tv Sunday Morning CBS September 27, 2015 9:00am-10:31am EDT
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have a great sunday. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been c good morning i'm charles ross god this is "sunday morning." we're looking at the new season and enter in ament. also looking at the sun superior tee of the young people coming of age. a generation experiences growing pains, of course, is there
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challenges facing the so-called mil learn jowl dep rakes. >> the generation has had a tough time entering the workplace. now they one in three american workers is a millennial. succeed. >> we need these young workers. they have lot to contribute. >> ahead on "sunday morning," hit the workplace but does the workplace know what hit hit. >> osgood: julianna margulies is an emmy winner. as the new v seeing on. >> julianna margulies is beginning her 7th season as "the good wife" publicly stands
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>> does she stay with peter or does she -- >> what a way to put it. >> i think she loves peter. i don't think. >> do i disgust you. >> ahead. julianna margulies. on screen and off. >> osgood: could the smell of success be a phone call away. afternoon inventor thinks so. >> look at this place over here. >> do could capture but scents as well. >> if you could send a tweet that communicated that. >> that would be very interesting. >> ahead. >> osgood: as we membered the
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culture and entertain. >> so much for to fall that leaf peeping. we preview the bounty of the seasons in movies, and art. >> are people allowed to go under? >> they are. >> pull you have a chair and oversized offerness of fall. >> osgood: questions for ben bernanke. and mo rocco that you the cathedral. and more. first, headlines for this sunday morning. pope francis ends his visit to the united states today with a mass in philadelphia that is expected to draw a million
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yesterday, he drew a huge crowd in front of independence hall. he was joaned by aretha franklin. president obama is here to address the 70th session of the united nations. the president will meet with vade me putin. and raised the dole both during the hajj pilgrimage. at least 769 people died, many were iranian. demanded an 'polity. as many as a dozen people were injured night after a crowd rushed a concert stage. it's quieter than usual in paris today, the city has proclaimed
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only buses, ambulances, police cars and fire trucks are allowed in central paris. here is today owes weather. ought i am is in the air with rain and thunderstorms including carolina and gulf coast, cooler across the plains, but warmer than usual in the mountain best. sunny and nice across the heartland. >> next -- this generation does score on narcissism. >> the hill men los angeles
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>> later, new season in art. patients across the country have spoken. they recently rated their care experience at over 3,500 hospitals nationwide in a survey conducted for the centers for medicare and medicaid services. fewer than 10% received 5 stars. among them was cancer treatment centers of america in philadelphia. learn more at cancercenter.com/eastern. cancer treatment centers of america. care that never quits.
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we're new york city public school teachers. taking learning to the next level. and parents and the community are on board! all coming together... ...as one. to celebrate the passion and promise of our public schools. i'm michael mulgrew, president of the united federation of teachers. cmon! join us! millennials, you've heard that label 'plowed to the generation that is come of age around 2000. the mysteries abound. we call it growing pains, record by ben tracy. >> it's more of a complaint than a question. and it dates back long before is the 63's.
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your own never quite seems to measure up. the greatest generation spawned the baby boomers and the boomers gave birth to the millennial generation. born between 1981 and the year 2000 there are some 75 million. they're ready to take over the workplace. though plenty of people think the new kids in the office have a lot to work on. headline, we are raising generation of deluded mars cysts, do you believe that? >> we know from looking at it's more recently that this generation does score a little higher on narcissism. just that it's moved from one out of eight to score very high. >> gene twenge is a professor of psychology.
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of self assessment by millions. which they reported how accomplished, how motivated hand even how special they consider them themself. it seems to say it all on of already papers lays it out. they are defined by, the not wanting to work hard but still wanting more money and status. >> this is facing a challenging, competitive job market the problem is they haven't interest prepared perhaps because they got so much trophy for showing up. the workplace doesn't work that
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>> that's exactly the question. the beginning of 2015 marked the point they became the dominant generation. more than one in three workers are now millennials. >> what did the market research show up? >> they were weird. >> you didn't -- >> this clash of generations has been parodied on youtube. >> the video knocks both those boring over the top training films. >> did exactly what was asked. expect a raise and promotion. >> thanks.
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>> assistant manager. >> the video was made by age 39 a member of generation x who works at bedrock media. >> i don't think of this general operation as the most self deprecating generation. >> he estimates three quarters of his audience are millennials. iep if the truth sometimes hurts. >> that is a big, in my opinion, issue in our generation. >> we don't particularly respond to criticism and want praise. >> she created the blog to share advice and network trying to enter the workforce. although she spreads her gospel
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>> you want to you in double, triple digit likes in the next hour or two. it fees like, i failed. it's the instant gratification cycle that is a problem in the workforce as well. >> she points ointment the craving for positive feedback can get positive results. >> if you want to be entrepreneur or creator if you want to start something you have to have to a degree delusional,. >> just consider these success stories. facebook founder, and billionaires. >> the stereotypes we hear are that they are over competent that they don't respect authority. >> what generation doesn't have those.
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>> doug is a baby boomer unabashed advocate of the millennials that he employs. a recent survey reports only quarter of believe their employer is taking advantage of their full potential. >> i told the president, i said i wanted his job. i hate where i used to work. used to people because they didn't have enough grey hair. to hell with that there are some really smart people out there. >> ? you. >> you all fall into this, do you like the term? do you use the term? >> never. >> i feel like we don't compare ourselves to other generations. >> the millennial employees may
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confess it sometimes fits. >> i mean, at times i am impatient. that is the characteristic of our generation, that's it. >> the way they see it, those traits are nothing to apologize for. >> the whole idea of everyone is a winner, you can be anything you want when you grow up. >> do you hear those things growing up? >> kind of. >> does it set you are for disappointment when you realize there is a limit. >> that's life. >> not always going to get what you want. if you set your goals goals higher than what is attainable. >> now that millennials are settling into the office won't be long before they get to work about the next generation. >> i found the kids these days.
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>> cbs news presents a special report. which occurred minutes ago the end of his extraordinary 13 day visit. >> osgood: extraordinary indeed. his visit was effort by both countries is ease cold war tensions. the president welcomed him. all seemed to be going well enough until day five of the trip. >> just now i was told that i couldn't go to disney lapped. i asked, why not? rocket launching pads there? >> osgood: he december missed the official ex plaintiff nation. he even threatened to cut his visit short. but in the end soviet leader
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stop in the america's farm belt. >> today in with what, went out into the field. >> osgood: he wound up with two talks at camp david. he sounded optimistic. >> i hope the relationship between our two countries be able to use more and more often the good short american word, okay. up till we meet again, friend. >> osgood: would not always be okay. stepss mounting over ukraine and syria, president owe bama is scheduled to meet with tomorrow with russian president vladimir putin, the at the north dakota nations, not disneyland.
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the new season brings all kinds ever events are of are events. tracy smith launches our fall preview with look at come attractions at museums. >> if, to everything there is a season this fall may be the season for art. starting with the brand new broad museum in los angeles. housed in a building that is in itself a remarkable work. designed by architect biller scofidio and renfro has been likened to a cheese greater. but i saw it differently. also a baffle. for lack of a better word. >> especially designed skylight that is is 23 feet up in the air but when you're in the gallery you notice the light.
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>> joanne is director and chief curator. >> the mission of this museum to connect widest possible audience with contemporary art. it's really that simple. >> the museum which opens to the public this past week has art collected. more than 2,000 works of post war and condemn rear art. of aings from andy warhol, jags material johns, cindy sherman and keith haring just to name a few. what they set fortune you can enjoy for nothing. >> it's free? >> it's free. we didn't want there to be any economic barriers for people to enjoy. you can visit one gal row at a time. you can an organic relationship.
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>> but don't shed a tear if you can't make it to l.a. over the next few weeks there are dozens of noteworthy exhibits opening all over the country. in new york, the whitney unfails a new exhibit at the museum of modern report, picasso. will pop up gyp this time in 2d at washington, d.c.'s philips collection. boston's museum of fine arts features "dutch painting in the age of rembrandt and veremeer" and cleveland also. houston's museum of fine arts hosts mark rothko works. and dallas.
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>> osgood: old and new. >> osgood: pope francis saw the truth of saying what is old is new when he visited st. patrick's cathedral. now with mo rocca. >> every sunday morning in new york, the bells of st. patrick's' echo through the city. beckoning catholics and non-catholics to the cathedral's massive bronze doors.
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we call this america's parish church. >> we got over six million people a year. they want to see st. pat trek's. >> all mighty god. >> there is a lot to see. neo gothic landmark modeled on the great cathedrals of europe. a prism of stayed glass. an expression of uplift and hope deeply rooted says new york's cardinal timothy dolan in the american experience. >> almost all of the great ethnic parades, columbus day, the steuben day parade. the puerto rican day parade. would begin with a mass here at
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>> it was the flood of irish immigrants in the middle of the 19th century that gave birth. fleeing famine and persecution. but they found a champion in this man. archbishop john hughes. >> his nickname was daggey john, because he would stand up and defend the rights of his people. he said, we want to make a statement. and i want to build a cathedral to make the statement that catholics have arrived. they are at home. >> to make his statement the archbishop turned to james, designer of the famed smithsonian. he considered the premiere
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>> -- >> it took more than 25 years of mostly immigrant labor to realize his vision. when the someone spires were completed in 1888, st. patrick stood at the tallest building in new york city. but after years of neglect, the cathedral was showing its age. >> this cathedral is cracking much the bricks are crumbling. we have to clean our beloved the. >> which is why in 2012 cardinal announced restoration at eye popping price tag. >> the restoration is costing $175 million.
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give. we had to do it. i was survival. >> the cathedral is build out of marble. it's a beautiful, wonderful stone. >> the architect of the firm murphy, burnhan was charged with the task. >> the stone. to the touch. >> some-stories of scaffolding was erected outside and inside allowing trades people access to every inch of this massive structure. to clean and relead enpanes of glass. restore more than 92 0 organ pipes. and remove soot from the chapels including most popular our lady
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of guadalupe. >> she was just added. now this shows the continued presence and gift of the immigrants who always found spiritual home. >> good job. thanks for all you do. >> just as the original laborers and artisans have done the restoration work was performed largely by hand. and by a new generation of immigrants like peter cuffy. >> you're taking out a nail that someone banged in there maybe 120 years ago. >> make it look exactly as they had it. >> i have come over here and watched them with tooth brushes to get into some of the nooks and crannies of marble. >> the restoration process has taken three years. >> i am eager to get this done with.
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>> like any building the cathedral has its secrets. >> you stand underneath this say, how did i build this cathedral out of stone. then when we started working on it and i would go up to the attic we realize it is not stone. >> to save money after the civil war the whole upper half of st. patrick's was constructed of wood and plaster. yes, only looks like marble. project engineer, kera brady. >> looks like stone and in line with the gold paint. of. >> there have been some sobering discoveries as well leek the markings left by firefighters on the walls and spire. >> when the firemen come to inspect it up there, they will
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and when they were doing the restoration, they shot show we cleanse these, absolutely no. particularly because before 9/11 when the firefighters came here and carvedder this names in, those men lost their lives. >> >> this is the crypt below the main altar. >> also within are the many of the church's past leaders. >> i got his cross here. >> and the man known as the catholic billy graham the emmy award winning fulton sheen. >> the most popular peacher. >> i pray every day. when i fly, when i travel. twa, travel with angels.
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reporter lois lane would stumble into some terrible fix only to have superman save them. >> i got you, too. >> superman. >> he went on to long career as a play wright. he was 87. >> yogi berra. >> was no. 8 on the roast are the new york yankees an all-star catcher for 15 sees sons. the linchpin for ten world series wins. respected for his talent on the field he was also admired for his off-the-cuff aphorisms. others were quoted by presidents. >> yogi berra once said when you come to a fork in the road take it. good time.
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not long ago edwards' latest, is in cambridge, massachusetts. a design center, exhibition space all in one. the le laboratoire is another outlet to showcase edwards' grand idea, the invention like the "waff." >> it's a carafe. when you tip it on the side, i have port wine, creates a cloud of part wine, cloud in terse my glass. fur look at this cloud it's about 40 micrograms of port wine. i can actually sip this out. >> i can smell it. smells great. >> a range of nutrition products. >> another is aerolife which edwards says, allows you to inhale your way to better sleep
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>> you will see. energy. >> this is the place where you >> i do. >> edward got his phd in chemical engineering. but in the classroom he teaches students to turn their big ideas into real world products. >> i'm a professor of idea translation at harvard. >> began by creating a company which came up with designs for inhalable medicines and vaccines. did he well enough with that to be able to fund his very first laboratory in the heart of paris. >> this the ophob. >> and continuing his fascination. he started working on projects like o phone a kind of telephone
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and receive. >> if you could send a tweet olfactory that have restaurant. >> that would be very interesting. >> like a phone for aroma it works with mobile messaging app. tag over with 00,000. >> edwards shows in this video the o phone comes programmed with thousands of smells that users can trigger when they send an o note. >> you can actually share them. using the o phone you could even create a series ever smells. the experience of walks through paris. why would it not be enough to send pictures? why would you want to send smell? >> the smell of chocolate makes
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me love chocolate. i tell you about chocolate. it doesn't have the same. something about walking through the streets of paris with a nose which is completely unlike seeing a film of paris. >> edwards admits that the o phone could cause real stink. >> are you worried about this having bad uses, people sending each other unpleasant aromas as an in salt? or the guy dumps you sends something inappropriate. >> can't do anything that potentially changes the world that it will be used in a negative way. things can go wrong. you can get a bad odor message. >> edwards has his way the o phone may be coming soon to a store near you. consider another of his big
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what he calls the scoop of frozen yogurt. >> interested in eliminating plastic packages. moving on to other from water to juice to yogurt to cocktails to dessert. >> you could do that like vodka. you are could have grapes of wine in a mottle. >> what's interesting, too. >> interesting. >> if you like sip or david edwards cocktails, in cambridge ask for a few cocktails might be inspired to pursue your own big idea.
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ambitions. >> osgood: a small wonder of a football player has made a big impression on his teammates. >> of all the great kids at american heritage high school in plantation, florida, the one student who stands above the others, is the one who stands below them. 17-year-old senior adam reed is just 4'5" he's small because his moans. adam has taken on most unlikely role here. football running back. >> it's crazy, but it's true. >> what made you think you could do it? couldn't. >> he weighs in about 100 pounds with the helmet. most of the orgies are two times
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each looks up to adam. >> his expectations. saying. >> the ever heard of the little dog with the big dog heart. >> adam works out every day like bowl. he non- knew he might never get in single game. he's fourth string but completely unfazed by the. >> just care for what you do and love what you do. >> loads us to remarkable. last week with 20 seconds to go in the came the adam reed, coach told alleged am to take a dive before he got tackled. adam ignored him. >> get to the end zone.
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>> coach said he wasn't surprised. as you can see adam picked up five yards on the play. not quite the touchdown he was hoping for but still everything he dreamed of. >> i feel like i'm out of the ordinary. i just feel like i'm part of the team. and that's how everyone should feel. >> who needs altitude when you've got his kind of attitude. >> osgood: still to come. different side of julianna margulies. >> you say going up the stairs? in make we are say -- >> in massive financial --
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>> you can't pick and choose. >> i'm a lawyer that's what i do. >> it's the new >> here saw charles osgood. >> osgood: julianna margulies stars in one of the most acclaimed series on tv's prime time schedule. "the good wife" like in real life. jane pauley has our sunday profile after which we'll hear from more from jimmy wax.
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>> >> hello? >> this is aleighsa? elevision audiences know julianna margulies as aleshia. the good wife. on disgraced, philandering politician. >> abuse of office charges. >> sucking the toes of a hooker. a stay-at-home mom who goes back to work as lawyer when her husband goes to prison. >> i'm asking a simple question. >> you are not, sir. you are piercings. >> shut up. >> no, sir. >> as she launches her 7th season alicia has changed. >> i admire the way she is silent more than she speaks.
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i realize it's so much more powerful to think before you speak than to just go off the top of your head which is so -- the way i used to react i hold my emotions on my sleeve. she holds them deep down. >> she was late. >> i'm sorry i'm never late. >> punctuality is key. >> it has to do with growing up. i was in high school i got up at 5:00 and i walked. i walked to school every day in high school. i could not stand to be late. >> her mother was a former ballerina. punctuality was not her thing. >> my mom was sort of soul searching, trying to find herself. >> her father -- wrote "plop, plop, fizz,
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fizz, owe what a relief it is." lines. are? >> that's interesting. i think it's a confluence of many different things. i was lucky to have two incredibly loving parents. but i was also, the product of a divorce and of an instability in my life with where we were going to live and what country. >> country? >> i was born in new york, we moved to france when i was young. then moved to england. came back to the states when i was six. >> then back to england again. >> can you switch on and off your accent? >> i can. >> is this actress going to be talking. >> no. >> just be me, you know, sort of -- i grew you have in sussex in the quite london a bit more
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country in a way. but the difference between english and american, in england you say are you going up the stairs. in america we say, are you going up the stairs? >> she often felt like fish out of water? the american girl in england when i came to america i was english girl in america. i went back to england. i never quite fit in my shoes until i got to college, when i went to sarah laurence college got up on the stain the first play was cation in i felt like i was open. >> actress was born. in 1994, at age 28, she became a star. in the role of nurse carol hathaway on "e e.r." opposite george clooney.
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to leave the show. reportedly turning down $27 million contract to return to the city she considers home, new york. she had recurring role on "the sopranos". >> it makes it harder. >> made some movies in cluing "snakes on a plane" and was happily, determinedly, single. >> it's so funny when i was 35, i said, i never want to have kids and i never want to be married. i love my freedom and she said, oh, carl, don't say. that every woman should get married at least once in her life. which she kind of gave me an idea. she said, it's important.
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i hope you experience it at least once. i rolled my eyes. >> but then -- i met keith when i was 39. >> keith had never even heard of nurse hathaway or julianna margulies or that matter. >> i only ever dated actors i needed to work with them only. >> but he was interested. charmed. but i just assumed he was an actor. we met through a mutual friend who was an ache. so much theater actors. >> been there, done that, she wasn't interested. >> he said, no, i'm a lawyer. i was so stunned. then i thought, well, what kind of law do you do? i was a wall street litigate for but recently quit. i didn't like who i was i thought, my god.
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he's a thinking, feeling, smart human being. >> he proposed in paris. >> we came home i found out i was pregnant. which at 40 was not just shocking but -- >> miraculous? >> we'll wait until the baby's born. no, i want to get married with you pregnant. great, i waddled down the aisle. >> cbs offered her starring role in "the good wife." >> look how red pretty. don't get jealous. >> season seven finds her restarting her legal career. >> you're shooting the 13 pages of the script today. >> right. >> and when the crew breaks for lunch she'll get the next day's script.
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dressing room, i shut the door. i lie down on my couch, i study all my lines. it's in there. burt not in there too much that i'll forget the lines i need for today. that's all i do. >> what's your iq? >> i don't know. >> i think it's high. >> shot on brooklyn sound stain the show's proximity to broadway has attracted theater veterans like christine baranski. >> would you like to be state's attorney? >> what? >> andal cumming who plays political operative eli gold? >> do you have anything to do with your -- >> i came into that two-thirds of the way through the first season.
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got the quality in her veins. good wife." >> quality that's been recognized with two emmys for best actress, last year -- >> the emmy goes to -- and in 2011. >> to julianna margulies. >> and my spectacular husband, i love being your good wife. grateful for. >> there's a different appreciation you get for things when you're at a different time in your life. i obviously waited for the right time and i got lucky. i say it every night when i go to bed. how lucky i am. i love my job. i love it.
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awards hosts andy sandberg poking fun at the endless number of shows on television. >> are you surprised at how television as changed during the course of your career? >> yeah. >> mayor preelizabeth beth known in "scar face" and the perfect storm" has joined tv's crowded ranks. this fall she plays nazreen in charge of the fbi in the new cbs series "limitless." >> about this fellow who comes across this drug. he comes to work for us. >> one of the television critics at new york magazine. >> it's new season. >> he has overflowing stack of
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dvds and online downloads. >> what does the universe of tv now lock like? >> imagine that you're climbing a mountain get all the way up to think is the top. that is one plateau. you get to another. and another. always going to be more television. despite all the talk about dvrs, 86% still watch tv the old fashioned way at program's regularly scheduled time. this fall, there are more choices than ever. the variety shows. the super heroes. >> i really like the new super girl it's throw back to another kind ever super hero. which is to say, cheerful. >> maybe any handle this the best. >> the muppets. >> they have gone the extra mile. these are actual creatures that live in the world.
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directors are making their move to smaller screen. >> you have cinemax with the, david lynch coming to show time. martin scorsese. there are a lot of opportunities in television. one is you can endlessly explore, reexplore the same thing with the same characters. >> this is just the beginning. or should i say the beginning of the end. >> but eventually, as with tonight series finale of the cbs hit "csi" we have to say goodbye. >> i hate to let go of a show. >> still, mary elizabeth says, just when you think you'll never love again. >> many shows come shoping to come back. you know, get the dishes done. >> why should --
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see what happens else. >> that's good stuff. the one to find a cure, to clean the oceans, to lead a country. bring water to their village, write the next masterpiece, or open a school. explore a new planet or be the next davinci. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we don't know who it is, we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10.
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discover more in a camry. toyota. let's go places. >> osgood: when and how the federal deserve, the other questions bernanke and his wife are happy to discuss. lower a o'donnell pops in on them at their home in washington. >> one of the president's most federal reserve. >> what was your reaction when your husband was offered the fed chairmanship? >> i burst interest tears. >> pleased to see that have they are with us today. >> if only anna bernanke had known what lay ahead. fear.
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>> just one year after ben bernanke became federal reserve board the economic alarm bells started going off. >> history making. >> now a year after leaving the fed behind, bernanke is putting the crisis into perspective. his perspective. >> you describe this last crisis as the worst in human history. worse than the depression? >> the financial crisis itself, the collapse of asset prize, the financial innings take substitutions in my view was the saw. across the globe. >> it that was bad? >> if you look at the major financial firms, most of them either failed or came close for needed some kind of help? >> and it would have taken -- the. >> the problem that was financial firms were increasingly putting their money
quote
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many people hardly understood. >> when the housing bubble burst and those mortgages started going under the firm started to go under, too. >> lehman brothers a 158-year-old firm filed for bankruptcy. >> given the job to keep stable all landed on bernanke's desk. >> to froze credit market. >> the worst in human history why didn't more experts like you see it coming? >> we didn't. there were problems in the housing sectors, in subprime mortgages we didn't see what i think almost didn't see was vulnerability of the financial system. person. he grew up in small down lillon,
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south carolina, where his father owned a pharmacy started by his pharmacy. then in now lawyer often visited their grandparents. >> my grandpa's bedroom was right here. the real action took place in the kitchen where grandma cooked all of her wonderful specialties >> he achieved almost per sect s.a.t. scores, 1509 out of 1600 as his brother well remembered. >> we haven't had areas where we're competitive. >> he spent a lot of time on baseball. not playing it but tracking the stats. >> his notebooks, they are jam packed with the player names. i just don't see the attraction. >> he was 11 bernanke won the south carolina state spelling bee which earned him a trip to
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>> i made the to it finals the word they asked me was edelweiss. which was the name of the song in "sound of music" my hometown did not have theater had not seen the movie. i misspelled so i didn't win the national spelling bee. >> how do you spell edelweiss. >> i'll never forget. >> there was something else he never forgot. >> i used to sit on that porch there with grandma, tell me stories about the dregs. she lived in town where they had a shoe factory that shut down. because there was no jobs, they didn't have shoes that didn't make any sense. i remember getting interested. >> as economic professor at princeton he study the depression. concluding that back then the
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fed didn't do enough with the economy getting messed up under bernanke's watch acutely aware of the potential devastation. he says the problem was that to save main street he had to bail out wall street. >> there is still the perception out there that congress and bush white house and you bailed out little people. >> i'm totally same anesthetic to that concern. when i was would go outside see bumper sticker say, "where's my bail out." not something that we wanted to did but reason we did it not because we cared about banks or shareholders or even their employees. we knew that in mat sieve financial panic if banks fail in large numbers as we saw in the great depression, implications are going to be massive. >> the heat came from haul sides.
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online satire. with that? >> i don't know. nice beard. politicians. >> what was it that rick perry called you. >> >> at this particular time in american history to almost trees news. >> he believed that his. >> now seven years later with economic growth and employment up he had a ready answer for high school students in charlotte this month. >> the fed had to do lot of unpopular things, history vindicating them in sense that the financial crisis was stopped and the economy recovery. >> what about the recovery at the bottom of the ladder. the gap between the rich and equality.
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>> it's very long term trend. not nothing that was caused by the recession, one ex whether nation as our society becomes globalized, highly technological that people with lower skill levels are getting left out. >> he believes education is key. that message literally brought home in program started by his wife, anna. after growing frustrated, she founded the chance academy to help urban kids who are home schooled. the they are putting their money where their mouths are. >> you financed yourself? >> pretty much. we subsidized just about everybody. >> he works primarily at the brook innings institution a washington think tank he and anna kept the modest townhouse near capitol hill. >> the chairman of the federal
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it couples to the market now you advise two hedge funds make a lot of money making speeches, but you live the same way. >> this is the way we like to live. we enjoy our pleasures, we still do the sunday cross ward puzzle together and walk the dog. >> the financial world was watching to see if they unleash higher some rate. glare fell on current chair who decided to maintain the near rear row rate. ben seems happy to let someone else take the heat. >> no, i like to be able to look at the newspaper, see story about a problem, gee, i hope someone does something about that. not my problem, no. my li'l buddy? and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital but i wondered if this was the right treatment for me.
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then my doctor told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots, but eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. knowing eliquis had both... turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me.
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song "happy birthday" is public domain. company that held the copywrite has been everybodying $2 nill i don't know a year from the song. says it's considering it's options but barring successful appeal song is now free for anybody to sing. that's good news for us. as we celebrate the start of sunday morning's 8th season on the air. sunday morning to proud par now we're allowed to sing celebration with no fee and no fuss so proudly we state, our year 38 without fear of litigation
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>> assuming. morning ted! scott! ready to hit some balls? ooh! hey buddy, what's up? this is what it can be like to have shingles. oh, man. a painful, blistering rash. if you had chickenpox, the shingles virus is already inside you. 1 in 3 people will get shingles in their lifetime. after almost 3 weeks, i just really wanted to give it a shot. you know, i'm not feeling it today. talk to your doctor or pharmacist today
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>> a look at the week ahead. on monday, trevor noah debuts as host ever "the daily show" on comedy central. here on cbs steven colbert welcomes guest michelle obama. tuesday is world heart day dedicated to reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease the world's leading cause of death. wednesday midnight is the deadline for congress to pass a new funding bill.
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down. thursday is the 80th birthday of dame julie andrews who won oscar for her role in mary poppins. friday marks 65th anniversary of the "peanuts" comic strips. which run in major newspapers. 15 years after the death of create tore charles schulz. and saturday sees the 23rd annual new york press club conference on june limit with our own mo rocca delivering keynote. no you to john dickerson for look of what is ahead. >> dickerson: we'll talk to house speaker john boehner about his big decision to leave the house and hosting the pope. and bernie sanders. >> osgood: thank you. we'll be watching.
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two weeks from today here on "sunday morning." the doctor is in. >> emotional cup i'm going to point you down the right path. >> talks to dr. phil. you tuck here... you tuck there. if you're a toe tucker... because of toenail fungus, ask your doctor now about prescription kerydin. used daily, kerydin drops may kill the fungus at the site of infection and get to the root of your toe tucking. kerydin may cause irritation at the treated site. most common side effects include skin peeling... ...ingrown toenail, redness, itching, and swelling. tell your doctor if you have any side effect that bothers you
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or does not go away. stop toe tucking... and get the drop on toenail fungus. ask your doctor today about kerydin. which allergy? eees. bees? eese. trees? eese. xerox helps hospitals use electronic health records so doctors provide more personalized care. cheese? cheese! patient care can work better. with xerox. that's it. how was your commute? good. yours? good. xerox real time analytics make transit systems run more smoothly... and morning chitchat... less interesting. transportation can work better.
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