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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  August 11, 2016 7:00am-9:01am CDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is thursday, august 11th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." an explosion and fire overnight levels part of an apartment complex outside washington. donald trump blasts hillary clinton and president obama, but his attack is leveled by a controversial supporter. a man who scaled trump tower says he had a message for the gop nominee. >> a new report blames flying debris for more than 200,000 crashes and hundreds of death. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. we have the fire
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transition into the search mode. >> an explosion destroys an apartment complex in maryland. >> one building, objeliteratedo. a door was found across the parking lot. >> he is the founder of is circumstances. the founder of isis. i would say the cofounder would be crooked hillary clinton. >> donald trump is making a new round of allegations in the race for the white house. >> words matter, my friend. and if you president, words can have tremendous consequences. >> canadian police shot and killed a man suspected of being connected to a terrorist plot. >> he is believed to be the lone suspect. >> i'm devastated. >> our generous and beloved colleague john saunders has died. >> i don't think anybody realizes what we lost today. he was a phenomenal, phenomenal man. >> delta is struggling to resume
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worldwide cancellations. >> going to the catch. oh, a face full of nachos and cheese. >> a classic. >> would you look at that. a man is climb trump tower. >> who climbs a? building. >> he explained he wanted a personal meeting with mr. trump. >> all that matters. >> the media will have a field day with this one. >> the reaction everyone is talking about today happened just behind donald trump. >> that is the old white g equivalent of oh, no, he didn't! >> on "cbs this morning." >> nijak, a world record to win gold. absolutely brilliant. the best celebration we have seen so far. >> oh, my goodness me! >> the roof is coming off this place, deservedly so. what a performance!
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>> the gold for the best performance after winning, those two? >> that is joy there! >> welcome to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell is off and dane ya jacobs -- dana jacobson is with us. a devastating fire at an apartment complex in maryland. the fire lit up the night sky in silver spring. >> nearly three dozen people, including three firefighters were taken to the hospital with injuries. several people remain unaccounted for at this hour. chip reid is at the s washington, d.c. chip, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. smoke is still rising from that apartment complex behind me where they are still searching for victims, between five and seven people are still unaccounted for. it began just before midnight with a massive explosion. one building was completely leveled. the blast was so strong, firefighters nearly a mile away say they heard the explosion.
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one is fully involved. >> reporter: when rescuers arrived at the apartment building in silver spring, maryland, it looked like a fire infer tow. people were pulling people throor to the fire department arrival using ladders off of work trucks and painter trucks as an example. >> reporter: about 160 firefighters worked to douse the flames and the scene of devastation on cell phone video and pictures. the giant flames that turned people's home into ash and rubble. >> very scary. like a big boom. like a big, loud noise. and my -- i went outside and checked, and my aunt saw a lot of fire outside. >> reporter: officials say about 30 people were taken to local hospitals with a wide range of injuries. >> the injuries range from abrasions to orthopaedic
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exiting the structures three and four stories, as well as burns and smoke inhalation type injuries. >> reporter: three firefighters were injured and their injuries are minor and official are still trying to discover what caused the damage. >> still too early to determine the cause. that will be determined later on in the day or yo >> reporter: firefighters say there are natural gas furnaces in each of those apartment buildings and a natural gas explosion is a cause. she say a police dog in that site detected the scent of a human and they do not know if that person is dead or live. >> trump has launched a line of attacks trying to connect
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a disgraceful chronicman and trump supporter stole some of the spotlight. major garrett is covering trump's campaign swing in florida. he is in miami. >> reporter: donald trump tried again to focus his campaign on hillary clinton. hammering the former secretary of state on the economy, immigration, and her plan to admit syrian refuges, but one trump attack had a a scandalous past. >> are we having fun with these stupid boards? we love these board. >> reporter: donald trump brought props to his evening rally outside of ft. lauderdale. visual cue cards to keep him on message. >> you don't have to see it too well. it doesn't matter. all you have to do is look at the lines. obama. obama. >> reporter: the point, give trump a way to drive attacks against hillary clinton and exploit her latest e-mail revelations.
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it's illegal. it's called pay for play. >> reporter: at issue? newly released e-mails from top aids at the state department that critics allege contain efforts that favors were granted to clinton foundation donors. >> it revealed so much. it revealed the lies, the deception, the dishonesty. >> reporter: the clinton campaign insists she, quote, never took action at secretary of state because of donations to the clinton foundation. >> isis is honoring president obama. >> reporter: trump also tried to tie clinton and president obama to the rise of the terror group isis. >> he founded isis. and i would say the cofounder would be crooked hillary clinton. >> reporter: but when with trump shifted to another attack, it backfired. >> and that guy is sitting back there. and, of course, he likes
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mateen sat behind clinton at a rally in florida, the father of omar mateen. but trump had an unexpected visitor of his own, disgraced former congressman mark foley. >> while ed, he didn't know. they knew. but how would you -- how did you like that picture? >> reporter: foley resigned from he spent explicit e-mails and text messages to teenage boys who had been at the time or had been house pages. that struggle launched for republicans losing their struggle. foley has appeared in previous
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nk nancy cordes is in warren, michigan, a detroit suburb, will clinton will speak in a few hour. >> reporter: good morning. clinton aides tell us this will be a compare and contrast type of speech. she has laid out the basics of her economic plan before and trump did so here in michigan on monday. so, today, here at this warehouse, she is going to put them side-by-side and her ideas are better for working families. >> bernie is right. $7.25 an hour is a starvation wage. >> reporter: starting with the minimum wage. she wants to raise it and trump's position is harder to discern. >> i hate to say it but we have to leave it the way it is. the minute wage has to go over. >> reporter: another disagreement is against taxes.
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income tax rucket reduction. >> we are raising it on the wealthy because that is where the money it. >> reporter: clinton argues that trump wants to use the income tax. >> i am going to cut regulation lags massively. >> he wants to roll back regulations on wall street. i want to tighten them. >> reporter: there is one thing they do agree on. >> we have to rebuild our infrastructure. we have to fix o our tunnels. >> we have to improve our infrastructure. our roads, our airports. >> reporter: the difference clinton has a plan to pay for that spending. in iowa on wednesday she has a plan that one reason some officials have endorsed her. >> i am humbled and moved by the republicans who are willing to stand up and say that donald trump doesn't represent their values. >> reporter: one of those
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congressman from connecticut 21 years and went public with his support yesterday. >> never voted for a democratic governor or a democratic president, but donald trump lost me a long time ago. history is not going to be kind to donald trump and it's not going to be kind to people supporting him. >> reporter: trump says that slashing taxes and regulations will unleash the economy, while clinton will say, today, that you can't pay for things like new roads and bridges unless you tax the wealthy more will also argue that flint's water system here in michigan is a perfect example, gayle, of what can happen when governor oversight is relaxed. >> thank you, nancy. a virginia man who climbed trump towers said he had a message to deliver. the new york city police department yanked the man off the side of the building yesterday. he spent nearly three hours using suction cups to climb to the 21st floor.
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nypd went to extraordinary lengths to bring this high flying stunt to a safe end. the unidentified man used climbing tools and suction cups to scale donald trump's personal residence and campaign headquarters. building, his intentions were unclear. the 19-year-old from virginia was taken down by an elite nypd unit in dramatic fashion, 21 stories above fifth avenue. one of the men who pulled him in, detective christopher williams. >> i was waiting for the perfect time to present itself. i reached out and took hold of his hand and i said, "sir, you need to come with me." >> the reason i climbed your tower was to get your attention. >> reporter: in a video posted on social media the day before
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himself an independent researcher with information to share with trump. >> believe me, my was not significant. i would not risk my life pursuing it. >> reporter: investigators are looking into his background. >> it was explained that he previously went by one name and now he goes by a different name. >> reporter: his actions choked traffic in mid-town manhattan. while a swarm of witnesses took the spectacle. >> i didn't know if i was a crazy thing to see. >> reporter: the tower is a mixed-used building with high-end shopping and restaurants on the ground level and first 26 floors are offices with residences reaching up to the 68th floor. the suspect was pulled into an office from the 21st floor and eventually taken out on a stretcher and to a local hospital for a psychological evaluation.
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the manhattan's district attorney's office is considering criminal charges. >> tony, thanks. we have learned that a hard-hitting report by congressional republicans accuses u.s. central command, also known as centcom as repr repressing intelligence about the agency is stretching from egypt to the arabian gulf and central region of asia. >> reporter: according to the report set to be released today, senior leads have said centcom has an intelligence to paint a far rosier picture to protect isis. the report find in mid 2014, final intelligence reports
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assessments made by its own analysts. mike pompeo. >> the facts on the ground didn't match what the intelligence was saying out of the u.s. central command. >> reporter: the task force stemmed from a whistle-blower complaint filed in 2015 by a senior analyst at centcom saying it had been manipulated. it is unactive investigation by the inspec >> there is enormous information how this talented career professionals inside the analytic arm in centcom did their job and depicted what was going on the ground but when it got to senior levels that information was changed. >> reporter: it wasn't just classified intelligence. the task force also found that centcom's public statements are far more positive than events on the ground warranted, such as in march of 2015 when general commander lloyd austin testified to congress.
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longer do what he did at the outset which is to seize and hold new territory. he has assumed a defensive crouch in iraq. >> reporter: as of today, more than a year later, the iraqi city of mosul still remainses und under isis control. the task force found evidence that no order for those changes came from the white house. >> a suspected isis sympathizer was shot dead at they think driver was acting alone. delta airlines suspects to finally resume normal operations today after its computer meltdown. the airline was forced to cancel more than 2,100 flights the past three days.
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the outage and t good morning. we have the sugar loaf mountain behind us. today here at the olympics, 21 dpoeld medals will be handed out in 11 different sports and two high-profile americans one named phelps are hoping to grab two of those. last night in the pool was that 19-year-old phenom from maryland
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katie ledecky did it again. >> the 19-year-old is making it look easy. this time anchoring the 4x200 freestyle relay. but tonight a showdown when friends and rivals michael phelps and ryan lotky go head to head. phelps appears to grab gold medal number 22. bit it was the american women who added to the gold medal on wednesday, including kristen armstrong. despite some very wet roads in rio. the rainfall forced most of the tennis matches and all of the rowing events to be canceled. the u.s. men's water polo team knocked off the french, swimming in water that turned green because of a chemical imbalance
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but for american divers, the only color on their mind was gold. they were outduelled by and settled for silver. later this morning golfers will tee off at the olympic golf course here in rio. the first time golf was back in the olympics in more than 100 years. the top four golfers in the world are not competing here. citing the zika virus. a new warning this morning about a growing danger on the nation's roads. how flying debris from the back of trucks and other vehicles is
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incomes incom announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by chick-fil-a. a police officer who
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73-year-old woman was already facing a lawsuit over his actions on duty. >> ahead, the lawyer who says he warned people about that officer. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by kohl's. the more kohl's cash you'll earn no limit! use your kohl's cash later on just about anything! plus - yes2you rewards members earn double points on nike purchases! now that's the good stuff. kohl's. maybe almond breeze tastes so good because it's the only almondmilk made with california blue diamond almonds. but if you ask our almond growers... there's no maybe about it. almond breeze. the best almonds make the best almondmilk.
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning everyone i'm kate chappell with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:26. 3 a young man is dead after drowning in a pool overnight in milwaukee.police were called to the "washington park pool" near 40-th and lisbon around 11 last night.police say... a 19-year-old and several friends climbed over a locked fence to get in. pool was closed at the time. we're told the young man jumped into the pool--- but had trouble swimming and sank to the bottom.when officers got there... one of them jumped in the pool to save him. first responders started c-p-r... but were unsucessful. the man died on the scene. coming up on "cbs this morning" a new report is shedding light on the dangers of flying debris on our highwayskris van cleave has the alarming details of a new triple a report 3 first before you head out the door... andy brovelli has a traffic update!andy? 3
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morning. weather should not have an impact on your morning commute. once again, your travel time along westbound i 94 will be a slow one due to the zipper merge. as each day goes by, drivers get more used to the delays. plan on using alternates. i will have thos as well as a look at your drive times coming up. 3 forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast... today: decreasing clouds,
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? surveillance video caught this bike in china. the bike was chained to a fairly large tree, ubleged sayou could. he cuts the chain and the tree falls down. he then drives off. i want to know what kind of bike that was. >> creative bike? >> give him an a for effort. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, flying debris that can destroy your life. a report out this morning shows deadly and often needed risk that drivers face on the road every single day. kris van cleave talks to a family changed forever. see how some states are cracking
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the death of an 18-year-old sky diver and his instructor. ahead how the sport enjoyed by more than 3 million people a year faces new excrete knee, particularly when it comes to tandem sky diving. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the washington post" reports on two suspected government rulings about marijuana. the drug enforcement administration will refuse to allow pot used for medical purposes at the federal level. it is currently legal in the district of columbia and 25 states. the dae will also allow more places to grow research. "wall street journal" looks at the mystery woman who set off the latest zika scare in florida. a pregnant woman in miami-dade county reported zika symptoms last month but has no connection to the outbreak zone in the wynwood neighborhood of miami and she was not infected through travel or sex. she is one of 22 cases in florida. 17 of those cases are men. "the new york times" says a cyberattack targeting democratic politicians was wider than first
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accounts of more than 100 party officials and groups. the targets appear to have been the personal e-mail accounts of hillary clinton's campaign official and other party organizations. last month, the release of hacked internal e-mails led to the resignation of the dnc chair. the star ledger of new york rports an allegation that new jersey governor chris christie lied during the bridgegate scandal. christie told the media in 2013 that he didn't think his snarling traffic to punish a political foe. a text from a christie aide who heard that said he just flat out lied. the governor scoffed at that. >> you dispute the assertion that you actually lied? >> of course. absolutely. it's ridiculous. nothing new. and so that's it. there is nothing new to talk about. >> the text surfaced in newly
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said an officer who killed a woman was asked to resign by another police department. lee coel fatally shot mary knowlton. the gun was supposed to have blanks said the police department. david begnaud is at the pun take gorda police headquarters. >> we will get an update in a few hours from the police department. the revolve nolton had been used the several past years and no one ever got hurt. more than 30 people watched mary knowlton fall to the ground and, in fact, a photographer was covering it. this is the moment when punta gorda police officer shot mary knowlton. >> shu just heard the shots and
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>> reporter: sue paxton took the photo. >> she started to double over and we thought she is getting into it and play acting and role playing with it. >> reporter: 73-year-old knowlton died during a shoot, don't shoot exercise that was held tuesday night. the demonstration qa was part of a citizen police academy and experience firsthand how dangerous it can be. will you allow a weapon be in a simulation like this? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: the officer is devastated. we have officers assigned to him to make sure he is psychologically stable. >> reporter: officer coel is the target of an impending lawsuit and accused of letting his canine attack richard schumaker for nearly two minutes after he stopped him for riding his bike
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here is schumaker attorney. >> i was saddened but not shocked. i had warned people about officer coel. >> she was an incredible woman and, you know, she stood by all of us. >> reporter: steve knowlton is mary's youngest son. are you angry in any way? >> my mom brought herself not to hate. we know this gentleman didn't mean for this to happen. sure, it was super careless and altered ouriv if you hate, it just -- it only kills you. >> reporter: you know, the police chief here in punta gorda has not answered the question why they were using a real gun in a scenario with citizens to show them what with it's like to be a police officer. the other question how did live ammunition get in that weapon when they have been using blank rounds the past two years? the officer is on paid administrative leave and his attorney called us back last
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to issue a comment. >> a sad story. risk of debris that flies off over vehicles on the road and hundreds of thousands of dangerous and sometimes deadly accidents. kris van cleave is in washington with how researchers believe many tragedies could be prevent. >> reporter: good morning. those researchers found that the bulk of these accidents have to do with things coming off one vehicle and flying into the road, particularly on freeway. that could be watching your speed and not overloading a vehicle and strapping things down and using ropes and straps to secure the cargo in a vehicle. driver, beware. dangerous debris in the road, or from an unsecured load falling off other vehicles. >> there it goes! >> reporter: has been blamed for more than 200,000 crashes on u.s. roads between 2011 and 2014. a aaa foundation study found
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watch this video from june. an suv hauling a boat, a pad comes loose and the motorcycle behind can't get out of the way in time! >> the real troublesome thing about this is the majority of these crashes are preventible if drivers would take the necessary precautions to secure their load or maintain their vehicle properly. >> reporter: a tragedy that heidi coffee has been living for ten years. >> i couldn't believe it. >> reporter: she was seven months pregnant when cher husband gavin was this metal shelving was with not properly secured and flew out of the back of this pickup. gavin tried to avoid it and was hit by another car on a seattle area freeway. >> i miss being a wife. because that was my favorite thing. was to be his wife and best friend, and that is what i miss the most. >> reporter: 37% of those killed in the aaa study died like
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it's most likely to happen on a freve freeway in the milled of the day. drivers responsible for creating road debris can be fined in all 50 states. because of this accident that blinded this lady, washington state is one of 16 states to pass a law that can send a responsible driver to jail. >> i don't know how i could live with myself if i ever caused someone's injury or death because of something that could have so easily been prevented. >> reporter: aaa is talking about maintaining your vehicle. there have been fatal accidents of pieces to cars coming off on freeways and striking other vehicles. one rule for hauling cargo, if you wouldn't want your own family driving directly behind you, that load probably is not secure enough. dana? >> a very good point there. thank you. >> really good point. you have to think about heidi coffee. how many times do you hear a story and it's another name but
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>> put the face with a real tragedy that could have been avoided. >> yes. >> new questions this morning about the safety of sky diving. ahead, why the deaths of a teenager and his instructor are sparking concerns about how the sport is regulated. as gayle likes to say, don't leave us! we want you to stay. but if you're heading out the door follow us through the all-access cbs app on your digital device. don't miss jeff bridges and chris pine interview each other in our new series "something in common." weil i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment
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? learned a sky diving instructor involved in a questions how sky diving is regulated. mireya villarreal spoke with
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a neat personality. >> reporter: for tyler turner, last saturday was supposed to be a fun outing with friend, just weeks before the honor student was set to head off to college. his mother francine snapped this photo of him kneeling at the tarmac at the parachute center in california. >> he gave me a hug and said i love you, mom. i said, i love you, son. he got on the plane. >> reporter: were those the last words? >> yes. >> reporter: at first, she of the jump until she spotted emergency vehicles in an open field. >> the officer had come up and ed that the two people on the ground are deceased and i lost it. i just remember screaming and screaming. and thinking it can't be true. >> reporter: it's believed tyler and his instructor died after their shared parachute didn't open. the united states parachute association says more than 3 million people sky dive in the
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in 2015, 21 were killed, one during a tandem jump. >> sky diving will never be a perfectly safe thing to do. >> reporter: ed scott is the executive director of a nonprofit organization which works with federal and state officials to promote sky diving safety. >> if you don't find a location listed on our site, you don't know what you're getting. we don't know what their standards are. the imrtant factor with tandem sky diving ie certification of the tandem instructor. >> reporter: "cbs this morning" was unable to locate any of the required certifications for the instructor. when you hear is there a possibility he may not have been certified, what goes through your mind? >> anger. a lot of anger. >> reporter: francine claims that earlier in the day, the facility sped through preflight procedures. >> it was like mcdonald. just, you know, get your order
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>> reporter: the owner of the parachute center bill dass declined our repeated request for comment but spoke on the crash. >> it's an unfortunate situation but if you see a car wreck, they don't close the freeway. it's something that, unfortunately, in this sport, and scuba diving, there are facilitates. >> reporter: investigators are looking from the parachute to the instructor's qualifications. for "cbs this morning," mireya villarreal in lodie, california. >> it seems they need better regulations. >> i was able to sky dive and do it with the army golden knigs. the one thing they preached to us is the safety factors. if you're ever going again, to make sure it's regulated and they are licensed. i was for which to do it with them. a final face-off between two arch rivals at the rio olympics.
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longstanding rivalry between swimmers michael phelps and ryan lochte as they prepare to swim for gold tonight. who is going to win? plus, a lesson for fans in major league baseball park. how trying to catch a foul can mess up your night, you could say, especially if you're holding fo terry bradshaw? what a surprise! you know what else is a surprise? shingles. and how it can hit you out of nowhere. i know. i had it. c'mon let's sit down and talk about it. and did you know that one in three people will get shingles? (all) no.
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ad chickenpox then the shingles virus is already inside you. (all) oooh. who's had chickenpox? scoot over. and look that nasty rash can pop up anywhere and the pain can be even worse than it looks. talk to your doctor or pharmacist. about a vaccine that can help prevent shingles. we could brag about what's in new light & fit yogurt. but we'd rather talk about what's not in it. like no artificial colors or preservative ingredients. and with 70 calories... maybe we're kind of bragging? new light & fit. dave, i'm sorry to interrupt. i gotta take a sick day tomorrow. dads don't take sick days, dads take nyquil severe the nighttime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching,
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? ? ? this is the sweetest thing anyone's ever done. that one's from my friend caitlyn. "you always encouraged me to go after my dreams. well, it's my turn now. love always, your future maid of honor." ? going for the chest. oh, my! >> he did it to himself! w >> nachos! >> a pittsburgh pirates fan was nacho lucky, get it? >> did he get the ball? >> no! >> instead, he caught a face full of his own nachos and he also dropped his beer but none of that spoiled his fun as a team tweeted a photo of the fan with a clean shirt and new nachos nearby along with a message, we got you, dude. good effort. at least the pittsburgh pirates have a good sense of humor.
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nachos. do you think his friends will tease him? >> "we talk about acting and not acting coming up. >> we both share music. have you ever had a band? >> no. >> i've been in a band. how fun it would be to play together! >> yes, i know. >> our new series "something in common" is ahead on "cbs this
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hey tommy! what did you say to me when i said i was going to invent the telephone? i said you were crazy. hmmm and what did you say to me this morning when i said i wanted chicken for breakfast? i said you were crazy. 0 for 2 pal. this new egg white grill from chick-fil-a is aces. chicken for breakfast. it's not as crazy as you think.
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning everyone. i'm jessica tighe with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:56. 3 ?breaking news? in kenosha... where an s-u-v is in a retention pond.police are at the scene right now.the pond is near a shopping center on green bay road just south of highway 50.cbs 58's ?kyle er
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3 we know some of you may have to head out now..andy brovelli is here with a traffic update. andy. 3 roads are in good shape this morning. weather should not have an impact on your morning commute. once again, your travel time along westbound i 94 will be a slow one due to the zipper merge. as each day
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? it is thursday, august 11th, 2016. it is nurse thursday, august 11th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including a massive explosion and fire that injured dozens outside washington, d.c. we g on the search for the missing. but first, here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> smoke is still rising from that apartment complex where they are still searching for victims. it began just before midnight. donald trump tried again to focus his campaign on hillary clinton, hammering the former secretary of state. >> she has laid out the basics of her economic plan. today at the warehouse she'll argue her ideas are better for working families.
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intelligence to paint a rosier picture of the u.s. effort to combat isis. >> the police chief in punta gorda has not answered the question why they were using a real gun in a scenario with citizens. >> the bulk of the accidents have to do with things coming off one vehicle and flying into the road, that can be avoided by properly strapping things down using ropes and straps. >> either this was a rye comment about shooting a future president or it was a call to voter action and no one can agree. >> you're words like he is the most articulate person. say he was an english professor with a ph.d. in grammar. >> you can't get a ph.d. on a subject that's taught in the fifth grade, okay? that's like getting a bachelors of science in kickball or something, right? >> this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is presented by liberty mutual insurance.
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with gayle king and dana jac jacobson. norah o'donnell is off. daylight shows full extent of the damage of the fire, much of the four-story complex collapsed. >> nearly three dozen people including three firefighters were taken to the hospital with injuries. chip reid is just outside of washington, d.c., good morning. >> reporter: good morning. behind me you can still see a lot of gas company workers, firefighters, a l and the fire is still smoldering. there are between five and seven people unaccounted for. redon't know if they are dead or alive. this began with a massive explosion just before midnight. it was so strong firefighters in the station about a mile away heard it and felt it. when the firefighters arrived here they found an inferno and saw residents here taking ladders off the top of their work trucks and rescuing people out of second and third floor windows. now they still don't know what
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say there are gas furnaces, natural gas furnaces in each of those apartment buildings and that is certainly one thing they are looking at as a possible cause. dana? >> chip, thank you, for the latest there. donald trump says newly released state department emails prove the clinton foundationot special eatment from the department while s was secretary of state. >> it's called pay for play. you saw this. new emails come out, new how do you think hillary would feel if emails were never invented? would she be happy? that's like a truth serum, truth serum. >> one email from 2009 shows dug band of the foundation reaching out to two of clinton's top aides on behalf of a job seeker. huma abedin responded that state department personnel had been
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the clinton campaign says the job seeker was a former advanced staffer to bill and hillary clinton. officials insist he had nothing to do with the clinton foundation. >> donald trump also attacked clinton because the orlando nightclub gunman's father was at one of her rallies. the campaign says of it a public event, the fare was not invited and she does not want his support. >> wasn't it terrible, when the father of the animal that killed the was sitting with a big smile on his face right behind hillary clinton. and by the way, including a lot of the people here, how many of you people know me? a lot of you people know me? >> trump made those comments with disgraced former florida congressman mark foley sitting behind him. foley resigned in 2006, after
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teenage capitol hill pages. foley is a trump supporter and attended other rallies. >> donald trump stood by his comments about hillary clinton and the second amendment that he made on tuesday. >> hillary wants to abolish, essentially abolish the second amendment. by the way, if she gets to pick -- [ booing ] if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks. although the second amendment people maybe there know. >> trump said he wants people to use political power to stop hillary clinton, not violence. clinton said in iowa that words matter. >> yesterday we witnessed the latest in a long line of casual comments from donald trump that cross the line. his casual cruelty to a gold star family, his casual suggestion that more countries
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now his casual inciting of violence. >> a sister and nephew of president john f. kennedy and senator robert f. kennedy also say that donald trump was wrong. they write in today's "washington post" "it is still the words delivered extemporaneously off the cuff, in the raw pressure of the moment that matter most. they say most directly what is in a candidate's heart. so it was a sense of sadss and revulsion we listened to donald trump. political violence is a inherent risk to any free society. it is not to be encouraged. it is not funny. it is not a joke." >> a group of doctors in syria is pleading to president obama for help. almost 30 doctors in a rebel-held district of aleppo signed an open letter received by the white house. they warn if attacks on medical facilities continue at their present rate they could all be destroyed in a month. cbs news received these photos from a group of american doctors who say they escaped recent
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syria's capital damascus. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the warnings are dire. over 2 million people in aleppo are in danger of running out of food, fuel, medical supplies and water in a city that has been under siege for weeks now amidst fighting. russia announced the unilateral daily three-hour cease-fire starting today to allow aid into the city, but it failed before it even began as neither rebel coalition nor the syrian government appeared to have endorsed the truce. the heavy fighting never stopped. overnight there have also been reports of another alleged gas attack in rebel-held aleppo. one witness desedhemical explosion, then the smell of gas.the children, he said, all of us were choking. even if all parties agreed to a cease-fire, the united nation
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needs 48 hours to bring in desperately needed resources to the war-weary people of aleppo. gayle? >> debora pata in syria. the justice departmt released a scathing report yesterday acausing baltimore officers of routinely targeting young blacks. the investigation began after the death of freddy gray whose neck was inexplicablely broken in a police va stops, searches and arrests, using enforcement strategies that produce severe and unjustified disparities in the rates of stops, searches and arrests of african-americans. >> in one case a sergeant told a patrol officer to "stop a group of young african-american males on a street corner. when the patrol officer protested he had no valid reason
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". this morning the sports community is grieving the loss of an iconic broadcaster. >> congratulations to the national champion texas longhorns! >> espn announced yesterday long time personality john saunders died at age 61. he began his career at the sports network as a "sportscenter" anchor in 1986. he went on to cover events like college football and basketball. many of his colleagues delivered >> our generous and talented and beloved colleague, john saunders, has died. >> he was a big brother. he was a father figure. i'm sitting here in shock. >> for him to be just so invested in who we were, it just, man, i'm devastated.
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>> saunders also hosted the ven arable sunday roundtable show "the sports reporters" for more than a decade. i had the pleasure of working alongside him. he was all of that and more and such a mentor to so many people there at espn. his daughter alliyah is part of our cbs family, working over on the sports side. he made a point of coming over to work on his show, on her show. the pride that he had in his two girls in both alliyah and jenna was just so wonderful to see. just he was one of the good nobody out there would say different. >> it's one of those passings in which you wish you had known someone because you can tell by how deeply hurt his friends are. >> yes, i was thinking that, too. clearly see people really loved this man. >> i know one person said in sort of a "me" business, he was a "we" guy. he really was. >> so young too, dana. that's what strikes me. >> thoughts with wanda, his wife
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family. american women hauled in more gold in rio despite a slipper road course. kristen armstrong won in cycling time trial, she celebrated with her son afterward. she turns h43 today, the oldest woman to win olympic gold in more than a century. katie ledecky won last night in the 4x200 meter freestyle relay. she has three golds and one silver medal. thema continues as one of the greatest rivalries reaches a climax. ahead the more than 12-year-long rivalry between michael phelps and ryan lochte and how they
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>> there morning's eye opener at 8:00 is sponsored by liberty mutual insurance.
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our new series "something in common" continues this morning with actors chris pine and jeff bridges, the co-stars of the new movie "hell or high water." >> i funed yourseind yourself p different ways. do you a methodology or do you just kind of attack? >> i think i sort of do. i think i have a method. i look inside myself and figure out what are some aspects of my own personality that kind of parallel and something magnify and aspects of myself or just kick it to the curb. >> jeff bridges and chris pine interview each other. that is ahead on "cbs this morning." maybe almond breeze tastes so good because it's the only almondmilk made with calirnia blue diamond almonds. but if you ask our almond growers... there's no maybe about it. almond breeze. the best almonds make the best almondmilk.
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feingold: that's my grandfather with a brand new truck. it was one of the first to come out of this plant in 1923. but today, too many good manufacturing jobs are shipped away because of a tax code that actually rewards companies for exporting jobs. let's close the corporate loopholes- that will save taxpayer money and help business create jobs here. i'm russ feingold and i approve this message because we don't need an economy that works only for ceos,
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? two legendary americans swimmers face off at the be their final showdown. it is michael phelps versus ryan lochte in the 200-meter individual medley. this may be their last head-to-head race in their they go head-to-head with
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also. but that is only half the story. >> reporter: it's the duel in the pool. michael phelps, ryan lochte and 200 meters of medley and all in one race. >> phelps looking good by all of these swims. lochte right behind him. >> reporter: lochte has won four consecutive world championships in the 200 im but n gold. phelps beat him in athens, beijing, and london. >> the competitive environment between those two guys have always been good. >> reporter: greg troy coached both simmers in the 2012 olympics. >> they bring out the best in each other. i think there is mutual respect but they are very competitive and neither one wants to give in all. >> reporter: phelps made his olympic debut? in sydney and he was just 15.
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always had to swim in the shadow of the greatest olympian ever. if it wasn't for phelps 25 medals, lochte would be the most decorated swimmer of all time. he has won 12, one more than mark spitz, the star of the 1972 games. >> he is the hardest competitor i've ever had to go up against and he's not likely to back down, and i'm not either. >> reporter: but at the u.s. olympic swim trials this summer, phelps said their relationship >> honestly, i think we have both just grown up. you know? you know, i do feel like i talk to him more and joke around with him more than i really did in the past. >> they do make each other better. i don't think they would be as good as they are in this event if they don't push each other. >> reporter: what are excited to see tonight? >> reporter: dara torres knows both phelps and lochte. >> are they more of competitors
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point? >> reporter: you can tell they are very good friend but on the starting blocks, they are not friends any more. >> reporter: because at the end of the race, someone has to touch the wall first. village, so, gayle, perhaps he has aop we don't. >> i don't know, but, boy, leach are watching that tonight. you kind of want ryan to win one. i like michael phelps. >> i think i wanted michael but cool. you get ryan all of a sudden in their last race and finally beats him. >> what are you thinking, mr. rose? >> i want a good duel in the pool. >> we will get that. what were you going to say, charlie? >> the idea of touching, how they electronically they measure when they touch the wall.
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tonight. jackie chan rumbles down under. how the martial arts master was spotted going to new heights on one of the world's most famous land marks. that is coming up next on "cbs this morning." t together, is with the treat you make together. ? ? ? when this busy family... ...got a cracked windshield... ...their dad went to the new safelite-dot-com... ...and scheduled a replacement... e you don't have to miss a thing. y'all did wonderful! thank you. (girls sing) safelite repair, safelite replace. my sweethearts gone sayonara. this scarf all thats left to remem... what! she washed this like a month ago the long lasting scent of gain flings good is in every blue diamond almond. good is a catalyst,
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there is no stopping what you can do. get your good going. blue diamond almonds. proud sponsor of the us swim team fact. people spend less time lying awake with aches and pains with advil pm than with tylenol pm. number one sleep aid. gentle, non-habit forming advil pm.
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? martial arts star jackie chan climbing a movie in dubai.
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opera house and part of an
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is is a cbs 58 morning news upd. update.good morning i'm kate chappell... c-b-s 58 news time is 8:26. we continue to follow ?breaking news? in kenosha... where an s-u-v was just pulled out of a retention pond near a shopping center south of highway 50. cbs 58's ?kyle aevermann? joins us live with an update.kyle?
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i-43 northbound is backed up to the marquette interchange because of an accident. an update. andy? andy? 3 3
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forecast...today: very warm and humid. chance of a late day storm. high: 90 (feels like temp. 100-105)tonight: scattered storms. heavy rain possible. low: 74friday: more storms. high: 87weekend: dry and seasonable. highs near 80.
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? hospital police in spotted a car driving slowly and eventually stopped in front of a park they weren't sure if the driver was drunk or up to something not so great. turns out he was playing, you guessed it, pokemon go. he got off without a warning. they have to do something about that. he got off with just a warning in this particular case. you got to do something with pokemon go. looks like it's a bad accident waiting to happen. >> or has already in certain cases. >> you're right. welcome back to "cbs this
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men's basketball team is playing without the game's greatest players but guess what. they are still undefeated in rio. go team usa. we will see how they are building friendships on the way to another expected gold medal. melo on fire last night. oscar winning jeff bridges is going to team up with chris pine in "hell or high water." they learn something in our series "something in watch them get together for a jam session. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" reports on the lopsided housing recovery that is leaving millions of americans behind. overall house prices are now just below their peak in july of 2006. but in the second quarter, the home ownership rate was at its lowest point since a census brewer began tracking in 1965. aspiring homeowners have been
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of affordable homes "time" takes a look into what is called donald trump's recent meltdown. his campaign has suffered sinking poll numbers and attacks in public maistakes. earlier this month, republican chairman reince priebus reportedly resources. >> the "los angeles times" reports on earliest americans arrived here. scientists have long thought ancient humans passed from siberia to alaska. they say many americans may have traveled down the pacific coastly land or sa. bloomberg news reports in the surge of internet links that were added to cars and everyday products than to mobile phones and tablets combined.
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carriers see that segment as a growing revenue source. >> britain's "telegraph" one survivor of a crash landing is luckier than others. muhammad of dubai was among 300 of the passengers who escaped a plane when it caught fire. he now has he kept leaving expensive ones in locker rooms and burr oughs. >> the men had to battle for their 71st international victory
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emulate the first dream team, in '98 that won gold in the barcelona olympics winning each game by the average of 44 points. >> wow. >> jamie yuccas is in rio how team usa is playing on and off the court. jamie, good mornin curry, they are still winning games and people's attention. >> a penalty. >> reporter: soaring. pinpoint accuracy from behind the arc. has made it seem for the elite u.s. men's basketball teamthat gold has never been a question. until australia almost turned
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nightmare. >> that will do it. not an easy night for the united states. >> raleally, the only competito that u.s. faces is itself. if they can get over complacency, i think they will win a gold medal. >> reporter: the team used to gold, the hardware isn't necessarily the prize. >> the bond we will have in a time will be more special to me >> reporter: only three games into this two-week long tournament, the 12 superstars on this team have already grown closer. >> this is the tight team i've ever been on, you know? i feel that everybody here
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their time off the court. >> straight up. >> we all here. >> having a lot of fun. this is something i always wanted to see and cross it off my bucket list. >> reporter: they are cheering on their com patriots in the pool and taking photos and posing for selfies. >> it's different. i never spent that much time on a ship. >> reporter: floating in the high seas in rio's port zone. hot hotel. it's a boatel. >> reporter: managing all of that personality? >> we play as hard or harder than anybody. >> reporter: is duke coach and basketball legend mike krzyzewski. >> he tells these guys, i want you to bring your ego here. if everybody feels good about themselves, everybody has confidence in their game, we are going to destroy the competition. >> reporter: a strategy they hope means the red, white, and blue will be joined by gold.
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know, the silver medal e them ar at other competitions like we did earlier this week. >> they are having a great time. thank you, jamie. you know coach k, charlie, so you could say they are in good hands with him. >>kn speak to and understand these nba rich and extremely talented players. >> even if it's a team he has never coached before. >> to meld them together. >> people were tweeting last night worried they might lose to australia. the last time they stayed on a boat is when they got the bronze in athens so what was it a bad sign? get them off the boat, but they
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some questions for his co-star. that would be chris pine. sigh. ahead, in our new series "something in common." >> do i worry about getting type cast? how do you avoid that? >> this business has a way if you've done one thing well, they try to make as much money off that version of you if they can. but if you're a curious human being, i think that can't be stamped out. you will find avenues to not
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feingold: i'm russ feingold and i approve this message. johnson: i've always said i'll be the calmest guy on my election night. i win either way. narrator: if he loses, senator johnson falls back on the ten million dollar bonus he paid himself as ceo. a big corporate payout for him. johnson: i've always said... i win either way. narrator: if he wins, he gets another six years to support tax loopholes and bad trade deals that ship jobs overseas. all to benefit corporations
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narrator: if johnson wins, wisconsin loses.
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because i was given a chance to contribute my skills and talents to show that my disability is only one part of who i am who i am who i am at work, it's what people can do that matters for more information, visit whatcanyoudocampaign.org ? this morning, the newest installment of our series is called "something in common." actors jeff bridges and chris pine met up in los angeles to talk about their new movie it's called "hell or high water." this modern day western is distributed by cbs films, a division of cbs corporation and it opens in theaters tomorrow. bridges and pine talked about their careers growing up in
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surprise you. >> you guys aren't rolling? >> we are rolling. >> you're rolling now? >> the town looks busy. >> a little bit. >> not a bad shot. >> a great shot. >> a drone shot or manage? >> yeah. >> don'to >> definitely what appealed to me about the film is how morally ambiguous it was. >> ambiguity? that is one of the things that attracted me to the script in the first place, because life seems so ambiguous, you know? what is good and what is bad? >> you know, here is a guy who is just at wit's end on how to
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family. he is a good man forced into all circumstances, i felt, for my character. >> do you want to get us killed? huh? you find yourself preparing in different ways. you have a methodology, or do you just attack the project? >> i think i sort of do. i think i have sort of a method. i look inside myself and figure out what are some aspects of my own personality that kind of parallel and something i might magnify and aspects of myself, i'll just kick to the curb. >> not responsible! i don't feel guilty. you got it easy. i'm out there every day, every [ bleep ] day trying to figure out what the hell i'm doing. my father really encouraged me to get into acting. he loved it so much. >> really? >> oh, yeah. he taught all of the basics. tell me what your relationship
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>> how did that go down? >> like you, i grew newspaper a show biz family and just around him. so it was just a language like at the dinner table, whereas, my friends whose parents were doctors and i guess you could say they could talk about the surgery. my dad would come home from the set of whatever guest star he was doing that day and say we did that scene. did you see the new pacino film? you were talking about it all the time so i processed it a lot of it that way. supportive and i think a blessing growing up. we grew up in l.a. and a town where this was done and totally normal and a part of life. >> don't worry about me. i can't get lost out there. i know it pretty good. what roles have had the biggest impact on your life? >> the dude. >> i'm the dude! so that is what you call me. you know? that, or his dudeness or duder
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you're not into the brevity thing. >> i was so happy when i first met you. obviously, from my generation and many others, we were hoping you were as cool and as neat as "the dude." and you were actually "the dude"! this is what i wanted to ask you too. because i always watch it and i think, all of the ums and uhs. >> every script. >> this could be a lot more, um, ah, a complex -- i mean, it might not be such a simple ah you know? >> what in god's totally game are you blabbering about? >> dude, man. >> i'm a clicker guy when i watch tv and i'll come on and say, ah, i'll watch it until he licks the ball and i'll go. look. i cannot stop it! >> i love that you appreciate that as much as we do. >> do it so good.
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it's wild! >> magnify it. >> do i worry about getting typecast? >> what is this? how do you avoidthat? his business has a way, if you've done one thing well, they try to make as many films and as much money off of that version of you that they can. but if you're a curious human being, then i think that curiosity can't really be stamped out and you avenues to not be just one thing. >> when i was starting out my career, i was really concerned about not developing tootrong of persona. and so i really tried to kind of mix it up and now -- now i've kind of gotten to where you are where i'm kind of less concerned about that. and i think some of the greatest casting is where they cast against type.
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something that we both share is mu music. >> have you ever had a band? >> no. >> i've been in a band. toub how f do you know how fun it is? >> yeah, i know. ? you got me running you got me hiding you got me hide run run hide the way you want ? >> you only started performing publicly after "crazy >> "crazy heart" set me on fire. ? you want to be somebody now i'm somebody else ? >> something so negative about being on stage as a musician or i think about that even with stand-up comedy or something. like this is it, this is what i got. >> i tend to relate to so many other things that i do in life in that way. you know, so when i'm performing
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in the scene with me and we are just doing a jam. ? now that i need you by my side ? >> i can only say jeff bridges is one of my favorite people. i mean, he is clearly the dude. >> yes. >> he is clearly the coolest guy. >> well done. it's nice to see the interaction between the two of them. i now want to see the movie. suggestive questions, you could see they had a natural conversation and really good to see. >> chri didn't know his dad wase
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bring it... [speaking spanish] bring it... bring it... we are going to bring it... bring it... this election... i... i'm going to bring it... bring it... bring it to the ballot. like a wisconsin driver license, passport or wisconsin state id card? before casting your ballot in the next election. find out whether your id will work at bringit.wisconsin.gov.
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great to see that series.
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be sure to tune into the "cbs
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning i'm kate chappell... . c-b-s 58 news time is 8:56. 3 donald trump's running mate is making his third campaign op in wisconsin today.indiana governor mike pence will speak at the downtown milwaukee hilton hotel.the event starts at seven o'clock tonight. tickets will be handed out on a first come, first serve basis you are invited to celebrate the completion of the bugline trail improvement project. waukesha county officials are hosting a ribbon cutting tonight. you're encouraged to bike... rollerblade.. or walk down the trail. the ?entrance fee? will be ?waived? for tonight's event. just go to the ?new? bugline trailhead at "picnic area 2" in "menomonee park" in menomonee falls.the ribbon cutting starts at six tonight. a traffic alert to pass along. i-43 ?has? reopened at hampton avenue following an r-v
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brovelli has the details. andy? andy? 3 3 3 forecast...today: very warm and humid. chance of a late day storm. high: 90 (feels like temp. 100-105)tonight: scattered storms. heavy rain possible. low: 74friday: more storms. high: 87weekend: dry and seasonable. highs near 80.
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wayne: ? fabulous ? jonathan: it's a new scooter! - oh, it's gonna happen. wayne: everybody should get a money fairy. you've got the big deal! tiffany: gold rush! jonathan: it's a ruby bracelet. - curtain number three! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. we make deals. who wants to make one? (cheers and applause) i see four ladies in green.

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