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tv   Sunday Morning  CBS  January 10, 2016 9:00am-10:30am EST

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captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations >> osgood: good morning. i'm charles osgood and this is sunday morning. children who don't know their biological fathers grow up under a cloud of uncertainty. no wonder so many seek to learn their true family ties. as it happens those who owe their birth to a sperm donor the internet and new sense of
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mark strassmann will report our cover story. >> this is probably the most unusual family reunion you'll ever see. many of these brothers and sisters have never actually met each other before. some of them have never met their father. sperm donor no. 2053. >> how many potential kids are out there from a single donor? >> we know of group that somewhere around 200. >> the new way defining family. ahead on "sunday morning." >> osgood: we have questions this morning from norman lear the veteran tv producer who appears to have no thoughts of retiring. he's talking with mo rocca. >> norman lear the man behind
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breaking sitcoms is 93 years old. and still at it. >> i am clearly older than a lot of people. but am i old, not yet. >> norman lear still stretching himself at 93. later on "sunday morning." >> good. >> osgood: wide. martha teichner will do the honors. >> rhiannon giddens was already a grammy winner. but then legendary record producer offered to put out her first solo album. >> what exactly has t-born
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>> pushing. >> ahead this "sunday morning" the rise of rhiannon giddens. is a slice of floating apple pie. it is pure americana. go? >> of course. it's sad. >> how goodyear plans to continue t as el chapo.
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from the earnest hemingway. steve hartman watches a teenage weight lifting star on the rise. and more. but first headlines for this sunday morning the 10th of january, 2016. first things first. nobody won last knit's powerball lottery. so, the jackpot has risen to $1.3 billion. next drawing is wednesday night. good luck. secret interview gave to actor sean penn was released by "rolling stone" helped mexican authorities to track down the notorious druglord el chapo. mexican officials are saying that mexico may be willing to extradite el chapo to the united states. again, ben tracy will have more on this mow men tear leave. north korea's dictator celebrates the country's claim
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was met by show of force to the south and american b52 carrying nuclear weapons flew low over sec before returning to the vikings and the seahawks in minnesota could be the coldest in nfl history. rain and snow will fall from kentucky into maine. for the week ahead more cold, rain and snow for many of us. not so much california, though.
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his tale. in new york state, we believe tomorrow starts today. all across the state the economy is growing, with creative new business incentives, and the lowest taxes in decades, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. like in the hudson valley, with world class biotech. and on long island, where great universities are creating next generation technologies. let us help grow your company's tomorrow, today
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>> osgood: as we told you there's a new development in the arrest of the escaped mexican druglord el chapo. "rolling stone" released the story by shawn penn who interviewed him at the escapeees the exclusive interview in
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latest strike twist in the saga of joaquin guzman known as el chapo, or shorty in spanish. he heads the mighty sinaloa drug cartel, controlling nearly half of the illegal drug trade between mexico and the united states. he's believed to be responsible for the deaths of more than 34,000 people. mexican authorities say friday. penn met with the fugitive cartel leader this past fall. he later submitted questions to him via text. among the revelation el chapo says he got into the drug trade to provide for his family. that he hasn't used drugs for 20 years says he doesn't go looking for trouble but simply defends himself. on friday morning trouble came to him. in the form of mexican marines who descended on the town.
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found some of his men with stash of weapon including rocket propelled grenade launcher. el chapo escaped but was later captured brought to this hotel. he was wearing a dirty under shirt and appeared to be unharmed. but a firefight with the drug kingpin's bodyguards left five of them dead. el chapo had escaped mexican prison not once, but twice. so on friday night the mexican government made a very public show of his capture. parading him across the car mac and on to a waiting helicopter. but this was el chapo six months ago in his prison cell. the surveillance video shows him walking into his shower stall, that's where he disappeared down this mile long tunnel and hopped on this retro-fitted motorcycle. the rolling stone interview claims that he had engineers flown to germany.
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whitaker reported, and the ingenious places he's built his drug tunnels and escape routes. during the last manhunt, his pursuers discovered this. >> look at this. >> a tunnel entrance also concealed in the plumbing, in this case underneath the shop. >> sean penn says he was in undated with offers from hollywood but ultimately entrusted mexican actress to make a film about his life. while he won't be heading to hollywood, el chapo could very well likely be extradited to the united states. where he is wanted on drug charges in six states. >> chapo said that his worst fears being extradited to the united states. >> andrew is expert on ex coat the wilson center in washington. >> a lot of pressure in mexico is extradite him to the united states to make sure he can't escape again. and i think mexican officials are going to be very interested in looking at that option.
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el chapo got on fry die night took him back to the very same prison from which he escaped. >> osgood: next. fatherhood many times over. >> sort of young men, 18-0 needed for sperm donation. >> osgood: later, u7, up and away. everyone needs a bff. even your smile. colgate optic white toothpaste goes beyond surface stains to whiten over 3 shades. in fact, it whitens more i'm billy, and i quit smoking with chantix. i decided to take chantix to shut everybody else up about me quitting smoking.
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and finally being able to give meaning to the phrase can >> what are your thoughts going into this. nervous? >> a little bit nervous, yeah. todd white surities walking into the unknown. >> what if they turned out to be really strange and shy, they don't look up they're like antisocial or something. >> four kids are waiting for him a half mile away. >> i don't know what to do. >> one of them is 20 year old sarah malley. >> what makes you nervous? >> what do you say when you're meeting your biological family for the first time. i don't know. >> todd whitehurst is their biological father. the one they're about to meet. he's 49-year-old computer
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in 1998 then a stanford grad student he noticed something in the school paper. >> a big ad saying, young men 18-30 needed for sperm donation. >> did you have any qualmshurst has two children of his own from previous marriage never expected to meet any of his donor children. sperm banks follow a protocol. all donor dads sign an agreement to remain anonymous. the families on the receiving background information about their donor. his age, ethnicity, height, birth place, education, so on. clinic give them ha unique i.d. number and that has become the gateway to improbable meetings like the one white surities about to have.
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>> it never would have happened if not for one woman. >> it's innate human desire to want to know where we come from. >> wendy camer is the mother of donor son. she saw how curious he was to learn about his father and found it online database called, the donor sibling registry. it's a networking site for children who want to connect by matching their donor father's i.d. number. 47,000 people have registered including 2300 donor dads. i want to see him smile. i want to know what he thinks is funny. i want to -- i want to look into his face, i want to shake his hand. >> carey phelps felt that way. >> i have always known that i was donor child. you can imagine a parent with 2-year-old and kid is asking, where's daddy? >> phelps, the daughter of a single mother, was 14 when she
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phelps had little information about him but spent two weeks plugging what she did know into an online search. she found seven >> that moment when i saw his face for the first tomb. vacations together with some of his other donor children. like this trip to cape cod last july. >> i feel that it's the right thing to do f. the children want to meet then it's important i think to be available to meet. >> get ready to watch an extraordinary family moment. eight donor children came together. four of whom whitehurst had never met before who are also meeting their siblings for the
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yeah, it gets complicated. >> what is this moment like for each of you? >> it's awesome. >> this is insane. >> sarah malley a student had learned six months earlier that she and her twin sister jenna were donor babies. she contacted whitehurst through the donor sibling registry and he helped arrange this family gathering. overwhelming. i was worried, like we hugged a whole big thing. >> do you feel father's pride? >> oh, absolutely. when i hear her talking about a hug i want to give her a hug again. >> the reproductive industry does little to make it easy for donor dads and their children to meet. >> nobody keeps track of the donors.
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there's no tracking whatsoever. >> wendy kramer says sperm banks ask mothers to report donor births but it is not required. and no organization links dint clip particulars track the total number of births from a single donor i.d. >> how many potential kids are out there from a single donor? >> nobody really knows. the largest group that we have on our website, we know of a group that somewhere around 200. >> 200 kids. >> right. i don't know about you, but if i knew that i was -- i had 200 half brothers and sisters i would feel like i was part of a herd. it would feel odd. >> whitehurst donated to the same clinic for four years. how many times would you guess, ballpark? >> probably on the order of 400 times. something like that. >> 400 times. >> yeah.
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donation at a sperm bank can produce as many as 24 sellable vials. whitehurst's 400 donations could have produced 9600 vials for his clip sible to sell. >> how many donor children do you know that you have? >> i have 2. >> 22 kids. >> that i know of. >> you could have family touch football game have enough players for both sides. >> maybe compete with other families, too. >> does that seem a little crazy? >> it does seem crazy. >> but on this cape cod long weekend, there was no sign anyone felt like part of a herd. just a clear curiosity from eight half siblings about each other and about their donor father. >> going forward do you feel a responsibility for their lives? >> yeah, i do. it's responsibility i feel as an uncle.
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their parents are primarily responsible for them. but if their parents are unable to help them then love, you want to protect them, you want them to have happy life. but they have all turned out to be really quite remarkable children. >> carey phelps now studies computer science at stanford, just like her donor dad. >> i never felt like there was something missing because i've been so lucky. i'm so wanted, that's something that i think a lot of kids can't say for certain. so being able to meet all of these totally different, but at the same time very related siblings is such an incredible honor for me to grow up this way.
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the all-new tacoma. toyota. let's go places. >> osgood: now a fridge our sunday morning almanac. january 10, 1949. 67 years ago today. today rca victor unveiled a new breed of phonograph record. the 45. the 7 inches across with 1 1/2 inch hole in the middle. new record played at 45 revolutions per minute.
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clarity than folks at arch rival columbia records which was promoting new record of its own played at 33 1/3rd rpm. columbia's chairman, we're unable to fathom the purple of the record's revolving at 45 rpm. for columbia couldn't fathom it, generation or two of american young people certainly did. the small size and modest price, the 45 became the stanford for top 40 hit songs through the 60s, from elvis to the beatles and beyond. millions of american teens first played their favorite songs on a 45. eventually, however, technology turned against the pint-sized record.
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approach to tape. >> cassette tapes, cds and online streaming services all eclipsed the 45. and it's 33 1/3rd big brother as well. relegating vinyl records of all types to that most dreaded of categories, music of 33 1/3rd lps of 52% between 2013 and 2014. proof positive that what goes around comes around. >> osgood: next, a man of
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>> this is ernest hemingway. the fifth doll um was written in the fall and early winter of 1937. >> in this rare recording, hemingway is describing his work on a play about the spanish civil war. even as it raged around him in madrid. >> while i was writing the play, the matter with it.
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times" said it was a good play,one many works where hemingway explored the agony of war. >> he experienced war on many different fronts. >> sean hemingway is enest's grandson, born after his hemingway. >> he understands why hemingway is considered one of the most in influential writers of the 20th century. with a series of landmark works that earned him the nobel prize for literature. >> he illuminated the human condition. >> that's absolutely true. he was able to capture emotions in a very direct way, that you read it and you feel it. >> and now there is renewed interest in ernest hemingway. in the wake of the recent
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feast, his love letter to the city of light, sold out on amazon. hemingway first traveled to paris in the 1920s, part of the lost generation of ex pay tree @writers and artists. >> he introduced himself to gertrude stein, and picasso and miro. >> declan kiely is curator of a new hemingway exhibit that's been parking them in at manhattan's morgan library. he says it was the 1926 novel "the sun also rises" that put ernest hemingway on the map. this is a telegram from -- >> this is dorothy parker writing from new york to hemingway in paris. she says, baby, your book is knocking 'em cold here. isn't it swell?
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>> made into a film stamping ava gardner entitled >> most shocking thing a man has ever heard. you are going to be -- >> one person who appeared not to fall in love with "the son also rises" was his own mother. >> yeah. i think it could be said that she actively reviled the book. she said every page fills me with a sick loathing. >> undeterred, hemingway developed a reputation for living it up to write it down. a lover of fine liquor, beautiful women, he was married four times, and great adventure. is it true that you're 98 years >> can you believe that?
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>> hemingway biography ae hotchner shared many of those adventures. >> he became a father figure. >> they met in 1948. >> at that point it seems that he was interested in shooting big game, hunting, bull fighting. that wasn't ernest.
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>> hemin was made for yes. >> luckily there were no mishaps. hemingway never let his funther briers would probably have held on to and tried to use. >> in later years, hemingway spent much of his time in key west and havana, often aboard his boat. his novel of a fisherman's epic struggle "the old man and the sea" won a pulitzer prize in 19e l came a year later.
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leading up to his death from a self-inflicted gunshot wound at
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it. reviews started coming >> the album has been nominated for a grammy. >> i had this list of songs. and i said, well, what do you think about this? he said, great. this was on scale of nothing that i had experienced. i didn't realize what i was getting into. it was a long process of trying
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blimps filled with nonflammable helium have been soa >>d i
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only he could. you become content to go slow. ou y. even seagulls pass you by. none of it seems to matter. >> things haven't changed much since that ride of kuralt's, in back in 1925.e on it?
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it's a beautiful view. aviation. >> gone are the old manualt to fly. it's not physically challenging. once you get the concepts down, it's not so bad to fly. >> goodyear is building three of these new nt models at this massive hanger in akron, ohio. each is being assembled piece by piece. from parts sent over from a zeppelin company in germany. i cost has actually been in the blimp business most of its corporate life.
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the blimp. >> the first blimp cast was the rose parade back in 1955. from thenn, baughmaz this was revolutionary. >> incredibly game back in october a. goodyear blimp will be watching over clemson again tomorrow night, as they take on alabama for the college football national
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for chief pilot jerry hissem it's as good as it gets. hours. >> could you really? >> yeah. it's fun. >> there's just one of the old models left, the spirit of los angeles. the one that brought alice gratias back to earth. her ride wasn't just a bucket list moment. present. >> it was wonderful. thoughtivity was going to be? >> it was. what a birthday. >> what a birthday and what a
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old mr. new goodyear's floating >> where is t here at beaufort high school in south carolina. this 15-year-old cj cummings looks like just another kid. in fact everyone thought he was just another kid. until three years ago when he
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men's tournament. >> thought i was just like a spectator. >> thought you were a short. last august this 5'4", 150 pound kid attempted the unimagable. >> this is 385 pounds? >> yes. >> picture a kitchen stove on each end of that bar. no american in his weight class had ever done that much in clean and jerk. it's astounding. not until cj came along. >> an american men's record. after this lift his personal coach said a lot of people didn't believe the report. >> i can understand that.
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telling you. to that end a local professor of sports medicine set up a bunch of cameras and sensors to try to figure out exactly how cj is doing this. but he found nothing special in his technique. proving that cj was either sent here directly from the planet krypton. offer he's just plain strong. and get this. coaches say he's still at least ten years away from reaching his full potential. probably another four until his first olympics. until then he'll be busy inspiring young weight lifters across the country. >> that's what i'm talking 'it. and exercising a great deal of patience. >> i'll take it as far as i can go. hopefully get a gold medal for the u.s. >> have you thought about a wheaties box? >> what is that? >> what is a wheaties box? >> yeah. >> i told you he was young. >> guess who died by norman lear. act one.
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again. and later, what's next? and i didn't get here alone. there were people who listened along the way. people who gave me options. kept me on track. and through it all, my retirement never got left behind. so today, i'm prepared for anything we may want tomorrow to be. every someday needs a plan. let's talk about your old 401(k) today. the flu virus. it's a really big deal. and with fever, aches, and chills, mom knows it needs a big solution: an antiviral. don't kid around with the flu, call your doctor within the first 48 hours of symptoms and ask about prescription tamiflu. attack the flu virus at its source with tamiflu,
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>> 50 cents, some thanks. >> don't like it? >> i like it. >> why don't i -- it's "sunday morning" on cbs here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: 1970's hit is wop of the break through tv shows norman lear produced. he's still at it as mo rocca has discovered. >> do you prefer senior people? >> i prefer older. >> older? >> older, yeah. elderly has a connotation. people. but am i old? not yet. >> good morning. >> which is why last november during the austin film festival
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93-year-old norman lear was at it again. >> guess who died? by norman lear. >> he brought toga group of actors for a reading of his newest television comedy. >> guess who died? >> is a comedy about his contemporaries. >> how are you doing? >> terrific. cantaloupe without xanax. can't get out of bed without celebrex. other than that i'm terrific. >> i've been at this for some time as i was aging. people of my age? >> lear says he noticed that older characters were relegated to marginal roles on tv. >> there were no shows about us. about our lives. about our attitudes, about our problems. you'd think that norman lear
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his script produced. after all, this is the man who gave us landmark comedies like "maude" "good times." >> give me one good reason why you married me. >> you was pregnant. >> "all in the family." but since writing his script for "guess who died" five years ago a total of zero network executives has shown interest. television executives think that young people only want to watch other young people. >> they're the same television executives that didn't think archie should say this or that. >> god had intended white people to dance with colored people. >> you can't deal with menopause, you can't deal with abortion. >> just tell me where it is. i'm doing the right thing.
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>> can't deal with economics. >> i didn't have no people out there marching and protesting. >> no, his uncle got it for him. >> they're not always right. >> finding the funny in the serious began early for lear when he was growing up working class in connecticut. you're nine years old you find out that your father going to prison. what is that like? >> it's terrible. it's terrible. i adored him. >> his father, convicted of selling fake bonds, was sent away to prison for three years. lear still remembers a neighbor's "words of wisdom." >> puts his hand on my shoulder and says, well, you're the man of the house now, norman. and, there, there, a man doesn't cry. nine years old i'm hearing that.
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lot about the foolishness of the human condition. ultimately it taught me that there's humor everywhere in every situation. >> lear's world view was also shaped by trips to new york city looking out the train window into the apartments of harlem. >> the tenments were like, they felt like they were eight feet away. probably 30 feet. they were very close. the windows leading into the apartments were, you know, very visible and life inside those windows and largely african american. and i used to wonder about them. >> who were these families? >> who were these families? what were they thinking? what were their problems. i also had something in common with them. i knew by then that as a jewish kid there were people who hated me simply for that reason. and i understood certainly by then that black people had it worse than i had it.
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look out different windows and see african americans. this time high in the skies over europe. >> how you doing, buddy? >> i hug. >> during world war ii lear was radio operator and gunner, flying more than 50 bombing missions over germany and italy. his escort during some of these dangerous flights, the flamed all-black tuskegee airmen. >> 70 years later. >> a few months ago lear met one of them, professor roscoe brown face to face for the first time. >> i sat down -- i shot down a jet over berlin on a mix that you were on. >> yes. >> march 24, 1945. >> how amazing is it that the two of us flew the same mission over berlin, no less. >> over berlin.
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>> of the tuskegee airmen. >> both men were honored at vet an's day ceremonies in new york city and honored to be with each other. mixes? >> we flew about 100 feet over the bombers. we'd drop down right close to them and our job was to protect them from the enemy fighters. >> i'm probably standing here with him because he was there. >> where does the tension sort of build up for you? >> head to toe. >> today lear is still in fighting shape. most mornings he's up early, stretching and strengthening himself for the day ahead. >> i get applause doing this. >> he probably deserves a standing ovation. >> it does feel good. >> it feels great. >> norman sheer not the retiring type.
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day at a time u. for netflix. this time with a latino cast. >> for what, the good life. >> he has no intention of pulling the plug on his newest project "guess who died?" >> i hope to see it on the air. >> if there is a television executive who can green light a show watching us right now are you available for a meeting? >> oh, yeah. all he has to do is throw up a window and scream, there aren't enough old people on television. i'm not going to take it any more.
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>> the first week of 2016 was the worst ever start to a year for u.s. stocks. with major indexes down over 6%. the cause of the new year's sell off was anxiety over a slow down in chinese growth which sent stocks plummeting roughly 10% over five days. but while the pace of growth inclinen the world's second largest economy is important, this country is not greatly dependent on he can ports to china. yes, there are some companies that rely on the region for sales and earning, but not enough. even with a rotten first week for stocks, to trigger fear, is that the u.s. economy is falling over a cliff. so what's a retirement safer to do? the answer is nothing. you are in this for the long term and that boarding the invest or roller coaster means accepting the ups and the downs. keep your emotions in check and stick to your game plan. in other words, stay put.
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on this ride before and know that despite a few white knuckle moments from time to time, you should end up just fine. >> this is coal miller. more than a week now an armed militia has occupied the malheur national wildlife refuge near burns, oregon. he staged a stand off of his own in 2014. they want the federal government to turn over control of his lands in the area to local authorities. earlier in the week the county sheriff met with bundy asking him to leave peacefully and to respect the wishes of many regs dents, even offering an escort out of state. bundy refused m. say the group sending a message and stand behind them. it's become a big issue for this small town, one as old as the old west. >> i'm vinita nair in the new york subway station. don't be surprise understand later today here and at least 14 other american cities, you
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without their pants. they will be part of this year's "no. >> o'donnell: pants subway ride." observed as it were in cities around the world. >> welcome to the no pants subway ride! >> promoted as international celebration of silliness, the ride started in 2002 with just seven bold but cold new yorkers taking part. in more recent years, organizers say thousands have climbed aboard. so whatever else you might think about the no pants subway ride, it has thrived and survived for 13 years. there's little doubt it's an event with legs. >> osgood: ahead, the trump
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>> osgood: how to explain the remarkable subjects says to date of drum. some thoughts from the chief national correspondent of the "new york times" magazine. >> if you're watching television this morning, chances are donald trump will be in your face somewhere. he's been interviewed on some media outlet nearly every day for the last six months often more than once. he can be blustery. >> we taking our country back. we're going to get rid of the stupid people. >> and compelling. >> i love you folks. >> of course controversial. >> we will build a wall that is me. >> but trump's abiding that he delivers. not substance, always eyeballs. he is box office personified the broadcaster's deal with the did he have it. >> why do you talk so much about the polls? because i'm winning. >> this isn't to say that trump has not tapped into a
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>> the american dream is dead. we're going to make it bigger and better and stronger than ever before. >> but his appeal to the republican electorate exists separate from the spell he has cast upon the once solemn gate keepers of the fourth estate. think of the media as addicts and trump as heroin. maybe it's the other way around. trump is the addict and attention to his heroin. >> the press is not an honest group of people. >> it's unholy company dependence either way. like most arrangement is comfortable and possibly quite unhealthy. >> consider hear that? >> the media have always walked a tight rope between journalism and entertainment. trump assess senn dehas tripped that balance in favor of the latter. >> president of the united states. donald j. trump. >> we journalists claim to hate ourselves over this. how dare trump in still our news organizations and call us losers and talk in circles. yet trump is the abusive guest
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invited and, yes, usually the light life of the party. >> jeb bush to this point has spent over $40 million for ads. >> trump made his free media rounds last week he said something that truckee for its subtlely, which is not a quality he is known for. he guilty felt guilty about everything spent so little on campaign advertising while his opponents have parted with tense and millions. was a taunt, suckers, he seemed to be saying to the junkies who will keep booking him. you think i need to pay for this? buying ads to for losers. >> i went to ivy league college. i know a lot of words. somehow loser is so nice. it's a good word. >> forked record i found his back handed chest thump to be well earned. but let's put aside blame and concede that when uttered together news and entertainment will always represent a conflict of interest. certainly the media's trump
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it's been great for trump, great for ratings and great for enhancing the public's interest in politics. if not public interest, per se. is it too quaint to wonder this the only loser here might be our democracy? meow, meow, meow, meow... it's more than just a meal, it's meow mix mealtime. with great taste and 100% complete nutrition, it's the only one cats ask for by name. when your cold makes you wish... ...you could stay... ...in bed all day... ...you need the power of... new theraflu expressmax. the power to feel better. soil is the foundation... for healthy plants. just like gums are the foundation for healthy teeth. new colgate total daily repair toothpaste. it helps remineralize enamel and fight plaque germs for healthier teeth and gums. strengthen the foundation for healthy teeth.
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monday, jury selection begins in the trial of caesar goodson the second baltimore police officer to be tried in the death of freddie grey last april. on tuesday night president obama delivers his final state of the union address. wednesday is steven foster memorial day, marking the 152nd anniversary of the death of the popular composure who is widely regarded as the father of american music. thursday sees the announcement of this year's academy award nominees. on friday, american astronaut tim kopra and british astronaut tim peake are scheduled to perform a space walk outside the international space station. and on saturday, the north american international auto show
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good morning, john. >> dickerson: good morning,we to hiton about new revelations on her e-mail story, issue gun control and democratic race. then on republican side we'll talk to chris christie and rand paul and we' real joy worked her miracles. rheumatoid arthritis. before you and your rheumatologist move to a biologic, ask if xeljanz is right for you. xeljanz is a small pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can reduce joint pain and swelling in as little as two weeks, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz
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tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts, and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common, and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz can reduce the symptoms of ra, even without methotrexate. ask your rheumatologist about xeljanz. we were below the 88th southern parallel. we had traveled for over 850 miles. my men driven nearly mad from starvation and frostbite. today we make history. >>bienvenidos! welcome to the south pole!
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you explore. it's what you do. >>what took you so long? if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. >>you did it, yay! whatcha doin? just prepping for my boss' party in a couple weeks. what are those? crest whitestrips. they whiten way better than paste. crest 3d white whitestrips... whiten 25 times better than the leading whitening toothpaste. i'd say... ...someone's making quite an impression. crest 3d white whitestrips. the way to whiten. >> osgood: we leave you this sunday morning in colorado at
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and preserve. >> osgood: i'm charles rolls good. please join us again next sunday morning, until then i'll see you on the radio. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by
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