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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  January 5, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EST

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ever new england. eversource. . . >> good morning. it is tuesday, january 5th, 2016 him welcome to "cbs this morning." president obama goes around congress today to tighten gun laws through executive action. unmasking the new jihadi john. sources reveal to "cbs news" the suspected identity of the english-speaking militant in the latest isis execution video. those fast food wars are broiling. are those new combo deals really a good deal? >> today we begin with your eye opener.
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>> what we really have is a president that finds the congress the constitution and the american people to be inconvenient to his gun control agenda. >> the president set to take executive action on gun control. >> this plan, much of it having to do with background checks. >> donald trump is blowing off criticism of his new tv ad. >> some of the individual which looks like it's from mexico is from morocco. >> it's just a display of what our country is going to look like we're like a third world country. oregon. situation. >> it goes into its fourth day. >> isis reveals there may be a new jihadi john, threatening cameron. bracing for a band of storms, covering nearly the west coast of california. >> flood waters begin in some areas of the mid-west. alert. >> we are able to get you there,
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>> uncertainty over iran and saudi arabia and a plunge in chinese stocks sent marks down. >> chris gayle fined for playing cricket. >> don't blush, baby. >> all that, the jayhawks. >> three overtimes, 109-106 and a class they can will liver forever. under surveillance video captures a sudden avalanche sliding from the roof in turkey. large chunks of snow fell on pedestrians. who people were injured. >> and all that matters --? what are you sorry about? >> showdown at starbucks, an angry mother accuse ing the cashier of stealing her information. >> i stop for coffee. >> jeb bush is dealing with dwindleing poll numbers. >> should i say, this is jeb! or maybe even jeb and -- jeb;.
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where it belongs. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." congress is acting on its own to tighten federal rules for gun sales. he will layout his plan this house. >> several candidates are announcing the proposed executive action, they say they're unconstitutional. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, last night the senior officials here at the white house outlined the action the president is going to announce in a few hours. they focus on what they say are flaws and loopholes in the nation's background checks. that the president says will help keep guns out of the wrong hand. >> when i asked my team to do is see what more we could do. >> reporter: after months a review, president obama
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recommendations on gun control, during an oval office monday with fbi director james comey and attorney general loretta lynch. >> these are not only recommendations that are well within my legal authority and the executive branch, but they are ones the overwhelming majority of the american people, including gun owner, support an believe. >> reporter: among the actions are requiring gun dealers who sell firearms on the internet and at gun shows to be licensed and conduct background checks. changing a federal privacy rule that keeps people with mental health restrictions from possessing guns. asking congress to approve funding for an additional 200 atf acts and investigators and hiring more than 230 additional fbi ploy yes, sir to help process background checks. the fbi processed more than 23
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firearms sales if 2016. the highest in the program's history. >> of course, it's an overreach. >> republican white house hope. s condemn them before the details were released. >> executive action is designed to implementation of the bomb, not to undermine the authority. >> well, he can abuse his power all he wants. he has a phone and he has a pen. if you live by the pen, you die by the pen. my pen has an eraseer. >> some gun control advocates say it doesn't change all that much. it doesn't go that much. senior officials are saying the president is also hoping to start a conversation about gun control. now, that itself a conversation opponents are ready to have. republicans say they are planning to propose much of the president's proposal. >> thank you, jan. hillary clinton praised the plan in iowa, but much of the attention focused on the former her.
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candidates will visit today. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. those republicans will address the new hampshire primary student convention here. the battle for the republican nomination has reached a crucial and long anticipated turning point the candidates are now turning on each other in tough tv ads. meanwhile, bill clinton tried to deflect donald trump's personal rhet, teicing voters here, he's just a happy grandfather who isn't angry at anyone. >> i do not believe in my lifetime anybody has run for this job alt a moment of great importance who was better qualified by knowledge, experience and temperament to do what needs to be done now for pros sperts. >> reporter: the clinton family cherishes, bill clinton made his first solo surrogate visit on his wife's behalf.
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state for the campaign's revival in 1992. >> i think this election is about restoring broadly shared prosperity. >> reporter: the former president picked up with voters where he left off from hillary's 2008 primary victory in the granite state. >> i always say, every american will have a right to meet at least one president in our country. every american. and in new hampshire, your odds go way up. >> reporter: meanwhile in iowa, hillary clinton turned over a few trumpian leaf. >> i will let him live in his alternative reality. i'm not going to respond. >> on the republican front, donald trump was battling his rivals, needling ted cruz for copying his immigration plans. >> he said, we're going to build a wall. here's a good thing, he's a politician, he wouldn't know where to start.
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>> our slogan is don't engage in the threats. >> i know i have a debate. i have to get this fantasy football right. >> reporter: rubio took on chris christie, a threat to rubio now in new hampshire. >> one high tax common core, liberal energy loving obamacare medicaid expanding president is enough. >> reporter: on the ad front, trump took heat for showing water crossers in morocco. in his ad discussing illegal immigration in america. >> if that was video footage, it's a display of what our country is going to look like. country. we're a dumping ground. >> reporter: republicans battling the trump campaign said it was unlikely that moroccan video gaffe is going to tarnish trump or his ad. details supporters say are much more important in the face of perceived danger. one other notable thing about that trump ad, it doesn't attack republican, only the president and hillary clinton. charlie. >> thanks, major. law enforcement this morning
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occupation of an oregon wild life refugee. an anti-government group is settable fires on federal land. they return to prison monday. john blackstone is at the national wild life refuge, where there is no sign of action against the protesters. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, it is hard to call this a standoff. so far, authorities have made no attempt to reclaim the refuge. there doesn't seem to be any urgent reason to do. so there are no hostages. no one has been hurt. but there are concerns the armed takeover here is actually hurting the ranchers' case. >> reporter: this began as a peaceful protest. it took an unfortunate turn when some of those folks broke off and began an armed occupation of the national wild life refugee. >> reporter: there was not a single law enforcement officer to be seen for miles in the wilderness that surrounds the
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35 i sheriff david ward had a message for those occupying it. >> you said you were here to help the citizens of harney county. >> that help ended when a peaceful protest became an armed occupation. the hammonds have turned themselves in. it's time for you to leave our compluvenlt the armed group says it has no plans to leave. they even showed us around the compound they took over. how many people were in here? they refused to say how many they called a group citizens for constitution freedom. leader ammon bundy tweeted, we have no intentions of using force upon anyone, but if force ourselves. they are demanding an inquiry as to why ranchers were sent to prison for setting fires on federal land after they have already served prison time. >> it has been left to us to decide whether we allow these
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make a stand is they will not happen to other people across this crown. but many in the area who support the hammonds oppose the occupation. >> it's still imper tiver we find ways to address these issues that are peaceful, that are legal and that are productive. so that kind of leaves the occupiers out. >> reporter: other critics of the occupation include naturalists and bird watching groups. this refuge is a part of the migratory route the mosque fly-way. it's an important nesting grounds for more than 300 norah. >> all right. john, thank you so much. sources have revealed to "cbs news" the suspected identity of the newist so-called jihadi john to speak for isis. he appears to show the execution of five men.
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british news reports as a former bounty capital salesman. elizabeth palmer is in walk with the latest. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. there hasn't been any official confirmation, at least yet. but those sources you mentioned have provided a name and it is dahr. dahr is from london. he was raised a hindu, but converted to islam as a young man him he eventually joined a banned radical group al mujahirounment-joined isis tweeting, what a shoddy security system britain must have to allow me to breeze through europe to the islamic statement later using his isis name abu
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of himself holding a gun and his fifth child. in the recent video which shows the apparent execution of five men, the man that to be zaur is masked. in it, he nts the british government. >> how strange it is the leader of a small island -- >> reporter: dahr's sister says she can't be sure the masked man is her brother. >> i think it's hard considering what i've seen. my honest subpoena that it might not be. >> reporter: but many other people who knew dahr think it probably is. one of the hundreds of british citizens now in syria, including this little boy who appears at the end of the video. he's thought to be about 4-years-old. to establish the identity of that masked man conclusively, british intelligence services are going to examine as much as they can of his face behind the mask and also compare his voice
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have on time. charlie. >> elizabeth, thanks. iran's president is blasting saudi arabia this morning for cutting diplomatic ties with tehran. they call the move a cover-up for saudi crime. the clerk was seen as an outspoken voice for shiites in sunni rule saudi arabia t. white house is calling on all sides to show their strength. deadly flooding swept through the mid-west is headed for the south this morning. at least 25 people have decide in missouri and illinois. the rising waters pumped flood warnings along the mississippi river. david begnaud is in alexander county, illinois. that's where communities are swamped. good morning. >> reporter: gail, good morning. good news this morning, the water is receding here. when we left last night, it was right about here. this morning when we showed up, it was down two-and-a-half inches. it will take several days to dry
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the flooding across the county and southern illinois flooding is enormous. the flooding in alexander county, illinois is catastrophic, where the mississippi river has swelled 4 miles outside its banks. >> you can see the river just pouring water into the flood plain. >> reporter: on monday, we knew with the u.s. coast guard over the failed small levy. >> reporter: the breach is about a quarter mile wide. at least 125 structures are flooded and 14,000 acres in the county are under water. the water is rising. >> reporter: alexander county has seen major flooding before t. county government has offered buyouts to people living in the flood zone. 73-year-old richard johnson turned down a buyout. he now needs a boat to get to his front door. >> it's a mess this is. and i don't know what to do about it. >> reporter: alexander xoun
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the median income $75,000 a year. johnson, a retired truck driver, says the cost of relocating was too much. even with the financial incentive of a buyout. >> they offered everybody a buyout. i didn't accept i. i told my wife, i said, we can't afford to move. it takes money to leave. >> reporter: back here in alexander county the united states coast guard moved its assets further south. they have teams, rescue crew, additional planes in place as the flood water heads south towards the gulf of mexico. norah. >> david, thank you so much. the former south carolina police officer charged with the murder of an unarmed black man is out of jail. he posted $500,000 became. he was released last night in charleston. the 34-year-old will be under house arrest. his trial is set for october. cell phone video showed him firing eight times at walter scott.
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traffic stop in north charleston. wall street futures predict more losses this morning after a sell-off to start the new year t. dow jones industrials fell as much as 400 to 67 points on monday. the index finished with a 276 point loss, down 1.6%. it was the worst start to a year since the great recession of 2008. "cbs news" business analyst joe schlesinger joins us now. good morning. >> good morning. >> what's behind all this? >> well the selling started yesterday morning in china. the index down 7% in one session. >> that came after a weak manufacturing reading there. there got everybody nervous. they were worried china's growth is slowing down. the world's grooet is slowing down. selling was broad based. japan, europe, here in the u.s. as well. >> what's the likelihood that china will drag down the world's economy? >> i think this is the critical question of the year. china is trying to move from a
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they had an economy based on mvg and government investment. that was the big spending. they're trying to move to a consumer economy. decades ago it would grow by double digits. i will remind everyone we are four times as large as they were ten years ago. they are going to slow down. whether that rate is at 5% or 6 or 7. it will be the story in 2016. >> the connection to oil prices? >> exactly. obviously, when they cut off relations with saudi arabia and iran, this escalated things. i think that was a little icing on the cake yesterday. still, china was the main driver. >> and your advice to the average investor who might be freaking out other than don't freak out? >> i know, saying don't freak out is hard. remind yourself why you are investing. i'm a long-term investor. i have ten or 15 years before my retirement. i am diversified,ly have a rotten year, a rotten week, a
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few can't, if this is keeping you up at night, you got to go back to what your portfolio is all about. maybe you do need to make a move, but only if you literally pinky swear with yourself you will not change it when markets reverse course. >> okay. thank you. >> it's been a long time since i pinky squared myself. thank you, jim, got it. thank you very much. nfl owners are expected to decide next week if pro-football will return to los angeles. l.a. has not had an nfl team since 1994 t. st. louis rams, oakland raiders and san diego chargers filed their official relocation request yesterday. they say they failed to get nud stadium deals in their current cities. san diego's mayor says the charger's owner walked away from a fair deal. he says that san diegans deserve better. >> hmm. all right. the news true crime series making a murderer is sparking outrage online.
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prosecutor who says he is good morning everyone. a frigid start with subzero wind chill to across new england this morning. and plenty of sunshine. the one exception, back down to the gate where we have ocean effect snow showers impacting the region. an additional coding of two an inch in spots that the afternoon. otherwise, the real feel -- staying in the teens. tomorrow, another cold start that we are making rebounds.
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>> fast 2350d chains offering new meals. >> the new battle unfolding between the biggest names in the restaurant industry. >> the news is back here in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." neutrogena makeup remover does. it erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. need any more proof than that? neutrogena. weight watchers has changed. our all-new beyond the scale program puts the focus on you and not just the number on the scale. lose weight while eating healthier, with all new smartpoints. and move more by including fitness in ways that work for you. see how good you'll feel with the new weight watchers beyond the scale program!
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mellody. the so-called affluenza team, ahead, a drunk driving victim speaks out. good morning. i am chris mckinnon.>> the wind chill is still six below -- zero. we will rebound just a bit but it takes time. by mid to late morning, we are still seeing real feel in the single digits. we will be in the teens in terms of what it feels like in the warmest part of the day. we do see plenty of sunshine with the glaring exception. carey codd. ocean effects. they will taper off in the early afternoon. an additional. back up to 40. quiet at the end of the week. it looks like showers again this weekend.
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slowing things down north of the city. in wilmington near 129, two lanes were closed. we are now seeing bumper-to- bumper tractor -- traffic. 128 northbound at rock 125, the left lane is blocked. check out the top stories this morning. marty walsh is in washington to back president obama's move on gun control. the president is expected to bypass congress to require gun dealers to be licensed and require background checks even at gun shows. we will see you back here in 20 minutes for another update.
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>> what was your new year's resolution? >> to stop smoking. >> how is that going for you? >> not so good. >> what's your new years resolution? >> to stop drinking. >> how much have you had to dripping today? >> one too many. >> what was your new year's resolution? >> to eat more kale. >> how much have you eaten? >> i gagged. >> try to workout, eat healthier you, not get if trouble. >> what did you eat for hundredp today? >> i had krispy kreme donuts. it's really not a good start. >> oh.
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did a krispy kreme. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in half hour, a shift in wars, restaurants are focusing on bargain combo meals to keep customers. mellody hobson shows us whether it's has staying power. we look at the series "making a murderer" it tells a story about a convicted killer. the key figure in the case says he didn't get a chance to share his side. that's ahead. time to show you this morning's headline, usa today reports on federal rates targeting undocumented immigrants including children t. weekend raids were focused on carolina. 121 people were taken into custody t. raids focused mainly on people from central america with criminal records with gang ties. the los angeles times focused on a shooting that brought the nation to a standstill. they shot and killed the suspect
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chasing him in the san fernandez valley. police call him the most wanted man in last-minute for a month-long crime spree causing massive rush hour delays. >> the san bernardino "sun" says federal investigators are looking into whether a collision near los angeles killed four adults and a child a. toyota a toyota yaris plowed into a child. ago. republican lawmakers want a profess or caught on video to be fired. he was bullying a journalist. >> you need to get out. >> no, i don't. >> you need to get out. >> i actually don't. >> this clip was widely criticized for her actions during the november pro test. she has given up a journalism school appointment. the university refused comment. the las vegas review journal says the manager of the
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is no longer on the job. schroeder left in late december after an article involve cagcy no mogul sheldon adeleson. adeleson's company brought the review back in december in a shroud of secrecy. the teen known for the so-called affluenza defense will meet with his high profile attorney in mexico today. imgrangs center. couch does have access to television, phones and even a basketball court. we have the lawyer's strategy. manuel, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, ethan couch's mother tawnya couch will be in court later this morning in los angeles. she is expected to be sent here, the tarrant county jail when she returns to texas. meanwhile, her son ethan is
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trying to keep him from returning to texas for as long as possible. ethan couch's return to the u.s. remains uncertain, more than a week after the 18-year-old and his mother tawnya were picked up by immigration authorities. >> the law is there to protect everybody. not just the people we like. we are deeming with an immigration case. that's all. >> reporter: couch's high profile certain to calling for his client to be extradited, which involves the u.s.-mexico extradition treaty. couch has fewer rights under mexican law. >> he deserves compassionate and human treatment and this is what he will get from his experience in my country and i will make sure of that. >> the correct legal protect here is actually an extradition. >> reporter: the criminal defense attorney. >> it will take some time for the proper paper to be filled out in the united states, reviewed in mexico, for appropriate actions to be taken.
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tawnya is still being held in a los angeles jail without bail. mexican officials deported her last week for staying in the country illegally. ethan couch violated his ten year juvenile probation sentence when he and his mother fled in december. he killed four people and injured several others in a 2013 drunk driving crash. kevin mcconnell's son lucas was injured. he says it's impossible to move on. >> it's like ripping a bandage off the wound just at the time it wounded a bit. it's fresh in everyone's minds and hearts again. >> reporter: tawnya couch faces third degree felony charges for helping her son flee. once she returns here, she could face a penalty of two-to-ten years in prison. gayle. >> all right, thank you, manuel. a new trend in fast food is heating up among restaurants this year. burkeer king is the latest chain to serve up a combo meal t. five
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this, a bacon cheese burger, chicken nuggets, small fry, a cookie and a drink. mcdonald's version is the pick two. customers can choose two items from the list for $2. wendy's pidz za hut and papa john's announced deals. contributor mellody hobson is in chicago. we have to start with the most important question, did you get charlie rose a sausage mcmuffin and hash browns for his birthday? are you sending it over? >> reporter: i'm happy to send one over. i'll try to get a value combination. >> he is waiting. >> make sure the fries are hot. >> happy birthday is right. what's going on, with all these deals and why now? >> reporter: so think of it this way. they are trying to drive customers into the stores. they call that traffic with value offerings, while at the same, weening customers off the unprofitable dollar menus that
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they think if they can combine item, they might eek out more possibility. >> any restaurant has fixed costs. if you can increase the number of sales, that leads to greater profit. it will bring more people into the door. >> reporter: as long as you are cost. some of the dollar items they had, they were lost leaders, which created what "time" magazine called the franchisees had a love/hate relationship with these dollar menu, people came in, they were losing money or had very, very little profit in them. healthy items? >> reporter: the healthy items are there. all those companies will say we have salad, soup, oatmeal, apple, all of those things. that's not necessarily what they're offering up in these value offs right now. they tend to be other types of items, where they can offset an expensive item, maybe a bacon cheeseburgerer with a cookie, less extrens e pensive and create more profitability there. >> do you think it's a marketing stunt or do you think it's here
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>> reporter: here to stay. we've seen a series of these. now, mcdonald's says the mcpick two is a five-week promotion. although franchisees can run it longer. it's one in a series. they had the dollar menu, the dollar menu and more, now mcpick two. wendy's has a 99 cent menu, size price right menu. there is a series of these, i think customer versus come to expect these value offerings. >> i think it's going to work, if you can get five items $4 bucks, people will be seen me up, drive through. good to see you, happy new year. >> reporter: happy new year. new controversy surrounding a real series, fans making a zimps difference in one man's freedom by signing an online petition. that's next. if you are leaving, you can watch us live through a cbs all access app on your digital device.
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jones here in studio 57. plus, it's charlie's birthday, come on, get the cbs all access app. it will make him happy. we'll be right back.
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ibs-d. you know the symptoms when they start. abdominal pain. urgent diarrhea. now there's prescription xifaxan. xifaxan is a new ibs-d treatment that helps relieve your diarrhea and abdominal pain symptoms. and xifaxan works differently. it's a prescription antibiotic that acts mainly in the digestive tract. do not use xifaxan if you have a history of sensitivity to rifaximin, rifamycin antibiotic agents, or any components of xifaxan. tell your doctor right away if your diarrhea worsens while taking xifaxan, as this may be a sign of a serious or even fatal condition. tell your doctor if you have liver disease or are taking other medications, because these may increase the amount of xifaxan in your body. tell your doctor if you are pregnant, plan on becoming pregnant, or are nursing. the most common side effects are nausea and an increase in liver enzymes. if you think you have ibs with diarrhea,
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>> thousands of netflix viewers are asking for help for a coni have beened killer. they claim the legal system failed putting an innocent man behind bars again. but our digital network cbsn shows us why he could stay locked up. >> reporter: good morning, following the podcast serial and hbo "the jynx" now becoming a murderer has become the latest true crime ob sex. it follows christian avery, wrongfully convicted of rape. he spent 18 years in prison. many viewers wonder if he was framed again, this time for murder. >> at this time the court will read the verdict. we the jury find the defendant
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degree intentional homicide. >> reporter: a jury didn't believe steven avery in 2007 when he insisted he was framed for the murder of photographer teresa har baugh, now facing a life sentence, avery has been given a new sentence, making a murder. this time viewers seem to believe him. more than 200,000 people have signed a petition on change.org and white house.gov demanding avery be pardoned. he has gained celebrity support. mia pharaoh tweeted outrage after watching all ten episodes of "making a murderer." rickzy ki gervais says "making a murderer" zooev deserves a nobel price. >> reporter: he says it ignores much of the incriminating evidence presented during the trial. >> if i was spoonfed only what
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wanted me to see, i'd come to exactly the same conclusion. >> reporter: making a murderer" some of who were involved in avery's wrongful rape conviction, may have planted everyday to frame him as payback t. film makers say they asked kraft to participate but were turned down. >> we used what he said in court. we used press conferences, we do feel we represented his point of view. >> reporter: online, viewers are speculating about other possible suspects. some have made death threats against kraft and his family. his page gets a lot of negative comments. kratz says making a murderer is unlikely to give him his freedom evidence. >> it does very little to help the search for the truth. that's a function that is uniquely given to jurors and the
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>> reporter: kratz when say if he will sue the film makers or write a book in response, in private practice, kratz adds he appreciates the interest in the criminal justice system sparked by the documentary? thank you so much. gayle is in the toyota green room which a quick way contestant the your health. why are you on the floor? >> this is a first. we like exclusives on "cbs this morning." today. he will show us a fitness test from his new book. >> a simple test is if you can get up with one hand or no hands from the floor, that puts you in the top 25% of muscular cellular strength. it actually means you may lift longer. >> if you can't do that, call the crane. there is no way i can do it. >> i will pull you up. >> oh. >> what does that mean if you
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>> ocean effect snow showers continue to impact the far south short and cape cod through early afternoon in addition to a coating of an extra inch. the real feel, right around 0 degrees through late morning. the afternoon, it will feel like the teens. the warmest time of the day. accuweather sunday, another cool start tomorrow. light into the week and a little unsettled this weekend. showers possible saturday. we could have a wintry mix on
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announcement: this storm promises to be the biggest of the decade. with total accumulation of up to three feet. roads will be shut down indefinitely. and schools are closed. campbell's soups go great with a cold and a nice red. made for real, real life. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology,
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to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. look at this. a houston area couple is enjoying their rare identical triplet girls at home for the first time. they were born ten weeks early. back on december 1st, but now they bought the to go home, just last night. addison, kinsly and savannah were born within one minute of each other. the pom says she'll use ankle bracelets and colors to tell them apart smr it's exciting. you know how rare that is to have identical triplets. >> it can range from one in 60,000 to one in two million according to hospital. >> speaking of gift the gifts of life. it's my birthday.
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of you. we are celebrating something special around here. >> oh my god. >> this is for you, this is for you. >> that's so nice. >> so happy birthday. >> i feel bad i got you nothing. >> that's all right. >> i have my psychologist for you. >> happy birthday, charlie. >> it's better to give than to receive and if you were lucky enough to sit here every morning with these two people, you know why i'm giving them gift ghs that is so nice, thank you, charlie. >> you got him a gift? >> i'll open this later. >> okay. >> lolo jones will be here with her story of determination. >> happy birthday, going to the store.
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traffic once again. a crash and some slow down south of the city. the accident is it 128 northbound. you have a delay of about a half hour. and look at the expressway. the split to columbia roadway, a 27 minute trip. >> our top story this morning. more problems for the tea. out of service commuter train derailed forcing riders to get often warrants. they were best to andover where they could board a bus. we will see it -- you back here
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. >> it is tuesday, january 5th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including president obama tightening gun regulations on his own. jan crawford looks at how far he will go and how republicans might stop him. but first, here is "today's" eye opener at 8:00. >> senior officials outline the action. they focus on what they say are flaws and loopholes in a system of background checks. >> the candidates are turning on each other in tv ads.
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deflect tougher rhetoric. >> authorities made no attempt to claim the wreckage. there doesn't seem to be any urgent reason to do so. >> sources have provided a name. it is siddartha dhar. >> it's at least 125 structures are rising. water is rising. >> tawnya couch will be in court this morning. meanwhile the attorney for her son ethan is trying to delay his deportation. >> they are trying to drive customers into the store with value offerings, while at the same, weening customers off of these unprofitable dollar menus. >> after being arrested for crashing his car into a shopping mall, a florida man explained to police, he was trying to time travel. with i is crazy. if you want to travel 50 years into the future, just leave
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gayle king and for ra o'donnell. >> i have to take a second, charlie in the last hour, these are very expensive. so i thank you so much. >> you are welcome. >> it's very, very nice of you. it really is. >> not always. >> thank you. >> i thank you. >> we'll try to make sure we give you something later. >> you give it to me every day. we start with president obama will outline new rules designed to keep guns out of the wrong hands, the governor is taking executive action of congress shoes chose not to tighten gun laws. he received a string of recommendations at monday's oval office meeting with the attorney general and fbi director. >> although we have to be very clear that this is not going to solve every violent crime in this country. it's not going to pre vent every mass shooting. it will not keep every gun out of the hands of criminals. it will potentially save lives in this country.
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the new rules, governor chris christie says the president was acting like a pet lent child. senator ted cruz said he would rescind every single illegal and unconstitutional executive action that was taken and senator marco rubios this. the president undermines the constitution. >> despite the criticism the president says he is within his legal authority. jan crawford is at the white house. jampb, good morning. first what's in this plan? what will he need congress to approve to get parts of it paid for and et cetera? >> right. first of all, senior administration officials believed reporters on the details the president will be announcing later on today. essentially, they focus on fixing flaws and loopholes in the nation's system of backgrounds checks. it requires gun dealers to be lnsd. and then they would add more federal employees to help carry out those background checks to make them more efficient and
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here's where they are going to need some congressional approval. the president is asking, for example to add 200 more atf agents and investigators. it's asking congress to budget that. he is asking congress to get $500 million in additional funding for mental health treatment to try to offer services to deal with some of the recent episodes we've seen of terrible gun violence. soese going to have to go to congress for those t. rest of those are basically instructions to federal executive actions on how to carry out some of the existing laws. >> go ahead. >> what kind of liam, no, it's your birthday. what kind of legal talent. >> i will remember. jan, what kind of legal challenges does he face? yesterday. he says, this is within my legal authority. >> reporter: opponents will argue he is doing an unconstitutional end run around congress. congress passes laws and the president faithfully executes them.
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separation of power issues. it raises issues under the second maemt. the president is confident he will prevail. think about this he has a year left in office. lawsuits take forever. so this could be tied up in court to the end of his administration, meaning they will never be implementing these proposals, unless the next president decides to pick up the ball and run with it. >> i assume it's true for the president. he believe it's not just those cases, those awful scene cases of multiple acts of violence, but also individual acts of violence because of access to guns. >> well, right. that's right, charlie. no one says these would have prevented san bernardino or sandy hook t. president says if they can stop one death, it will be worth it. >> jan, thank you so much. for the first time in this presidential race, hillary clinton's campaign brought bill clinton to new hampshire. the former president was her co-strategist in twoipth. he campaigned vic russly for her
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his at sued on monday was far more subdued. he did not mention donald trump or respond to recent attacks. the former president discussed what he believes the election is all about. >> first of all, i'm a happy grandfather, i'm not mad at anybody and, secondly, i thought it was supposed to be a job interview. this election is about restoring broadly shared prosperity. >> that is how we will keep america safe and still keep it america. preserve our individual liberties and our reputation for being an open country, our belief in diversity. our understanding that one of our great meal tickets in the next 20 years will be somebody here from everywhere else.
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on hillary clinton at a rally across the massachusetts border. of obama. hillary. that's what you are getting. that's what you are getting. and i believe it might be even worse if you want to know the truth. it might be worse. >> reporter: a democratic front runner told iowa voters, she won't respond to trump. she says her new year's resolution is to quote let him reality. >> states to the south this morning are preparing for the potential of devastating floods, rising waters are blamed for the deaths of at least 25 people in missouri and illinois. flood warnings are in place along the mississippi river as the water moves south. >> the miss semis swells 4 miles past its banks in alexander county, ill noichlt a nearby levy broke. at least 125 buildings are faded there. flood waters are already making their way downtreatment to
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tennessee, voluntary evacuations are under way in low lying mississippi neighborhoods. it's official. legendary rock band guns and roses are planning a return to the jungle. the group is returned in the lineup for the coachella music festival in. ka. gunnens and roses will headline twice in april. >> the reunion publicly signals the end of disputes among the band's members. the band in 1996 over tension with the lead singer axl rose, the two haven't performed on stage together in morning 20 years. rose tweeted last night saying, okay, okay, it's confirmed! guns n roses is headlining the 2016 coachella. see everyone there. >> they are very excited. remember when he was here. we is asked him, did you think
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he indicated he was opened to it. >> he will be very popular, indeed. >> can you fine tune your health care and live better? that's what we all want? dr. david egus is in our green room exploring the yucky here. >> it's not yucky. >> i'm not yucky. >> i'm hearing something in my ears i apologize, the lucky year.
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>> flooding tornadoes, and historically high temperature, we'll look at the climate change and how to prepare for this year's el nino storms.
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, trt: :30 our cosmetics line was a hit. the orders were rushing in. i could feel our deadlines racing towards us. t need a loan. funding fast. building 18 homes in 4 months? that was a leap. but i knew i could rely on american express to help me buy those building materials. amex helped me buy the inventory i needed. fill the orders. just like that. another step on the journey. will you be ready when growth presents itself? realize your buying power at open.com on average, it takes three hundred americans working for a solid year, to make as much money as one top ceo. it's called the wage gap. and the republicans will make it worse by lowering taxes for those at the top and letting corporations write their own rules. hillary clinton will work to close the wage gap. equal pay for women to raise incomes for families, a higher minimum wage, lower taxes for the middle class. she gets the job done for us. i'm hillary clinton and i
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>> in our morning rounds, medicine is reaching a tipping point. "the lucky years" is out this morning. dr. david agus says it will
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prolong fertility an turn cancer into a manageable condition. the book is published by simon and schuster, a 26 of cbs. dr. agus leads at the southern western university of southern california. he is in studio. always good to see you. i love the title the lucky years. you say it has nothing to do with wealth or social status. we are all a part of the lucky years because -- >> this revolution that's happening now. it literally s. i'm with you guys once or twice a week with a break through happening all the time. these are break throughs that will change the playing field. it equalizes the playing field. we no you can do things like approaching reversing aging. we can prevent i. we can treat disease like never before. i do. aging. >> yes. >> birthday boy. >> yes. >> how can we reverse aging? >> it's an amazing story.
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published. she was kicked out. she took an old rat and young rat and put them to sleep. put the skin toke. joined. the old mouse had nurn newer nurns neurons. people called her dracula. three separate labs in san francisco repeated it. it worked. so it turns out there are proteins in young individuals up to age 25 that turn on stem cells. our stem cells go to sleep at age 25 some what's amazing is the cure for diseases, it itemly the is asleep within us. this is a way to potentially wake it up. >> i'm going to latch on to young people i'm thinking. yeah. >> you are in the 25 plus.
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staying healthy also means preventing a disease, i did a story on gene editing technology. tell us the proms they holds. >> it's wild. we can with this enzyme take one letter of your 3 billion letter code and change it. if you inherited a defect in breast cancer or something else, we can go in and change that one letter. so now it's happened in china. they actually changed the dna of an embryo. at the same time we need to regulate it. do it right. this has the potential of being transformative. something as wild as science fiction like, you take an organ from an animal and change the dna to allow it to be used in humans for transplants. these are fought far off. >> how far off are they? >> these are happening now. >> animal organs. >> we are designing pigs to have human proteins on their surface, using that for kidney transplantsz will happen.
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with heart valves. >> no question, this is a living functioning organ. >> i thought it was interesting, you said there is never any right answers in health. there are always several right answer, never just one. >> it's based on your value system. this was a maturation system for me, this is the right way or wrong way. i learned it's the right way for you as an individual. we all shouldn't do everything the same. personalized medicine will be fantastic based on data. value is a key part in decisions. >> you said there is a brave new world in fertility coming. what is that? >> you inherit dna from your mother and father, those are your chrome soechlts you inherit dna in your mitochondria. a doctor in new jersey was taking out their nucleus and putting it into a donor egg. the child has three parents. can you the that now for a 40 or 50-year-old woman and allow them
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changing the playing feel. this is a different world. people are giving birth later and later. this is a powerful transformative. >> mitochondria is a cell. >> you remember that. >> if you live near the airport, your change is greater. that's surprising. >> if you do concent trick circles around the airport, heart disease goes up. few live in the city, put foam in your ears when you sleep. i have a 150 pound dog that senators. ure brain needs that quiet. >> thank you, doctor. good to see you. very formidable. >> "the lucky years." >> thank you very much. >> as opposed to the yucky years. lucky years is a better title. goes on sale today. dr. day of the agus is getting ready to answer questions. tomorrow we'll continue our look at the lucky years with the panel and advances in preventing and treating cancer.
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>> i am lucky, too. all right a. three-year-old girl saved after a terrifying night. >> sweet heart, are you okay? come here. come here. >> meet the police officer who brought her out of the cold. that's next here on "cbs this
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new england's energy comes from a pool of energy producers. at a set market price and delivers it to you. but that pool is shrinking, causing energy supply rates to go up and down. so we're working with partners across the region to increase our natural gas supply and bring in affordable, clean hydropower from canada. we're leading the way toward the solution... because more energy means lower energy supply rates for you.
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>> there is a manhunt for a little girl. listen to this audio from this body camera. >> hi sweet heart. are you okay? come here. come here. >> oh my gosh, caroline was crying and described as very cold and very scared after the nearly five-hour drama. hero. but he is a father. >> i almost started crying. this is very happy, i'm happy and thankful we were able to find her. >> police are hunting for the kidnapper and a second man seen at the scene of the car jacking.
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>> you can tell he's got young daughter, come here, sweet heart. can you tell. that was so nice. three time olympic athlete lolo good morning. 8:25. i am kathryn hauser. top stories. first, a very cold forecast. daniel, it is brutal out there. it is still subzero in wind chills. six below. 12 no is the real feel. and we mix -- we make slow progress. through the morning, wind chills will still be running in a single digits and teens. one other thing we are watching today, ocean effects with -- it is backing up little bit. down to the cape cod canal where we may see an additional coating to an inch of snow
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tomorrow, another cold start that water rebound. week. traffic and weather together. let's take a look at the slowest rides out there right now. the pike eastbound is jammed from weston. about a 30 minute ride there. needham back to 95. 23 minute delay. from the north 90 from stoneham to the connector, that triple take you about 20 minutes. stories. morning. and out of service commuter train derailed. that forced him down riders to get often warrants, pass to a bus. the helpful service will be restored by midday. we are expecting to hear more allegations that students were sexually abused at a prestigious rhode island prep school.
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reportedly ignored complaints of sexual misconduct. they found no wrongdoing. a number of victims say they were molested by the former athletic trainer in the school in the 70s and 80s. marty washes and -- mayor walsh is in -- back today. requiring gun dealers to be licensed and require background checks at gun shows. critics say it infringes on their constitutional rights. we will see you back here in 30
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energy supply rates keep going up and down. at eversource, we don't like it any more than you do. it doesn't mean more money for us. it means that the market price of the energy we buy for you has changed. so we're working with partners across the region to increase our natural gas supply and bring in affordable, clean hydropower from canada. we're leading the way toward the solution... because more energy means lower energy supply rates for you.
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>> these exist, they're pre-samuel l. jackson. >> okay. >> i believe if you perform these in your own way, they will from here on out and forever belong to you. >> frankly, my dear, i don't give-a-damn! hello, my name is indigo montoya, you killed my father. prepare to die. mrs. robinson, you trying to se dues me? . you shall not pass.
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>> akuna matada. >> he does own them. very good. >> that was good. >> i don't give-a-damn. that's my favorite one. >> mrs. robinson, are you trying to se dues me? >> i love it. >> i know how great it is to produce those iconic movie lines that we all know. >> we all know. that's why it's funny. welcome back to "cbs this morning," coming up in this half hour, what's going on with this bad weather, what nasa is learning about millions of people. lolo jones is trying for her fourth chance to compete in the games. she is in studio 57 to show us how she is overcoming injuries after what she calls her worst year professionally. that is ahead. right now, it's time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. houston reports on a terrifying test drive for a car salesman, aattacker posed as a customer. he beat the man and locked him in the truveng.
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the new york post says a surrogate mother in california filed a lawsuit to stop a forced abortion. she was carrying triplets for a georgia man. the man only wants to children and requested the third be aborated. that is allowed in tear contract. cook is about six months into her pregnancy. she claims in her lawsuit she is the legal mother of the triplets. >> the telegraph reveals the safest airline. for the third straight year, quantus, looked at several factors, including government audits and that saelt fatality rorts records. >> that make the top 20 are alaska able, american and united airlines. >> britain tells us about an overworked judge in italy. he's so busy, he had to postpone a civil hearing until 2019. he says he has a backlog of 500
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rights protect him from forced labor. the walk post reports one fish, get this, sold for more than $100,000 at auction. a japanese sushi chain did ar $171,000 for this blue fin tuna. >> that works out to about $265 a pound. blue fin tuna are endangered due to overfishing. it was sold at the last new year auction at a historic fish market that will be torn down this year. extreme weather this morning continues to hit the united states. we've showed you earlier, the flooding overwhelming the mid-west and an arctic plast is finally chilling the northeast and california is preparing for a series of drenching storms. heavy rain is already falling this morning outside san francisco. jeffrey includinger is editor at large for "time" magazine and time.com. jeffrey, welcome back. >> thank you for having me? what is going on with all this weather? >> here's what's happening.
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what's the hottest year on record 2015 and the hottest month in the hottest year, which was july some think of the earth as running a chronic fever. now, on top of that chronic fever comes the acute fever of el nino. which occurs when westerly winds that usually push warm pacific water over to the west side of the pacific weaken or reverse, ae louing that warm water to slosh back east. that tends to heat up the northern -- north american hemisphere. >> we're talking el 19io. nasa says the images could rival the one of 1997, 1998, that killed 23,000 people world wide. what does that mean for us? the big snow we're having in the mid-west? what else does it mean? >> the know in the mid-west t. droughts we are seeing in central america, which are imperiling 3.9 people with food
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people in africa food and security. you seen the images with the flooding across mississippi. we're going to see extreme heat spikes over the summer. which will affect vulnerable population, older people, sickly people, very young people. so this could take a much bigger toll than in 1998. >> it was in the '70s on the east coast for christmas. the north pole is 50 degrees higher, they say. so is this the new normal? >> this is the new normal t. problem, i'm glad you brought up the north pole. because what happens when the people gets above freezing is shrinks. ice caps reflect sunlight back into space. the smaller the arctic ice cap gets the more warmth that the dark waters can absorb, so you got sort of a dangerous feedback. warming. phenomenon. what i admire about the nasa scientists in these cases is they're not acknowledging every
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to climate change. it certainly isn't. if are you a heavy smoker, not every cold will be smoke related. a lot are. you very much have to quit your healthy. >> given you look at science and a tough year weather wise with eknow, though, weather can affect national security. right? >> weather absolutely affects national security. any time you get food and security in any places of the world, you have a tendency for political unrest. the u.s. is no longer likes to say we're not going to be the policeman of the world any longer, still, people turn to us when you get this kind of problem. when the u.s. infrastructure is threatened the way it is along the mississippi the way it was in new orleans ten years ago, these are issues that divert funds, divert resources, that divert energy, affect shipping. all of these things go to the straight of national. >> so what can we do? >> well, what we can do,
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do with a lot of short-term steps. you can make sure there are cooling centers for older people in the summer. can you make sure we have water cons vacation in drought stricken areas we have flood law, levies, in flood-prone areas. we also have to be willing to say it's time to address this in the long term. the paris climate accord was a very, very good sign. the u.s. as the world's leading emitter has to take the lead in curbing this problem. >> important information, thanks, jeff. >> thanks so much. olympic hurdleer and bobsleder lolo jones is right here in studio 57. on the road to a comeback in rio.
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if she makes the u.s. team, it will be her fourth olympic appearance. lolo jones is with us in studio. first we will take a look at her long olympic roller coaster. for more than half her life, lolo jones has been clearing hurdles on and off the track t. photo genic olympian and iowa american. she began her racing career as a student at louisiana state university, where she won national titles in both sprint relays and the hurdles. >> it's a fair start. here's the first hurdle. >> reporter: in 2008, jones entered the beijing summer olympics as a gold medal favorite in the 100 meter hurdles. ahead of the pack, with gold in her grasp, she hit the second to last hurdle resulting in a 7th placed finish. >> best time going into the olympics. best time going out. i didn't get that gold medical. >> reporter: she was side lined
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her quick recovery led to a spot on the 2012 summer games in london. an olympic medal still proved to be out of reach for the 4th place finish. in 2014 jones traded her track sneaker for a helmet and joined the u.s. bobsled team in sochi. the track star has yet to win an olympic medal. that has not stopped her from becoming one of team usa's favorite stars. >> this is really pretty. lolo, gorgeous. >> reporter: her magazine worthy good looks has secured deals with some of the biggest brands. with it, criticism of whether she deserves the spotlight. jones continues to brush off critics. less than three months out of hip surgery, seven months before the summer olympics. she is working hard to find her stride. >> wow, lolo, wow. >> yeah. >> worst year professionally. what happened? lay it out for us, where do you
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>> well, this last season, i had two surgery, a torn shoulder. then a torn hip later onch they were quick to come back. from i was like, man, like is this it or is this a sign to give up? or this a sign to get killed? >> what keeps you motivated? how are you doing? >> well, you laugh a lot. although i've placed success, i've tasted as well a lot of failure. i think for me knowing that, you know, you will not take joy in small victories, also how you leave something is how you enter. how your attitude is when you cross the finish line is how you enter your next race. if i get down on myself, that itself how i'm going to carry it into the next race. so every olympic i failed at. i have to look at the good side, winter olympic, i got to 11. i'm one of the ten people to go to winter olympics. when you are pursuing a goal. will you fail on that path to that goal. attitude.
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have that negativity when you attempt it. >> you are training for the olympics inryio. you turn 34 on opening day. >> why do they do that, awful? >> 34 is young, stronger than ever. >> strong. >> stronger than ever. how do you think you will train differently for this olympics than have you in past olympics? >> every year i have to remote rate is myself. track is essentially who can work out the best? there is no game involved. it's who is the best condition. so every year i try a different workout. pilates one year. yoga the next. i do a workout similar, involving science behind it. heart rate monitors. every year i try out something new. this one fit and worked well with the post-surgery that i feed. >> and you are a spokesman for them, too? >> yeah, i am a spokesman, i was kind of shocked and amazed you could have such a workout that
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eb up is getting fit. >> for track stars, is there some combination of hand-eye coordination for golfers and baseball hitters? >> not as much, you know, i think they're more specific. obviously, when i have a hurdle coming at me very fast, i have to have hand-eye coordination. there are not specific things in my dun time that focuses on that. we are concerned at going over a hurdle in high speed in a race environment. >> track stars have what? >> determination. >> they have to. >> our workouts are running. everybody hates rung. treadmill, like, yeah. so you know just to get through that day, what are you going to do for practice today? i'm going to run. what are you going to do tomorrow? i'm going to run. >> lolo, you have a lot of haters on the internet. people tear you down, she is very good looking. you are, you are stunningly gorgeous. they say, she ain't won no medals.
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i'll show you mine. really, somebody else in the room can do what you do? you do get a lot of criticism. how do you deal with that? you heard it? >> i can tell my staff i'm a three time world champion, i'm the fastest american indoor record holder. >> that means nothing to them. at the end of the day i have to know my opinion of what i've done in track is not altered by what they think of me. it comes by how hard i worked and what i've achieved. everybody will face criticism. you start a business, family says, you can't do that. you have to say i can do that. take joy in the small things have you overcome. will you get where you are at. >> the first challenge is to make the team? >> the first challenge is to make the team t. best feeling in my life, when i cross that finish line, no one can take that away. every american who has made it on the team and has the chance to represent their country in olympic, knows there is no grarlt honor. >> i can't imagine how good it is to walk in that stadium and
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with the flag flying. >> to know that people back home are watching you an supporting you. it's something that i always cherish. >> you have been candidate about being sell bat. can we discuss that? >> let's. i hope my husband is watching, my future husband is watching. >> you made that decision why? >> to honor my future husband and for god, it's i'm a devout krichlths i believe in that. i believe within growing up i saw a lot of girls my age get in trouble or just in the wrong environment and there are more girls than i would, they'd get pregnant and be off the track team. >> is it hard? >> is it hard? no, is it hard? >> not to be funny. >> it's extremely hard. >> tell her how hard it is. >> it brings a lot of lonely nights for sure. >> did you have a boyfriends in. >> no.
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>> i'm going to be working on that today. but it is difficult. >> it's difficult because there is a lot of people that you tend to be grit with, but they don't want to wait. so that makes a lot of tension. so you see, you know, people are having fun. but you are doing this to honor your future spouse. >> lolo, what's your real name? >> my real flame is lori. >> we are rooting for you. great to have an olympian at the table? we hope you get married soon. enough of this pain. >> we'll be right back.
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the new year means a house full of new devices. and that can slow your internet down.
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fios - quick. only fios has the fastest internet and wi-fi available, with speeds from 50 to 500 megs. and right now, for $79.99 a month online, you"ll get 50 meg fios internet, tv and phone for your first year. plus with a 2 year agreement, fios gives you $400 back, and all the premium movie channels for a year. hurry, this offer ends soon. so go online or call now. get out of the past. get fios. john kasich's an impatient rascal. paces, pushes. but, unlike some, his state is now booming. unlike some, john kasich has proven he can do the job. brought back jobs from mexico and china. keep us safe, make us boom. because he's done it before. only an impatient rascal can bring america back. john kasich. new day for america is
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thank you, thank you, thank you, for all your e-mails. >> that does it for us. be sure to tune into the cbs
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tonight and for news anywhere, watch our digital news network, cbsn. we will see you tomorrow. it will not be my birthday
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it is 8:55. i am kathryn hauser. you have a very frigid forecast. the wind chill, the real feel value is still sitting subzero across new england. six below. -- six below in boston. the real feel brings us to the single digits and team -- teens. at least, the sun will be shining but not for everybody. we are tracking those ocean effect snow bands from plymouth and the cape cod 10 -- cape cod canal. we have already had a coating of up to 2 inches in some of these spots.
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we will get an additional inch in the city. 40 by the afternoon. traffic and weather together. daniel, an accident on 128 causing problems now. northbound. there is still debris in the roadway. also creating delay on the southbound side with some rubbernecking. from stoneham to boston, a 30 minute ride. the worst is to the south in northbound side of furnace brook to columbia road, that will take it 20 minutes. >> making news we have been following from whitmore elementary. they have been evacuated gas leak. there were no children in the school or on the road, at the time. the fire department is on scene and conducting tests. buses are being used to keep kids warm and reroute them to
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church street your wbz has a crew on scene. we will bring your details noon. our other top stories this morning, boston mayor marty walsh is in boston today backing president obama's move on gun control. he is expected to bypass congress to require gun dealers to be licensed and require background checks even at gun shows. critics say it infringes on their constitutional rights. >> and out of service community -- commuter rail has derailed. forcing riders to get off in lawrence. we will see you at noon.
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devil dogs! but the game is tied. devil dogs! [music starts playing] drake's. listen to your craving! happy now? ring dings! in your stomach.
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yodels. yodels! not now. i'm watching the game. yodels! in the stomach! you're right. yeah! drake's. listen to your craving! happy now? funny bones. in your stomach!
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