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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  February 24, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, february 24th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." deadly tornadoes tear through the south. powerful winds toss rvs through the air. tens of millions could still be in danger. donald trump wins the nevada caucuses in a landslide. marco rubio surges to second. he'll be with us. is your phone secretly recording you, how some apps steal your personal information and your money. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. look up. it's going to cross right in front of us.
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>> wind picked up and sounded like a bomb hitting the house, basically. deadly storms sweep through the south. >> severe weather threatening on the southeast atlantic coast to the middle east atlantic coast. >> we love nevada! thank you! >> donald trump winning the nevada caucuses and leaving rubio and cruz far behind. >> donald became president? nobody know what he would do. he doesn't know what he would do. >> sanders went after clinton over her wall street speeches. >> i'm very happy to release all street. here it is, chris! there ain't none! >> worry about the zika virus spreading. u.s. health officials say 14 cases may have been sexually transmitted. republicans aren't blasting the plan to close guantanamo bay. president's plan. to send terrorists to the united states.
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washers had to be plucked from the country's tallest hotel. >> in connecticut, up to 12 people fighting. >> all that. >> the next generation of robots looks so much like humans, it's kind of scary. >> oh, no! >> oh! i just threw that up. i drew that up at the time-out. >> and all that matters. >> bernie sanders who has had trouble attracting african-americans voters just got a high profile endorsement from spike lee. >> for bernie's sake, i hope it's better than other spoik lee's lee spike lee's endorsements. >> the vatican spokesmane pope wasn't attacking trump. trump went toe-to-toe with the victor of and the pope
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just put a poster of him in the chapel. "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump is now in a after his big victory in nevada, building even more momentum toward the republican nomination. after a turbulent night of he nevada caucuses with 46% of the vote. >> marco rubio finished second, just ahead of ted cruz and senator rubio will join us in a moment.eynolds is outside caesar's palace in las vegas to show us how trump, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump got more votes than ted cruz and marco rubio combined last night and he did it by winning nearly every voterry, according to cbs news exit polling. so when he took the stage here last night, he was really pumped. >> we will be celebrating for a ght. have a good time. have a good time.
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night in nevada, donald trump oss the board. >> we won with young, we won with old, we won with highly educated, we won with poorly love the poorly educated! >> number one with hispanics. i'm really happy about that trump rejected the notion he has a ceiling of support and laughed at conservatives who are calculating how he could lose. >> and if up, because, you know, the other candidates amount to 55%. so if they could -- they keephen people drop out, we are going to get a lot of votes. they keep forgetting. they don't say it. >> reporter: long lines pointed to a big turnout for trump andf caucus go-ers said they are angry at the ferguson and he president
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political system. >> one week from today will be campaign. his third place finish, ted cruz took the stage in las vegas, focused on super tuesday and his home state of texas. arguing he is the onlyidate who can dethrone the front-runner. >> the only campaign that has beaten donald trump and the only can beat donald trump is this campaign. >> thank you. >> reporter: leaving nevada before caucusing began, marcod the results from michigan, where he urged voters to look beyond emotion. >> we can't just elect someone that is angry. we have to can make a difference and someone that will win. of some caucuses, people not being allowed in or others double voting appeared but the republican national committee did call the process
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in fact, the ballot was a little confusing with voters being allowed to choose from among 11 six of whom are no longer gayle? >> thank you, dean. this is a question what will it take to stop donald trump? it allo the delegates. republican voters in 11 states will hand out almost 600 delegates on super tuesday. cbs news is here to where we take a stand on that. anthony, can donald trump opped? >> mathematically, yes, but it's politically going to get harder. after last night's big win in nevada, donald trump has a commanding 81 to 17ad over cruz and rubio what is given out so far. on super tuesday we will see 595 delegates in play andss the south and full of kinds of voters donald trump has been winning like conservatives
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if he keeps up this pace, then he can going to have at leastelegates coming out of super tuesday. partlily because of the rules give out those delegates proportionately. that means based on how many votes you get, not just whether you win or t even harder for everyone else to catch him. now, there is still time. it takes over 1,200 delegates ton the road on march 15th, there are big delegate prizes in states like florida and ohio. those states are winner take all. thefolks like cruz and rubio, can they hang on that long? charlie? >> thanks, anthony. florida senator and ial candidate marco rubio is with us from grand rapids, michigan. good morning, senator. >> good morning. >> reporter: congratulations on in nevada. many people are asking this question this morning -- as the
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endorsements and many of them, is it simply too little too late to stop donald trump, especially if he does very well -- >> -- on the s.e.c. day, the super tuesday voting? >> yeah. i think it's important to take a deep breath here.the republican nomination is decided by delegates. over 1,200 delegates you need to have and we are nowhere that filed, much less being able to win them. and nthat sense the votes happening between now and the h all of these states are aawarding delegates proportionately. it's not how many states you wines you pick up. there are plenty of states out there in the winner take all category if you win them, you more than catch up. so i think what needs to happen here, though, this race needs to continue to narrow bld trump, for example, he underperformed mitt romney yesterday in nevada. four years ago, mitt romney got 50% of the vote there so shows af
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are not -- do not want donald trump to be their nominee but right now divided up among four ow, you have yet to beat him, including the latest poll in your home state of florida. it shows that you're not even beating him in your own home state. at state do you think you're going to be the one to trump donald trump? >> well, we will with win in florida.sh is no longer in the race. i filled up a lot of the support in florida so that will help us. again, as far as going into next week, we feel state on the map. has to be a coalescing here and i think that process began after south carolina and i think continue after our second place night. if we are going to keep working hard. we are in michigan already and here last night for a rally and headed to houston, texas, today for the debate tomorrow and a rally today. about the work we are putting in and what it's leading to when this process plays out. >> senator rubio, we keep hearing the party doesn't want it but the people tell aory how they feel about donald trump.
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>> first of all, the people in every state that has voted, theoverwhelming majority, including last night, 55% of the people did not vote for donald trump and that is helping him right now divided among the other people.an endorsement with jeb bush and we are friends and i look forward to visiting him soon. >> can i ask you about the issues before the republican people, the ones you have debated. one of your cruz this week said that he would have federal agents knock on the doors to find those who are in this country illegally. would you follow that?well, that is a change of position for him obviously now that he is under duress in this campaign and trying to guess -- once again i guess to appeal and win votes. the bottom line i don't think this country supports and i do not military style e are going to enforce the law and people are being deported now. if you're here illegally in this country and have you a ou're going to be deported, especially if you're a dangerous criminal.
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don't think this country is going to support nor do i think support a roundup style of people in america. we need to secure our border and bring i control and i think the american people will be reasonable and responsible who you deal with people in this country a long time who are not a criminal. u for joining us. >> thank you. thank you. the democratic road to super tuesday still has to get through south carolina. bernie sanders reached out to voters at a town hall last night. the poll shows hillary clinton days before the primary. nancy cordes is in columbia, south carolina, where she faced new questions about her use of private e-mail system as. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. yes, she was asked about a new ruling by a federal judge who said that some state department official and aides should testify under oath
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e-mail system to evade public record laws. she says there is no base for it. >> ie, you know, challenges about what the state department did or didn't do and that will all be worked out. it's just not something that, you know, is going to have anyct. >> reporter: clinton was also asked again whether she would release transcripts of her wall street speeches. >> why is there one standard for me and not? everybody should be on a level playing field. >> reporter: sanders was asked if he would be willing to level the playing field. >> i am very happy to release all of my paid wall street. here it is, chris! there ain't none. >> reporter: in a state where african-americans of the democratic electorate sanders accused the republican front-runner of race i'm. >> this birther issue, which we ump and others, a racist effort to tie -- to try to delegitimatize the president of the united u imagine that? >> you're making the right
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>> reporter: earlier, clinton appeared at a emotional gathering at a columbia she was joined by him the mothers of five victims of gun violence or police brutality whose support she cultivated for bland. >> i am very angry, but i'm not angry enough to riot. i'm this lady. >> reporter: and the mother of trayvon martin. >> we have an opportunity to have someone that is going to stand up for us asn-americans, for us as women! i say my vote goes to hillary clinton. five women are taking that message all across the state during multiple events throughout the day. without hillary clinton and getting huge crowds.s is spending most of the week outside of south carolina in super tuesday states where he, charlie, thinks he has a better chance of thanks so much.
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across the south as a series of destructive tornadoes killed at least three people.eft a trail of devastation from mississippi to florida. one tornado ripped through pensacola last night.inds also slammed a trailer park in louisiana where two people were killed. the storms damaged several homes and buildings. more than 80 million americans evere weather threat. the system is moving from the gulf to the mid-atlantic region. david begnaud is in convent, morning, david. >> reporter: good morning. 30 people were hurt here. seven critically and two people died. this rv park looks like a disaster zone. shredded rvs children's toys. this place was packed yesterday. there were people who live here off and on. they work at jobs in theal plants. yesterday, when the tornado rolled through the plants closed and so the park was packed. as the sheriff told me, katrina
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this, he believes, is the worst tornado. >> look! it's going down! >> reporter: more than two dozen tornadoes were reported across states tuesday in a deadly outbreak of storms that punished the gulf coast. a portion of the sugar hill trailer park in convent, demolished. two people killed and another seven are in critical condition. >> i heard like a big rumbling sound. the whole entire house start >> look at thousand these trees were snapped off like toys. >> reporter: we toured the damage with louisiana's governor edwards. nado different? vulnerable area. these are travel trailers. secured. >> reporter: some of the most critically injured were thrown from their rvs and suffered major head >> you have individuals crawling out of debris and people looking for help. you see walking injured.
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panhandle, a tornado tore a path of damage. at least six people were injured here. 24 homes were destroyed at this apartment complex in pensacola.d for anyone possibly trapped under debris. >> it just felt like a big train just running through. >> look up. look up. >> that looks r: 20 miles east of baton rouge, the capital of louisiana, another tornado was record in prairieville and this gold's gym. dozens of people inside at the time but no one hurt. the storm stretched to mississippi where a 73-year-old er his mobile home was tossed nearly 500 feet. back here at the rv park in there were cadaver dogs being used overnight to search for people who may still be missing under the debris. as of this morning, e six to seven people unaccounted for. it doesn't mean they are dead. it just means their family keeps calling the sheriff and he can't a local hospital. >> got to remain hopeful there.
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the fight over replacing ustice antonin scalia is escalating. senator republicans said they nominee from president obama and that breaks precedent. the senate a always given a nominee a hearing since reports that senate majority leader mitch mcconnell said there isn't a snowball's chance in hell that he'll back down. >> the judiciary committee hasously recommended there be no hearings. i agree with that. number two this nomination will be filled by the next president elected in november. >> a letter from scalia'she late justice suffered from heart disease and obesity and diabetes among other ailments. the 79-year-old justice was also a cans will strongly challenge the president's plan to close the guantanamo bay prison in cuba.
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united states and in 2011 transfer of any inmates into the u.s. they looked at locations to house the prison and that includes the naval bringing in south carolina and super max prison in colorado and the leavenworth, kansas. apple wants congress to resolve its fight with the fbi rather than the courts. reports the tech giant plans to make that argument to a federal judge in the standoff over the san bernardino gunman's iphone. cbs news has confirmed is demanding apple's help in other investigations. the fbi has asked the company to unlock a total of 12 devices. apple is fighting the government in at least seven of those cases. >> it's more than just one phone. a prosecutor says ubered in the deadly kalamazoo, michigan, shooting rampage planned to kill more
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before the killing spree. they say he bout a jacket with igned for a handgun. the shooting saturday killed six people and seriously hurt two others. there is a hopeful new development this morning on the plan for a partial truce in ne call, syria president bashar al asaid told russian his government will help implement the plan. the agreement broken by the u.s. and russia takes effect at midnight on friday. isis or the al qaeda affiliated neutral front. the nephew of robert f. kennedy could head back to ahead the new push by prosecutors to convict michael skakel in >> samantha: good morning to you. of course, our big story is this pouring rain. the rain may be heavy at times, and if you're out on the west side, you might see a little freezing rain this morning. so take it slow out there. in cleveland our temperatures get into the 50s today, but it
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rain, wind and even a little thunder for today. tomorrow we switch over to snowshowers and a little more snow possible announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. cyberthieves are stealing confidential information and even money through your phone. ahead, the apps that could
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>> tia: good morning. i'm tia ewing. avon lake is getting a major
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they have invested in clear well, a $23 million investment to allow avon lake to store 3 million gallons water ready for use at any time. this is expected to be completed by next spring. sam, a whole lot of water falling from the sky today. we have a little rain in our forecast. >> samantha: yeah, tia. it's pouring out there in many areas. it's been coming down since very early this morning. it will be a rainy and very windy day. temperatures are going to be in the upper 40s and lower 50s, but we may not make it there until the evening. so most of the day will be in the 40s, a little thunder possible today, too. and maybe even a little freezing side. so take it slow. we change over to all snow for tomorrow, and then a slight chance for some snowshowers on
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today, people in this country are up in arms. they are furious. they are seething with 0 about starbucks new reward system. this is all so frustrating. if only there was some way for peopleoffee at home. >> starting april, you will no longer get one point or star per visit.ou two stars for every dollar spent. sounds fair, right? well, wake up! i believe that this is the nie sanders
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>> people take their coffee seriously. >> remember the days when we used to make coffee in the office or at home? i still make coffee at ll be done, i've heard. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, the nephewkennedy on could face a new murder trial. prosecutors want him back in prison. ahead, the development of a case0 years old. dr. dave agus is here to talk about the zika virus.ou some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" says donald trump is not the classic power broker he may portray himself to be. the times said trump did not make the top ten in list o condominium developers and power players in real estate. he also does not belong to influential trade groups. trump said he started going national and
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quote, cooler than all of that. >> okay.at, don't you? >> i do. i think it's very telling. "usa today" looks at the u.s. marshal's heavy use of cell phone trackers that were used to,000 suspects. the tools raised privacy concerns because they also intercept information about other phones in the area. the marshal services is the most users of those devices. the survey says marshals use various techniques to locate >> 72 million dollar jury award involving baby ueline has a lawsuit. the company is expected to appeal saying their products are safe and the health care giant could face more than a thousand dollar> britain aguardian" on a huge recall on mars chocolate company. the united states is not among
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snickers prompted the move. the effective products including mars, mickey way, snickers, e washington post" reports on a new twist in more than 40-year-old murder case involving the nephew of robert f. kennedy.t could petition for michael skakel to return to prison. a judge in 2013 overturned his conviction for the death of his ighbor martha moxley. "48 hours" correspondent peter van zandt shows us the next chapter in this murder r: in 2013 a judge decided michael skakel received an inadequate defense from his trial lawyer mickey sherman. hearing as their last shot at reinstating skakel's conviction. if the state supreme court rules insecutors will get a new trial. >> mr.n through
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the hearing in the highest court in connecticut comes 40 years after martha moxley was founder home. skakel was convicted in 2002 for moxley's death. >> i'm praying that i can find justice for the case has been a roller coaster for the skakel and moxley families and has remained in a spotlight, partly, is the nephew of ethyl kennedy, robert f. kennedy's widow. skakel's new criminal defense lawyer says the family dynamicght unwanted attention. >> this case is not about the kennedy family. >> reporter: but skakel's cousin, attorney robert kennedy jr., fought for years to get the conviction >> i am utterly convinced he did not do the crime. >> reporter: the 2013 appeal centered on ney mickey sherman provided a confident defense. skakel testified his former
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his own public e was hanging out with the press. he said he was a media hoar. >> reporter: the judge agreed and said sherman did not point the finger at other possible suspects. won't make the same mistake. who killed marriage moxley? >> that is a great question. i can tell you michael skakel is crime and he moxley. >> reporter: but someone within his own family may have. >> that is possible. his own brother, that's eporter: and that brother, attorney steven seger, is referring to is tommy skakel, two years older than michael. it could be several months reme court issues its ruling. until then, michael skakel remains free on $1.2 million bond. >> thank you very much. the cdc is investigating 14 possible u.s. cases of zika virus that may have been spread through sex. the new pregnant women and brings the u.s. total to at least 105
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states and washington, d.c. is here. david, good morning. this even surprised officials at the cdc. >> reporter: surprised but there is medical literature showing a transmitted and present in sperm and been around several years so it's not new, but i think the number of cases this early on when zika isry small amount is surprising. >> what does it mean? >> well, what it means is that giving warnings to women, volunteer traveling and especially if you're going to get pregnant. now what it means is we have shown or zika in sperm for up to 60 days and so what it means is anybody traveling in those regions and d to have protection or abstain from sex. >> they might not know they have it. >> you're right. many people may have no symptoms of zika. wehey can have zika virus in their sperm and not documented but especially
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zika virus is, obviously, hered states. as mosquito season comes in the gulf coast it will spread dramatically. >> what is the recommendation now? when it first broke it was about pregnant women and now talking about men and transmitted disease. >> you remember the '80s? we were worried about hiv at the time. now you have to ask people abouty. we need a quick test for the virus. we need to accelerate vaccines. you need to be very careful if sidering having sex with had travel to south america or a place where there is the zika virus. >> what is a diplomaticat question? >> you'll have to ask charlie on that one. >> i cannot get an answer. do mosquitoes have any redeeming value? >> well, only womentoes -- >> only women mosquitoes sting or bite you. >> men don't bite? >> you're right. we can eliminate all of the
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once you hit one thing, other things are affected also. mosquitoes have killed more people in this world than -- angerous animal on the planet. >> they are? >> yes. mosquitoes are. i have 8-year-olds and 7-year-olds and how i know this. mosquitoes areerous animal on the planet. >> one more thing to worry about. >> thank you, dr. david agus. from apps flashlights. how you may be handing over control of your phone to hackers and even places as far as at is next. watch us through our all-access app on your digital device because we know you do not want to miss the ron with the author who inspired the ginormous hit lton." we will be right back. and plane tickets and shoes? you would turn an intimidating process into an easy one.ge on your
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wouldn't more people buy homes? to fill their homes with lamps and blenders and sectional couches with hand-lathed wooden legs?t mean all sorts of wooden leg-making opportunities for wooden leg makers? and wouldn't those new leg makers own phones from which easily secure mortgages of their own, further stoking demand for necessary household goods as our tidal wave of ownership floods the countryers, who now must own other things and isn't that the power of america itself now shrunk to fit the hands of a child,pfully, a home-buying adult. anyway. that's what we were
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ular apps on your smartphone are convenient and
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software known as malware.m found between 75% and 80% of the top three apps on android phones or iphones were breached. the number jumps as high as among the top paid apps on those devices. anna werner is here with the hackers mergeed. apps that help target you or help hackers rip you off, you want to do your housework before downloading apps. >> any wayy could take, they got a hold of it. >> reporter: california's susan harvey says she was a victim after she used a debitload a slot machine game app to her smoen. >> it was something you purchased for $15. e went to reload the game she found hundreds of purchases had been made.
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hundred dollars. >> i was sick. i didn't know what they were. he apps ask for are way beyond what they should be asking ter: that thorough stroer story is no surprise to gary whose company tracks malware.consequences. >> you'll lose your identity. you wonder why there was a transaction and got neurobank account and paid a bill that doesn't exist. >> reporter: he says when you download an app, you're also permission to access other parts of your phone. like an alarm clock app that can track phone calls. >> you think an alarm clock those per missions? access to the internet over the wi-fi? your call information calls you made and call history and i.d. me is not a safe alarm classwork.
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a demonstration of what could a photo of a check to send to their bank. what happens to the check now? >> well, the flashlight app notice the check and grabs a copy of it and shipped it off to a server somewhere far away. >> reporter: last year the groupdiscovered 11 apps that gathered users sensitive information and sent it to a remote the following. apple fought back by removing the apps and putting stricter security measures in place. >> they go to at your gps, yourto build a profile you on. >> reporter: some apps are collecting information simply for advertising purposes. in 2014, the federal trade lawsuit with a company over its popular brightest flashlight app, alleging iters personal information them. but gary says he has found another flashlight app that can
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>> this one turns on yourhone in the background, listens in on you and sends an encrypted tunnel to a server we discovered>> reporter: you're saying they are actually listening to people's conversations and sending that audio back to beijing? >> yeah. we have tracked it. i can show you where it does it.s it on this map? >> a few blocks from tiananmen >> reporter: he gave that app to the fbi. his recommendation? >> we really have to look at our phone and say this is really a s this our pocket. let's shut down all of the apps we don't use and delete apps that don't make sense and reduce the risk ofeporter: the creator of the brightest flashlight app settled with the ftc and agreed to erasemation it had
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a judge dismissed susan's ying she failed too late. way to shake us all up this morning, anna werner. read the fine don't you have an increasing suspicion that a lot of people known more about it than we do? >> i'm deletght app. there is one that comes on the phone by itself so i don't need it any more. a awards show whereor will be honored. we will show you the all def awards show and they are like us, how a surprisingly human next generation robot reactsocks it down. first, it's time to check ur >> samantha: good morning to you. of course, our big story is this pouring rain. the rain may be heavy at times, and if you're out on the west side, you might see a little
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so take it slow out there. in cleveland our temperatures get into the 50s today, but it takes us until tonight to get there. rain, wind and even a little thunder for today. tomorrow we switch over to snowshowers and a little more snow possible announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by cigna. yeah! ahh... ahh...ably say it a million times a day. ahh... ahh! ahh... ahh! but at cigna, we want to help everyone say it once a year. say "ahh". >>ahh...plans cover one hundred percent of your in-network annual checkup. so america, let's go. know. ahh!f your health.
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boston dynamics is showing off the impressive human-like new generation of its robot. video shows the robot opening doors and navigating uneven ground. the 5'9" robot walks comfortably next to a human and it performs task like lifting boxes and a down with a stick. it popped up and walked away. >> and punched the man in the face! listen up!
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this is, this is my life. this is my family. being a part of helping people in need is who i am. working at brookdale for me is no me. i love it. i formed many connections with part of their family and they're part of mine. if you can get up in the morning, ya know, and make somebody happy, when i
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>> brian: good morning. i'm brian duffy. if you prefer music over politics, you're in luck. the rock 'n roll hall of fame and at&t partner up to provide free admission during the weeb of the republican national convention. this is not a done deal yet, but it could be. of course, the convention begins july 18th. here's our meteorologist sam roberts with a very wet forecast. sam. >> samantha: oh, yeah. it's been coming down all morning. it's raining through midday and even into the afternoon and evening. we'll have scattered showers, maybe a few rumbles of thunder and very windy. if you're on the west side this morning, you might run into a little freezing rain. that shouldn't be an issue after 10:00, and then for tomorrow we
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to crazy seven day with the rain and wind today. then the cold and snow tomorrow still cold on friday but we warm it up for the weekend.
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esday, february 24th, 2016. morning." more real news ahead, including why donald trump is the republican race. columnist and author mike lupica is here. he calls some other candidates real losers.t, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> this rv park looks like a disaster zone. shredding rvs tossed like children's toys. donald trump got more votes nd marco rubio combined so he was really pumped. >> donald trump has a commanding
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tuesday, we are going to see 595in play. >> what state do you think that you're going to be the one to "trump" donald trump? >> well, we will within in a state supreme court rules in skakel's favor, prosecutors will get a new trial. you remember the '80s. you had to ask everybody their and we were all worried about hiv at the time. now you have to ask people about their travel history. >> what is a diplomatic way to ask that question? >> you'll have to confer with charlie on that one.e saying they are actually listening to people's conversations and sending that audio back to beijing? >> yeah. we tracked it. can i show you. >> way to shake us all up, werner. >> hillary clinton visited the set of the '80s tv hit "the scandal." is that really the show you should be visiting right now? why not drop by the set of "iwrong"? announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. severe weather today threatens more than 80 million americans after a series of punishing storms. threats offlooding stretch from the gulf coast to the southeast and mid-atlantic. the storm's system is blamed for at least three deaths.e south. >> more than two dozen tornadoes were reported across five southern states, one of them tore through pensacola, florida. 24 homes were destroyed at thist complex. devastating winds ravaged a trailer park in convent, louisiana. two people were killed there. at least seven others are in critical condition today. then is marching toward super tuesday, the biggest day so far. but south carolina democrats still have to vote this saturday.rnie sanders held a town hall there last night. they talked to voters about money and politics and racism in america in a state where a largets are
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i have a record that already demonstrates my willingness to take on wall street and and there is no question about that. >> the people like the koch brothers, okay? country. they and a few of theiriends are going to spend $900 million on this campaign. i think that stinks. i think that is undermining american democracy. >> we have serious chags challenges and i think it's important for people people to be honest about those and to recognize our experiences may not equip us to understand what a lot of our fellow citizens go through every single day. >> my dad, as i mentioned, came from poland. i'm running fors what. nobody has asked for my birth certificate. maybe it's the color of my skin.
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>> clinton heard stephen colbert an interview where she was asked by scott pelley if she has ever lied. >> you're asking me -- i don't believe i have ever. i don't believe i ever will.est i can can to level with the american people. >> how can you be this bad? just say no! even -- even richard nixon knew to say, i am not a crook!say it has always been my intention as far as i believe, i will do the best i cannot to be a crook. the home run of campaign questions. you just say no! and then touch all of the bases! >> is that a question that you'd answering? >> i'll just say no. >> with three days left before the primary, clinton still leads the pollslina. have you guys ever told a lie? >> and has her sense of humor
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>> have you? >> yes. >> have you? >> yes, i it right in nevada. >> i feel better, norah, that i confessed! thank you. >> i know. >> i'm just waiting --o find the person who has never told a lie! >> mike lupica my be that man. ther decisive win in nevada and won by 22 points and beating his rivals in virtually every voter marco rubio in second ahead of ted cruz by nearly 2,000 votes. trump celebrated an las vegas. >> we have numbers coming out of tennessee and arkansas and florida.
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we might not need the two to be honest. mike lupica is known for his pro provoctary comments. mike, welcome back. >> great to have you here. >> have you ever told a lie?s! >> we want to keep the record going. >> no, but when scott pelley asked her that question, all i could think was the day somebodyom brady and he said, are you a cherting? and he said, i don't think so. the answer is no! >> but you could lie without knowing you lied? >>then -- then, charlie, it becomes, you know, a definition of what is a lie. >> we are not going there, are we? >> no. d trump a long time. >> yes. >> what is it about donald trump you think has connected in 2016? >> charlie, i don't think he
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about, not just congress, but the president as well. so he tapped into something that ithis was knew. and every time i've interviewed him throughout this process, he always says the same thing, come on, aren't you a little bit and i would always say, yes, yes! >> no, no, listen. if somebody had told you eight years ago that a tor, african-american from illinois was going to take on the clinton machine and beat them, you would have said, yeah, right. but this is way more surprising than that. >> here is the point too. it is within his dna,ity to capitalize on the anger. >> yes. and i'll tell you something else he does and it's been interesting to watch. he will find your and attack it, okay? and he'll listen to three hours and he'll seize on the one thing that he can use. when hillary clinton called him
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play at warped speed and when jeb bush thought he would bring his brother out of the bull pen, like the first army coming over the hill, he went right after him on led jeb low energy which was right to a quality that people seem to -- >> jeb bush, if you would ask me at the start of this thing to y, i would have bet on jeb bush way back before trump came down the escalator. now you look at him and he is like the nice boy with hisg and lunch money walking to school and he is almost at school. he thinks it's going to be a great day at school! and then? >> then this guy is waiting for him on the street corner! donald trump will be the nominee? >> i do. >> yeah. >> i think that the only way that he doesn't is if cruz pulls out of the race. my wife was saying the other why doesn't cruz pull out? honey, he thinks he is still going to be president. and rubio, i think, is the only one that would possibly have an avenue, but as he continues totum -- charlie, my
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third place finishers declaring victory. it's my favorite! as a child in theke carolina panthers going home after the super bowl and throwing themselves a victory parade. >> to be fair togame of a proportional map at this stage in the race and they are tracking the delegates. even if you give trump the same percentage through march 1st and the path to getting those 1,200 delegates >> any metric you look at i think the only one who has a chance now is rubio. >> he has to -- he would have to sweep florida and ohio. >> but he's got to win 't make any kind of case for himself with the american people that the second place finishes somehow make him the odds on favorite tointon in november. >> just a capping point about expectations. it is expectations that allows people to declare themselves a
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in south carolina, said we made history tonight. i'm thinking, what kind of history? you're in the south. block without running into a white evangelical. >> thank you, mike. >> okay. >> are you done? >> well, no! >> okay. >> no, no, no.re delighted you're here. i'm just kidding. >> that's fine. >> there is a clock. it's not you. >> that's not welcoming! >> it wasn't welcoming! >> mike, you need a hug. some are calling it the black oscars. >> where are you? >> all s want to be exclusive >> samantha: all right. thanks, gail. you don't need me to tell you it's a mess out there this morning. pouring rain everywhere.
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and latest radar scans show freezing precipitation trying to mix in out to the west of the sandusky. we'll watch that closely, but i expect mostly a rain event for today. heavy at times, and it will be very announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nationwide. nationwide your side
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"hamilton." >> i'm at alexander hamilton's south in northern manhattan. a hundred blocks south of here he is the biggest name on wall street. how hamilton has become the hippest of the founding fathers. new york see me. see me. see me to know that psoriasis is just something that i have. i'm not contagious. see p. until i find what works. discover cosentyx, a different kind of medicine for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. majority of people find clear or almost clear skin. 8 out of 10 people saw 75% skin clearance at 3 months. while the majority saw 90% clearance. if you are allergic to cosentyx. before starting, you should be tested for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infectionsity to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have
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if you're not going to do it, i'm out. >> every punch i've ever thrown has been my own.e how to do this? i'm ready. >> that is michael b. jordan withone in "creed." no person of color was nominated in any acting category for the second year in a row.host kevin frazier is in los angeles where a new show called the "all def movie awards" is taping >> you may find yourself between two rocks and a hard place this sunday. chris returns to host the oscars
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and created by russell simmons and it's a more exclusiveive. >> yes. we will build a staircase. >> reporter: comedian tony rock isn't looking to spoil his 's big night but the awards show he is hosting is looking to disrupt hollywood's status quo. rds show will create dialogue and get things moving as far as the oscars is concerned and casting is concerned and how people ht and how we are perceived in television and how we are shown in the media. >> i don't undle feel this undieing need to be down to white people all the time. >> reporter: this launched documented die atribe. >> our movies and our culture. >> reporter: your rant was epic?
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down to nuts and bolts, is this something that you need? and if you have this, then do you no longer worry about the o, you always worry about the oscars, but this is needed because dialogue always, you know, can create a change. >> reporter: while the all federe created to make a point, the show, produced by media mogul and def jam l simmons -- >> we poke fun at the oscars and everybody else, but this is about celebrating people who might not otherwise get . like, i can't expect 94-year-old white guys to vote on "outta why would i? >> hey. >> it did get a nod on the all def picture of best pictures nominees but the awards will go toe best hopeful
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>> harrison ford. "star wars." r wars." "star wars." significant vester sylvester stallone. >> you're a good fighter. >> you continue to deny my work. the world will deny my work. >> >> and legendary producer norman learated the show? >> yes. we are moving on up >> george jefferson walked with swagger. anywhere. look around! we are already there! >> he cursed white people out. >> who you calling crazy? >> norman lear will do something we don't have to go back then. big screen will show some of the room. is promising to bring his irreverent star to "the all def
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hes you can spp some expect some edges in the oscars. >> you have to address the big black efficient lephant in the room.or saying things people wish they could say and getting away with and he is going to push the envelope and he is going to do all of that. >> the all def movie awards willon fusion tv. last night a star-studded turnout and robert downey jr. there to honor don cheadle andored was diahann carroll. they he accepted the award, he said this is the only award i'm concerned about. >> thete person award, you will not see that at the oscars. >> norman lear? >> no. special category. >> he got a special category.llone may win that one.
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dion during her return to the vegas stage.ful tribute to her late husband. you're watching "cbs this morning." for the past 27 days, four men have outlasted authorities by making their getaway in a prius.ow. to catch a prius, you've gotta be a prius. , what's that? oh, man. laces. pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies. then your eyes may see it differently.proved to relieve both your itchy,z watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. complete allergy relief or incomplete.. flonase changes everything. how do you eat healthier, while you enjoy life and lose weight?t all with one simple plan. the all-new smartpoints from
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videos shows a terrifying moment. a rhine o charges pull feed at a ams the toyota and pushing
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no one inside was hurt. but they were shaken up.
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>> samantha: ed rad dar looks like it did the last time we talked. it's pouring rain out there but you don't have to go far to find snow or freezing rain as close to home as toledo or traveling up 75 into detroit this morning, very heavy snow. for us, it's just rain. we're still on the warmer side of things, and i expect this to be mainly a rain event for the rest of the day. that rain, it may be very heavy at times as temperatures very slowly climb into the 50s. that won't happen until this evening, so most of the day will actually be in the 40s. you should dress for weather in the 40s, a little cooler, not quite as spring-like as 54. that will happen later tonight like evening time frame. otherwise, rainy, windy, a few
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start to cool off very late tonight. so we transition over to snow for tomorrow.
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let's make that random call with today's 10,000 dollar question, who shot alexander hamilton in that famous d >> hello? >> hello. for $10,000 -- >> excuse me? >> wait. >> the first gotl aired back in 1983. a history buff knew the answer to a call-in question, who shot alexander hamilton but he has trouble saying who shot alex rose. >> remember? >> ding, ding, ding. >> because he is out of milk! that is one of the fun facts i
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you learn a lot going to see that play. i knew very little about him. highly recommend. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, more on the of the musical "hamilton." it is enjoy nor ginormous inthe store can be seen beyond the stage. >> how do you spell that? >> ou learn something new in our sew show. dr. tara narula is in our green room. fare worse than men.
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>> that's true. she has got a good excuse. >> let's show you some of this nes. wp reports on dr. samuel alito said the supreme court will find a way to get its work without dr. scalia's on the h. he said the supreme court. erin andrews wants damages. they accuse the hotel for giving her room number to a stalker. in manhattan were stranded 70 feet up more than an hour yesterday when their scaffold got stuck. firefighters broke a window to
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and joked once they were safely inside. >> most people would have needed a depend so it's good they have a sense ofost people wouldn't. >> you know what? >> i'd be scared! >> i'm surprised depends has not called you toon because you say that quite often. >> and i don't use them! >> that would be ginormous news if it were true! here. "wall street journal" reports on companies that pay workers to live close to the office. they offer rent subsidies andand companies. believe the perk will attract people to move to high rent areas. managers say people who live near the office often work late company longer. and "the new york times" looks at the declining popularity of cereal. ine $13 billion
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almost 40% of millennials say cereal is inconvenient breakfast because they have to clean up the bowl afterwards. heart disease is the number one cause of death in women.than 6 million women every year. recent studies from the american heart association show how women's symptoms are often overlooked or misu. tara narula is a cardiologist at lennox hill hospital and also a spokesman for the american heart morning. >> good morning. >> why do women fare worse? >> right. since 1984 the annual more tall think for cardiovascular is longer for women. they have longer e remissions and there are multiple reasons for this.
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women t carve events cardiovascular event older at around 60.e risk factors like hypertension and tobacco, debates, depression and psycho risk factors.entation can be different. they can have atypical symptoms that can be misdiagnosed and treatment is different. either not tailored specifically guidelines. it? i mean, does treatment and the fact they are somehow not as seriously taken in terms of here's an attitude problem and a biology problem. >> exactly. >> the go red for women movement was established in 2004 to increase awareness andl but 55% of women recognize that threat. women don't recognize the symptoms or if they do they blow them off time to go to the doctor, i have
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or they are afraid or embarrassed. then the biology issue. we are learning that the biology of women's heart disease mayfrom men in terms of how they have their heart attacks. the mechanisms of their blood vessel dysfunction. let's not forget thetitioners and doctors who are also to blame here, in part, for misdiagnosing heart disease in women and for not as often for diagnostic evaluation, not giving them the guideline related treatment. we have a ways to go. >> other than raising awareness, what else can we do other than? >> right.people? >> women can do a lot. 80% of this is preventable. one of the things the aha is promoting a well women's visit. you go as a woman internist and talk about your risk factors before you get to a point where you have a problem. you should know your family >> everybody should, shouldn't they? >> most people wait until they have a problem.
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>> thank you. >> accolades keep coming for theical "hamilton." it won the kennedy prize on monday. the cast wowed grammy viewers. tickets are sold out throughout at least january of next year. the show is based on hamilton, our nation's first treasury secretary. chip reid spoke with the author who helped the founding father find new life. morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. , you know, george washington and thomas jefferson are over this town but good luck finding alexander hamilton. yes, you can pull adollar pill out of your wallet or come here to this galgalaxy. now he is getting his turn in the >> reporter: behind the wrath-inspired lyrics and hip-hop, new york's most talked
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a historyo musical ever before. >> reporter: until recently, alexander hamilton was best known as the stoic face on bill. that changed when hamilton hit broadway. so this is. re he lived the last couple of years of his life. then you have to remember, chip, this would have been very far north of the city at the time. this would have been virtual >> reporter: about a hundred blocks north of the theater is where the real alexander ls hamilton heights. ron chernow wrote the biography on sical is based. what is it like for you to be siting here? >> it's a thrill to be in this house because it's the only house we know he
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a immigrant born out of wedlock and orphaned as a childew decades became general george washington's top aide and a constitution and founder of the coast guard and the new york post was hamilton a ius? >> not for me. >> reporter: but for some people? >> some people. >> reporter: a visionary? >> undoubtedly. >> reporter: insecure? >> to an extent. temperamental? >> definitely. >> reporter: definitely temperamental? >> i think people that attracts people to alexander hamilton, s about him you can nir admire but, at the same time, you can identify with him. >> reporter: play write
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to tell his stories behind rap. in60 minutes" interview, mannered complained it to charlie rose. >> i believe that form is uniquely suited to tell hamilton's as rhythm and it has density and if hamilton had anything in his writings, density. >> reporter: his furious r founding fathers were legendary, including a decades long rivalry with thomas jefferson over slavery which hamiltonand over the future of the young republic. >> hamilton had a vision of the country and not only true traditional agriculture but there would be large cities and factories and stock exchanges. >> reporter: hamilton died in a duel at the age of 49.
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to remember the man who history almost forgot. he died more than 200 years ago and now he's getting his turn in >> his name is literally up in lights on broadway. doesn't get any better than that. >> reporter: the alexander wing no signs of slowing down. ron chernow's book has been on the best seller list 18 weeks and six weeks longer than in first came out. >> i just got the book yesterday. i'm one of the ones! thank you so much, chip. i marvel that here is lynn play. rap. >> so good. >> he says he'll be happiest the attention when that play is being produced by theater groups in high schools all over the world. >> can i see that happening really easily, charlie. >> awesome. >> a great, great play.k you again. consumer >> samantha: all right.
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nothing has really changed, and it's still coming down out there. it's moderate to heavy at times especially out towards sandusky. good news is temperatures are above freezing, so most of this is coming down as rain and not freezing rain. we continue to monitor the potential for that, especially out on the west side. let's talk about your forecast for today. rainy, and you know, you don't need me for that, right?
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tv-commercial
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his morning, we are peeling back the plastic wrapped on the prepared foods at your grocery store and 29 billion and growing as fast as overall grocery sales.
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prepared foods are fresh and healthy and save you any money. the magazine analyzed food samples in a labd fat and saturated fat and sodium. welcome, trishaanted to look at prepared foods. people are busy and looking at convenient options to make dinner and get it on the table fast. we wanted them nutritionally because those foods are not required to provide any nutritional information. >> let's get specific. what did you find when youe foods breaded take tilapia? were similar in sodium and found the restaurant meal was slightly higher in calories in sodium and fat. >> what does that tell us or
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>> it really tells us that, you know, they are all more or less the same and it really does mean that homemade is usually the best option. >> so we reached out to wholee not heard back from them and keep you posted on that. this is what you did. you sent secret shoppers into the grocery stores. what did you tell them to do? >> weppers to buy the dishes we identify as being available regularly and asked them to ask the store clerks, the people behind the counters about the food, where the food wasow the food was prepared. >> one of them went to shop rite's chicken march en en did you find out? >> we found the same dish from two different locations of the store varied widely in sodium content from 363 milligrams to milligrams in the same sized serving. >> how do you explain that? >> you know, it's just that the foods are not prepared
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necessarily maybe to the store's recipe or the clerk throws an extra bunch of sodium in. know. >> shop rite has coming to say. it says the article does not represent the depth of their prepared food options and that they do provide healthy dishes for to that, you say? >> yeah, i think that they do. i think there are some that they do, but i think the real issue with this is nobody knows which ones arech ones aren't because there are no nutritional information and that store doesn't provide nutritional information. >> you say rotisserie chicken is a great deal? >> $1.66 a found what we found in our tests. >> the whole study is sort of do a check on whether you're nd whether the nutrition in is it what you expect or whether it has more salt or sodium than you expect? >> absolutely. >> to those of us who don't havet are we supposed to do? >> i think that you should -- you have to pay attention to
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that is big part of this.lerks about the food. ask they have nutritional information, ask where it was prepared. thank you. >> thank you, trisha. >> thank you. celine dion returns to the stage with an emotional tribute to her late husband.
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an't live without without feeling it inside the lonely hearts go >> celine dion playing tribute in las vegas last night.
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she said every time she closed
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>> samantha: all right. this is what you can expect if you haven't gone out and about yet, maybe you have errands to run or you're about to leave for work, it's 8:55 and the continues on the roads, well, it's a slow go. it is raining. it's 37 in cleveland, so no snow out there, and likely no freezing rain right now either considering most observation sites are well above freezing by at least 2 degrees depending on where you are. we're right around 34 degrees out there around sandusky. so no freezing rain right now. still watching it closely. mainly just a lot of rain moving through, and it's windy as well. it will be a windy day with periods of rain especially this morning and even into tonight we see some rainshowers. maybe a few rumbles of thunder, and notice that high for today is 54.
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long time to get there. probably not until this evening. it will be in the 40s for most of the day. tomorrow we transition over to
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[music playing] it' s the harley-davidson show at myrtle beach, south carolina. talk about a cool ride?. whoo! let' s get in the kitchen, s get cooking. announcer: today on "flip my food," chef jeff teams up with the crew from myrtle beachogether, they ride the open road to big flavor in this gorgeous and lively beachfront destination. at the i' m here with ron, who is the parts manager. jeff: it' s a pleasure to ron: thank you, sir. jeff: you know, i ride ron: oh, yeah. jeff: and i always try to with the parts manager, ' cause when that new stuff comes out... ron: gotta have it. jeff: i got to make sure i get i can hook my bike up. so are you from myrtle beach? ron: actually, i was born in south new york. jeff: so a lot of new york folks ma that? what' s so great about myrtle beach?

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