tv CBS Overnight News CBS January 30, 2018 3:07am-3:56am EST
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growing up, a lot of people judged me because of the way i look. "i thought all asians were good at math." "you all look the same to me." "no, where are you really from?" "9/11 was your fault." "how do you see out of such small eyes?" "go back to your country." i guess i wish that people knew... we are not all the same. we are not all the same. we are not all the same.
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crews disinfect the property. kaitlin kasner is a senior that isn't taking any chances after her brother was sick with the flu. school nurse patty barton saw more kids in the clinic than in the classroom. >> this year, it really is unprecedented. i probably saw about 30 kids in here on monday. and sent ten home. >> reporter: the flu is widespread in 49 states. and the cdc says 39 of those have especially high activity. schools in at least 12 states have canceled classes for a few days. for cleanup and recovery. the flu shut down classes today for the 815 studentthomas aquin. more than 10% of the student body gotbariki is the school superintendent. >> even if we miss anything that e have a chance to get healthy, hopefully not bring that virus back to school. >> it has tough influenza
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season so far this year. >> reporter: dr. jernigan with the h 3 n 2 strain of the flu is hitting patients over 65 very hard. but other strains of the flu are taking a toll on younger patients.>> since that winter h we've seen that kids are really making up the amou of influenza-like illness, taking that back to school, it's getting transmitted there, driving a lot of this visits to the outpatient clinic right now that the flu spread so fast in schools is that students are in close quarters a share everything. one of the biggest problems? cell phones. students type on them, then share them, then end up spreading the virus. >> omar villafranca, thank you remuch. we have information about the flu on our website, cbsnews.com/flu2018. there was another dangerously close encounter today between u.s. and russian
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military planes. this one in international air space over the black sea. a russian fighter jet intercepted a navy reconnaissance plane and hung around for 2 hours 40 minutes. at one point the planes were five feet apart. president trump today ruled out negotiating with the taliban while as he put it innocent people are being killed left and right in taliban claim responsibility for saturday's attack in kabul. more than 100erkilled. twice that number hurt when an attacker drove an ambce elosive heart of the city. the fris could mount similar ambulance attacks in the west. >> reporter: it's not hard to buy a used ambulance. we posed as buyers and found this one on eb experts like chris phillips, the resale of emergency vehicles is handing terr
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>> the terrorist threat is wider, mordi is. and one of those attacks will almost certainly be a vehicle bomb. se reporter: a threat british decade ago when they were being used in iraq. they're called trojan seemingly ordinary ambulances that are instead packed with not the ambulance coming towards you is a real one or a fake one. >> reporter: philips says the fear is that tactic will be imported here as terror attacks by islamic militants grow. >> there needs to be some kind of legislation to stop the use of these vehicles. or we're going to have a major problem with this. >> reporter: we found examples on ebay. a police car with original equipment in the ambulance withy markings. most run for just thousand dollars. >> anybody can turn up, pay cash for the vehicles. and within hours, those vehicles can be in the hands of a terrorist cell.
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>> reporter: lord carlisle led call to o emergency vehicles. >> so the very thing that you had warned against? ago, is still there? >> yes, there it is. >> reporter:ti regulations governing the resale of ambulances. lord carlisle pointed oye's ari where 60 ambulances raced to the scene. exactly the scenario where a trojan vehicle could exploit the chaos after that initial blast. where the rick of one of these vehicles entering the cordoned-off zone in the minutes immediately after the explosion >> reporter: we contacted the home office, errorism authority repeatedly and were told they're looking into it. ebays operational emergency vehicles are not allowed on their website, and
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who knew a fitbit could give away valuable information about the military? >> our enemy could basically scrape this entire information off the internet. tom versus talk radio. >> my daughter or any child, you know, they kids on chicago's south side are learng movelongside police . >> i can't believe you took my >> i can't believe you took my queen!
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u.s. service members in war zones run the risk of being er time they go for a run while fitbits.exercise trackers, david martin reports the pentagon is now doing a broad review of these devices. >> reporter: servicemen working out in this digital age have a their locations and activities worldwide. a security breach the pentagon did not find out about until a 20-year-old australian student discovered it. nathan russert came across a map put out by strava, a social media network for athletes which showed two years worth of
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satellite tracking data uploaded from fitbits and other digital fitness devices. u.s. bases are clearly russert tweeted, like this american special operations base in syria. >> it took us seconds to really gather some information that really should not be publicly available. any child can do this. >> reporter: tobia global public policy issues says the location of these and other bases, such as afghanistan, were previously known. commercial satellites had this american base in the horn of africa before it lit up thegy strava can reveal the patternba the identities of individual soldiers and the routes they take. >> so we cannot only find out how many s stationed there but how do they move? how do they connect with other bases? what patrol routes do they have around the area?
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>> ror hallmark of the modern et jeffrey lewis of the middle bury institute tsa personal information ends up on those networks. >> there's actually one trace that shows loops as he or she jogs around nuclear weapons stored in turkey. so while, yes, i think to some extent this is the new era we frightening example of that era could go well beyond the military to include iofntelgece used a fitness device while working at a >> david martin, thank you for that report tonight. still ahead, the man who heads the recording academy and why so few women are nominated new olay whips
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my daughter, something like whether i want to come on this show again. so i really don't have much to ed.>>his morning. brady goes for his sixth super bowlnsthe philadelphia eagles. the grammy are drawing some criticism on social media.oman to win a major award, best new artist. five years, only 9% of grammy nominees recording academy president neil portnoy gave this explanation why are "i think it has to begin with women who have the creativity in tsoheirs to step k they would be welcome." wan has with strategy for keeping kids with strategy for keeping kids out of trouble.
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finally, 187 people have been shot in chicago so far th now a woman touched by the violence is helping shieldit, t of the toughest blocks to some of the friendliest squares. adrian adiaz is there. >> reporter: 11-year-old stefan edwards has his opponent on the run. >> check! >> reporter: one who's usually others. >> oh, man! >> reporter: on chicago's south si kids on equal ground. >> that's your first move? >> reporter:he
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>> okay. >> reporter: they're broughtray started a program called, not before my parents. >>t'there, that's e.j.'s dad -- >> reporter: we sat down with her two years e.j. got hit in wa was shot in the head at 19. >> oh, god. oh, god. >> reporter: he was one of 771 chicagoans killed in 2016. it's an agony relived. 21 years before that, her daughter was also murdered. in their memory, she vowed to be part of a solution. >> no parent should have to bury their child. they just don't go together, it's not right. >> reporter: two years later she's delivered on that promise and "not before my parents" uses chess as the toll. >> with choose, you think, you focus. i want to beat him, and i don't
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have to beat him with these, i can beat him with this right here. >> reporter: she drives kids to weekly lessons and monthly matches with police officers that she hopes will build trust. >> how are you doing now against this officer? >> demolishing. >> you're demolishing him? >> i'm sure every time he sees me, oh, hey, that's officer mcclain, i beat him in chess. >> is this your grandson e.j.'s legacy? >> yes, it is. i know he's looking proud. go, nana. go, nana, y'all go. >> reporter: raydell lacy lost her cherished grandson, but her family and her impact continue to grow. adriana diaz, cbs news, chicago. >> and we are looking at her proud as well. that is the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning."
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from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. welcome to the overnight news. president trump goes before a joint session of congress tonight to deliver his first state of the union address. the president is expected to highlight what he calls the accomplishments of his first year in office, the tax cut, deregulation, and a soaring stock market. but he's also expected to lay out plans for immigration reform and a massive infrastructure project. margaret brennan has more. >> we worked on it hard, covered a lot of territory including our great success with the markets and the tax cut. >> reporter: for a president who often complains that his successes are underreported, the unfiltered primetime address
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is a key opportunity to push his agenda. >> it will obviously be must-watch tv. >> reporter: advisers say the president will echo many of the business-friendly themes he spoke about last week in davos. >> america is open for business, and we are competitive once again. >> reporter: the highlights, a promise of improved trade deals. a $1.7 trillion plan to revitalize infrastructure. a request to congress for $25 billion to construct a border wall with mexico. in exchange, he'll offer to make 1.8 million undocumented young immigrants future citizens. >> we're going to get something done, we hope it's got to be bipartisan, the republicans really don't have the votes to get it done in any other way so it has to be bipartisan. >> reporter: one thing absent from the speech, the russia investigation hanging over the white house. but he doesn't feel a need to address it? >> i think we've addressed it every single day that we've been here. no one cares about this issue and it's not the thing that keeps people up at night. we'd love to talk about the things that do, my guess is that will be the focus of the president's state of the union
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tomorrow. >> reporter: the president and first lady have invited 15 guests to attend the address. they include two injured veterans and five individuals who have personal ties to the immigration crackdown, including victims of ms-13 gang members. >> it's a year into the trump presidency, is the country better off? >> i believe it is doing much better. the stock market, i know eventually it will end, but i think the economy is doing much better. i'm seeing more jobs. >> i completely disagree. i don't think it's doing any better. sure the economy is getting better, it seems, but the economy is not the only thing that we have to look at when we're describing the country as a whole. you know, racial tensions are increasing. among whites and blacks. health care is a crisis in this country. we've got the opioid crisis. i don't think ultimately as a whole the country is doing any better than it was. >> financially, we're doing much
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better. i think that with the addition of gorsuch, our supreme court has improved. on the flip side, as debbie's pointed out, there are breaks in the american culture. used to be a homogenous culture, it's not anymore. it's unfortunate. i hope that we can get back to a point in which americans look at america and are proud to be americans and we're not divided up into african-americans and hispanic-americans. we're all just americans. i wish we'd go that way. >> watch the state of the union address right here on cbs. our coverage gib begins at 9:00 p.m. eastern. the fbi is looking for a new kepty director after andrew mccabe abruptly walked away from his post. mccabe came under fire from president trump for his role in the hillary clinton e-mail investigation. he's also a central figure in the investigation of russian political interference and possible obstruction of justice. the white house insists it had
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nothing to do with mccabe's decision to leave. jeff peguess has the latest. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news fbi deputy director andrew mccabe was strongly encouraged to step down and the investigation into the clinton private e-mail server may have played a role. in a message sent to fbi employees this afternoon, director christopher wray mentioned the results of an inspector general review of that probe and said the fbi must perform at the highest standards. >> i fully complied with every rule that i was governed by. >> reporter: mccabe oversaw the clinton investigation, but became a lightning rod for critics, especially president trump, after it was revealed his wife received almost $700,000 from democratic party sources in her unsuccessful bid for the virginia senate. >> mccabe got more than $500,000 from essentially hillary clinton. and is he investigating hillary clinton? >> reporter: mccabe oversaw the russia investigation when it was run by the fbi.
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after president trump fired james comey as director in may of last year, mccabe became acting director. but he also remained loyal to comey. >> is it accurate that the rank and file no longer supported director comey? >> no, sir. that is not accurate. >> reporter: in recent weeks, president trump has stepped up his criticism of mccabe, tweeting he was racing the clock to retire with full benefits. >> there's a perception problem out there that is not going away. >> reporter: ron hoska, former assistant director of the fbi. >> i think the white house has applied its fair share of pressure, but what's unknown is what did christopher wray know? the new director of the fbi, something presumably caused the director to act. >> attorney general jeff sessions also pressured fbi director wray to get rid of mccabe. the white house says the president had nothing to do with today's action but stands by his criticism. we're not even halfway through the flu season and it's already the worst in nearly a
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decade. the cdc says 37 children have already died from complications of the influenza virus. and entire school districts have been closed down because so many teachers and students are sick. omar villafranca has the story from hard-hit dallas. >> reporter: schools across the country are fighting the flu. classroom by classroom. today, bishop lynch high school in dallas resumed classes after it closed last week to let work crews disinfect the entire school property. kaitlin kasner is a senior that has low-grade fever, and isn't taking any chances after her brother was sick with the flu. school nurse patty barton saw more kids in the clinic than in the classroom. >> this year, it really is unprecedented. i probably saw about 30 kids in here on monday. and sent ten home. >> reporter: the flu is widespread in 49 states. and the cdc says 39 of those have especially high activity.
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schools in at least 12 states have canceled classes for a few days. for cleanup and recovery. the flu shut down classes today for the 815 students at st. thomas aquinas in dallas. more than 10% of the student body got sick. matthew bariki is the school superintendent. >> even if we miss anything that the kids will have a chance to get healthy, hopefully not bring that virus back to school. >> it has been a tough influenza season so far this year. >> reporter: dr. jernigan with the cdc says the h3n2 strain of the flu is hitting patients over 65 very hard. but other strains of the flu are taking a toll on younger patients. >> since that winter holidays we've seen that kids are really making up the predominant amount of influenza-like illness, taking that back to school, it's getting transmitted there, i think that's really what's driving a lot of this visits to the outpatient clinic right now. >> reporter: one of the reasons that the flu spread so fast in schools is that students are in close quarters and they share
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everything. one of the biggest problems? cell phones. students type on them, then share them, then end up spreading the virus. okay - let's try this. it says you apply the blue one to me. here? no... make every day valentine's day with k-y yours and mine. two sensations. one great way to discover new feelings together. ♪i'm gonna get ya', get ya', get ya', get ya'♪ ♪one day maybe next week, ♪i'm gonna meet ya' ♪i'm gonna meet ya', i'll meet ya'♪
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this is the "cbs overnight news." the pharmaceutical industry coming under fire for its alleged role in the nationwide opioid epidemic. delaware is one of 13 states suing drugmakers. the state's attorney general is targeting the entire opioid supply chain, from manufacturers to to chain drugstores. the industry isn't taking this lying wnasve lobbying campaign and our julianna goldman has more. >> reporter: more than 30 state investigating and negotiating with the pharmaceutical industry to try andent over the opioid crisis. a number of a gs have lost patience and have left the group directly.
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there's a high-stakes campaign o get them to drop their cases sue so they can contain potential damages. >> i can enjoy every day that i live. >> reporter: that was the message to 15,000 doctors inm p company that made $35 billion from the sales oxycontin. >> the rate of addiction amongst aty doctors is much less than 1%. >> reporter: the company says it corrected its marketing and pled guilty to misbranding in 2007. but ohio's attorney general, mike dewine, says the company continued deceptive marketing through 2014. >> if you go back 20 years in ohio, you can see the number of pain meds prescribed in ohio start going up like that. >> reporter: last may, dewine sued purdue and four other pharmaceutical manufacturers. >> i would love for purdue pharma and other drug companies to follow me around, just one
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day, give me one day. i'll show you what you have done to the people in the state of ohio. >> reporter: purdue recently tried to persuade dewine to drop ohio's lawsuit and negotiate instead, writing, litigation takes years and the costs for both sides are significant. >> there's a lot at stake for them. and so they've been very aggressive. they've lawyered up. they have hired lobbyists. >> reporter: they've opened their war chests. donations from drug companies to political associations for state a gs have risen in the past three years totalling almost $700,000 to democrats and over $1.7 million to republicans. professor paul nuett studies state government. >> you have some of the very companies that have manufactured opioids either under active investigation or potentially under investigation, donating tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of dollars, to these ag organizations. >> reporter: the republican ag association told us they have an
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obligation to the people to hear from all sides. their democratic counterpart said she also hear from a wide variety of voices. the contributions are legal. but they allow companies to gain access to the ags at exclusive meetings, golf outings, and high-end dinners. opioid manufacturers and distributors spent over $100,000 to partially sponsor this meeting in san francisco. >> that was really something else. the opening dinner last night. >> reporter: at a meeting in may, two opioid companies who had given the democratic ag association a combined $65,000, got to speak on a panel at this hotel in oregon and told a group that they were not responsible for the opioid crisis, according to several attendees. there are nationwide rules for congressional lobbyists but not any when it comes to lobbying state ags. those lobbyists don't have to say how much they're being paid or who they meet with.
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awards. mars won in six categories including three of the biggest. rapper kendrick lamar didn't do too shabby walking out with five golden gramophones. superstar ed sheeran skipped the ceremony but still won two awards, best pape sow low best pape sow low performance for "shape of you." mark phillips caught up with sheeran in his hometown near that castle he sings about. >> when was the last time you got fish and chips? >> couple of weeks ago. >> cod and chips. can i get a battered sausage and chips, please. >> reporter: to hear ed sheeran talk about the place he grew up, you wonder why he left. >> what's special about this place? >> it's the best fish and chips in england. >> reporter: then you realize in a way he never did. >> are you a vinegar or no vineg vinegar? >> vinegar and salt, i don't know why you'd have fish and chips without them. >> reporter: ed sheeran will be 27 next month. not just the hottest thing in the pop business, he seems to
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have reinvented it. >> i usually jump up on here. can you jump up? >> jump up to stand on it? sit on the wall. >> there you go. ♪ i'm in love with the shape of you ♪ >> reporter: "shape of you," the lead single of his latest album, debuted number one on the charts and stayed there a remarkable 12 weeks. it remains in the top ten for 33 consecutive weeks. the longest ever run in billboard's 59-year history. the music video of "shape of you" has been streamed 3 billion times. billion with a "b." >> is that the slide technique? >> the good thing is whether it's the middle of winter or summer, the weather's always the same. >> yeah, i think it's quite nice here in summer. ♪ i can't wait to go home >> reporter: when sheeran released two single tracks from that album, instead of the usual one, people said he was crazy.
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that they'd fight each other. there's no one way to do it anymore? >> actually, not necessarily. >> this is good fish. >> good, isn't it? >> reporter: but he was right. both songs shot into the top ten like a bullet. "shape of you" at number one, "castle on the hill" at number six. ♪ my first kiss on friday night ♪ ♪ i don't recognize >> reporter: here on england's east coast where he grew up, sheeran eats his lunch one chip at a time. >> what's beautiful about this area, no one's treated me any different. still the same people working the fish and chip shop treat me exactly the same. >> reporter: if the same means like a local hero. ♪ when i was 6 years old >> reporter: there's a method to his success. first, write catchy songs about stuff you know. ♪ i was running from my brother and his friends ♪ >> reporter: this is "castle on the hill." ♪ over the castle on the hill >> this is what the song is
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about? >> this is a legitimate teenage hang out where you and your pals would come on friday night? >> yeah, this is the spot. >> with tins of beer? >> you'd get 20 cans and sit on that hill. i was really in love with the place i'm from, like springsteen would write about new jersey, i guess. ♪ you are my one and only >> reporter: beyond writing the songs, sheeran wrote his own rules about how to sell them. like so many others, he had set off for london as a teenager, singing on street corners and in pubs. but he didn't knock on record company doors or wait to be discovered. ♪ you can wrap your fingers round my thumb ♪ >> reporter: he began marketing his own stuff, releasing his music himself on websites, until inevitably a record label came calling. ♪ a small bump i know you'll grow ♪ >> the record company offered
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you $20,000. >> yeah. >> you had already earned $500,000 on independent sales? >> i didn't have infrastructure. they have at american label, they have a japanese label, they have an australian label. that's what i was signing for. >> i suppose you'd say it paid off. >> yeah, definitely. ♪ white lips pale face >> reporter: by the time his first album came out in 2011, he called it "plus." he had already made "following." it moved into the top five around the world. ♪ people fall in mysterious ways ♪ >> reporter: his next album he called "multiply." he has a thing for math. it hit number one in the uk and the united states. and it's hard to go to a wedding these days without the bride and groom dancing to the big single from that one "thinking out loud." ♪ thinking out loud >> reporter: whether sheeran will dance to it at his own
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wedding -- he did and his high school sweetheart are engaged -- isn't known. >> that was beginning of my career. i wasn't -- >> you wanted the music to speak? >> i don't like the way i looked on film. yeah. deep. >> you seem to have gotten over it. >> no, i just can't hold it back now. my songs sell more if i'm in the video. ♪ keep this love in this photographic ♪ >> reporter: boy do they sell. sheeran may be a worldwide mega star but to fans he seems like a small act that made it big. he says, thanks to them. ♪ so you can keep me >> who helped you first? >> fans. fans. it was file sharing. i know that's a bad thing to say because i'm part of a music industry that doesn't like illegal file sharing. >> code for piracy. >> illegal fire sharing is what made me, students in england going to university, sharing my
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songs with each other. >> what's your view on file sharing now? >> i don't think file sharing exists now. >> really? >> people rip off but it's so easy to stream. ♪ everything has changed >> ed sheeran, ladies and gentlemen. >> reporter: he's written for other stars, like taylor swift. and justin bieber. ♪ if you like the way you look that much oh baby ♪ ♪ you should go and love yourself ♪ >> reporter: and he's also written for the movies. this for "the lord of the rings" series. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: however it happened, sheeran became big enough to fill madison square garden, three times. and because people said he could never do it, he booked london's 80,000-seat wembley stadium, also for three nights, and filled that too. ♪
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>> reporter: and then he stopped. packed it in. vanished for a year. >> i was definitely in a spiral of work and partying that probably would have ended not well. but also i think, as much as i needed a break, i think the public needs a break from you. if you continually are just in everyone's face the whole time, eventually they're going to be like, nah, you're not all that i'm cool. ♪ i'm on my way >> reporter: if the sales of the new album called "inevitably divide" are any indication, sheeran's fans missed him. ♪ we may n know the answer ♪ i miss the way >> reporter: maybe he really sd needed a break. maybe it was another really clever marketing ploy. maybe both. ♪ over the castle on the hill we watched the sunset ♪ ♪ over the castle on the hill
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a big role in this weekend's grammy awards.g fun at president trump, artists wore white roses in support of the "time's up" movement and to protest sexual misconduct. despite all that, music still tookenter stage. kevin frasier reports. >> reporter: many thought this would be the year of rap. rapper jay-z started with the most nominations, eight in all, but left empty-handed. hip-hop artists lost in top categories like album and record of the year. major disappointments, but also some very impressive wins. ♪ don't we look good together >> reporter: bruno mars looked great taking home all six awards he was nominated for, including in the most coveted categories of record, album, and song of the year.
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>> alessa kara! >> reporter: she got her start on youtube, took home the honor for best new artist. >> holy cow. wow. i'm shaking. i've been like pretend winning grammys since i was a kid -- >> reporter: she was the only woman who won an award of the 14 nominated on the televised ow w and silence us, we offer you two ime's up." >> reporter: artists supported the time's up and me too ♪ you brought the flames and you put mehrkesha, accused her former prord producer dr. luke of sexua visibly shaken as she performed her hit song "praying." praying ♪ ♪ i hope your soul's shaken >> reporter: ♪ new york, new york >> reporter: after 14 years in l.a., the grammys returned to
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corden put a big apple twist on carpool karaoke. ♪ you don't want me on camera i cash on me. >> reporter: in a nod to the city's musical theater the grammys featured broadway brother-in-lawty p royalty. ♪ don't cry for me argentina >> reporter: country music stars eric church, maren morris, and brothers osborn paid tribute to fans killed last year in the uk and las vegas concerts. ♪ i saw you in heaven those. >> reporter: showing music can hell with the healing. ♪ ♪ i'll find my way through night and day ♪ >> and that's the overnight news for this tuesday.
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captioning funded by cbs it's tuesday, january 2018. this is thecbmorning news." we are following three big stories in washington this morning. the fbi's secon i abruptly steps down.pl vote to classified memo in the russian election med probe. and president trump prepares for his first state of the union address. mr. trump immillation, border s and the economy. while in minneapolis, the eagles and the patriots are gearing up for the
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