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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  January 13, 2016 3:05am-4:00am EST

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check this out, bro. what's that, broheim? i switched to geico and got more. more savings on car insurance? yeah bro-fessor, and more. like renters insurance. more ways to save. nice, bro-tato chip. that's not all, bro-tein shake. geico has motorcycle and rv insurance, too. oh, that's a lot more. oh yeah, i'm all about more, teddy brosevelt. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. lysol disinfectant spray kills
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on more than just the trashcan. it's the "pungent gym bag stink" neutralizer. and the "prevent mold and mildew on the shower curtain for up to 7 days" spray. it's also the "odor causing bacteria" fighter. and even the "athlete's foot fungus" killer. discover more ways you can use lysol disinfectant spray to help keep your home healthier. welcome back to "comics unleashed." what do you think is sexy. >> i'm irish. i'm like, no, i have a theory. the reason the irish girls don't have a lot of sexuality, because
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you reach the height of your sexuality. i'm catholic and this is what i get. >> pablo, who is your favorite actor? >> i like the guy who does the movies because we went out to breakfast and he orders breakfast like that. recognition. and coming soon. >> it's the same old stuff. >> are you keeping up with technology? >> i hate technology. i can't keep up with it. the blu-ray. i hate it when people -- this is my worst thing. how about you e-mail me? how about we use the phone like we used to. now i have to turn the computer on and i have to type and i don't even know how to type. once you start instant message,
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i can't stand any of it. i like the fancy tv but you have the vcr and dvd and satellite dish and surround sound. if you're like me, i have six remotes so i get one of the universal remotes but i'm terrified of it because you have to punch codes. i punch in the codes and the tv went on and i'm like, you're kidding me. and then i do like the dvd player and satellite dish and then i want to watch the dvd and it makes the tv go to dvd but remote. then i have to adjust the tracking on the vcr. remotes. i'm not even here. this is an image.
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i think the battery is dying. >> i'm talking about when you get your butt naked on, you don't have to leave the house. you can be at home and download your butt naked. you know, the porno movie flicks, they have like 15 seconds. >> four days to boot up. >> all right. give him a round of applause! [cheers and applause ] >> all right. thank you, guys. that was a lot of fun.
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join us next time.(?d& fgebffemfeemebddcnfaedcacacacaca ^z fdfjeoeeemfeddcne this has been a production
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tourists. at least ten people were killed. 15 wounded. turkey's government blames isis, but not everyone is convinced. holly williams is there. >> reporter: the deadly explosion targeted istanbul's historic heart, just yard from monuments dating back 2,000 years. at least 8 of those who lost their lives were german tourists. this image captures the moment of the blast. jostein neilson from norway was hit by shranel from the bomb. we were splattered said his wife
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remains. the turkish government blamed a syrian suicide bomber and said he was a member of isis. but so far the terrorist group, which normally celebrates its atrocities, has not taken responsibility. this attack comes just three months after two suicide bombers targeted a peace rally in the turkish capital ankara. more than 100 people were killed in the deadliest terror attack in turkey's modern history. turkey's a member of the u.s.-led coalition against isis, and has tightened its border security to try to stop the flow of militants to syria. turkey is also engaged in a violent conflict with militants from the country's kurdish minority. after a cease-fire collapse last year. some here in turkey believe this spate of deadly attacks shows
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across the border. but, scott, others blame the turkish government, because of its ongoing clashes with the country's kurdish militants. >> holly williams in istanbul, thank you. >> today, mexican authorities released a new video of the capture of the drug kingpin known as el chapo. he was caught friday, six months after escaping from prison. the video shows how he nearly got away again. manuel bojorquez is in mexico. [ gunfire ] when mexican marines first raided the house there was no sign of the notorious drug lord el chapo. instead inside a maze of dark rooms captured on helmet cameras the marines found cartel members who pleaded for their lives guns on the floor. upstairs a stack of dvds, featured kate del castillo, the actress who arranged the "rolling stone" interview for
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then they found this. a light chain inside a closet that unlocked an unusual panel behind this mirror revealing a hidden door and el chapo's escape route. and he almost managed to get away, fleeing through wood panelled tunnels, el chapo made it several blocks to the city storm sewers before he was finally arrested. the government said it had been watching the house for weeks after a cartel member known for his tunnel making expertise was spotted going inside. today, el chapo is locked up here at the same prison he escaped from six months ago awaiting possible extradition to the u.s. but former mexican foreign minister jorge castaneda cautioned capturing el chapo won't make a dent in the drug business. >> there is no reason to believe that less drugs in in all are entering the united states from mexico than before. >> reporter: so el chapo being
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>> i don't think so. >> reporter: here at the prison federal police beefed up security. guzman's oldest son is believed to be filling his father's role in the cartel now. scott, a twitter message claiming to be from ivan guzman vowed revenge for his father's arrest. >> manuel, thank you. >> well, winter was awfully slow to arrive in the northeast. now it has come in with a vengeance. driving was nearly impossible south of buffalo, new york. 2 feet of snow since yesterday. in eastern indiana, have a look, mangled trucks scattered all they crashed in blizzard conditions. but no serious injuries. >> it's not just cold, descending from the north. canadians are streaming over the border to buy powerball tickets today, the jackpot for tomorrow night's drawing grew to at least $1.5 billion. more than 19 million dollars
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every hour. well you can't put a price on clean water in one city where the supplies are tainted with lead. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. there's moving... and there's moving with move free ultra. it has triple-action support for your joints, cartilage and bones. and unlike the big osteo-bi flex pills, it's all in one tiny pill. get your move on. as it is for him... her. aw... so we use k-y ultragel. moisture so i can get into the swing of it a bit quicker. and when i know she's feeling it makes me feel like we're both... when she enjoys it,
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get your move on. and now try move free night. the first and only 2-in-1 joint and sleep supplement. >> we have breaking news -- >> intelligence officials blame common smart phone apps for helping the terrorists. families in flint, michigan,
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delivered door to door today. their tap water has been tainted with lead for nearly two years after the city began drawing from the flint river to save money. the number of children with high lead levels in their blood has doubled. adriana diaz is in flint. >> reporter: flint residents have been waiting a long time for this. >> water and this is replacement filter. >> reporter: volunteers and state troopers handled out bottled water and filters a week after governor rick snyder declared a state of emergency for the city. >> pretty stressful. you got to go pay your water bills. then go and buy water too. >> reporter: back in october that drinking water in flint was declared unsafe. recently unearthed e-mails suggest state officials knew about the lead problem as far back as july when an internal health study found high lead
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the 2014 water switch. residents weren't told there was a problem two months later and continued to drink contaminated water. governor snyder came to flint yesterday. >> i have apologized for what is going on with the state i am responsible for state government. >> reporter: the flint resident said that the governor's words ring hollow. >> we are the walking dead. we just haven't had the dirt thrown upon us yet. >> reporter: she worries about her kids. their pediatrician told her contaminated drinking watt r may be what's behind their skin rashes and mouth sores. known indicators of lead exposure. irritating because nobody cares. people don't care? crime rate here. african-americans.
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snyder don't care. he don't stay here. >> reporter: today the governor's office told us state experts originally concluded higher lead levels were simply seasonal. it wasn't until october 1, the governor learned there was confirmed lead in the water. still, scott, the federal justice department is launching >> joe biden reveals a secret offer from the president when we
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david bowie never had a number one album, but that is about to change. billboard says black star is headed to the top with 130,000 albums expected to sell this week. the album debuted friday.
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in an interview with cnn, vice president joe biden has revealed a touching moment with president obama. the subject was biden's son beau, delaware's attorney general, who was battling cancer. >> i said, you know, my concern is, i said, if beau resigns, he had no, there, there's no -- nothing to fall back on. his salary, i said but i worked it out. i said, joe ill and i will sell the house. he got up. don't sell the house. promise me you won't sell the house. he will be mad at me saying this. he said whfr atever you need. i will give you the money. i said i don't think we will have to. he said promise me. beau biden lost his battle with cancer last spring.
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>> first lady michelle obama invited more than a dozen people to sit with her in the house chamber tonight for the state of the union address. including one young boy from bear, delaware. chip reid has his story. >> welcome, tom vilsack, nice to meet you. >> nice to meet you too. >> reporter: in washington, braeden manering, and his mother in tow, had meetings with the secretary of agriculture and home state senator, tom carper of delaware.
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12-year-old did to earn such special treatment. well it started when he was just 9 and entered a recipe in the first lady's healthy eating contest. he won and was invited to the kids state dinner at the white house where mrs. obama challenged him to make a difference in his community. two days later when he saw a homeless man on the street in the rain inspiration struck. >> i couldn't stop thinking about him and how he could be cold, hungry, tired. >> reporter: so he put together a bag of food and asked his mother to help him find the man. >> i got out of the car gave him the bag and umbrella. he said, thank you, son. then i knew what to do. >> reporter: he knew he had to feed the hungry. he created brae's brown bag which so far has distributed 4,600 bags of healthy food. how does it make you feel? and but at the same time not
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because i know they're all out there. but -- as long as, as long as i'm there, he'll be good. >> reporter: his mother christie is so proud she can hardly believe this is her son. >> people often say, you are doing a great job raising him. and i say, he's raising me too. so -- >> reporter: he says the key is to change how people see the homeless. >> i treat them as if they were my family. >> reporter: he hopes his seat of honor tonight in washington will inspire others to feel that way too. chip reid, cbs news, washington. >> that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and of course, "cbs this morning." from the nation's capital, i'm
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welcome to the "overnight news" i'm michelle miller. president obama went before joint session of congress to deliver the final state of the union address of his presidency. he didn't outline any bold new proposals, instead giving his upbeat assessment of his seven years in office and his hopes for the future. it was likely mr. obama's final primetime opportunity to speak to the nation before the party primaries begin next month. it comes at a time when seven in
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headed in the wrong direction. here is some of what the president had to say. >> tonight marks the eighth year that i have come here to report on the state of the union. and for this final one i'm going to try to make it a little shorter. [ applause ] and i know some of you are antsy to get back to iowa. but for my final address to this chamber, i don't want to just talk about next year. i want to focus on the next five years, the next ten years, and beyond. we're in the middle of the longest streak of private sector job creation in history. [ applause ] more than 14 million new jobs, the strongest two years of job
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unemployment rate cut in half. our auto industry just had its [ applause ] that's just part of a manufacturing surge that created nearly 900,000 new jobs in the past six years. and we have done all of this while cutting our deficits by almost 3/4. any one claiming that america's economy is in decline is peddling fiction. i believe a thriving private sector is the lifeblood of our i think there are outdated changed. there is red tape that needs to
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but after years now of record corporate profits, working families won't get more opportunity or bigger pay checks, just by letting big banks or big oil or hedge funds make their own rules and everybody else's expense. [ applause ] and middle-class families are not going to feel more secure because we allowed a tax on collective bargaining to go unanswered. food stamp recipients did not cause the financial crisis. recklessness on wall street did. look, if anybody still wants to dispute the science around climate change. have at it.
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because you will be debating our military, most of america's business leaders, the majority of the american people, almost the entire scientific community, and 200 nations around the world who agree it is a problem and intend to solve it. but, i told you earlier, all the talk of america's economic decline is, political hot air. well so is all of the rhetoric you hear about our enemies getting stronger, and america getting weaker. i mean, let me tell you something. the united states of america is the most powerful nation on earth. period. [ applause ] period! it's not even close. it's not even close. we spend more on our military than the next eight nations combined. our troops are the finest fighting force in the history of the world. [ applause ]
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isil, over the top claims that this is world war iii, just play into their hands. masses of fighters on the back of pickup trucks, twisted souls plotting in apartments or garages, they pose an enormous danger to civilians. they have to be stopped. but they do not threaten our national existence. the future we want, all of us want, opportunity and security for our families, a rising standard of living, a sustainable peaceful planet for our kids. all of that is within our reach. but it will only happen if we work together. it will only happen if we can have rational constructive debates. it will only happen if we fix our politics.
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delivered by south carolina governor niki haley. >> barack obama's election as barriers and inspired millions of americans. as he did when he first ran for office, tonight, president obama spoke eloquently about grand things. he is at his best when he does that. unfortunately, the president's record has often fallen far short of his soaring words. as he enters his final year in office, many americans are still feeling the squeeze of an economy too weak to raise income levels. we're feeling a crushing national debt. a health care plan that made insurance less affordable and doctors less available. and chaotic unrest in many of
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most dangerous terrorist threat our nation has seen since september 11th. and this president appears unwilling or unable to deal with it. soon the obama presidency will end, and america will have the chance to turn in a new direction. that direction is what i want to talk about tonight. at the outset, i'll say this. you have paid attention to what has been happening in washington. neither am i. i see what you see.
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played a role in how and why our government is broken. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. (cell phone rings) where are you? well the squirrels are back in the attic. mom? your dad won't call an exterminator... he says it's personal this time... if you're a mom, you call at the worst time. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. r it's what you do. where are you?r it's very loud there. are you taking at
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your heart loves omega-3s. but there's a difference between the omega-3s in fish oil and those in megared krill oil. unlike fish oil, megared is easily absorbed
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...which makes your heart, well, mega-happy. happier still, megared is proven to increase omega-3 levels in 30 days. megared. the difference is easy to absorb. the biggest lottery prize in history continues to groechlt the powerball jackpot stands at more than $1.5 billion, that's right billion. excitement is growing internationally. thousands of canadians are pouring across the border to try their luck. demarco morgan is in niagara falls at the new york border with canada. >> niagara falls is behind me and an attraction that draws americans and canadians. now it seems as if canadians are using this hoping the crossing will transfer them to a
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dreams will come true. while millions of americans think they're lucky enough to beat the odds, so too do canadians. >> i'm going to take my chances just like everyone else. >> reporter: she drove nearly two hours from her ontario home for a chance to become the world's next billionaire. >> we come here and drop a lot of money, we shop in the u.s. a lot. so we give to you. it's time you give back. >> reporter: our neighbors to the north have been traveling from vancouver, toronto, montreal. >> the canadians coming like crazy here for the lotto. >> thank you. >> reporter: which they are legally allowed to do. >> you do not have to be a u.s. citizen to buy a powerball ticket. as long as you're buying at an authorized retail location, that's fine with us. winners outside the u.s. can expect more taxes. the federal government can withhold 30% of gambling
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that's 5% more than for a u.s. resident. there could also be state taxes depending on where the ticket was purchased. new york has one of the highest state lottery taxes, more than 8%. we are steps from the border where canadians enter the u.s. for those not willing to make the trip there are online retailers willing to do it for them. the lotter.com. says it became unavailable after experiencing high demand. >> we don't endorse them. we tell everyone to, to, be careful. >> reporter: no matter which side of the border you are on, there is no escaping the one in nearly 300 million chance of winning. >> you know the odds are totally against winning. somebody has to win. so we can dream. >> reporter: jackpot is $1.9 billion in canadian dollars, long way from the jackpot of canada's lottomax, sits at $50 million. >> the son of mexican drug lord, joaquin "el chapo" guzman, grows
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"rolling stone" released the 17 minute in the view with el chapo. outside the mexican prison where el chapo is being held. >> reporter: newly released mug shot of joaquin "el chapo" guzman shows the drug lord with his head and mustache shaved. authorities here at the prison where he is held indicated they're moving him from cell to cell to make it diic cell to make it difficult for him to escape. and we're now getting a look at dramatic video taken by helmet camera and released by the mexican government shows the deadly gunfight that took place shortly before el chapo's capture. cbs news has learned when 17 mexican marines stormed the home early friday morning, the drug lord fled through a secret door concealed by a mirror. he hid in a tunnel until rain water forced him out. an armed guzman stole a car before being arrested.
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security prison where guzman is being held. is there a chance we will see el chapo escape again? >> there is more than all of the eyes of the world put on him. therefore, i don't think so. >> reporter: guzman's attorney says he hasn't been able to communicate with his client. which he claims violates the drug lord's rights. over the weekend, it was revealed that guzman's secret visit with sean penn and mexican actress kate del castillo helped authorities narrow down the fugitive location. new photos show the academy award winner arriving at a mexican airport for the october meeting. del castillo, was photographed in the country on several different dates. in one of the images a lawyer for el chapo is said to be handing her a cell phone. "rolling stone" magazine has come under fire for publishing the article in which penn details the encounter.
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article before it was published but did not ask for any changes. monday, penn told associated press, he has nothing to hide. in an interview, "rolling stone" publisher, defended the magazine's decision to give el chapo what he calls story approval saying it was a small price to pay. >> reporter: the u.s. is seeking to extradite guzman to face charges there. one mexican official said that process could take a year or more. >> the federal government's dietary guidelines have touched off a firestorm of controversy. the guidelines are updated about every five years. and critics say that gives food industry lobbyists plenty of time to sway the final results. anna warner has the story. >> reporter: the new guidelines from usda and department of health and human services are to tell you what to eat. critics say they're muddled and confusing and not by accident. more fruit and vegetables. less sugar.
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the key dietary recommendations from the government. >> even a small shift can make a big difference. >> reporter: new york university professor of nutrition maryann nestle says there is something missing in the message. you say the junk food industry why? messaging in the dietary guidelines that says don't eat junk food, don't eat processed food, don't eat meat, don't drink sodas. >> reporter: dietary guidelines affect food labelling to national school lunch program that serves more than 30 million kids each day. but instead of simply saying don't drink soda, she points out, the guidelines say, less than 10% of calories should come from added sugars. and instead of saying eat less meat, they say, less than 10% of your diet should come from saturated fats. >> the meat industry does not
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saying, eat less meat. that is unamerican. >> these are multibillion dollar industries that put a huge amount of effort not just in advertising but in changing policy. >> reporter: the doctor is president of the nonprofit physicians committee for responsible medicine which is suing the government. claiming the egg industry used its influence to try to weaken warnings about cholesterol. the new guidelines dropped recommended limits but advise people to eat little as possible. >> the egg industry is paying universities where the people are then put on the committee to decide whether eggs are safe or not. that's a conflict of interest. >> now the usda told cbs this morning its process is robust and transparent. and the new guidelines reflect advancements in scientific understanding about healthy eating choices and health outcomes over a lifetime. >> the cbs "overnight news" will
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it's not always as easy for me it's easy for me cause look at her. aw... so we use k-y ultragel. it enhances my body's natural so i can get into the swing of it a bit quicker. and when i know she's feeling like that, it makes me feel like we're both... when she enjoys it, we enjoy it even more. and i enjoy it. feel the difference with k-y
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education in america at a crossroads. support for common core is fading fast. student college debt is through the roof. the new acting secretary of education, john king, sat down with nora o'donnell to discuss the hurdles he faces and the challenges he has overcome. they did it as secretary king's elementary school in brooklyn. >> are you a president? >> i work for the president. >> reporter: john king can already speak softly. putting his new role as acting secretary of education, he may
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in 2010, king scored new york state a $700 million federal grant, which made him controversy followed when new york's education commissioner he rolled out common core standards. parents and teachers shouted him off the stage at a pta meeting in 2013. you ended up canceling further meetings like that? >> we restructured them. that meeting got to a place where it wasn't productive. folks were screaming, yelling. >> reporter: why were people screaming and yelling? >> some of it was the politics of the moment. some of it was misunderstandings that folks have. >> reporter: you know what the critics say, i don't need the federal government delivering standards in my state? >> yeah, it's important that folks realize that -- the
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policymaking. what we have said is that states need to have standards that push towards college and career readiness. >> reporter: at first, 46 states adopted common core standards. three states have since dropped them. and 19 more have put them under review. king will half to continue the fight for uniform standards without overstepping the bounds of his federal role. you went from this school to becoming the first african-american education commissioner, the first puerto rican education commissioner of new york. what does that mean to you? >> i think it is a testament to what is possible if students have the right opportunities. teachers could have looked at me and said, you know here is an african latino student, difficult family situation, what chance does he have? they could have given up on me. but they didn't. >> so, this is your old
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wow. >> reporter: the teachers king called life saving taught here in brooklyn. >> my mom worked here and was a guidance counselor here. so it felt like home. and then, my mom passed away when i was in 4th grade. and school took on a different role in my life. >> reporter: he was just 8 years old when he lost his mother. 12 when he lost his father. once the highest ranking african-american educator in the country and later suffered from undiagnosed alzheimers disease. >> i can recall one night he the morning. i can remember holding on to the banister in the house, saying, daddy, daddy, it is not time to go to school. not time to go to school. it's middle of the night. he didn't understand. i didn't know what was wrong. so that was a very, very difficult period. and, you know, it made school even that much more important.
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where i could get beyond that. >> reporter: king went on to earn four ivy league degrees and co-found one of boston's best charter schools. he married and had two children. and now 41 years old, will become one of the youngest cabinet secretaries in history. is there a crisis in education in this country? >> it is hard to look at the fact that we have fall in from 1st and to 13th and not see a crisis. good news i do think there are lots of signs of progress. as the the country goes through the election every candidate should talk about what are they going to do to raise graduation rates and make sure more kids graduate from college. >> raise your hand if you love school. >> king will be in office just over a year, a year that will be defined by a presidential race where the republican candidates have condemned common core. >> the term common core is so darn poisonous. >> the common core has to be ended it is a disaster. >> imagine repealing every word of common core.
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fazed. >> hard ambitious things come with contentious politics. are we moving toward the goal of all students having access to quality education, moving to the goal of all students having the kind of life saving experiences
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even after his death, rock star, trendsetter, david bowie continues to have a major impact on the music business. his album, "black star" released friday two days before he passed away is now number one on itunes. five of ten albums are bowie classics. 60 minutes did a series of bowie in 2003. none of the footage was ever aired. the man who fell to earth describes how he never liked hearing himself sing and so much of his music deals with lonliness. >> searching for music is like searching for god. they're very similar. there is an effort to reclaim
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unseeable, then speakable, all those things comes into being, composer, writing music and searching for notes and pieces of musical information that don't exist. somebody asked me the dumbest question, my god it was hard to answer. they said why do you do what you do? i thought, boy that is, that is such an awful question to answer. i really had to think about that. i guess taking away all of the theatrics or costuming and all the kind of outer layers of what it is. i am a writer, what i do, i write. i started examining the subject matter that i write about. it boils down to a few songs. based around, lonliness, to a certain extent. and a couple with isolation. and some kind of spiritual search. and, looking for a way into communicating with other people. that's about it.
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let's do a harmony line on those two that we just did. the forever sections, yeah. i was never particularly fond of my voice. i never thought of myself as a singer, you know. and i thought that i wrote songs and music. and i thought what i was best at doing. and because nobody else is doing my songs. i felt i had to go out and do them. it is only over the last few years, that i actually felt more comfortable interpreting the songs myself and being a singer, you know? i don't mind doing, being that now. but for many years, i really wasn't comfortable with being a singer. i would have much preferred other people to have done my songs. then i wouldn't have had to put all that makeup on. and that hair. oh. you know?
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