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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 28, 2016 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, september 28th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." world leaders pay tribute to a founding father of israeli who became a warrior for peace. former president, prime minister and nobel peace prize winner shimon peres died overnight at age 93. >> hillary clinton talks about donald trump's past comments. see the tense moment between trump and alicia machado during an interview. >> are other banks resorting to the same tactics as wells fargo? we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds.
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did anybody see that debate last night? one down. two to go. >> both candidates declare debate victory. >> almost every single poll had us winning the debate against crooked hillary clinton. big league. big league. former israeli prime minister and president shimon peres has died. >> he was one of israeli's founding fathers and a key political figure for more than five decade. >> you should count their treatments. >> the flames get close, then we will head out. >> in southern california, homes threatened by the growing wildfire. >> crews are trying to keep the fire under control. >> makes a challenging situation. >> african-american male died after a police involved shooting in california. >> the male rapidly drew an object. >> typhoon made landfall in
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northeast taiwan. >> knocking on the door of a cat five. a monster out there. >> wells fargo over phony accounts. john stumpf says he will cancel bonuses. >> elon musk sending people to mars. >> the man was proposing at a yankees game but he dropped the ring! >> they found it! >> all that matters. >> i won the polls easily. i won cbs. >> that is impressive but cbs did not conduct a post-debate poll. ah! that close! that close! >> on "cbs this morning." >> the debate got very nasty at times. >> in fact, donald trump interrupted hillary clinton 51 times during the debate. 51 times. >> when reporters asked hillary if she was bothered by the
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interruptions, trump said, "no, she wasn't!" announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." israeli and the world are honoring shimon peres as a visionary and a fighter for peace. the nobel prize winning former president and prime minister of israeli died overnight. the 93-year-old was the last surviving leader of israeli's founding generation. >> president obama gave this tribute a light has gone out, but the hope he gave us will live and burn forever. he also said peres changed the course of human history working with other world leaders for decade to bring peace to the middle east. many of those leaders will travel to israeli on friday for the funeral. charlie d'agata is in london with the global reaction. >> reporter: good morning. well, they held a moment of silence in israeli this morning in honor of shimon peres.
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prime minister benefitijamin netanyahu called him a man of vision. peres's family said he died in the hospital after two weeks suffering a stroke. even for his own people, shimon peres was a putshiple -- puzzle. lacked formal education, yet brimmed with culture was a mediocre politician who became a statesman of spectacular vision. his service in the knesset israeli's parliament lasted a 12 cabinets and was prime minister twice. his political career enaccident happensed all of israel's war but peres believed his country's security lay as much as making peace as being prepared in conflict. peres cooperated with his fierce political rival yitzhak rabin to form a historic treaty signed by
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israeli prime minister menachem begin and yasser arafat. >> we will have a settlement and with all of our neighbors, a comprehensive peace, peaceful. >> reporter: as foreign minister, peres was in charge of the peace process with the palestinians. the oslo accord, signed at the white house in 1993, when peres, prime minister yitzhak rabin and yasser arafat won the nobel peace prize. in 1994, per are res sat down with one of his many interviews with charlie rose. >> may i say, almost with a smile on my face, that only politicians have the right to make mistakes and without mistakes, you cannot reach peace. >> reporter: a long and mostly secret special relationship with king hussein of jordan culminated in israeli's second peace treaty, an arab state.
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in what perhaps some dubbed his life best, shimon peres once said, the duty of leaders is to pursue freedom ceaselessly even in the face of hostility, in the face of doubt and disappointment. just imagine what could be. that optimism remained right up until the end. earlier this month he posted a video message on facebook to first graders on their first day of school saying don't forget to be daring and curious and to dream big. gayle? >> wow. i love that, charlie! what a powerful statement ed to you, without mistakes you cannot reach peace and to first graders. >> the difference in peace the young bury the old in peace and the young bury the old and my better deem is making a better world for the young. >> he did that. sin singular life until the very
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end. >> ammunition on the campaign trail today. hillary clinton will be in new hampshire today with a former rival bernie standards. donald trump campaigns in illinois, iowa, and wisconsin. monday's debate drew a record 84 million viewers. clinton is capitalizing on this one moment, attacking the republican nominee's treatment of a beauty queen. nancy cordes is in white plains, new york, traveling with the clinton campaign. nancy, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. the clinton campaign says one of its goals with this debate was to go trump into making a mistake. they say it worked and that he is digging himself in deeper by fat shaming the former miss universe again and now she is fighting back. >> he was really rude with me. he was -- he tried to destroy my self-esteem. >> miss venezuela, you are the
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new miss universe! >> reporter: trump on fox yesterday. >> she gained a massive amount of weight and it was a real problem. >> reporter: brought back bad memories from years ago when she won a beauty pageant and forced to work out in fronts of an army of cam raze. >> she weighed 118, 117 pound and she went up to 160 or 70 so this is mb who likes to eat. >> reporter: when the two appeared together, a few months later, machado said she only gained 18 pounds. >> she is one of the great miss universe and had a problem in the middle where she gained a little weight. >> i don't think so. >> she is probably right. >> i don't think so. >> okay. >> trump faked ignorance when clinton brought up machado on the debate stage. >> he called this woman miss piggy. donald, she has a name. >> where did you find this out? >> her name is alicia machado.
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>> reporter: within hours they had a spanish language campaign video featuring the former miss universe. >> did anybody see that debate last night? >> reporter: in raleigh, tuesday, clinton called trump's words dangerously incoherent. trump's medical records revealed 236 he is on the borderline between overweight and obese. >> your family give you a hard time with byour weight? >> i think i could lose some way. i've sort of been a little bit this way. >> reporter: controversies like this one has prompted the arizona of republican to endorse a democrat for president the first time in its history. trump's long history of objectifying women and his demeaning comments about women during the campaign are not good old boy gaffs, but evidence of deep character flaws.
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a red state is arizona and a state that clinton is trying to turn blue in this election. >> donald trump says he may be tougher in his next debate and hit his opponent hard where he campaigned yesterday. major garrett is in chicago this morning. >> reporter: donald trump loves to take credit for big tv ratings and he considers himself a ratings magnet for monday' now presidential debate and brought tv production values to a rally in central florida late last night where his own campaign cameras captured plenty of footage for a coming trump campaign commercial. ♪ >> reporter: donald trump's private jet glided slowly up to a jam-packed hangar in melbourne, florida, amid pseudopresidential fan fare. trump can't abide losing and cited none scientific online polls to prove he won the debate with hillary clinton.
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>> almost every single poll had us winning the debate against crooked hillary clinton. big league. big league. >> reporter: trump patted himself on the back for something else. restraint. >> i was also holding back. i didn't want to do anything to embarrass her. >> reporter: casting clinton as a captive of old-style politics, the gop nominee repriced what advisers thought what one of his best debate lines. >> what has hillary clinton accomplished for your family the last 26 years she has been doing this? nothing. nothing. she has got experience but it's bad experience. >> reporter: having failed to drive the issue when face-to-face with clinton, trump said her e-mail scandal looks worse and worse. >> then her aides took the fifth amendment and her ring leaders were given immunity! and if you're not guilty of a crime, why do you need immunity
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for? >> reporter: trump found fault with lester holt and bulky microphone. >> he didn't ask her about the e-mails at all. he didn't ask her about her scandal. my microphone was terrible. i wonder if it was set up that way. >> reporter: hillary clinton dismissed the conspiracy. >> anybody who blames it on the microphone is not having a good night. >> reporter: trump brought his best fund-raisers to trump tower tuesday for a national call-around and after a few hours, he raised more than $18 million. online donations augmented that total but trump is still well short of the 140 million he is pledged to put on advertising between now and election day and on mounting pressure to spend more of his own money on his own cause. >> john heilemann is manager editor of bloomberg politics and co-host of "the circus" on show time a cbs affiliate. what do you make of this fallout
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on the day after the debate? >> i think it was a beautifully set trap by the clinton campaign. hillary clinton got it in at the very end of the debate and trying to find a moment all night to lay that argument out. trump was plainly unprepared for it. kind of acting like where did you find that? well, i found it on television, in your book and "the new york times" and all over the place. managed to do the dumbest thing he did which to go on television following the raid and attack the woman again. that gave the story legs and made everyone in our business able to keep talking about it. it wasn't just -- >> she is talking too. >> it wasn't just a debate hit any more. >> at a time he desperately need suburban women. >> you think about all of the good work. just strictly political good work for weeks his ability to stay relatively disciplined and to do all the things aimed at suburban republican leaning white women. then to engage in this kind of act of fat shaming. again, i don't know -- you guys
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may have know some exceptions in the world. i've never met a woman, rich, poor, black, white, republican, or democrat who thinks it's okay for a rich, powerful man to call a woman fat. >> you know why you've never met her? because there isn't one and that's why you've never met her. >> i just said it's not a great political strategy but i'll just say this. i think one of the things about trump, we talk about how much he attacks people. we accept attacks even really violent vicious attacks in politics. if you're donald trump you can attack hillary clinton and chris christie and march ro rubio. whether it's judge curiel or the khan family or miss machado, unprecedented and political thing and very dangerous. >> they have come out with an ad already. >> like i said it was a set trap and part of the setting of the
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trap was knowing -- >> i don't understand why they didn't anticipate it? >> who? >> the trump campaign. it was all over the press. >> look. you could fill a book with the number of totally predictable attacks that hillary clinton leveled against donald trump at the debate that trump seemed unprepared to handle in a crisp, clean way and then pivot away from those things. that is what you do in debate. you anticipate the attack and answer it quickly and move on to a topic of your choosing. he did not do that over and over again. always this is off the criticism, right? who won or who lost the debate. i think there is no question she executed will 85% of her plan and he executed about 15% or 20% of his plan. >> he said next time he'll go harder. >> he may. we will see. harder to do in the context of a town hall format and harder to be like that when you have ordinary scitizens and voters asking questions. >> we will have tuesday's vice presidential debate at 9:00/8:00 central on cbs. the moderator is elaine quijano of our streaming network cbsn.
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tensions growing in a california community this morning after another deadly police shooting of a black man. officials in el cajon released this imagine showing a man pointing an object at police before one officer opened fire. police now know he was not carrying a gun. mireya villarreal is in el cajon, northeast of san diego, with how the shooting unfolded. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. friends tell us that the man's name is alfred longo and police have yet to release the full video from the still imagine you just saw. it was taken from a witness smartphone but they say the longo pulled his hands out of the pocket and pointed them in the direction of the officers. >> you killed my brother in front of me! >> reporter: video taken moments after the shooting shows a distraught woman who is identified as the man's sister. >> oh, my god! you killed my brother! >> do you have somebody you can call? >> i just called for help and
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killed him! >> reporter: she says she called police for help and told them her brother was mentally ill and unarmed and officers confirmed they received that information and when they arrived at the scene they say the man was acting erratically and refusing demands. >> reporter: this video freeze-frame shows the moment before the shooting. >> at one point, the male rapidly drew an object from his front pants's pocket, placed both hands together on it and extended rapidly towards the officer taking what appeared to be a shooting stance. >> reporter: one sister discharged a taser while simultaneously another opened fire. police haven't said what the object the man pulled out was, but they now know it wasn't a gun. >> why did you take him? why why why? >> they didn't say anything. he didn't hear no rights. had he no rights. he was a black man he automatically had no rights so they shot him. they shot him five times and he
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is mentally challenged. >> reporter: tensions quickly intensified at the scene as a growing crowd of people demanded answers but the police are urging calm. >> now is the time to allow the investigation to shed light on this event and we plan to be open and transparent. >> reporter: the names of the two officers have not yet been released but we do know both of them have 20 years of experience on the force. we also know that they are on administrative leave. the local police department here, their homicide division is conducting their own investigation. that will be reviewed by the district attorney's office and the fbi. gayle? >> thank you. dutch investigators are releasing a new report this morning on the downing of a malaysia airlines jetliner in ukraine. prosecutors told victims' families a short time ago that russia is behind the crash. the relatives say they were told the missile that brought down the jet was transported from
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russia and fired from a section of ukraine held by pro-russian rebels. rusch's government denies this and they say rebel held. police believe an apartment on the second floor may have been used as a marijuana grow house. the battalion chief was killed in the explosion. he was a 17-year veteran of the fire department and father of three children. families of 9/11 may soon be able to sue saudi a
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by neutrogena. rapid wrinkle repair works in one week. space pioneer elon musk has his sights on mars.
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>> ahead, his ambitious, but drowning plan to colonize the plane and the price tag for those brave enough to make the trip. the news is right back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by walgreens. at the corner of happy and healthy. ♪ when is your flu shot more than a flu shot? when it helps give a lifesaving vaccine to a child in need. ♪ thanks to customers like you, walgreens "get a shot. give a shot." program has helped provide 15 million vaccines through the un foundation. it's that easy to make a difference. ♪ walgreens. at the corner of happy and healthy.
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you're getting more for your money at the grocery store. good morning, i'm brooke thomas. campaign 2016, comes through philadelphia, again, today this time, it is first lady michelle obama. the first lady is campaigning for democratic presidential nominee hillary clinton. mrs. obama will attend a clinton rally at lasalle university's gola arena at noon time today. republican donald trump is in illinois, iowa and wisconsin today. lets get a check of the eyewitness forecast with meteorologist katie fehlinger. >> we have a day that sort of goes downhill with time starting off on a pleasant note, yesterday we could only pull out of the worst and end up with nice heather, and that is the opposite. we will have patchy fog earlier this morning keyword is patchy. we will see sunshine for rest of the morning and even in the afternoon, showers start to build in by evening by south
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to north with the new cut off low that will be with us for multiple taste, wetest time frame tonight and tomorrow. meisha. >> all right, katie. looking outside we are still looking very good you guys we have an accident here broomall upper darby blue route southbound before west chester pike, left lane is compromised because of that accident. very busy on the ben franklin bridge from new jersey into center city. moving in the westbound direction. the at route 30, it is opened but we have lane shifts in shift, and, at jimmy lead road. that will ease tension a little bit there. disabled vehicle mount laurel route 38 westbound and left lane block, brooke. thanks, meisha. our next update 7:55. up next, e lon
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♪ trump seemed to take his cues and bragging this morning he won the debate and citing several online polls. he said he won to prove it. >> i won cbs. >> that's right. he won cbs. which is news to cbs as their chief white house correspondent tweeted this morning, quote, donald trump said he won a cbs news post debate poll. we did not conduct a post-debate poll. >> come on! >> oops! oops, mr. trump, oops. sounded good when ed it because i was thinking, i didn't know we conduct a poll. >> i had to look it up. welcome back to "cbs this morning." this half hour, congress could decide today to allow families of 9/11 victims to sue saudi arabia over the allegations they helped the attackers. lawmakers may override a veto by president obama. how members of both parties
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disagree with the president. >> billionaire elon musk wants to colonize mars. how he hopes to send a hundred people to the planet within the next ten years. . time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" says a hundred thousand syrian children are trapped in a killing zone in aleppo. russian and syrian attacks on rebels there are intensifying and children can't escape the fighting. the world has seen heartbreaking images that show the suffering of children in rebel-held areas of aleppo and one of the most gripping accounts in the paper today. >> horrendous. >> the story is heartbreaking. governor chris christie denied knowing about the bridgegate scandal while it happened once again. he reacted to testimony by david wildstein. two former aides to new jersey's governor are accused of causing the jam in 2013.
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governor christie is not charged. >> bloomberg reports on a historic plunge in grocery prices. government figures show that food prices declined for nine straight months in the united states. this is the longest streak of food deflation since 1960. some eggs sold for 99 cents a dozen. they say the reasons include low grain and oil prices and gas prices and discounts like target and walmart. >> referee: senate plans to vote to override president obama's veto of giving 9/11 families the right to sue saudi arabia. many claim the saudi government has connections to the terror plot. defense secretary ash carter tells congress the bill could undermine counterterrorism efforts around the world. margaret brennan is at the white house. >> reporter: good morning. well, the white house, saudi arabia, major u.s. businesses, they have all been lobbying hard to kill this legislation. but as the votes are counted
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today, it appears that the 9/11 families may soon be able to bring the kingdom of saudi arabia to court. terry stratta's husband tom ka will was killed in the world trade center. >> we want truth and justice for the murder of our loved ones like any other american is entitled to. >> reporter: the bill will allow 9/11 families to sue saudi arabia whose officials they suspect may have provided assistance and funding to the terrorists. 15 of the 19 attackers were saudi-born. but president obama vetoed it last week. arguing it makes american troops and diplomats vulnerable to retaliatory investigation in foreign courts. josh ernest. >> what do you say to the families, who, in their view, believe the white house is standing in the way to justice? >> the president is very sympathetic to the argument that the argument that the 9/11 families make and the president is very interested in making sure that those families understand this administration
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stands with them. >> reporter: today, the senate is likely to override that veto, followed by the house. it would be the first time that president obama has had a veto overridden during his two terms in office. new york democrat chuck schumer. >> if the saudis were com they should pay a price in the name of justice and to prevent this from happening again. so i understand where the president is coming from but it's not where i'm coming from and the vast majority of house and senate members, democrat and republican. >> they have grown up without a dad. one child has memories of him and one child has no memories of him. >> reporter: terry spent the last 15 years raising three kids on her own and this is for them. >> i believe it's the way to protect ourselves from future terrorist attacks. i really believe we need to hold them accountable for the actions they take and ado it because of my children. >> reporter: oven though the bill would allow the families to bring saudi arabia to court in the u.s., the cia says there is
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no evidence linking senior saudi officials or their government to these attacks. and, charlie, the kingdom, vehemently denies any links. >> margaret, thanks so much. space pioneer elon musk has his eyes set on a bold new mission. the man behind spacex says tesla unveiled an ambitious plan yesterday to take people to mars. passengers on the first journey to the red planet have to buy a pricey ticket and carter evans shows us the plan to colonize earth's neighbor. >> reporter: this is what the first man mission to mars could look like. in the university of elon musk. >> i want to try to achieve here is to make mars seem possible. >> reporter: the founder of tesla and spacex said it could happen in about a decade. >> and liftoff. >> reporter: ambitious for a space company that has yet to launch a manned mission at all. the spaceships would carry at least a hundred passengers.
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each paying around $200,000. >> i think the first journey to mars is going to be really very dangerous. a risk of fatality will be high. no way around it. >> reporter: this month's explosion of a spacex rocket is a reminder of the significant consequences of failure. >> he has lost two falcon nine rockets the last 15 months and there is a sense that the -- would like to see him master that before talking about sending people to mars. a lot of the cost estimates that he made today are based on reusable launch technology. but they haven't been able to refly those rockets. >> reporter: it could cost about $10 billion to get the first ship off the ground. >> even if the ultimate goal of this doesn't pan out, the product that come out of this trying to attempt this will push us along in a direction that will benefit everybody. >> reporter: musk is hoping for a public private partnership to pay for the project. in the meantime, he is prepared to put his own money where his mouth is.
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>> i really don't have any other motivation, except to be able to make the biggest contribution i can to making life multiplanetary. >> reporter: for cbs news, carter evans, los angeles. >> i don't know. count me absent on that one. cost $200,000 that you have to pay and the first journey is very dangerous. >> is this a one-way ticket? >> i'm with you, my dear. >> you too, norah. you two dare devils at the da e table, no thank you. two are giving up at least $60 million in compensation because of the bank scheme but is the scandal bigger than wells fargo? another employee of another bank shares his experience of feeling pressure to meet those sales target or face the risk of getting fired. if you're heading out the
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door, we hope you don't have to leave right now but if you do, take us with you. you can watch your lice through your all-access device because you don't want to miss legendary actor morgan freeman who will be here in studio 57 coming up. we will be right back. ♪
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♪ hey! hey! wells fargo's independent directors are punishing two top executives after the bank scandal over sales practices. chairman and ceo john stumpf is forfeiting 41 million in stock awards and also forego his salary during the investigation. stumpf will not collect a bonus this year. >> former executive carry tolstedt is forfeiting the following. before the director's announcement she was expected to leave with $125 million in
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compensation. >> the fall back opened about two million unauthorized accounts in customers' names to meet lofty sales targets. omar villafranca shows us in dallas how this may be a larger problem in the banking industry. >> reporter: good morning. wells fargo fired more than 5,000 employees for opening those sham accounts. there is now a class action lawsuit on behalf of those employees in california who say they were either fired or demoted for not bending the rules to meet those sales goals. now employees at other banks, including one in the dallas area, say it's a common occurrence. >> i accept full responsibility for all unethical sales practices in our retail banking business. >> reporter: john stumpf was contrite last week as lawmakers questioned him on wells fargo sales tactics but didn't go far enough for senatoristic warren who called on the ceo to resign. >> elevate your desks of
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accountable is to bush the blame to your low level employees who don't have money for a fancy pr firm to defend themselves. it's gutless leadership. >> reporter: oscar garza was a person personal. he says aggressive sales tactics aren't just a problem at wells fargo. >> deceptive sales trade practices is across the industry and not specific to any branch. >> reporter: garza said he made $12 an hour and the only way to make extra cash was to make certain sells goals by managers and even if that meant setting up goals they didn't want. were they goals or quotas? did they have to be met. >> they had to be met. >> reporter: what did it result in? >> termination. never a direct order but there was definitely i'm going to turn a blind eye.
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do you what you need to do to meet that quota. >> reporter: a spokeswoman for chase bank disputed some of garza's claims and telling cbs news we don't have formal quotas that, if not met, would result in termination. adding any manager who would encourage a illegal activity and create a negative culture would be terminated. >> they have to sell as much as they can at all costs. >> reporter: jude conte works at the national employment law project and acquires numbers. it cited bankers from a variety of financial institutions all with similar stories, saying managers pushed workers to meet almost impossible goals and to ignore it when with consumers say no. >> it's a scary concept for the consumers and scary concept for the employees who are forced to engage in hard-sell techniques to push products that people don't really need. >> reporter: people don't necessarily want it either. according to federal regulators, complaints by bank customers about their accounts and service
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have risen 26% the past year. garza felt the sales tactics were unethical and left the business and now a member of the committee for better banks. to avoid being taken advantage of, he said customers should tell personal bankers exactly what they want. >> do not run my credit. do not run my social. i do not want a credit card. be very specific. >> reporter: wells fargo announced it will pay 180 million dollars in fines and the bank says it will get rid of all retail banking sales goals by the end of the year. >> nerves get the best of a groom-to-be as he drops the engagement ring at the yankees
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moments of his life. and, now, he can't find the ring. the box is empty. oh, that poor guy! >> that poor guy is right. here is one diamond at the ballpark that was not so easy to spot. andrew fox was proposing to his girlfriend at last night's yankees game. that is a good idea. then he dropped the ring. not so good. fans in his section immediately all put their heads together to search for it. took a few minutes but cheers erupted when the ring was recovered. fox got on one knee and his girlfriend heather said? yes! andrew, i want to marry you. they found the ring stuck in the cuff of her jeans. there it was! >> he was sweating, man. he was sweating it big time. >> he looks so worried when you look at his face. but it ended up okay. >> not a bad story for the rest of their lives. a controversy until new medical procedure can fix
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embryos with a new medication. meet the first three-parent baby. we will ask dr. david agus about the risks coming up. ♪ ♪ leads to the next.ce ♪ the new 2017 ford fusion is here. it's the beauty of a well-made choice. ♪ ugh. heartburn. sorry ma'am. no burning here. try new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. they don't taste chalky and work fast. mmmm. incredible. can i try? she doesn't have heartburn. new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. enjoy the relief.
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good morning everyone i'm jim donovan. they say all good things must come to than a end? well, it is even of free park nothing parts of the philadelphia it is last wednesday drivers will be able to park for free in center city. the city is evening it free first friday park nothing olde city as well, city officials say it is because of high demand and lack of parking spaces. oh, well. lets turn to katie for a look at the forecast. >> bummer of the story there. regardless we are starting the morning off on a quiet those then we did yesterday when we had rain to dodge. the is there more on the map already. i don't think you have to worry about what you see here they are nation's capitol and chesapeake bay area there may be a shower firing up across portions of delaware before this late morning is all said and done but regardless not until late today and tonight that our next storm arrives
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and it will be bringing us locally heavy rain thursday and well into the rest of the week. it is prolong system, meisha. >> and despite fact we have dry roadways i can tell you it is still looking very busy out there. we have an accident schuylkill west at vine block ago this left lane. another accident blue route southbound before west chester pike left lane was compromised now pulled off to that shoulder. water main break from earlier lincoln drive at green street intersection close at 8:00 a.m. alternate germantown avenue and that is closing in the next few minutes, over to you. >> thanks, meisha. our next update 8:25. coming up this morning fertility technique that produced world's first three parents baby. i'm jim donovan make it a great
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♪ have you heard? it is wednesday, september 28th, 2016. hump day! welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including the baby with three genetic parents. dr. david agus describes the procedure to screen out defects. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> a moment of silence in israeli in honor of shimon per he's. president netanyahu called him a man of vision. >> one of the goals with this debate is to goat trump into making a mistake. they say it worked. >> trump loves to take credit for big tv ratings and he brought tv production values to a rally late last night. >> i've never met a woman, rich, poor, black, white, republican or democrat who thinks it's okay
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for a rich, powerful man to call a woman fat. >> you know dwhy you've never mt her? because there is not one. >> a man pulled his hands out of his pockets and pointed them in the direction of the officers. >> as the vote are counted, it appears the 9/11 families may be able to bring saudi arabia to court. >> elon musk has his eyes set on a bold, new mission, to take people to mars. >> count me absent on that one. >> is this a round trip ticket or not? >> i know. >> during the debate, donald trump's campaign was reportedly deleting old tweets that contradicted his on-air claims. and i think we actually have a clip of that process. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the world is mourning shimon peres as a leader who fought for
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peace. israeli's former president and prime minister died overnight. two weeks after a stroke. he was 93. peres shared the nobel prize for reaching an interim peace deal with palestinian leaders. >> former president obama and former president clinton with expected to attend his funeral on friday. here are some conversations with him in 2012. >> in this long life that you continue to flourish in, what has been -- brought you the greatest sense of satisfaction? >> the thing that makes me is the people. really. pleasure. i don't think the world is a pleasure. i think to sell is a pleasure. >> what do you remember about him? >> a remarkable man. i saw him in israeli and i saw him in new york. he had a passion to try to bring economic reconstruction to the
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palestinians as well as israelis. he died having not done all that he wanted to do. >> at 93. and had more to do? >> a great sense of the possibilities of peace. >> i love in the last hour that we learned that on monday, he sent a letter to first grader telling them to dream big and to be fearless. i think that says a lot about this man. >> another amazing thing that he and yitzhak rabin came together when he was a prime minister and they were much better together than separate. >> he had secret friendships that helped lead to these peace negotiations and peace deals that he received the peace prize for. >> he was a constant appearance around the world. hillary clinton and donald trump both say they won the most watched debate in history. the facts are different. they attacked each other again yesterday, but also addressed policies.
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>> i don't think any family should ever have to pay more than 10% of your income to child care. >> we will cut your taxes and let you deduct the cost of child care. it's about time. >> we are going to raise tax on millionaires and billionaires. and we are going to close corporate loopholes. >> i'm going to eliminate every unnecessary and costly regulation. >> we have to make it clear that everyone is safer when there is respect from the law for the communities they protect and respect for the law from the communities that are protected. >> the policy, like stop and frisk in chicago, especially, where it's going crazy, could save thousands of lives. >> every call you make, every door you knock on, every friend, you register to vote to make the difference. >> you need to show up and vote on november 8th. >> clinton goes to new hampshire
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with bernie sanders today. trump campaigns in the midwest. a suspicious package that forced the evacuation of charlotte's police headquarters is the latest evidence. the city remains on edge. a bomb squad safely removed the package yesterday with a robot. the scare follows last week's deadly police shooting of keith lamont scott. there's still questions surrounding his confrontation with officers. errol barnett is outside of the charlotte police department with more and new information. >> reporter: good morning. the witnesses and the keith scott family deny or say it's unclear if keith scott had a gun. even though there are new questions about his history with weapons, scott's supporters say it doesn't change during his deadly encounter with police. dash cam and body cam videos fail to show exactly what led to the fatal shooting of keith
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lamont scott. wb-tv is reporting the gun recovered at the scene was stolen by someone else and sold to scott. past evidence shows the 43-year-old had a history with firearms. in 2005, scott did prison time in texas after shooting a man. last october, scott's wife rakeiyia filed a protective order. the body cam appeared to start recording late and lacking audio for the first 40 seconds. show me how it is initiated. >> when with an officer decides to do a recording he taps this center button here and the body came begins to record. >> reporter: body cameras are now charlotte police. in 2015 the city spent 57 million dollars implementing 14 body cameras. tactical teams like most of the officers on the scene at scott's
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shooting don't wear the equipment. >> all of those recordings are susceptible to being released to a defendant, then our susceptible to be released to the media, which could potentially put those officers at risk in the future because now we are publicizing the tactics. >> reporter: scott's death caused violent protests in charlotte and rattled members of the community. >> we need our fathers and mothers. >> reporter: including 9-year-old ziona who made a tearful plea at a recent city council meeting. >> we want to have peace and we want to be treated the same way as other people. >> reporter: now we should note that there is more footage that the cmpd has to release. on saturday they remove body and dash cam videos from the record and the same day the scott family plans to hold his funeral. >> errol, thank you so much.
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a 5-month-old infant has three genetic parents. ahead, how the baby is born without a genetic disease. dr. david agus
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morgan freeman is one of the world's most sought-after actors. hello. he is also showing off his talent behind the camera as one of the master minds of madam secretary. ahead, we will get his take on the real life presidential race. you are watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it transformed treatment as the first cure that's...
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get him out of here! get him out of here! get the hell out of here! priorities usa action is responsible for the content of this advertising. priorities usa action is responsible katie mcginty: franny, johnny, me, and colleen...een,, all 10 of us raised on a policeman's salary and a mom working as a restaurant hostess. imagine trying to do that today, with washington looking out for the favored few. i'll bring a different point of view to the u.s. senate -
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working class roots and the mother of three, i'll put middle class families ahead of wall street. i'm katie mcginty and i approve this message because it's your turn to get ahead. ♪ good love >> in our "morning rounds" a new fertility technique has produced a three-parent baby. the controversial procedure reported yesterday using genetic material from one man and two women. the breakthrough treatment intends to stop mothers from passing down genetic disorders to their children. our dr. david agus is in los angeles. david, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. >> so explain what they mean by a three-parent baby. >> well, this was a woman who had mitochondrial chromosome. in her case they took out her
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chromosomes and put it into a donor's egg with a nucleus had been removed. the baby has dna in the mitochondrial from the mother and chromosomes from the mother and the father. in the sense three parents. when you look at the amount of dna it looks like 2.001 parents rather than three but it's dna from three different people. >> i think what is exciting about it, it could help a lot of infertile couples, right? >> no question about it. thousands of kids born err year with mitochondrial defects and many cosuccumb to this horrible disease and many women can't give birth because they know they have this particular defect. it opens up the door for them to have children of their own. >> how do they monitor this procedure? >> this procedure was started in the '90s and they were doing it and it stopped because bad things happened and it wasn't regulated. now this is really the first case with modern technology. but in this child, there still
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is a fraction of the bad mitochondrial from the mother. we don't know the outcome. so the problem with experiences like this, if you want to call this an experiment you don't know the outcome until many years later. we need to follow this and follow this child to really understand better the ramifications of what was done. >> explain what migtochondrial is. >> there are 37 genes in mitochondrial and when they are defective, the organs that require a lot of power, the heart, brain, muscles don't work well and children who have these might tochondrial disorders cans this like this joredian couple in this story had children who died at a young age because of this might row condreal defect. >> they passeded a allow in the united states to allow it to
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happen although it hasn't happened. in mexico you can do what you want in this regard. with these new technologies the world is flat and there need to be global governance saying we all do it right and have the right outcome both for the children and the parents. >> thank you, dr. david agus. one mother's difficult decision to show her son to the world changed history. ahead, how the emmett till tragedy galvanized the civil rights movement. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by mirafiber. from the makers of miralax. ity with dailycomfort fiber and is less likely to cause... unwanted gas. finally. try new mirafiber. from the makers of miralax.
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♪ what's going on >> the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture in washington, d.c. is open to visitors after its dedication ceremony last weekend. it connects the artifactses and images of the past to the realities of the present. one of the museum's most anticipated museum is a casket that carried the boy 61 years ago. it's so sacred that visitors are not allowed to take pictures or videos. you have to see it in picture. michelle miller has more. >> reporter: it was 1955. the u.s. supreme court had outlawed legal segregration the year before yet blacks were living under a reign of terror. that same year a 17-year-old boy was the latest victim of it and
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his story may have been lost to history, if not for his mother's decision to expose his brutal death. we warn you, these images can be hard to watch. before the protest in charlotte and ferguson were the chants of black lives matter. there was the story of emmett till. it started when the 14-year-old walked into a mississippi general store with his cousins. >> emmet said nothing out of line. mrs. bryant came out from behind us. for some reason, a wolf whistle emme terks t did. >> why did he do that? >> i tell people, i think he wanted us to laugh. >> reporter: police found emmett's body floating in a river and so badly beaten his mother could barely identify him. >> i saw his tongue had been choked out and it was lying down on his chin. >> reporter: a young filmmaker
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named keith boshaun interviewed her 14 years ago, shortly before her death. >> this eye was out and it was lying about midway, the cheek. i discovered a hole. i said now was it necessary to shoot him? i said i want the world to see this, because there is no way i could tell this story and give them the visual picture of what my son looked like. >> reporter: in the midst of grief, disbelief, and horror, mobley made the decision to expose her only child to the world. these photos of his body in an open casket were published in the black press. >> it's unbelievable. that someone can do that to another human being is just putting your mind how evil those people were. >> those black people in the deep south, this was finally testimony to what they endured.
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>> reporter: michael eric dyson is a georgetown university sociology professor. >> it was meant to make them stay in their places. instead, it ignited a movement. >> reporter: rosa parks said it was till's images. >> this one image conjured the pain, the acrimony of lynching and showed to america, this is what you do to us. this is evil. >> the essence of justice is truth and you cannot have justice without truth. >> reporter: filmmaker keith boshawn has been on a quest the last 25 years. he is revealing it in an upcoming feature film. his chance to finally tell the complete story. when you see that photo and you juxtapose it against the video of rodney king, alton sterling
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and philando castille, to tamir rice. >> this there is no other story that speaks to this generation than the story of emmett till. >> reporter: no one was convicted of till's murder but his mother believes his legacy has become his justice. >> it took something to stir people up and let them know that we are either going to stand together or we are going to fall together. >> reporter: that film make's reporting led the fbi to reopen this case. in 2005, till's body was exhumed but his casket left to be forgotten but a family member found it. >> you can sit and see the casket. it's smaller than you might think. people literally are weeping. his picture is in the casket that you can barely see.
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people sit there and wee good morning i'm brooke thomas. police are interviewing neighbors and checking security cameras in the search for a killer. a 32 career old man was shot several times at close range on his porch on van dike street in tacony around midnight. died at temple hospital a short time later. office are found ten spent shell casings at the scene, investigators say they have no suspects and no motive so far. now it is time for eyewitness heather here's meteorologist katie fehlinger. >> we are tracking our next storm system over midwest and that is rotating toward us, heading toward night tallest sessionally. the at the home we see activity on storm scan we are still keeping a close watch, certainly some showers and thunderstorms have been quite heavy but it looks like the
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fizzle and it will be a situation we have to keep a close watch honest specially traveling southbound i-95. they are out there but for now, the we will stay dry throughout the day but showers develop later this evening from the south, and thursday and try, not to mention sat the day looking awfully soggy especially tomorrow, but still some showers around on friday, and as well as even in the weekend here there one same system. it the is cut up, and stuck here for a couple of days. meisha, over to you. >> katie, thank you. right now looking outside roadways are still looking busy, plus we still this have accident pulled off to that left schuylkill eastbound ramp to northbound boulevard, that left lane is compromised there and also a accident here in delaware i-95 northbound route 141 left lane block there also in the world of septa back out of the way, accident blocking rails route 15 trolley shuttle busing right now between 63rd and girard and 26th due to an accident. make note and make sure to check your schedules on line you want to do that. eight on the schuylkill, 15 on
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i-95, 25 on the vine and eight on the blue route moving in the north bound direction, brooke. >> thanks, meisha. our next update 8:55. ahead this morning actor morgan freeman. i'm brooke thomas have a good
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♪ >> we also honor marcellus who, unfortunately, could not make it here today, and morgan freeman, who undoubtedly is off playing a black president again. he never lets me have my moment. >> he must have been really busy. can't wait to hear, where was he? that was president obama last week at the national medals of arts and humidity ceremony. morgan freeman was not able to attend that ceremony at the white house but he did make it here to join us here. hello, morgan freeman! he's in our toyota green room. >> hello. this green legend is taking a turn behind the camera for the season premiere of "madam
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secretary." we will give awe preview. >> jan crawford will introduce us to ryan speedo green. how he overcome a difficult childhood. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. president obama nominating the first ambassador to cuba in more than 5 years. jeffrey dilroentas has served in havana since 2014. he has to be confirmed by the senate. an officer's good deed. mark ross posted a facebook photo of him and officer robson. ross was pulled over for speeding after he tried to get to detroit after his sister died. the two prayed together and the officer drove ross to his destination 100 miles away. everybody knows how much he dislikes cops but he said this gives him hope. ed the families were so touched they have now invited the officer to go to the funeral. >> what a good officer.
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"wall street journal" says online retailer amazon is building its own shipping operations. it would compete with u.p.s. and fedex. by one estimate, amazon would may more than $1 billion a year if it stopped using those shippers and amazon spokesman denies it's trying to replace its delivery partners. a home run by a big leaguer morning a friend. diaz of the cardinals hit the first grand slam of his career last night in st. louis. he had just returned from a memorial service for jose fernandez where he grew up together. fernandez died on sunday after a boating accident. >> morgan freeman has one of the most distinctive careers in hollywood. you hear his voice you know exactly who it is. he made a name for himself in the following movies. behind the camera, freeman is
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one of the executive producers of the cbs news political drama "madam secretary." this episode starts off with a exciting career change for elizabeth mccord, played by actress tea leoni. >> you look great. >> totally vice presidential. >> i told you, that information is on complete lockdown until july. >> you're in our house. >> still, you have to pretend like you don't know anything. >> seriously? ignorance is a plus? this is your moment. >> really, pal. you have to toe the line on this one. >> okay. >> morgan freeman is here. what great directing in that scene. >> thank you very much. >> can we start with this? you heard president obama having fun at your expense. where were you that you couldn't go to the white house? could you share with the group? >> i was working in new mexico. >> oh, okay. >> right.
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there. >> we will give you a pass. >> thank you very much. let's talk about you directing season three premiere because you're in the episode. how do you direct yourself? you're in it for a nanosecond but you're in it. >> yeah. i thought i would sit down and talk to myself about ten minutes before going on and telling myself to settle down and don't try to overdo it, you know? just say your lines. >> just deliver? >> yeah. >> directing something you really like? >> yeah. it is. i like working with actors. they like working with me. it's one of those things. >> makes it work. >> the first time i directed was way back there. i did a movie called "bopa." and i had just walked with clint eastwood, so i had a really good instruction on how best to do it. >> to do it, yeah. >> what is the key to being a good director? >> casting. >> yeah?
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>> yeah. then get out of the way. >> really? >> some say it's like 75% of it? >> yeah. more than like 80% of it. you're always working with professionals, particularly at that level. your crew, your actors, they all know what they are doing. they may not always know what you want. >> yeah. >> so, you know, trying to get that over is what i always want to speak. >> is anything you really wanted that you don't have? >> anything i really want? >> wanted. >> wanted? >> yeah. >> no. >> i didn't think so. >> why didn't you think so, charlie? >> because i know that -- i mean, i just know that you're a man who goes after his pursuits, whether it's flying or whether it's directing, or whether it is, in a sense, giving express
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to your curiosity. you do it. >> you know me well! >> you're not like the other kid in the class. that is a great picture. >> that is true, isn't it? >> this was at the convention. >> you were at the convention. when your voice came on narrating hillary clinton's bid by video, everybody knew instantly who it was. why did you want to do that? i know they asked you, i get that. >> yeah, they asked me and we go back quite a few years. actually, i met them while he was still governor of arkansas. and we have been friend for years. and i like them. >> you live in a fellow southern state, mississippi. >> right next door. >> exactly. >> talk about the voice, though. why you? what is it about your voice? where does it come from? >> you're asking the wrong person, charlie. it comes from somewhere down in here. >> yeah.
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>> i had -- when i was in school, i took voice and and voice development and over the years, it goes by itself, you know? your voice, everybody knows charl rose. >> did you take those classes because you were trying to develop it or someone sent you a message, you got a great voice and you should spend time developing it? >> i went to school to learn how to act. i took acting classes. i flunked the acting. really. i mean, i didn't really flunk it. i made a d. just got over. >> that's flunking. that ain't good. >> but the voice thing was -- i had a really good instructor on telling me how to do that. >> listen. your voice is so recognizable that the ways people came to you. let's roll that clip. the first time i heard it, i thought that is genius. >> let's roll. we owe it to our children to
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have you arrive saelve. hazard ahead. ladies avoid all clear present dangers. make a u-turn. let's keep our enemies guessing. you've arrived. it's been my honor and duty to see you through this mission. >> morgan, that is so fun. you only did that for a temporary amount of time. you know people want you to come back. >> they do? >> yes, they do. >> we love "waze." we miss your voice. >> we may talk about that. all right. >> what are you going to direct again? >> i don't know. >> but you want to? >> yes. i've been asked back to "madam secretary" sometime this season. >> was that you asking yourself? >> as executive producer? >> well, executive producer, i think, is different than producer. >> did you watch the debate the other night? >> i did. >> what is your take on the election this season? >> well, i'm like everybody else. my fingers are crossed. everything is crossed.
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eyes. >> toes, legs? >> yeah. yeah. >> you worried? >> am i worried? >> yeah. >> a little bit. yeah. just a little bit. i think we're at a serious crossroads in terms of who we are. ♪ what is america to me >> thank you, my friend. >> wonderful to have you here. > it's wonderful to be here. always nice to see you guys. >> we love "madam secretary"! >> say that loud. >> "madam secretary" we love you more. the new season of "madam secretary" premieres on sunday at 9:00/8:00. where? >> cbs. >> would you just say "cbs this morning"? >> "cbs this morning," here we are! >> love it. music lifted a troubled teen to the world's elite stages. should i keep reading? ahead, the big breakup that helped an up and
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♪ you're watching a scene from the dress rehearsal that is
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opening tonight at the metropolitan opera in new york city. it tells a tragic tale of love torn apart by illness but the opera might not be the most dramatic story on that stage. jan crawford shows us the remarkable journey of one of the players. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. so, you know, at 6'5" is built like a football linebacker and ryan speedo green is hard to miss, but had he a rough childhood and says he was nearly lost before he even became a ter teenager. but then, against all odds, he found his way out with opera. ♪ >> reporter: with that rich, robust voice. ♪ >> reporter: a presence commanding the stage. it's easy to see why ryan speedo green, 0 years old, is -- 30 years old is considered one of the most promising stars of opera. ♪
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>> reporter: gracing top stages in europe and the u.s. but his improbableable rise of the elite of all the arts has its roots in poverty and violence. you know your father was largely absent? >> yes, he was. >> reporter: and your mother could be rather abusive? >> i wouldn't describe it as abusive. it was a volatile relationship. it was tough. really tough. >> reporter: green grew up near norfolk, virginia, amid chaos and dysfunction. in elementary school he was sent to a class for the most disruptive students taught by bet hi hughes. >> the first time i met her, i threw my desk at her and how i said hello to her. rather than sending me home or to the office she told me you can sit on the floor and learn since you don't want to have a desk. she nearly gave up on me. >> reporter: even when he almost gave up on himself. >> this was a point in her life
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when she had a steady job and things were looking up. >> reporter: we traveled to virginia with "the new york times" magazine writer daniel bergner. his book "sing for your life" chronicles ryan green's story. >> it was here that ryan threatened his mom's life, probably with a knife. cops came. he was 12 years old. when he was loaded into back of that car, cuffed, shackled, driven across the state to virginia's juvenile facility of last resort. >> reporter: the facility, a tough place for troubled kids was home for two long months. >> i was lost and that is pretty much the best way i can put it. i was lost. >> reporter: green also found himself in solitary confinement. >> when i got out, i promised mice i would never get there again. i started pursuing other entertaining things as a child joining the latin club and being in chorus and tried to find
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outlets so i could stay off the street. >> reporter: the big break of his childhood came from the arts in norfolk. he was accepted but didn't know what he was getting into. >> this is ryan as a 12 grader. >> reporter: allen fisher is head of the school's vocal progr program. >> it was not an exceptional voice back in ninth grade, but over the four years, it grew to become an exception. ♪ >> reporter: at governor's, green flourished under a voice teacher named robert brown. >> they need somebody to be their foundation and be the person possess kick them in the butt when they need to be kicked in the butt. he taught me not only music but he was a father figure to me. >> reporter: brown took his students to see carmen at new york's metropolitan opera, a title role performed by denise graves. ♪ >> i never thought it was
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something that a person of color could do. when i left the met that evening, i told mr. brown, i want to get to the met someday. that's what i'm going to do, i'm going to sing at the met. >> reporter: that is exactly what he did. gruen threw himself into the study of opera and after graduate school entered a national competition at the met. he won! ♪ >> reporter: and, tonight, he is back, opening in a leading role. do you ever just stop and think, wow? i can't believe this? >> even arriving a couple of weeks ago in new york to start rehearsals, i woke up in my apartment and sort of pinched myself thinking, like, i'm going to go to work at the metropolitan opera. >> reporter: and you're going to continue to doing it? >> i am. the dream is not finished. ♪ >> reporter: now denise graves who was, obviously, an inspiration to green is scheduled to attend tonight's opening and so will green's new
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wife irene. he and irene got married earlier this year. his mother is planning to attend a later performance. i think that relationship is still a work-in-progress. what an incredible journey he's had. gayle? >> with such a happy ending. guess what. january, i want to go see it. number one, his speaking voice is so great and to see where he has gone from a to b to z is a great success story. >> i want to see it too. betty hughes, his first teacher who inspired him and robert brown, his voice teacher. for every person who has a dream, they need somebody to be their foundation. >> i wrote that down too! >> you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back.
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one hesave snack time.ion to watch babybel in the great snack rescue. you want a piece of me? good, i'm delicious. creamy, delicious, 100% natural cheese. mini babybel. snack a little bigger. great stories and interesting people. that does it for us. tune into the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight and we will see you tomor
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good morning everyone i'm jim donovan. there are no injuries but police are investigating a school bus accident that happened within the hour in camden county. chopper three over black horse pike and kendell boulevard in oaklynn. the bus hit a pole and at 8:00 . there were children on the bus at the time but officials say they were all able to exit the bus, without any injuries. now lets head over to katie for a look at today's weather. >> good morning, jim. we are still watching a storm system out of the midwest that will rotate in our region and cause headaches for next couple days with much needed rape but headaches regardless. i want to show you storm scan. you can see over the morning we have been tracking some showers and thunderstorms near d.c. area they are trying to move ever closer, very slow to progress but we will keep a close watch on this for you
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but we will have at least window have of a few more hours at minimum before rain picks up for any southern counties. in the meantime outside one of the southern communities cape may courthouse handful of clouds but generally sunny. that will get skewed with time here, more and her cloud cover building in as this next storm moves in and along with it and we will have steady rain, especially tonight and tomorrow but because it is a prolong system and cut off from the hain flow of energy it is stuck with us. on friday left over showers continuing anytime and saturday could also produce a couple showers, and it is even into sunday. a long system to deal with here, meisha. >> sure is, with the weekend. katie, thank you. we are looking out identify still busy. we have an accident i-95 north before the vine pulled off to that left shoulder, slow moving, past that accident, but not to mention slow moving here. also route 30 eastbound, you can bet we were looking at that almost looking like bumper to bumper. we have a water main break
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lincoln drive at green street. intersection closed. alternate germantown avenue or wissohickon is your best bet, overall we are still looking slow, jim, over to you. that is "eyewitness news" for now join us for "eyewitness news" at noon i'm jim donovan make it a great day.
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>> announcer: losing her arm changed the medical world forever >> dr. travis: you are gonna see the future in action. >> announcer: a ground-breaking gives hope to millions. and then this "sopranos" star tells all about the secret she's kept for 15 years. and, on a mission. he's not pulling punches. >> why do you think there's opposition about this science? >> announcer: an austin powers star breaks his silence about a near-death experience, that's today! >> dr. travis: hello, everyone. thanks for being with us. joining us today is ob/gyn dr. nita landry. welcome to the show, dr. landry. >> thank you for having me. >> dr. travis: i am curious of both of your opinions, it touches on bo

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