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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  February 25, 2013 7:00am-9:00am EST

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good morning. it is monday february 25th 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." kids without vaccines schools without teachers and massive airport delays. we'll show you the worst-case scenario for government spending cuts. ben affleck is vindicated at the oscars plus we'll have all of the moments and talk to one of the big winners. plus one of the most powerful women at facebook wants other women to take charge of their careers. we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> we know that there has to be
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some type of compromise, but dang it, they need to get the job done. >> washington locked in a sequester showdown. $85 billion in across-the-board spending cuts have to start kicking in as late as this week. >> as many as 40,000 teachers can lose their jobs. >> there has to be some type of furlough to air traffic controllers. >> my advice to the president. roll up your sleeves and do the hard work of governing. and the oscar goes to "argo." >> i want to thank my wife who i don't normally associate with iran. >> and the oscar goes to jessica lawrence. >> you guys are standing up because you feel bad that i fell. >> daniel day-lewis. >> three years ago i had actually been committed to play margaret thatcher. for the second time the daytona 500 goes to jimmie johnson. >> danica patrick finished eighth on record for a woman at daytona.
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>> i send my thoughts and prayers out to everybody who was injured in the grandstand. >> you have to realize the motor was sitting in the stands, a wheel with a brake arm and everything flying over your head. it was kind of scary. >> denver got the worst of it. there may be 15 inches of snow on the ground. in rome more than 100 thousand people gathered in st. peet ersters square. >> the fall up on the stage, was that on purpose? what happened? >> at 9 years old, what has this experience been like for you? >> it has been crazy. and all that matters. >> shouldn't a four-hour-long television show be allowed to give out awards for editing? i sa no. >> now, the story was so top secret, that the film's director is unknown to the academy.
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captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." congress and the white house have just four days to stop $85 billion in automatic spending cuts. >> what happens next could have far-reaching implications from classrooms to hospitals to airports. major garrett is at the white house. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. the white house spending cuts to basic government services will hit consumers hard jeopardize consumer growth and significantly slow air traffic. it appears some pink slips are going out. the education department has already put some teachers on notice. spending cuts mean your job could disappear. >> is there a sky is falling aspect to any part of it? >> there are literally teachers now who are getting pink slips, getting notices they can't come
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back this fall. >> reporter: another part of the white house full court press, warnings about flight delays due to understaffed air traffic control towers. >> there has to be some kind of furlough of air traffic controllers, and that then will also begin to curtail or eliminate the opportunity for them to guide planes in and out of airports. >> reporter: the white house tabulated the state-by-state impacts of the cuts. in new york 12,000 furloughs of civil defense department employees. in missouri, 1,200 fewer children in head start and in california, more than 15,000 children would go without vaccines. the only consensus in washington, these spending cuts are coming. republicans said the white house could come up with less painful cuts. >> my advice to the president, stop the campaigning, stop sending them out to scare the people. roll up your sleeves and do the hard work of governing. >> reporter: they'll begin debates for the first time on an alternative of the
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across-the-board cuts. even some democrats are frustrated with the slow action. >> there's no reason we should be playing this kind of brinksmanship. >> reporter: this debate is generally about the federal debt and more than $16 trillion in national debt. an alternative spending cuts won't change that essential problem. those numbers won't be reduced until the country has a debate about cost savings to entitlements like medicare and medicaid, and that's not part of the discussion at all. charlie and norah? >> mayor garrett, thanks. with the deadline approaching, cbs news anchor scott pelley will interview house speaker john boehner. you'll see that tomorrow night on the "cbs evening news." the academy award brought surprises last night. the big prize, ben affleck with "argo" for best picture. ben is up in los angeles. ben, good morning. >> good morning. if you made it all the way to the end, you got to see some
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history being made. when it came time to announce the winner of best picture. jack nicholson was upstaged by an even bigger name. >> live from the white house, the first lady of the united states, michelle obama. >> reporter: in a show that promised surprises, this one was the biggest. >> i am so honored to help introduce this year's nominees for best picture. >> reporter: the envelope was the winning name was not in hollywood. it was handed to michelle obama in the white house. >> "argo." >> reporter: "argo" won the grand prize even though ben affleck was nominated for best director. >> i was sort of hallucinating. honestly i was just asking these guys outside, was that michelle obama. >> reporter: 22-year-old jennifer lawrence had a very unscripted moment on her way to collecting her oscar for best
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actress actress. her fall had the audience on its feet. >> what was i thinking when i got up? a bad word i can't say that starts with "f." >> and if question that begins with tommy lee jones begins now. >> reporter: oscars host seth mcfarland got plenty of laughs on stage but was on twitter. >> the actor who got inside his head was john will booth. >> reporter: the show itself seemed more about music than movies with 12 performances including jennifer hudson. and barbra streisand. >> did you kind of feel like you were watching the tonys at some point? >> by the end i thought, now it's tonys. i actually said to her, it's the tonys. >> reporter: adele belted out
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her james bond theme which won her an oscar for best song. shirley bas southeast paid tribute to the 50-year-old franchise. >> i think it's pretty safe. >> reporter: christoph for jango unchained won his oscar, the second in three year. best supporting actress anne hathaway apparently dreamed a dream about oscar. >> i had a dream. and it came true. >> reporter: now there was other history made during that oscar telecast. daniel day louis won becoming the first actor to ever win that award three times. don't feel bad for all of the losers last night. they all went home with gift
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bags apparently worth $48,000. >> ben tracy, thanks. pope benedict steps down on thursday. yesterday he gave his final sunday blessing and defended his position to retire and there's news this morning surrounding one of the cardinals who helped pick benedict's successor and the pope has changed the conclave rules to hold the conclave earlier than normal. allen pizzey is in vatican city. >> reporter: more troubles for the vatican city and the conclave. it was announced he was resigning and would not take part. cardinal o'brien is the focus of atense because he's been accused of inappropriate contact with four young priests some 30 years ago. the cardinal denies the allegations but said he was not taking part in the conclave so as not to detract from the conclave to choose pope benedict's successor. that brings the number down to
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115. benedict told the faithful who came to his last sunday blessing that he was not abandoning the church but doing what was best to serve it in a way more suitable to my age and my strength. certainly the scandal that keeps erupting would tax the strength of any 85-year-old. even before ben digit announced his resignation, news reached him that cardinal keith o'brien was accuse of inappropriate touching with four young priests 30 years ago. the scandal matters less than who will replace benedict. >> i'm praying the cardinals will choose the right pope who's going to lead the church where it needs to be in a difficult time. >> would you like to see an american pope? >> that would be kind of cool. >> reporter: john walter wanted change too. >> maybe a pope that's a little bit younger, i think, would be a great fit. i think that would add a lot to the whole thing if we could get
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a younger pope maybe this time. >> reporter: in the meantime benedict still has work to do. this morning he met with the three cardinals who prepared the secret report on the vatileaks scandal. deciding when the conclave can begin is expected some time this afternoon. it's widely held that he will release the cardinals from the 15-day waiting period that is mandated by church law between the end of the papacy and the start of the conclave. allen pizzey cbs news vatican city. monsignor anthony figueiredo is a cbs news consultant. good morning, mon sig nor. >> reporter: good morning to you. >> i want to start with this breaking news that the most senior rome catholic cleric is resigning amid the reports of infidelities of four priests. is the catholic church able to police themselves or do they
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need now an independent body to look into these allegations of behavior? >> reporter: we cannot but be sad by the news that we are hearing. certainly cardinal o'brien is stepping down at this stage in order that attention is focused on electing a successor to pope benedict. but i want cbs viewers to be very clear. the roman catholic church has a process with dealing such cases. it is thorough, it is just and it is final. that process is already in motion and cardinal o'brien will meet the justice that he needs, as will the church and the perpetrators and also those who have been victimized in any possible way. let us be clear on that. >> but you say the church is able to handle this on their own. is that sufficient because he's resigning just a day or two after it became public about this report. >> reporter: he does want the cardinals to focus on moving the church forward for the good of
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the world. thing that's a good good decision. and certainly in the united states. the american bishops backed by pope benedict have done really enormous efforts to deal with the sexual abuse scandal. i think now what the church needs to do is focus on its mission. what is that mission? to bring people to god. what is that mission? to be a beacon of hope to so many who are suffering. what is that mission? to bring charity to the needy. in the united states norah, the roman catholic church is the second largest provider of services. >> monsignor? >> reporter: yes. >> this question we're hearing report of the resignation. there's the report of the secret report. did any of this -- these stories have anything to do with the pope's decision to resign? >> reporter: the holy father met
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just a couple of hours ago, the three cardinals he had commissioned to investigate the vatileaks scandal. certain anything we're hearing from the press reports is unsourlsed at this point. but certainly by meeting with the cardinal it's an indication that pope benedict is very concerned, and he wanted his successor to continue this process, to deal with it and to remove anyone who is involved. i think that's positive for the church at this moment. it's positive for the world. and it's very good news on the pope we're going to have in the next few weeks. >> thank you, monsignor figueiredo. thanks. america is reporting. local troops working with those special forces in the province are accused of torture and abuse. a nato military spokesman said this morning they have found no evidence of misconduct by the americans. and john kerry is in london
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on his first trip abroad as secretary of state. he's going to be visiting nine countries in the next 11 days. margaret brennan is traveling with the secretary. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, norah, from windy london. secretary kerry is beginning his tour here in europe but the focus is the middle east where state department officials say the u.s. and europe are more strategically aligned than ever to pressure london to abandon its nuclear program and to isolate syrian president assad. kerry's efforts to broker a political transition in syria is already faltering. the syrian opposition is threatening to boycott a meeting with him this week and they've already canceled an upcoming trip to the u.s. they're under severe pressure to get more support from the international community, but the u.s. and europe refuse to provide them with military aid. secretary kerry sent his top envoy to the region yesterday to try to persuade them to meet with him in rome on thursday.
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>> margaret brennan, thanks. this year's daytona 500 wasn't decided until the final laps, but there was trouble at the track before the premiere race. a crash sent flying debris into the stands injuring dozens. >> reporter: two of those people are still in the hospital both in stable condition. one of the things nascar fans love about this sport is the danger, except when they're the ones running for cover. by one second jimmie johnson finished first on sunday his second win at daytona. danica patrick competing against 42 men was a top ten competitor all day. she started the final lap in third place but finished eighth. but this daytona, nascar's super bowl was also memorable for
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saturday's disastrous final lap and the 12-car pileup. the rookie car driver's car went up and over. no drivers were hurt but the cell phone video showed the aftermath in the stand. 30 spectators were hurt. 13 had to go to the hospital. firefighters from syracuse new york, were sitting above where the karst burst over the fence. >> pieces came over us and next to us took out people. it was crazy. never seen anything like it. >> all of a sudden you see a tire and an engine and car parts coming at you. >> reporter: the group of six firefighters began immediate triage around them. the impact was so power recall it shirred larson's car in half. nascar's investigating the crash and a debate's under way whether fans sit too close to cars
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jockeying for position at almost 200 miles per hour. normally the win over this race gets all the attention. but charlie and norah, this daytona spot light was shared by danica patrick and this lingering issue of how to keep fans safe. >> mark strassmann thanks. time to show you news from around the globe. the pittsburgh "post-gazette" says unless doctors readvise child ear infection treatment. the first female president. she says she'll improve korea's economy and make people's lives better with expanded welfare. her father is the former south korea dictator. general motors will anuns today it's teaming up with at&t bringing 4g and wi-fi to most of its vehicles by 2014. drivers will be able to stream video to the back seat and navigation systems will be more sophisticated.
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and "the wall street journal" says there's still a gap to high-speed general areas. people in small -- some parts of the country in california and mississippi say they're still being left out because of >> announcer: this national weather report spon southern plainsed by easy drinking starbucks blond roast. converts want it.
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if you think flying is tough now, travel experts say just wait until government budget cuts kick in. >> get to the airport early, be prepared for the worst, take a good book, and hope for the best. >> this morning we'll ask cbs news travel editor peter greenberg how bad it could get. and a piece of art vanishes in london and turns up for sale in florida. the mystery behind what happened and how londoners are trying to get it back on "cbs this morning."
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a snow plow driver in massachusetts used his truck to bury cars during the blizzard earlier this month. he made a video of his handiwork and posted online. the video went viral and the driver who went by dog was fired. would you want to go to antarctica to run a marathon? what if you were just 9 years old? well charlie, there's this 9-year-old boy from pennsylvania who's willing to do just that. he's raising money for his grandfather's charity. we're going to ask if it's safe
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for someone to be running the marathon at age 9 in the 26 minutes past 7:00. lots of sunshine on the warehouse at camden yards. sharon is watching the streets, marty is over at first warning weather. >> let's take a look at the forecast. it's 30 now, going for a high of 48. mostly sunny skies in the area. now here is sharon gibala at wjz traffic control. good morning. >> good morning. still problems to report on 95. we still have that accident that we told you about a while ago on 95 north bound at white marsh boulevard. it was blocking all lanes, then off to the right shoulder. watch for minor delays there. also a problem in harford county, a road hazard that could be booking some lanes, 543 at smith drive. there's some livestock on the loose there. speeds good on the
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topside of the beltway. the west side is slow. 28 is your average. there's a live look at the west side at baltimore national pike. this traffic report is brought to you by your baltimore hyundai dealers. don, back over to you. >> thank you. more and more attorneys are preparing to file suit in the case of a john hopkins gynecologist accused of secretly videotaping his patient's exams. mike schuh is live with the latest. >> reporter: good morning. there is a common question being asked by hundreds of doctor levy's former patients, did he take pictures of me while in the examination room. they are turning to lawyers to try to find out. local lawyers are advertising in the paper online, on tv to sign up patients. lawsuits have already been filed. some lawyers believe the women deserve compensation from hopkins and doctor's estate, even though there's no proof they were on camera. hopkins says any invasion of patient privacy is intolerable. i'm mike schuh reporting live in east
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baltimore. back to you. >> thank you . today the perry hall high student who shot a classmate is expected to be sentenced. 15-year-old robert gladden is facing 40 years this prison after pleading guilty to one count of attempted first degree murder. he shot 17-year-old daniel borowy when he opened fire in the cafeteria on the first day of school. . another young girl has died of a fire last thursday. the blaze broke out in home in glenn arden. 11-year-old dya price was e vooif ed recued but lie -- rescued by died over the weekend. councilman todd huff said don't you know who i am when officers pulled him over early saturday morning. he was driving without his headlights and his blood who will level was twice the limit. stay with wjz 13, maryland's news station. up next, how a
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london community stopped the sale of a mural by a famed artist. meet a 9-year-old who running marathons in his spare
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to pronounce the musical that hugh jackman started in this year. you pronounce it like this. >> "les mis"erables"miserables." >> could we have it one more time? "les miserables." >> thank you john travolta. welcome back everybody, to "cbs this morning." massive government spending cut this week could bring surprises if you're planning to fly. elaine kweeis at the airport.
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>> reporter: long lines, flight delays and cutbacks on flights could start as soon as next week and get worse as soon as we get to the airport. >> get there early, prepare for the worst, take a good book, and hope for the best. >> reporter: that's because the sequester would force the aviation administration to trim $600 million from its budget. ray lahood say they would have to cut back on staff and put thousands on furlough. roughly half of the air traffic control facilities at these regional airports around the country may have to close and overnight shifts at dozens of towers could be eliminated. officials say that will mean both fewer flights and delays up to 90 minutes or more at major travel hubs. >> it could get fairly bad. it could be like we had a storm all over the country and things get slowed down and messed up. i mean that's a way to inflict the maximum pain on the public.
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>> reporter: some republicans complain the white house is exaggerating the impact to pressure congress but secretary lahood says the warnings are legitimate. >> we're not making this up in order to put pain on the american people. >> reporter: now, secretary lahood says the american people should be prepared for major disruption. we may find out soon just how accurate those predictions are. charlie and norah? >> elaine thanks. travel editor peter greenberg is with us this morning. good morning, peter. >> good morning. >> how bad? >> you have 150 facilities that could be closed just based on the number of operations every year. you have another 60 towers in this country where they're going get rid of the your night shifts so you're going to stop shifts at a certain hour of the day. >> this is because of the automatic spending cuts. everybody is taking a hair cut and $600 million for the faa. are these, though just scare
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tactics or can the faa move around money so there won't be these distractions? >> they can't move around money. the big airports will be operating but the problem is will the pilots get their push back from the tower and get direction from the air traffic controllers. if it's going to go beyond 90 minutes, they're going to say, let's just cancel the trip. >> what do you do? >> you heard the reporter say bring a book. bring two. there are going to be angry people. >> do you think lit compromise safety? >> not at all. it's going to be slower operations. it's just going to slow the process down. it's not a safety issue. it's a procedural issue.
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>> why is there going to be 90-minute delays again? >> if you cut down the controllers, you can't process that many planes at a time. >> and they're going to have to furlough. >> the lines will go from three to two. at the smaller airports it will go from two to one and that's a 50% cut. that's where you'll see the delays. >> when you hear -- i know you're a travel editor not a politician. >> what do you mean? i'm a politician. >> people are going to say, i don't want to do that. i have a vacation coming. >> this particular cut is flying in the face of as many people as you can get which is why i think administration is pushing it first because people can relate to it. >> peter greenberg, thank you so much. >> you bet. and an international mystery from the world of art continue this morning. there was a street more real by a fan on the street artist and it disappeared from britain and then it turned up in the u.s.
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and its state remains in the air. elizabeth palmer is in london with this story this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. in spite of all the media coverage and the international hullabaloo about this there are still more unknowns than knowns about the story. the story begins with this mural by the street artist bankcy. it's called young slave. it shows a young boy bent over a sewing machine making a bunting for queen elizabeth. it appeared here. local residents were delighted. >> when it went up i was delighted. it puts the area on the map. >> bankcy is a celebrity mystery man. his identity has never been revealed but his works are seen as public treasures some of there was outrage when the slave labor mural vanished from its
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london wall and reappeared here at this high end auction house in miami. the estimated selling price, up to $700,000. the people of hearing gay stage add protest, that it would be removed from a public place and put up for private sale. >> this is street talk. there are fundamental points about who's responsible, who morally owns it. >> reporter: they launched an investigation, one that reportedly included the police and fbi who still couldn't shed any light on the theft. on saturday with three bids for slave labor in place, the infamous banksy was withdrawn for sale. the auction house declined to say why but did say, in part, there are no legal issues whatsoever regarding this sale. banksy is no stranger to
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controversy. his art has appeared on walls all the way to israel. more difficult, though, is the question of who if anyone actually owns it. the people of hair ingay believe that the banksy that was here belonged to everyone. a new more real has popped up in the meantime but the locals hope their banksy will be back here from florida very soon. >> i'd like it to come back. we'd love to see the picture back again. just for us the whole community. >> reporter: now if you look at that wall closely, the one behind, you can see that the banksy was actually sawn out. who did it? we don't know. so stay tuned. norah and charlie. >> interesting story. >> very interesting story. elizabeth palmer thank you. and an american boy plans to run a marathon in one of the
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world's coldest places but it's not the location that's creating some controversy. it's this runner's age. we're talking about the little guy in the yellow jacket. that story's ahead on "cbs this morning." and tomorrow "cbs this morning's" read is back. t.d. jakes will be here in studio 57. that's tomorrow on "cbs this morning."
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marathoner is hanging up his sneaks. fauja singh is 101 years old. he finished his last marathon on sunday in hong kong. he's the oldest man to run a full marathon. that was in toronto two years ago when he was 99 years old, charlie. >> that says a lot. >> love it. a 9-year-old pennsylvania
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boy plans to run a marathon in antarctica. he's doing it for a good cause but many don't think he should be running long distances. joe brown with why his parents are letting him do it anyway. >> reporter: while most 9-year-old boys are playing video games or skateboarding, nikolas toocheck is training for a marathon. he completed his first marathon in december in just under six hours. >> congratulations. >> reporter: should a 9-year-old run marathons? >> he's not being hard on his body by running and pounding with coaches pushing him, trying to meet times, things like that. >> reporter: some marathons do allow children to run but no study has been done on the long-term health effects. it's thought that kids running
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long distances is a bad idea. >> we were worried about it. is there any detriment to that. that's why we went to the doctor, to make sure that we're making sure he's safe. >> reporter: the doctors say this is okay. >> yes. >> yes. they don't have any reservations with the way he's doing it. >> reporter: you could say nikolas is following the footsteps of his father. they go for runs four to five time as week. >> when it's raining outside, i don't say, hey, it's raining we can't run. we run in any weather. >> reporter: that training could help with where he's running. did that freak you out at first? >> i thought, what are you kidding me? taking my kid in negative temperatures and running in negative temperatures. >> i think it will be really
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fun. i'm really excited to meade a penguin. >> reporter: nikolas also hopes every stride he takes will help operation warm a charity started by his grandfather to provide winter coats for needy children. >> something he said to us early on, you know i'm small and i'm making a difference in the world. the fact that that came out is the most -- i mean that's just -- i'm going to cry. it's just so incredible to me. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," terrell brown, westchester, pennsylvania. >> seems like a caring mother to me. >> and father. i think it's great. sounds like he spends a lot of time running with his
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that, but that's pretty awesome. very good. >> the question is whether she did all that before she came to do the spot or once she got there, did she learn those moves? >> i have a feeling she might have known those moves. >> from her children. >> absolutely. kids know all those things. one of the world's most powerful woman from silicon looks at women and their careers and lives, wondering if it could be a start to a new feminist movement. we'll take a look on "cbs this morning." why don't we play a game of hide and seek? right now? yeah go hide. one, two... [ son ] come and find me! three! [ male announcer ] bite-sized chicken's grown up. kfc bites. freshly hand-breaded in the colonel's original recipe.
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millions of people have turned to jenny craig. the company's ceo is here to tell us why it's about more than the food we eat. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." your local news is next.
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at 4 minutes before 8:00, a beautiful looking morning. sharon is watching the commute marty is over at first warning weather. >> 48 degrees is going to be the high. it's going to be a pleasant afternoon not unlike yesterday. now here is sharon gibala at wjz traffic control. >> over all not a bad morning on the roads issue just a few issues out there. including that accident on 95 northbound at white marsh. off to the right shoulder. still some may nor delays there. a livestock issue in harford county on 543 at smith son drive. there are some lanes blocked because there is some livestock on the loose there. speeds slow on the top and west side but standard delays. there's a live look at the west side at baltimore national pike. there's another look outside at 83 at ruxton
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road. this traffic report is brought to you by the baltimore boat show. don't miss the winter's biggest boat sale, the progressive insurance baltimore boat show february 28th through march 3rd at the baltimore convention center. it's the best place to see and buy boats. get tickets and details at the baltimoreboatshow.com. lawsuits loom concerning a former john hopkins gynecologist. mike schuh has the story. >> good morning. there is a common question being asked by hundreds of doctor levy's former patients did he take picture of me while in the examination room? they are turning to lawyers to try to find out. local lawyers are advertising in the paper online and on tv to sign up patients. lawsuits have already been filed some lawyers believe the women deserve compensation from hopkins and the doctors estate even if there's no proof they were ever on camera. hopkins says the invasion of privacy is intolerable. i'm mike schuh reporting from east baltimore. back to you. >> thank you. stay with wjz 13
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, maryland's news station. up next, entertainment tonight's nancy land o' lakes spreadable butter with canola oil is made with sweet cream, canola oil and salt. just three simple ingredients. what's in your spread?
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it's 8:00 a.m. welcome back to "cbs this morning." congress is back from vacation with four days left to roll back those automatic budget cuts. we'll ask senator mark warner why the senate hasn't acted yet and what did you think of the oscars. we'll hear from the big winners, check out the fashions and get reviews from host seth macfarlane. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> it appears that some pink slips are going out. >> congress and the white house have just four days to stop $85
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billion in spending cuts. >> as a traveler what would you do? >> you heard one of the other reporters say bring a book. i'd bring two. when it came time to announce best picture, jack nicholson was upstaged by an even bigger name. >> the academy awards had plenty of surprises last night. >> what went through my mind? a bad word that i can't say. >> there are yet more troubles for the vatican and the coming conclave. cardinal keith o'brien of scotland announced today he's resigning because he's been accused of what he calls inappropriate contact. >> is the catholic churchable to police themselves. >> the roman catholic church can deal with such cases. >> secretary kerry is beginning his tour in europe but the focus is the middle east. one of the things the fans of nascar love about this sport
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is danger except when they're running for cover. >> don't feel sorry for the losers from last night. they went home with gift bags worth $45 billion. >> there will be 45 billion people watching worldwide which is why jodie foster will be up in a moment to ask for her privacy. >> announcer: today's eye opener is sponsored by allergan. heavy snow is falling for hundreds of miles from the texas panhandle to central kansas. >> the storm already caused problems in the denver area. the region is still cleaning up after getting a agting a foot or more on thursday. the governor of kansas says the storm has a potential to be worse than the last won. >> meteorologist jeff berardelli of wfor is watching.
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what's going on? >> we have extremely heavy snow in amarillo texas, but they're calling it a crippling historic blizzard. we have snowfall rates of 2 to 3 inches an hour. let's take a look at the radar and show you what we have right now. the deep shades of white, the real bright whites in texas, that's pulling toward the east as we speak. that will be moving through the plain states and we're expecting some spots to get as much as two feet plus of snow in local areas, so that's from the panhandle of texas, western oklahoma, through central and southern parts of kansas and eventually into kansas city. they could see about a foot of snow. that moves into tonight and tomorrow. same thing with chicago. they'll see about 6 inches of snow in chicago today and tomorrow. the other side of the storm is the severe weather threat. we have a frontal boundary right along new orleans over to tallahassee. showers, thunderstorms, some of them severe. the severe threat today is in
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that jengeneral area from louisiana, mississippi, and southern georgia. so this is kind of a one-two punch from mother nature. if you're traveling across the country today, there's going to be a lot of flight delays and cancellations unfortunately. >> now we know. thank you, jeff. oscar host seth macfarlane got mixed reviews. they say he was fine respectful and tame. "the washington post" thinks macfarlane did, quote, a middle of the road job. but the "detroit free press" called his performance, quote, self-indulgent. in just a few moments we'll take a look at the biggest moments with "entertainment tonight's" nancy o'dell. it's such a thankless job. no matter what you do. i found it very entertaining. automatic spending cuts are now just four days away. the obama administration is sending out more reminders of the potential impact.
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major garrett is at the white house. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah, charlie, and gayle. the white house is drawing up what these spending cuts could mean in each and every state of the union. that's a white house communication strategy designed to translate what has been a d.c. budget battle and the local stories about furloughed teachers slowed down meat and poultry inspections and lodge delays at the airports. the president will talk with the governors about all of this. the governors are concerned this could harm their statewide economies. they're asking to do one thing, delay the cuts or find a suitable alternative. that work is only beginning this week in the senate and it doesn't end the resolution. entitlement programs like medicare and medicaid until those topics are on the table, frustrating though they are, are
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likely to continue. >> with us now, virginia democratic senator mark warner senator of the budget committee. good morning, senator. >> good morning. >> do you believe the president and the white house has misjudged the republican intent to avoid sequester? >> i'm surprised. i don't think the public realizes how stupid these cuts are. in many places we'll cut things that will cost the taxpayer more money than the cuts. let me give you some examples. in the navy there are 985 separate line items. each of these will be cut. each are not of equal value to the taxpayer. in some places we'll actually have to cut long-term contracts which means we'll have to pay more for ships and planes. we're going to cut back on nih plans, meat inspectors so meat
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will go up. the senate will actually have a plan, half cuts half revenues but what the house will do, who knows. >> we'll get to the senate plan in a minute but the president is clearly trying to fan out and talk to the american people about this. but why is there no negotiation right now between the president and republican leadership? whose fault is that? >> well, charlie, i don't know. i've got to take the speaker and the republican senate leader at their word. they said no 1th hour deals this time. they didn't want to deal with the white house. i don't get it. now, we should have been able to deal with this actually earlier and i'm part of the so-called bipartisan gang of six that said let's do entitlement reform more revenues. >> senator, why does it always come down to the wire? both sides knew this day was coming. what can you say to both sides without blaming the other guy? i think people are so tired of
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this tit for tat on both sides. why do you always get down to the wire? >> i don't get it. i was a governor before i was a member of the senate. think you've seen governors in both parties the last couple of days say hey, come on guys get your act together there was a group of us in the senate that had a broad $4 trillion bipartisan plan. we never got a vote on that plan. why we have to wait until the last hour of the last day to avoid the crisis, i don't understand. >> the new senate plan will include both spending cuts and new revenues to sort of avoid this sequester. explain what those revenues are, and can you answer the republican argument that we're done with the revenues we've already addressed that. there shouldn't be more revenues or tax increases. >> well the revenues in the senate plan are targeted at closing down a certain number of tax loopholes for the most
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successful americans. it will also spending cuts so it is 50/50. what's remarkable is that the new year's eve deal that had about $600 billion in new revenue, every bipartisan plan before that had twice the amount. it's true, in addition we need to do entitlement reports, medicare, medicaid be part of that grander bargain mix, but there's no reasonable plan out there that didn't have north of a trillion dollars. >> all right. you know the deadline is friday. you know we'll all be watching. >> amen. we've got to get it done. scientists say we're not doing our jobs like we used to because of climate change. in a new report the report says the earth is getting hotter and more humid. that makes it harder to work. the amount of work people can do has fallen by 10% in the 1950s. they predict it
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good morning. it's a nice start to this day with temperatures on the chilly side by 8 or 9 degrees from this time yesterday. in the low 30s. 48 degrees going to be the high temperature this day. mostly sunny, a very pleasant afternoon afternoon. 31 degrees over night. here comes that rain tomorrow through much of the day. high temperatures in the mid 40s. jennifer lawrence is making headlines after winning her oscar last night. nancy o'dell got a close-up look at the best actress before and after the ceremony. nancy's next on "cbs this morning."
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by allergan. talk to your doctor today about chronic migraine. maybe you'll have a migraine. if you have migraines with 15 or more headache days a month, you're living a maybe life. and you may have chronic migraine. but knowing this thing you're going through has a name means knowing you can find treatments that are right for you. go to mychronicmigraine.com to find a headache specialist. and don't live a maybe life.
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"this is george. he is a good little monkey and always very curious. one day george got an important letter. he's built a rocket ship to travel into space." google, how far is earth to the moon? moon is 238,900 miles... "the great moment had come." 3, 2, 1... [ giggling ] sometimes makeup needs a little magic. new almay smart shade mousse is like smooth velvety magic. it instantly transforms to my perfect shade and gives me a flawless, airbrushed finish. [ male announcer ] if you can clear a crowd but not your nasal congestion you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec-d®. powerful relief of nasal congestion and other allergy symptoms -- all in one pill. zyrtec-d®.
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at the pharmacy counter.
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i got it when we could download an hd movie in like two minutes. [ male announcer ] once you've got verizon fios -- america's fastest, most reliable internet -- you get it. but don't take our word for it, ask a real fios customer. ask me why fiber optics matters. ask me about the upload speeds. [ male announcer ] so send a tweet, and get the real scoop from a real fios customer. get fios now for an even better price online -- just $89.99 a month and we'll triple your speed for free with an upgrade to fios quantum internet. plus get $250 back with a 2-year agreement. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 800-974-6006 tty/v. the academy awards certainly
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was entertaining last night. co-host nancy o'dell was there for the red carpet and parties that go way into the night. nancy, good morning to you. >> good morning, gayle. exactly. that's why i'm still in my dress as i tend to try to show up on your show and i don't get any sleep on these award nights. it's such a thrilling night. one thing i notice is the lead actress always arrives looking like a winner and last night was no exemption. jennifer lawrence was absolutely stunning in pink. she took home that oscar gold for her emotionally charged role in ""silver linings playbook."" >> you guys are just standing up because you feel bad that i fell and that's really embarrassing but thank you. this is nuts. >> i sensed that dress might be trouble. look closely and you see dustin hoffman helping her with her train. >> he was so kind to take out
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the evening to hold up my train. >> how did you fit in the car in this dress? >> we took the front seats out and i sat in the back. >> no kidding? >> really. >> look at this at the governor's ball. it's the first time she saw her family. her big brother and a big bear hug. >> of course i was shocked. u can't believe all of you guys are like -- i'm walking around shaking. >> the oscar goes to daniel day-lewis. >> he helped make history of his own. he's the first actor to win three oscars for leading roles. >> i really don't know how this happened. >> he joked about his intense acting style which involves staying in character all the time. >> i'm definitely out of character at this moment but if i slip back into it by mistake, you can do an intervention of some kind the heimlich maneuver
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or whatever you do when i get stuck in character. >> "argo." >> the first lady announced the best picture and george clooney won another oscar, this time for "argo." when he arrived with stacy keibler, he spoke about how important it is. >> you have a time limit on how long you're able do it on this screen. do you other jobs so you have things to do, so if you can succeed in that it's nice. >> they said they were so thrilled they couldn't believe who announced their win. >> was that michelle obama? i thought -- you know i -- the whole thing kind of overwhelmed me at the time, but in retrospect, you know the fact that it was the first lady an enormous honor and the fact that she clearly surrounded herself by service membership and women was special and i thought appropriate. anyway, it was very cool. >> it was very cool. and then even cooler was to continue on and go to the party
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where i was at and that's why i'm still in this dress, as i said. but anybody who was anybody was there and if you want to know gossip, i'll tell you. >> i do want to talk about the "vanity fair's" party. i want to go back to jen for lawrence. she had any woman's worst nightmare. she handled it so well. did you talk with her about that? >> that's the wing thing you love about her. she's so down to earth. she'll say anything she's thinking. i remember the last interview i did with her, she came in and had four cookies and they were all over her mouth and she was like, whatever aisle just do the interview this way. i think that's why people love her so much. she's so real. i know why you're standing up and giving me a standing ovation ovation. it's because i fell. it makes us love her more, i think. >> what was the biggest surprise for you. >> probably all of the winners were expected. the only thing we didn't know is
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whether it was jennifer lawrence or jessica chastain. the only other surprise would have been that steven spielberg didn't win for "lincoln" but went to ang lee. they were expecting he would possibly mean because they figured "argo" would get best picture so think thank was a little bit of a surprise. >> you mentioned it. the "vanity fair" party, the hottest ticket in town. you were there. what did you find out? any good gossip? >> it was fun, everybody rubbing elbows. my favorite moment was bradley cooper because he brought his mom as his date to the party as she was his date at the oscars ceremony. the thing i loved is i asked her are you so proud of your son, he's doing so well. >> she said i was just waiting for them to call out his name.
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spoken like a true mom. >> nancy, we've got to go. you know how it works. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by lifestyle lift. find out how you can light up your life.
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25 minutes past 8:00. lots of sunshine on the water in the inner harbor, it looks like a nice day. >> 32 now a high of 38 degrees this afternoon. here is sharon gibala right
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here right now wjz traffic control. good morning. >> good morning . a typical monday morning commute. at this point we have a few accidents. one new one on york road at hillside. another one in owings mills on glenn brook avenue by biwater road. one more on southbound route 2 at 695. on the beltway speeds in the teens on the west side of the beltway. that's a live look at the topside. that's the outer loop coming towards us. there's another live look at the west side at baltimore national pike. this traffic report is brought to you by bill's carpet fair. bill's has it all. call 877-75-bills. lawsuits are coming as more attorneys line up patients of a john hopkins gynecologist who police say secretly videotaped their examinations. mike schuh is here with the latest. >> good morning. there is a common question being asked by hundreds of doctor levy's former patients did he take pictures
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of me while in the examination room? they are turning to lawyers to try to find out. local lawyers are advertising in the paper, online and on tv to sign up patients. lawsuits have already been piled. some lawyers believe the women deserve compensation from hopkins and the doctor's estate, even if there's no proof they were ever on camera. hopkins says the invasion of privacy is intolerable. back to you. >> thank you . city police are investigating a murder mystery in northwest baltimore. it was on friday morning. firefighters found two bodies inside a burning vehicle in an alley off north monroe street. later investigators discovered the two were shot and the car was set on fire to disguise that fact. it could take a week or more to determine the identities of the two. a u.s. senator just back from cuba says it will take compromise and negotiation in order to bring home a maryland man imprisonened on the island. patrick lahey says allen gross isn't going to be released because of pressure from the
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united states. he visited gross who has been held on the island since 2009 accused of spying but who maintains his innocence. in this morning's msan on wjz spring training report, the orioles defeat the jays. steve pierce got up to the plate hit the ball deep for a homer. the orioles win 5-4 over the jays. stay with wjz 13, maryland's news station. up next, ceo jeannie
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour we'll talk with the ceo of jenny
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craig. she runs one of the largest and most successful weight loss companies in the world. she's having a good time in the green room. all the executives are women. that was a surprise to many movie fans. we'll hear from one of the winners best directors ang lee. right now it's time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the wall street journal" says the housing uptick is helping car dealers. that's because people are buying new trucks. they expect a 15% jump from last month. "the washington post" says iran is criticizing the oscars. this year's best picture "argo" is based on the rescue of the american diplomats. iranian need wra is slamming everything from ben affleck's acceptance speech to first lady michelle obama names the best picture. >> he was the ceo of a company
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that makes tabasco sauce. he decide at he died at age 68. cnn reports on n nnn . cnet reports a backlash. a vulgar word used to describe 9-year-old quvenzhane wallis. there's a twitter to follow the account. ten female surgeons interviewed by the globe say explicit discrimination is rare in boston hospital bus they claim they face more subtle obstacles including pressure to behavior a certain way. in a new pbs documentary, samberg says women have a long way to go but also do men. >> my brother-in-law once said
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he was baby sitting. i said, dude you're not baby sitting. you're the father. that's called fathering, parenting. that's not baby sitting. we need to live in a world where men do half women do half. >> facebook's chief operating officer wants to start a movement called lean in. some of the details were revealed last week by jodie cab tore of "the new york times." jodie, good morning. >> good morning. we should say this book is not out yet so people will have the opportunity to read it. what is cheryl sandberg trying to do? >> if you look at the fortune 500, only 21 ceos are female. so she wants to address that problem. she's telling women to lean in. if you want to understand her ideas, a very good preview is the ted talk she gave a year or two on this and her book will be
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out march 11. she basically wants women to become more aggressive and savvier about navigating the workplace. >> i think the issue is for many years it's been going like this up, the trajectory and then it's plateaued. for ten years it's been the same number in women in leadership. what's the criticism? >> and where is it coming from? >> it started on feminine listserves. women are talks more that copies of her book are circulating. the worries of the bach that i'm hearing is carla samberg worked at google facebook and women are wondering can she really relate to my life. women are saying my problem is not they need to be more ambitious. they need to navigate the workplace differently but i need
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more support from my employer or government. there was a great stock from google. they implemented five months' maternity leave. that's the most in the world. attrition dropped by half. >> she went to harvard for two degrees. she worked her way up. don't you want to get advice from someone who's worked as hard as she has and has gotten where she is? >> i think part of the strengths is she's seen the workplace from the top. one of the things i see again and again with the powerful women i have interviewed an maybe you can feel the same way, success can be almost a radicalizing experience because when whim can get to the top they survey the landscape and say, okay here's how it really works. the fear is women saying i already feel so much pressure i'm doing the best i can. my problem is that i can't afford child care or my problem
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is that when my child is sick i can do nothing. they want sheryl sandberg's help with that. >> to take care of their children. >> not take care of their children. but she has said in her book there are interior barriers and exterior barriers. she believes the employers and government needs to change but she wants to talk about the interior barriers. >> sheryl said she always wanted to lead a movement. some of the criticism, i'm thinking of maureen dowd talking about a movement has to come from the bottom up rather than the top down not so much a criticism of what she has earned in her life deservedly so. >> this is part of what's fascinating about the project. it's really not just a book. she e wants to give women something a little bit more concrete. just as we had feminine consciousness raising circles in
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the '70s, she wants to bring women together in lean-in circles. if you could cross a book club with business school. she has an online curriculum women will go to. the idea is to get women together and trade experiences. >> can you give us a specific example of leaning in. for instance she thinks you should do what. >> well, she talks a lot about the pattern she has seen in the workplace where even women who are not married yet, let alone have kids are already anticipating that a couple of years down the line and saying i dolkt want to take on this tough assignment because if in three years what if i have kids and i won't be able to do it. she's saying that's not your problem now. don't worry about that now. push ahead as far as you can now and we'll deal with the child when we get to it. jenny craig ceo is a woman.
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she says they don't expect their clients to be perfect. she'll tell us what she thinks it takes to lose weight good morning. the sun is out. it's going to be a fine last monday in february. it's 32 now, 48 is going to be the high. mostly sunny skies today. a big weather system is getting ready to come into the great lakes and new england with snow again this winter with rain. increasing clouds 31 tonight. tomorrow it's going to be quite wet at times. we could see up to an inch of rain in some locations. an afternoon h
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hand crafted just for you. it's like a sexy sandwich. [ anouncer ] compare new griddle melts yourself. just $4.99. it's an epic breakfast sandwich. than 5 million people with weight to lose. in 2011 consumer reports named jenny craig the top diet program. dana pfizer is the ceo of jenny craig. how are you? >> i'm good. >> with 50% of the country overweight you're not going run out of customers any time soon but why do we still not get it. we're still a nation of fatty mcfats. >> i know you like to say that.
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i've heard that before. >> i'm speaking from personal knowledge as you know. >> i know. it's an all-time high and it's absolutely a crisis. i think we can say it's something we want to fix. i think we go about live in these stages and say i'm going to go on a diet and have a quick fix and get it down and not thing of the healthy long-term behavior. i look at jenny craig that you don't go on or off. it's a way of life. it's about changing behaviors for long-term benefits. >> do you think that the problem is lack of knowledge or do you think it's lack of control? >> i think it's a little of both. and at jenny craig, we have -- i think you talked about over 3,000 consultants we have in our centers. i think one thing that sets us apart is our one-on-one relationships we build. they're there to educate on the nutritional parameters. it's the little pieces that help. there's the knowledge base certainly. but, yes, control is about behavior change, control is about understanding when i'm
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getting those emotional cues and i'm not happy or i really need and it goes in all those different directions what to do with that energy versus reach for the chocolate or second piece of pizza. >> when people talk about willpower, what do you say? >> i think it's skill power. it's acknowledging there's willpower to it but there's an element of understanding what you're putting in your body and the impact those things have. we talk about those things from a vanity aspect but there's a number one killer out there called heart disease. i'm sure you know we've partnered with the american heart association because it's the number one killer of women and men. >> one of the first things i did when i got this job is called jenny craig and got on the program. i talked with a consultant. i said i was cheating. she said don't say cheating. i made alternative food choices. the thing is it's prepackaged food, dana.
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how do you navigate trying to keep the weight off without prepackaged food? i think it's very difficult to make the transition once you get off of the program and start eating on your own. >> a couple of things. we start add program called my days that helps consumers eating what they want to. it educates you on food you want to have and need to have. at the same time we link in a world of prepackaged foods. it helps with visual cues and portion control and we have an agreement with vol u metrics. how do you add all those additional vegetables. >> when you made erin ternive food choices why did you do it? >> i want add cheeseburger and a cub cake and i'm tired of eating prepackaged food. >> that's why i ask the question. we all have knowledge about the bad choices we make. >> we all know what we need to do. >> helping with willpower are
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the prepackaged meals. that helps people with some of the decision-making. my question is how healthy aren't these prepackaged meals? shouldn't with be teaching young people to cook healthy? >> we do. absolutely. so our cuisine is we've got 85 different products. low sodium. that's the only reason the american heart association would work with is because of the quality and additional parameters of our food. the question is how do teach children. how to change behavior but influencing the behaviors of her children and family. sh's the nucleus. we have a world of overweight people and kids are coming right along with them which is even more scary for us. what does the next generation look like? yes, there's a reason for them but we don't want people on jenny craig forever. >> it's a never-endinging battle for most people and everybody has to figure out what works for them. >> absolutely. >> dana viser, thank you.
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when we come back we'll talk with oscar winning director. that would be the one and only ang lee. plus it's the only other competition on oscar night. the outfits. the editor in chief of "cause moe" talks this is dylan right here this is dylan, and this is his big brother hayden. dylan's only five, but he's already been through two surgeries for brain tumors. and he just went through his second round of chemo.
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and this is their mother, dawn who runs this loving and happy home. she too struggled with tumors. but that doesn't slow her down. her love of family comes first. their dad, phil, works two jobs, repairing copiers, and on weekends delivering newspapers. but the bills keep piling up and the heating bill gets pushed off. when you learn about their difficulties it just breaks your heart. when we asked the biggest oil companies to help families in need only citgo, the people of venezuela and president hugo chavez responded. thanks to them, citizens energy is able to deliver millions of gallons of fuel to families just like the berios. i'm joe kennedy. if you need help staying warm, call me at 1-877-joe-4-oil. because no one should be left out in the cold!
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argo won but life of pi one the statue. >> ang lee won best director for his work on "life of pi." good morning. >> good morning. it's kind of a good night for me. >> it's worth it. what was it about this film that so resonated with audiences and the academy?
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>> i don't know. it's a mystery to me. when i made the movie, i think i was doing a show and i might have said this is a philosophical book and we're making a very expensive movie, and i carried the anxiety for a long time. when i was in the show i didn't know what i could expect but then i saw how the movie played out tlorld the world, and each different culture, they grabbed different things. >> i'm wondering what was your first thought because everybody thought spielberg, spielberg, spielberg, "lincoln," "lincoln," "lincoln." did you have a speech prepared last night? >> it was like everything. we didn't know. when my name was announced, i went blank for a little while. as i walk up everybody seems to be very happy that we win this
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award. they all stood up and they cheered. they keep on cheering. and i had to give that big ball before i sit down. the energy of the room was so high. i was very very touched. it was genuinely a very happy moment for me. >> what was remarkable about this is you had as your lead actor a young man who never acted before. >> i think it's miraculous in some ways. that to me is the purest form of performance. of course he's not an experienced actor but he is pi. as a filmmaker, i don't know how much more i could ask. >> when you think about the movie, first-time actor. there is no tyinger no water, no real ocean. you certainly deserved it and people were really thrilled for you last night, ang lee. congratulations. >> thank you. i'm very happy talking to you. >> that is a happy guy. it is the most glamorous night in hollywood but not all of the nominees dressed for
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success as the oscars. joanna coals is a former mentor to the designers on "project runway all-stars." let's start with anne hathaway and the nipples. >> the nipplegate. just to say how serious this business is i actually brought index cards of what everybody was wearing in case i get this wrong. this is one of those cases where you think, uh-oh, what was she thinking there couldn't be a more talented actress than ann act a way. >> those aren't her real -- >> those are not her real nipples but that's not the point. the first law on the red carpet is do no harm. the first thing you want to do is get off the red carpet. everybody was saying are they her nip. s and the attention was drawn away from her genius. later she was wearing a
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different dress and it looked fantastic and we were praying she would stay in the dress, but, no no. she put it back on. >> was that her fault or her stylist? >> two hours before the press guard said she would be wearing valentino and the next thing they changed their mind. >> who made the dress? >> prada. but it took the attention away from where she actually wanted it. >> where else did you like? >> i thought jennifer lawrence looked adorable in that huge couture dress and we know she's young and sort of thoroughly enjoying the moment clearly, and she's not entirely polished yet, jennifer lawrence, as we noticed when she tumbled up the stairs. it was enormous and somehow she magnified this princessy moment. >> you think it was better that she fell. >> i think it was better. >> why? >> we think, oh my goodness. she's human after all. >> she handled it with grace.
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>> yes. and she got up and sank you stood up and thank you so much. she warmed up the crowd. >> you liked jennifer aniston's dress. >> i liked jennifer aniston's dress. you don't want it to look like this is the best day of your life and dressing up. jennifer aniston looks fabulous in red and she has a fabulous body which is what the current trend of sleeveless is all about. that's why they're showing off their shoulders, they're spending so much time in the gym. >> how about jessica chastain. >> looked also fantastic. she looked better at the oscars even though she didn't win the oscars than she did at the globes when she was wearing that slightly off calvin klein pale blue dress. >> about you. about you. >> helen hunt because she did the h&m dress. we have to say something. >> helen hunt did the h&m dress.
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she doesn't take fashion too seriously because she's really a serious actor but may we add she added $750,000 worth of jewels. >> in a word why is ""cosmo" such a hot magazine. >> it's about hot styles and lots of career advice. >> thank you. that does it for us. up next your local news. we'll see you tomorrow on "cbs this morning." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com
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5 minutes 9:00. look at all the sunshine on this last monday in february. >> sunshine is a good thing particularly in february. we haven't had a lot of sun this winter. it's been as gray as i can remember it being. today 48 going to be beautiful. 34
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right now. 31 degrees your over night low. rain tomorrow, it may be heavy at times. we can see up to an inch of rain. a 45 degree high. almost 60 on wednesday, thursday 53. we drop back to 47 and 44 for the first two days of march though. in the news this morning more attorneys are preparing to file suit in the case of a john hopkins gynecologist accused of secretly videotaping his patients examinations. mike schuh stays on the story. >> good morning. there is a common question being asked by hundreds of doctor levy's former patients, did he take pictures of me while in the examination room. they are turning to lawyers the try to find out. local lawyers are advertising in the paper, online and on tv to sign up patients. lawsuits have already been filed. some lawyers believe they deserve compensation from hopkins and the doctor's estate, even if there's no proof they were on camera.
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hopkins says the invasion of privacy is intolerable. back to you. >> thank you . today the perry hall high student who shot a classmate on the campus last august is expected to be sentenced. 15-year-old robert gladden is facing 40 years in prison of pleading guilty to one count of attempted first degree murder last week. he shot 17-year-old daniel borowy in the cafeteria when he opened fire on the first day of school. another young girl has died after a fire in prince george's county. it was last thursday morning the fire broke out in a home in glenn arden. 1 is-year-old dyja price was rescued but she died over the weekend. her father and two sisters died the day of the fire. city police are investigating a murder mystery. on friday firefighters found two bodies inside a burning vehicle in an alley off north monroe street. later investigators discovered the two had been shot and it appears the car was set on fire to disguise that fact. police say it could take a week or more to determine the
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identities of the two body burned body. in baltimore county, a member of the county council is charged with drunk driving. according to charges documents councilman todd huff said to the officer, don't you know who i am. it was early saturday morning in towson police say huff was driving without headlights and had a blood alcohol level more than twice the legal limit. he's charged with dui and negligent driving. ravens wide receiver and super bowl hero jacoby jones danced in several end zones for the ravens but now she's taking his dance moves to another stage. he's been announced as one of the contestants on dance being the stars. stay with wjz 13, maryland's news station. complete news and first warning weather today at noon.
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when it comes to fighting the flu virus remember to wash your hands, get your flu shot and use clorox disinfectant products to kill 99.9% of flu viruses. this cold and flu season lets help spread protection.

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