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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 14, 2016 7:00am-9:00am CST

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captioning funded by cbs it is wednesday, december 14th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? breaking news. the fragile cease-fire in aleppo collapse. ou risk. the u.n. calls it a complete meltdown of humanity. >> president-elect trump meets silicon valley tech giants today after clashing women during the campaign. plus he defends choosing an oil man for secretary of state. former secretary of state james baker tells us why he likes the choice. re we are alan thicke. the beloved tv dad from "growing pains" who died suddenly of a heart attack. he was just 69.
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your world in 90 seconds. >> it looks like this arctic air just simply won't back down. very c cold air down the northe tier of the u.s. and the coldest so far. >> freezing cold temperatures blanket millions. >> the big arctic blast heading through areas of the great lakes and northeast. >> it's 9 in detroit right now! 9! what were we thinking move to dret detroit? >> rex global leaders of all time. >> president-elect on his thank you tour praising rex tillerson, his pick for secretary of state. >> it is a very different thing to be negotiating deals for oil and gas company than it is to be standing up for american interests. >> the united nations says massacres have been carried out in eastern aleppo and that leaves a complete meltdown of humanity. ? >> alan thicke, one of the
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>> in later in life it's tougher without eight writers. >> president obama signs a sweeping billion that invests billions in cancer research. >> mail truck up in flames with holiday packages inside. the driver was able to save most of the packages >> all that. ? hallelujah ? >> you seem like you're in a great mood. >> what is not to love? >> if i was wearing that level of soap, i would be happy as well. >> and all that matters. >> donald trump nominated exxonmobil ceo rex tillerson as his secretary of state. >> rex tillerson was once the president of the boy scouts of america! yeah! of course, donald trump calls that government experience! >> on "cbs this morning." >> the president-elect met at trump tower with kanye west. you can tell it was a high powered meeting because kanye is
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our next two presidents side-by-side like that. it's remarkable and historic! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ? welcome to "cbs this morning." gayle king is off. alex wagner, co-host of "cbs this morning: saturday" is with us. a new humanitarian crisis is unfolding in the sia aleppo as a day-old cease-fire fell apart. they are on the verge of retaking the whole city and attacking each other with gun firing and shelling and united nations warns of a complete meltdown of humidianity. >> the rebels are holed up around thousands. syrian government buses waited this morning to transport tens of thousands of civilians and rebels. this was part of the cease-fire deal. look at this.
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completely empty. prize, but it's come at a horrifying cost. it's hard to believe this is happening in the 21st century. million people. a center of ancient civilization. now bludgeoned by a barbaric war. its people pounded by bombs. after four years of fighting in the city, the syrian regime has won back aleppo from the country's rebels, except for one tiny pocket. but it's done it with total disregard for civilian life.
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indiscriminately killed its own people and syria has won this victory with the backing of russia and iran, who america's ambassador to the u.n. addressed yesterday. >> are you truly incapable of shame? is there literally nothing that can shame you? is there no active bar barrism against civilization and no ut under your skin that creeps you out a little bit? >> reporter: as regime forces tightened the noose some of those still living in rebel-held areas have been posting desperate videos on the
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n the handful of neighborhoods still held by the rebels. >> a tragic of epic proportions. holly williams, thank you. president-elect trump will hold a summit today with some of the tech industry's most important names. the guess list includes sheryl sandberg and tim cook and jeff bes os bezos and elon musk and most of them wanted hillary clinton to be president. >> nancy cordes is covering the trump transition. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. mr. trump called rex tillerson one of the greatest global business leaders of our time. and he also buried the hatchet at that rally with the man who will be the second most powerful republican in washington, the house speaker. >> honestly, i've never seen a resume like this before.
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president-elect defended his choice of rex tillerson for secretary of state. >> rex is friendly with many of the leaders in the world that we don't get along with, and some people don't like that. they don't want him to be friendly. that's why i'm doing the deal with rex, because i like what this is thereabout. >> reporter: mr. trump is the first republican nominee to win wisconsin since 1984. in an effort to smooth over a rocky relationship, he thanked a native son, house speaker paul y every day goes by, i get to appreciate his genius more and more. >> reporter: earlier in the day, the president-elect met with a series of the rich and famous, including "vogue" editor in chief and former football stars jim brown and ray lewis and microsoft founder bill gates and
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and he is mr. trump's pick for secretary of the interior. he is a former s.e.a.l. team six commander and western congressman sits on the house natural resources committee and has opposed legislation to sell federal lands to states. >> we need a president who understands that agriculture makes thisry g countat. >> reporter: an early trump backer, the congressman questioned the effects of america should first strive for energy independence. >> the issue is it's not a hoax. but it's not proven science either. but you don't dismantle america's power in energy on a maybe. >> reporter: the interior department is responsible for conserving federal land and natural resources, and nearly one-third of montana's land, the state where zinke is the sole
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state or the federal government. >> the trump transition team says rex tillerson is already a diplomat. it's part of his job as ceo of a huge global corporation like exxonmobil. tillerson has strong ties to more than 50 countries. margaret brennan is at the white house how critics are focused on russia. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, as chief of america's largest oil company, rex tillerson has made access to energy and profits his top priorities. the question now of state, will he approach high stakes foreign policy challenges as a deal-maker or a diplomat? >> rex will be a fierce advocate for america's interests around the world. >> reporter: the president-elect defended rex tillerson's business ties with russia's vladimir putin and other countries with poor human rights records. but members of the senate foreign relations committee who will be judging his nomination, worry that tillerson's business
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judgment. democrat chris kuhn sits othe committee. >> as secretary of state he has to fight for free press, human o. senators marco rubio and john mccain exxon is facing at least three lawsuits on pollution and climate change. but tillerson has said that climate change is real, something mr. trump has denied. >> is there no question climate is changing and we have never -- that's never been up for debate. >> reporter: another sticking point will be his plans to imply with federal conflict of interest laws that require tillerson to separate from his significant business interests. including well over $200 million
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he'll now have to divest that according to a former councilman. >> congress and the american people need to judge, can we trust mr. tillerson not to have the appearance of a conflict? >> reporter: well, exxon's board is meeting soon to plan how to unwide his financial stake. taking the job of secretary of state will come at some financial costs to rex tillerson. >> thank you, marg. advir to mitt romney and paul ryan in the 2012 presidential campaign. good morning. >> good morning. >> reporter: so what are you hearing from republicans in the senate about rex tillerson? >> a lot of questions. so with other nominees you will see statements being issued that basically say we are green lighting this. they actually have to go through the process but it's going to be the kind of know where they are going to wind up. one where enough republicans, only takes three republicans, assuming all democrats vote against tillerson's nomination,
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raising serious qutions. on the one hand, they say, look. he has an impeccable resume and ran one of the ten largest companies in the world and an organization whose staff is comparable in size to the sprawling state department. he has the support of key figures in the republican foreign policy establishment, baker, gates, rice, hadly. the president should have his prerogative in picking advisers but a question what he has done with russia and iran and other countries reflect pure intis intere business interests or world news. >> assad has won in aleppo. >> is that about rex tillerson or barack obama and the administration in power and had an opportunity to do so? >> you look what happened. 2011 the assault on civilians began and president obama did nothing and 2013 red line issued
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and 2015, russia intervention, which took the human catastrophe down to a whole other level, i mean, and this was russia complicit. i think many republicans believe over the years, you've had president george w. bush, you've had president barack obama and secretary clinton who all approached putin with a bear hug and they don't want another president and secretary of state to do the same thing. >> do we expect tillerson to bear hug or be able to talk tough to you knows him, because he has some credible with him? >> that is the key question. i spoke to one republican senator over the weekend who said when tillerson does his meetings before his confirmation process depends what he says in the meetings. does he say, you guys, come on. i know how to deal with this guy and i'll make the u.s. does not get rolled. i was doing business deals with him and now the interest of the united states at heart and that will be my focus in dealing with putin and i know how to deal with him and they will give him a pass. if he says, no, no, no.
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and russia reflect my world view, we need to back off and reduce sanctions and take pressure off putin that is a problem in the confirmation process. >> do you think this matters in trump's position as far as the cia is concerned in russian hacks and make his confirmation rocky. >> the timing is not great. one of his great attributes of being touted as he is a quote of vladimir, tillerson is. i'm not sure that is the headline you want given the headlines we are dealing with right now. in our next hour, only on "cbs this morning," former secretary of state james baker will join us. ahead, why he recommended rex tillerson to be america's top
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snow and that is 30 degrees colder than this date last year. with the cold risk of frostbite. whiteout conditions added to the bitter air. >> this is brutal. this is more than brutal. >> reporter: and dangerous. in minnesota, good samaritans pulled a woman from her car when she slid off the road onto thin ice. nearly 150 miles away in duluth,
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degrees, a cargo ship encased in ice arrived. for millions of americans, the subfreezing temperatures are unavoidable. the bureau of labor statistics says 47% of u.s. jobs require outdoor work. that's about 64 million people. >> it's like being in a freezer. >> these contractors in minneapolis are spending up to ten hours a day outside in single digit temperatures. >> it's cool on the cheeks. cool on the lips. we're dressed in layers out here. the windchill dropped to negative 8 overnight, crews lit tracks on fire to keep them from in 5-degree freezing over. same temperature 20-mile-per-hour winds result in
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for a high and thursday and thursday and friday could be even colder as this arctic air heads east. >> stay warm. thank you. this morning, we are remembering the life and the career of actor alan thicke. the 69 year old worked on more than 100 tv shows and movies. josh elliott of our streaming accomplishments on and off the camera. josh, always great to see you. >> you too, alex. good morning to you. >> reporter: alan thicke wasn't just a memorable tv actor of his time.
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>> before becoming a household name on "growing pains" he had been host of a short lived late-night show. and the composer television's most enduring theme songs including "different strokes." ? you take the good, you take the bad and there you have the facts of life ? >> reporter: "the facts of life" and the original score for "wheel of fortune." even after "growing pains, thicke continued to stay busy
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on a number of sitcoms and as he might have once taught us, for alan thicke, family was everything. >> i look at my kids or spend some time with them and see what they accomplished and generally i feel that i must have done some of it right. >> robin thicke is alan's son. one of his three children. them. when i look at them, i pat myself on the back. >> now early this morning robin thicke posted a brief note to instagram in memory of his dad saying "my father passed away today. he was the best man i ever knew. the best friend i ever had. thank you for your love. love, your grateful son." >> i had no idea he wrote "the facts of life" and those other jingles. >> he was a talent.
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>> he was dad. >> josh, thank you. a new report highlights mistakes that opened democratic computers to russian hackers.
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a massive fraud targeting a military health program allegedly made one man $20 million in just nine months. >> ahead, new criminal allegations in the government investigation. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this
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good morning everyonei'm jessica tighe with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:26. temperatures are in the single digits in southeastern wisconsin this morning.. and the wind chill is making it feel worse.for those who ?don't have a place to stay?-- its a potentially life- threatening issue.the lack of warming center county is so bad... executive chris abele says... he's teaming up with "continuum of care"... to help find people... places to stay.abele says... they expect to have ?more? warming centers available today.you can get more information about what's available... by calling the social service hotline number "2-1-1." coming up on "cbs this morning"-- a c-i-a report claims russia tried to interfere in the u-s election... to try and help elect donald trump. new york times' "david sanger"... is in studio 57 with their
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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: 39 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, mild. high:
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? here is a new way to save energy while shoveling snow. this young man rides his hoverboard while clearing his driveway in wisconsin. probably only works with some light fluffy snow. the hoverboard have enough kick or traction to cover snow when it's wet and heavy but kind of cool. >> innovative for kids today. the kids today! >> love it. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? this half hour, we will take a deep look at how russia hacked into the democratic national committee and the clinton campaign. "the new york times" national security correspondent david sanger is in studio 57 how a low-key fbi response apparently
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accused of taking $20 million in kickbacks by abusing military benefits. just ahead, how that may be the tip of the iceberg in an alleged health care fraud uncovered by cbs news. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" says millions of americans could be drinking toxic water and would never know it. an investigation found about 4 million americans get water from small operators who skip required safety tests or did not conduct tests properly. drinking water from utilities that discovered high lead but failed to treat it.
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a cargo ship as it sank in a hurricane. a newly released transcript shows one sailor cried, "i'm a goner! !" as the el faro went down last year in the atlantic. the captain refused to change course and that angers the wife of a crew man who died. >> i would have thrown the captain overboard and tried to save myself and the ship, if it were me. but it's just devastating that >> all 33 people on board the el faro died. "the washington post" reports scientists are % frantically coping climate data because they fear the trump administration may tamper with it. in recent weeks, the president-elect has nominated growing list of cabinet members who question the evidence around global warming. scientists are now archiving reams of climate data on independent servers to keep the information safe.
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investigates how the kremlin hacked and then leaked tens of thousands of e-mails from the democratic national committee and hillary clinton's campaign chair. the times says an early fumbling encounter between the dnc and fbi, quote, meant the best chance to halt the russian intrusion was lost. the failure to grasp the attacks. the white house reluctance meant the russians have not paid a heavy price for vladimir putin turned, quote, two institutions the core of american democracy and political campaigns and independent media to his own ends. "cbs this morning" asked for a comment overnight from the white house and fbi and dnc and democratic national committee and the trump transition and we did not immediate get a response. "the new york times" national security correspondent david sanger co-wrote the article and we are pleased to have you here. you compare this to the
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>> that is the amazing thing. you go down in the basement of the dnc's headquarters and there they have, we have it in the photograph that is on the front page, their old file cabinet that was propped open during the watergate break-in 44 years ago and next to it, a thin little dell server that is about the size of a laptop. >> incredible. >> that the russians got into and it got far more data.
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he does nothing basically for seven months. during that time period, the fbi doesn't raise the alarm. this is the time period when john podesta's e-mail is hacked that resulted in those e-mails that we saw later on. so there were just a series of people asleep at the wheel and then you get to the point where the white house was very slow to react and an effective deterrence plan. >> the white house knew about this in june. how do you grade that response knowing all the facts? >> pretty slow. if you compare it to the sony hack two years ago, which we spent a lot of time talking abou and charlie and i have, in that time period they got in a few weeks they got the attribution to north korea, the president came down in the press room accused the north korean leadership and imposed sanctions.
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sanctions that you can use in cyber cases. they still haven't used them against the russians. partly for very good reasons. they did not want to appear to be acting in a partisan way on behalf of hillary clinton. partly because they were concerned about the escalation ladder because they thought if they acted before the election, the russians might come in and actually hack the election system. >> this is just an incredible read and just incredible reporting to all of you just to read this to key approach as you call it by the russians resulted in this massive breakthrough. the republican national committee has said that they were not hacked. what does your reporting suggest? >> our reporting suggests they were but not in the committee itself. like most organizations they take their data and send it off to some vendors and guess what? u.s. intelligence found republican data as well. now, they may be narrowly
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servers right in the rnc but to say that they weren't hacked would be to say that the office of personnel management wasn't. >> was the goal to influence the outcome of the election in favor of donald trump? you quote the head of the commander of the u.s. cyber command. what did he say? >> he said it was a very deliberate effort here to influence the election. he did not say on whose behalf. and i think while there are a lot of arguments right now abouh russians was. i think you have to think of this as a rolling intent. they started to disrupt and they may have ended up in the last stages when they thought that mr. trump was a viable candidate going in his path. >> one of the points made is if they did hack the rnc and the dnc as well, they only gave to wikipedia the russians what they found from the democrats and not the republicans. >> wikileaks only got the material from the democrats.
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they were putting their finger on the scale or because what they got out of the republicans wasn't terribly interesting. >> do we know whether they did anything to have access to the e-mails on hillary clinton's server? >> i have never found anybody with any evidence that they got onto hillary clinton's server. on the other hand, i would have to say that knowing that they had gotten into the state department, the white house and the joint chiefs of staff, it seems remarkable to me that they wouldn't have at least tried to get into hillary clinton's >> cyberattacks are cheap. what does the trump administrationeed to know about and think about going forward? >> they turned out a cyber plan before theresident-elect got elected. i don't think they understand yet -- and i don't think any of us really do the degree to which this weapon has become the weapon of choice.
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without prompting a military response. david, incredible piece of journalism. >> thank you very much. >> thank you very much. a nationwide fraud the justice department $20 million st we invite you to subscribe to our "cbs this morning" podcast. you'll get the news of the day and extended interviews and podcast originals. find them all on itunes and apple's podcast app.
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? we are learning new details about the scope of an alleged fraud scheme that cost taxpayers billions of dollars. the justice department says former nfl player monday i
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million in kickbacks from a compounding pharmacy in florida. the payment was allegedly part of a scam against a health insurance program that covered members of the military. jim axelrod helped break the story. >> good morning. mr. grow's indictment follows a cbs news investigation last year into a scam that targeted the pentagon. prosecutors say active duty service members, as well as veterans were recruited as patients, so their health care for hundreds of millions of dollars. prescribed pain and scar creams of dubious value and they say mr. grow was part of that scam. >> picked off by grow. monty grow getting his first >> reporter: former nfl linebacker monty grow made his first appearance in miami court on tuesday.
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fra. >> every patient that i have, they lov these products. >> reporter: cbs news exposed last year. one of the people working with grow was this woman, deanna dutting. she pedaled pain creams to members of the military at no cost to them. >> here are these amazing creams. they are complete free. all you got to do is type in your tracking number online and submit it. >> reporter: she told us tricare, the military's health benefit plan, paid $25,000 for a one-month supply. >> if you want to feel bad or do your own research, you can do just like the rest of us did but we got over it real quick once we started making our money, do you know what i mean? >> reporter: she turned herself in last week. cbs news learned she was one of dozens working with grow to generate business for a compounding pharmacy in florida. >> how much is the pharmacy making off of this? >> oh, millions.
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monty grow is out on $6,000 bond and had to surrenf course, his firearms. >> howy moreases are there like this? >> thenvestigation is at its earliest stages and not just south florida. nationwide investigation and several other states will be hearing a lot more about this. >> jim, thanks for that. corden for some carpool karaoke. >> who knew? ? >> say it, james! >> i just want to be in the passenger seat for that.
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? for too long for too long ? >> when did you first know i want to perform and this is what i want to do. >> 4 years old. >> 4 years old? doing what? >> i was impersonating elvis presley. >> shut the front door! >> in waikiki james corden he got his start on stage as a 4-year-old impersonating elvis presley. he joined corden for a round of carpool karaoke on "the late late show with james corden" last night. >> so good. it never gets old. i love it. >> especially with those hats. >> yes. the president-elect is about to meet with ceos of tech giants that he blasted during the campaign. >> we are going to get apple to
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computers and things in this country instead of in other countries. amazon is getting away with murder tax-wise. >> ahead, the big issue that could bring mr. trump and his silicon valley critics together. you'reatching "cbs this morning." ? wait a minute fill my cup put liquor in it take a sip sign the check ? c'mon in, pop pop! happy birthday! i survived a heart attack. keep from having another one. and i'm taking brilinta. for people who've been hospitalized for a heart attack. i take brilinta with a baby aspirin. no more than one hundred milligrams as it affects how well it works. brilinta helps keep my platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. brilinta reduced the chance of another heart attack. or dying from one. it worked better than plavix. >>don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent,
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good morning everyone.i'm jessica tighe with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:56. new this morning-- waukesha police make several arrests at ?massage businesses.?they happened at these four locations.waukesha police say... they got an ?anonymous tip? through crime pp trafficking? at these places. police say... an investigation ?verified? some of the crimes. investigators searched ?three? of the businesses and one related residence... and made ?multiple? arrests.?evidence? was also taken.the investigation is still underway--- but we're told it's being ?delayed? due to a language barrier. ahead on cbs this morning--- former secretary of state and reagan white house chief of staff "james baker"... shares his picks for the ?top names? in the trump administration 3
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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, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds,
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sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47 would you say no to a lot more money? [excited scream] you just won a million dollars! no thanks. nice balloons, though! or no to more vacation days? janet, i'm giving you an extra week's vacation! oh, ah... nooo. what? no way. who says no to more? time warner cable's all about giving you more. like the most free hd channels and virtually unlimited movies and shows on demand,
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call now. and don't forget the free tv app. get ultra-fast internet with secure home wifi to connect all your devices. saving on mobile data fees, helps big time. switch to time warner cable. for $89.99 a month you'll get free hd channels, 30 meg internet and unlimited calling to half the world. we can call aunt rose as much as we want now. switching is easy. get our exclusive 1-hour arrival window, a money-back guarantee with no contract to sign. plus get free installation, tv equiment and epix included. really? o.
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? ? good morning. it is wednesday, december 14th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including former secretary of state james baker. why he recommended rex tillerson for his old post and what challenges the tmp first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the syrian regime is now in control of aleppo. the city is a strategic prize. >> mr. trump called rex tillerson one of the greatest global business leaders of our time. the question now is will he approach high stakes foreign policy challenges as a deal-maker or a diplomat? >> what are you hearing from republicans in the senate about
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assuming all democrats vote against tillerson's nomination it only takes three republicans to sink his nomination. >> many americans face dangerous cold as arctic air blankets the northern half of the country. today's high will only reach 8 degrees here in minneapolis. >> alan thicke was a memorable tv actor, but also a singer and a composer and, above all else, he was america's dad. >> i can still sing the theme song to "growing pains." ? as long as we got each other we have the world in our hands ? >> a new lawsuit claims that uber employees used passenger data to stalk celebrities. when i called to complain, uber said don't worry, conan, we didn't mean you. ? i'm charlie rose with norah
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the collapse of a cease-fire in syrian has led to a humanitarian crisis in aleppo. the u.n. describes it as a complete meltdown of humanity. thousands of civilians are trapped among rebel fighters in a tiny section in the east of the city. >> the u.n. says there is evidence pro-government forces massacred 82 civilians, including 11 women and 13 children. at an emergency security council meeting, american ambassador samantha power directly criticized russia, iran, and the assad gime. >> three member states of the u.n. contributing to a noose around civilians. it should shame you. instead, by all appearances, it is emboldening you. you are plotting your next assault.
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can shame you? >> russia and syria denied committing atrocities. president-elect trump's nominee for secretary of state exxonmobil ceo rex tillerson will need to address the syrian crisis. at a thank you rally in wisconsin last night, mr. trump called tillerson, quote, one of the greatest and most skilled global business leaders of our time. tillerson has spent decade negotiating multibillion dollar oil deals that benefited exxonmobil and russia. members ofh relationships. >> james baker served as secretary of state in the first bush white house ding the first gulf war. the fall of the berlin wall and the collapse of the soviet union. he joins us from houston for a interview you can only see on "cbs this morning." secretary baker good morning.
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>> let me begin with syria and this humanitarian crisis. we are now talking about rex tillerson as secretary of state. you know this man well. he's from your home state. what would he do? what would he be recommending? what is his world view about syria? >> well, i don't know that i know his world view about syria, but i know this, he's an excellent choice to be secretary of state and he has the opportunity to be an extraordinarily effective one. because he has the management skills. he's got txp and he's got the negotiating skills to do the job and to do a very good job. >> are you worried about his closeness with vladimir putin? >> well, i'm not worried about that, charlie, because he was doing -- in getting close to vladimir putin, he was doing
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and that is make good deals, good agreements with foreign powers, whether they were authoritarian or not, that added to the bottom line for the shareholders of exxonmobil. you know we used to have a saying in washington when i was up there that where you stand is a function of where you sit. and he was sitting in the ceo's chair of exxonmobil. now he is going to be sitting in the secretary of state state on the seventh floor of the state department and i guarantee you he is going to have a different outlook. he is going to be looking at formulating and implementi basis of the principles and values of this country and in the national interests of this country. >> explain the difference from being a ceo of exxonmobil and cutting a deal with russia, a transactional relationship. how is that different, though, from what needs to be done as a diplomat and secretary of state? >> well, i'm not sure, because
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>> yes. >> but i have -- i have cut a lot of deals for the united states and i did so as treasury secretary and i did so as secretary of state and some of them were probably good and some of them, maybe not so good. but i don't think there is a heck of a lot of difference. i think, you know, you know what your country's interest, national interest is and what our principles and values are, and you cut a deal that supports all of that and you don't give those away just because you have a relationship with a person on the other side of the so i -- go ahead. >> i'm sorry, mr. secretary. you're partner in a law firm that represents exxonmobil and some of the russian gas companies that do business with exxonmobil. >> that's right. >> i ask you a two-part question. do you have any experience of working with rex tillerson and do you think that at all complicates your support for him? >> well, i've never done anything for the company that -- in which rex was directly involved. i know him.
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and i have great confidence in his ability. i want to tell you something, though. this story that somehow i was out there pushing rex early on is not correct. when the transition people for the trump -- for president-elect trump called me, i gave him really high marks. that call came in monday, the day re you've seen on that, that somehow i was pushing him because of my firm's representation of exxonmobil, that's not true. but i do think he will be an excellent secretary of state. >> so who was your first choice? >> well, you know, i don't know that i want to get into all of that, charlie. but i will tell you -- i will tell you this. i will tell you this. i think that there were three people under consideration by the president-elect that i thought would do an extraordinarily good job as
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one of them was senator bob corker who is chairman of the foreign relations committee in the senate and another was former governor mitt romney and the next one was rex tillerson, but not necessarily in that order. >> what marks would you give donald trump in terms of who he is appointing to his administration? >> in my judgment, he is doing very well, particularly given all of the questions and concerns that were -- that were out there originally. yes. i think he is appointing some extraordinarily capable people but you're going to have to wait and see how it all plays out. i'll tell you -- i was thinking you were going to ask me a question, what is it that rex tillerson does to -- what does he need to do be a good secretary. >> yes. >> and i was going to tell you take the most important thing that he needs to do is to establish a seamless relationship with his president.
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of state unless you have that kind of relationship and, fortunately, i had that kind of relationship with george w. bush. >> but it went way back to the time you both were young men in texas and worked for each other. >> no, we didn't work for each other. >> no, but you supported his campaigns when he supported your ambition. >> it went back 40 years because we had been friends for 40 years. yes it did that. i didn't have as difficult of a job establishing a seamless relationship with my president. but that is the important th >> mr. secretary, i know we want to talk about something that is close to your heart which is the struggle, the plight of elephants around the world and you've called for a worldwide ban on ivory and you say elephants are our collective responsibility as global citizens. what needs to be done? >> the global ban on ivory trade. when i was secretary of state in 1989 and 1990 i pushed for that
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endangered species and over the years, the ban began to erode a little bit and exceptions were made here and there. progress was made, by the way, in restoring elephant populations while that ban was in effect. as it eroded, that progress was lost. we run the risk, norah, of waking up here one day with elephants in dire strait, in dire possibility of extinction. i don't want my children and great grandchildren that grow newspaper a world that doesn't have elephants and we have a risk of that today. >> that is an admirable concern. some of the people in the trump administration believe too fee people who have a strong view to protect the planet. and who have strong views about the dangers of global warming.
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everybody in the administration. i certainly can't because i don't know what their views are. i do know this. rex tillerson was one of the people -- one of the corporate leaders in the united states who first came out and acknowledged the problem of climate change, and so -- but i can't answer for people who have been appointed to positions like epa and so forth. i don't know the answer to that. >> thank you. >> secretary baker, thanks for taking time this morning. >> thank you for having me. just ahead, what could be a clash of the titans. when some of silicon valley's most powerful ceos visit trump first, it's time to check
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two young entrepreneurs are redefining the color nude. ahead, how the recent harvard college graduates are using technology to offer new options n colored fashion. you're watching "cbs this morning." ing "cbs this
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some of the tech world's biggest names will gather at trump tower later today. the president-elect will meet executives from companies like oracle, amazon, apple, google, and facebook. many in of the group described him in the campaign as a threat to their future. only a few took a a path forward. a key issue on the agenda is jobs. >> we are going to get apple to start building their damn computers and things in this country instead of in other countries. >> reporter: donald trump pulled no punches on the campaign trail, attacking some of silicon valley's giants. >> amazon is getting away with >> reporter: the verame
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chastised are now set to meet face-to-face with the president-elect. >> the election of donald trump surprised silicon valley but an opportunity to view that as a wake-up call. >> reporter: aol founder steve case was not shocked by trump's election victory because he has been traversing the company and spotlighting entrepreneurs on his rise to the rest bus tour. people have seemed their futures dim because of what is happening with globalization and digitization. >> reporter: jobs will be reportedly be a top the agenda at this afternoon's meeting and familiar face will there. peter thiel one of the few in sill son valley to back trump. thiel is now advising the
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have endorsed hillary clinton but he sees an opportunity for cooperation. where do you think they can find common ground? >> i think a lot of issues there is disagreement. immigration is a big deal. maybe the president-elect trump will support an immigration, you know, policy around things like, you know, the start-up visa. ? i'm proud to be an american ? >> reporter: trump has softened his position on visas for highly skilled immigrants. >> i'm changing. i'm changing. we need highly skilled people in this country af it, we will get them in. >> reporter: in a way, do you think his candidacy and now his mass deportations. >> don, thanks for that. an interesting meeting at trump tower today. >> indeed, yes, yes. >> yeah.
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ahead, why the captain says he was very, very, very lucky. you're watching "cbs this morning." ? you got the notion said i like to know where you got the notion ? ? rock the boat don't rock the boat baby don't rock the boat ? ? don't tip the boat over don't rock the boat baby ? advil pm combines the number one pain reliever gentle, non-habit forming advil pm. for a healing night's sleep. liberty mutual stood with me when i was too busy with the kids to get a repair estimate. liberty did what? yeah, with liberty mutual all i needed to do to get an estimate was snap a photo of the damage and voila! voila! (sigh) i wish my insurance company had that... wait! hold it... hold it boys... there's supposed to be three of you... where's your brother? where's your brother?
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? ? a yacht race in sydney nearly turned into a demolition derby. the yacht scally wag squeezed into a small gap and apparently missing other vessels by inches. the yacht finished third. they say we roulette wheel and came up zero. very, very lucky, we would say. >> by the skin of >> i love that name, skallywag. >> good sailing! a giant sinkhole raises new questions about coastal erosion on the west coast. we take you to california where the sinkhole is reminding residents about the dangers to their own homes. you're watching "cbs this morning." your local news is next. ? make like a beeline goi heading to the borderline
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would you say no to a lot more money? [excited scream] you just won a million dollars! no thanks. nice balloons, though! or no to more vacation days? janet, i'm giving you an extra week's vacation! oh, ah... nooo. what? no way. who says no to more? time warner cable's all about giving you more. like the most free hd channels and virtually unlimited movies and shows on demand, so you can binge all day. call now. and don't forget the free tv app. get ultra-fast internet with secure home wifi to connect all your devices. saving on mobile data fees, helps big time. switch to time warner cable. for $89.99 a month you'll get
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unlimited calling to half the world. we can call aunt rose as much as we want now. switching is easy. get our exclusive 1-hour arrival window, a money-back guarantee with no contract to sign. plus get free installation, tv equiment and epix included. really? honest...no. good morning i'm kate say yes to more. call now. chappell... c-b-s 58 news time is a driver is facing an o-w-i charge... after his pickup truck went over an embankment and plunged into pike creek in kenosha overnight.police say it happened around 11:30 at the pike bike trail bridge. they say the driver was intoxicated when his truck went off highway 32 ...and landed in the creek.the driver was able to get out of the truck and to shore on his own. he was not hurt. a lakeland university student is ?missing? this morning.
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says... he waswearing a black jacket.if you've seen o'neal--- call the "sheboygan county sheriff's office" or "lakeland university." a sheboygan man is facing felony terrorism charges after posting about school shootings on his facebook page. after days of threatening posts... a tipster alerted police. when police searched 21-year-old joshua bagemehl's home... they found ammunition and handwritten notes. bagemehl was arrested... and now faces three-and-a-half years in prison... and a ten thousand dollar fine. 3 why your child may actually crave your attention... but from afar.a psychologist explains what teenagers really want... and the concept of the 'potted plant parent.' a wind chill advisory was issued this morning for later today.justin tells us what we can expect. forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low:
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high: 47 forecast...today: decreasing
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? >> i just want you to know if you need anything, don't be shy, okay? there are no rules in this house. not like a regular mom. i'm a cool mom! right, regina? >> please stop >> okay. >> actress amy poehler trying to be the cool mom. why being a cool parent m not be as involved as you think. psychologists and cbs contributor lisa demoore is in our green room to show us just being around benefits your team
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shaking up the fashion industry. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" reports the government now believes fracking has contaminated drinking water. that is a major change in the study first released last year by the environmental protection agency. current federal rules cover only fracking wells on public land. about 10% of the total. prp has vowed to expand fracking and roll back related rules. >> cbs news national affiliate wtvf reports that murfreesboro, tennessee, were evacuated after dangerous hazardous chemical spill. two semis crashis were reportedly hospitalized with unknown injuries. "usa today" says this year was the warmest on record in the arctic. the surface temperature of the arctic ocean in august was 9 degrees above average.
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one scientist says the arctic and the global climate system it maintains are unraveling. >> and "the washington post" reports on dna testing for dogs. scientists want to know if certain genes can influence behavior and may explain why some breeds bark more or trainers are asked to submit a swab of their dog's drool and take a cognition test for a behavioral study. gned up. barcy's spit?ing to get barcl >> he barks at everybody. powerful storms and high tides in northern california today could slow efforts to fill a large sinkhole. crews have been working to fill the 15-foot hole along the coast. at first, it appeared on saturday. john blackstone is in pacifica, ten miles south of san
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john, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, here in pacifica, we are right on the western edge of the continent. this apartment building is empty and condemned because it could slide into the pacific ocean because of cliff erosion. over here now, a popular hiking path down to the beach is closed because part of it has disappeared into a huge sinkhole. at 15-foot section of the trail just dropped away into the ocean. the trail is now off mi crews pump concrete and sand into the massive sinkhole. this is only the latest effort to stop erosion of the cliff here that has been falling away for decades. >> we have seen waves up pretty high every year but this is the worst i've seen. >> reporter: the company that owns the land told "cbs this morning," an underground pipe separated and caused leaking water to saturate the ground below. as crews work to stabilize the area, powerful tides are moving in. >> sand just, you know, washed
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big cavity. >> reporter: the cliffs here are more than a hundred feet tall and when the base is pounded by high surf, the bluff is undermined. >> when you get the big breakers and ground swells coming in, that really takes a beating on these things. >> reporter: rick gillaza grew up in this area and watched waves erode the pacifica coastline for years. >> i have memories when i was a child out here and i take my wife out here now and try and find the places where my dad and i fished years ago. they are gone. once here are gone too. when major el nino storms hit california in 1998 the bluffs eroded so quickly, residents fled before one home tumbled into the ocean. other houses were knocked down before they, too, fell off the cliff. earlier this year, two apartment buildings were demolished as the bluff beneath themtinued to drop away and a third ocean view apartment complex was condeed
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building at cliff's edge. you must have come along here, seen those apartments often. could you ever have imagined that it would be like it is today? hanging off the edge? >> well, gosh. coming out here every do. i mean, there is just nothing stopping this water. >> reporter: now once the sun rise, the view from here is spectacular, which is why there are apartment buildings all along this bluff. the nearest apartment building to here was ocean air and that is perhaps because its previous name conjured up a now too precarious image. it used to be called land's end! >> how about that? john, thank you so much. parents of teenagers might be surprised to learn what their kids really think about having them around. "the new york times" looks into the issue in an online article called "what do teenagers want? potted plant parents." psychologist lisa demoore
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here is a complaint one might not expect. they wish their parents were around more often. lisa demoore is a cbs news contributor. good morning. >> good morning. >> when i first heard the phrase potted plant, i thought negative. but you take it a different direction? >> i do. what i've learned from teenagers is they like to have their parents around but that doesn't mean they want to interact with their parents. so i think a potted plant makes a good metaphor for that. >> yes. >> what the teenagers are asking for. what we see is the data on the e of the teenager's preference to have the parents there. one of the really interesting thing in the data they separate
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connectiveness in the families and even when the warmth and connectiveness is not strong the presents in and of itself is available for teenagers. >> what about the working parents that can't be around as much as perhaps they would like to be? >> absolutely. families with big jobs or who are spread thin. so they can't always be present in the ways they want. so the good news is that teens are resilient, kids are resilient. kids thif under all sorts of conditions. what we see in one of the studies i cite in the article looked att and fly out parents in australia. there is a large sector of parents who work away from home for two to three weeks at a time on oil rigs or mines. they studied those families. their teens were more stressed as you might expect but they were doing just absolutely just fine. i think the point here is families do the best they can with the option they have got, but mostly what we want to do is reassure parents that you just being around is enough. i think often we feel like we
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have a conversation. that is not necessarily what the data show. >> i've always been curious about this question. what is it about the teenage to rebel against their parents? >> that terrible side effect of puberty. their job to become independent. i think a normal development a teen's job to push away and a parents' job to pull back. the other reason honestly they get wise to us. you know? at 14, >> bored? >> yes. they realize you're older and noon what dodd all the time. >> i think a pull of being with your friends and they are developing friends and contact and they want to be where they are and doing their thing. >> absolutely. that is their job. what we want to do in that context is for home to be a secure base. you know, that they can explore the world and move away and come back and know that parents are available, if needed. i think one of the challenges with teenagers is needs arise quickly.
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one minute and completely not fine the next. for teenagers, i think they feel let's pretend you're not there but don't go anywhere. i might need you. >> what is a world example of being a potted plant parents? >> sure. i collected these from my friends as i was writing them. one just folds laundry every night in a room where her teenagers watch tv. she is around and there is no pressure, no expectation. >> interesting. >> and another one of my friends, his daughter will ask him to sit in the room where she es does his work there quietly. i think that we can just underestimate the value of just being available without an agenda. you know, so many adults, when they are with teenagers, they are bringing an agenda. it's a coach or a teacher or parent. >> i wonder fountain inverse is too. we played that clip from amy poehler and "means girls." does that have a deleterious effect on a relationship? >> not necessarily.
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thing. i think what i want to reassure parents is that just because you're not having a deep conversation, just because your teenager is not coming wito you with questions doesn't mean you just being there in the kitchen doing your thing, available if they need you, that is still valuable. >> so could i move into your office? because if you were there, i would just have more fun. >> you want me to be there around you more? >> yes. >> i can do that. >> i could get more done. >> beautiful. you guys are on to something. >> i'll be i don't think you want me as a potted plant, though. you want more than that. >> a beautiful potted plant. >> when two harvard grads couldn't find the right color nude for their skin tones, they turned to technology. ahead, how their breakthrough won the support of nearly a
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? the global lingerie industry is expected to reached $30 billion next year. for most women, finding the right shade of clothing or makeup that matches your skin tone can a be a challenge and some start-up companies are work to go expand the nude color
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>> reporter: woki iworking from kitchen table, two harvard business graduates are hoping to change how the resale community sees all skin colors. >> we are the first to tackle this problem. >> reporter: the problem according to entrepreneurs have been fashion's limited range in the color nude. when you grew up, what did the color nude to you? >> it definitely meant beige. i have a lot of stories of in just having ashy legs. >> reporter: the children of sudanese and mexican immigrants bonded from lingerie and nylons to makeup. >> we were talking about needing flesh tone products and there just being this huge gap. and so it came out of this desire to do something good for the world. >> reporter: on a mission to change the standard of beauty for women around the globe, they launched their company nudist last july, just months out of
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our nude meter. we digitize your skin tone and we match you with product that best matches your skin tone. >> reporter: they say their nude meter is the first of its kind. >> propriety algorithm. between of two us we were scanning people's skin and looking at different, like, products versus skin tone, and coming up with what were the different variables that we need to measure to match product to skin tone. >> reporter: it sounds very harvard-like. we give the nude m it starts by taking a picture of your hand on a white sheet of paper. >> so then you select your skin tone. >> that looks good. >> reporter: looks good. >> then you shop your skin tone. now number 7. that is your nude. >> reporter: once you know your nude, the site cureates longry and hosiery to match and they have a wide variety of skin tones. are you actually matching people's skin tone with products
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that are close enough? >> we do offer products that are close enough, because there's still a gap in the market for nude products. >> reporter: we examined that gap. when we went to the websites of ten major retailers, we found few options for women of color. >> the current definition of nude, the beige tones, do not match 84% of the global population. so the opportunity is big to fix this. >> reporter: julie wills is a fashion and beauty editor for "essence" magazine and says it's not a move, btrend, but a movem >> i feel trends are fleeting and i don't want this to be a fleety thing. >> reporter: wem pooem apeople about it on social media. >> i think social media is really the reason why this is all happening. it's really kin of energized people to be more vocal about
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called out. >> yes. yeah. a lot. >> reporter: as more companies answer the call with more skin tone options, ateam and nancy plan to expand as well. >> we talk about launching footwear which we call the most coveted nude item. right now if you got google and search nude shoes you will not find anything that matches my skin tone. our customers keep asking, when is footwear coming? >> shoes. it's all about shoes. >> women love shoes. >> reporter: now isn't perfect just yet. the ladies are constantly refining the product to work out some sinking. the young entrepreneurs are working on those explanation plans and means moving out of nancy's apartment and new office space and even hiring some employees because they do everything themselves right now. >> i'm so excited about this story. i can never find nude that matches my skin tone. >> it's not for darker-skinned women. also for fairer-skinned women,
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? as long as we keep on giving ? >> great to have you, alex. >> so nice to be here. i even woke up on time to make it to the studio before the show began. >> that does it for us today.
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evening news" with scott pelley tonight. we will see you tomorrow right
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good morning i'm kate chappell... c-b-s 58 news time is 8:56. the city of milwaukee has ?reduced? the cost of a plow license dramatically... from 50 dollars to 10. city leaders are hoping this will help clear alleys and side roads sooner... since those are "lower priority" for ?city? plo. plows.we have details on how to ?get a license?... at police in waukesha are asking for help finding ?this woman.? they say... she walked into the waukesha state bank on east st. paul and madison streets around five last night.. and demanded money.she took off with some cash. if you know who she is--- call waukesha police. wilmot mountain-- in kenosha county-- opens for the season today. and skiers will notice some changes. the mountatin jas new owners and underwent 13-million-dollars worth of renovations.the new owner-
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new.. four-person chairlifts... significantly changed the base area... including a new ski school building with a ?magic carpet? instead of a tow rope.there's also a new terrain park and 56 new snow making guns. wilmot opens at 10 this morning. bundle up if you do plan to hit the slopes.it's going to be ?very? cold today. and even colder tonight!justin has a check of ready weather. forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39u 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, 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
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wayne: whee! you're going to bali! jonathan: it's a zonk snowed-in living room. (screaming) wayne: you've got the big deal! both: (high pitched voices) teeny tiny box. - i've got to accelerate! wayne: you got it! - (screaming) wayne: go get your car! - let's make a deal! jonathan: it's time for ?let's make a deal?. now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody. welcome to ?let's make a deal.? i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in. one person, one dealer, let's go! in fact, you know what? let's do a couple. i need a couple. let's see. you guys. yes, in the red. in the red, come on. hello, hello, hello. you guys stand back here for me. how are you doing, marco? christie. how long you have been together? - three years.

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