tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 21, 2016 3:00am-4:01am EST
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(alex)tor) if you have medicare or will be covered soon, here are some important things you should know. first, if you think medicare covers everything, you may be in for an expensive surprise. second, you could be responsible for thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. which brings us to number three. a medicare supplement insurance policy from colonial penn life insurance company can help you save money by helping to pay the bills medicare doesn't. so you have affordable coverage with the freedom to choose
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a plan that best meets your needs and budget. and no one chooses your doctors but you. you can be covered for visits to doctors, specialists, hospitals, and more. so now that you know more about your choices when it comes to a medicare supplement plan, call now. (bright music) ♪ . darwin walker from las vegas. they didn't get any pressure on russell wilson, they only had one sack. how disappointed are you, darwin? >> you know, the defensive line, you know, those guys are my dogs. my dogs don't perform, i get so frustrated. because you know, you know, that's my position.
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and my dogs don't get the credit they deserve when they're making plays and making an impact on the game and mean the difference maker in the game, you don't talk about the defensive line man so i always try to talk about my guys. today, they didn't do anything. we had a couple bright spots here and there. bennie logan whatnot, overall, i just don't understand this offensive line is supposed to not be very good. they're like one of the lowest paid offensive lines in the league and they don't have anybody that's an impact guy. so you know, russell wilson should have been on his back most of the game. i didn't see that today. >> let's talk about seattle on the whole. because do you think this is what the eagles are inspiring to be, great on defense, confident on offensive. smart coaching. you know, this is a team that was just out played and out coached today. >> they were. they were. listen. i give credit to seattle.
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like i said earlier, i may not be allowed at the novacare center as much as i love my eagles and i bleed green, but the seahawks play the way you want your guys to play, they're close-knit, come out week to week, go to work, one of the few teams that shuts tom brady down almost every time they play. they are what i would love to see our eagles be like. i would love to see our eagles be and have that kind of chemistry on our defense and go out there and make plays and have fun doing it. each and every -- this is what i was saying earlier. each and every one of those guys out there, each and every defensive players wants to be that guy. they all want to be that guy that's willing to lay it on the line and make it happen for their team. that's the thing that's special to me that i think we need on our did he first and our team as a whole when you have that. that's when you have something special. >> i got to be honest. this is the first loss this
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season really i'm not that upset. i kind of feel like we saw this one come, this is the first team they played all year where there was a serious talent deficit. if we're going to be completely honest. they didn't deserve to win because they don't have the same talent. you have play maker, pro bowlers, champions on that side of the ball. even on the defensive line with cliff any ofville with one of the top guys in the nfl bobbie wagner leads the nfl they have talent across the board and more than the eagles do. this is one of those games where they were going to take their lump >> i agree and disagree. the reason why i feel like statistical it's going to be a struggle for my eagles to get to the playoffs. i was one of those people at the beginning of the year that said i felt this team will find a way to squeak in. right now, it's not looking so
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good. today might have been the nail in the coffin. it may be over. it may be. >> really? >> listen, >> as much as i'm crushing them now for the talent deficit, they're not as talented i do have a little hope. four of the next six games are at home. this team is four and 0 at home. they still have to play the opponents at home. remember how different they are playing at the linc. they're completely different >> but you have darren sproles who's injured and matthews, that's big, those guys go down. >> eight days off. >> i agree -- i agree with that, they do play better at home. but at the end of the day i don't know how you catch up in the division where the cowboys are now nine and one i believe it is. how do you -- i mean, how do you make up that difference? >> that's gone. >> i don't know. i'm saying they can make the playoffs.
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i'm not saying they can win the division. don't sell me on that one. i'm not saying they can win the division. >> if you don't win your division, you got to be a wild card. it's tough to get in that way with other teams running the league. i think the eagles really hurting themselves today, shot themselves in the foot and it major major way and it's unfortunate because you know i like -- i love doug pederson i think he's going to be a great coach, i love carson wentz i think he's going to be a special quarterback. today, again, they probably shouldn't have won it but the way they lost it. when you got receivers who making fundamental mental errors that are just ridiculous the way that cost us on touchdowns and you turn around and you miss a pass the way agholor missed then you got beckham playing like he's 5-9 and he's 6-9.
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they shot themselves in the foot and they might be over >> it is a critical juncture for the eagles. thank you so much for joining us from vegas, baby. >> i'll tell you everything that actually happened when i get back to philadelphia. got to hydrate. >> working that voice too. sounds like you may have lost it, darwin walker joining us here in the sports zone. safe travels back. >> taking break, when we come back lots of act around the national football league >> and it started back in february. today the nascar season
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♪ i had an injury to my neck. it wasn't as serious injury it was a herniated disc. anything that could go wrong went wrong. i've been in the hospital twenty three times since. the bills started to pile up. i had nothing to give. we had nothing in the refrigerator. i would be dead and not sitting here right now if it wasn't for pond lehocky.
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staysing with ben simmons still recovering as well. it wasn't just all football today, three fifths of the big five in action. temple picking up a at one point win over manhattan 88-67. >> the big game, the defendanting national champs taking on central florida and the championship game of the charleston classic. villanova was having a little trouble stopping 7-6 center ten for ten, 13 rebounds on the night. second half, josh hart helps the wildcats with a 30 pointer right there. nova scores 15 points, villanova wins to charleston classic 67-57. st. joe's taking on saint thomas var jen islanders.
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17-12. in the second, sebastian hits the tray. 48-42. hawks lose 81-68 in paradise. >> well the eagles lost on the road in seattle the rest of the nfc east was putting distance between themselves and the birds >> that just hurts. let's go around the league we'll start with the cowboys hosting the ravens game tied in the third, dac prescott. cowboys taking the lead in the fourth bryant slam pass and drags his defender in for the score. he had two. cowboys beat the ravens 27-17, nine straight wins, nine and one. giants taking on the bears third quart. chicago with the lead, eli manning with the tie gets into the end zone, g men able to tie up the game, manning found a wide open sterling.
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the giants came back from a ten point deficit and won the fifth straight game 22-16: where did they come from. cardinals and vikings. check out the sound guy. down he goes. can you hear me now? poor dude gets blasted by the vikings coming out of the tunnel in the pregame introduction. second quarter carson palmer picked up by xavier rhodes. give him an inch he'll take 100 yard. 20 to ten, minnesota. opening kickoff second half. patterson, check out the speed on this dude. are you kidding me? >> what? try and stop him >> he's on another level. >> the 56 become the first team since the 1962 dallas cowboys to have an interception return and a kick return in the same game hundred yards for each. vikings win it 30-24. the rams dolphins just
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before carson wentz the number one pick. his nfl debut. how did he do? it was great. 134 yards, no touchdowns, no pick, the dolphins with the big come backs 36 seconds left. parker nine yard score, dolphins win 14-10 >> this is the final race in the career of tony stewart, the three-time spring cup champion 49 victories in his career and 22'nd today, ten laps to go. the restart joe with banks into carl edwards and that would put edwards into the wall. open the door for jimmy johnson. who wins his seventh nascar sprint cup championship tying richard petty and daily earnhardt. >> i think that's seven in 11 years for him. time for a final time-out. when we return, top three plays of
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(alex)tor) if you have medicare or will be covered soon, here are some important things you should know. first, if you think medicare covers everything, you may be in for an expensive surprise. second, you could be responsible for thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. which brings us to number three. a medicare supplement insurance policy from colonial penn life insurance company can help you save money by helping to pay the bills medicare doesn't. so you have affordable coverage with the freedom to choose a plan that best meets your needs and budget. and no one chooses your doctors but you. you can be covered for visits to doctors, specialists, hospitals, and more. so now that you know more about your choices when it comes to a medicare supplement plan, call now.
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(bright music) ♪ >> reporter: a magnitude 7.# earthquake hits california and the clock is ticking. national guardsmen are working to pull a trapped man from an elevator shaft while a especially trained dog searches for stranded survivors. this drill is meant to help emergency responders prepare for the real thing. >> you want to be the best prepared. best trained, and most efficient as possible. >> but these extreme scenarios could easily become reality. usgs scientists discovered that two of the country's most dangerous faults, once thought to be at least two miles apart, are actually connected, creating one massive, 11-mile-long fault. using this device they confirm the hayward fault reaches the fault in the san pablo bay near
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san francisco. >> the longer a fault, the larger earthquake. if the faults went together along their length it would be magnitude 7.4. >> reporter: what kind of damage are we talking about here? in 1906 the great quake leveled san francisco neighborhood killing thousand. in 1989, the quake killed 64 people and caused $6 billion in damage. folks in the bay area need to be prepared for a strong earthquake. the team is trying to predict the future by studying when earthquakes appeared here in the past and how often. when an earthquake occurs, the sediment along the fault line shifts which creates a time stamp in the mud. watts' team drops down the long tubes into the bay floor to collect samples. the cores are pulled from the water and cut. >> pull this look a cheese cutter. sliced open.
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>> wow. >> awesome. >> and photographed. >> think of it as looking down through time. we can find a date for flat layers on top. then the layers that are offset. bracket in. theage of when that earthquake happened on that fault. >> watts' research will help scientists belter understand the two faults as their potential for damage makes emergency preparation like this even more essential. mireya villarreal, cbs news, california. still ahead, faith and flying. they go hand in hand at most major airports.
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amopé. love every step. faith and flying go hand in hand. boarding a plane you are putting faith in the pilot and crew. but majerle hall found that religious acts of faith are becoming more common at america's air ports where chapels help travelers stay grounded before they fly. >> reporter: he is flying to morocco for business. his nearly 12 hour journey began at islamic center at john f. kennedy international airport. by doing this i am fulfilling my duties. >> reporter: this small mosque filled with travelers and airport employees. imam says attendance is growing. >> for muslims it is very important to have a space, so they can go inside. not disturb anybody. >> reporter: more than half air ports have dedicated space for worship. most are interfaith.
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here at jfk, four chapels, one for each major religion. the islamic center, a synagogue and catholic and protestant church side by side in terminal 4. our lady of the skies. >> there is a full-fledged con congregation? >> jfk its a city that employs about 36,000 employees that's bigger than many parishes. >> the father spends most of his time reaching out to passengers on the go. he calls it sweeping the terminal. >> i'm looking for any sign of distress. >> most of the time people want directions. others need more. >> people are very stressed when they enter the airport. and we find that the chapel is a place where they can find some peace. >> reporter: for many travelers it's time well spent. marly hall, cbs news, new york.
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about 60 volunteer cowboys and girls ride herd. including -- >> 81-year-ld bob lindt. >> didn't care who. two people. >> ain't in there and charging you ain't riding. >> reporter: this spur jingling, chaps wearing buckaroo participated in the nation's biggest buffalo roundup of its kind for the past 45 years. what's the best part of the roundup, bob? >> to me, it's the run is the, you know when we are actually pushing the buffalo and they're running just as hard as they can run. we are running. an adrenaline kicking son of a gun. tell you that for a fact. >> a lot of fun, yes. but a buffalo can weigh 2,000 pounds. and some of them have an attitude.
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just ask first timer, chris. >> i had a bull come at me on my horse. we had to boogie out of there pretty quick. made for a memorable event. >> reporter: more than 30 million buffalo once roomed the u.s. in the 1800s they were slaughtered by pioneers all most to extinction. today one of the largest herds, calls custer state park home. >> there is a purpose to the roundup? >> for the health of the herd? >> health of the herd. to hold the herd in manageable number so they don't overgraze the land. >> ready. >> after the roundup they're vaccinated, calves are branded. some cows are sold. for landis it never gets old. >> when you quit during your thing that you look to do, you are going to die. >> spread out across here. >> reporter: for this cowboy, living a good long life means making your home where the buffalo roam. chip reid, cbs news, in the black hills of south dakota. that's the overnight news for this monday. for some, the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano.
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>> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news," i'm elaine quijano. it is thanksgiving week, the busiest travel week of the year. if you are not hosting the holiday feast you may want to make your travel plans now. triple a says more than 48 million americans will be moving by planes, trains, and automobiles between now and next weekend. that is about a million more travelers than last year. jamie yuccas has more on the thanksgiving getaway. >> pack your patience if your holiday travel brings you through chicago. travel site, orbitz.com predicts o'hare airport will be the busiest airport this thanksgiving holiday.
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and tomorrow, about 500 workers including aircraft cabin cleaners, and janitors could walk off the job. workers voted to take action over wages and working conditions there last week. almost 4 million people will travel wednesday through sunday. jim and his son are already on their way. >> what do you anticipate moving forward. a lot lighter than i expected. come tuesday wednesday, it is going to be massive. >> nearly 90% of thanksgiving travelers will drive to gram mas this year. drivers will see savings at the pumps with gas prices expected to be the second cheapest since 2008. when the national average was just a dollar 85. today it is $2.14 per gallon. google checked travel times and found today was the best day to hit the road. if you want to avoid gridlock coming home, the search engine says leave on black friday at 6:00 a.m. if you are hitting the rails
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remember the tuesday and wednesday before thanksgiving and the sunday are the busiest days to travel. nearly 750,000 people will take amtrak to and from their destination. after long lines and major complaints, the tsa says it added staff. the agency says it is now ready for the additional 55,000 passengers a day over the thanksgiving holiday. but elaine, they still recommend arriving two hours early for a domestic flight. >> good advice. jamie, thank you. now let's get the holiday traveler forecast from pamela garden at wbz in boston. >> as we get close to thanksgiving, couple systems that could bring cooler temperatures compared to next week. for monday. wind and snow in the northeast. out of the four corners, area of low pressure will bring rain and mix, perhaps snow in northern plain states. high pressure and control to the southeast and west. until the system moves in from the pacific northwest affecting friends in seattle, oregon and california. perhaps some snow in the mountains. then, area of low pressure tracks into new england states
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for thursday. bringing some, light flurries, but not as potent as, we once thought. high pressure and control to the south and west. looking okay for thanksgiving. all around. no major issues. temperatures will be quite chilly especially for the northern half of the u.s. black friday looking ahead to the shopping season, kicking off chicago. wintry mix. 41 degrees with sun in dallas. high of 66. elaine. >> pamela, thank you. president elect trump and transition team had a busy sunday. meeting with candidate who could fill top jobs in the trump administration. meetings took place an hour from new york city at trump national golf club in bedminister, new jersey. craig boswell has the the latest. >> reporter: rudy giuliani arrived at donald trump's golf club as a leading contender for secretary of state. >> and other things. >> reporter: saturday, mitt romney met with the president elect along with vice president elect mike pence for the same job. governor romney is under active
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and serious consideration to serve as secretary of state of the united states. >> reporter: trump is interviewing a parade of potential picks for key posts in his new administration. new jersey governor chris christie, who was recently demoted from the transition team is also on the list of interviewees today. >> very talented man. great guy. trump named alabama senator, jeff sessions as his nominee for attorney general, but there are questions abut his past statements and his civil rights record. >> i wouldn't want to support him unless i was convinced we would have a strong civil rights division in the justice department. >> during a break from the transition process this weekend, pence was greeted with boos and some cheers at a performance of "hamilton" as well as direct message from the cast. >> we truly hope this show has inspired you to uphold our
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american values and to work on behalf of all of us. >> that set off a tweet storm from donald trump. the cast and producers of hamilton which i hear is highly overrated should immediately apologize to mike pence for their terrible behavior. on face the nation, pence saw no reason for any apologies. >> i wasn't offended by what was said. i will leave to others whether it was the appropriate ven to to say it. >> high profile interviews include robert johnson, founder of bet and congresswoman, and kathy mcmorris rodgers. elaine, the trump transition team says meetings will continue into tuesday with some nominations possibly monday. >> craig boswell in washington. thank you. at the vatican, pope francis celebrated end of the holy year of mercy. part of the weekend festivities, elevating 17 bishops from around the world to cardinals. the list includes three americans. seth doane has the story from st. peter's basilica. cardinals are informal advisers to the pope their most important role its to elect the next pontiff. elevating cardinals to their post is a significant moment within the catholic church and
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comes with all the pageantry you might imagine. st. peter's basilica provided a magnificent backdrop as the so-called princes of the church were crowned with their signature cardinal colored skullcaps. among them, those three americans, including indianapolis archbishop joseph tobin, just appointed to newark new jersey. he clashed with indiana governor, vice president elect, mike pence over helping refugees and migrants resettle in the u.s. another now cardinal is chicago archbishop, blaze supich who tweeted a picture of his gift to the pope, a cubs' hat following the world series win. the third, former bishop of dallas, kevin farrell, learned he made cardinal as he watched
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the pope live on tv. >> i did not honestly think that there would be more than one american on the list. >> reporter: then the pope named you. >> about five names later, he named me. and i was just -- did i hear that correct? >> reporter: you were surprised? >> very surprised. i was shocked. >> reporter: farrell arrived in rome to take on a new job running the vatican department at family life. how significant is it to have three americans be made cardinal? >> well it is significant in the sense that it shows the holy father's love for the people of the united states. >> this is one place. >> reporter: greg burke is director of the holy sea press office. we asked if it was a political statement to choose the cardinals? >> what you can see is the new american cardinals are concerned about the samer use the pope is concerned with. one of them is immigration. >> reporter: this morning the pope spoke of polarization and exclusion in today's world and how "wounds grow deeper amid growing animosity." thanksgiving is just three
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thanksgiving is just three days away. a good bet your holiday feast does not include either moss or ants. well one restaurant that many consider the best in the world, does have both on the menu. we paid a visit to copenhagen, denmark. >> reporter: flowers. moss. ants. not exactly what you might expect to find on your plate. unless of course, you're at noma. this restaurant in copenhagen not only has two stars but was named best restaurant in the world in 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2014. >> never did i expect or dream up that it became what it is today. i mean, never.
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>> reporter: 3-year-old chef redzeppi opened noma in 2003. limiting himself to ingredients found in the nordic region. back then it was a tall order. >> if you were not cooking french or italian. forget it. everything else was stupid. >> reporter: noma, nordic and mo, danish word for food looked for culinary inspiration from the land itself. foragers like michael larson collect ingredients every day. rain or shine. >> so the berry here itself will, you can use it to make jam. that's so many thing you can do with this one. >> what's wrong with grabbing a bunch and sticking it in the freezer, drying it. >> yeah, i think that might be the difference between fine dining and there mall dining.
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this is fine dining. we need to have the best every day. need to be fresh. back in the kitsch than get to work. >> this is sliced rhubarb. >> beautiful. >> cooked with sea wood and sorrel leaves. >> reporter: perhaps what is most impressive about the kitchen, just how fresh everything is. >> wild blue lobster. >> he is alive. >> he is alive. >> how much does it cost to eat at noma? >> i meal with drinks at noma, average around $400 a person. if you were to envision that everybody down the food chain had a pay that would enable them to have a nice home, a car, any meal would be very expensive or more expensive. >> reporter: but the elegance and prestige of noma is a world away from rural macedonia. >> there is no refrigerators. you go out and peck something -- pick something, from the ground, tree, kill an animal if you want a checken. go and grab a chicken. and --
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>> redzeppi emigrated to denmark at 12, dropped out of school at 15. began working as a restaurant apprentice a year later. during a much different culinary scene. >> food in the 80s were like microwave food. seriously it wasn't anything amazing at all. look ready made meals most of the time. >> noma changed all that. turning copenhagen into a foodie destination and redzeppi into culinary royalty. for noma a game changer and copenhagen as a city, game changer for the northic region. >> reporter: but noma's story doesn't end there. in a few months the restaurant will move to a new part of town. >> we. space to build a small urban farm. amazing for a cook. to actually be able and pick your parsely a minute before you need it. >> reporter: until then,
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redzeppi will open a pop-up restaurant in mexico, using ingredients unique to the region. a full plate by any means. then again, filling plates is exactly what this man does best. >> you know, i understand this thing that it is just food. food is so much more than that as well. to some, when they -- get a fine meal it is like a real transcendent moment. to others it is a vessel to enjoy the conversation better. i'm perfectly fine with everything. as long as they enjoy their time with us. >> reporter: one of the most famous chefs on television, anthony bourdain has a new cookbook out. he sat down with anthony mason at one of his favorite restaurants. >> mm. magic. >> reporter: after a laf on the road, traveling to parts unknown, eating with no reservations, anthony bourdain is very particular when he gets back home. you don't like being fussed over at restaurants? >> no, i don't want to be comped. i don't want extra courses. serve me like any? body else.
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>> reporter: we met at pastrami queen on new york's lexington avenue. this is your place when you come home? >> this is my go to. what i crave. no matter how well i have been eating or where that might be. the first thing i want and need. >> reporter: in his travels, bourdain has eaten everything from rotten shark to sheep testicle. >> is there anything you won't eat? >> eaten a lot of bad, putrefied food. it's when no one cared at all. that's sole destroying. make a take it too seriously. i will really, a really carelessly made burger by a cynical large company, the contempt implicit in that transaction. can, can really send me into a spiral of depression that will last for days.
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>> reporter: actually little seems to slow him down. >> so how many pots do you have on the stove? >> i don't know. a lot. i mean, but all of them are fun pots. >> reporter: they include producing, writing and starring in his cnn series "parts unknown." his web series, "raw craft." authoring a new cookbook. and a speaking tour. how much are you on the road? >> 250 days a year. it's been like this for the better part of 15 years. >> reporter: and you are okay with that? >> i'm -- i have been sentenced to the best job in the world. >> reporter: it started in 1999 when the then struggling chef wrote an article for the new yorker titled don't eat before reading this. which mushroomed into a book deal. >> overnight. >> reporter: kitchen confidential, adventures in the culinary underbelly published in 2000, turned the restaurant world inside out and bourdain's life upside down. >> reporter: this book changed everything?
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>> everything. i mean i was, i was 44 years old. uninsured. hideously and hopelessly in debt. behind on my taxes. behind on my ren. >> reporter: the book would sell more than a million copies and launch a new career for the culinary bad boy. how is this guy different than that guy? >> i think when you travel as much as i have, you -- you -- i don't want to say i am more humble. but i think you become a wear of how other people live. how hard their lives are. how big the world is. >> reporter: now this wouldn't be the dish if we didn't have a drink. >> this is some very good 30-year-old whiskey. >> reporter: there is a bad joke in here some where. at bemelman's bar in the carlisle hotel, we sampled some of balvenie's best scott. $1,000 a bottle.
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>> this is very smooth. >> better be. >> reporter: bourdain partnered with the distillery on raw craft to profile great artisans. he had a lot of unlikely encounters in his travels. this season on "parts unknown" bourdain met up with president obama in a hanoi restaurant. not ideal from secret service view. a room this size. i think one exit. second floor of a not particularly clean noodle shop. nice seeing the president of the united states drinking beer out of a bottle. >> was there -- is there any body you would look to have a meal with. >> keith richards. >> trying for years. eat bangers and mash. cooked steak and kidney pie with keith richards. talk about british naval history which he is a big fan of. that would be super cool. rooms come in all sorts of shapes and sizes.
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back seat chefs peer inside your oven. but you've cleaned all baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that beautiful bird. go ahead. let 'em judge. the itsy bitsy spider went up the waterspout. down came the rain and clogged the gutter system creating a leak in the roof. luckily the spider recently had geico help him with homeowners insurance. water completely destroyed his swedish foam mattress. he got full replacement and now owns the sleep number bed. his sleep number setting is 25. call geico and see how much you could save on homeowners insurance.
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you can pick up cold & flu viruses from things in your home for up to 48 hours? it's like having a sick family member that you didn't even know was there. and we all know what happens when one family member gets sick. but lysol spray and lysol wipes kill 99.9% of germs including 8 common cold & flu viruses to help protect your home. this cold and flu season help keep your home happy and healthy and lysol that. can the hug of a child mend a broken heart? steve hartman found out on the road. >> reporter: not long ago in a cemetery outside augusta, georgia, a loving couple was buried. the wife, buried below this white bouquet. the husband, buried above. in a mound of grief.
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>> took me totally by surprise. 82-year-old dan peterson says after mary died he fell into a deep depression. spent days just staring out at the squirrels. what were you living for? >> i was trying to figure that out. frankly. >> reporter: you had no purpose. >> no. >> were you just waiting to die? >> yeah. >> reporter: for six months it was just that bad. then one day you go to grocery store? >> reporter: it all changed inside this publix. dan was nearing the end of the canned vegetable aisle. he hates grocery shopping. and by all accounts the expression on his face confirmed his aggravation. but that's when this unapproachable man, was approached. by a 4-year-old girl named norah wood. in the security footage you can see norah randomly reaching out to him. her mom tara says i was quite embarrassing. >> she said, old person, it's my birthday today. >> old person.
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>> old person. >> hi, old person. >> she says this to the cranky old man. >> yeah. >> reporter: then had the audacity to demand a hug. >> i said a hug, i said absolutely. norah got her hug. asked her mom to take a picture of her with her new friend. >> she zeroed in on him like a missile. she didn't want anything from him. she just wanted to make him feel loved and give him a hug. and his little lip quivered. he teared up. it was just sweet. >> i said you don't know this is the first time for quite a while that i have been this happy. >> reporter: that all happened a couple months ago. and his grin has only gotten wider since. >> hi, sweetheart. come in. come in. today norah visits at least once a week. >> how is my sweetie, huh. every time the grocery store all over again.
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>> i knew i was going to got a hug. >> it's unbelievable. totally unbelievable. >> it's a bridge. >> okay. >> dan does have grand kids of his own. but they're all grown and gone. and norah does have grandparents. but her mom says this a completely different kind of bond. that almost defies explanation. >> she fell aseep holding a picture of them. and what? ha-ha. >> to dan it is equally miraculous. but far less mysterious. he believes norah is quite literally an angel. >> okay. >> she opened me to a love that i didn't know existed. >> reporter: when your wife died, you felt look you didn't have any purpose anymore. do you feel look you have a purpose now? >> of course. norah. watching her grow up. i know i made room in my heart
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♪ i was on my way to work, the next thing you know, i was on the ground. ♪ the trash truck ran over both my legs. ♪ i had sixteen surgeries. ♪ i don't sleep through the night unless i have my medicine. ♪ my medical bills was piling up. my employer stopped paying me. pond lehocky has put me back together. ♪
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there is a new animated movie in the works about dutch painter vincent van gogh. animation may not be the right word. the film is made up of more than 60,000 individual paintings all done in van gogh style. jonathan vigliotti has the a look. >> reporter: one of cinema's films is under production in a small studio in poland. here with the stroke of a brush, a team of painters brings to life the work of vincent van gogh. the final result, the firsthand painted film ever made. >> we have definitely, without a doubt, invented the slowest form of filmmaking ever devised in 120 years. >> hugh welshman is the director. >> using letters written by van
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gogh, welshman and his wife, tell the story of van gogh's creative genius. and sudden death. vincent van gogh was born in the netherlands in 1853. over the course of his career he painted over 800 canvass. famous teams including sun flowers and wheat fields. at 37 years old, after being released from a mental institution, he took his own life. without any explanation. >> how does a man go from being absolutely calm to suicidal in six weeks? question is through fictional interviews with the character interviews with the character depicted in 150 of van gogh's paintings. >> interesting man. >> he was a genius. >> look a traditional film, loving vincent began with a set and actors. >> use your initiative. >> an important man, like van gogh. asked around.
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>> he filmed with live actors on green screens and the shots. van gogh paintings and cut it together like a live action film and projected each on to canvas. >> reporter: as the producer explains, a total of 120 artists recruited from all over the world turned those projections into oil paintings. to be clear, every single frame of loving vincent is painted by hand. all 64,000 of them. the equivalent of 64,000 canvass. >> a nice quiet man. >> loving vincent is a painstaking tribute to van gogh. a moving exhibit of his work unlike any before. jonathan vigliotti, cbs news, london. that's the "overnight news" for monday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano.
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captioning funded by cbs i it's monday, november 21st, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." the next secretary of state could be a political insider. the trump transition team may be looking to rudy giuliani or mitt romney to fill the spot. >> we are the diverse america who are alarmed and anxious. >> that is the speech that got the president-elect fired up. the cast of "hamilton" was addressing vice president-elect mike pence who was in the audience and had he a very different reaction. mr. obama and russian
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