tv CBS This Morning CBS July 29, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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cbs this morning is next. have a great morning. captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is friday, july 29th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? history in philadelphia when with hillary clinton accepted the democratic nomination for president. she says the race against dona for the nation. >> donald trump calls hillary clinton's attack insulting. cbs news looks into his business dealings with russia. and breaking news in san diego. one police officer is dead, another is in surgery after an overnight shooting. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> i will be a president for all
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for all americans together! >> a historic first, as hillary clinton becomes the democratic nominee. >> when any barrier falls in america, it clears the way for everyone. when there are no ceilings, the sky is the limit. >> there is one issue in this campaign, as she told it, one issue -- donald trump. >> americans don't say i, alone, can fix it. we say we'll fix it together! >> i think we will stay together all night because i don't really want to go home and watch that crowd. >> i watched last night and i saw lies. every one of these guys, they go up and they go crazy. san diego police have one suspect in custody in the shooting of two officers. one of the wounded officers has died. >> a black and white en route to the hospital. >> pope francis has paid a somber visit to the nazi
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into the gate. >> out of control wildfire raging in california and look at the hail in colorado. >> all that. >> i'm michael jordan and i'm here with hillary. >> the zinger of the night became from basketball legend kareem abdul-jabbar. >> i said that because i know donald trump can't tell the difference. >> the super rich are going to start paying their fair share of taxes. and i know they are good for it because they paid me tons when i spoke to them! >> on "cbs this morning." >> people tell me that a balloon drop is fun. a man standing next to me just said, isn't it great being a kid again? >> it concluded like so much speeches do with the adults having their minds blown by balloons. i am the candidate who will not be afraid to take on isis! oh! announcer: this portion of "cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." hillary clinton highlighted her sharp differences with donald trump in a historic speech to the democratic national convention. >> it is with humility, determination, and boundless confidence in america's promise that i accept your nomination for president of the united states! >> the former secretary of state, senator, and first lady, spent nearly an hour last night laying out her vision for the future. >> clinton said the skun at a moment of reckoning and she urged all americans to work together to meet the challenges to come. >> nancy cordes is at temple university in philadelphia where clinton and running mate tim kaine will appear just a few hours from now. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this was a speech for the record books in more ways than one.
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that a nominee argued her opponent was simply incapable of doing the job. but clinton also acknowledged that many americans still don't know quite what to make of her. despite her decade in public life. >> tonight, we have reached a milestone in our nation's march toward more perfect union. the first time that a major party has nominated a woman for president. >> reporter: is making moment and they savored it. >> when there are no ceilings, the sky is the limit. >> reporter: clinton used the biggest speech of her life to try to explain what makes her tick. >> i sweat the details of policy, whether we are talking about the exact level of lead in the drinking water in flint, michigan. it's not just a detail if it's your kid, if it's your family. it's a big deal.
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deal to her opponent. >> you didn't hear any of this, did you, from donald trump, at his convention? he spoke for 70 odd minutes and i do mean odd. >> reporter: again and again, she laid into trump's character. >> he loses his cool at the slightest provocation. a man you can bait with a tweet is not a man we can trust with no clear weapon. donald trump says, and quote -- i know more about isis than the generals do. no, donald, you don't. >> reporter: clinton spent the most time on the economy, an issue where our poll shows trump was the biggest edge. >> democrats, we are the party of working people. my primary mission, as president, will be to create more opportunity and more good
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rhetoric. >> i, alone, can fix it. >> reporter: should alarm everyone. >> really? i, alone, can fix it? he is betting that the perils of today's world will blind us to its unlimited promise. he has taken the republican party a long way, from mourning in america, to midnight in ama. she can make serious inroads with skeptical republicans and independents. so from here, she and her running mate will embark on what should be trump country. they are heading to western pennsylvania and southeastern ohio and on monday, she is going to a solidly red state, nebraska. >> cbs news political director and "face the nation" moderator john dickerson is with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> two questions. number one, did she do what she
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and is this more about simply her goals than how she is going to get there? >> well, we don't know. she did what she had to do until the polling comes out a week later. i was struck by how much she went after donald trump. it was -- it was a lot more attack in a nominee speech than i would have expected and really on that questiof the economy, h businessman and people think he is a businessman and can get this thing point-by-point of his business career and attacking and saying he was essentially a fraud. that is what really struck me about how -- and then, of course on foreign policy basically saying he doesn't have the temperament baiting him with that tweet about being baited by a tweet. >> you had, she went specific. she said trump ties are made in china and not in colorado, that the suits are made in -- in mexico, not michigan. they were all battleground states. >> exactly.
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leaving this convention going to pennsylvania, ohio, nebraska on monday. those are rural white working class voters she is looking for. >> right. and the idea is not that she is going to win that their group of voters but does not need to lose as badly she is in terms of donald trump taking not only blue collar voters who, you know, turning out blue collar voters that would vote republican but stealing some democrats. and that is why the idea on the ec i it because people -- because voters have this kind of natural feeling he's in business, he can do it. >> everybody looks unified in the balloon drop and great music but at the end of the day, what do you think lives on? >> i think these attacks on donald trump live on because as our pal bob schieffer said, this is about donald trump and disqualifying him and what the trump campaign say this campaign is about. if donald trump can be seen as president he can win. he is a candidate for change and
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worried about handing over the presidency to him and she is trying to say don't do it he can't do it and can't fix your problems. her list of her long plans she has, everybody knows she has plans. >> yeah. >> i think if anything lives on, it's what she tried to do to donald trump. >> we have two different visions from these conventions, did we not? >> they define totally different turf on what they want the campaign to be fought and the question is who wins the battle over which turf. >> which turf? >> donum with constant threats. hillary clinton described much more optimistic world, a world of acceptance and of tolerance yes, but it can be done together. >> and only thing we ought to fear -- >> she did fdr and went back to the founders and described the qualities for the founders the previous three nights everybody had described to her and wrapping herself in philadelphia. >> she took the word out of some republicans' mouth that it was
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midnight in america. >> a lot of republicans saying her hawkish patriotic liberal patriotism is what republicans used to talk about, that sense of patriotism. >> and sense of optimistic. >> how are you feeling this morning? >> a little crispy but you got in at the same hour i did. >> crispy is good. >> amazing what three hours of sleep does for you. >> you got three, did you? >> showoff! only on "face the nation" sunday, john talks with senator bernie sanders and donald trump's campaign chair paul man april forty and rnc chair reince priebus. one of the most solemn moments last night was an american soldier whose father was killed in iraq in 2004. he criticized donald trump for singling out muslims during the campaign. >> donald trump, you're asking
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their future. let me ask you -- have you even read the united states constitution? >> kahn offered to lend trump his pocket constitution. he also said if it were up to trump, his son would never have been an american, meaning he never would have served in the u.s. military. >> that appearance is being described as one of the most powerfulth donald trump responded to hillary clinton's attacks with a barrage of his own. the trump campaign called clinton's speech, quote, an insulting collection of cliches and recycled rhetoric differed from a fantasy universe, not the reality we live in today. the campaign accused hillary clinton of talking down to the american people. major garrett is in philadelphia and he takes a look at trump's counterattack. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump wants to cast the
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more outsider versus insider and running commentary from trump on clopt's acceptance speech portrayed clinton as a fixture of washington incapable of changing its ways or her's. >> are we going to watch this? i don't know! >> reporter: at the second of two evening stops in iowa, donald trump offered the crowd an alternative. hillary clinton's philadelphia triumph. >> i think we will stay together all night because i don't really want to go home and watch that >> reporter: ever the tv critic, trump knows the democratic convention ratings are higher than his but he gave the gop convention higher style points. >> by the way, i thought our stage in cleveland was much more beautiful. >> reporter: during clinton's nominating speech, trump blasted supporters with 15 clinton anti-e-mails and most arguing she embraces free trade and open borders and special interest groups. >> donald trump can't even handle the rough and tumble of a
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trump blitzed clinton on twitter calling her a captive of wall street and questioning her characte, tweeting corruption and devastation follows her wherever she goes. earlier in the day trump refused to credit clinton's unique role in history. >> i just don't know, frankly, how a person like this would be electedable. someday, and i think not in the distant future you will have a woman be president and i look forward to that. >> repor t delegates appeared to jeer clinton and post-speech commentatorary suggesting bernie sanders wasn't all that impressed. trump wants to use those divisions in the democratic party because he need to compensate for those in his own. charlie? >> thanks, major. as the democratic convention wound down last night, i spoke with former attorney general eric holder on my pbs program. we discussed hillary clinton's historic nomination.
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you questioned his gray matter, that he is not smart enough to be president? >> reporter: yeah. i wonder. i sometimes thinks he hides behind a certain bravado to hide a lack of substance that he has. a person this far along in the process, i think, we would know a little more about what his plans are, we would know more about who his mentors might have been, who his intellectual guides might be and i don't have any sense that there is any of that to him. to be a very shallow man. >> reporter: because you don't see intellectual interest and don't see anything other than a businessman? >> yeah. one of the other things that makes me doubt his intellectual is he sees everything in black and white terms. and that is -- that's the realm of people who aren't very smart because the tough stuff is in the gray area and you have to
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would say no capacity to operate and delve in the gray areas. >> eric holder believes a gun control debate will be a defining issue of clinton's campaign and he said it could give her a mandate for action if elected. we are following some breaking news of a deadly southern california shooting of a police officer. san diego police say two officers were shot overnight during a traffic stop. one is dead and the second is in surgery. vinita nair is here with the details. >> reporter: good morning. san diego police chief s ambush. one suspect is in custody and the hunt for other possible suspects continues. police swarmed this neighborhood just southeast of san diego late thursday night. >> we have two officers down. roll medics. >> units use caution in the area. we don't know where the shots are coming from. >> reporter: two officers from the san diego police department, part of a gang suppression unit, were shot making a routine
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one was killed after hit in the torso multiple times and the other was rushed into surgery at scripps' emergency hospital. >> another officer arrived on scene and taken to the hospital. heroic efforts by the officers on seen, heroic efforts by the doctors to save his life. >> reporter: police apprehended a hispanic male who was shot and treated at an area hospital. the san diego police officer who died leaves behind a wife and two children. gayle? >> the job they do, putting themselves in harm's way. thank you, vinita. parts of south florida are asked to stop collecting blood because of the latest zika fears. the fda warning yesterday affected blood banks in two different counties. as we reported to you case, four cases of zika possibly unrelated to travel are now under investigation. they could be the first mosquito-born transmissions in the continental u.s.
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university hospital in miami. >> reporter: gayle, good morning. every year, around the world, 725,000 people die from mosquitoes and the viruses they carry. that makes mosquitos the deadliest animal in the world. with that in mind, the largest blood bank in the southeastern u.s. which operates here in miami been dade and broward counties, is now changing the way it handles blood donations because of the zika threat. starting today, one of largest blood banks, oneblood, will start testing every donation it receives for zika. >> it uses essentially what is a dna xerox machine or rna xerox machine in this case to amplify that genetic material to the point we can detect it. >> reporter: yesterday they asked blood banks in miami-dade and broward counties to stop
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blood sample can be tested for zika virus. it could be from mosquitoes here in south florida. this doctor is trying to confirm the source. >> one with of the ways in which it's being done is analyzing mosquitoes in the areas where these people who have not traveled and are infected are from. and the other way is this door-to-door surveillance where we discover individuals who may have had symptoms. >> reporter: earlier this week, and again today, dr. mardi will join health inspectors who will visit homes in the areas where zika patients live and work. local mosquito control workers are targeting those same neighborhood to eliminate mosquitoes and their breeding ground. >> release the mosquitoes, josh. >> reporter: dr. matthew is researching how to improve mosquito repellant.
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repellant. something you can put in a room or an area and then the mosquitoes avoid that area. >> reporter: stay away from the house entirely? >> yeah. this is useful not only in the united states but in other countries where there are really suffering from mosquito-born illness. >> reporter: dthe doctor says te both repellants on the market are those that contain deet. later today, the governor of florida rick scott will give a zika investigation scheduled 9::15 local time and we will be there. >> a dramatic new twist who murdered washington intern chandra levy.
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survivors at the auschwitz concentration camp. >> he honored more than 1 million people killed in the complex by the nazis. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: >> announcer: fastsigns. more than fast. more than signs. good is in every blue diamond almond. good is a catalyst, good is contagious. and once it gets going there is no stopping what you can do. get your good going. blue diamond almonds.
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good morning. 7:26, friday, july 29th. a live look from mobile 2 in hoboken on this rainy morning and drivers are waking up to a wet commute. john elliot has the forecast coming up. first, flooding in brooklyn. andrea grimes is live with more. >> reporter: there's some pretty incredible flooding on 9th street. there's no cars now but it's about a foot of water. you can see that cyclist going through it. this is 9th street between smith and second. we had pretty incredible rain around 5:00 this morning here in brooklyn, pounding the area leaving some flooding behind. this car standing next to -- or stopped next to our camera -- actually stalled in the
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and the driver had to escape through the window, through the driver's side window, but he was telling me there are pretty brave drivers continuing to go through as you can see now, easy for the trucks and suv's but a little bit of a tougher time for these smaller cars here. we didn't notice any other flooding in the area, just this street, again, 9th street in the quanious section of -- gowanus section of brooklyn. >> thank don't drown. john elliot in the weather center with the forecast. this is a day you don't want to push it in the flooded areas. >> reporter: i was thinking the same thing. brave maybe not the word i would use. i wouldn't risk it. there's flooding so be smart and you'll mess up your car. light rain and fog, 70 degrees now. heavier rain filling into parts of suffolk county. that is going to lead to a little urban and small stream flooding. they upped the advisory there through brooklyn and into
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follow this line into parts of the jersey shore, this is going to push through, really serving to slow you down. it's this east wind, keeps us wet this morning, it's better this afternoon. i'm jessica moore. we'll be back with another local update in about 25 minutes. "cbs this morning" returns in a moment.
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chelsea clinton, this is very touching and a beautiful moment. chelsea clinton came out and she introduced her mom. first, they had one of those big budget biographical introduction video. >> hillary rodham grew up in park ridge, illinois. >> i'm not saying hillary is going to win evangelicals but by god. that was good. >> hillary quietly attended debbie's wedding. >> that is just a little sound bite. actually, it was really beautiful and moving story, and i think it just proves what we have always known about hillary clinton, that no matter who you are, she will attend your wedding. >> morgan freeman, you know?
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doing could you do my answering machine voice? i think one of the most touching moments was chelsea and her mom when hillary came out on the stage and the way the two of them looked at each other, you really felt the deep connection between the two of them. that was beautiful to see. >> and followed that 12-minute video that was produced by sean deron. >> he is on on the case again. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, donald trump's ties to russia. we will look at the money trail from moscow to manhattan. changing memories of vladimir ti team have cashed in from kremlin allies. plus a new development in a murder mystery that captivated the nation. prosecutors dropped their case against a man facing a new trial in the 2001 killing of government intern chandra levy and what led to that decision and how levy's mother is responding. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. an emotional memorial for the three officers killed by a
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vice president joe biden spoke at the event and assured the officers' families that one day they would heal. the officers were targeted by a gunman who later was killed by police. big profits on google's company alphabet and their second quarter profit increased 24% compared to a year ago to more than $4.8 billion. it was driven by mobile and pad sales. amazon growing grip on retail sales pushed profit up more than 8 hundred% t dollars and that sent amazon stocks soaring. forbes says overnight, jeff bezos saw his net worth jumped $2.6 billion. >> ahead of warren buffett. >> he just looks great, doesn't he, jeff bezos? what money does. you go, jeff bezos. nice guy, too. "the washington post" looks at why prosecutors dropped their case against a man accused of
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ingmar guandique faced the trial for the 2001 murder. l levy was linked to congressman. erin, good morning. she is at rock creak park. >> reporter: chandra levy simple vanished in 2001 and her remains were found in rock creek park the main suspect at the time was congressman gary condit who was romantically linked to the 24-year-old but then not charged. then ingmar gunandique was charged because they had he confessed to the killing. he was serving a ten-year sentence killing two other women
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he was found guilty of murder but guandique has always maintained his innocence. the week following levy's disappearance made national headlines when it was revealed she was having an affair with a married congressman gary condit who never admitted the affair. while suspicion fell on condit, he was eventually ruled out as a suspect. >> i had nothing to do with her disappearance. guandique rested on the testimony of convicted felon armando morales, a jailhouse informant. >> this is really the most dramatic case that washington has seen in decade. >> reporter: "the washington post" reporter keith alexander says an acquaintance of morales secretly recorded his admission that he lied on the stand. how important was morales to this case? >> they had no dna, they had no eyewitnesses.
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nothing. >> reporter: guandique had already been granted a new trial, but, yesterday, a judge dismissed the charges. condit's lawyer issued a statement expressing his disappointment but says this in no way alters the fact that condit was long ago completely exonerated by authorities. levy's mother isn't giving up hope. >> i always want justice. but even if i doesn't bring calm back to a family that has been fractured by a horrendous crime like this. >> reporter: guandique's attorney says the dismissal of these charges vindicates his client but his client is likely to be deported back to el salvador which means the mystery of the disappearance of chandra levy remains a perplexing
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story. i covered this case and i feel her mother's pain but there is an interesting mystery here that i think deserved to be solved. >> we may never know. do you think? >> i don't know. >> i always want to know what happened to her. >> i'm not going to ask you who but do you have a sense who might have done it? >> i've always had some thoughts about it and never reported on it the last ten years. this happened right before 9/11. after 9/11 happened it kind of got washed from the pope francis paid an emotional visit to the nazi concentration camp in auschwitz, poland. more than a million people were killed there. seth doane is traveling with the pope in poland. >> reporter: the pope's visit to aurk witnessauschwitz was a somp of his visit. 90% of the population here is catholic and where the wound of
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the pope walked alone through that infamous gait at auschwitz. a sharp contrast to the fences and barbed wire of this place. for nearly 15 minutes, he sat in silent prayer. the pontiff then prayed again in the blackened prison cell where catholic saint max milan colby volunteered his life to save another. at nearby including this lady gathered to watch the pope. you're jewis and he is a christian leader. >> the holocaust was not only a huge tragedy, it is a european tragedy. >> reporter: this is not the first time a pope has traveled here for auschwitz. john paul, ii came as well as pope deny addict.
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would, instead, remain silent. >> let me tell you. it is silence. silence displays stronger than words. >> reporter: the pope's only word were those he wrote down in a guest book. cruelty. norah? >> wow. what an incredible visit there. >> powerful image too of the pope sitting alone praying. >> very powerful. seth doane, thank you so much. donald trump has changed his answers on vladimir putin. up next, we will look at how he has tried to make money talk in russia. you're watching "cbs this morning." i love you so much.
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democratic party. the fbi warned hillary clinton's campaign in march that it was targeted by hackers. that is weeks before a computer breach was discovered by the democratic national committee. the democrats have accused vladimir putin of stealing the stolen e-mails to help donald trump's presidency. julianna goldman is here more. >> reporter: questions about russia's involvement in the dnc hacked room happened over this entire convention and donald trump has talked about russia being a hot business climate as he has been trying to bring his brand to moscow for decade. ? >> reporter: most americans might not know russian pop star
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familiar. >> what is wrong with you, amman. >> reporter: a cameo of donald trump sitting in a board room. >> you're fired. >> reporter: he is the son of russian, a vladimir putin ally who is worth, according to forbes 1.3 billion. they run the crocus group, a firm that helped bring trump's miss universe pageant to moscow. >> you look what is going on in russia and moscow and it's doing, it's booming. >> reporter: when trump returned to the u.s., he said he had a relationship with putin. >> i spoke indirectly and directly with president putin who could not have been nicer. >> our next president, donald j. trump. >> reporter: nearly three years later, trump changed his tune. >> i never met putin. i don't know who he is. >> reporter: he had three real
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ground. in a 2007 deposition, he spoke about plans for a trump international hotel in moscow and meetings with russian businessmen. it's ridiculous that i wouldn't be investing in russia, trump said. russia is one of the hottest places in the world for investment. >> i will tell you right now, zero. i have nothing to do with russia. >> reporter: but russians have bought trump's conned minions and deals that were partially financed by a which has connections to private russian money. >> wouldn't it be nice as we got along with russia? i'm all for it. >> reporter: trump financial's disclosures do not show any russian assets or investments. >> and i'm proud to stand by our allies and nato against any threat they face, including from rusch. >> reporter: that hasn't stopped the clinton campaign from making an issue of his russian connections. >> i think i get along very well with vladimir putin.
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that would empower the russian leaders to advisers who have made millions like campaign chairman paul manafort who worked for viktor. to be clear, trump has no relationships with russians? >> that is what ed. that is what i said. that is, obviously, what our position is. >> reporter: it seems that putin is fond of donald trump. he is a very vivid talented, no doubt about that, but this is not up to us to decide if he is worthy. it is up to the voters in the united states. the russian leader said that last december. wee wiki leaks is threatening to release more threatening. gayle, many of those questions could be answered if trump released his tax returns.
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questions. i know, norah. i'm sure that wasn't your intention but you let paul m manafort with a hum moment. >> i had no idea of this reporting by julianna and our investigative team. really fascinating. >> videotaped they say lives forever. julianna, thank you. democrats had a blast on the dnc stage after hillary clinton's historic speech. a blast.
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well she loves to say, "well, fantastic!" a lot. i do say that, you see... i study psychobiology. i'm a fine arts major. nobody really believes that i take notes this way, but they actually make sense to me. i try to balance my studying with the typical college experience. this windows pc is a life saver! being able to pull up different articles to different parts of the screen is so convenient.
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i think when people hear about memory care they're scared, they think that it's sad. i think it's important for everyone to know that there is so much more to memory support than the stigmas you hearabout. that these residents still have lives and their lives still matter and that they are still living their lives. that they're not locked away and that they still have a lot to live for, you know, that they have people that care about them and they have people that love them and i love them, so (laughs). call now to find out how we can put our 30 years of understanding to work for your loved one today. a sea of balloons washed out democrats on the dnc's final night and they took full advantage. people on simple shared some of the special images of the downpour, including this one from bill clinton. tim kaine punched and kicked them around as he took in the moment.
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acceptance speech. why not? >> i was going to say, why not? why not? at one point, a balloon ended up between my knees. i don't know how that happened or why that happened, but you really do need to get caught up in the moment. then it gets a little scary too. have you ever had balloons stuck between your knees, norah? you cannot walk. >> gayle, we are good friends but we are on live television. >> we will be right back. dotcom superstar. and us, we'll be right there with you, helping with the questions you need answered to get your brand new business started. we're legalzoom and we've already partnered with over a million new business owners to do just that. check us out today to see how you can become one of them. legalzoom. legal help is here. ? if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis,
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good morning. 7:56. friday, july 29th. it's going to be a wet start to your friday. i'm jessica moore. john elliot with coming up. the situation in brooklyn we told but is getting better. andrea grimes with more. >> reporter: that's right. it's a lot better since the last time we checked with you about a half-hour ago. let me step out of the way, on 9th street between 2nd and smith. you can see the floodwaters receded this morning. let's show you video from really just a short time ago. when there was, roughly about six inches of water down the
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several cars braving the conditions and still just driving through it. earlier this morning there was some pounding rain, 5:00 a.m. we spoke with an uber driver earlier who didn't see the flooding in the dark, his car stalled in the middle of that water. he actually just pushed his stalled car into the parking lot here as i've been talking. in pretty decent spirits but said had he seen the water he would never have driven through it. we have reports of p jersey city but for now in this part of brooklyn the flooding is a lot better. andrea grymes, cbs 2 news. >> don't be driving through the puddles. if they look too deep for your car to get through. john, you were saying it could mess up your car if you're not careful. >> absolutely. it's interesting, the national weather service in sync with what we're seeing with andrea, they dropped the flood watch
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advisory for suffolk and central and south jersey now. already parts of the area over an inch of the rain, again we're dealing with more rain. the heaviest to the south, it will be better this afternoon. i'm jessica moore. we're back with another local update in about 25 minutes. "cbs this morning" returns in a
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? it is friday, july 29th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including hillary clinton's hard hitting acceptance speech. plus a look back to another histic 1991. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. hillary clinton highlighted her sharp differences with donald trump in a historic speech to the democratic national convention. >> for the first time in modern history that a nominee argued her opponent was simply incapable of doing the job. >> i was struck by how much she went after donald trump. it was a lot more than i would have expected. >> as you had, i mean, she went
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colorado and his ties were not made in michigan. they were all battleground states. >> the pope's visit would be most somber stop on his tour in poland where the wounds of world war ii are still raw. >> around the world, 725,000 people die from mosquitoes and the viruses they carry. that makes mosquitoes the deadt morning? >> a little crispy, norah, but, you know, you got in at the same hour i did. >> crispy is good. >> this morning you're looking at what three hours of sleep will do for you. >> oh, you got three, did you? showoff! i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. hillary clinton campaigns in pennsylvania today after the most important speech of her
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accepting the democratic presidential nomination. clinton said the country has problems, but donald trump has the wrong answers. >> don't let anyone tell you that our country is weak. we are not. don't let anyone tell you we don't have what it takes. we do. and most of all, don't believe anyone who says i, alone, can fix it. >> hillary clinton blasted trump's ability to handle tough issues, including national security. >> i've laid out my strategy for defeating isis. we will strike their sangaries from the air and support local forces taking them out on the ground. we will will surge our intelligence so we detect and prevent attacks before they happen. donald trump says, and this is a quote -- i know more about isis
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no, donald, you don't. you really think donald trump has the temperament to be commander in chief? donald trump can't even handle the rough and tumble of a presidential campaign. i can't put it any better than jackie kennedy did after the cuban missile crisis. she said that what worried president kennedy during that very dangerous time was that a war might be started, not by big men with self-control and restraint, but by little men, the ones moved by fear and pride. >> after her speech, donald trump quoted, donald trump tweeted, rather, quote, hillary's wars in the middle east have unleashed destruction, terrorism, and isis across the world. chelsea clinton introduced her mother last night and called
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wants for the country. >> i never once doubted that my parents cared about my thoughts and my ideas, and i always, always knew how deeply they loved me. that feeling of being valued and loved, that's what my mom wants for every child. >> clinton posted a photo of herself watching her daughter to instagram with the word, "so proud." >> they could have both tweeted the same picture and had the same caption. chelsea was 12, going on 13, when she first went to the white house and now 36 and a mother of two. good to see her on stage. >> she had a baby just about five and a half weeks ago. >> she looks good. democratic delegates in 2013 cheered what julio castro's
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came from mexico in 1911. >> she wasn't a 6-year-old or an orphan but as a girl, she walked past store-front signs that said no dogs or mexicans allowed. her life wasn't easy and she didn't always feel welcome, but she never stopped believing in america's sacred promise that her sacrifices would be rewarded with opportunity for herself, and her family. she kept up her part of that promise by life babysitting and cooking and cleaning houses. and the fact that her grandson is standing here on this stage tonight is proof that america kept its promise too. >> the texas congressman said he and his brother, the u.s. housing secretary, have a story that is not unique. castro called it part of america's story. the mayor in massachusetts is digging in his heels in a fight over the black lives matter sign.
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protest the banner. it has been displayed on the sh city hall outside of boston the past year. the protesters called it offensive after police killings in dallas and baton rouge. the mayor says the sign is not coming down. >> that sign went up not as the result of an efforts of one elected official but as a result of an engagement with the community and an expression and recognition that hate, a significant portion of our day. we can honor our police officers and first responders and public safety official while treating communities fairly and qaequall. those aren't competing messages. >> members of the black lives matter movement also held a real rally in support of the sign. >> the mayor makes a good point. they don't have to be competing messages. they are both very important. the music and movies that
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recession at the time and the country was dealing with police brutality and equality and unrest over the status quo. it was an inspiring time for creative artists too. we take a look back this morning to the year 1991 and the movies and the music that made an impa impact. ? >> nobody move! >> i'm engaged and i'm getting married! ah! >> saddam hussein started this cruel world against kuwait. tonight, the battle has been joined. ? o say can you see by the dawn's early light ? >> king suffered a broken leg and battered face and continues to be held on a possible throw violation.
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>> and that is why today, i proudly announce my presidency for president of the united states of america! >> the soviet union came to an end yesterday. >> welcome to our broadcast. i'm charlie rose. ? >> previous few years had been a golden age of pop. michael jackson. prince. the biggest rock band in america was guns and roses. >> awe a pent-up desire for something new. ? live and let die ? >> alternative rock. it changed what rock 'n' roll was dramatically. overnight, new stars were joined
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>> for me, 1991 is all about nirvana and all about curt cobain and the video that sound like team spirit and the explosion of grunge. it was really a movement. it was like a youth movement. ? ? hello hello get down in the nation ? >> and then here are these guys coming out of the basement of seattle with this whole new sound. more stripped-down, more raw, something you could really feel. ? >> it was real interesting thing that i think did coincide with a lot of the hip-hop energy from various groups, just taking it to the streets, to the gutter, banging on your door, banging on our tv screen. ? >> it all came from kind of a
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folks were really trying to make these connections. they were trying to make these connections with what had come before to where they were going. >> guess where they went? one. number one pop album in america. >> there have been studies now that that year, 1991, which was the first year that a rap album went on a billboard charge that inherited the er rap was the most influential music. >> the album sold, i guess, a million dollars in one weeks, because a lot of white kid bought it. they were like, whoa, nwa is like outlaws at the time. ? >> you know, that life in south central l.a. for black youth, black and brown youth was rough. ? i heard shots ? >> nwua was a window into that
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aggression musically to people affecting people in the streets. it resonated with us in ways that perhaps music and voice of artists hadn't done since back in the '60s. >> you got a problem here? you got a problem? >> boys in the hood was interesting. ice krcube was the main member the group and young j came together and they just put a perfect frame around life in l.a., south central, in the hood, and it was a very successful movie. this time was just a really, really pivotal time of black america so this movie "boys in the hood" comes in. i'm not thinking about all of these bigger issues. i'm just thinking about the
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neighborhood was going through. >> silence of the lambs." it was cerebral and haunting and realistic, and the chemicals between anthony hopkins and jodie foster was magnetic. you almost rooted for the guy who ate people! like what is wrong with you? >> they want to test me. i ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice chianti. >> that was the first time that films on the world and kind of the fact that they could be this grand collective experience. >> the thing i remember most about "terminator 2." it was the best action movie i had ever seen it in my life and i saw it, like, five times in the theater. >> you have linda hamilton that is just equally jacked to arnold schwarzenegger, okay? the guns.
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i'm going to kick your -- from a female. no one has ever seen that on screen. >> will you take care of this gun? >> why did you bring that for? >> it's so cinematic and so instantly identifiable "thelma and louise." you're in the grand canyon and a convertible and it's americana. first time you saw two women strong and self-powered and radical and i think it's reshaped the way we saw women and saw those kind of films for years to come. >> that is awesome. >> 1991, just the fact you have fab 5 and charlie rose in the same sentence to me and along with guns and roses. >> a big year for me too.
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we are the clad second to none and the class of '91. i graduated from high school and went to college and met my husband. i didn't marry him in '91. i was just 18 then. how about you, gayle? >> it was just 1991. nothing momentous happened to me. i was just here and happy to be here. >> come on! >> and we are happy you're here. >> and now i'm happy to be here. >> forget the campaign buttons and bumper stickers. meet the woman with designs of her own in the battle for the white house. that's next on "cbs this morning." you don't let anything keep you sidelined. that's why you drink ensure. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure.
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i have seven obama dresses and six hillary dresses. >> my goodness. that is kelly jacobs. mead her. a democratic convention delegate and from mississippi. she wears her politics on her sleeve and nearly everywhere else. last night as hillary clinton accepted her party's nomination, jacobs wore the candidate's image big and bold. earlier in the week, president obama and and the first lady. jacobs makes the dresses herzegovina. >> there are articulate positions who can talk about the positions hillary and what they are going to do, so some of us could just provide the decoration in the background and that is me. >> jacobs says she wears her outfits while shopping and can quickly tell people politics by their reaction! the conventions are the place for an outfit like that. everybody is dressed up and has their hats and a lot of
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she was a hit good morning, it's 8:25 on this friday morning, july 29th, a wet start to the weekend. john has the forecast coming up, but police are searching for two men who robbed an accounting office in brooklyn yesterday. one of the men was seen running they tased and pistol whipped an employee and tied up another before stealing money. two women were wanted in a bias assault, they attacked a 29-year-old woman on the number 1 train after making antiasian comments. the victim was treated for head
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opening up an office. it has three locations. beginning tuesday and continuing for three months, they'll send tickets to broadway and off broadway tickets. that's between 62nd and 63rd streets. it sells tours to boost sales to locals. now, avenues, they're seeing the worst of it after heavy rain caused flooding this morning. be cautious during your morning commute. let's find out what to expect in the next hour or so. we're not done yet, we have rain in the city, we have pockets of fog. that serves to slow you down. numbers have retreated a bit. they've trimmed the flash flood watch for much of the area.
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and the jersey shore. it's pouring through parts of month math and into ocean county. we have the soaking rain for suffolk and the south shore as well. it's been raining for hours, and it's hard to deal with that. it's the rainfall rates that are causing problems into parts of the jersey shore. here's the good side. we'll wrap this up. beneficial rain, we're starting to see a break morris county. it's bringing a wet morning. wrap around showers but it improves, tomorrow starts dry and we see the inverse in the afternoon. we'll be back with a local update in 25 minutes.
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? that is presidential historian goodwin in the middle dancing to ladies night on the late show with stephen doris kearns goodwin has got some moves and there she is in our greenroom. we will look at the possibilities of a woman president after 42 years of men in charge of the country. >> also coming up in this half hour camping gets a change of scenery. millennials are leading a makeover. ahead how they are coming along with the trip. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe.
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usa's uniforms for the olympic ceremony in brazil. they consist of navy blazers and white jeans and boat shoes. the designer is ralph lauren. we will have full coverage of the rio olympics when they kick off a week from today. >> new york "daily news" reports on long time performers are off the show. bob mcgrath and roscoe orman and luis the show says it's always evolving to meet the educational needs of today's children. a lot of people will be disappointed by that. >> they will be. jody cantor reports on clinton acknowledges the importance last night in her acceptance speech. >> standing here as my mother's daughter and my daughter's mother, i'm so happy this day has come. i'm happy for grandmothers and
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i'm happy for boys and men because when any barrier falls in america, it clears the way for everyone. >> "the new york times" correspondent and cbs news contributor jodi cantor is here and pulitzer prize winning author doris kearns goodwin is here. good morning. >> good morning. >> jodi, is cracking the glass ceiling the same as dismantling it? >> that is the question. and would president hillary clinton be kind of re-enacting all of these dynamics we have seen a million times before or would she be able to change them just by showing up to work? every day. >> some said it would influence their lives and their thinking. >> that is the hope. we talked to women all across
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female presidency would be a force in their own lives and said it would change their work places or cause them to act and think about themselves differently. but the truth is we do not really know because, of course, does a far off president in washington really affect your own behavior? and she has raised historic hopes. she has promised a lot to women. those things will be very difficult to deliver on. >> when we look at history and women in powerful positions in government, thatcher gandhi in indiana, what does it say? >> i think often a disconnect between those women experienced and the general population did. think about gandhi, a prime minister, and the amount of power and agency that most indian women had. things are a little bit different with clinton, though, because she would be coming into office, let's stipulate there is a very hard-fought election to come. she would be coming into office
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just to give you a couple of quick examples. as commander in chief, one of the things she would be overseeing would be the integration, the final integration of women into combat roles in the military. she would be trying to expand parental lead at a time when statewide parental leave is a reality across the country. the potential there is actually some link and connection between her achievement and the progress that everyday women are feeling. long from a historical point of view? >> it's still mystifies me it took so long. i think in part women didn't have a series of mentors to help guide them because so few women in politics so you didn't have the pool of talent. the pool of talent has doubled overnight by hillary getting to this mark. i think as jodi was saying, we don't have a parliamentary system. once you get into it you move to the top. you have to be an entrepreneur
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night. we have had 43 presidency and women are going to college more and medical school more and suppose the next 43 presidents are women? how would you guys feel? >> charlie, how would you feel? >> you know how i feel about women. >> you would love it. >> but then some little boy, you know, in 2025, when can i be president, please? >> that is the most important thing right there. e be whatever they want to be. >> i think so. you do need role models. i remember when i was in college and i read barbara tuchman "guns of august." an incredible book by a female historian opinion there weren't many and i thought if she can do it, maybe i can do that. the highest and free world leader may perhaps be a woman now. i think it's big. it is historic. >> it's a forward motion of history too.
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already as a gay american become a gay president and we may very well have had a gay president but we don't know. that is clearly the forward march. >> i think what we have seen the last 20 years in terms of groups that were excluded from power, excluded from dignity, moving forward, that is one of the most optimistic things i think i feel about america, despite all of the darkness that everybody else is talking about. it's great. >> doris, i'm glad you're here this morning. one of the things that president obama said in his speech was that there has never been a man or woman moreli hillary clinton to serve as president of the united states. you've written definitive biographies on lbj and teddy roosevelt and abraham lincoln. can you fact check that statement, please? >> well, you know, it's pretty true. i mean, because she had experience at the local level first in arkansas when she was first lady. and then she is in the white house itself. on so she sees the pressure that are on a president. for eight years and four years of secretary of state. then she is on the international stage and then in new york
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that experience matters. and then people argue what about like ability? i think more important in eastern like ability or experience is temperament and temperament is what the character is, the disposition, what do you make of your experience. you could have a lot of experience and learn nothing from it. >> bob gates has known a lot of presidents and says the most important quality of a best president has is temperament. >> i couldn't agree more. when fdr was interviewed like when he was 92, the supreme court justice and he came out saying he has a second-r intellect but a first-rate temperament and temperament is it. it means that is the attitude he took toward the depression compared to the trump convention where everything was so dark. the theme is happy days are here again in the middle of 1932. >> before you leave, doris, share with us what is your dancing move and your dancing technique? >> oh, god. >> that was on full display with stephen colbert. >> show us something we don't know. >> look at you! >> oh, gosh! i mean, the last time i was on
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if you're looking to go camping this weekend, you'll likely have a lot of company. nearly 1 in 3 americans go camping every year. the outdoor industry is growing after years of decline. last year, listen to this. people from more than 1 million household camped for the first time. nearly half were millennials between 18 and 35 years old. but the next generation isn't just enjoying the great outdoors. mireya villarreal shows us how it's also >> reporter: for these ten friends looking for the perfect camping spot, nothing beats catalina island which sits about 20 miles off the california coast. >> millennials are looking for unique destination. will go the extra mile if affords us an experience not
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pictures for his more than instagram followers. what drove him to this camp site was the amenities. island campground provides tents and stoves along with stand-up paddleboards and kayaks and also provides easy access to wi-fi. although camping has always been about connecting with nature, for yurk staying collected. 3 out of 24 say they use social media every day while traveling and seek out activities worth sharing. >> we want that photo. for me, i want it for memories but, of course, i think you can generally say that we want to post it and share it to our friends on facebook and instagram and snapchat. >> reporter: for those who say this is not camping, how do you respond to that? >> i say camping can be whatever you want it to be. i think as long as you're getting out to nature, it's a start. i would urge them to, i mean,
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few minutes and experience nature like their parents or grandparents might have. >> reporter: campgrounds of america, the worlds largest system of privately held campgrounds is taking moat and surveyed thousands of campers for their annual camping report and redesigning some of their five campgrounds. toby. >> what they at the us recreation. we are jumping pillows to swimming pools and miniature golf courses and zip lines and some have wi-fi. >> reporter: with younger customers now spending money to camp, the 646 billion dollar recreation industry has started to rethink their gear. >> they are kind of adjusting their products to fit a more leisurely approach to the outdoors and more comfortable approach to the outdoors. >> reporter: brand like the
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te tech natural gears. now they are likely to include friends casual gathered around a camp fire. >> it's kind of going from being outdore to being outsidy. >> reporter: not everybody here knows how to build a fire for example from stracratch? >> not everybody knows how to put up a tent but they can figure it out. equipment, sites focus on that and hip camp and airbnb make it easier for people to find their unique spots. >> wherever you feel comfortable in the outdoor, get outside and enjoy nature. ta just take over it. >> reporter: making this the next generation to discover the outdoors so great.
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villarreal, catalina island. >> talk about making america great anything. anything to get you outside is great. national park service is celebrating their 100th anniversary. if they could just figure out room service in camping, i'd be in. >> next, a look at all that mattered this week. you're watching "cbs this
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on them. it takes bill clinton. >> she's a natural leader and the best darn change-maker i've ever met in my entire life. >> i accept your nomination for president of the united states! >> happy cheers in the room for hillary clinton. >> it just shows that hard work actually >> it's huge! >> we're with hillary. >> there has never been a man or a woman more qualified than hillary clinton. >> my daughters and all of our son and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the united states. >> there are a lot of politicians on this stage this week who are vouching for hillary. >> hillary clinton must become the next president.
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be president of the united states. >> the u.s. officials admit that russian spies hacked american target. >> experts have attributed this to the russians. >> to be clear, mr. trump has no financial relationships with any russian oligarch? >> that's what ed. that's what i -- that's is, obviously, our position. >> trump's people counts on the democratic party e-mail scandal. >> russia, i hope you're able to find the 30,000ai >> the case against the officers did not hold up in court. >> we do not believe that freddie gray killed himself. >> when hinckley leaves this psychiatric hospital, he will live with his mother. >> i hope he will not injure anyone else when they let him out. >> is he kind of dull? >> he plays the harmonica.
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>> mo, your car is here! >> i know. it's the ankle thing. it fell off! >> so we don't get the two of you mixed up. >> we are twins but i'm a little bit uglier than him. >> anything hillary clinton could do or say to win you over? >> nothing. >> what about the others? they were talking! tape your mouth! >> the mount the podium where hillary will be crowned. >> i'm not going on. i'm not going on. >> all that. >> can you tell me how to get to betsy ross' home? >> surely. go out to the street and you can't miss it. >> thank you. >> and oh, and get yourself some stockings. >> and all that matters! on "cbs this morning." >> i'm not one to gloat, but i
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there's one place where america's pastime is preserved for all time. ?? and that's not the only thing you can only find in new york state. ?? discover something one of a kind in new york. ?? new york. it's all here. it's only here. [ bus engine revs ] i don't understand. where do they all go? well, we have plenty at staples and all at low prices. all right. get another. back to school or back for more?
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good morning. 8:55 on this friday, july 29th. wet start to the day today. cbs 2 is on storm watch this morning. check out this flooding in gowanus, around 9th street between smith and second it after heavy rain fell 5:00 this morning. the flooding is starting to recede now but drivers are warned to be cautious during the morning commute. mobile 2 was out in the rain earlier. this is southbound route 287 in wanaque, new jersey, you can see the rain coming down. watch for slick surfaces. for more let's go to meteorologist john elliot. >> thank you. this is the view from the empire state building looking down into the city. you can see drops on the lens.
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brooklyn receded, rain and fog though continues around the city. there's heavier rain to the east. many of the advisories have been dropped and this is the back end of this. look at this around islip and south shore, this is going to slow you down. that will continue and there's more that will feed into that. then you head into parts of monmouth and ocean county. that is where we're seeing more rain. look here, into parts of middlesex, somerset, getting a break now, it's still county but starting to see the rain push out. what happens during the course of the morning, wee see more and more dry air filter in. we see sun this afternoon. there's a break saturday. there's more rain in the works for sunday. timing it out, you see a few leftover wraparound showers wrapping around that low but not the coverage that we had this morning. that is into the afternoon and evening hours. even mixing in some sun. then saturday starts dry but by saturday afternoon north and
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>> announcer: his roommate took his ride. >> there was beer bottles everywhere. there was liquor bottles everywhere. >> announcer: straight into a tree. >> my car was wrecked. >> judge larry: nice job. shame on you. >> he was just saying like, "it's okay." i don't have to pay for it. >> judge tanya: you trashed this car. >> announcer: "hot bench." judge tanya acker. judge larry bakman. judge patricia dimango. three judges. one verdict. >> judge patricia: we've reached our decision. >> announcer: in a court of law, it's called a "hot bench." courtney king is suing his ex-roommate, 22-year-old chastity garden, for driving his car without permission and returning it damaged. >> judge patricia: thank you. please be seated. >> sonia: your honor, this is case number 37, king vs. garden. >> judge tanya: thank you, officer montejano. mr. king, you are suing the
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