms begin to occur. the prostate squeezes the urethra, slows the urine, ultimately stopping the urine flow. >> recently, i sat with a group of men who've been experiencing some of those symptoms. this was the first time they'd talked in a group. >> i can't remember the last night i didn't have to get up four or five times. i mean, i was saying it to myself just two or three nights ago. "god, wouldn't it be nice to experience an eight-hour, uninterrupted sleep?" >> when you get to a certain point, it's almost like being a drug addict where you're worrying about your next drug. i'm worrying about where the next bathroom is. if i'm on a plane, am i in the aisle seat? the worst one was i took my son to go see the last "lord of the rings." i thought it was a two-hour movie. >> oh, no!
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>> i'm in there. i make it two hours, on the nose. all of a sudden, this thing's going. i'm going, "oh, no!" >> you're going, "throw the ring! throw the ring!" >> "please, is this the end?" [ laughter ] >> i got news for you. i'm very happy that my wife is an r.n. she worked in a hospital, and we used to get the urine caps. put it in the trunk, i'd reach down. "hello? yeah. how's everything? oh, yeah. sure. fine." >> i thought it was normal to pee two or three times a night. >> well, sometimes my doctor would say, "you know, you're not 21 anymore." so, i just sort of wrote it off as that. >> yeah. >> until finally, he said, "well, just how many times are you going?" and i said, "five, six, sometimes seven." >> you got up five or six, seven times a night? >> yeah. >> you didn't think there was something strange about every hour? did you ever sleep? >> i thought, "what goes in, goes out." >> are we that stupid? or that embarrassed over something that we shouldn't be embarrassed about? >> yes. >> yeah. >> i think so. >> i think embarrassed and living in denial. >> we notice these changes so subtly that they don't really register, and that's why we always become aware of a problem
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when it's too late. >> truth is that now i start mentioning it to my friends. i go up to guys, and, you know, when i'm standing at the urinal and there's a guy standing next to me and he's slower than i am, i ask him how long his prostate's been enlarged. [ laughter ] and he doesn't know what the hell i'm talking about. >> it's a great pick-up line. absolutely. >> in the john. they love me for that. [ laughter ] what happened when you started taking prosvent? >> it probably took, you know, maybe 2 weeks -- 10 days to 2 weeks before i really started knowing. instead of three times a night, i might get up once now. and i had one or two nights where i didn't get up at all. i was, like, shocked. i mean, i hadn't slept through an entire night in maybe 10 years. i like it. i'm taking it. >> i am very happy. i'm thrilled beyond compare. i mean, i take the stuff, and, hey, i'll sleep all night long. >> it's really funny. i was -- just went -- we went on a trip. my wife and i said, "let's get away beforthe holiday." so, we had to sit in the car. >> oh, boy. >> oh, boy. >> before i started taking it, i would have had a fit. but i was okay. i was really surprised.
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say six, seven months ago, no. so, i love it. it's a great product. >> when is someone -- when should you start doing something about all this? >> at the first sign of any symptoms, that is that your urinary stream has gotten a little narrower or you wake up once a night or you find that you can't make it through the whole movie, that's when you absolutely should start treating it so you don't progress to three or four times waking at night. >> for me, it's remarkable, because i've found it to be, you know, maybe the most significant lifestyle-altering things. and that's huge. >> having gone through what i've gone through, had that been available when i was in my mid-20's, i certainly would have talked to my doctor about it, you know? i mean, i wouldn't wish what i've gone through on anybody. >> if no one takes anything else away from this show, i want them to figure out what's going on, because being silent is being stupid, and i don't want to be stupid anymore. >> nope. >> tell us again about what's in prosvent. >> prosvent has a unique
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combination of natural substances and minerals that both help alleviate symptoms and protect the prostate's health. there's pygeum africanum, stinging nettle, pumpkin-seed oil, and saw palmetto. acting together and in concert, they inhibit prostate enlargement, reduce frequent overnight urination, lessen urgency, and dramatically increase urine flow. but we wanted an even more comprehensive formula, so to all of that, we added lycopene, a powerful antioxidant, plus zinc and vitamin d for overall prostate health. >> before i did anything, i would always go to the restroom. leave the house, go to the restroom. when you get to the next destination, go to the restroom. i haven't experienced that since i've been taking the pill, so it definitely has improved my daily routine and the quality of my life. >> it happens every two, three hours, and then, as i said, when i get up and go to the restroom, come back to bed, i have problems to go back to sleep, you know? now, after taking these pills
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for two weeks now, it helps me a lot, you know? i think i will be more productive and more restful during the day, also. >> if somebody had the same symptoms that i had, i would tell them to try this product, because the fact that i don't want them to be an idiot like i was. >> he was on a constant search for whatever bathroom he could get to in whatever quick amount of time her could get there, and this has enabled him to see life a little bit differently. >> it made my husband a completely different person. and i'm not crabby, either, because he kept waking me up every time he would get up. i'm very happy for him, and i'm happy for me, too. >> so many times, wake up at night -- five, six times at night, and even to only a few drops, and i have to go. i cannot hold. my life is a lot better now. it has changed my life. changed my life. >> there was sometimes when i didn't quite make it to the
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bathrooms some places. but now, oh, geez, i can't -- i just can't -- i just can't get over how great these pills work. >> the best thing about taking prosvent is not only do i not have to get up three or four times a night, but i don't have to take drugs. >> now is your chance to order. you really can change your life for the better. >> announcer: do you or someone you love make too many trips to the bathroom... suffer from urgency that is hard to control... have a weak stream or find it difficult to start and stop? do you get up more than once a night... or find it next to impossible to sit through a movie? worse yet, is a diminished sex drive destroying your life? if you answered "yes" to more than one of those questions, you are probably one of the 30 million men who suffer from an enlarged prostate. until now, you had three choices -- take expensive drugs with potentially serious side
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effects, suffer painful and bloody surgery that often must be repeated, or try and live with it. you don't have to live with it anymore. introducing prosvent, the all-natural solution so good it's guaranteed to give you relief in less than 30 days. prosvent is a unique combination with naturally occurring substances shown to reduce the symptoms of an enlarged prostate, helping return men to comfortable and happy lives. and no side effects. it has pygeum africanum, stinging nettle, saw palmetto with beta-sitosterol, and pumpkin-seed oil, all with long histories of limiting overnight urination, lessening urgency, even improving urinary flow. powerful antioxidant lycopene, clinically proven to support prostate health, plus vitamin d and zinc to round out this powerful prostate-health formula, all in an easy-to-swallow gel pill with
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bioperine to increase absorption. so, what's getting your life back worth to you? painful and bloody surgery costs thousands of dollars, and prescription drugs with potential side effects could cost hundreds of dollars. but prosvent won't cost you $100, not even close. a full two-month supply is only $79.95. but it won't cost you that, either, because we're going to let you try prosvent for 30 days for free. that's right -- free. you pay only shipping and processing. plus, call in the next 10 minutes, and as our free gift, we'll include a 30-day supply of provigor, the all-natural formula for those intimate moments when you want to put the spark back in your life. that's a $40 value free. plus, this guide to prostate health to answer all your prostate questions. try prosvent. try it for a full 30 days, and if it doesn't help you sleep through the night, reduce urgency, frequency, or just make your life a whole lot better,
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return the unused portion and your credit card will never be charged. that's how sure we are it's going to work for you. get your life back. callow. have your credit card ready when you call. don't suffer through more sleepless nights. don't let urgency and frequency ruin your days. an enlarged prostate may be inevitable, but it doesn't have to be a life sentence. prosvent can help restore your life. sleep peacefully through the whole night. sit comfortably through a ball game or movie. drive without worrying about the next rest stop. remember, call in the next 10 minutes and get a 30-day supply of provigor for those loving moments as our free gift. don't wait. call now to get prosvent for 30 days. all you pay is shipping and processing. >> we have some callers on the line with questions. chris in rochester, you're on the air. >> yeah, i'm just beginning to see some of these things happen, and i got to say, i'm a little scared.
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how quickly is this gonna get worse, and can i reverse what's started? >> nobody can tell you how quickly your symptoms are gonna progress. we can only tell you that, with time, they will get worse. but if you start prosvent, it has the ingredients that will reverse that process, and from the day you start, the healing will begin. >> our next caller is lou from new york. >> i'm 62 years old, and i'm having some of the symptoms you're discussing today. can some of these lead to cancer? >> lou, the simple answer is no. but the man of 62 who has benign prostatic enlargement is also the man who's at risk for cancer. remember, i encourage every man at the age of 50 to see their physician, have a digital rectal exam, and get a psa measure. you've got to rule out cancer. then prosvent can help alleviate the problems of an enlarged prostate and increase your overall prostate health. >> and no side effects. >> these ingredients have been
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studied countless times with thousands of patients and no side effects. >> i'm glad to say we have a woman on the line -- francine from philadelphia. >> i am really worried about my husband. he says he's fine, but i know something's wrong with him because he just gets up all night long to go to the bathroom, and when he goes to the bathroom, he's in there forever. he said nothing's wrong, but it's because his p.h.-- p.s.-- whatever you call it -- psa is negative, and he just won't talk about it. what should i do? >> francine, you've got to talk to him. understand that it's unlikely that he has cancer. that's what the psa means. but those symptoms are horrible. and they're interfering with his life and yours. and you've got to persuade him that there is something that can be done and he doesn't have to live with those symptoms. >> this is a perfect example of how it not only affects the man but his loved one, too. i-i can't believe how men just think this is gonna go away. francine, if you're still there,
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you got to pick up the phone, and you got to order this for him, put it down, and make him take it. because it's not gonna only help him. it's gonna help you and your relationship before it gets any bigger problems. >> and he's gonna be grateful for your help. >> all right. we have time for one more caller. neil from los angeles. how are you doing, neil? you have a question? >> yes. you know, i've been having these symptoms that you've been describing for many years now, and, you know, i've tried a lot of things. why don't i just have the prostate removed? >> that's a good question. >> neil, your body is not like a car. you can't just change the oil filter. you may be trading a bad problem for a worse one. if you have your prostate removed, you run the risk of damaging the nerves and winding up incontinent, impotent. it is not the treatment of choice. it is truly your last resort. >> now, we only have a couple minutes left. is there anything else that you want to add? >> the problem of an enlarged prostate is inevitable. it's going to happen to every man listening out there today. so far, it's been a silent
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epidemic. don't be afraid to talk about it. don't be embarrassed. don't wait until the problems overtake your life. if you have a family history of prostate problems or have any symptoms such as frequent urination, urgency, hesitancy, getting up frequently at night, pain or discomfort when urinating, or a diminished sex drive, try prosvent today. get back your life. >> thank you for joining us and be well. >> i had run out of the samples at one time, and i noticed going back to getting up once a night, then twice a night, and i said -- that's when i really realized that this product was really working and that i should continue taking it. >> going to bed and being able to get a full night's sleep, get up in the morning, and make believe i'm a race horse was unbelievable. >> i want to be healthy, and i am. maybe i'm a little overweight, but that's because i eat too many cookies, but what are you gonna do?
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[ chuckles ] >> announcer: try prosvent. try it for a full 30 days, and if it doesn't help you sleep through the night, reduce urgency, frequency, or just make your life a whole lot better, return the unused portion and your credit card will never be charged. that's how sure we are it's going to work for you. get your life back. call now. have your credit card ready when you call. don't suffer through more sleepless nights. don't let urgency and frequency ruin your days. an enlarged prostate may be inevitable, but it doesn't have to be a life sentence. prosvent can help restore your life. sleep peacefully through the whole night. sit comfortably through a ball game or movie. drive without worrying about the next rest stop. remember, call now and get a 30-day supply of provigor for those loving moments as our free gift. don't wait. call now to get prosvent for 30 days. all you pay is shipping and processing.
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>> garry found ways to make you want to learn to work. >> reporter: director ron howard first encountered marshall when he was a child star on the "andy griffith show." >> gary had been doing the "dick van dyke show" on that same lot. >> reporter: did you know each other? >> i knew who he was. >> reporter: marshall would later cast howard in a sitcom he created set in the 1950's.
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sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: launched in 1974, "happy days" would run for ten years. >> garry was the best boss i ever had. he could lead a group of people to be their best selves. >> reporter: he did it again with a string of hits, "laverne & shirley," "mork & mindy," dominating prime time for more than a decade. he seemed to hit a nerve in this country. >> yeah. he could have kept going as a dominant figure in television, but he really wanted to make movies. >> reporter: on film, he gave us "pretty woman." >> oh! >> reporter: and "the princess diaries," and always mentored his actors. >> you want to go in and pitch a comedy to a network? in your pitch just curse a lot. it worked. i sold a couple pilots that way as a producer. >> reporter: marshall was an actor, too often playing the studio executives he made fun of. >> you know the words i like?
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i like the words "peppy" and the word "cheap." peppy and cheap. >> if any of us were beginning to have success in the bis, he'd say, just don't ever forget, life is more important than show business. >> reporter: "it's nice to be important," garry marshall once said. "it's more important to be nice." anthony mason, cbs news, hollywood. and that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues and for others, tune back a little bit later for the morning news and of course full coverager of the republican national convention with charley, nora, and gale. from cleveland, the site of the republican national convention, i'm scott pelley.
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this is the cbs overnight news. welcome to the overnight news. volkswagen is bracing for another multibillion dollar hit. over the ongoing emissions scandal. three states have filed lawsuits charging top executives with creating defeat devices to allow hundreds of thousands of so-called clean emissions cars to pass emissions tests. they've already settled to the tune of $15 billion. >> reporter: this is one of the effected vehicles the company may have to buy back. the latest lawsuits site internal volkswagen documents and allege this was a long running, well known ploy to skirt laws in the u.s. and
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around the world. >> this was not a corporate decision from my point of view. this was a couple of soft ware engineers -- >> reporter: that's then ceo michael horn giving congress what had become the volkswagen emissions scandal party line pp some found it hard to believe. >> vw is trying to get the united states to believe this is a couple of rogue engineers. i categorically reject that. >> reporter: among the top executives named is former ceo that had previously denied wrong doing but resigned in september. >> this cover up was deep, wide and long lasting. >> new york attorney general, erick sniderman. >> the idea that this level of fraud could take place and involve so many people at such high levels of these major international corporations for
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so long is appalling. >> reporter: audi, volkswagen and porsche signs 600,000 vehicles in the u.s. with software designed to cheat emissions standards. and get a cost benefit analysis over potential penalties for getting caught. >> i'm angrier today than i was a couple days ago and i was pretty pussed a couple days ago. >> reporter: he bought a 2011 audi equipped with a defeat it vice. >> how do nine people say let's cheat and no one else goes that's a bad idea. >> reporter: in a statement, volkswagen said the allegations are essentially not new. adding that it's regrettable that some states have decided to sue for environmental claims now pp these latest lawsuits stop short of naming the current ceo to knowledge. and because the earlier settlement didn't have to do
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with penalties, these lawsuits can move forward. in mayor with -- and the potential liability to vw is in the billions of dollars. chairman roger ailes is about to step down amid charges of sexual harassment. ailes and fox are reportedly negotiating the final details of his exit. over 20 years he grew it from a start up operation to the top cable news network. >> reporter: ales is already under investigation. by former anchor, gretchen carlson. then yesterday, megyn kelly reportedly told investigators that he had made similar sexual advancement towards her, about 10 years ago when she was starting at fox news. it was business as usual for fox news correspondent, megyn kelly
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tuesday night reporting from the republican national convention but according to sources sited by new york magazine, she has reported to investigators that her boss, roger ailes made unwanted sexual advancements towards her about 10 years ago and she described her harassment in detail. >> the star stats made his position untenable. where does he go if he's being accused by one of his most prominent employees, prominent women as being a sexual harasser. sser. kelly had nothing but praise for her boss when she spoke to charley rose last year. >> i really care about fox and i really care about roger. he's been nothing but good to me and he's been very loyal and he's had my back. >> reporter: kelly's reported accusation is putting increased
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pressure on fox news' parent corporation to release ailes. an internal investigation was launched after former fox news anchor, gretchen carlson filed a sexual lawsuit against ailes. fox executives appear to be taking the accusations against ailes seriously. >> they're in these discussions right now and the real question is how quickly they can get him out and under what terms. >> reporter: 21st century fox issued a statement. roger is at work. and any exit deal would likely be a lucrative one for the fox chief. >> you expect to see a rich pay day for leaving under a cloud. 10s of millions of dollars. a private funeral is planned for hollywood icon, garry marshall. the legendary writer, actor and
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producer died tuesday at his home in california. he was 81. he entertained america for more than 50 years starting as a joke writer and moving on to create tv shows and blockbuster movies. charley rose has his story. ♪ a beautiful smile to hide the pain ♪ >> reporter: garry marshall knew how to make a moment. >> princess of genovia. a five-time emmy nominee. ♪ sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: marshall was a hit maker. he created numerous '70s and '80s television sitcoms. "laverne and shirley." and "mork and mindy." launched the career of an unknown robin williams. marshall, an italian kid from
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the bronx, shined in front of the camera too. >> i like wayne newton. >> i said wayne newton? >> i heard you say wayne newton. i like him. that makes me a schmuck. >> on my pbs program in 1995 i ask him about the key to his success. >> filling blank tape is the hardest thing there is. >> why is it so hard do you think? >> because you have no excuses. a guy with a pen has really no excuses. >> reporter: on cbs this morning in 2012, marshall explained how an uncertain ending contributed to the big screen magic of "pretty woman." >> we didn't have an ending and i kept thinking what could it be and then we finally had a fairy tale ending. and i said julia, tell the story about the little girl in the tower. just tell it.
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♪ the republican national convention in cleveland hasn't attracted the violent protests many had feared but it has attracted several rock and roll bands determined to sway the political process. >> reporter: behind me you see a memorial to the rock and roll in america. donald trump may be the headliner but last night one band came to town with the intention of disrupting that party. if rifts could start a revolution, then the prophets of rage hope to start right now. >> what we do is we play music. we play it loud and with meaning. >> reporter: he plays guitar in the band.
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>> i describe this band as a path of revolutionary musicians who have come together during this crazy, historic political juncture. >> reporter: formed this year it's a collection of rock veterans. three guys from the '90s band, rage against the machine teamed up with be real from cyprus hill and chuck d from the '80s rap group, public enemy. ♪ all three ensembles were known for their politically charged lyrics and in-your-face performances. >> it's a reintroduction of a particular style of how words and music can actually move people. >> reporter: the prophets of rage say they're of no party and instead endorse a platform of the people, against corporate
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greed and political corruption. >> our system is broken and it cannot be fixed by either of the two major parties. i'm not going to hope that the racist, misogynist demigod advocating war crimes at the rnc or the centerest democrat is going to fix the country. >> reporter: at this year's republican national convention, they're staging concerts which they hope will encourage action. >> the world's not going to change itself, that's up for you. ♪ stop children what's that sound everybody look what's going down ♪ >> reporter: jason hanley is in charge of education at the rock and roll hall of fame. he says the prophets of rage are part of a musical history that's repeating itself. >> rock and roll grew up side by side with what was happening. ♪ so many people are dying
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>> reporter: in the 1960s, bob dylan captured the anger of a young generation. 20 years later, rappers like nwa voice the frustration and oppression of urban communities. >> we're still today dealing with those exact same issues. so those lyrics still resonate with us and they still feel painful and that's all right. >> people are feeling what we're speaking of right now. >> reporter: the word rage, especially in the last couple weeks, things have been heated. there have been killings of civilians, killings of police officers. is there ever a line that you won't cross when you're performing your art? >> this is about peaceful protest but it's anger and injustice that sparks people to act and that's what our music's about. >> the presidential campaign hasn't really begun yet but it's already providing fodder for
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political cartoonist from coast to coast. mo rocca is in cleveland with ow satire come together on the campaign trail. >> reporter: at the cleveland art gallery, spaces, four decades of political cartoons from former syndicated editorial artist, ed fresca are now on display. what makes for a successful political cartoon? >> when i have provoked somebody into thinking. left, right, doesn't matter. >> reporter: american political art predates the founding of this country. >> benjamin franklin did that snake bits of the 13 colonies, which if they don't unite, they're not going to survive. >> reporter: a descendant of john adams and john quincy
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adams. the great cartoonists of the past, would this be great material for them? >> i think this is a year made for a political cartoonist. donald trump is just a cartoonist' dream. his hair, his face, the way he speaks. there's a cartoon quality to that. >> they can draw him every day. >> reporter: david horsy is a two-time pulitzer prize winner editorial cartoonist with the l.a. times. he's wielding his pen all this week in cleveland. >> i've drawn him as a barbarian conquering rome, i've drawn him as a caveman. there are wonderful analogies you can find for his sort of macho, i'm in charge i don't care style. >> reporter: political cartooning isn't just about cartooning. charactericturing an individual. i'm providing commentary and the
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drawing ads a heightened reality. >> his politics are liberal, even though. when you're looking at hillary clinton, what physical features are good material for political cartoonist? >> you start with the face. she has a very kind of round face, moon face. kind of a small mouth, big eyes. there's sort of a -- i don't know. i'm going to get in trouble with this. but sort of this midwestern mom look to her. >> reporter: it may sound a bit harsh but the point is to dre blood. >> right here we have nixon with his patented reseeding hairline. >> reporter: richard nixon gave the cartoonists of his era plenty of material. >> i think he was a sneaky looking guy and wasn't too hard to exaggerate. >> the whole tradition of political cartooning has been to poke fun at the powerful and humor itself is very seldom
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nice. i mean, you're always finding the weakness and going after that. and that's ultimately the job of a political cartoonist is to intelligently provoke with images and observations about the world. >> reporter: and maybe, just maybe move the masses. >> reporter: can you overly humbly say it rarely moves the needle. but abraham lincoln thanks thomas gnash for the election 1864. and ulysses grant thanked him also. sg >> i don't think i've changed minds but i've marshalled forces. >> they can taken a issue you don't care about and they can make it seem immediate and visceral. >> where are they on the scale of effectiveness right now? >> i think this is a period
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where no one quite knows what's going on. i think social media has had a big impact. we're communicating with word and image. >> reporter: in other words, the meme has given users a political say. this may be the golden age. >> i think it probably will be but probably in ways we can't quite anticipate. takbbq trophies:hese best cracked pepper sauce... most ribs eaten while calf roping... >>yep, greatness deserves recognition. you got any trophies, cowboy? ♪ whoomp there it is uh, yeah... well, uh, well there's this one. >>best insurance mobile app? yeah, two years in a row. >>well i'll be... does that thing just follow you around? like a little puppy! the award-winning geico app. download it today. that's you could wearstrong, dudthem a second day.n...keeps charmin ultra strong. it's 4 times stronger,
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summertime and the living is easy. especially in one of america's most iconic national parks. conor knight has the story of caneel bay at the u.s. virgin islands. >> reporter: the rooms at caneel bay don't have telephones or televisions. a luxury resort situated inside a national park. guests enjoy access to pristine beaches, tropical cocktails, and sunset cruises. at night there's fine dining under coral chandali eechandali under the stars. and if you're wondering how did a national park end up with a resort that feels like a place rockefeller would stay? it's because it's the type of place a rockefeller would build. in 1952, lawrence rockefeller landed on this stretch of st.
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john, the smallest of the u.s. virgin islands. he thought this was one of the most beautiful places he had ever seen. so, he bought it. most of it, at least. it's good to be a rockefeller. his father, john d. rockefeller jr. used some of the family fortune to purchase land to expand grand titon national park and create acadia national park. and so, while developing a luxury resort in the middle of paradise began to get a similar idea. >> he thought there should be a partnership between commerce and conservation and he built the resort with the idea that visitors can have the luxury of sleeping in a bed but can experience the benefits of being
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in a natural setting. curin is a ranger at virgin islands national park. the first 5,000 acres were a gift from rockefeller. with assistance from frank stick, rockefeller bought up nearly half the island. at a picnic on december 1st, 1956, he handed the land over that federal government. with one condition, that he would still be allowed to run caneel bay. >> it would be a resort with a beach. >> reporter: nicolai, the general manager where the setting remains the setting -- selling point. rockefeller designed the hotel as one of the first eco resorts. the lighting is low, the buildings are unobtrusive. >> it's protected. >> reporter: the water is filled with sea turtles. and while the land is owned by
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the department of the interior, it operate said under an exclusive lease passed on by to its current owners. but not much has changed since rockefeller was in charge, except maybe the prices. >> you can stay from $300 on. the high end is $1800 per night and his own residence. >> reporter: the rooms of cottage 7 were rockefeller's preferred accommodations. in a way, it was this hotel that kept the island from becoming a bunch of hotels. sitting on the edge of st. john, you can look across and sea st. thomas and the difference is striking. on nearby st. thomas, development runs wild. but thanks to this chance visit by a new york billionaire, today nearly 2/3 of st. john is a national park. it's the virgin island that
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remained virgin. a paradise protected. ng pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-cbs caption t! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 678 it's ryan's cell phone. gibbs: isolate calls from psy-ops, government-issued lines. there's five or six different numbers here. cross-reference with incoming calls to banks
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kraft beer is big business these days. and one of the founding fathers named his brew after one of the founding fathers of the united states,sam adams. serena sat down with him over a couple of beers. >> four ingredients go into beer. >> reporter: at the sam adams brewery in boston, massachusetts, kraft beer lovers unlock the aromas of hops. learn what a mash is. >> it looks like a porage or an oatmeal. and it's going to turn really sweet. >> reporter: and of course sample a variety of brews. >> this is actually brewed with kosher salt, which is something
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i didn't know before but it adds a different layer of flavor to the beer. >> my favorite ones would be stout. >> reporter: today there are more than 4,000 kraft brewers in the united states. when jim cook started in 1984, the american beer landscape looked very different. >> american beer was the laughing stck of the rest of the world because everybody thougt it was just watery and fizzy. >> reporter: determined to change that, jim cook quit his corporate job to brew beer. he thought his father, a fifth generation brewer would be pleased. >> i thought i was going to have a father-son moment. that's so great. you're continuing this long tradition. he looked at me and said jim, you've done some stupid things in your life. this is about the stupidest thing. >> reporter: today sam adams has started a revolution of its own and jim cook is a billionaire.
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a made-in america success story. he writes about in his new book. you get compared to steve jobes. you're the steve jobes of beer. >> i thought that was a very kind comparison. he put a ding in the universe. i'm just trying to give people a better glass of beer. >> reporter: starting with his great, great grandfather's recipe. >> luck that he will varieties of hops were still grown north of munich. >> reporter: 32 years in, jim cook is as passionate about beer as ever. though now he's the guy to beat in an industry that has exploded. >> all 4,000 kraft brewers have got to 10 or 12% of the market. we can double. that's pretty cool. >> and that's our overnight news. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back for the morning news and cbs this
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morning. captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, july 21st, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." a rival revenge. ted cruz takes the stage at the republic national convention and refuses to endorse donald trump. instead, telling delegates -- >> stand and speak and vote your conscience. >> this morning, we are getting trump's response to the most shocking moment of the night. mike pence officially accepts the nomination for vice president, delivering a speech that was equal part praise for trump and criticism of clinton. s
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