tv CBS This Morning CBS August 29, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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good morning. captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is monday, august 29th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? terrified passengers run on the tarma false reports of an active shooter. >> donald trump says he will deliver a major speech on immigration this week, amid new confusion about his policy while his showdown with hillary clinton over race relations heats up. 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick says he will continue to sit down through the national anthem. his stand has a fierce debate online and in the nfl. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener."
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emergency at the ticket counter. >> chaos at l.a.x. after false reports of an active shooter. >> we just heard there is a shooter, a shooter. we couldn't believe what is going on. >> we immediate started running. >> what happened to the other 11 million? will there be a deportation force removing these virgin islands? >> do they or don't they? >> the softening is more approach than politics. murder of a shooting death of nykea aldridge, the cousin of nba star dwyane wade. >> forecasters are watching two weather systems expected to impact the southeast united states. >> if you live on the gulf coast you need to make your preparations now. >> colin kaepernick elaborating
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during the national as dnthem. >> is there a time and place. >> a new jersey police officer pulled a man from the tracks just seconds before a train barreled through. >> all that. >> tonight, we are here to have fun. >> beyonce at the video music award. >> and all that matters. >> i'm here to tell you that the >> charles osgood announced he is signing off as host of "cbs sunday morning." >>-o after 50 years on cbs, the time has come. >> on "cbs this morning." >> there it is! >> they did it! a perfect season' little league world series championship. >> how does it feel? >> the best. >> the best, guys, the best. announcer: this portion of "cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose and gayle king are off so josh elliott and demarco morgan are here. panic in one of the largest airports overnight. reports that a gunman at los angeles international airport and turned out to be a false alarm but it caused passengers and a ground stop. >> no shots were fired and no one reported hurt. mireya villarreal at l.a.x. with the impact of this false alarm. good morning to you. >> reporter: well, good morning. police have determined that it was loud noises that prompted calls of an active shooter and while they are still trying to determine what those loud noises were, it was enough to put a lot of these customers and
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>> reporter: panicked passengers captured the chaos at los angeles international airport last night. >>ome on, run! >> reporter: after reports of an active shooter inside terminal 8 sent people running for safety. >> operation. we have an emergency at the ticket counter. a shooting. need needed immediately. hour to determine it was a false alarm. >> people started running and i thought they were missing their flight or running late and we heard there is a shooter, there is a shooter. we just started storming and couldn't believe what was going on. >> reporter: the reports sent hundreds of passengers pouring out of the airport and onto the street, some even seeking shelter on the tarmac. >> get on the ground! >> reporter: police also detained a man wearing a mask and carrying what appeared to be a weapon last night.
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sword. he was immediately released. >> reporter: the faa issued a partial ground stop and passengers who evacuated during the panic needed to pass through security again before boarding their flights on. just two weeks ago, reports of gunfire created a similar panic at new york's kennedy airport. those reports also turned out to be false. there were 68 cancellations report. while this chaos was occurring overnight, l.a.x. security was able to send anyone within a five mile radius a safety notification telling them not to come to this area and a first here at l.a.x. >> what a mess. thank you. donald trump is preparing for this fall's presidential debate with a familiar name. former fox news chairman and ceo roger ailes met with trump
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george h.w. bush. he resigned from fox last month facing sexual harassment allegations. trump will deliver a major speech on illegal immigration in arizona on wednesday. major trump is here with more. >> reporter: donald trump's attempt to soften his language on immigration, i emphasize, appears to be short-lived. long time supporters issued stark public warnings for trump to stand his ground and he appears to have helped trump on the stump, on twitter, the gop nominee is still trump. >> all of the media wants to talk about is the 11 million people or more or less, they have no idea what the number is because we have no control over our country. >> reporter: donald trump blamed the media saturday for missing the point of his immigration plan. but offered little clarity on how he will handle otherwise law abiding undocumented immigrants already living in the u.s.
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happen within one hour after i take office, we start. okay? >> reporter: backing away from a suggestion trump, himself, made last week, vice presidential nominee mike pence of indiana said undocumented residents will have to leave. >> people that want to gain legal status, you heard donald trump say again and again will have to leave the country. >> reporter: pence refused to explain why tough language like this that helped trump win the republican nomination has disappeared. >> you're going to have a deportation force and you're going to do it very humane and nice way. i yo it doesn't sound nice but not everything is nice. >> reporter: trump's campaign manager admitted he has change. >> he is not talking about a deportation force but talking about being fair and humane. >> reporter: on sunday, trump talked about hillary clinton's health and challenging her to release detailed medical records
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on the campaign trail, trump has only eluded to the issue. >> she doesn't have the strength, the stamina, or the ability to straighten out our country. >> reporter: despite being among the oldest general election candidates in u.s. history, neither trump 70, nor clinton, 68, have released in-depth health records. on another topic, trump relse john edwards the catch phrase the 10 million bye in battleground states is two more. >> i remember that. donald trump's campaign revealed last my that trump will address the impact network in detroit on saturday. it is the only african-american owned and operated christian tv network. it comes as the trump and clinton campaigns continue to argue over race relations.
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>> reporter: good morning. we are still seeing the repercussions what was truly a first. two presidential candidates accusing each other of bigotry. the clinton campaign has followed up with a new ad flushing out their accusations, while trump court controversy on the subject this weekend but, what else? a tweet. >> you're living in poverty. your schools are no good. you have no jobs! look at my african-american over here. >> reporter: the latest ad accuses trump of racial insensitivity and more fodder this weekend after the relatively of an nba star was killed in chicago. trump tweeted the following. just what i've been saying, african-americans will vote trump. clinton's running mate chastised trump. >> we ought to be extending our sympathy to the family. that is only reaction that is appropriate. >> reporter: the day before, he
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kkk. >> ku klux klan values, david duke values, donald trump values are not american values. >> reporter: trump did eventually tweet his condolences to the chicago family and his supporter chris christie accused clinton and kaine of overheated rhetoric. >> this type of discourse in the campaign is just unwarranted, but it was started by mrs. clinton. >> hillary clinton is a bigot! >> reporter: actually, trump beat clinton to the punch by about 12 hours. >> there has been a steady him. >> reporter: the two sides are also tangling over the clinton foundation and the access its donorsad to clinton as secretary of state. >> we get these new revelations almost weekly that there are thousands of new things that we haven't yet seen. >> the republicans call it pay to play. why are they wrong about that? >> when wps meet with their donors and supporters, they call it a meeting and when democrats do that, they call it a
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repeated donations did not get special favors when clinton was secretary but the republicans want more documentation, including clinton's calendars and schedules and 15,000 additional e-mails that were unearthed by the fbi. >> nancy, thank you. dan seno on r was a senior adviser to the romney/ryan campaign in 2012. the trump campaign announcing it's going to spend 10 million in nine states for this new ad by called two >> is it too little, too late? >> the message is right, which this is a change election and running against the third term of obama and three decades public life is hillary clinton. it's late in the message. in terms of the actual ad about 10 million is a fraction of what the clinton campaign has been spending the last several months. this stage of a presidential campaign is like a world war ii battlefield.
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tv ad buying and mass field operation and trump is doing nog of about it. >> it's a mass deportation. and donald trump saying he is going to finally give this major speech on wednesday. >> right. >> supposedly, clarifying this but isn't this muddling of the issue and bringing more attention what is a divisive issue for someone who is trying to gain hispanic voters? >> absolutely. i don't think they believe they are actually going to reach significant numbers of latino white educated suburban middle class and upper middle class and where they are suffering and republicans can't win without those voters. they are trying to calm those voters down saying we are not as crazy as the media say we are. also just this uncertainty about his position. you showed clips of his surrogates on tv all over the weekend earlier. no two of them said the same thing about his immigration plan and it speaks to the strains of not having a presidential
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and roll out policies and none of that is going on. it's chaos. >> the surrogates come the first debate and we have learned that not only is roger ailes advising donald trump with regard to the upcoming first debate but the trump campaign, in a stark and marked contrast to the clinton campaign is not actually having any mock debates. >> right. >> fair to say that is unusual? >> unusual, yes. i've been involved with primary not only to re-create the point and counterpoint but a stamina issue. it's exhausting. hillary clinton, she is actually pretty effective debater. you look at her debate experience normally the end of 2008 when she was one-on-one with obama and then the last debate one on one with sanders. not what trump is used to. he is used to being on stage
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with some of the rubio debate prep. we were struck by how exhausted he would get. it's a stamina issue. you have to prep for this. this is a different debate than in the primary. >> how exhausted trump got? >> how exhausted trump got. you could see it on the show and on television by the end he was sort of worn down, even though on steak a stamina issue there and he is sharing the stage with 13 or 14 people. this is him one-on-one wh thank you, dan. two brothers accused of killing dwyane wade's cousin is in custody. derren and darwin sorrells face attempted murder charges. the man in charge say the suspects are, i quote, the prime example of the challenge we face, end quote. dean, good morning to you.
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well, the two shooting suspects the police say have long criminal records and were known gang members. apparently, they were shooting on friday at the driver of a car. they missed him. but they struck nykea aldridge, who was returning home after having registered one of her children at a local school. >> this act of violence is the why ee shooters in city of chicago. when will enough be enough. >> reporter: derren and darwin sorrells were each charged for first-degree murder in the shooting gej of nykea. derren admitted to police he shot his gun multiple times. >> we were supposed to grow old together. >> reporter: family members remembered the 32-year-old
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sunday. >> her life is gone. she can't come back. >> reporter: chicago bulls star dwyane wade mourned his cousin's death on twitter, writing, the city of chicago is hurting. we need more help and more hands on deck. wade had spoken at a chicago town hall on gun violence the day before aldridge was killed. >> someday we can start a conversation and start to work today and hopeful eventually stop it. >> shootings in 2016. more than 460 homicide and over 2,800 shootings have plagued the city this year and statistics to surpass last week's total. the police department has confiscated enough handguns in the city, enough for one murder every hour.
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them in jail and keep them there. >> reporter: now, police say they have video of the incident, but it hasn't been released yet. meanwhile, the two suspects are being held without bail. demarco? >> dean, thank you for that report. stormy weather threatens to impact the southern united states this week. three tropical systems are gaining strength in the atlantic and hurricane gaston is not expected to tropical depression could strengthen and become a tropical storm. showers and thunderstorms are expected tomorrow. a tv legend is steppingway from the anchor chair. charles osgood, a beloved figure here at cbs news announced he is retiring after 22 years as host of "cbs sunday morning." over a half a century, he has been an anchor an reporter for every cbs news broadcast.
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hosting the sunday morning broadcast very much longer. well, i'm here to tell you that the rumors are true. >> reporter: few people would have begrudged charles osgood had he decided to anchor just a little bit longer. after all, his program is the most watched news show on sunday morning. with its best ratings in decade, but osgood says it's time. >> for years now, people, even friends and family, have been asking me why i keep doing i am pushing 84. it's just that it's been such a joy doing it! >> reporter: osgood is only the second person to anchor "cbs sunday morning" taking over for another cbs news legend, charles carrult. >> we will be in the hands of charles osgood next sunday morning. >> reporter: he won his audience over with his trademark bow ties
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with words. >> toe tapping is much more satisfyinging with shoes on. >> reporter: as sunday morning viewers know, osgood can tickle the ivories too. ? ? i know that face i've seen that face before ? >> wishing you had those days back again? >> reporter: osgood joined cbs news in 1971. his last tv broadcast will be september 25th. >> after which, it's still continues. >> by far, many people's favorite program here at cbs for a long period of time. >> what a loss. >> yes. we will miss you, charles, but i know we still have you through september and on the radio as well. two united airlines pilot face a judge today after accused
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one nfl quarterback says his sideline protest won't be a onetime event. >> ahead, how colin kaepernick's decision to sit out the national anthem was received by other players. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." s. this is 100% useful for a 100% fresh mouth. what's it like to not feel 100% fresh? we don't know. we swish listerine?. ry people we studied in the study of bold. people who are statistically more likely to stand up to a bully. do a yoga handstand. and be in a magician's act. listerine? kills 99% of bad breath germs so you can feel 100% in life.
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show at the i'm stephen chase. we have within following breaking news all morning long a pedtrian was struck and killed on u.s. 70. krb north carolina is live with more. this happened at chic road. tell us what's going on >> the accident happened just before 5:00 this morning. and it does have part of u.s. 70 eastbound and all the on and off ramps getting on to u.s. 70 eastbound currently closed. you can see that we still have emergency personnel on scene. durham police are investigating this descend again it happened on u.s. 70 east. right by the overpass there for
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will be block for the next several hours. u.s. 70 eastbound will be blocked for the next several hours as well. fatal vehicle versus pedestrian accident. just before 5:00. waiting to gather more information from the durham police as they continue to investigate what exactly unfolded here. we will bring you that information as it becomes available. so you'll want to stick with us for updates. reporting live in durham. cbs north carolina. here's allie with a look at your latest traffic updates >> . thanks so ch that crash. i-85. the 07 -- u.s. 07 elaborates are blocked here and take you to exactly where it s. eastbound lane side closed from exit 287 to nc98. that's where you see the purple here. your best detour around this gear street to miami boulevard. again, i-85 ramp to 07 bypass is closed. a lot of people heading to school for the first time today after a long summer off.
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morninrush. a bunch of crashes in raleigh as well. one slowing thing down on i-40 eastbound. and we do have u.s. 64 business part of it closed due to an earlier crash that caused a utility pole to come down am live look of i- 85 where that fatal crash happened earlier this morning. alyssa is here with more better news about the forecast. >> yeah. certainly a nice mix of sun and clouds as we start off our many students heading back to school. 70 degrees here in raleigh. 69 in durham. 6 # in henderson. mid-60s around roxboro. we have 74 in fayetteville, rayford and clinton. milder but muggier as well. yourorecast as you're planning your day. 84 at lunchtime. we climb to 89 ffer an afternoon high. it will be warm and humid. we're back to 85 at 6:00. hotter days ahead.
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90 i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message he wears it like a crown. "make america great again". but trump made his shirts in bangladesh. his ties in china. and his suits in mexico. jobs to 12 different countries. so don't believe the hat. you can't make america great again, if you don't make things
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? that is beyonce performing part of her 16-minute set at the mtv video music award. she won eight award. she took home the michael jackson vanguard award and pbri the stage and delivered her first performance at the awards show in nearly ten years. but beyonce shows she is again the queen. did you see the outfit she wore on the red carpet with her daughter? >> the little wings and all of that? >>impressive. impressive. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? this half hour, san francisco
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kaepernick responds to critics of his controversial protest, why he vows to continue sitting during the national anthem to make a statement about race relations in america. >> fascinating stuff on that stage. two united airlines pilots accused of being drunk are appearing this morning in a scottish court. ahead how they were taken into custody as passengers were board ago flight to the u.s. westbound time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the washington post" reports on clashes between u.s.-backed groups and intensifying in there was new fighting between syrian rebels and kurdish fighters yesterday. turkish war planes targeted kurdish positions. the pentagon says the clashes are unacceptable and calls on all parties to stand down and focus on the fight against isis. hundreds attending a church service for two nuns killed in their mississippi home. 300 people yesterday remembered sisters margaret held and paula
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arrested and chargedith the killings. "the new york times" reports on a charter bus crash in louisiana. police say the bus driver is an undocumented immigrant with no driver's licee. the bus hit a toyota camry after slamming into firefighters respond to go an earlier accident yesterday. a local fire chief was one of two people killed. more than 40 were hurt. the bus driver faces criminal charges. "wall street journal" reports on new rules for drones that take effect today. the regulations don't affect aircraft weighing less than 55 pounds and fly no higher than 400th feet and operators must have a remote pilot certificate or under the supervision of someone who has one. >> amazon plans to test a 30-hour workweek. i like this story. it will include a small group of tech workers paid 75% of full-time rates about with their
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could attract diversity and women with children. san francisco 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick says he will continue to sit through the national anthem at nfl games until he sees significant change in american race relations. kaepernick spoke out yesterday after refusing to stand for the star-spangled banner before friday's preseason game. jeff glor is here with that message and the reaction inside the league. good morning, jeff. >> reporter: good morning. this isn't the first time that colin kaepernick has spoken out. his social media pages are filled in the past. this wasn't online. it was on the field. >> i'm continue to sit. i'm going to continue to stand with the people that are being oppressed. >> reporter: colin kaepernick spoke with reporters sunday, two days after he sat on the bench during the national anthem. >> cops are getting paid leave for killing people. that's not right. that's not right by anyone's standards. >> reporter: the decision
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online. and drew criticism from some nfl players, including new york giants wide receiver victor cruz. >> you got to respect the flag and you got to stand up with your teammates. it's bigger just you, in my opinion. >> reporter: tiki barber. >> i agree with his to continue the narrative. i don't commend him for sitting and not honoring this country and our flag. >> reporter: in the mid '90s, called the national anthem a symbol of oppression. >> we all field frustrated by the violence. >> reporter: last month carmelo anthony and chris paul and lebron james delivered a speech at the espys. >> it's time to look in the
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to create change? >> when you are faced with a crisis, a crisis of police activity in communities in which you came and you feel defenseless, you got to let people know that you object. there is never a good time to protest. there is never a right way to protest. and that is just the reality. >> reporter: kaepernick lost his starting job last year. but he says no one has tried to silence him for his views. the nfl released a kaepernick saying players are encouraged, but not required, to stand during the national anthem. this thursday, the 49ers play the chargers in san diego, home to a large military base. >> i just wonder how long will it last? and the issues that he is protesting are not -- >> he says he is going to continue to sit this thursday. >> bill rhodesen said at the
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this. >> jeff, thank you. two pilots appear in scottish court this morning charged with being drunk before a pilot. the united airlines has removed the pilots from service and conducting its own investigation. they never made it into the air which is a good thing but the flight was scheduled to take off saturday from glass glasgow airport to newark. >> rte the two pilots could be fined and potentially lose their license and even face jail time. 35-year-old paul brady burbank and carlos were arrested shortly fore their transatlantic flight was to take off from gla glasgow. police believe they were ready to take into the skies under the influence.
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again, very rare, which maybe one of the pilots might have been potentially over the limit, but to have both of the cockpit crew, this is extraordinary. >> reporter: it's still unclear who or what tipped authorities off to their concerns over the united airlines crew, but the flight was scheduled to take off at 9:00 in the morning with 141 passengers oboard. the flight was delayed for ten hours while united looked for replacem two pilots were doing before their morning flight but as ros rossenge r explains it protects everybody from alcohol and altitude. >> not only are you carrying people in the back, but the effects of the alcohol are exaggerated when you are at altitude, so you're judgment is taken serious consequences from that, and even a hangover can
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>> reporter: saturday's arrest come a month after two canadian pilots were also arrested at glasgow airport and charged with trying to fly under the influence. >> jonathan, thank you. the drug company facing strong criticism over the rising price of epipens just announced it will also make a cheaper gec version. we have been telling you how many patients and parents are co mylan will sell generic epipens in the coming weeks. a crew has emeed from a dome after a year-long experiment to study the effects of a potential mars mission. ahead, what the simulation revealed about the possibility of a real trip to the red planet if you're heading out the
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watcus live through the cbs all-access app on your digital device. you do not want to miss, among others, hollywood legend robert de niro joining usn the studio 57 coming up. we will be right back. gard, their flea and tick killer doesn't have to be. nexgard, the vet's #1 choice for dogs, is a delicious, beef-flavored chew that kills both fleas and ticks. so it's easy to give, easy to take. use with caution in dogs with a history of seizures. why mess around? for powerful flea and tick protection, ask yo vet about nexgard.
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? ? you're unbelievable ? >> i've seen it and i still don't believe it. take a look at this. high school soccer match in colorado! wow! richard etner it's fair to say -- >> look at that. >> i couldn't stand that landing. >> is everybody's mouth just hanging over? that is awesome. >> good camera work. >> don't try that at home. wow. >> that is terrific. congrats to them. nasa hopes a year-long experiment that just ended would help reveal what it would like
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mission in the 2030's, their goal was to study the effects of a potential mission on the human mind. errol barnett shows us how life on earth is helping nasa learn more about space. >> reporter: good morning. it's pretty incredible. nasa wants to know what it would feel like to live for a year to mars and while travel to the red planet might be light years question much closer to home. an excited crowd gathered sunday in hawaii to welcome this six-person crew back to earth after they spent a year on mars. or more accurately, after they simulated living a year on mars. they have actually been spending all their time in a solar-powered dome on the side
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>> it's really exciting to be able to welcome the crew back to earth. >> reporter: last august, the group, including an architect, astro bioologist and aerospace engineer came from across the globe to live in a dome. over the next 12 months, they had limited food and water, used a computer with at least a 20-minute delay to communicate to the outside world. >> i'm just very excited. it is the first time we get be outside and outside of a space suit. everything is different. >> reporter: it's the fourth and longest time high seas has performed this type of mission. >> a mission to mars is going to be a complex system of systems. >> reporter: jen is the principal investigator of the project. >> some of those systems are going to be technological and human and just as bad if the human part of the system fails as if a rocket blows up. >> reporter: based on this experiment the crew is
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they said they would make the trip themselves if they could. >> i could give you my personal impression, which is that a mission to mars in the close future is realistic. >> reporter: if you don't want to wait for that day the university of hawaii program is currently accepting applications for next year's eight-month mission. the crew's advice for the next group? bring a lot of books. josh, are you interested? >> i am. so this wasn't six people drawing very short straws? >> they go through examination, a mental examination. the question is how do they deal with each other being together locked away in isolation for a year. they say astronauts are kind of mentally fit and difficult to shake so we all wonder how would we behave if you are locked away with your colleagues for a year without communication or delayed communication? >> errol, thank you for that story. >> a long time.
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remarkabl look at this. a police officer pulling a man off train tracks in new jersey just as that train rolls through. officer victor ortiz, a hero. struggling to pull that man to safety. he gives him one final tug, what, half a second before that train rolls through? police have not yet confirmed why the man was on the tracks in the first place. thankfully he got off safely. >> a reminder of the work our
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fitbit on their wrist. the company's ceo is here to announce the company's big new product. that is ahead only on "cbs this morning." looking forward to that. the things that i consume on a daily basis, a lot of it is very acidic. the enamel on my teeth was actually weakening. the whiteness wasn't there as much. my teeth didn't look as healthy as others. my dentist said that pronamel would help fight against that erosion that foods and drinks were causing. you have to worry about. pronamel is now giving me the confidence to know that i'm doing the right thing. so it's nice to know that it's as simple as that. ? anyone with type 2 diabetes knows how it feels to see your numbers go up, despite your best efforts. but what if you could turn things around? what if you could love your numbers? discover once-daily invokana?.
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that works to lower a1c. invokana? is a pill used along with diet and exercise to significantly lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. and in most clinical trials, the majority reached an a1c goal of 7 percent or lower. invokana? works around the clock by sending some sugar out of your body through the process of urination. it's not for lowering systolic blood pressure or weight, but it may help with both. invokana? can cause important side effects, including dehydration, which may cause you to feel dizzy, htheaded, or weak, upon standing. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections, changes in urination, high potassium, increases in cholesterol, risk of bone fracture, or urinary tract infections, possibly serious. serious side effects may include ketoacidosis, which can be life threatening. stop taking and call your doctor right away if you experience symptoms or if you experience symptoms
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do not take invokana? if you have severe liver or kidney problems or are on dialysis. tell your doctor about any medical conditions and medications you take. using invokana? with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. it's time to turn things around. lower your blood sugar with invokana?. imagine loving your numbers. there's only one invokana?. ask your doctor about it by name. what's going on here? you know, to show the importance of saving for the future. so you're sort of like a spokes person? more of a spokes metaphor.
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i'm roy cooper, and you deserve the truth about the crime lab. when i became attorney general, we discovered a backlog of more than 5,000 dna test kits but what governor mccrory isn't telling you is that we cleared the backlog. we also solved over 2,000 crimes and put killers and rapists in prison from cold cases. we fixed the problems at the crime lab,
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extra special for the kids here at lincoln heightings elementary. they want every kid to know that even though they might not be able to have a parent escort them into school they have a bunch of people waiting for them. have dads, fathers, teachers, plifers, members of the community walking the kids through the school into their classroom. a lot of these will be getting you have off the bus here. sthai -- it really makes them foundation on the first day of school. they say some of the kids may not get that at home. they will have someone escorting them into the classroom. again that's going to be happening in a few minutes here we're going to continue to continue to follow that and we will bring you some updated throughout the morning. reporting live. all right. we've got a lot going on on the roads.
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if you need to take u.s. 70 in durham after a fatal accident this morning many we'll take you to exactly where it was on our maps here. u.s. 70 eastbound side was closed. you can see where the purple was. just reopened here but as you saw on our traffic cameras we still have a lot of delays because of this crash and because of the closure. you want to take wade avenue behind that instead. we have a bunch of crashes. miami boulevard arouha add road closure. u.s. 64 business. new burn avenue. prairie creek road as well. , if any, you take a little farther south. u.s. 70. another crash there. take you back outside. look at that traffic moving very slow on the first day of school. at least that recess forecast doesn't look too bad. >> you got it right. yes, we are looking at dry weather through lunchtime today. after that tracking the
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72 degrees right now. a mix of sun and clouds from our north raleigh studios. right know most most of you are on the dry side. other than, that's dry, we saw some rain overnight. the conditions may be a little damp out there if they are waiting a the bus stop. 72 in raleigh and clayton. 73 in wilmington. upper 60 nz durham, roxboro and south hill. 89 our high today and 90s again
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? good morning. it is monday, august 29th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more rl news ahead, inclinghe presidential campaign with just ten weeks to go. we are going to look at the big susan paige of "usa today." first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> there was loud noises that prompted calls of an active shooter and put a lot of passengers into a frenzy. donald trump's attempts to soften his language on immigration appears, i emphasize appears, to be short-lived. >> remember still seeing the repercussions which is truly a first.
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>> this presidential campaign is about mass deployment. trump is doing none of it. >> the two suspects have a long known criminal record and known gang members. >> by far, many people's favorite program here at cbs for a long period. >> this is not the first time that colin kaepernick has spoken ou >> the two pilots, if found guilty could be fined and face jail time. >> watch this. jason day's shot. putting here into the hole. >> someone who has done this before. >> how about this? how about draining it? yes!
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elliott and demarco morgan. a scary night over at one of the nation's largest airports. massive responses to a report of a gunman at los angeles international airport. it took hours for gunmen to determine if it was a false alarm. no one was reported hurt. people needed to pass through security again before then boardg their flights. police say that loud noises led to those reports of an active shooter. determine just what the noises were. the faa had issued a partial ground stop during the chaos. two weeks ago, you'll remember reports of gunfire created a similar scare at new york's jfk airport and those reports also turned out to be false. federal investigators are trying to determine how the engine of a southwest plane blew apart in the air. the flight was flying from new orleans to orlando on saturday. its left engine suffered a dangerous mechanical problem mid
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gouged in the fuselage and it forced an emergency landing in pensacola, florida. sully sullenburger lost both engines in 2009 taking off from laguardia airport. he landed the plane on the huds ver. he said they had an advantage the plane was flying atround 30,000 feet. >>eing at cruise altitude gives some altitude and it gives to work rough this problem until it was successfully completed and they would have had a lot of altitude they could use t reach an airport even if the engine failure had required them to land. >> what a scare there. 104 passengers and crew were on the southwest flight. no one was hurt. newly revealed e-mails tell us more about the relationship between the clinton foundation and hillary clinton's state department.
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aide to bill clinton and huma abedin, an aide to hillary clinton. >> he asked the following. abedin replied, i'll ask. roddin has donated between $10 million to the clinton faungs. it's unclear who started that conversation or if the request was granted. the e-mails were released through a pc by a conservative group. donald trump tweeted last night that he'll give a long expected immigration speech on wednesday. his earlier tweet on the death of the cousin of nba star dwyane wade, aldridge, got a lot of attention. trump wrote, quote. dwyane wade's cousin was just shot and killed walking her baby in chicago. just like what i have been
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some called it disrespectful. on "face the nation" sunday, trump's campaign manager focused on his second tweet. >> i think you have to look at both tweets where he expresses his condolences and he says, and he reminds everybody he has been trying to make the case that the increase in random crime and senseless murders, the poverty, the joblessness, the -- the homelessness in some of our major cities is unacceptable to all of us. >> in a number of incidents, the paris attacks and now this one, his first instinct is to talk about himself, his policies, to see tragedy as a validation of what he has been saying. is that healthy for a presidential candidate to do that? >> well, look. i know the media live on twitter but most americans see what he does on a weekly basis which is he gives policy position speeches. >> on saturday, trump will answer questions at an african-american church in detroit.
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us and covering her tenth presidential campaign. >> good morning. >> lots to talk about and that issue is on the front page of "usa today." does that hurt his outreach to african-americans? >> i think it hurts not his ch as his outreach to white s as suburban voters which i think is the real target of some of these recent speeches he has given. i said saturday in chester county, pennsylvania, just outside of philadelphia, talking to just those voters in the sense that donald trump is racially insensitive or driving these voters away from the republican party and toward hillary clinton. >> he is not going to get a significant share of the african-american vote but the polling does show that college educated suburban whites have fallen from his campaign. that should be the base of the republican party. >> this is the biggest swing group in this election. mitt romney won these voters by 14 percentage points just four years ago. now hillary clinton leads among them. that is the biggest we have seen of any major demographic group
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>> to immigration. trump's speech on wednesday how is the recent confusion over his policy on illegal immigration affected his campaign? >> i think it's a diversion. you know, this is not the issue that he wants to be talking about if he is reaching out to voters who are in the middle and might be undecided. i think it's created some problems with his core supporters, the sense that he is moving away from the idea of deporting the 11 or 12 million people who are here illegally. i think the campaign hopes to put this controversy, this confusion to rest in the s >> well, i don't know. it is just 71 days until the election. so it is pretty late in the day to be explaining yourself on the issue that launched your candidacy 14 months ago. >> even as he was looking to stay on message with regard to the issues facing hillary clinton and the clinton foundation, if we looked into the clinton campaign's approach and really response, the candidate herself said there is
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now? >> so far, we don't know of anything that is illegal. we don't even know of anything that is unusual. these kind of outreaches are pretty customary for candidates running for office but i think it looks unsavory for a lot of american voters and i think one of the things that makes americans suspicious of politics and politicians. it's one reason that bernie sanders did so well against hillary clinton, hence the coziness of the powerful. >> they said they will shut the foundation down if she wins. pe that -- >> they won't shut it down. >> they will step away but in stepping away, people suggest you're acknowledging to a degree there is an issue here? >> and if it's unacceptable as president to have bill clinton out there fund-raising for the foundation, why not unacceptable when she was secretary of state? i think that is a fair question to raise. >> the trump campaign announcing this morning $10 million bye in nine states and eight of those nine states, mitt romney lost in
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i know you've looked at the ad too. a strong economic message. >> this is the message that republicans had been hoping to hear from donald trump, from the beginning. it's a message of change versus more of the same. the ad, it says things are going with a president clinton. that is a powerful message. we know 2 out of 3 americans say the country is going in the wrong direction and gotten off track. but donald trump has been unable to capitalize on those feelings because he has been -- provocative statement after another and raised questions about his own qualifications and suitability for the office. >> this is your tenth presidential campaign. an ad like this is released. wouldn't the speech that is coming up have -- be on the same message as the ad that was just released? sort of hammering home a single message to get full conch on that yet he is speaking about immigration, the ad is about the economy. is there dissidence here? >> that is not what a traditional campaign would have been planning. in fact, this is an ad that
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summer to have maximum effect on an electorate. early voting starts in a couple of weeks. >> thank you. >> thank you. the world's top maker of fitness trackers wants an even bigger piece of the market. the cofounder and ceo of fitbit will be here in studio 57 with a big announcement straight ahead and only on "cbs this morning." first, it's time to check
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treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ready for a new chapter? talk to your rheumatologist. this is humira at work. if you've gone to extremes to escape your nasal allergies... try clarispray. from the makers of claritin. clarispray provides 24-hour, prescription strength relief from sneezing, runny nose, and nasal congestion. return to the world. try clarispray today. ? my brother and i have always been rivals.
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i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. there's a race going on right now. the world's clean energy super power's either going to be germany, china, or us. and i'm going to make sure it's us. from 500 million solar panels installed by the end of my first term, to precision manufacturing. we can do this, millions of jobs right here in america.
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? welcome back. time now is 8:16. a lesbian couple in new jersey say they were unfairly prevent from getting coverage for infertility treatment and the two women are suing over the way specific way elaine quijano talked to them about their painful experiences to try to have a child. >> reporter: the two got married in 2013 with the intention they say of starting a family and they say they have spend 50,000 on multiple infertility treatments including ivf with donor sperm but a law that might otherwise didn't apply to them and a violation they say of their constitutional rights.
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actually carry the baby? that is pretty serious discussion. >> actually, that was one of the easier discussions. we said you're older, you go first. we didn't think it would be this huge battle. >> reporter: but it has been a battle in the effort to expand this family. doctors three years ago told erin she was infertile. six miscarriages between the two of them. heartbreak followed. >> every time we heard we were your brain just goes down this path. you think about that kid and what it's going to mean to you and then it just gets taken away in an instant. >> reporter: new jersey is one of 15 states with laws requiring insurers to cover fertility treatments. but the two say their insurance company initially denied their coverage because under new jersey law, women their age are considered infertile if they are not able to conceive after two years of unprotected
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mind? >> i talked to a financial coordinator and told her that was discrimination, that wasn't fair. and she said that was the law. >> reporter: and what did you think at that time? >> i was furious but it seemed like there was nothing we could do about it. >> reporter: a new jersey state lawmaker is trying to do something about it. an asemably woman is trying to allow the mandate ply to going on in the country and i think that momentum is here and now, to be able to move this forward. >> we have this goal and we are not quitters and we are going to fight until it happens. >> reporter: the two women are changing a different way with a lawyer along with another lesbian couple, they filed a federal lawsuit against the head of the new jersey state agency that regulates insurance companies. the suit claims current new jersey law discriminates based
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a spokesman for the agency told us the department does not comment on pending or ongoing litigation. the couple tell us they have accepted they might not never have a biolical child but they say they hope to make things easier for families down the road. >> we want to help other people who are experiencing this. >> it shouldn't be this painful. >> reporter: their lawsuit asks the court for an injunction to force a change to the state insurance mandate and unspecified damages for mental anguish and pain and suffering. we should note the insurance covered some of their infertility treatments even though the law doesn't require it. the company issued a statement to cbs news saying it supports a legislative review of the infederal tillity mandate to clarify and simplify benefits for same-sex couples. >> interesting legal question here.
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updated the language in their mandates to require fertility coverage, regardless of sexual orientation. either the legislature may act or they will get some relief through the courts. we will see. >> we will see. keep your eye on that couple there. up next, a hungry bear just showing off. ahead, this is real skill. poaching from a trash can, asking the important question this morning. >> what is the skill? >> we have answers and >> in our continuing series on wild bears. the enamel on my teeth was weakening. the whiteness wasn't there as much, my teeth didn't look as healthy as others. my dentist said that pronamel would help protect my teeth. pronamel is giving me the confidence to know that i'm doing the right thing so it's nice to know that it was as simple as that.
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l needs... all in one. purina one. healthy energy, and a taste he loves. purina one smartblend is expertly blended... with always real meat #1. all in one. purina one. ?"all you need is love" plays? my friends know me so well. just by looking in my eyes. but what they didn't know was that i had dry, itchy eyes. i used artificial tears from the moment i woke up... ...to the moment i went to bed. so i finally decided to show my eyes some love,... ...some eyelove. eyelove means having a chat with your eye doctor about your dry eyes because if you're using artificial tears often and still have symptoms, it could be chronic dry eye. it's all about eyelove, my friends.
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to the beaches... the piedmont... to the sandhills... north carolina is possessed of spectacular natural beauty. [ sea gulls crying ] [ man vocalizing ] run! ?? ? i'm up against the sky ? ? i said i'd taken it all in ? ? to make the good life ? ? and i don't feel like i'm falling ? ? i'm up against the sky ? it's ours to preserve... because we're only borrowing it from our children.
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the trash can was no match for this bear. it was determined to get whatever w he used his front feet to hold the bin and then he screwed off the lid. the bear began poking through the garbage bag to find the food. the people reorganized this video tried to scare the animal away but the creature had no interest in giving up. >> wt do you think of the technique? strong to very strong? >> impressive. very impressive.
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? jimmy fallon used last night's mtv video music award to spoof ryan lochte. even michael phelps got a kick you he the best video of the year. i can tell you that. they are all so great and so talented. i couldn't tell you even if there was a gun to my head. >> he joked about lochte's run-in with police in brazil before handing out the award for video of the year, which who won it? beyo beyonce. welcome back. this half hour, only on "cbs this mning," fitbit is about
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trackers. fitbit's ceo james park is in our green room with the announcement. studio 57 actor robert de niro, 36 years after his oscar winning performance in "raging bull," he stops back into the ring as a legendary trainer in "hands of stone." how a hollywood studio has a fascinating studio how they secured that financing. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the hollywood reporter remembers mexican he died from natural causes yesterday in his home in santa monica. he was famous for a ballad you are hearing now. he was in the middle of a u.s. concert tour. juan gabriel was 66. "the new york times" says many start-ups in silicon valley
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staff and they say a crash didn't happen last year partly because of the abundance of venture capital. "time" reports on selfies putting tourists at risk at yellow stone national park. some visitors getting too close to the animals and they are recording more violations as people enter sensitive areas that are off limits. officials says it puts visitors in damage and can damage resources and displace wildlife. the "new york post" the many papers reporting an american team of young ladder, the little league world champion the first time since 1964. the champions are from endwell, new york. the winning pitcher said he was nervous. understandably so. but he still went the distance and scored the winning run. >> it's so important to finish my last game of little league play. to finish a complete game. it's a perfect season.
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>> certainly ended well. a new york state team hasn't won at all since 1964. it was the best. >> congratulations to them. university of tennessee football team will honor on the school's legendary women's basketball coach. players will wear a helmet sticker this season to remember pat summitt who died in june. she is the winningest coach in division i college basketball history. britain's "guardian" reports a study mediterranean is better for people than heart disease. researchers tracked 1,200 people with history of heart disease and stroke and diet rich in nuts and fish said they were 37% less to die during the study. statins reduce heart problems by 24%. "usa today" describes a system being inslled in chicago as a fitness tracker for the city's well-being. to be completed and it will
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statistics about air quality and nose traffic on sidewalks and streets and similar systems are planned for a dozen other cities,ncluding atlanta and seattle. fitbit has grown into the largest maker of fitness trkers since 2007. they are popular for measuring health data such as the number of steps walked and heart rate and sleep quality. the company has sold more an countrie now only on "cbs this morning" they are introducing two new wrist bands. the charge 2 and flex 2 are the latest edition to fitbit. james park is ceo and co-founder of fitbit. welcome and great to have you here. are big fans of fitby. what is new. >> we reimagined the two best selling categories, charge 2 and
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pretty slim wrist band. what we have done is we are giving people even deeper insights about their health and physiology. so we have introduced a feature such as cardio fitness level. this is a test previously you could only do if you went to a performance lab and wore an oxygen mask and had experts test you. now it's available on your wrist. >> oh, my. >> and we are also giving awe feature called relax, which is a feature where we actually detect your breathing rate and guide you through personalized breathing exerse anxiety. >> reporter: it is important for runners looking at that because it's a level of activity you reach or a fat burning level, right? >> exactly. it measures how well your body uses oxygen when you work out. >> fascinating. >> yes. >> this is charge 2 here. >> you can't keep it, though, josh. >> you guys have about a quarter of the wearable tech market, is that right? >> we have about a quarter of the wearable tech market, over 80% of the fitness track market
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>> you're facing competition over apple. how do you differentiate? >> we have been around this for nine years and tens of millions of users. that huge user community actually creates a giant network effect. people compete with friends and family. you know, who has walked the most steps and et cetera. that has allowed us to grow our user base pretty rapidly. these products out here, we have wide range o products. >> philosophically, when you lo as an accessory, i know a lot of people thought the apple watch was taking away one ofur choices every day. how do you conceive of the design? and how it might play into somebody's choice? >> loo i think one of the reasons for success is we realize there is no one size fits all in these devices. people have a of different preferences on size, style, fashion, et cetera. so we have, you know, made our devices a lot more fashionable. look at our flex 2.
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>> which is a bracelet. >> that necklace is going to be very popular. >> look at this. >> how can you tell it's a necklace? it's confusingust a bit. >> it goes on your neck! >> no! >> there is a chain, et cetera. >> what kind of ivements have you made in this technology? you taed about the vo 2 b battery life and other improvements in this? >> yes, extensions in battery life and flex 2 can be worn lap. >> this one or the other one? >> this one here. take it out of the pendant of the bracelet and put it into a band and then go swimming. >>ueions remain. earlr is year class action lawsuit filed alleging your heart rate technology. at do you have to say in response? >> this is america and there i alwa a lotf lawsuits. we stand by our products all the
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ekg and partners with us and ucf is included. trust the partieso consumer reports have tested our devices and rated them very accurate. you can go outnd grab an issue off "consumer reports" and check it out for yourself. >> what do you think of the apple watch? >> i think apple is a great company and has a great product. again, no one size fits all. everyone has a different, you know, style preference, choice, price point, et cetera. large, there is going to be room for more than one company to succee >> what about the price range? is that one of the challenges you face that something might still be too expensive to fitbit? >> definitely price point is important to people, but we have a range of products from $59 to $250 and ges pple a lot of choices. >> more than a hundred studies onhe ferguson -- do you see fitbit playing a larger role in the medical community and why? >> absolutely.
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more emphasis being placed on preventing disease as opposed to treating it after it happens. it's a lot more cost effective to do that and a lot of chronic conditions can be changed through lifestyle factors and ere we come in. >> continued success and thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> t you. es park, thank you very much. > he won an oscar for aging bull." actor robert de niro is inur toyota green room and he will tell us about his return to the
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z23aoz zi0z y23aoy yi0y hillary clinton: i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. over sixty people here making shirts labled made in america. but donald trump's brand of shirts come from china, his suits from mexico, his coats from india. trump's products have been made in twelve other countries because he says there's no place in america that he can make them. well there is.
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robert de niro won best actor for his portrayal of boxing champion in "raging bull" he has appeared in more than a hundred movies award noms ainations and won tw. he is back in the movie theaters this weekend with "hand of stone." he plays ray arcel who was the trainer for a legendary boxer robert duran. >> you want me to leave here? i can leave youn the corner by yourself. now act like a grown-up and stop being a baby.
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>> you're making work. >> you're making yourself work. no, you relax. you get out there and you show me what you can do. you pace yourself. you be the boss! >> robert de niro is here. welcome back. >> thank you. >> not throwing punching there but sparring with your fighter, nevertheless. i know the trainer in question here is a legend in the sport. what drew you then to the story? >> well, i just had seen that jonathan had done, the director, he had the script and sent it to me. i was interested, myself, because i had met him either once or twice when i was doing "raging bull," and i was impressed with who he -- just the way he carried himself. he wasn't like a typical trainer i ever saw. he had elegance about him and always dressed up and like a banker or something.
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him as i could and met his wife and saw as much on him and blah, blah, blah, research and so on. and, in the meantime, we would try to get closer to making the movie. but then the -- i was committed to doing it. then the financing just dropped because supposed to come from middle east and just disappeared. we were going to do it in puerto rico. i said, really? you should write a letter to the panamanians to do it for a tax break and fund the movie. panama got behind it and how it happened. >> i know the director went dn there and moved there for a ar. really raised money almost dooro-door and, again, in panama wherean remains a legend. >> he was behind it always, duran was. that was the logical place also to shoot it there. much more interesting place to
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it was meant to be. >> what did the family think of the story, the movie? >> i think they are happy it was done. they seemed pleased. maybe they didn't wish there was beer or thatut that is typically. >> i love goin back through history too. despite that everybody remembers the robert duran and sugar ray leonard and fought three times. wherbert duran says -- >> that was the one. >> there was controver when he said no moss because the was question whether he had a stomach ache? >> he said he h eaten too much and he h a stomach ache. and then his -- he even says that he never said no moss. somebody picked it up. >> it has come -- >> exactly, exacy.
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arcel? the relationship he h with robert duran. he talks a lot abo his mental fitness, not only his physical fitness. >> he was a cerebral guy, ray arcel, from what i found out. but very, you know, emotional about duran and about his fighters. he had over 20 champions and so, you know, he was a himsand so on. this was his last great fighter. >> back to you. your daughter actually played your daughter in the movie? >> yes. >> what was it like working with her? >> it was good. >> a l of essure for her? were you ey on her? >> no i think that -- jonathan, the director, he likes to use pele that he nee or, you
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is a built-in relationship of sorts. not really our relationship but there is something there. there is a comfort level and all that. i understand in some ways, i, as a director only two movies i did, but that somehow had the inclusion of done it here and there were people that contributed. a nice thing. >> as somebody who knows perhaps as welas anyone, what boxing is a can . what was it like rurng to e sport? why does the fight resonate so much? >> it's an ultimate match between two people. nothing going to go past that. but, you know, i was interested -- it wn't so much the fighter g. of course, duran, his story is great ghter. i just happened to have known him during that piod so,
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during the no most is period before that. i like the story the father/son type thing with ramirez and that relationship, i think, is very important. >> well done. best of luck to you. >> robert de niro, always a pleasure to have you here. >> thank you. >> "han of stone"s now in theaters. coming up, riders try to that is next on "cbs this morning." adelle: at first, i was so happy to teach in north carolina. but we've fallen to 41st in teacher pay, 44th in per-student spending, and a lot of us even have to buy school supplies. governor mccrory talks about raising our pay, but he tried to cut education funding to its lowest budget share in over 30 years. like over two thousand other teachers, i'm having to move to another state
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?? from the mountains... to the beaches... the piedmont... to the sandhills... north carolina is possessed of spectacular natural beauty. [ sea gulls crying ] [ man vocalizing ] run! ?? ? i'm up against the sky ? ? i said i'd taken it all in ? ? to make the good life ? ? and i don't feel like i'm falling ? ? i'm up against the sky ? it's ours to preserve... because we're only borrowing it from our children.
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i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. he wears it like a crown. "make america great again". but trump made his shirts in bangladesh. his ties in china. and his suits in mexico. in fact, the real donald trump outsourced his products and jobs to 12 different countries. so don't believe the hat. you can't make america great again, if you don't make things
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>> suzie had made no attempt to repay me. >> announcer: a large loan fractures a friendship. >> judge judy: well, what was the business arrangement? >> announcer: but now... >> "$4,500 was allocated for business costs." >> judge judy: no! >> yes. $1,500 was for a personal loan. >> announcer: ...it's time to get down to business. >> judge judy: you just told me $5,000 was allocated for business costs. >> $4,500 was for -- >> judge judy: you just -- >> you know, i'm trying to do this by memory. >> judge judy: i'm looking at your face, and right now you're making it up. you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. the people are real. the cases are real. the people are real. the cases are real. the rulings are final. captions paid for by cbs television distribution tracy tenner is suing her former friend, suzanne wheeler, for an unpaid loan to start an internet car business.
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