tv CBS Overnight News CBS February 8, 2016 3:35am-4:30am EST
3:35 am
of course we did. when the whole thing happened, our investigators tried to find him. but he'd moved. it was like he'd gone off the grid. and then when the fda rejected it and the drug was dead anyway, we just dropped the whole thing. i can get you what we have on him. manny: nicole's at the doctor's. it's only a couple of blocks away. she should be here soon. i remember this park when i was a kid. you couldn't even walk through it. looks nice now. this dealer, martenz... how bad? he's pretty bad. deals crack, heroin... works in cypress hills. he uses kids as go-betweens, so it's tougher to pin him down. sorry, i have to ask... is that the bat? no. i'm not that proud. that's a gift from a kid i used to coach. he's in the minors now. arm like a cannon. (chuckles)
3:36 am
i'll see to it. actually, mr. rose... that's not why i came. i, uh... i wanted to tell her it's okay. i understand. she doesn't have to do anything she doesn't want to do. the da's office has their guy, and there's other evidence. they'll just have to make the best case they can. and who knows, maybe martenz'll plead out, do a little time. doesn't feel right to try to talk her into testifying. martenz killed a boy. a good boy. she can explain to a jury exactly what happened. (phone blips) i'm sorry; i'm getting called away. it's another case. would you tell her what i said? thanks for the water. (door closes) no luck finding lawrence cranford? worse luck. did find him. lawrence cranford was apparently so disgusted by his experience with big pharma--
3:37 am
"...a company so poisoned by profits "that even the few good souls who remember why they got into health care are silenced"-- that he drove to mexico, took up surfing, and settled in baja, where he was killed by a rash of unseasonably rough waves in 2012... placing my degree of certainty that he is not adam peer at around 100%. bullet-riddled man. is the decor in here not american enough for you? we could get some rockwells, deep fat fryer... no, this is the gift i was telling you about, for marcus. it's the target from his requalification test. officer mulgrew is a firearms instructor. he pulled it for me. it's a nice grouping. watson: hmm. other potential adam peers? each of them, at some point today. other researchers, executives at merrill-grand involved in the development of toproxefin. so you think adam peer was someone else inside the company. unfortunately, i've also already eliminated each of them, as either a coconspirator in the fraud
3:38 am
lawrence cranford is the only individual who knew that his teammates were concealing negative data, but was not himself part of the deceit. well, it has to be someone else he told. according to his own e-mails, he only told a handful of higher-ups who rejected his warnings. unless, of course, one of them didn't. "...even the few good souls who remember why they got into health care..." he wasn't talking about himself. one of the higher-ups tried to do the right thing and cranford knew it. watson: ms. buckner! oh, i'm sorry, i'm actually late for an appointment... no, no, i'm sure you can spare us a moment. alternatively, we could head up to your superiors and share with them our suspicions that you're adam peer. in 2008, you headed a panel examining the corrosive effect of profit margins on american health care. and you must have known this would go over poorly with your new bosses, 'cause you left it off your resume
3:39 am
when lawrence cranford shared his concerns about toproxefin, you wanted to stop the drug. but you couldn't. not without losing your job. you created adam peer as a way to blow the whistle anonymously. and when your bosses still thought it was someone inside the company, you were able to deflect suspicion, because you were the one in charge of finding him. according to the files you gave us, you sent your investigators looking for cranford. he looked the part, but you only needed to run out the clock. as soon as the fda rejected the drug, you were also the person who called off the search. i'm quite certain a thorough scan of your computer would reveal some of adam peer's footprints. we don't have a warrant, but... we're betting that your employers will cooperate without one. you're only half right. because i'm only half of "adam peer." you have a partner. had. barry. the two of us were adam peer together. the murder victim barry granger. i would never have hurt him. and you already know he didn't hurt himself. i'm sorry, but...
3:40 am
3:41 am
karen: i already told your consultants this e-mail didn't come from us. i didn't send it, and barry obviously didn't discredit himself. someone hijacked our pseudonym and used it to attack barry's study. that's quite a hobby you two had going. how did it start? (clears throat) barry and i met at a conference about a year before the toproxefin scandal. we shared a lot of the same concerns... including the influence of money on good science. so you came up with the idea of adam peer together. at first, it was just a way to expose toproxefin. and it worked. we got away with it. and then, a few months later, barry was reading an article in another journal and he noticed that some pictures of tissue samples were duplicates. adam peer already existed, so we used him again. and then we started looking for things.
3:42 am
data that was too perfect... before we knew it, adam peer had become something bigger than either of us. why didn't you say something when dr. granger was killed? watson: because it would have meant undoing all the good that adam peer had done. if it came out that you were an exec at a big drug company, it would've looked like any rival study you'd debunked was motivated by greed. barry and i talked about coming forward after he was accused of fraud. he refused, even to clear his own name. he knew that eventually his work would defend itself. so when he died, i... i did what i thought he would have wanted. which was nothing. can you account for your whereabouts wednesday morning about 6:00 a.m.? uh, i was just coming off of a red-eye from san francisco with about a half-dozen of my colleagues. their numbers are in my phone; they'll confirm it. you're gonna tell them, aren't you? you're gonna tell everyone
3:43 am
the device that dr. granger was testing could save countless lives. and the person who attempted to decry it was an imposter, so... how could we not? so why go to the trouble of discrediting barry granger when you're going to kill him anyway? to explain the suicide? perhaps the target wasn't dr. granger, but his work. consider the combined effect of the killer's plan: you lob an accusation of fraud and then stage it to look like granger killed himself in shame. so you think this is corporate espionage? loathe as i am to admit it, granger's benefactor hank prince may be right when he sees himself as the victim in all this. prince: i can't believe it. barry was adam peer. just not the one who called your invention into question. we've notified the journal his study appeared in the e-mail accusing fraud was, in fact, fraud itself. might not be the same as having dr. granger back to clear his name, but it should reassure your investors and expedite the vetting of the good doctor's work.
3:44 am
you have no idea how much time you've just saved me. but... what now? obviously, "adam peer" didn't kill barry, so who did? we believe it was someone who had motive to attack you and your work. is it safe to assume the hound has competition? well, of course. any particular rivals spring to mind? i'll write you a list. bell: mr. rose. everything all right? i had a talk with nicole this morning. i told her that i thought that testifying was the right thing to do. it did not go well. she left. went to stay with family of hers upstate. sorry to hear that. but, you know, like i told you the other day... she needs to do what she needs to do. i want to take her place. what? i want to testify in her place. nicole and i must've talked a thousand times. about what she saw that night. i know every detail, inside and out.
3:45 am
you could go to jail, i could lose my shield... and do you really think martenz's attorney wouldn't see right through it? you coming forward, months after the shooting, just as nicole backs out? he'd eat you alive on the stand and martenz would still go free. mr. rose, i'm confused. i-i know you. i know how much you did for your school, your community... how much? how much have i done? would you want your child to go to rooker high? would you want to raise them in my neighborhood? you really don't think you made a difference? quame martenz shot that boy right in front of nicole. didn't care that he had a family that loved him. didn't care what that would do to nicole. i have poured my life's blood into this neighborhood. never did anything but the right thing.
3:46 am
i was 12. they tried to get me to join up. they beat me half to death. but you know what? i didn't end up in any gang. and neither did a lot of kids. it's because of you. look, go home, okay? let me worry about martenz. we don't get him this time, we will get him the next. you have my word. well, from what i can tell, the company closest to getting another cancer-detection device on the market is called radner science. they're one of the biggest medical device companies in the world. who's winning? i'm having second thoughts. about? tomorrow night's festivities. i'm pleased for detective bell.
3:47 am
he deserves to be feted. okay, first things first. are you worried about being in a bar? i'm not worried about triggers. i'm worried i'll distract. as i said... he would not have invited you if he didn't want you there. (grunts) misanthropy was so easy, watson. elegant. i miss it sometimes. (phone rings) captain? i thought you'd want to know that guy that was working with barry granger, hank prince, he's at the station. did something happen? you could say that. his estranged wife was shot dead a few hours ago, in her home, with a gun registered to him.
3:48 am
what happens when lobster gets grilled, baked, and paired with even more lobster? you get hungry. and you count the seconds until red lobster's lobsterfest is back with the largest variety of lobster dishes of the year. like new dueling lobster tails with one tail stuffed with crab, and the other with langostino lobster mac-and-cheese, it's a party on a plate! and you know every bite of 'lobster lover's dream' lives up to its name. hey, eating is believing.
3:49 am
i didn't hurt my wife, okay? i would never hurt my wife. that why she took out a restraining order against you three months ago? prince: her lawyer put her up to that. we had an argument on the phone, okay? that was it. well, according to her statement, the argument got heated, you argued about the divorce, and you told her you weren't gonna let her take a dime. she was being unreasonable. look, for the last time, i was in a cab with my girlfriend when andrea was shot. her name is sloan teller. we were going from her place to my place. you got a medallion number, driver's name, anything at all we can use to confirm your story? 'cause the whole "my girlfriend is my alibi" thing is starting to wear a little thin. i got a receipt, i think.
3:50 am
are you two seriously just gonna stand there? tell him what you told me today. we went to see mr. prince because we believe someone was targeting him and his work. prince: you hear that? someone is after me. someone who wants my device to fail. first they wrote that letter to discredit barry's study. then they killed him. but your people saw through all that, so now they're framing me for andrea's murder. she was killed with your gun. which must've been stolen from my home. they found it on the coffee table a few feet from andrea's body, right? tell me, what kind of idiot would i have to be to kill my wife with my own gun and then just leave it behind? you know what? i'm done talking. i-i want my lawyer. either this guy did the dumbest job shooting his ex i've ever seen, or someone's doing a really good job ruining his life. mm. the man developed a machine for detecting cancer via exhalations-- i don't think he's dumb. you think he's telling the truth?
3:51 am
he had motive to kill his wife, there were no signs of forced entry, so she probably knew her attacker, his gun was the murder weapon. but there were no prints on it, and he does have a point. he'd have to be an idiot to kill her this way. well, i'm gonna send a team to his house to find that receipt. we don't find it, he better pray you two figure out who's gunning for him. i'm dreaming this, right? you're not seriously waking me up again. the detectives who searched hank prince's home found the taxi receipt, just like he said they would. they identified the cab driver; they showed him photographs of prince and his girlfriend, sloan teller. he i.d.'d the both of them. remembered them vividly, mostly ms. teller, vividly. i haven't even met her, and i can picture her vividly. but so what? the guy has an alibi. he could've hired anyone to shoot his wife. would you hire someone to kill someone for you, go to the trouble of establishing an alibi, and then hand that person your gun to commit the crime? for the time being, mr. prince has been released from custody. and until a better theory presents itself,
3:52 am
under our previous assumption that someone is targeting prince in an effort to undermine the hound. i get that framing the head of a company for murder could throw a hitch in his business plan, but it's a hell of a long way to go. precisely the reason that i think we need to focus our attention on an individual disposed to going to such lengths. last night, you mentioned a likely home for our corporate saboteur, a company called radner science. i wasn't even sure you heard that. well, not only did i hear it, i spent most of the night considering it, and i have concluded that i agree. i read the autobiography of its ceo, charles "call me chuck" hammond, and he's just the kind of sun tzu-quoting, take no prisoners corporate executive that one might expect to ignore all boundaries of moral decency. plus, the company is developing a device in direct competition to the hound. however, from what i can infer from the internet, they may be as much as one year behind in the race. come on. are you okay? you seem hyper. i may have had a coffee or three with my tea this morning. are you joking about this? two lives have been taken, a third is on the verge of ruination.
3:53 am
you do admit you know about hank prince and the two murders. of course i do. it's my job to know. because your cancer-detecting products are in competition. i don't know what sort of weird cloak and dagger world you live in, but in mine, we don't go around killing our competition. we don't have to because there is and always has been a pretty damn effective alternative. and what might that be? buying them. i have a whole floor full of analysts whose job is to do nothing more than pay attention to start-ups like hank prince. we watch, we wait, we prepare a bid, and then when all this dust settles, if his device is any good, we pay him handsomely for his company. we put the words radner science on the side of his hound, and nobody's happier than me. make sense? entirely. yes, our apologies for interrupting your breakfast. you've been most helpful. (sighs) are you crashing? you look like you're crashing. no, i'm ascending, actually. i believe i've determined who has the strongest motive
3:54 am
hank prince. (door opens) captain. care to explain why photographs of my client and his girlfriend have been taped to those chairs? what's this? holmes: we met chuck hammond this morning. colorful chap. he was kind enough to give us this. it's is radner science's financial analysis of your company, complete with a handy graph plotting its projected value over time. if the hound proves to be as successful as barry granger's research suggested it would be, you stand to become a very wealthy man. watson: your problem is that you were in the middle of a divorce. your wife's lawyers were busy trying to figure out how much you would be worth in the future so they would know how much you would have to share. you wanted your future to disappear, but only temporarily. holmes: you came up with a tidy plan. impersonate adam peer to suggest that dr. granger falsified his results. then murder him, stage it as a suicide,
3:55 am
who could defend his work and legitimizing the accusations of fraud. once the divorce was finalized and the company was out of your wife's reach, well, barry's work would be vindicated. the company's value would skyrocket, and you would be able to keep your millions. gregson: your company's value was gonna rebound too quickly. you were still dead set against sharing anything with your wife, so you went to plan b-- you killed her. holmes: realizing that as the estranged husband, you would inevitably be the prime suspect, you hatched another devious plan. you framed yourself for a murder you actually committed. the other day, we told you that we thought someone was targeting you. you took that idea and ran with it. you murdered your wife because you thought it fit with the narrative of our case. you were being framed by someone who wanted to destroy you. you're forgetting my client has an alibi for both murders. you interviewed sloan teller and the cab driver yourselves. ms. teller wouldn't be the first girlfriend to falsely alibi a guy for his wife's murder.
3:56 am
this is the actual partition from the cab in question. have a look through it. would it surprise you to learn that upon being reinterviewed, the cab driver admitted that he barely saw the gentleman in the backseat. his attention was far more focused on the provocatively dressed ms. teller. as you intended. we got a warrant for ms. teller's apartment. turns out, she spent most of the day yesterday on trueromantix.com, specifically searching for guys about your height, build and hair color who might be interested in going on a date with her last night. once we discovered that, she flipped on you pretty quick. (phone rings) bell. hey, man. yeah, that was mine. when? hawes: the way it was described to me, mr. rose walked up to mr. martenz on euclid avenue and...
3:57 am
a couple of martenz's friends returned fire. both were declared dead at the scene. did you know him? only the legend. (laughter, crowd chatter) and there was me thinking the party would be inside. hey. i wasn't sure you'd come. well, neither was i. had i known this would be the extent of the revelry, i might have committed much sooner. you ever have one of those nights? my fair share.
3:58 am
really back. harder than i've worked at anything my whole life. everyone in there is expecting me to be happy tonight, but... yeah. the work we do... there's often a price. i don't know. i guess i'm just... not ready to go inside yet. well, don't. not yet. there's a coffee shop on the corner. that an invitation? well, they'll still be here when you're r captioning sponsored by cbs and ford
3:59 am
the weekend insider from hollywood, your 24/7 celebrity conversation. >> knowing that another woman of color has not walked through that door is heartbreaking. >> halle berry breaks her silence on the oscar race controversy. >> that's just part of our good week. >> bad week. >> we finished second, and i want to tell you something. i'm just honored. >> including pamela anderson is the baywatch babe slipping into her iconic swimsuit for the reboot? >> do you ever put it on? >> yeah, in the shower and for my friends. >> then, the sag awards were like hollywood high. >> so we asked who's most likely to -- >> stalk leo dicaprio? >> who's most likely to pull a
4:00 am
>> the cast of state out of compton. >> they have photos of me in a compromising position. >> as new hollywood meets old hollywood. >> i'm not that old. >> did you hear her all right? >> now hollywood from the inside-out. it's the insider, together with yahoo. >> if i could sum up hollywood feelings on grease live this weekend, it's this -- are' the one that i want. i could watch that over and over and over. >> we're going to relive all those musical moments in a minute, but let's kick things off with the headlines in our good week -- >> bad week. >> today this meant hope that the glass ceiling was broken wide open. >> it was a good week for halle berry, sounding off and be being heard. >> that win almost 15 years ago was iconic. when i said the door tonight has
4:01 am
with every bone in my body, that this was going to incite change. and to sit here almost 15 years later and knowing that another woman of color has not walked through that door is heartbreaking. >> almost three weeks after oscars created a hollywood firestorm, the winner is voicing her discontent. >> i think the films coming out of hollywood aren't truthful. >> and that's not the only berry beef. she has had enough with hollywood's obsession with male-driven franchises and sequels. >> when a woman does have a success, because they think it's a fluke, she doesn't get an opportunity to like get back on the saddle again. men get sexy. we get old. that's the perception. >> and, it was a bad week for the donald. trumped by ted cruz in his first primary. >> we finished second. and i want to tell you something. i'm just honored.
4:02 am
republican has been able to do yet. he got in a big fight twwith donald trump, and he beat him. >> the media salivating over trump getting stumped in iowa. the new york daily news cover, dead clown walking. >> make america great again. it's very simple. >> one twitter user toog that slogan and re-imagined it, to make second place great again. there's no doubt the experience appears to have humbled trump, by his standards anyway. >> we will go on to easily beat hillary or bernie or whoever the hell they throw up there. iowa, we love you. in fact, i think i might come here and buy a farm. i love it, okay? thank you. thank you, everybody. and it it was a good week for former baywatch beauty pamela anderson. >> what do you think of them making a movie of baywatch?
4:03 am
i'm not a fan of movies made of tv shows. and they're spoofing a series which we took very seriously. and they asked me to be in the film. i don't know how that benefits me. i have such great things going on now. it might be fun to do a little cameo. >> oh, pam, please, you have to be in it. kelly rohrback is playing you. do you have any advice for her when she dons that red suit? >> i still have a couple of them. >> do you ever put it on and prance around the house? >> i put it on in the shower or for my friends. >> it was a huge day for the sag awards. >> it is kind of like a reunion and like high school. so we thought we'd have our own most likely moment.
4:04 am
youralisha. i want to say gachs,congratulations, because you've already won. >> this is the highest honor. >> i loved you and your movie so much. i just watched it yesterday. you're such a remarkable actor. you want to be on my show? we'll find you a role. >> maybe. >> maybe. oh, my god. >> the sag awards were like hollywood high. >> so we asked who's most likely to -- >> most likely to stalk leonardo dicaprio tonight? >> i think helen mirren is just one of the sassiest women. so i hope for leo's sake that it's her. >> while leo's become his first actor. >> thank you from the bottom of my heart. >> the stars were pondering, would he take home a few others? >> who is most likely to hook up with each other? michael fassbender?
4:05 am
poehler? >> probably leo and tina and amy for sure. >> let's go with leo, tina fey and amy, and i hope i get to be part of it. >> leo, tina fey and myself. >> who is most likely to wind up in the tabloids tomorrow, dame helen mirren, do you know who she is? >> no. >> jacob tremably. >> or the cast of downton abbey. >> the cast of downton abbey. >> who's most likely to pull a kanye if they don't win? the cast of mad men, "game of thrones" or downton abbey? >> the cast of straight out of compton. >> it really would have been amazing if straight out of compton had -- >> i just wanted them to rush the stage. >> we know one winner who will make that team for super bowl 50.
4:06 am
halftime show, our very own kelsey takes us inside the making of the super bowl. >> guys, super bowl sunday is right around the corner, and while the players may be concentrating on the field, there's going to be thousands of people behind the scenes making the entire show a spectacle. >> we've been preparing for this show for years. we have some 12 trucks, 550 people to put this show on. 100-plus cameras many. >> so if cam newton comes on the field in a zebra pant, you're going to have cameras to see it. >> we are not going to miss anything. >> so now we are down on the field. >> on the field. >> i feel so excited. >> in is where they're going to play the game! >> execution! >> forget the game. >> so you're getting the inside scoop right now. >> sami choi is the guy responsible for all the super bowl entertainment. >> imagine the gun goes off at halftime. >> yes.
4:07 am
like ants marching around here. we've got hundreds of staging pieces going out beyonce, coldplay's getting ready for halftime. >> i've been really nervous, but we're going to really practice. if you're autistic and asked to play, it's a huge honor. >> i can hear the coldplay now. >> everything is scripted, down to the minute, down to the second. keep in mind, that the show has to be done in 12 minutes. >> all of these people's jobs peak at the same moment, and that's, i think, why it's got their extra zing to it. >> how do you fit 16 years of music into just 12 minutes? >> we decided we'd play all our number ones and then work out how to fill the other ten minutes. [ laughter ] >> thanks for being so charming.
4:08 am
we know about beyonce, and we know about brewuno mars. are you telling me there are other stars and celebrities that are going to be added and coming out during the show? >> well, what's going to happen is -- >> yeah, yeah. this is the action center. >> this is all the bells and whistles for the entire stadium. do you want to play with some bells and whistles? >> i certainly do. oh! me and louie and debbie, i put you and my up on the enormo-tron. >> i can't wait for the halftime show. >> or the food. >> or the commercials. >> have they already extended their family? >> i am surprised you were able to keep it quiet. plus, mariah, eva, julie ann, what do they have in common? >> they're getting married. plus we have the wedding forecast.
4:09 am
by8 ah, tis the season. hollywood ladies got their men to put a ring on it. >> and we are here to help. from eva to mariah to julie ann, these are the gowns that will have them saying "i do", to the dress. >> julianne hough just got engaged. what do you see her wearing to her wedding? >> well, i see her in something like nicole has on. >> all insiders say yes, sir to the dress star. >> this is a v neckline, sheer bodies. >> it's reminiscent of the great gatsby era.
4:10 am
wearing this is eva longoria. >> this is around $6500, $7,000. >> ooh. >> miley cyrus. she's going to want something different. all lace, form-fitting. this is also a sheer top. this is called a body veil. this is new this season. >> so this has never been done before as a bridal. >> never. >> how much does that go for? >> that's about $8,000. >> mariah carey, and he's a bill billionaire with a b. >> she likes really fitted pieces that show her curves, and she likes a ball gown. this is around $7500. >> wow. >> i know. >> you know, it really is one of the biggest decisions of the wedding. and once you choose that gown, the rest of the details are all cake. >> let's put the wedding cake
4:11 am
bob mackie's taking you behind the scenes of carol burnett's iconic costume closet. mrs. wiggins. >> when she walked it gave her that bimbo walk. >> then all hail clooney and tatum. >> you are sitting next to the biggest movie star in the world. >> sure, sure. >> i mean. >> but what does george think about channing's uncontrollable case of the magic mike? >> people aren't i accept i'm not 22. i accept i do a shorter set these days. i even accept i have a higher risk of stroke due to afib, a type of irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. but i won't play anything less than my best. so if there's something better than warfarin, i'm going for it. eliquis. eliquis reduced the risk of stroke better than warfarin, plus it had significantly less major bleeding than warfarin... eliquis had both... that's what i wanted to hear.
4:12 am
as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... ...and it may take longer thanusual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. i accept i don't play ...quite like i used to. but i'm still bringing my best. and going for eliquis. reduced risk of stroke plus less major bleeding. ask your doctor... ...if switching... ...to eliquis is right for you. you wanna see something intense? new pantene expert gives you the most beautiful hair ever, with our strongest pro-v formula ever.
4:14 am
up for their george and amal clooney, the definition of hollywood royalty at george's premiere monday night. >> i love that her dress is that floral, the day after her wedding was flawless. >> george is recently spotted in the arms of somebody else, and she happens to be at this table, too. >> i'm sorry, i couldn't resist. >> you left channing tatum out, too. >> it was a tough assignment, but i took it on. you have no idea how funny these guys are. let me tell you, they are a good time. >> you are sitting next to the biggest movie star in the world. >> sure, sure.
4:15 am
>> i do realize that. [ laughter ] >> what was your earliest memory of george clooney, and did you ever think in a million years you'd be sitting right here? >> i'm not that old. >> we keep, yeah. oh, man, when i was in the cradle, yeah. >> that diaper's getting a little tight. >> hey, george clooney. >> you are a big deal. >> did you hear her all right? did you hear her okay? a cryin' shame >> it's a moving pairing fans have been waiting for, leading man george clooney and channing tatum teaming up in "hail caesar." >> what keeps you coming back for more? >> they have photos of me in a compromising position from the mid '80s, so i have to keep coming back.
4:16 am
>> your dance was, i swear to god, amazing. at one point i thought it was tgi. it can't be him. every single movie you're in, everybody wants you to dance, channing tatum, dance, dance. >> it's not just the movies. he'll be in the airport, and they'll be like -- >> dance, chief. >> dance, monkey. >> you've got to stop doing that. people aren't going to take you seriously. >> but before we parted i had to send the warmest of wishes to the clooneys. i would like to congratulate you on your adoption. >> yes, we have milli the bassett hound. and we've been busy. >> what prompted you to adopt a special needs dog? >> my mom and dad's dog died and they didn't want to adopt another dog. and i thought the only way they would do it is if i gave them one for three years that nobody
4:17 am
my dad would say, i'll take that damn dog. so that's sort of what happened. >> all hail george clooney. >> yeah, somehow i knew you were going to say that. >> this time we had costumes designed by the brilliant bob mackie. >> a sweet shout out from carol burnett to bob mackie after accepting her life achievement award from the screen actors guild. >> their relationship goes back over 50 years. he designed over 17,000 outfits for her, and that's just for the carol burnett show. so i couldn't wait for the 75-year-old fashion icon to take me through carol's revolution. what was the favorite? >> oh, there were so many. i can't even say. >> what carol wore to the sag awards. well, you designed it. >> of course. we've been working since 1967 together.
4:18 am
boom, we hired him on the spot. >> you know, she's a rather normal lady off screen. but you give her just a hint of what that character could be and she'll run with it. she was never afraid to look unattractive. she would wear the most horrifying thing, body pads. boobies that moved. >> how about scarlet o'hara? >> that's a classic. that's in the smithsonian. >> i saw it in the window and couldn't resist. >> what is that on her head? >> well, that's part of the curtain, you know. i couldn't figure out, how am i going to get a laugh. >> those were your exact orders, make it fun e. >> that's when the little hand and the big hand are both point offing straight up. >> mrs. wiggins. >> i made the skirt as tight as possible. >> i said i'm flat back there,
4:19 am
he said no, stick your behind in it. >> you were like the original kim kardashian. >> exactly. >> nora desmond. >> i'm sinking fast! >> that was a movie take off on sunset boulevard, gloria swanson. carol just took it and ran with it. and we gave her kind of saggy body parts. >> all i was trying to do was lend this crummy affair some class. >> eunice. >> carol loved playing her, and it was sad at times. i feel bad for eunice. >> did you come up with that yourself? >> yeah, the look, sure. >> queen, you do realize that maleficient looks just like that. >> i've been knocked off, you know, designs for all my life. but that's very flattering. >> he is such a legend and still so humble. such a class act.
168 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WDBJ (CBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on