tv Sunday Morning NBC January 24, 2016 9:00am-10:30am EST
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>> but the actress courted rover that past week. the alluring and enigmatic charlotte rampling ahead on "sunday morning." >> osgood: a long gone airline is still flying high as far as the number of its veterans are concerned. conor knighton will have their story. >> they have flown in from all over the world to remember the days when they flew all over the world. >> on one of my flights. and they each had a suit on. >> to the mile high club. >> that's right. >> ahead on "sunday morning" the stewardesses of pan am. >> margaret brennan shows us the little known art.
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love story. and we'll also mark a macintosh birthday. first the headlines the 24th of january, 2016. the blizzard may have passed but the northeast is just starting to dig out after getting wall lopped. snow reached 30 inches in some places. even more in others. a lot of people got stuck at home if they were lucky. at least 18 deaths are blamed on the weather. in new jersey, the danger is coastal flooding. still, there were many people who wrestled in it. depending on your age, it was out of this world. we'll have latest from major cities blanketed by the big snow coming right up.
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in the northeast, this has been the wke oth b blizzard. we have three reports beginning with marlie hall in new york. >> the snow has stopped now but the big storm is one for the books. second largest on record. 26.8 inches here in central park. more than two feet of snow and ice blanketed new york city. 50 mile an hour winds created white out conditions. >> this is a very big deal. >> new york city mayor bill debrass so threatened to arrest anyone out driving. >> people have to take very seriously what's going on here. >> new york governor andrew cuomo declared a state of emergency, then jumped into action to help a driver stuck in the snow. but not everyone was so lucky. there were more than 300 accidents, none of them fatal. things are starting to get back to normal here later today
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fair share of tourists and snowball fights. >> 70 miles south the worry is more than snow and ice. here along the new jersey shore flooding is a big concern. high tides along with strong winds have caused flooding in coastal areas putting hundreds of homes at risk. since super storm sandy in 2012, protective sand dunes and retaining walls have been constructed in some coastal communities. but even with these improvements towns like mantoloking are still feeling vulnerable. police staff stacy ferris. >> a lot of people have the concern from sandy. we feel form much post traumatic stress. they have been traumatized. they have rebuilt, they have come back bigger and stronger you have another one at your door. >> statewide some 45,000 homes
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but officials say they won't know the full extent of the storm's damage until later today. >> >> washington, d.c. averages 19.5 inches of snow a year. the region got more than that from this one storm and it left a huge mess. after cancelling more than 10,000 flights, the airlines hope to resume flying today to the snow covered northeast. in d.c., mass transit is shut down, while the focus turns to digging out after 36 hours of snow left many streets impassable. many, but not all. what are you doing riding your bike in a blizzard. >> i like the snow. next best thing. >> is this easy to bike in? >> not particularly. difficult. >> difficult for people but not for panda. the national zoo's tian tian
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g theead ha fan ever but she says, isn't taking care of its past players. and isn't being honest with the families of future players. >> if as a league you're telling them, hey, it's really safe for your six-year-old and your seven-year-old and eight-year-old to playable earl football. you're responsible for a number of hits they ke you can't just say we're only responsible for what happens on the field during their nfl career. and proof that their cte isn't a result of their grade school career or their high school career. bull. >> currently the nfl covers health insurance during a player's career and five years post retirement. even though players' injuries can last a lifetime.
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themselves until well after retirement. >> we don't tell any other employee who goes into a dangerous profession, don't tell firefighters, if you get injured in a burning building you have no health care. >> tough sledding. >> but for some reason in the nfl you're on your own. >> so who is picking up the tab for players' long term health care? >> the american taxpayer. because what's paying for that stuff is medicaid. >> medicaid. and medicare. but the biggest change jenkins says, needs to happen at the youth level. >> the funny thing is there are people in the league, is that feel, if you don't have six-year-olds playing tackle football we won't have peyton mannings or we won't have tom bradys, that's ludicrous. tom brady didn't play tackle football until he was in high school. what is this weird fear that if don't have six-year-olds beating on each other that somehow we won't be able to grow nfl football players? it's a complete fallacy. >> how old were your boys when
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tackle football. >> 7th grade. i think you can wait on the contact and tackling. i think there is plenty of time. >> archie manning started for the new orleans saints in 1970 and '80s. he's the father of super bowl winning quarterback, payton and eli, who played non-tackle flag football as a kid. >> we love flag football. >> can you learn all the skills with flag football or are you missing out? >> i think at a young age you learn plenty. >> manning says pro football has done a good job addressing the concussion issue. with new rules and better equipment. which the nfl in its own report says harry duesed concussions 35%. >> i think a lot has been done in the last three or four years to make the game safer at every level. >> but salie jenkins believes
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easily do more. >> you're not going to take neurological disease out of the equation. but what you can do is mitigate and palliate and, if that means that it's a lot less profitable for bob kraft or a tisch or lurie or a york, tough. if concussions are the black lung of football, we've got to do something about that to make sure that people with black lung and their families are cared for. i think the moral solution here is to create the equivalent of a coal act for football. say, if you want to do business in this industry, you have to agree to take care of the workers in this industry. >> the nfl can't want federal oversight. >> oh, no. that is the thing they are most afraid of. >> tony dorsett didn't know the
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take on him. but someone he says, did know. >> management knew way before players of what the damage that was being done to the players. >> management amount the pro level? >> yes. from my knowledge, they knew about it way before the players knew about it. >> and the long-term effects? >> exactly. >> we asked the dallas cowboys about dorsett's assertions. they told us that since no one from dorsett's era is still with team management, it would not be appropriate to comment. as for the nfl they declined to speak with us on camera but issued a statement that they welcome any conversation about player health and safety. >> i never thought that i would be going through what i'm going through right now because of playing football. but i just thought i'd just be retired like mom and pops. you know, just enjoying life. >> when you look back on your
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>>h,arpp del slr.janu 2 antosdl >> osgood: steve jobs himself presented the first macintosh to the world that day. the very first computer offering user friendly icons along with a mouse. >> many of us have been wr turned out insanely great. >> osgood: not entirely. at $2500, consumers found that original macintosh too expensive for what it could actually do. sales fell short of expectations. and a little more than a year,
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forced to leave the company. of course, what happened next is now the stuff of hi-tech legend. not to mention the recent film "steve jobs" for which michaelssbeas binatr anar. >>doo? >>lay therche you are right there, best in the room. >> on the verge of bankruptcy in 1997, apple brought steve jobs back. and what followed was a seemingly endless succession of successful apple products, continuing up to steve jobs' death in 2011 and beyond. by the way the early 198 macintosh computer had .1 megabytes of memory.
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convection ovens. i could lay pair of tongs. >> things like sweet breads would be prepared in paris by maxims. >> the food was just exquisite. entree -- kept the menus from some of those meals. >> lobster them door? >> so good. >> from new york where i was based we flew to europe and middle east, beirut, tehran, then all the way to bangkok and hong kong. >> boarding your flight you were greeted personally. >> get assignment beforehand we had to memorize the names call the passengers by their names. >> sometimes those names weren't hard to remember. >> lana turner was on one of my flights. and lex barker was with her. and they had -- each had a birth booked. one birth was never leapt in. oh, wow.
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existed. >> right. >> pan am brought the beatles to the united states. and it brought its employees into contact with worlds they never imagined. >> friend of mine and i ran into a move review, would you like to join us on the set? well, of course, we'd never been on move see set before. but this was a lulu. fran c's pla ome,'s wor
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rt is n domelal ilure any more. >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs here again is charles osgood. with paul newman in the movie "the verdict" back in 19826789 in her most recent role sheon oscar nomination for best actress. oscars are just five weeks away here is anthony mason with the envelope please. >> in half aturyn, s play oe pau an.>> yre so ful. tfordan who cas as
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es . i'ybout >> in paris, where charlotte rampling has lived for most of her adult life, she's known as la legende, the pledge end. a british actress at home in france, she's never courted hollywood, preferring the parts to come to her. >> it's like strange form much pride maybe, i don't know what it is. or i'm just old fashioned girl and i like to be asked to dance, you know. somebody is going to ask me to da 'reti dan >> till dan >> this year in the film "45 years" about a marriage suddenly destabilized as the couple approach a landmark anniversary. >> you really believe that. >> no, i think i was enough for
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>> rampling's nuanced performance as the wife has earned the actress her first academy award nomination. >> that pleases me. >> she is one of 20 actor nominees this year, all white. the exclusion of black actors has prompted calls for an oscar boycott. when rampling called that racist to whites in remarks on europe's radio one last week, the backlash was swift. i regret th my comments could have been misinterpreted she said later in a statement to "sunday morning." i simply meant to say that in an ideal world every performance
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edonceon cp su who aerhear,resu soofficed h. i vexpl fhau ha n thel merin kael ctto tplet in holocaust. but the film became an art house hit. for a long time, perhaps maybe even still to this day that's the image a lot of people still associate with you. >> yeah. >> how do you feel about that? >> that means it's a very strong image if that's what identifies me. >> you're proud of it?
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to hig p fiin the '80dn at whoe c her r, pewmath ve" you were actually punched by paul newman. >> then i fall. >> there's something in your re, tot'sllyinteg. i thaomen actuall do you whats, meiostaremorheayed neucress but rampling was battling her own demons by the end of the decade she would suffer a nervous break down. >> depression is about stuff that you've just pushed down and down and down. or not even pushed down, just sitting there but it hasn't been dealt with. >> did you reach point where you were just felt paralyzed. >> you just can't get out the door any more.
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with was the death of her older sister, sarah, who had committed suicide in 1967. >> that was a big trigger. but you have to push that down. i was 20. my mom was so devastated by grief she sort of was almost gone. there i was, i had to keep going. >> rampling and mer father kept the cause of sarah's death secret from her mother. and i always wondered if mom was protected by that pact or poisoned by the lie. rampling writes, published in french last year. it took me long spells in the wilderness before i shed my first tear. so as to finally become a woman relieved by pain, which had been too much contained. you and your sister were very close. >> she was my closest friend. we were incredibly bonded.
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>> we did. we got up and did this singing act where we sung these cute french songs. we had the tights and the beret and the mac. we were all the rage. >> as she was wrestling with depression, rampling's 20 years marriage was unraveling. she continued to work mostly in france, but otherwise stayed out of the public eye. how long would you say that period lasted for you? >> i would say getting on ten years. >> really? ra in the french film "under the sand" about a woman whose husband goes for a swim on vacation and vanishes. the wife can't bear to confront her loss. when rampling saw the final cut of the film, she had a revelation.
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head. i said, this is about sarah. this is all about her. >> lot of see it as come back film it. >> was a come back in a sense of me coming through what we just talked about. that's theime i re thas ro goout >> the next year she part in a hollywood film called "spy game." you took a film with robert redford because you saw there was something scru'd bleo? yes.st gms. w it w i >> tha i'm a fun lady. it wt. id i actually twice because
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>> osgood: here is a look at the week ahead. monday has been decreed bubble wrap appreciation day, day for packaging and for popping. on tuesday, the house of representatives will again attempt to override president obama's veto of a bill repealing the affordable care act. wednesday is holocaust memorial day. marking the 71st anniversary of the liberation of the auschwitz death camp. thursday sees the opening of horay for politics, an election year exhibition at the national museum of american history in washington. friday is national buzz l day with events and celebrations scheduled at museums and libraries across the land. and saturday sees the screen
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los angeles where comedian carol burnett will receive a life achievement award. right now to john dickerson in washington for look what's ahead on "face the nation," good morning, john. >> dickerson: good morning, charles. we'll talk to donald trump on republican side then bernie sanders the democrats and we'll have brand new results from our battleground tracker poll. >> osgood: thank you, john. we'll be watching. next week here on "sunday morning." >> does it feel like something different than a gig? >> what you've been build up to. >> anthony mason talks with super bowl headliner chris martin of cold play. so you're sort of like a spokes person? more of a spokes metaphor.
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dakota. >> osgood: i'm charles osgood. please join us again next sunday morning. until then i'll see you on the radio. these little guys? they represent blood cells. and if you have afib-an irregular heartbeat that may put you at five times greater risk of stroke they can pool together in the heart, forming a clot that 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, pradaxa can help stop clots from forming. pradaxa was even proven superior to warfarin at reducing the risk of stroke, in a clinical trial without the need for regular blood tests. and, in the rare event of an emergency, pradaxa is the only oral blood thinner other than warfarin with a specific reversal treatment to help your body clot normally again. pradaxa is not for people who have had a heart valve replacement. don't stop taking pradaxa without talking to your doctor.
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ask your doctor if you need to stop pradaxa before any planned medical or dental procedure. pradaxa can cause serious, and sometimes, fatal bleeding. don't take pradaxa if you have abnormal bleeding. and seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have kidney problems, stomach ulcers, a bleeding condition, or take certain medicines. side effects with pradaxa can include indigestion, stomach pain, upset or burning. don't just go with the flow. go with pradaxa, the only blood thinner that lowers your risk of stroke better than warfarin and has a specific reversal treatment. talk to your doctor about pradaxa today. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh
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i just started cookin. we at time warner cable need to apologize to you. i haven't even started to bronze yet. we no longer give you an excuse to work all day perfecting your tan. starting to even it out. we're making a bunch of changes at time warner cable. including one-hour arrival windows. we'll also tell you how long our visit will take before your appointment starts. siup flth ncevery..myremi22 d a it a futes ant exthe of ce ed apricwant. it comg feinto hat mily isheale al qufor ial to makrageafle,
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