tv CBS This Morning CBS October 10, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is monday, october 10th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? donald trump apologizes and then turns the table on hillary clinton at the second presidential debate. he past and says he would put hillary clinton in jail if he is elected. she says a vulgar video shows who trump really is. >> the threat from hurricane matthew continues. north carolina faces dangerous flooding. we are there tracking the multibillion dollar impact of the deadly storm. samsung reportedly stops production of the galaxy note 7 following a series of fires. three top phone companies now refuse to give customers
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we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. with prior republican nominees for president, i never questioned their fitness to serve. donald trump is different. >> the candidates conveysquare a brutal presidential debate. >> we will get a special prosecutor and look into it because it's a disgrace. you ought to besh someone like donald trump is not in charge of our country. >> because you would be in jail. >> secretary clinton? >> this was just disgraceful. >> there wasn't much presidential about some of the discussion. >> this was wrestle mania. >> the reports that 900 people were killed in haiti. >> in the u.s. 20 people killed. >> half of the victims from north carolina. >> hurricane matthew is off the map, but it's still with us. it's going to be with us for a long time.
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beginning. >> i have nothing left. i just want somewhere else to go. >> samsung has reportedly suspended production of its new galaxy note 7 device after new ones caught fire. >> a boat cap sizing with 30 people on board. >> all that. >> brady with time. touchdown! >> after serving a four-game suspension, tom brady was back on the field. >> get his teammates going. >> rodgers to jordy nelson for the touchdown. >> the record. >> all that matters. >> melania said this was okay. >> bush? >> there we go! excellent. >> let's not cross over the fact that he said how about a little hug for the bushy? >> on "cbs this morning." >> just assume you're being recorded! you fall for this every two years! you lost sports teams because of
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presidential election. tape recorders have done damage to old white men than tennis elbow. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ? welcome to "cbs this morning." last night's second presidential debate offered more insults than insight. donald trump told hillary clinton that as president he would try to put her in she said a video showing trump talking lewdly about women represents exactly who he is. >> trump's comments recorded in 2005 and released on friday blindsided republican leaders and they have condemned trump's talk on that about aggressively pursuing women. we begin our coverage with nancy cordes at washington university in st. louis, the site of last
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>> reporter: good morning. there was no handshake at the start of this debate and things only got more tense from there. donald trump calling hillary clinton a liar at least nine times, making all of the attacks that supporters wanted to hear in the first debate. she argued he was simply trying to distract from the herd of elephants in the room. >> you bragged that you have sexually assaulted women. do you understand that? >> no, i didn't say that at all. i don't think you understood what was said. this was locker room never did any of the lewd things he bragged about in that leaked 2005 video but he argued hillary clinton's husband, sitting in the front row, had. >> if you look at bill clinton, far worse, mine were words and his were actions. >> reporter: his opponents said it wasn't true but didn't elaborate. >> what we all heard and saw on friday was donald talking about women, what he thinks about women, what he does to women.
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shifted the conversation to clinton's use of private e-mail servers as secretary of state. >> the thing that you should be apologizing for are the 33,000 e-mails that you deleted. if i win, i am going to instruct my attorney general to get a special prosecutor to look into your situation. >> reporter: the fbi recommended against charges in july. >> it's just awfully good that someone with the temperament of donald trump is not in charge of the law in our country. >> because you'd be in jail. >> reporter: secretary clinton? >> okay, donald. i know you're into big diversion tonight. >> reporter: clinton was asked about her campaign chairman's recently hacked e-mails that included passages from some of her paid wall street speeches. >> you, secretary clinton, reportedly say you need a public and private position on certain issues. >> reporter: clinton said she was referring to scenes from the
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his efforts to end slavery. >> president lincoln was trying to convince some people. he used some arguments and convincing other people. he used other arguments. >> okay. honest abe never lied. the good thing. that is the big difference between abraham lincoln and you. >> reporter: one big difference that cropped up was between trump and mike pence. >> i want to remind you what your running mate said. he said provocations by russia need to be met with american strength. >> he and haven't spoken and i disagree. >> you disagree with your running mate? >> i think we need to knock out isis. >> reporter: the clinton campaign argued that some of trump's comments once again crossed the line. at one point he called clinton the devil and said she has hate in her heart more than once. one asked the two to name something they liked about the other at the end of the debate. she said his children and he said her tenacity but they added that they disagreed on
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question got huge applause in the room last night. thank you, nancy. donald trump spent nearly 48 hours before the debate fending off critics of his comments about groping bleep. he apologized on video and held a news conference with women who say bill clinton assaulted them. major garrett is also still in st. louis. good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump took the stage with the weight of his sexist comments dragging his campaign down. after parading four women who accused the clinton's o misconduct before reporters, came prepared for an intensely personal fight with hillary clinton. >> no, i didn't say that at all. >> reporter: donald trump quickly offered a defense of recently revealed comments making light of assaulting women. >> it's locker room talk. and it's one of those things. this was locker room talk. >> reporter: that talk appeared on a 2005 videotaped with "access hollywood" published friday by "the washington post." >> you could do anything.
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[ laughter ] do anything. >> reporter: within hours, trump released an online apology video. >> i said it. i was wrong. and i apologize. >> reporter: and when pressed last night, said his boasts were embarrassing and empty. >> i have tremendous respect for women. >> reporter: have you ever done those things? >> women have tremendous respect for me. i will tell you, no, i have not. >> reporter: that opened the door for hillary clinton to challenge trump's character and sincerity. >> i think it's clear to anyone who exactly who he is. >> reporter: seeking to deflect criticism of his coarse and vulgar language, trump launched long dormant accusations-os of l clinton's sexual misconduct. >> hillary clinton attacked those same women and attacked them viciously. >> reporter: less than two hours before the debate trump appeared with four women who claim to have victimized by the clinton's. >> on bill clinton raped me and hillary clinton threatened me.
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them to join his debate entourage. >> she talks about words that i said 11 years ago. i think it's disgraceful and i think she should be ashamed of herself. >> reporter: trump's wife melania accepted his apology but daughter and adviser ivanka has remained conspicuously silent and mike pence his running mate could not defend trump's sexual fantasies and said he will campaign for trump throughout the explosive charge of rape arrives in an episode in 1978 when juanita broaddrick. they found the evidence behind the charge inconclusive. >> dozens of donald trump's supporters say his vulgar comments on video are more than they can take. more than 70 prominent
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trump's remarks. 25 of them have endorsed their party's nominee say they no longer can support him. julianna goldman is in washington with more. >> reporter: worried the tape could cost them the house and the senate, rnc officials are discussing whether to shift resource away from trump and toward candidates for other down ballot races. one source tells cbs news it's likely too late to make much difference. >> i'm out. i can no longer, in good conscience, endorse this person for president. >> reporter: utah congressman jason chaffetz said his decision came after he realized he couldn't explain a way to his teenage daughter donald trump's language on the 2005 moved. >> i move in on her like a [ bleep ] and i couldn't get there and she was married. >> reporter: trump has a history of controversial comments, but bragging about sexual assault crossed the line for a slew of republican lawmakers. former republican presidential nominee senator john mccain pulled his endorsement, saying,
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offer even conditional support. house speaker paul ryan disinvited trump from a joint appearance in his home state of wisconsin after the tape surfaced, although he stopped short of pulling his support. over the weekend, trump tweeted, so many self-righteous hypocr hypocrites. watch their election and poll numbers go down. cbs news battleground tracker poll shows why some gop lawmakers are weary of completely disavowing their republican nominee. half say it worsens their view of the nominee. at least 90% say their view is unchanged. still, cbs news has counted more than two dozen politicians, like utah senator mike lee who are now calling for trump to bow out. >> for donald trump to step aside and for the republican party to find a candidate who can bring together all of the elements within the republican party and defeat hillary clinton
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>> reporter: house republicans have scheduled a conference call for later this morning to regroup after the release of the tape and while it's clear there are deep divisions in the party, charlie, so far, at least the majority of house republicans are still supporting their candidate for president. >> robby mook is the campaign manager for hillary clinton and joins us from the campaign headquarters in brooklyn, new york. good morning. >> good morning. >> where is this campaign going after the debate last night which dismayed many people in terms of the bitterness of it all? are you going to have to finally defend and go darker? >> well, first of all, we were all disappointed by donald trump's stunt events prior to the debate. he went into this debate intended on throwing hillary clinton off her game and trying to sling a lot of mud. hillary showed up at the debate wanting to talk to the american
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she has to make a difference in people's lives. i think she had the opportunity to do that. unfortunately, she had to do quite a bit of fact checking on donald trump throughout. but we feel like we got that done. >> they are calling it the ugliliest, nastiest debate ever. did you feel that way watching it for you? >> first of all, i feel donald trump wanted to make this about mud slinging. i was disappointed about the stunt that he tried to pull just ab and, unfortunately, he continued to string of inaccuracies and lies. the fact-checkers have said that. so, yeah, i was disappointed in that. but like i said, i think secretary clinton was able to make a clear case. she articulated clear plans on health care, foreign policy and many other topics. >> "the washington post" is reporting that donald trump's
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former president bill clinton by placing and seating the women who have accused former president clinton of sexual abuse and putting them in the trump family box but at the last minute they were thwarted by the -- >> by frank farren d coucof. were i aware this was happening? >> i was not. >> would you like to comment on perhaps if they had been seat inned i >> like i said the whole situation is very disappointing. donald trump's campaign has had a string of disasters. his failed performance in the last debate, his vice presidential nominee refused to defend him at his debate. and then, obviously, we had the machado controversy, taxes and this videotape that came out last friday. donald trump is trying to change the dynamic but i'm arguing he is digging the hole deeper with
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this debate down. we will continue to talk about the issues. >> beyond that, he said if he was elected he would appoint a prosecutor to try to put her in jail because she deleted e-mails after she were under subpoena. >> again, it's disappointing. and i would say it's chilling that donald trump thinks that the presidency is like somebody in a republican dictatorship where you can lock up your political opponents. the career staff department have ruled on this issue. again, this is just donald trump trying to intimidate hillary, bully hillary and change the debate from anything but himself. i think he should apologize. >> thanks, robbie mook. >> thanks. >> hurricane matthew's toll is rising in the southeast. the storm is blamed for at least 19 deaths. severe flooding led to more than a thousand water rescues. the cost of property damage could hit $6 billion.
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fayetteville with why the rescue and recovery effort is so difficult. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. in some parts of north carolina, getting around has been a real challenge. look at this road. completely washed away and impassible. not just for residents, but for rescue teams trying to reach people trapped in life-threatening moments. >> hold on! we are coming for you! >> reporter: in flooded fayetteville, rescue teams her daughter and the car was caught in swirl flash floodwaters. also okay this family of three marooned on top of their suv. they had tried to drive through a raging current and needed to be rescued by a team of new york firefighters. over the weekend, more than 1,000 people were rescued here. >> hurricane matthew is off the map, but it's still with us. and it's still deadly. and we are taking it very
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long time. >> reporter: carl lee is a member of the urban search and rescue team. from the air he showed us the challenge on the ground. >> we are looking for the areas that maybe -- they are on their roof or stranded on their vehicle. we can get the rescues out to those areas. >> reporter: matthew dumped up to 15 inches of rain on parts of north carolina. >> even 90 miles inland you can see water and water-related problems all over. stranded and washed out road. over the weekend, rain was falling at a rate of 2 inches an hour. all that rain also overflowed the state's river several feet above normal levels, breeching dams and threatening towns. >> we are trying to to get clothes out there before they get wet. >> reporter: families are using their own boats to collect what they can from homes where the
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last week. it come in and didn't get gone before this come. so nowhere for it to go. >> reporter: because of roads like this, some residents won't get home for days. contaminated drinking water is another worry. the city of fayetteville has declared a water shortage emergency. norah? >> what an incredible picture there. mark, thank you so much. the hurricane is blamed for at least a thousand reported deaths in haiti. vladimir duthiers of cbsn is at th port au prince. >> reporter: the death toll may continue to rise here in haiti, but we will never know for sure because it's very difficult to get to the more remote parts of the country. for now, though, the u.s. military is helping the haitian police. you can see some of their helicopters behind me here and they are trying to get help to those in need. days after matthew made landfall in haiti, hundreds are dead and tens of thousands are homeless
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homes or businesses are damaged or destroyed. this man told us what is left of his home. every time the wind would blow you took all of the children and got on your knees and cover them? >> yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> reporter: he described the horror of living through the storm. >> at first, lift. >> reporter: the first house next door? the roof came flying? >> yeah. yeah. yeah. i called them. come in here, come in here. then they come in. >> reporter: then your roof? >> yeah, yeah. people are staying at this shelter. a school that is one of the few structures to have survived the hurricane. they tell us they have seen little to nothing in terms of help from their government. >> they don't have anything to eat. they don't have anything to drink. and for the moment, no one is coming to help them. the most difficult part of our reporting came as we were walking through the community in jeremy. dozens of survivors surrounded me and they asked me to write
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notebook. a way for them to say, look, we are surviving and we are here. don't forget about us. nrvel report incredible reporting. vladimir, thank you. how u.s. cell phone companies are responding to the af hello. i'm meteorologist jon loufman. a smooth sailing columbus day. we have another autumn beauty, mainly sunny skies and 61 degrees. light northeasterly breezing making a great day for perch fishing on lake erie. tonight, 43, just a few passing clouds from time to time. the breezes shift from northeasterly, they became southerly tomorrow and as a result temperatures climb into
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donald trump has a lengthy record of making degrading remarks about women. >> ahead a former executive of a company describes a hostile work environmen morning right here on "cbs this morning." up, despite your best efforts. but what if you could turn things around? what if you could... love your numbers? discover once-daily invokana?. it's the #1 prescribed sglt2 inhibitor that works to lower a1c. a pill taken just once in the morning, invokana? is used along with diet and exercise
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>> nichole: good morning. i'm nichole vrsansky. a 16-year-old is in the hospital this morning after being shot in the chest in an argument over a cigar on east 55th street. the victim and shooter are actually friends. the victim was taken to metro. no word on his condition right now. police are still looking for his friend. meteorologist jon loufman in for sam roberts today on this chilly morning. >> jon: it's columbus day and the sun will shine as we make our way to sunrise. a very nice columbus day. 61 is a few degrees shy of the average high of 64. 69 with more sun than clouds on tuesday. wednesday we see southerly breezes with moisture bringing us a risk of post h-sunset rain but sunset these days is just
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? it takes seven years to write a show so i don't know when i'm going to be back here. so i am not throwing away my job. i am not throwing away my job. my name is lin manuel. i am hosting "snl" and i am not ? past the baton and give me the ball tonight i got emmy and grammy but what i want to is name the person cameo. i do a bunch of sketches and sometimes i play the lead and give you what you need. if the cue calls me for to read. you'll see me tonight and walk into the audience and because i am not throwing my job. i am not throwing my job. >> i could watch fa for another five minutes. >> i know.
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hey, guys. i wonder if he wrote that. "saturday night live" was on fire this weekend. if you haven't seen that open on "saturday night live" about the debate, it is must-see tv. >> more than that, they incorporated the latest developments over the weekend. >> absolutely. >> they did it really good. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? this half hour, the leaked video of donald trump's lewd comments about women could seriously erode his voters. we will take a look at the history of statements of many women including a former executive who find offensive. galaxy note's 7 smartphone some u.s. companies are stopping distribution of their replacements over these safety concerns. the new fallout over phones that may overheat. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the desert sun of palm springs says the suspect in the deaths of two police officers had body armor and a large
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a 12-hour standoff. the officers were shot saturday responding to a disturbance call. the suspect is a felon with street gang connections. "the new york times" reports that two missiles were fired last night toward a u.s. navy destroyer near he yemen. the ship in the red sea in international waters. the missiles fell well short of the ship and the pentagon say they were launched from coastal areas controlled by rebels. the rebels are backed by iran. britain's "telegraph" reports on a suspect alleged bomb plot in germany. the man was arrested today after a two-day hunt. the suspect is a 22-year-old who had been granted a asylum. they found explosives in his apartment. he was arrested after police got a tip from fellow syrians who had held the man. new attention to donald trump's history of questionable statements. the republican nominee apologized for the language he used in the 2005 tape.
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latest incident threatens to erode his support among female voters. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. so, you know, over the course of his campaign, i mean, trump has insulted rosie o'donnell and many more. his statements go back decades and something many women voters find repulsive. >> i did try and [ bleep ] she was married. >> reporter: the leaked nbc video was not the only t this weekend that put donald trump's campaign on the defensive. >> by the way, your daughter. >> she's beautiful. >> can i say this? a piece of [ bleep ]. >> reporter: cnn uncovered interviews he did in 2005 and 2006 with howard short-term where he talked about ivanka's appearance and sleeping with beauty pageant contestants. >> you could also say is the owner of the pageant that it's
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>> reporter: after the first debate, trump spent days attacking 1996 miss universe alicia machado who accused him of making derogatory comments and humiliating her because she gained weight. >> she was the worst we ever had. the absolute worst. she was impossible. ? >> reporter: and last week, the associated president suggested trump subjected contestance on "the apprentice." >> you drop to your knees? >> >> must be a pretty picture you dropping to your knees. >> he wanted everybody to think that his office was decorated with beautiful women. >> reporter: clinton supporter barbara rest worked with trump nearly two decades. a former executive vice president of his company, she says trump often made inappropriate comments to his staff. >> created a -- a what we call a hostile environment. all of the talking about "playboy" and stuff like that. >> reporter: ivanka defended her
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misogyny. >> he is not a groper. not who he is. i have known my father, obviously, my whole life and he has total respect for women. >> this was locker room talk. i'm not proud of it. >> have you ever done those things? >> women have respect for me and i will tell you -- no, i have not. >> reporter: but trump had a strained relationship with female voters before the latest revelation says "usa today" washington bureau chief susan page. >> donald trump has been leading among men in national polls but trailed among women and had biggest gender gap in our modern political history. >> reporter: trump is also pointed to his record of promoting women to key positions in his company but a new cbs news poll found that 53% of female voters in the battleground state of pennsylvania said the leaked footage worsened their view of trump. gayle? >> thank you very much, jan. "face the nation" moderator and political news director john dickerson joins us at the table. before this debate trump's
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support and many gop members heading to the hill? reince priebus thought he won the debate saying that today. >> he has to say that or going with the people who were fleeing the trump campaign last week. . the things that caused him to flee still exists and what exists is not just the audio but in republicans i've talk to the latest of an example of his volatility that it's unpredictable and that he is going to hook other republicans up to that unpredictability in this campaign and also as president. >> will be there more defections today? >> well, we are going to have to see. there were planning to be. others who were thinking of jumping and didn't want to the it before the debate but that nervousness he created still exists regardless of what happened in the 90 minutes and even some people who saw the stupt before the debate where he brought up the clinton accusers, the bill clinton accusers saw that as a way to leave, give
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donald trump has shown he will win at all costs. for those who want to win that is great news. for republicans who are worried about the costs, it scares them. >> one thing it has accomplished there is not been the appropriate amount of conversation about her leaked speech. can that become a big issue? >> well, it -- well, it -- if donald trump and the republican party conversation breakup that is going on, that is topic a. a major party in the united states is having a crisis at the moment. >> a civil war. >> it was not one of her finer moments last night, her response to the question about these hacked e-mails, the speeches to wall street where she was chamming cham i channeling abe lincoln. speak speaks in private one way -- >> that is what she had? >> that is what she said. in the movie "lincoln" this is what lincoln did but she was making a broader point about --
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explanation and went huh? >> yes. they didn't find it a compelling explanation why you can't say in public what you would say in private. although, you know, again, the public/private company kathleen frankovic is going right now about donald trump. >> we talked a little bit about this last night. the treatment of women has now become a central focal point of this campaign. donald trump's treatment of women. he tried to make it about bill clinton's treatment of women and we learned from "the washington post" overnight that not only this facebook live stunt, but that apparently donald trump and his son-in-law and campaign manager tried to have these clinton accusers sit in the family vip box so they would be staring hillary clinton in the face. >> and maybe have to shake hands with bill clinton. >> right exactly. people before this debate some of them like pence the running mate said he wanted to see donald trump show his heart. rudy giuliani said trump is like st. augustine and turned his
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this was not a contrite donald trump. 100% donald trump and behaved in way gotten him to the dance and counterpunching and interrupting and what his base loves about him. the political challenge for him he had to expand that base with women voters and with these college educated voters and nothing in that debate last night that those voters are going to find specifically new and attract. >> bob schieffer described it as wrestle mania and my friend said they are giving wrestle man ia bad name. >> one more debate to go. >> that's right. >> john, how are you feeling this morning? >> i'm feeling like i could go every day with only 45 minutes of sleep. >> you wear it well. >> welcome to the club. thank you. samsung faces a new crisis over its flagship phone. >> it wasn't plugged in or it wasn't anything. just sitting there. >> scary. why many customers won't be able
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7's. you can take us with you on the go. >> you can? >> can you. hurry up and subscribe to our new "cbs this morning" podcast. you can hear an extended version of this. listen to this. charlie rose's interview with supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg. she doesn't just talk to anybody. that is coming up in the next hour. find out what she calls the cause of her life. we wil r i want my blood sugar to stay in control. so i asked about tresiba?. ? tresiba? ready ? tresiba? is a once-daily, long-acting insulin that lasts even longer than 24 hours. i want to trim my a1c. ? tresiba? ready ? tresiba? provides powerful a1c reduction. releases slow and steady. works like your body's insulin. when my schedule changes... i want something that delivers. ? tresiba? ready ? i can take tresiba? any time of day.
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? samsung i suspended production of its flagship smartphone amid new safety concerns. the embattled company recalled around 2.5 million galaxy note 7's last month. their batteries could overheat and they sometimes caught fire each when they are turned off. now there are reports that the replacement phones also overheat. kris van cleave is outside of an at&t store in washington. one of the sellers that no longer offers the replacements.
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samsung. first, at&t and several other carriers said they were pulling the devices and halting the replacement program. then this news from korea emerged samsung may be suspending production of the galaxy note 7 altogether. which raises the question is this the end of the galaxy device? >> it got hot in my pocket. >> reporter: at least three u.s. owners of the replacement galaxy note 7 say their new dangerously overheated, the same problem reported with the original device. those phones were recalled last month after more than two dozen reports of burn injuries due to overheating lithium ion batteries. cnet's dan ackerman says he is not surprised about the reported production halt. >> a enough cases with these replacement phones they didn't have a choice if they can't identify the problem immediately. >> reporter: now three major
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exchanging the original phones with samsung's new replacements, urging customers to power down their devices and return them. >> we are so fortunate she wasn't injured or severely burned. >> reporter: andrew of minnesota says his daughter's replacement galaxy note 7 overheated while she was holding it last week. michael clairing says his new note 7 filled his bedroom with smoke. >> it wasn't plugged in. it wasn't anything. it was just sitting there. >> reporter: a southwest plane was evacuated when ase says his replacement phone started making sizzling sounds. >> and looked around to see what that was and there was smoke just billowing, pouring out of my pocket. >> reporter: analysts say samsung faces now an uphill battle, regaining the public's trust. >> samsung needs to convince people it's taking the proper time and care and not rushing out replacement phones too qirl before they figure out what the problem or problems are with these phones. >> reporter: samsung has not responded to our on request for
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are suspended production, but earlier in the weekend, samsung told "cbs this morning" that if a safety issue is found, it will take appropriate action. >> kris, thank you. >> what does that mean, appropriate action? it scares me it's turned off and still catches fire and now make an announcement on the planes which is scary because you have to rely on people to police themselves. >> you don't want something on fire in your pants. old time rock 'n' rollers are uniting generations of fans. that is ahead. first, it's time to check your local weather. hello. i'm meteorologist jon loufman. a smooth sailing columbus day. we have another autumn beauty, mainly sunny skies and 61 degrees. light northeasterly breezing making a great day for perch fishing on lake erie. tonight, 43, just a few passing
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northeasterly, they became southerly tomorrow and as a result temperatures climb into the upper 60s as we make our announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by panera. food as it should be! get a sanh or something. "or something"? you don't just graduate from medical school, "or something." and we don't just pull smoked chicken, bake fresh foccacia and hand-slice avocado.
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>> the rolling stones started up at the desert music trip festival over the weekend in southern california. the six-day event has been dubbed old, which chela. paul mccartney joined others along with bob dylan. >> showing the kids how it's done! when we come back, campaign manager kellyanne conway joins us at the table. we started doing animation. with the surface book, you can do all this stuff. you can actually draw on the screen. so crisp. i love it. it's almost like this super powerful computer and a tablet had the perfect baby. it's a typewriter for writing scripts... it's a sketchbook for sketches... ...it's a canvas for painting...
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>> brian: good morning. i'm brian duffy. tensions are expected to be high during a meeting to help the parm ma schools. the meeting last aweek saw the school board president resign as parents, teachers and school administrators try to come up with ways to balance a $15 million budget deficit. they have one week to develop a plan, so they are running short on time.>> here's our meteorologist jon loufman. nice weekend, john, but it's awfully cold out there now. >> jon: it's a tad chilly, but we have no alerts as we make our way through the next seven days. on our way into a chill morning, sunny afternoon, and another chilly night to follow. here's what is happening through the next several days. we're talking 61 today, more sun than anything else, a few clouds on tuesday.
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? good morning. it is monday, october 10th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including what you might call the rough and tumble presidential debate. bob schieffer called it wrestle mania. donald trump's cpa matchup and trump's crude talk about women. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> trump calling hillary clinton a liar at least nine times. she argued he was trying to distract from the elephants in the room. >> trump came prepared for an intense lit personal fight. >> worried his comments could cost them the house and the senate.
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appoint a prosecutor to try to put her in jail. >> his history of coarse statements go back decades many women voters find repulsive. >> tried to make it about bill clinton treatment of women. >> this is 100% donald trump and he behaved in a way that has gotten him to the dance. >> look at this road. completely washed away and impassible. not just for residents, but for rescue teams. >> the death toll may rise here in for sure because it's difficult to get to the more remote parts of the country. >> martin on the ground. andrews makes the play. out there. throw to first. what a play! but here comes the runner! the ball game is over! he is safe! the blue jays are moving on to the alcs! >> i'm charlie rose with gayle
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donald trump and hillary clinton traded sharp personal attacks in last night's second debate. the candidate met two days after a 2005 video came out. it shows trump making aggressive sexual comments about women. prominent republicans denounced those remarks. at least 25 republicans pulled their endorsements of trump because of the video. trump held a news conference before the debate with women who accused former president bill clinton of sexual misconduct. >> donald trump was asked in the debate about that 2005 video. he said no one has more respect for women than he does. >> you called what you said locker room banter. you describe kissing women without consent and grabbing their genitals. that is sexual assault. you bragged that you have sexually assaulted women. do you understand that?
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what was said. this was locker room talk. i'm not proud of it. >> so for the record you're saying you never did that? >> frankly, you hear these things. i was embarrassed by it, but i have tremendous respect for women. >> have you ever done those things? >> women have respect for me and i will tell you -- no, i have not. >> i want to send a message. we all should to every boy and girl and, indeed, to the entire world, that america already is great, but we are great because one another and we will work with one another, and we will celebrate our diversity. >> if you look at bill clinton, far worse. mine were words and his were action. >> anyone can draw their own conclusions at this point about whether or not the man in the video or the man on the stage respects women. but he never apologizes for anything to anyone.
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poll, 54% of likely voters in ohio and 51% in pennsylvania said the tape did not change their view of donald trump. donald trump's campaign manager kellyanne conway joins us from trump tower in new york. good morning. >> good morning. >> "the washington post" is reporting that the trump campaign wanted to seat the women who have accused bill clinton of indiscretion in the vip box. were you upset that president on the debate thwarted that? >> i was surprised they thwarted that only it did not say family box, it said vip box. in the clinton box they invited senator claire mccaskill of missouri and she is not a family member, but they threatened to have security remove the women. i thought that was unfortunate because mark cuban got to sit where he wanted to sit. i think the broader issue, i was surprised at the clip you played of hillary clinton was her first response last night and when she
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went on to apologize again and said he was embarrassed for the remarks he had made and that there is a difference between words and actions. that succeeded his earlier post on friday night in light of the videotape revelations that he had said some foolish things and he was sorry for them. >> what was the point, kellyanne of having the women there in that facebook live chat? it wasn't a press conference because there were reporters weren't allowed to ask them questions, but what was the point of bringing them with women voters? >> it wasn't a facebook live chat. they women want to be heard. and i'm sure they would be available to come on your show any time. they deserve to be heard. we agree with hillary clinton, norah. she famously said about a year ago that she believes always sexual assault victims deserve to be heard and believed and i'm sorry that there are exclusions to her list based on -- based the way she has treated them. the whole point of those four
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kathleen and kathleen and paula is thousand they were treated by bill clinton. "the new york times" shortly after endorsing her to president went through the litany of hillary clinton modus operandi with them. them being private investigators and really try to ruin their lives and they want to be heard. in the case of kathy shelton she was a 12-year-old rapeic and hillary clinton successful represented her accuser. >> she was select by a judge to defend the man. >> she did so. a year later she laughed about getting him to have the plea deal. she deserves to be heard. >> kellyanne, do you expect there to be more videos and more people coming forward to talk about donald trump in the way this video spoke about donald trump? >> there is no way for me to know that, charlie. i am just very happy that donald trump said he was embarrassed and apologized and then said
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and that over the last year and a half, as he has been running for president, he has met millions of americans who have inspired him to soldier on to fight for the issues that they care about, that he is trying to articulate and show a real contrast with hillary clinton. there was a lot discussed in a 90-minute debate. tons of issues and he held hillary clinton to account for lying about her e-mails and not knowing the -- confidential on documents even though she has been secretary of state and first lady. >> he went point-by-point. can yote about mike pence and donald trump today? he seemed to throw mr. pence under the bus last night. >> no that is not true. mike pence is on other networks right now talking about what a fabulous job his running mate the top of the ticket did in the debate last night. >> over the weekend he was nowhere to be seen. i know he is out there today but he was nowhere to be seen over the weekend. >> no, that is actually not true. friday he was active. saturday, he decided not to go to wisconsin. and if donald trump wasn't welcome there then he wasn't welcomed there.
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public but he flew to rhode island to keep a commitment at a fund-raiser done for the committee between the rnc and the campaign. yesterday, he had sunday off after his debate. >> do you examine speaker ryan to keep his endorsement of donald trump or will he defect as well? >> i don't know. i hoe he keeps his word of donald trump. speaker ryan, of course, took to the stage in wisconsin in his event and faced some boos from the crowd because those who were expected to see donald trump. house has endorsed the nominee donald trump and hope that he -- >> what is that doing to the campaign? these are people who had endorsed donald trump and hopeful he would be a difference kind of candidate and now they are disendorsing him. what does that do to the campaign? >> well, it tells us that many of them don't want to support him and we are going to take the case directly to the voters. i can tell you as a campaign manager, we certainly welcome them back and hope they saw on display last night somebody who is willing to a take the case to
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the next three or four supreme court justices over to hillary clinton, they should think about that. >> there is a story making the rounds on social media about what melania trump wore. a gucci pussy bow crepe de chin blouse. do you know anything why she wore that? >> i don't know. she looked beautiful as she always do. >> don't miss the point that i'm making. don't miss the point that i'm making. yes, she looked beautiful and lovely. that wasn't the question i think under the circumstances that seemed an unusual choice but we thank you. thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. >> last night's town hall debate format created awkward moments you you could say. two long political strategists weigh on how the candidates performed after the podium. first, it's time to check your local weather. >> jon: here's what's happening locally. a mainly ought tun beauty on the
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we're on our way into the night that brings us down into the lower 40s, just a few passing clouds and an october beauty all the way through. as we make our way through tomorrow, temperatures will take a climb up into the upper 60s. let's call it 69 on southerly breezes. again, more sunshine than cloudn supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg reflects on more than two decade on the nation's
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>> no thought of retiring? >> i've said i will hold this office as long as i can do the job full steam. >> and you're doing it full steam. >> they call her a notorious rbg for a reason. ahead her time on the court and her vision for the future. you're watching "cbs this morning." i've been taking probiotics gx from nature's bounty to maintain healthy digestion and help with the occasional unwanted gas and bloating. so wherever i get stuck today, my "future self" will thank me. thank you. thank you. thank you. hang on, go go go back. thank you. do i get stuck in an air duct? it's a funny story really... (laughing) nearly 50 years of experience has taught us: no matter what the future holds, you're always better off healthy.
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where are last night we got the inside look at the preparations with veterans political strategists and their names are dan senor and michael feldman. including the opening behind the opening handshake but we know and that set the stage for a tense feisty confrontation between hillary clinton and donald trump. dan and michael are here with rea reaction. we were sitting there. >> what had happened if he had reached out? >> i think she would have taken it back. i don't think there was anything in it for her to shake his hand after the country was seeing them for the first time after this video, this vulgar predatory video had been out.
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move toward each other but shaked hands at the end. does that mean anything to you? >> no. i think him responding saying nice to her as not a quitter. it was quick. >> rentedly prhe repeatedly dess locker room behavior. how do you think that played? >> well, it's interesting. i don't know how well it played with the very small number of people right now who are sitting on the fence between the republican establishment fleeing donald trump and him. that potentially is the most important audience. he clearly made a decision he was going to move past this. and the best defense is a good offense and stay on the attack last night and not use any of that air time on the defensive. and she came prepared to make a connection between the tape and a larger pattern of behavior or what she sees are poor traits in him but then not dwell on it and i think both executed on that strategy. >> how about the way they moved on the stage? a couple times going around
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he was sort of hovering behind her. does that say anything to you at all? ammunition? >> i thought it was weird. i thought her positioning on the stage was perfect. i thought his hovering was weird. i thought his shaking back and forth as she was speaking from the split screen was weird. at the end of the day i'm not sure it will matter that much. >> this is fairly depict where the republican party is? this from "the new york times." the republican party was at the brink of civil war on sun as donald trump signaled he would retaliate against lawmakers from his campaign and others fear losing control of both house and congress. >> very few republican leaders i know believe that trump should be president or trump will be president. i don't think that has changed. i think the standard has really dropped now. the standard used to be can trump win. now the standard is -- or the standard heading into debate was can he do well enough in the
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the ticket? >> did he do that? >> yes. i think he prolonged life as the nominee. >> how does the speaker of the house paul ryan continue to stand by the nominee who stood by the comments that he says you can do anything, you can grab them by the p word. how does a republican then, if they want a future in politics stand by that? >> norah, after he used the word, he was sickened by donald trump's behavior. sickened. >> is there a real test? >> the same speaker that wanted the party t african-american -- >> the same question for every republican leader and the same question for mike pence. you can go down the list. all of these leaders have to think about what it says for the party and their own futures. in the near term, what they are hearing from many of their rank and file from the members of congress, i spoke to a few members of congress over the weekend who are first, second-term congressmen saying, look. i'm going to win my race and my re-election.
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district are still sticking by trump. if i keep my head down, i'll win re-election. if i take on trump i'm playing with fire and they could turn on me l me like that and i could lose my election. >> paul ryan, does he stand to lose more by disendorsing or remaining quiet? >> my counsel to every republican is to best distance yourself from donald trump. now, honestly what speaker ryan has a series of equities he has to balance within his does in the future, then i can't speak to but generally speaking as far as the future of the party is concerned, i think the more distance with trump, the better. >> mike, he is not doing anything to expand his base. rudy giuliani made all of the rounds yesterday saying he is ashamed and embarrassed and be contrite but he was quite the opposite when he came out yesterday. >> look. i agree with that and i don't think he did anything to reach out to new voters. he may have stopped the bleeding among the establishment.
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core and made the decision for speaker ryan very complicated today. it's not just a down ballot conversation. speaker ryan has to worry about the caucus he is going to be governing in next congress and there divergent views how this should be handled so a difficult position for him. look. we are not talking about who is going to win the election and whether the debate will move that now. we are talking about what is the impact going to be down ballot and what is the makeup of both houses of congress. a vastly different conversation. >> everybody is concerned the election is over? >> it's never over. >> believe me. >> consider . we are less than four weeks out. 1 in 4 republicans today, 1 in 4 republicans believe that donald trump should not be the nominee. just unprecedented you have this pr proximity to a general election and believe the party got the wrong guy. >> we will see. ,
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bald eagle rescued from the grill of a car is drawing comparison to the state of the country this election season. the eagle looked confused after it got stuck in florida following hurricane matthew. oh! it was saved by county sheriff and rescue workers. some wonder if the eagle's flight is an omen. said we are sad and confused eagle tonight. >> they got him out. that is good.
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>> jon: good morning, everyone. it's columbus day. it's a gorgeous autumn beauty with mainly sunny skies and 61 degrees on our way into a night that takes a dip down into the 40s. a few spots last night got into the 30s and not quite as cold tonight. on tomorrow's rise from the 40s into the 50s into the upper 69 degrees as we head to the afternoon hours in between the hours you saw there on southerly breezes. from there on our way into a day of increasing clouds on wednesday. southerly winds push us up into the lower 70s ahead of a cold front that will bring some nighttime showerses on wednesday and knock temperatures down to highs around 60 on thursday. a morning shower is not out of the question then. in a couple of spots it may not
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? a close call for veteran wing suit jumper whose suit got caught on the exit step of the plane he was trying to jump from! he dangled in the air upside down until his crew was able to free him! he landed safely and so did the plane. >> nothing lik g trouble right away. how terrifying that must be. thank you, crew. >> lesson get caught. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? this half hour, charlie's wide ranging conversation with supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg. how the bench has changed when she was appointed 20 years ago
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antonin scalia. >> and ahead what jennifer weiner wants to teach other women, including her daughters. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the independent in london says some top athletes wants donald trump to stop calling his vulgar statements locker room talk. the pro athletes took to twitter after trump used the phrase in last night's debate to explain away his 2005 comments. baseball, football and basketball players all said me never come up in their locker rooms. >> the athletes say don't put us in that category. >> john dickerson said that last night. not in any locker room i've been in. >> a locker room, when you're 59 years old at the time that he made those comments. business insider reports on the debate questioner who has become an internet sensation. he always has a bright sweater and attracted instant attention on twitter.
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one person thought he looked like a character from the board game "guess who." another said bone the therapist this country needs. >> his question got the biggest applause of the night. his question was can you same something about each other that you like. >> leading health groups are being challenged for taking money from soda makers. researchers say pepsi or coca-cola sponsor 99 health groups ending in 2015. among tm diabetes and american heart associations. the researchers suggests it is a conflict of interest. the companies didn't answer requests for comment. the guardian of britain reports on a pongs legal case about the suspected mistreatment of migrant workers in ka tar. they are seeking damages in a swiss court from the world cup organizers fifa.
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to build. >> ruth bader ginsburg argued cases that transformed the supreme court's view of gender equality. in 1993 she became the second woman appointed to the nation's highest court and known for her candor and unlikely friendship with antonin scalia who died in february. we sat down for a conversation about past and her future. >> whoever becomes president, when they arrive in the white house, they have the opportunity to appoint a new supreme court justice. >> that is one possibility. at the election the senate will act. >> reporter: what would you like to see the senate do? >> i would like to see the court have a full house by the time this term ends. >> reporter: you'd like to see the court have a full house? >> have nine members, yes. >> reporter: before this term ends?
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retiring? >> i have said that i will hold this office as long as i can do the job full steam. >> reporter: you are doing it full steam? >> so i know that this year, i'm okay. at my age, i'm 83. you have to take it year-by-year. >> reporter: many people, you know, have been fascinated by the fact that ginsburg and antonin scalia w we all know that you both loved opera. you have told me when we talked about your chambers that he is a better singer than you are. >> he was a much better singer. justice scalia had a very good tenor voice. i am a monatone. >> we agree on a whole lot of stuff. we do. ruth is bad only on the knee-jerk stuff. >> reporter: do you miss him on
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>> it's -- place without him. he had an uncanny ability to make even the most somber judge smile. >> reporter: when you came to the court, sandra day o'connor was your good friend. when she left, you said that was a turning moment? >> when sandra left, it was a very lonely place for me to be. that is, the perception of the court, we come and sit on the of spectators, and they saw eight rather well-fed men there. little woman. it was the wrong perception. >> reporter: yeah, exactly. >> i've been there over 23 years so i sit by seniority close to the middle.
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and keegan on the left side and my new colleagues take a very active heart in the colloquy that goes on in oral argument. >> this is the first book you have written since being a justice of the supreme court. >> yes. not the first book ever. the first book was the best seller called "civil procedure in sweden." >> reporter: i missed that one. but you've always been >> yes. i taught procedure for 17 years. >> reporter: when did this love affair with the law, how did it begin? >> my interest in becoming a lawyer was spocked in the 1950s when i was a student, an undergraduate student at cornell. it was a hey day of junior joe mccarthy. it was not a good time for our country.
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law brought to my attention the lawyers that were appearing before the people called before the committees. lawyers who were reminded congress, we have a first amendment and we have a fifth amendment. >> reporter: you saw the law as a protector of individual liberty? >> yes, yes. i thought it could be a way to make a living, plus to do something that would make conditions in your society a little better. >> reporter: there was another >> yes. >> reporter: who decided to become a lawyer too. >> yeah. my dear husband. >> reporter: your husband? >> yeah. in fact, we had decided that whatever we do, we do it together. marty started out as a chemistry major but his true major was golf. >> reporter: yes. >> and labs were in the afternoon and interfered with golf practice. so then it was either business school or law school. >> reporter: you were at harvard? >> yes. >> reporter: and you transferred
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>> yes. >> reporter: both great law schools but why transfer? >> marty was one year ahead of me. he had had his first year at harvard and then was called into service. my daughter was 3 years old and i didn't want to be a single mom, so i left harvard. >> reporter: and harvard didn't give you a degree. and then marty comes to you and says, don't go back and accept anything from harvard unless they are willing to give you an honorary degree? >> which i received in 2011. >>re chambers of you and domingo. >> yes. >> reporter: he is singing to you? ? >> reporter: in the harvard graduation robes? >> yes. ? ? to the supreme court ? >> reporter: and your title to that picture is what?
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that is me. >> reporter: thank you for this time. i enjoyed it very much. >> i did, too. >> i like that. a woman ecstasy. >> what a sweet way to end too. >> you talked about, too, many people don't realize, too, her legacy in terms of being a great legal mind. >> exactly. and really she has been called the third good marshal of the women's right movement. before she was a judge, she was writing briefs about gender discrimination and has continued that plight all >> i love she is 83 and going full steam. i often her described as frail. >> she was alive and funny. >> very much so. >> we loved it. >> her voice is monotone. i like that. >> in a couple of weeks i get an opportunity to do her and justice sonia sotomayor together. >> that's what you like, smart girls on either side of you! that is very nice. you can see the full interview
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charl's pbs program. you know he has got one. author jennifer weiner is getting personal in our green room. she talks about her decision to write her very first nonfiction book and guess what. it's about her own life and find out why she says this one is difficult >> jon: good morning. i'm meteorologist jon loufman. a really fine columbus day, 61 and mainly and that's the way it will go wall-to-wall stem-to-stern until a few passing clouds show up and we take a dip to 43 degrees, which is the ballpark we should be in. it's around the average temperature. temperatures tomorrow take a climb into the upper 60s. i think by tomorrow afternoon
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? you like that choice of music, miss weiner. best selling author jennifer weiner's books have been on the best sellers list more than five years and 15 fiction books penned over the years and in 36 countries. she is a big, big seller. for the first time she is telling her own life story, the must memoir is heart." adventures in life love and writing. the book is published by atria, a division of simon and shuster which is a division of cbs. >> you're numbering off those like hillary, bang, bang, bang. >> this is the first team you tackled nonfiction.
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>> parents, divorce, parents death. >> why? >> because i think that women, a lot of times will put the happy face on and will say it's fine, everything was great, you know? it's all good. and sometimes it's not all good and sometimes there's, like you said, catharsis in talking about like this is how my father died or i had a pregnancy that ended. there is you know? and then when you start telling those stories, you start from people saying that is my story too. >> i understand. you talk about the first time your daughter used the "f" word. >> fat. not the other "f" one. i think she's said that a couple times already. >> that really cut you, jennifer? it hurt you? >> it did. i'm thinking, you know, i've been so careful. i've been so good, you know? i don't say that word about mice. i don't talk about bad foods or mommy was naughty last night, she had dessert.
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like i don't like that girl, she is fat. i'm like, what? we had to turn it into a teachable moment. >> what did you say to her? >> i said a lot of reasons not to like somebody but what they look like should not be one of them. in this house, we don't say that. >> because your dad was so hard on you about your weight. >> so hard. saying no one will ever want you and boys won't look at you. yeah. that stays with you. now that the books are out in the world, i'm hearing from many women who heard similar stuff. >> did you have a lot of friends when you were growing up? >> what do you think? i'll give you a million guesses but only the first one counts. no! i had no friend! i was the weirdest kid in the world! i was always in a book. i had this, like, giant vocabulary. nobody knew what i was talking about! i mean, like, they would have stuffed me into locker rooms if i had hit. >> social media is a great discovery for you? >> yes. part of me wishes it had been there when i was a kid.
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craft and maybe made some, like, you know, some friends? >> yeah. >> but i also tell my daughter, lucy, who is 1 and watching right now, hi, lucy. you know, that every person on on the internet, no matter who they say they are, is a 64-year-old man living in a basement. like, every single one of them. even if you think you're talking to another kid, a 64-year-old man in a basement. >> but you've gotten yourself in trouble on social media. >> well, i wouldn't say trouble. i'd say opportunities for growth! >> that is definitely i just have to google your name and you were critical for oprah for not picking you to be a part of her book club. >> i was disappointed. i was sad. i mean, everybody wants that fairy dust sprinkled on their book and it was a little difficult when you write a frank, funny about marriage and
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topics. >> it didn't have something to do with you rather than the content of your novel? >> what i said was that it's hard to watch the pretty girls get things. hard for me personally. it brings up old stuff. and that is a story. i mean, what i heard from my friends onbook is that, you know, that resonated with them a lot, that you carry those disappointments with you and, you know, am i sorry i said it? absolutely. did i apologize? absolutely. but you know what? like i'm human. i screw up. i fall down. i crawl my way back to the top. >> i'm going to assume you had a bad day after any negative comments. >> as we should we all. >> let me ask you this. your husband bill, because you talk about your divorce. you have one of the best divorces. >> indeed, i do. >> and you've got a new husband in the green room. hello, bill, in the green room. >> 2.0! >> the key to having a good divorce is what? >> i think it's giving your
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doing the things that everyone says they are going to do and people really struggle with. it's just saying their emotions take priority and their needs take priority and if they want to be hurt, they want to be angry, you don't paper that over and say mommy and daddy still love you. of course, they still love them but they have two houses now. >> you have to love your children more than you dislike your spouse? >> exactly. a good point. >> thank you, jennifer. >> congratulations on book number 14! >> 14. >>
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i'm hall of famer jerry west and my life is basketball. but that doesn't stop my afib from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto? significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people with afib not caused by a heart valve problem. it has similar effectiveness to warfarin. and at least six blood clotting factors. xarelto? is selective targeting one critical factor of your body's natural clotting function. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. like all blood thinners, don't stop taking xarelto without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of a blood clot or stroke. while taking you may bruise more easily, and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto may increase your risk of bleeding
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o can cause serious, and in rare cases fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto tell your doctor about any conditions, such as kidney, liver or bleeding problems. to help protect yourself from a stroke, ask your doctor about xarelto. xarelto. ? >> if you're following us on social media last night, you might have noticed the sketches of our rrnt cartoonist that is liza donnelly. hello! she live drew the second presidential debate.
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>> jon: we're sailing through columbus day under mainly sungy skies. another autumn beauty in the works as we head to 6 it 2 degrees. we'll be a little milder than last night. last night was downright we're going 33 for the overnight low and a couple spots are chillier than that. on southerly winds we head into the upper 60s in between hours of 2:00 and 5:00, i think seal a topper right around 69 degrees as a few more clouds show up today. we're be looking at wednesday, and an increasing cloudenness situation along with increasing temperatures and 73 on the high side. warm front comes through, and
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get 24 meals for under four dollars. new at steak 'n shake! [ cheers and applause ] ? ? >> announcer: today on rachael ray! >> rachael: look at this. >> announcer: we are kicking it with michael j fox. and, sweet surprises >> >> this is a cookies and cream brownie! >> rachael: oh! what? >> announcer: we are combing through the hottest >> and now, are you ready for .... rachael! [ cheers and applause ] ? ? [ cheers and applause ] ? ? >> rachael: welcome everybody, welcome. i am so excited to get today's show going, because ... we have been here for 11 years and during those years i cannot tell you how many times people ask me. who was your favorite guest, what was your favorite moment,
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