tv Sunday Morning CBS March 20, 2016 9:00am-10:30am EDT
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a gossip website known as gawker has been testing the limits of free speech for more than a decade. now this past friday, gawker may have hit that limit, hard. a jury awarded the wrestler hulk hoe began $115 million in damages after gawker posted a sex tape that featured him. it's the biggest challenge yet for gawker's founder as erin moriarty will report in our cover story. >> i have a phrase, nothing is ever as good or as bad as it seems at the time. >> british born journalist nick den ton built a bare-bones start up into an internet power house. >> gossip the version of news that the authorities or the celebrities or the officials don't want people to know. >> hulk hoe began sure didn't want people to know about that sex tape and now gawker may have to pay a tripling price.
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morning," we talk with gawker's nick den ton. >> rocco:singer gwen stefani has been a superstar for years. she'll talk about all of it with our lee cowan for the record. >> she's had a chart topping batched, successful solo career, a clothing line and three young boys. but when her marriage of 13 years blew up in the most public of ways she almost fell apart. >> at that time everything was like, i had no skin, i was so raw. and nobody knew what was happening and i had this big secret. >> how she turned that secret and a few others into what she says is her most personal album ever, ahead on "sunday morning." is. >> rocco:we're on the trail again this morning, conor yet another of our national parks.
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>> it may look a little swampyuggy. >> if i slap one on my wrist am i going to get a fine from the park service? >> yes, you are. give me a dollar every thousands of plants and animal species that call the florida everglades home, there's no place else like it in the world. first national park created not to protect amazing scenery but amazing biodiversity, later on "sunday morning." >> is about to open on broadway thanks to two very well-known singer songwriters who are content, in this case to, make theirtage. they will be talking with rita braver. >> you may think of them as performers.but now steve martin and edie
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scenes. a new broadway musical. >> what do you hope that audiences take awayow? >> me, i hope they have a good time. i hope they laugh and cry and they're moved. on "sunday morning," setting broadway aglow. >> rocco:the late artist norman lewis fighting getting steve heart mac has story of patient and nurse. i'll take you through the cbs broadcast center and more. first, the sunday morning the 20th of mark, 2016. president obama today will become the first u.s. president in nearly 90 years to visit cuba.as calvin coolidge in 1928. mr. obama will be accompanied by
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he's got a busy two days that includes a meeting with both raoul castro and dissidents opposed to the communist ray gene. >> a crash 90 miles south of many of those on board were died. 30 others were injured. in southern russiave recovered the flight data recorders from the wreckage of a boeing 737 at the airport. the jetliner crashed while landing in bad weathay. all 6 aboard parished. it was lights out around the world last night for the 10th annual earth hour. draw attention to environmental issues. thousands of cities worldwide now participate in the event. after two days of bracket bustingtled down at the ncaa basketball tournament saturday. with favorites like north carolina making their way to the
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the tar heels defeat providence they will be more march madness later today here on cbs. and finally the balanced eagles known as mr. president and first ladyir second earringlet into the world earlier this morning at washington's national arboretum. first was born on friday. you're looking at pictures from the eagle cam.hey? here's today's weather. spring may be here but snow is expected from the mid atlantic into the northeast.et the worst of it. rain in the southeast and along much of the west coast, too. in the week ahead it's a weather hodge-podge. but definitely warm andsouthwest. 'a head, a tale of patient -- knew who she was. >> rocco:and nurse. but next -- >> i think people had rights to
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well as authorized version. >> rocco:gawker, testing the limits. rocks. places where fish swim and birds fly. history is made. art is created. hould always be remembered. heroes emerge. a woman sets people free. a man makes light. it can be a place, a feeling, a state of mind. so get up. and find your park. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, o to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimatelymily devastated. don't let this happen to you.
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media a collection of seven online blogs that feed on sensational stories, often having to do with celebrities. >> i think it's a good name, aame. >> but it means to stare stupidly. >> it means to stare, stupidly might be one of thee a little bit of sense of humor about what we do, too. >> with the internet largely unregulated denton and his crew have been able to gawk at just until one of
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them on in a st. petersburg, >> completely humiliated. >> terry bollea, seen here when he was still wrestling under the name of hulk hogan sued denton and gawker for invasion of privacy. he says his life has not been the same since 2012 when gawkeron of a sex tape featuring bollea. a lot at stake. bollea sued for $100 million. denton's entire digital media and some fear so is is freedom of speech on the internet. >> i have a phrase, nothing is ever as good or as bad as it and i think often tests bring out the best in people and in
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>> just days before the trial denton seemed confident. >> it's a good story. it's true. it's a matter of public concern. he's a very public figure so if to have a story go to trial, i'm actually pretty glad it's this one. >> since 2002, the british born,d denton has ball gawker media with stories just like this. there have been posts about a toronto mayor's drug use, private e-mail server, the accusations against bill cosby, and, of course, the hulk hoe began sex really news? or is that just entertainment and appealing to our most voyeuristic instincts? >> we and that particular story millions of people found interesting. gossip is the version of news
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celebrities or thet want people to know. it's the unauthorized version. i think people have a right to know the unauthorized version as well as of news. >> there are also gawker's internet pranks. his crew created havoc by candidate donald trump to repeat this quotation on twitter. "it is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as athe problem? fascist leader benito mussolini said it first. >> it's okay to know it'ss a very good quote. >> tormenting public figures may seem an odd career choice for a journalist who once worked for the lofty financial times, but a gay man and a brit trying to make it in america, he has felt like an outsider. >> if you're an outsider ther social consequences to
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that, you know, gawker ran in the early days or that journalists, good journalists of those stories make you unpopular. if you care less about being accept by an establishment then you are more likely to run those stories, more likely to allowuller freedom. >> denton employs 200 people, most working in the manhattan office, where a job as apected to post 1 stories a day, can be grueling. a large central board continually ranks the popularity of stories by the number ofing on. so what's a good story? how many collision do you need? >> any story that gets over aig story for us. >> for the record the hogan sex tape reportedly got eight million views, which made it a huge story.t year, he announced
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website to focus more on politics. he insists that it has nothing current lawsuit. but it may have had something to do with this. two years ago nick denton married derrence washington ator who admits he doesn't share denton's taste in news. you're not really interested in politics? >> no, not really. >> not interested in gossip? >> i mess every now and again but not gossip gossip. nothing that gets sort of judgmental and finger pointing.n that. >> but that's what he does for a living. >> but i'm not married to what he does for a living. i'm married to him. >> denton. >> i was a gawker. i was on the outside looking in. i was a gay guy in a straightmagine that i was going to have a family. i could just be getting older.
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>> last summer he did something had never done. he pulled a damaging story involving a man who wasn'tto have a brother who was. >> this was a story that i didn't believe that we should have done. i didn't think the point meritedd to the man's family. >> does this make the fact that you drew the line with one case, pulled a post, make it more difficult to defend putting on a sex tape of mull hogan? >> i think the judgment is made all the time. and i think w to know from us is that we do apply standards. >> but in the end, the man who has made a career out of pushing gone too far. the jury came down decisively against him, giving the
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than he asked for, $115 million.ton may be on the ropes, but even before the trial, he appeal. >> i to look back and i'm going to look at this trial as being -- the hogan case as being the prompt that actually caused us to focus do, what we believe in and be serious about being a major force in digital media going forward. >>ext, the death of the diet doctor. now the #1 selling brand for frequent heartburn.tection with the new leader in frequent heartburn. that's nexium
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ung people when they thought they should start saving for retirement. then we asked some older people when they actually did start saving. this gap between when we should start savingtually do is one of the reasons why too many of us aren't prepared for retirement. just start as early as you can.pay off in the future. if we all start saving a little more today, we'll all be better prepared tomorrow. prudential.
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r "sunday morning" almanac, march 20, 1981, 25 years ago today. a final to, tabloid sensation of a trial. that was the day jean harris wasd to 15 years to life for the killing of dr. her man tarnober, the create are of the popular scarsdale diet. a divorcee and girls school head mistress involved in years-long romance. after discovering that the diet timing her with a younger woman he employed in his office, jean harris took herself and her handgun, to his suburban new york home on the night of march 10th, him, she testified at trial, but
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committing suicide. instead, she said, the doctorr the gun and it accidentally went off, killing him. the tangled tale was told in notade for tv movies including hbo offering in 2005 with annette bening in the title role. i did not murder dr. her man tarnower. >> rocco:jry of the romantic betrayal failed to sway the jury which convicted her of second degree murder. she did win the support of some feminists and writers including diana compared her to such wronged heroines of madam bovary. unlike them, jean harris a model prisoner she counseled and tutored her fellow inmates while her son jim stood on
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up signatures for a clemency at the end of 1992, new york dove more mario cuomo commuted her sentence. and in a public appearance in 1949, she reflected on. >> the most compelling lesson that i learned when i was in connected we are all. >> jean harris died on december 23, 2012. she was 89 years old. $800,000 -- >> rocco:coming up. >> sold, $800,000. >> rocco:finally getting his due.an be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in.ctor. she said... symbicort could help you
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here's a certain satisfaction in seeing a talented artist finally getting his due. jim axelrod has a case in point. >> this is untitled work by>> at an auction at new york's swann galleries, the artist norman lewis is about to have a very good day. >> 500,000 up would you bid 550? >> according to nigel freeman a
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fine art, lewis' work is hot. estimate of $250-350,000. so 20 years ago what do you think this painting would have sold for? >> it would have been low unfortunately. paintings of his sold for less than $20,000. >>d. >> that was a record for the painter. 36 years after his death, norman lewis is having a moment. predicted. tarin fuller is his daughter. is. >> did norman know that it wasile for him to get the proper consideration? >> norman told that to my mother and myself that he didn't expect
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>> here you are right on time. >> well, he called it just like he could calm the horses. >> for 50 years, lewis painted with a style all his own and anf color and line. >> i always thought of him as a wizard.me would sum it up. he would play the piano, a true renaissance man. had a lot of vigor. he talkedd understanding what that meant and always shooting for the ceiling. >> i may not reach the ceiling but i think i stillried to do things that i believe.
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norman lewis is enjoying a critical reappraisal. seeing his work acquired by major museums. >> the colors are spectacular. >> and now the pennsylvania academy of the fine arts innting the first major retrospective of his art. ruth fine is the curator. >> i wanted to do it because i think he'smportant and interesting. i think the work is complex and beautiful. >> born in harlem in 1909 ton immigrants, lewis was profoundly influenced by the energy of the renaissance unfolding just outside his front door. >> as he is looking at harlem,ing? >> he's seeing everything. people warming themselves by a burner.le going shopping.
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the figurative work that was exhibited most during hishis painting which was sometimes called girl with yellow hat. sometimes yellow hat. >> in the mid 1950 os, lewis moved on, embracing abstractpressionism, a rare departure for an african american artist. >> i think he did not want to be hedge onhe wanted to live his life the way he wanted to paint it. i don't see that as rejection of anything. i see that as an embrace of -- >> -- everybody. >> in the middle of this work, you see two burning crosses. >> you do. absolutely. >> had to be clan rally. >> it was a tough time in this country. >> lewis' work did not go unnoticed. >> he showed one of the bestk, the
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he got very good press in the important art journals. he was in 13 group exhibitio >> but norman lewis' stature was bumping hard against the facts that governed life for a blackeven in the art world. >> he was at the venice biennale that they showed de koonig andck. he didn't get the same commercial success as his peers. >> what did norman lewis have to deal with? >> he had to deal with the exhibition, is that were exhibitions of white artists. he was also left out of exhibitions of black artists that i would have thought he in. but he was too abstract. he wasn't fitting the picture that people wanted to tell about was.
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>> is this finished? >> yeah.n lewis' struggle for his rightful place among his contemporaries produced an extraordinary body of work and ae to go with it. >> the fact that he wasn't recognized the way he should have been during his lifetime, did you see frustration about that? norman was angry. there was a subtling a tore him. you know, disappointment. >> i don't know how he keptow he had some rage. i know he was upset. but he didn't let that affect his painting. he just kept painting. >> former nba player and coach is a note collector of african american art.
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>> he owns four works bywere you surprised as you started to see what norman lewis' work, the prices that his work was commanding? >> no. work was really good. the last ten years, it was a bull rush on collecting africannd sculptures. we used to get pieces and get it for a good price. those days are long gone, buddy, >> if the store roofer of norman lewis is on of racism denying an artist his proper due during his life, then it is also says ruth fine, aeing written. the reconsideration of norman lewis, why now? >> i think the art world is realizing thatf american art is much more diverse. young scholars and even old people like me are trying to
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keep shining for me >> "bright star" opening broadway this coming week is in part about a young man on the brink of own surprising history. a people who wrote the musical are bright stars themselves. >> we are the wild and crazy guys!n known for his comedy -- >> the new phone books arework. >> things are going to start happening to me now.
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his cowriter is famed singerer edie brickell. and though she was raised in in california, broadway always deck oned. >> i had a 33 rpm of the music man that i just played over and and memorized. >> my mom used to sing to us in the car all the time. she sang show tunes. oh, what a beautiful morning. always singing. >> but the story of their collaboration is as full ofs ful twists and turns as thens as king tut >> his real musical talent,he instrument
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>> when i heard the banjo i was completely motivated. i loved it so much.t wasn't until about 1/5 years ago that he really added musician to his varied resume.part brickell considered an icon of the late 1980s indue music scene that put her burner. after her 1992 marriage to paul simon, raising their threeriority. >> i would never have kids if i couldn't be with them. if i couldn't sit and hold my web all day long, i done it. i needed to be with them. >> but she also became a fan of her old friend, steve martin's music.s ago with her children growing up she ran into him at a party.
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like to write a songsure love it. >> and thus a new partnership was born. they started writing together. the tunes, as he calls them, and edie the lyrics. she well and in 2014, the title song of their first album. grammy for best american roots song. >> we are truly stunned, if i can speak for edie, and i will. >> soon they were dreaming of broadway show.
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carolina, is inspired by an old newspaper article edie found. >> it was a story about a baby that had been thrownain in a suitcase and it lived. and someone discovered the baby, in the suitcase, and raised it. >>u understand this, it just set your mind clicking? what happened? >> i love miracles. and i read that story and said, it's such a beautifuland it's so weird that anybody can do such a thing. and it did, it sparked my imagination. y created a tale of love lost and found. >> you're a young girl and you want to knowf lives unexpectedly intersecting. and they gotten to knee award winning director walter bobbie
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two people who have never done a broadway show before? >> the two people. and actually steve as i remember the script over to my doorman that day and i read it. >> and the doorman started to reject it. he said --he midst of all this martin and brickell managed to release a new album. with a video shot in, of all places, an elevator. >> i'll go anywhere but i >> the fun and quirky tale is like much of their work, justs that their musical collaboration is still a bit of a surprise, even for them.
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i mean, what do you see fromip going forward? >> it has been, for me, a real miracle in my life. because it brought us, we were touring, we were creating all these songs.t from having written 20 songs to have written 60 songs. i never look back but i will listen to our old songs. >> how about for you? remarkable. steve is like a big gift in my life. >> now, ofocus is on their show. they know the stakes are high, in a medium where everyone is looking for the next new thing.t steve martin and edie brickell say that they deliberately created a more traditional musical. like the ones they grew up
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take away from this show? >> me? i hope they have a good time. i hope they, that's what i hope, and they're moved. >> relief, joy, really good time.good as opposed to, gee, that was intellectually stimulating but i feel terrible. >> rocco:next, we get happy. stones. and just like i'm there for her, pacific life is there to help protect me and my family so i can enjoy all life's moments.. helping families for over 145 years achieve long-term financial security with lifelong retirement income.
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with confidence. made for better things than rheumatoid arthritis. before you and your rheumatologist move to a biologic, ask if xeljanz is right for you.l for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can reducewelling in as little as two weeks, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. imes fatal infections, lymphoma, and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. or intestines, low blood cell counts, and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your docto before you start and while taking xeljanz, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common,, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. r xeljanz can reduce r
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is week, today in fact, the international day of happiness. so designated by no less than the united nations. echoing our own declaration of u.n. general assembly resolution proclaims, quote, the pursuit of happiness is a fundamental human goal. and it calls on allo observe the international day of happiness in an appropriate manner. so how, you might ask, are those member states doing? well, according to the worldx released just this past week, denmark is the happiest land on earth.
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happiness at more than seven on to ten. switzerland comes in a very close second. other european countries plusnd australia, round out the top ten. as for the united states, wember 13, up two spots from last year. we're just behind austria and just ahead of costa rica. so, forget your troubles, comeh us up in those ranking. after all, it is spring. just ahead, a little over 50 years agoe on tour with me.
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the cbs broadcast center, which is a very bigjust how big? follow me. we're going outside. a little over 50 years ago, cbs moved here to the west side of what was billed as the largest television plant on the atlantic seaboard. half a million square feet of floo combined size of ten football fields, pretty much a whole city block. but originally this place wasn't for tv, it was thergest milk distribution center. with seemingly endless corridorss sprawling complex, some parts of the broadcast center remainy unexplored.
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here, there was beer.n in the catacombs of the broadcast center. it is said that in the late 1800s this was a brewery. the catacombs themselves are three stories deep. dank, murky, eerie. fact, this is where all the late great cbs news anchors are buried. i'm kidding. i made that up. >>s is walter cronkite from our cbs news election headquarters in new york. >> cbs news moved time for the 1964 presidential election from studio 41. >> they were put into the acilities were touted as a versatile,
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wonderland.as home to the soap opera "as the world turns" starring a young julian moore as half sisters franny and now, this very moment no one's home here in studio 41. you can see how truly cavernous it is. up 300 lights. it may be quiet here but over at studio 43. cbs sports is in here covering the ncaa basketball tournament. >> get in to it all the sorry to interrupt i'm giving the cbs sunday morning audience a tour of the broadcast center. you may recognize these gentlemen, ernie, clark, kenny and charles. you hate to interrupt, why are you interrupt?
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not apologize. i can chat all day. butoonves, this is the boss, the man who signs my check has just walked in. very busy. now this is the scenic shop,cenery for whole bunch of different shows gets made. one of the many marvels of the broadcast center when it first opened was the largest plastic vacuum forming machine in the industry. of making -- a brick wall that weighed next to nothing. whenever you're ready. >> jimmy bianco is going to make us something with the vacu- how long have you been here? >> doing this for 36 years.
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>> thank you. i just realized. i'm hosting the though this. >> now, "sunday morning" has been on the air for 37 years. but we're not the only show to come out of studio 45. you baby boomers willremember captain kangaroo. we're back.e on the tour. that thing i had made? nice, huh? coming up. >> no place the world. >> on the trail at everglades national park. and later, gwen stefani, story just want to tell the truth. and i want to write.
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>> rocco: our conor knighton is on the trail again this morning celebrating the centennial of the national park service with a visit to another one of a kind park. >> they call it the river of grass. and to truly get your feet wet exploring the everglades, you need to feet wet. >> you can't really understand it just by driving by, like you can if you're standing in it. >> has been exploring the over 1.5 million acres of south florida's everglades national park for >> they have lost their leaves but the little ones are going to leave out. >> his wet walk deep into the don't follow any set
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and while he sees the beauty in the swampy landscape. >> isn't it beautiful? >> the everglades wasn'tits scenery. >> the first national park that was set aside by the national park service by the people of the united states for what is alive. the plants, the animals and the >> the different varieties, plant and animal life found in the park are staggering. over a thousand species oflants. more than 400 species of birds, everglades is international biosphere reserve. some species like thepanther are hardly ever seen. some, like the lowly mosquitoe can be all too shonn f. i slap i going to service? >> yes, you are. give me a dollar every time you do that. >> but you don't need to trekat to find inhabitant. just drive down one of the park
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one.ican alligator can be found throughout the everglades. in the water and on the trail. but keep an eye out you mightt a crocodile. and that combination is especially rare. >> both kind conducive habitat. there's no place else in the world that crocodiles andal gators. >> this stretch of florida, this mix of salt and fresh water is just warm enough fores just cool enough for alligators. both are technically to explain the difference. >> main difference they notice is the shape of the snout. the crocodile has much morey snout and alligator has a broader, rounded snout. the other thing people usually
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more of grey color and to dark green color. >> but for parry there's no comparing them. >> are you team alligator or crocodile? >> crocodile. >> i'm >> thanks to conservation efforts in the park the once endangered american crocodile has been downgraded to in florida. back whenever glades was established in is the 47 the idea of creating a national park to protect plants and animals may have seemed but today that habitat still has a lot to offer people. >> here in everglades national park you can go 50 miles frome in true wilderness alone.
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>> a few months ago here att hospital in milwaukee, nurse lynn bartos took a long hard look back at her career. after 44 years of sacrifice and devotion she w worth it? >> i invested a lot of myself into being a really good nurse. and did it really make a difference? >> she got herhe became the patient. lip has rheumatoid arthritis. and last summer during one of her doctor's visits she was treated by a new nurse named nicolemed strangely familiar. >> just something on her face and her eyes, i thought, i knew who she was. goose bumps when you think about it. >> i do. i have goose bumps right now. >> lynn first met nicole 28 yearshen they both shared the cover of children's nurse magazine. it was an article about lynn and
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with nicole. >> she was a very loveable little girl. >> nicole, with that whale spout of a ponytail had life intestinal problem, and lynn or sweet lynnie as nicole used to call her. >> nicole was this little girlare of and now she's taking such good care of me. >> nicole streets she doesn't remember much from those days. with but here's what'se also doesn't remember a time within she didn't want to be a nurse. >> oh, yeah, i always wanted to helpi really just liked nurses i just wanted to be one. >> for as long as she can remember, she always wanted to be one. some might say that's a but to lynn, it's a godsend.
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it is definitely a gift, because for 44 years i made a difference in people's lives. >> 44 years and maybe >> rocco: next, gwen stefaniover. your path to retirement... may not always be clear. but at t. rowe price, we can hgs. for over 75 years, investors have relied on our disciplined approach to find long term value. retirement journey takes you, we can help you reach your goals. call a t. rowe price retirement specialist or your advisoran help make the most of your retirement savings. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. ally gave much thought to the acidity in any foods. never thought about the coffee i was drinking having acids. it never dawned on me that it could hurt your teeth.
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and that sounded really scary to me, and i was like well can you fix it, can you paint it back on,it was not something that grows back, it's kind of a one-time shot and you have to care for it. he told me to use pronamel. it's gonna help protectyour teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee and to eat healthier, r and it was a real easy tswitch to make. is slowing my insides to a crawl. that's opioid-induced constipation, oic, a different type of constipation. i'm really struggling... paint a different picture. talk to your doctor about oic and prescription treatment options. we'll be with you shortly. yeah right... xerox predictive analytics help companies provide a better
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your flight? i'm here! customer care can work better. with xerox. wait i'm here! mr. kent? ing! xerox personalized employee portals help companies make benefits simple and accessible... from anywhere. hula dancing? cliff jumping!resources can work better. with xerox. >> it's sunday morning on cbs, here again is mo rocca. gwen stefani had a very big hit with hollaback girl back in 2005. along with the hits there has been one very big andss a real blow to her personal life. she talks about that and more with our lee cowan for the
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gwen stefani is underneath it alla superstar who doesn't brag. >> if i want to show them off i'd be like her collection of awards including her grammys are tucked away in a closet in iv beverly hills home. >> i thought i had more thanhought you had more? you've got three. that's enough. >> after two decades on the has had the time and the talent to rack up all kinds of recognition. but last year's grammys were bitter tweet. night the pop star would be truly happy for a long while. >> everything for me kind of fell apart last february, right after the. >> the day after? >> i woke up that morning, my
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>> her high wattage marriage toe the lead singer of the band bush exploded after 13 years. >> at that time everything was like, i had no skin, i was sow what was happening i had this big secret. >> the 46-year-old rocker, fashion icon and mother of three young boys suddenly found herself at a i was down all the way. like you don't go down lower than that. you know what i mean? >> rock bottom. >> i was so embarrassed, you know what i mean, like,o tush this into something. like i can't go down like this. if i can do music everything will be okay. >> but music easily for stefani of late. a long, frustrating bout with writer's block left her shake glenn what was it like going the first time? >> when i walked in there i said, i don't care about the
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and i just have to get this out of me, whatever it is, i want to write and i want it to be coming from me.isery tuned out to be her muse. one a mart of weeks she had written more lyrics than she knew what to do with. >> it was just the idea of piano and letting my feelings come out and i felt so good. it was like, wow, this is all i need to be doing right now.ut this. >> like the flood gates just opened? >> it was like the confidence came to me and just felt like the right thing to be doing. like it was pro-active asto like getting deep beer a hole. >> she was on a role. then it was surprise call from a >> they thought it was just too personal, too artistic and they didn't think people would relate to it. it really deplated me. i was like, wow, you guys, youen understand what
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like, this was saving my life and now you just punched me in the face. like, for saving my own life. you know what i mean?felt. >> how did you bounce back from that? >> i just went to the studio the next day. >> you went back? >> let's write the mostal record ever. >> that very day she wrote the ballad "used to love you." >> she sent a demo over to her record label and her phone rang once again. >> it was the first time in myebody from a record company called to me say that i had a hit. >> fast turn around? >> pretty magical. >> used to love you stefani's first single off already first solo album in a decade. fittingly called this is what
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it is raw, almost a it's not the first time stefani has turned to song writing for therapy.ainful break up, this one back in 1949 from her band's bassist, tony kanal let stefanit speak." it was a monster hit that put her and no doubt on the musical map for good. >> iand why i was so unlucky in love. i have so much love in me and yet i've just had so much tragedy with that, but yet i've had so many like incrediblei mean, like how did this happen to me? like it's crazy. >> one of those blessings she says was her stint on npc's "the>> i would love to help you because i think you need a lot of help. >> what is that supposed to mean? >> she sat two chairs away from shelton.
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he, too, had undergone very public split with his wife miranda lambert a country star in her own right. >> in a that happened, like unexpected mobileness, i found a friend that was going through literally the exact same thing as me. and that is a miracle, youand i it just saved me so much and i feel so grateful for that. >> back in the recording studio stefani's collaborators began toe in her mood. >> then all of a sudden, hey, what's going on with gwen, she's so happy. happiness inspired "make me like you." >> it was so fun to be able to ng saved and be happy about it and share that joy. >> she turned it all into
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music video sponsored by target that aired in a commercial break during this year's grammys, she admits that she wrote that aboutat's about as far into relationship territory as she is willing to go. >> look, you can have me say it out loud.ten to the record. i feel like i did everything right to say, i'm not going to let this ruin my life. >> they don't hide the fact they're a couple. they are publicly private. all play out in the tabloids in the sort of over the top the way these things often go. but she's managed to cope with that, too, by ignoring it. >> once in awhile into something like wow, really? how do you think that about me, you're wrong. if i saw you right now, i bethat to my face. >> she's never been a shrinking violet and in world ofop stars, she has
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but make no mistake, gwen stefani has lived a few life times in the last 18 months ame out on the other side beaming with new found optimism that is as bright as those signature lips.es me that despite everything that has happened to you over the last year and a half you're almost grateful. >> i feel so grateful. >> which i think people would be'm surprised. like, i believe there's a master plan for me and part of my journey and my cross to bear was to have to go through what i and i accept it. and -- >> made something of it. >> tried to make something good out of it. >> rocco: next, anniversary. i was absolutely frustrated,
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i did not think chantixwell as it did. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced my urge to smoke.had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix.ile taking chantix. if you have any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any historyroblems, which could get worse or of seizures. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it.p chantix and call your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. tell your doctor if you have heart or blood vessel problems, or develop new or worse symptoms.ight away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery.ect is nausea. i did it. i quit smoking. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. it's been a journey to get where i am. and i didn't get here alone. there were people who listened along the way.
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u.s. marine was killed yesterday by an isis rocket in northern iraq. the attack occurred on the eve of an anniversary that many people might overlook, but which iraq war gallagher has not. >> their teen years ago the american military invaded iraq.the history books? not yet. everything happening in that region, from isis to airstrikes to delta force raids, is decision. and the subsequent nine years of war and occupation. according to recent polls, more support a ground invasion against the islamic state. the same number would bar syrian refugees from entering the u.s. that a ground war against isis substantially more refugees doesn't seem to matter. and that such an invasion would ethically and legally be followed by lengthy occupation also seems somehow.
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of 18-29-year-olds military agedcan combat operations against isis. nearly the same percentage would never join the fight, though, even if they were needed. for too many americans in 2016,ire act turned to once all other options have been exhausted. it's a narcotic, a quick fix, something that happens in strange, far away lands wheres sons and daughters do violent things for country. as an iraq veteran who spent formative time in dusty,s north of baghdad i've long wondered if america pays attention to its foreign a fares. which brings me to thees. >> and the next p president of the night states -- >> citizens to support whomever they choose. but when legitimate candidateser in chief suggest war crimes should be allowed or that carpet bombing makes for sound military strategy i find myself wanting
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son or daughter were given those mixes? would you still cheer? in the era of all volunteer force, service members arend ciphes to many. it's easier to send them to war and keep them there than it is to send people we know, kids the divide between america and its military is vast. this should disturb us all, soldier and citizen.ve like this. everything the military does abroad happens in our name. they don't just wear the patch on their unit. th the american flag. they represent us all. it's well pastime we remember that and do right by them the to do right by us. their teen years after iraq, it's the least we can do. i'm vern, the orange money retirement rabbit from voya. vern from voya?
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>> rocco: here's a look at the week ahead on our "sunday morning" calendar. monday marks the 10th anniversary of the world's first tweet sent by twitter founder jack door see.sees long distance swimming martin strel's departure from long beach, california, on around the world swim to promote awareness oflean water. he plans to finish around july 4th, 2017. wednesday's the day washington,
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expected to enter their peak not unless it's thursday. unusual temperature swings this month are complicating the national park service's projections. on thursday the 43rdemmy award nominations will be announced on "the talk" right here on cbs. the awards ceremony itself is scheduled for may 1st. friday sees astones concert in havana. the first open air concert in cuba by a british rock band. for the dubai world cup, billed as the world's richest horse race with a combined prize purse of some $30 million. a few updates first, we know a lot of you wondering how charles osgood is doing after his knee replacement surgery. the good news is he's doing be back here in his rightful place soon. hurry back, charlie, we miss you.
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about billst night received the 2016 governor's award for from the new york chapter of the national academy of television arts and sciences. i always say if you don'tll geist there's something wrong with you. conor knighton will host web chat on his travels through our national parks a little after we go off the air this morning.eck out our website. with that we go to john dickerson in washington for a look at what's ahead on "face the nation." good morning, john.good morning, mo, the front runners in both parties unstoppable? we'll talk about that today and also hear from some voters who are disappointed in the idea that their final choice might be trump and hillary clinton. plus, discussion of that supreme court fight that's coming up. >> rocco: thank you. i and many others will be watching.e on sunday
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cca, thank you for joining us. see you next "sunday morning." afib - an irregular heartbeat that may put you at five times greater risk of stroke - they can pool together in the heart,hat can break free, and travel upstream to the brain where it can block blood flow and cause a stroke. but if you have afib that's not caused by a heart valve problem, stop clots from forming. radaxa was even proven superiorpto warfarin pat red a clinical trial - pwithout the need for regularpblood tests. and, in the rare event of an emergency, radner pother than warfarin with apspecific reversal treatment
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prad had a heart valve replacement. don't stop taking pradaxa without talking to your doctor. stopping increases your risk of stroke or blood clots.if you need to stop pradaxa before any planned medical or dental procedure. pradaxa can cause serious, and sometimes, fatal bleeding.you have abnormal bleeding. and seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising.ease your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have kidney problems, stomach ulcers, a bleeding condition, or take certain medicines. include indigestion, stomach pain, upset or burning. don't just go with the flow. go with pradaxa, lowers your risk of stroke better than warfarin and has a specific reversal treatment. talk to your doctor about
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"face the nation." campaign 2016 rumbles on and front runners pick up delegates can anything or anyone stop them.t to stop donald trump from winning the republican nomination are running out of option, down to three-man race but is there winning for either john kasich or ted cruz. >> the establish. they don't know what they're doing. they have no clue. they don't know how to win.we'll talk to the only candidate who beat donald
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