tv CBS This Morning CBS April 6, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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up dramatically south wind will get us all the way right around 60 tomorrow we could see an isolated thunderstorm tomorrow afternoon clear up the rain for the mets and then cooler temperatures return for the weekend maybe even a little rain/snow mix on saturday. okay john thanks so much. we'll have another check of weather and news coming up in 25 minutes. "cbs this morning" is next have a great day. captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, april 6th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." ted cruz and bernie sanders crush the front-runners in the wisconsin primaries. their victories create new
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>> donald trump finally unveils his plan to force mexico to pay billions of dollars for a border wall. with you will but will it work? >> new changes to your facebook page and we will launch the new feature right here on morning." we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. i don't know if the audience knows it, but we won in wisconsin! >> setback for the front-runners. >> the media said wisconsin was a perfect state for donald trump. >> what is it that people say to you, leaders of other countries, when they look at american politics? >> there is great anxiety. everywhere i go, people say what is happening in the united states? what is happened to your politics. >> >> alabama, impeachment charges against golf robert bentley.
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the people in the state of alabama. >> he used a shell company to shelter large sums of money. >> a brush fire in oklahoma. one man's sudden closeness to death. >> armed with a large enough in cincinnati. >> get down! >> dash cam video shows a frightening rollover crash in missouri. the driver who refused to stop, lost control and flipping over. >> all that. >> the national championship goes to connecticut for the fourth year in a row! the dynasty propels its destiny! >> they have done something that has never been done before ever, so that means it was really hard to do. >> all that matters. >> twitter will live stream ten thursday night football games this ball. >> not to be outdone. facebook will still have a live feed of your ex-girlfriend thriving without you somewhere.
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>> it is believed it is confirmed yesterday thety had to disburse a crowd. yelling casein and cruz control! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." the underdogs are riding a new wave of momentum in the presidential race. bernie sanders and ted cruz had big wins in wisconsin, slowing down front-runners donald trump and hillary clinton. sanders beat clinton by 14 points in tuesday's democratic primary. 57% to 43%. cruz won 48% of the republican vote, beating trump by double digits. john kasich finished a distant third. cruz picked up most of wisconsin's 42 gop delegates. his victory makes it likely that
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have enough delegates to lock-up the nomination before the convention in july. major garrett is in washington with cruz's important win. >> reporter: donald trump misread wisconsin voters badly, predicting victory, when all credible evidence pointed to defeat. as the hunt for delegates intensifies, the gop front is on a losing streak. for his part, ted cruz described his victory as a turning point. instead it proves that trump is no longer, if he ever was, the inevitable nominee. >> god bless the great state of wisconsin. >> reporter: ted cruz added a big wisconsin victory to a recent sweep of delegate gains. >> when colorado and wyoming finish voting, we are likely to have gained over 100 delegates on donald trump. >> reporter: cruz vowed he would win the gop nomination outright. he just didn't say when.
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the convention in cleveland, together, we will win a majority of the delegates. >> reporter: donald trump campaigned outside milwaukee early on election day. >> i hear the polls are busy, huh? >> they are busy. >> we could have a big surprise tonight, folks. >> reporter: but left town before the polls closed and issuing this statement arguing trump had withstooded onslaught of the establishment yet again. cruz, the campaign said, is worse than a puppet. he is a trojan horse, being used nomination. trump's loss represents the depth of party divisions, at least in wisconsin. more than 1 in 3 republican voters said they would be scared if trump were elected president according to cbs news exit polls and more than 70% of trump supporters said they would back a third-party candidate if cruz won the nomination. still, cruz promised to bring the party together in the general election. >> hillary?
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here we come. >> reporter: cruz benefited here from the endorsement of a popular republican government that support of influential conservative talk radio personalities and super pac ads attacking trump and cruz will not have those advantages in new york that votes in two weeks. and where the cruz campaign is managing and that means lowering expectations. >> major, thank you very much. on the democratic side, wisconsin was just what bernie sanders needed. he beat hillary clinton in almost every county in the state. the economy was a voter's top issue there. cbs news exit polls found that 66% of voters who said inequality was their main priority voted for bernie sanders. 51% said sanders would make a better commander in chief than hillary clinton. nancy cordes is here to break down the wisconsin vote. >> reporter: sanders has won six states in a row by margins that range from convincing to overwhelming.
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it's just a quirk of the calendar, a series of states that were designed to go his way. and that his winning streak is about to end. >> let me take this opportunity to thank the people of wisconsin for their strong support. thank you! >> reporter: the democratic underdog overachieved in the badger state. and said it's a sign of things to come. >> we have a path toward victory, a path toward the white house. >> reporter: sanders does have a path, but it's a steep one. he picked up roughly 15 more delegates by clinton last night but still trails her by 692 when you factor in super delegates. the next big state to vote. >> thank you so much! >> reporter: is the one she represented in the senate. >> the values of new york are the values of america. >> reporter: this is the cover of the new york "daily news" this morning.
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immunity for gun sellers. clinton aides say she will make that issue a focus here. >> i was against it and he was for it to give immuneity from liability for gun makers and sellers. >> reporter: clinton lost by nearly 30 points and lost 8 in 10 voters under 30 and she also lost 8 in 10 voters who said honesty was the most important quality in a candidate. it was the number one answer which was asked about the factor tuesday on "the view." >> obviously, i thought a lot about it because i don't like to hear it. >> yeah. >> i need to figure out what is behind it. >> what is inauthentic mean? >> i don't understand that. i don't understand that. because i've been pretty much the same person my entire life, for better or worse, right? >> reporter: the clinton campaign is taking solace in two things this morning. they note that about 70% of nondemocrats, independent voters went for sanders last night but they weren't allowed to vote in most of the remaining big democratic primaries and they
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wisconsin by less last night than she did eight years ago, which is not all that comforting, to her supporters, charlie, but it will have to do. >> thanks, nancy. cbs news political director and "face the nation" moderator john dickerson is with us this morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> with respect to the democrats, does the momentum help significantly bernie sanders going into a calendar that favors hillary clinton? >> yes to the extent the clarned looks bad for him. the best he could get would be momentum. what is did is raises questions for hillary clinton of honesty and the nagging questions that have surrounded her. it requires her to keep answering those questions. sanders needs his own momentum and he needs to rally around him. but this puts pressure on hillary clinton and you always want your opponent to be under pressure. >> the next big contest is new york, her home state. >> that's right. it's her home state. she is comfortable here and knows how to do the cut and thrust here.
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about liability for gun manufacturers but but who is responsible for these deaths. >> the front page of the new york "daily news" today taking aim at -- taking aim at bernie sanders. >> yes, absolutely. we already saw the race get pretty heated the last week and can imagine that getting escalated further. >> after the loss last night, donald trump says this about ted cruz. he calls him lyin' ted cruz. seems the meeting in d.c. didn't help with getting together with the party unity. that's right. he is talking about when he wants to be presidential, he can do it. >> yes. >> what about party unity? >> i'll be presidential tomorrow. you know, it's interesting. we are hearing signals that the candidate, himself, trump has said he is going to be presidential and the campaign says he is giving these policy speeches, but that was not a magnanimous defeat in response. it's very interesting. you could imagine an alternate response.
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john, in wisconsin? >> in wisconsin, both he had a bad couple of weeks going in. also the electorate is not a trump electorate in wisconsin. more like iowa electorate where he lost. you can overread the wisconsin results. and he is really happy that new york is coming up next. >> he seems to be framing the debate for him to make a case at the convention. >> that's what is most interesting and not just the tone of the concession speech but saying the establishment is robbing me of the nomination and 6 in 10 voters in wisconsin, bad state for trump, 6 in 10 said whoever has the most delegates going into the convention should get the noms butination but not the way it actually works but he has that kind of momentum on his side. >> thanks. john kerry believes -- leading an assault on nato. he appeared last night on my pbs program last night. he spoke about worldwide nervousness of trump's foreign policy agenda.
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leaders of other countries, when they look at american politics? >> well, they are very concerned, charlie. there's a great -- there's a great disquiet of anxiety right now. >> what are they anxious about? >> they are anxious that the certainty that they have had about the united states policy -- give you an example. i will say one thing about a policy issue that a candidate has said. when -- when donald trump talked about korea and japan getting their own nuclear weapons, i can think of nothing more volatile and more contrary to peace in the region and more contrary to the fundamental commitment of every president since world war ii to try to minimize the risk of nuclear weapons and minimize the number of people who have them. and here is a guy running for president says, let them go get it themselves. >> like japan? >> yeah.
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suffice it to say that there is great anxiety everywhere i go, people say, what has happened in the united states? what is happened to your politics? >> kerry warned that a lack of consistency can create a profound challenge for america's global relations. >> interesting to hear both the president yesterday and secretary of state kerry saying they are hearing from world leaders there is anxiety about this debate going on. >> not just nuclear issues. but nato and other things. >> the prime minister of iceland is the first world leader out of a job after what is known as the panama papers. he stepped down yesterday after thousands called for his resignation. doctors revealed millions of drars dollars stashed in an offshore company. others are tied to the scandal how the rich and powerful hide money. so far, no american politicians are named. an anonymous whistle-blower leaked millions of documents to
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they say it was hacked and asked prosecutors to investigate. a no travel state to mississippi because of that so-called freedom bill. it arrives some groups and mississippi businesses to deny businesses from gay, lesbian and transgender people. mississippi governor says he is protecting the faithful from violating their beliefs. the online payment service paypal is canceling plans to open a facility in north carolina. the facility would have created more than 400 jobs. some lawmakers in alabama are trying to force their governor out of his job. governor robert bentley faces an impeachment effort for making sexually explicit remarks to a female adviser. the recordings surfaced last month. bentley was married when he made the comments. mark strassmann is at the state capital in montgomery where critics accuse bentley of corruption.
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governor bentley calls this impeachment resolution a political attack. but the 73-year-old sunday school teacher ran twice as a family values republican. these articles of impeachment say he betrayed his trust and is unfit to serve. >> it's time to put aside his selfishness and step down. >> reporter: a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers say they have lost confidence in alabama governor robert bentley, and plan to impeach him. this five-page resolution calls out bentley's inappropriate relationship and says there is credible evidence that he consistently acted in violation of law to promote his own personal agenda. >> nothing that the governor has said is true. >> reporter: in a statement, governor bentley said there are no ground for impeachment and i will vigorously defend myself. he called the proceedings nothing more than political grandstanding intended to grab headlines. conversations between bentley and his former political adviser rebekah caldwell-mason, a
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recorded in 2014 while the governor was still married to his wife diane. bentley has repeatedly said he is sorry. >> i made a mistake. i have made the mistake. i want to apologize to the people of the state of alabama. >> reporter: he admits making the calls but contends he and mason, who resigned last week, were having a physical relationship. >> i have put it in the rearview mirror and others have not. >> reporter: on monday, bentley, again, asked for forgiveness. >> i take full control of -- i take full -- it's me. i did it. i did it. >> reporter: the state's lieutenant governor kay ivy says she is ready to serve. but if there is a transition, it might not be seamless. have you had any communication with governor bentley the last couple of weeks at all?
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thank you all. >> reporter: so here is where it stands at the alabama house, if they approve the impeachment they would remove bentley from official. they have to work fast. this legislative session has only 11 days left. >> to be continued for sure. we will be watching. thanks, mark. wind gusts are fueling wooirires in oklahoma. more than 27,000 acres have burned in the northwestern part of the state. the fast moving flames already have destroyed several buildings. police are urging people around -- around 300 people to evacuate. on tuesday a tv crew with our oklahoma city affiliate kwtv helped a man operating construction equipment and qued him rescued him just in time. >> he needs to get out. >> i know he needs to get out. >> hurry up! >> that was close.
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flames pushed toward them. wind and low humidity today could help the fire spread. a florida bus driver this morning is being credited with getting children out of a bus before it burst into flames. >> dude, that is friggin' crazy! >> reporter: the burning bus exploded and fire spreading yesterday. the driver pulled over after having mechanical problems near orlando. he helped the middle school students off the bus. fire started minutes later. no one was hurt. the university of connecticut fans this morning are celebrating college basketball history! >> the national championship goes to connecticut for the fourth year in a row, as the dynasty propelses its destiny! >> the uconn women last night hoisted their fourth consecutive national championship trophy after beating syracuse by more than 30 points. 82-51.
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11 titles. his teams have never lost in a championship game. the huskies begin next season with a 75-game win streak! >> that is awesome! i love connecticut because i anchored the news there for so many years. the seniors on that team, guys, the national champions, they have been national champions their whole college career. >> they don't know losing. >> that is nice. congratulations! the men's national champions returned home to philadelphia to a raucous celebration you could say. thousands of villanova fans greeted the basketball team tuesday at the school's football stadium. this friday they will celebrate their win with a parade. a murder convict captivated . thank you. good morning everybody, i'll tell you what, pretty skies out there, no special effects here.
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let's go places! donald trump gets specific about making mexico pay for a border wall. >> let's say it costs 4 or 5 billion. the wall is going to cost 10 billion. who is going to pay for that wall? 100%. 100%. >> donald trump says it would take just three days to arrange. ahead, josh elliott, who is chillin' with bob schieffer in the green room, breaks down the plan that could affect millions on both sides of the border. >> the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by voya financial. changing the way you think of retirement. rabbit from voya. vern from voya? yep, vern from voya. why are you orange? that's a little weird. really? that's the weird part in this scenario? look, orange money represents the money you put away for retirement. save a little here and there, and over time, your money could multiply. see? ah, ok.
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light trail train around 6:15, two people suffered minor injuries and the driver of the car and the operator of the train 17 people on board the train, none of the passengers were injured. a hunt underway in the bronx for a man accused in a string of robberies this is video of 26-year-old mark wiggins he struck at least six times in the section including one attempted robbery on monday, wiggins has allegedly stolen thousands of dollars of electronics clothing and accessories since march. a city council committee votes on a bill meant to gain control of costume characters and other panhandlers, give the department of transportation the power to designate pedestrianplazas and restrict the characters and painted ladies to restricted zones there have been complaints, though opponents say the vast majority will not cause any trouble. let's get to john with that forecast. we have a pretty day underway, it is going on the
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over all there is a better feel mostly clear and 30 in the city, wind chills, though, up through burgan county morris county, down through middlesex, summer set, in the 20s, 25, 27, look at this, hamptons still wind chills in the teens, 49 your high almost 10 degrees below normal. nowhere near the record 79. sun's up, we just proved it lots of sun until the clouds takeover midday sun sits at 7:26 it is a dry day. your day tomorrow, south wind fills in actually starts to warm up over night andturns wet, a few isolated thunderstorms possible during the day thursday left over showers early and cooler for the mets in the afternoon. thanks so much i'm chris wragge we're back with another local update in 25 minutes "cbs
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billionaire and never has to work! >> not far to melania trump. she works' shen and she is smart and she is terrific. donald trump reveals his plans to build a border wall. the backlash from president obama over the cornerstone of trump's campaign. a texas man could head back to prison for life for killing a wealthy widow. why defense attorney thinks new evidence should keep him free. that story is ahead. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" reports on pfizer's decision to drop a huge merger deal worth $150 billion. the drugmaker planned to merge with allergan of ireland and ship its corporate headquarters there. that would have slashed taxes in the united states. the decision follows new federal rules that make it harder for such a deal to win approval from regulators.
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jersey reports on 21 people allegedly arrested in a sting operation involving a fake college. the university of northern new jersey was set up by homeland security agents. suspects allegedly used a bogus school to take money from international students seeking u.s. visas. more than a thousand people who received those visas are now being investigated. a detroit free press reports on ford's plan for a factor in mexico that critics say will drain american jobs. the plan will cost $1.6 billion. the company says the project will create more than 1,82,800 jobs. ford says it won't take jobs from the united states. "the washington post" says donald trump is saying, for the first time, how he would force mexico to pay for his 1,000-mile border wall. trump's plan appears in a memo sent to the newspaper. josh elliott of our digital network cbsn is here with the proposal that could affect millions of people in mexico and
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josh, good morning. >> reporter: charlie, good morning to you. in that memo to "the post" trump outlined his mexico threat. the united states will block billions of dollars being sent home by immigrants. trump called it an easy decision but experts say there is really nothing easy, nor necessarily clear about his proposed plan. >> who is going to pay for that wall? 100%. >> reporter: since the start of his campaign, donald trump's proposed wall has grown bigger. >> i will and the wall just got ten feet taller. >> reporter: more expensive. >> let's say it costs 4 or 5 billion. >> the wall is probably 8 billion dollars. the wall is going to cost $10 billion. maybe 12. >> reporter: and has become the signature issue of his candidacy. >> they are bringing drugs. they are bringing crime. they are rapists. >> reporter: now we know how he wants to pay for it.
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letterhead, he laid out his three-day plan. on day one, amend the patriotic sack so no alien may wire money outside the united states. on the second day, according to trump, mexico will immediately protest a potential loss of cash flow, which leads to the third day when his administration will tell mexico that if its government pays billions towards the wall, the regulations will not go into effect. >> he might be better off getting his checkbook out because that might be the only way he is going to be able to fund this. >> reporter: stewart anderson says trump's plan pushes the brourneds boundaries. >> it likely tied up in courts for years. >> reporter: last year roughly mexico sent 25 billions money around the world and money
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and services such as western union or digital merchants such as paypal. president obama suggested trump's plan was mere political posturing. >> the notion we are going to track every western union, you know, bit of money that is being september to mexico, you know, good luck with that. >> reporter: americans do remain split on their support for a border wall. but more than 7 in 10 republicans like the idea. mexicans, meanwhile, have met trump's rhetoric with this and harsh words from former presidents. >> i'm not going to pay for that [ bleep ] wall. he should pay for it! he's got the money. >> reporter: we reached out to several of the major money transfer organizations in a statement to cbs news, moneygram said, i do quote, it remains committed to ensureing our customers can continue to stay connected to family and friends
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quality financial services, end quote. i also want to say it's not clear if these three days are mental literally but this always seemed a rather fluid plan. >> look. a lot of families send these remittances $26 billion. i wonder how hispanics who send that money back will have those remittances stopped. >> donald trump says he wants to deport immigrants living here illegally and what happens to that money. josh will continue to follow this story. on cbsn with more of the coverage of the presidential race. watch on cbsnews.com on our app which i tried for the first time yesterday. it works perfectly. i was so proproud of myself. >> what were you watching? >> the evening news. >> that's great! >> because i couldn't get home in time.
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>> i'm so proud. >> you're very good with technology. >> you might watch a little morning news too. >> i can do that too, josh. >> she is the queen of instagram. >> i can do that too. a texas man whose murder conviction inspired a hollywood movie is set to return to court today for a resentencing hearing. bernie tito was given life in prison in 1999 for the murder of a wealthy widow but they say the sentence was too hash. what is next in this bizarre case, david begnaud is here with more. >> reporter: bernie tito has been on bond nearly two years and after a new defense team came forward and said this. we have evidence that bernie was sexually abused as a child and think if the jury had known it at the time they would have given him a lighter sentence. guess what. bernie is getting a second chance with a new jury that will now decide whether to give him
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him back to prison for the rest of his life. bernie tito return to the courtroom marks the latest chapter in a nearly 20-year-old case that captivated hollywood. >> after you killed miss nugent, you kept on spending a lot of her money, a lot of it! >> reporter: he and shocked the small town of cartage, texas. he befriended a wealthy widow, 40 years his senior. >> i would like to say bernie maid lifelong friends upon a funeral arrangement. that is where they met, right here. that is exactly where all this began so to speak. >> reporter: the two struck up an unlikely friend before tita says things turned ugly. >> she was very possessive of my life. so much of my life for the last few years and it got worse.
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he shot nugent four times in the back and stuffed her body in a freezer. he hid her death for nine months, during which he spent or donated about $3 million of her money, according to her family. he confessed to the crime and was sentenced to life in prison. the case inspired the 2011 movie "bernie" directed by richard linklater. >> bernie got a lawyer after the movie. she thought she meld some stuff. wait, something is not right here. >> reporter: in 2014, he was % released on bond after an attorney jody cole discovered new evidence claiming tita was sexually abused as a child and a fact that could have resulted in a lighter sentence but nugent's granddaughters want him in prison for life. >> he conned her and murdered her. as simple as that. >> reporter: the retrial gets under way this morning in the courthouse behind me and expected to last three weeks, the trial.
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doing the last two years, he is living with richard linklater, the director who did a movie about him. he is living in linklater's garage in austin. >> a different twist on the story. good to see you, david. thank you. comedienne amy schumer is slamming a woman's magazine. ahead why she is a little upset this morning you could say about a cover story that is raising new controversy over so-called body shaming. if you're heading out the door, you don't have to leave us behind. watch us live through the cbs all-access app. do you like that app? >> on your digital device. did i mention, it works? >> yeah. >> works fine, too. don't miss the big reveal how your facebook page will be changing. we will be right back. i get all of my greens. and i try not to faint. this... i can do easily. benefiber healthy shape. just a couple of spoonfuls every day means fewer cravings. plus, it's all natural, clear, taste-free and dissolves completely.
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type think that is plus size. anna werner is at a cafe here in new york city. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. so this special edition of "glamour" magazine is meant to celebrate women of all sizes but predominantly. it includes an interview with schumer who schumer says she wasn't asked or told that it was going to be included. now, her comments about all of controversy about this issue of the magazine. >> i make fun of women's magazines a lot because it's easy and it's fun. >> reporter: amy schumer has been outspoken about body shaming in the media. >> they write hostile articles, like, how to trick your stomach into thinking you eight that week! >> reporter: but she took a surprise tone tuesday after "glamour" cover listed her as an inspiration focusing on plus
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schumer posted in insta-gamegraminstagram, in part. >> i'm very proud of "glamour. >> reporter: they are in partnership with plus size clothing maker lane bryant. linda heasley is the company's ceo. do you consider amy schumer to be a plus size? >> i don't define people by the label. she was called out by a woman who inspires other women, particularly in breaking the humorous sides. >> reporter:. >> i was born weighing 150. i just came out swinging like give me linguini, mom! >> reporter: after her initial response to "glamour" magazine, schumer went further tweeting
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reserved for women are unnecessary. do you think there's too much focus on what size a woman is, generally? >> he absolutely think that there is an opportunity to define women beyond the size and shape that they are. >> reporter: now "glamour" also responded to schumer. they say nowhere in this magazine did she explicitly called schumer plus size. a spokesman told us in a statement we believe her passionate and vocal message of body positivity is inspiring and we are sorry if we offended her in any way. >> it has certainly sparked a debate. >> the average size of a woman in this country is size 14. i get amy's point. if someone said you're 50 and you're really 40. nothing wrong with being 50 but i'm not 50, i'm 40. making. i get her point. >> i do too.
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the spotlight. >> reporter: ahead, the retired super bowl champ takes the stage to show off some undiscovered talent . thank you, nora, putting my voice to work to let you know, it is cool. 30, calm winds, to wind chill in the city is just 30. a lot of reporting stations wind chills in the teens and 20s, so it is a chilly way to start today, a little less wind later bright skies give way to clouds and 49, should be about 58 this time of year. tomorrow we break through but that south wind also ushers in rain heavy at times before we cool down this weekend. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nexgard. dogs - sure can be messy. but with nexgard, their flea and tick killer doesn't have to be. nexgard, the vet's #1 choice for dogs, is a delicious, beef-flavored chew
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of the train 17 people on board, none of the passengers were injured. a former new york city cop wants a new trial. peter liang was found guilty of manslaughter now his lawyers claim one of the jurors failed to reveal that his father served time in prison for manslaughter, liang was convicted of killing in a dark stairwell in brooklyn in 2014. happening today, mayor deblasio is expected to sign a new law banning smokeless tobacco at ticketed sporting events, us once signedded it takes effect immediately in yankee stadium and citi field. joins cities that won't allow fans or players to use smokelesstobacco in its ballparks. let's get to john for the forecast. interesting ballpark forecast, i think it looks okay for the mets on friday, tomorrow though for the yankees that could be in a little dicey
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just cool for the game tonight mostly clear and 32 right now, we're up a few degrees but the wind chills is now down to 27 you can see on average wind chill right around 25 little cooler through parts of the hudson valley, we're seeing clouds roll in to sullivan county, waiting for the rainmaker area of low pressure bringing snow to the upper great lakes and rain heavy at times through the ohio valleyly, that pushes through into our area between now and this afternoon, it is relatively quiet, just watch for increasing clouds, and then tomorrow morning some showers this concern is going to be during the day and into the afternoon a line of showers with an embedded thunderstorm maybe a few more later in the afternoon and night. thank you very much, we're back with another local update in 25 minutes, "cbs this
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"eye opener" at 8:00. trump misread wisconsin voters as the hunt for delegates intensifies. the gop frorntnt-runner is on a losing streak. >> sanders won six caucuses in a row. >> she knows how to cut and thrust here. it's going to get pretty raw. >> governor bentley calls this a political attack. these articles of impeachment say he betrayed his trust and is unfit to serve. >> the girls on that team don't know how to lose with four championships in a row. >> they say nothing clear about trump's proposed plan. >> he might be better off getting his checkbook out. >> this special edition of "glamour "glamour" magazine is meant to celebrate women of all sizes but
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now she has a controversy about this magazine. >> prime minister of iceland is the first one out of a job after panama papers. this morning" sponsored by nationwide. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the presidential candidates new york. nearly 350 republican and democratic delegates will be up for grabs in two weeks. hillary clinton and donald trump especially want to put wisconsin behind them. ted cruz won the state's republican primary decisively last night and beating trump by 13 points. john kasich finished far behind them. and bernie sanders beat clinton by 13 points in the democratic race. he has won six states in a row. >> hillary clinton congratulated sander last night on instagram
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she picked up 14 fewer delegates than sanders in wisconsin. her lead is only 254 if you leave out the super delegates. with the super delegates, hillary clinton is still far ahead but 3,000 delegates have not been awarded yet and sanders want to sway the super delegates who could change their mind before the democratic convention. the new york "daily news" is bashing sanders this morning for saying gun manufacturers and sellers should be immune from lawsuits when their weapons are used in crime. the page one headline calls it "bernie's sandy hook shame." sanders ran into trouble this week with the paper's editorial board who asked him to get specific about breaking up one of the big banks and one of the central platforms of his campaign. >> if you look at jpmorgan as an example you can't do citibank and bank of america, what would it be? what would that institution be? would there be a consumer bank? where would the investing go? >> i'm not running jpmorgan chase or citibank. >> but you said you would break it up. >> that is right. and that is their decision as to
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they want to reconfigure themselves. >> you would then leave it to jpmorgan chase or the others to figure out how to break it themselves up? i'm not sure. >> then you have the secretary of the treasury and some people who know a lot about this making that determination. the determination is goldman sachs and jpmorgan chase is too big to fail, they would be broken up. >> but sanders did not say exactly how that would happen or what the consequences would be. "the washington post" published a statement from sander saying he would work with the federal reserve and federal regulators to break up those banks using current laws. bob schieffer is a cbs news contributor and our former cbs news moderator of "face the nation." the headlines today are trouble for the two front-runners. do you think it's something more than that?
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more profound happen than just this race. i'm beginning to wonder. are these political parties going to survive 2016? i mean, i think the republicans -- i mean, i don't know who is going to get this nomination. i don't know if it's going to wind up in cleveland. if it does, donald trump is not going to quietly into the night. i think that is one thing we can say for sure. i don't know who is going to get the nomination. but there is going to be a huge fight out there. we may be seeing for the republicans something like the democrats saw in 1968 in chicago where the party tore itself apart in full view of the entire nation on television. there were riots in the street and brutality by the police and all of that. they not only lost in 1968. they come back in 1972 and try to institute reforms to correct that and throw out all of the
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big city bosses and all of that. they wind up nominating george mcgovern, a good man but someone far outside the mainstream of the democratic party and he lost in a historic landslide. he carried only the state of massachusetts. is this what is shaping up here for the republicans? i don't know. but i think it's something that we are going to be talking about. >> donald trump is certainly sending out signals he thinks they are trying to take it away from him. what is more risky for the party? donald trump as a nominee where people say they are afraid? or alienating his supporters? >> i don't think it's good either way. i mean, either way you do it. let's say he runs as a third-party candidate. i don't think he can be elected but i don't think the republican candidate could be elect either if that is the case. let's say he is the candidate. i mean, you know? with the numbers he is running up, the negatives he has just among women voters, i think it's going to be very, very difficult for republicans, but then you go to the other side here and let's talk about the democrats.
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finest hour either as a party. i mean, here you have the oldest party in america has managed to come up with one candidate who is a democrat and she is having a fight of her life with someone who has never saw office as a democrat who is an interest socialist? i think -- i don't know. >> he is likely to stay in. he has plenty of money and probably wait for event that may or may not happen. >> well, exactly. i mean, you're talking about how long can he stay? he certainly is not embarrassing himself because he is winning. he has plenty of money. and it would be, i would think, no one would blame him for just hanging around to see if hillary clinton is going to be indicted. now i don't have any evidence that she is or that she isn't. but i do know there is an investigation going on and i think he would be wise to just hang around and see what happens on that. and if that happens, let's say
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i mean, we are in a strange turning point. >> for both parties. >> of politics and both parties. >> what role does john kasich play in this? >> he didn't run a very good race in wisconsin, that's for sure. i think it's part of anybody but trump -- and there is such a thing as anybody but trump right now. and there is such a thing in the republican party as anybody but cruz. in the exit polls last night, they asked people, you know, if trump is the nominee, what will you do? well, 60% of the people said they would vote for trump but 10% said they would vote for hillary clinton and 15% i think it was, said they would be interested in a third-party and 8% said they wouldn't vote. that is 35% who said they wouldn't vote republican. that would be a dangerous sign to me if i were a republican leader. >> great to see you. >> it's great to be here.
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>> i'm glad i brought all of this happy news! >> we will see you again. >> we call it wisdom around here. brilliant analysis. >> proud to be here. >> thank you, bob. anywhere! >> proud to get up in the morning! >> that's right. the new daily eye opener seconds. you can now get it direct to your inbox. sign right up at "cbs this morning".com.
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in this morning's "eye on money" we look how you can live large after you stop working. 4.4 million paid a home mortgage in 2014 and 82% to 79,000 the median debt for age over 65. what do we need to know, jill? >> i think people freak out i have a mortgage going into retirement. we see from those numbers that is common and accelerated after the financial crisis. i don't think people should be so perplexed about this problem because, frankly, i'm more worried they are spending the available money they have to pay down that mortgage instead of keeping it liquid. you never know. you lose the dollars if you pay off your mortgage. you may have health issues and need that cash. in this day paying down a mortgage mr. retirement is look like a luxury, not a necessity.
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seems like a good question at any age but in particular if you're a retiree. >> i think the idea of not having to take care of a house is so luring. i just called the landlord. the boiler bust. what people forget is when you rent you could be subject to rising rents in the future, right? as we have inflation the cost of renting can be a lot more expensive than actually owning. you're going to have to weigh it out. i think it really is market by market and depends on how much money you actually have. you cannot burn up all of the money you have buying a place. you must preserve your liquid. >> i never see rents going down. >> right. i know. >> what about reverse mortgages? >> an interesting option and exactly what it sound like. if you are a homeowner and you're over the age of 62 and you've got a lot of equity in your home, you may want to tap that equity with a caveat. you have to decide you're staying in that house a long time. the amount of money you can borrow is based on a number of factors. your age, current interest rate, the appraised value of the home.
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offered through fha and they have gotten a lot better the last decade. >> you recommend it? >> it depends. such a case-by-case and has to do with the specifics of a situation. i think looking at it is a good idea. better is get older actually. >> what are the biggest retirement mistakes to avoid? >> i think people are pulling money out of their retirement accounts at the wrong time. the problem we saw during the recession and financial crisis if you had to pulmonary out and had no other resource, too many people take money out prior to age 59 1/2 and have to pay tax and withdrawal penalty. please reserve that asset. try to. another huge mistake people still have too much company stock in their retirement accounts. you want to diversify away from that. you want to try to set it and forget it. meaning you want to rebalance on an automatic basis and pay attention if you retire at the wrong time and your company stock goes down, that can hurt your long-term vision of what your retirement years are going to look like.
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>> of course, we are. i would tell mr. moon vves not more than 5% of your company stock in that 401(k). >> little girl's parents witness pope francis help their daughter cross an item off her visual bucket list. >> what did he say to you? >> he would be praying for us and to pray for him. >> reporter: the girl's up close encounter with the pope this morning and a hope for a miracle is coming up next on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by voya financial. changing the way you think of retirement. oh hey allison. i'm val, the orange money retirement squirrel from voya. val from voya? yeah, val from voya. quick question, what are voya retirement squirrels doing in my house? we're putting away acorns.
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little lizzie meyer crossed another big thing off her visual bucket list this morning by meeting the pope. that is big. we introduced you to the 5-year-old ohio girl last year. she has a genetic condition that will cause her likely to go blind. her parents have a bucket list for her to see what happens before she goes blind. debora patta has more. >> reporter: it's a big day for a little girl but 5-year-old lizzie is taking it in streit. >> i lopve pope.
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the pontiff. today's audience with the pope is a highlight of a week of sight dunn see sightseeing in rome all what her parents have called lizzie's bucket list and steve meyer is nervous. >> wasn't something we thought would be possible but now that it's here stomach is a little bit upset. >> reporter: as they headed off to the vatican, her father secretly wished for more than just an audience with the pope. >> we are definitely hoping for a miracle. >> reporter: lizzie was initially caught up in the excitement of the pope's traditional arrival. she enthusiastically waved and seeming perplexed he did not respond immediately. like any 5-year-old, she became restless during the pope's address, even a little bored.
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arrived, it was all worth it. pope francis hugged and kissed lizzie and then touched her face and laid his hands over her eyes. lizzie's parents have not yet told her that one day, she will lose her sight as a result of her rare genetic order, type 2, she already wears a hearing aid but as she approaches adolescence, she probably will go completely blind. >> reporter: lizzie's parents are making sure that she has lifelong memories to recall when she can no longer see. they want her to appreciate the simple things like picking flowers and looking through a telescope or marveling at a rainbow. and, of course, today's audience with the pope, which lizzie visibly moved mother christine said exceeded her expectations. >> he is praying for us and to pay for him. >> reporter: she added later she felt and overwhelming sense of peace.
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patta, london. >> wow. >> something she will remember the rest of her life. >> i believe in miracles. i see it's getting to you too. you can't get better than the pope touching your eyes and offering a blessing. i believe in miracles. >> what wonderful parents she has giving her all of those experiences. >> i'm glad she doesn't know at this stage in her life. >> something exciting only on "cbs this morning." facebook is about to change its own status. chief product officer chris cox . it is 8:25 on this wednesday april sixth another cold start to your day i'm mary calvi, a former new york city cop convicted in the accidental shooting death of an unarmedded man wants a new trial, peter manslaughter lawyer claim one
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they served prison time for manslaughter. liang was convicted of killing in 2014, due to be sentenced later this month. looking into potential corruption involving a city union leader and police sources tell cbs 2 an investigation began with nora seabrooks, saying he invested pension money that led to wiretaps andrecorded conversations, marsha claimer asked commissioner bratton about the matter. >> does it trouble you there is an investigation? >> the nature of the business that always results unfortunately in the investigations we'll just have to see where the investigation goes. a detective in the 66th precinct has been put on desk duty and several members of the 19th precinct have been questioned. a city council committee
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control of costume characters and other panhandlers giving them to power to designate plazas and painted ladies to specific zones. it is cold out there. >> the wind chills are down this hour in the city it is very pretty, nice skies but at 32 with a calm wind. around the area, wind chills in the 20s and low 30s so cool out the door. it won't be as windy as it was yesterday, 49 feels better but look at that still almost 10 degrees below normal sunsets at 7:26. it is breezy in the afternoon, not the winds that started the week over night it actually warms up so 44 for morning low then 50 at daybreak but we start to see showers during the day tomorrow in fact could see an isolated thunderstorm, you're up to 60 that south wind and showers early friday morning but it is looking
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bellaire. >> to me the highlight that came between those two big shots. when the game was tied and his team reeling, villanova center took time to personally mop the floor! i can't wait for new x box game ncaa mop madness! >> got to get it done! welcome back to "cbs this morning." this half hour, before you see it on social media today, facebook is making news only on "cbs this morning." we like that. facebook's chief product officer, chris cox, hello! he is in studio 57! he doesn't hear me. hi, krichris. >> he has his phone ready to launch a new feature that will change the face of the site. in our green room also is nina.
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of the most dynamic women in the real world. that is ahead. >> a terrific look. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. britain's "tell a graph" reports on prince harry unveiling the uk team for this year. he posed with them in buckingham palace today. they are taking part in the sporting competition. he handed over the invictus flag to transfer the games to the united states. that's right, everybody. in orlando, coming up. i'm an ambassador for the event. >> my favorite. >> although we like george now. >> yeah, we do. >> william. >> we are looking what did we say? you're right, we like him. >> we like him a lot.
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on -- renamed again. the problem with the acronym. last week, george mason university announced the following. they noticed the problem with the acronym. s. get it? they did not think it was appropriate. now it is the antonin scalia law school. >> that is a little better. the "new york post" explains how two guys in teenage knit that turtle costumes got seats behind home plate for a quarter each. the comic took issue with the new ticket policy. an executive suggesting that high-end ticket holders don't really like sitting near people who haven't sat in premium seats before. these two seats were the first to win the contest by dressing lik ninja turtles. the yankees say everybody is
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oliver for buying tickets. john oliver was hasilarious with this saying wear your best rift raft costume. tough new security measures. the company says it added end-to-end encryption to protect all forms of communication on its network and that means files can be unlocked and ready only by senders and resip yens.cipientsrecipients. >> chris cox is the man and the mind behind your facebook page. cox helped invent the newsfeed and redesigned the like button. you can now post with emotioned like love and ha ha. he only on "cbs this morning," he is here with a revelation about how your facebook account will change. chris cox, welcome. >> thank you so much for having
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>> good to be here. >> i'm happy to be here. >> what is the change we will see on our facebook page? >> facebook lives is what we are really excited to talk about today. right next to your newsfeed, there will be a new destination where you can go see people going live all around the world. live is something we started to roll out for a few months. open an app and tap a button and immediately stream the video what have is around you to your friends and family. >> what did you see, chris? i like your name chris cox. i think it's a cool name. what did you see that made you think this is a good idea? >> we started to watch all kinds of people using it in lots of different ways. whether it was just somebody streaming a very sort of, like, commuting to and from work with their friend, or whether it was people like hillary clinton or athletes, the villanova team going live from back stage in their locker room. starting to see all of these different scenarios where people were bringing people into their lives and taking people behind the scenes and connecting with them in new ways.
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thebook page, sometimes you get a little pushback from viewers. how do you roll that out and handle that? >> very carefully. >> don't want to upset the user? >> exactly. we spend a lot of time on making sure that we are doing a nice job of educating people and introducing the product to the experience in a new way. the really cool thing about live is everybody who has seen it so far really, really loves it. it's an exciting experience for people who have tried it. you guys have probably seen people do it here. >> is it streaming? >> yeah, streaming live from your phone. it's basically bringing a little tv studio from your pocket. you can immediately go live to your friends and family. i have an 18-month-old son and i'm often in a situation where he is doing something for the first time and i want to take my friends and family with me. >> this is an obvious to me. >> sure. >> all kinds of ways we can see things we couldn't see before around the world. what is the next step? when you think about tapping
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>> yes so a lot of this is just about taking what you see and what you're experiencing when it's interesting to you and sending it to your friends to see and participate in. >> live in real-time? >> yeah. there is something about being with somebody when something is happening that is really, really powerful. we are also seeing a lot of people interacting and having question and answers with their friends or their fans in a new way. there's an astronaut named scott piersinski who qualified to uniquely qualify on scott kelly returning from space. because he is a doctor and done a lot of space walks. he shows up and answers questions to people who are interested in what happens to the body in space. >> i knows what he is talking about. >> he does. >> twitter had a big announcement about the nfl. they are going to be streaming the games. were you in the hunt for that or were sgoued?disappointed? >> we are more focusing on back
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we had manchester city yesterday going live doing goalie. the texas rangers doing batting practice. we are especially interested when what is live and behind the scene areas. >> if you gotten the chance, would you like to have gotten that deal? >> with athletes specifically, whether it's nfl athletes or baseball players, to us, what is really interesting about this product is not what you see on tv. it's what you that is not on tv. >> let's talk about you're going live for 4 hours and we are starting it off right now on "cbs this morning." on our facebook page. let's get started. how do we go live? >> we are going to pull out our facebook app. we have the "cbs this morning" page that is loaded right here. and we have already typed in the title. we are live making a big facebook announcement about facebook live. and it's as simple as pressing this blue button. go live. are you guys ready? >> we are ready. go live.
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>> we are live from "cbs this morning." >> oh, and here we go. so we are live! so here is what i'm going to do. we are going to turn around. >> hi! >> if you go to cbs facebook page, you'll see us sitting here right now? >> you're live right now. >> we will do this the next 24 hours. >> i think so. >> charlie works 24 hours a day any way so this won't be a problem. >> no. i'll be here for you. >> can people like us? >> yes. people can like you guys. people can react. >> people can react? >> right now, we are starring to see reaction. >> what are people saying? >> hi. hey. hello from kentucky. do you want to hold it? >> were some of the things you introduced -- >> chris, i'm doing it wrong! >> just flip it around. so hold the camera. >> there you go! who is that? >> i told you i was tech challenged. >> this is using the reaction we rolled out to you. >> hi, norah o'donnell. >> hello. >> hi, charlie rose. >> up close and personal.
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people with such a different experience to connect in the way facebook has done. >> i want to be tony. what are you trying to say? >> wrap it up! >> wait. over here. say hi, patty. >> hi, patty. >> there is tony. this is what people want to see is behind the scenes. >> as you said, behind the scenes. >> giving us a look what this all is. >> thank you, chris cox of facebook. thank you for launching it 24 hours live right here on "cbs this morning." we greatly appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. >> somebody said, hi, charlie rose. >> hello! >> the conversation doesn't end here so go to facebook.com/cbsthisthis morning to watch the 24 hours of facebook live. >> mark henry said, "so cool." one said does it work on ipad? chris? >> it does. >> you have a read, gayle. you want me to read it for you? >> what can mothers learn from. >> laura bush and gloria estefan? >> she is here with the life
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of leading about the advice they hey what are you here for? you getting poked, prodded or pinched?? uhhh yeah, colon cancer screening. hey me too, second time. it's a piece of cake! that sounds good right now. it's no big deal. that's what everyone tells me. today there is more than one way to screen for colon cancer and it's easier than ever. if you're 50 or older talk with your healthcare provider
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>> where is my date? >> coming. >> holy geez! >> you like? it cost more than my car! >> shows like "two broke girls "and big bang theory have turned cbs in the most watched network. you can thank nina who oversaw more than 200 programs, including the good wife and madam secretary and super girl and she developed blockbuster franchises like csi and ncis and she stepped down last year to pursue other creative projects. first one hits book stores this week. it's called "what i told my daughter." and it is a diverse collection of essays like laura bush and brooke shields and mia hamm and madeleine albright. nina, good morning. >> thank you, norah i. eye know how hard you worked on this.
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what your inspiration was for this. your own 13-year-old daughter when she had adult type challenges. >> yes, exactly. she was 13 years old and she was playing club volleyball. i was traveling all over southern california and she happened to be at a tournament in phoenix, arizona. the temperature was about 120 degrees outside. it was pretty brutal. and she had a tough four days. they lost most of, if not, all of the games, but the last game she played, she played really well and she fought her heart out. i'm not very athletic so i said, oh, yes, hit hard and do well! and she did. but they still lost. she turned and came running over to me and i thought in that moment i had to say something. what am i going to tell her? what advice am i going to give her? because she still lost. and i realized, i said you know what? you were consistent. your team could depend on you.
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her and her face lit up. i knew in that moment i had validated how she felt about herself and i knew our change. i thought i have to reach out and find a book and i've got to get some advice. how do i do this? i looked for a book. i couldn't find it so he decided to write it myself. >> and talked to others all over >> norah o'donnell. >> i wrote a book about cup cake management which is story about my young grace as you know and their wanting to do things their way and trying to channel those executive leadership skills which in the past have called bossy and channel those in a positive direction. >> that's right. >> you found a common theme with all of the women you talked to. >> that was the most exciting. >> you interviewed a variety of black, white, younger, older. >> that was very, very important. i realized that we as mothers, i think we have been overhyphenated to death.
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tired mom and soccer mom and we are all just mothers. i think by hyphen-ating us it put us in separate camps and not the way it should be. we want the best possible futures for our daughters and having freedom of gender equality was a common theme about many of these essays. >> beyond that, how are mothers difference than mothers in terms of advice and playing that kinds of role? >> i don't think it's necessarily different. i think it's about showing a balance and ruth bader ginsburg says in her essay the way she taught her children about gender equality is letting them observe that both parents share home responsibilities. >> i love a message from your son. you're driving the car and your little boy said to you, mom, boys are better than girls. you pull the car over and said, wait a second. what did you say?
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better but they are equal. i think the key was not only pulling the car over but turning the engine off. i think that shocked him in that moment. >> when the school would call ruth bader ginsburg, she said why are you calling me? why don't you call the father? i love this too. so many great things. marie osmond tells her daughters they have the right to change their minds. aim high, but muddle through gracefully is another one. what did you find was the crux of successful relationships pbetween mothers and daughters? >> well, one of the most important things that i am found was there has been a trend about getting kind of overly involved in your daughter's lives. one of the things i found consistently through these stories is involving your daughter in your life. bringing them into your world was really important. when former first lady laura bush talks about traveling to africa, you know, she brought her daughters with her so they
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we will be right back. the sun'll come out tomorrow... for people with heart failure, tomorrow is not a given. but entresto is a medicine that helps make more tomorrows possible. tomorrow, tomorrow... i love ya, tomorrow in the largest heart failure study ever. entresto helped more people stay alive and out of the hospital than aleading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. can cause harm or death an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure... ...kidney problems,
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tomorrow, tomorrow i love ya, tomorrow. ask your heart doctor about entresto. and help make tomorrow possible. you're only a day away since when did experience become something to hide? i say we own it. lose all that negativity. just let it go. it's just bad energy. oh, and lose those terrible black balloons they give you on your 50th. what's up with that? hey we hear you. that's why our members love aarp the magazine. it celebrates you. with fun and provocative content, from lifestyle and entertainment to in-depth reporting. and it's just one of the great benefits of membership. if you don't think "this is right for me" when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp".
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for news any time, anywhere, if you're doing everything right but find it harder and harder to get by, you're not alone. while our people work longer hours for lower wages, almost all new income goes to the top 1%. my plan -- make wall street banks and the ultrarich pay their fair share of taxes, provide living wages for working people, ensure equal pay for women. i'm bernie sanders. i approve this message because together, we can make a political revolution and create an economy and democracy that works for all
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struck at least 6 times on monday. wiggins allegedly stolen thousands of dollars worth of electronics clothing and accessories since march. also new collision between a car and a light rail train in newark, happened on franklin avenue at 6:15 a.m. two people suffered minor injuries they are the driver of the car and the upward of the train, 17 were on the train injured. happening today members of the central park 5 and others wrongfully convicted will gather on the steps of city hall call on the state legislature to pass a bill requiring police to implant measures including eyewitness identification reform when the central park 5 were teenagers they were wrongly convicted of a 1989 beating and gang rape. reached a $40 million settlement with the city two years ago. get a check on your cold weather forecast here is meteorologist john elliot. you said cold, i mean it is nice and bright.
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we have a cold air in place calm winds, 34 degrees in the city, the wind chill is the air temperature wind chills below freezing, madison at 32. warmed up nicely, that beats 12. we wait for the rain, it is a south wind so it is really warmer tomorrow right around 60, turns wet that kind of lift and energy could see an isolated thunderstorm that pushes through we see a left over shower early, should be dry for the mets that's definitely the process that's underway on friday but then cool and wet again saturday. >> john thanks, our next newscast is at noon we're always on at cbsnewyork.com.
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day. >> announcer: was she the victim of a violent home attack started by her ex-girlfriend? >> judge patricia: you smash a security camera. >> judge larry: you pick up a brick, and you start hitting the front door. >> promises were broken, [crying] and it hurts my feelings. >> judge tanya: you guys are really trying to complicate this. it's a bad breakup. >> announcer: "hot bench." judge tanya acker. judge larry bakman. judge patricia dimango. three judges. three opinions.
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