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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  February 8, 2016 2:05am-4:00am EST

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i don't think we'll be taking too much heavy fire with this group. - look, jennings, i spend most of my nine-to-five tethered to a desk. i've questioned a few embezzlers and some identity thieves. we're about to walk into a room with a killer. - and i'll be standing right behind you. - thank you, mr.r.mis. i'm with the fbi, looking for a missing person on the island here. i'd like to ask you a standard series of questions, and i'd appreciate your cooperation. - okay, so ask. - this is jack rollins. i'm trying to establish who had contact with him on the island recently. - i don't recognize him. we don't get too many tourists this time of the year, but i would have seen him at the store. - who do you recognize at the station tonight, becky? - i've known stanley most of my life. - who don't you recognize? - that honeymoon couple for one. - and where did you two meet?
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- why didn't you evacuate earlier? - i told you, i've got a few thousand bucks crawling around in those traps you made me leave down on the docks. - so you disregarded a state of emergency? - i had to preserve my catch. - you often pull in traps all by yourself? - how's it going? - good. see all these tiny waves? they're called microseisms, and all these little bumps are the heartbeat. the needle picks it up like it would a tectonic shift, and it's picking up a lot. - and everyone else? - i'm getting clean readings. the metal in the table amplifies it. everyone is steady. stanley the bar owner is a little below average, but i think there might be something wrong with him. - no, i just think his blood alcohol level could start a lawn mower. but that fisherman in there? - he's nervous about something. - i know ethan mattson. he's lived on owen for five years.
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do you wanna know who i don't recognize? half of owen knows cunningham properties, but i can't say i've ever said "hi" to his face. and that drifter? i mean, who comes to an island in winter looking for seasonal work? - ms. winter, how long have you been the dean of student affairs at stanford? - 10--no, 11 years. - i'm wondering if you could shed light on a former student who went missing. henri musset? he graduated-- - in 2005. i remember henri. he was an international student. he went missing right after he graduated. police called for weeks. inspectors from france, even interpol. - there was a digital trail on the boy in san diego, 18 months after graduating. - just as we told the authorities then, henri never left a forwarding address. we often lose touch with recent alumni until
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- so the last time henri was seen was on campus. he lived in student housing. did he have a roommate? [keyboard clicking] - yes. his last year, it was a student named alex declan. it says here--huh. - what? - i just see a note on henri's housing form. he requested a new roommate his last semester. - the last semester of his senior year? does that happen often? - not usually. most seniors have a million other things on their mind. but the matter seems to have been resolved. - do you have any records on declan? [keyboard clicking] - that's strtrge. declan is listed in housing as henri's roommate, but i can't find his registration. no student photo either. something must have fallen through the cracks. - dennis, you're such a busy guy.
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- i don't babysit my properties. but the hotel out here was days behind schedule. you think i wanto slog around this sandpit in the rain? - [sighs] victor, you don't have an i.d. you don't have a solid alibi for being here on the island and, last of all, for being down at the boatyard. - i told you. i was passing through. - recognize this? it's yours. you've got a lot of d-rings. kind of weird. unless you're a climber, or... in the military. [thunder crashes] [knock on door] - do you have a heart problem?
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- owen island station, this is detective joss carter. eighth precinct, new york city, calling on the emergency police frequency. do you read me? over. - this is deputy schmidt of the owen island pd. who is this? - [static crackling] detective carter from new york city. i have new information for the u.s. marshal on your island. i need to speak to him immediately. - who is it? - some detective from the city got through, said her name was carpenter--carter-- ugh! the generator. - do you read me? over. [crashing]
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[motor puttering] - [screams] - oh, my god. is she--is she dead? [static] i'm billy, and i quit smoking with chantix. i had a lot of doubts going in. i was a smoker. hands down, it was, that's who i was. after one week of chantix, i knew i could quit. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix definitely helped reduce my urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. some had seizures while taking chantix. if you have any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems,
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don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you have these, stop 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. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. most common side-affect is nausea. life as a non-smoker is a whole lot of fun.
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- you shouldn't go out there. the storm's pretty bad. - i'm following up on a lead, it's urgent. i need to get to owen island. - whoa, i can't let you do that. i don't care what lead it is. - i'm going, kyle. i won't say it again. - okay...but i'm driving. - what's going on here? first you question us, and now this? you. you were helping them. what were they doing in there, really? - they asked to use my equipment for police business.
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talking about finding a killer. - becky, what did they ask you? - they asked me who i recognized here. - so who don't you recognize? - everyone please settle down. - you're building a hotel on the other side of the island. nobody even knows your face. - i have hundreds of business contacts in the city. call any of them. - and what good did that do, harold? - behavior analysis, john. just give it a minute. - what about you, mr. newlywed? nobody knows your face. - wait a second, i know his face. - everybody, we're forgetting, she was killed with a knife. so whose knife was it? - i know whose it is. that knife? it's called a ka-bar. not exactly something you pick up at a local bait and tackle. - i didn't hurt anybody. - you need to be a special kind of person to carry a weapon like that. [both grunting]
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- that's what i thought. - i was lying. okay? god help me, i was lying. but i'm not a killer. - no. you're a marine. - the knife. the tattoo. the d-rings clipped to your bag. you're on the run. - 24th meu out of camp lejeune. second tour. i couldn't go back. i wanted to get a boat to canada. i got stuck here. - so who else knew you had that knife? - i don't know. i mean, i came into the station with the fisherman. - wait, where is the fisherman?
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if i don't come back, get these people to safety. [thunder crashes] - so... do you think we can cross the entire state before you say a word to me? - what do you want to talk about? i can think of some things. like how an nypd detective got aced out of the fbi because she keeps bad company, how about that? - what are you talking about, the fbi? - not a friend of internal affairs, huh, cal? - joss, i'm in narcotics.
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my neck of the woods don't mean a thing. - it does to me. makes me wonder about the man i trusted. - oh, what, you don't trust me? [engine revving] you think i'm dirty? that i'm on the take? is that what you think? - i don't know what to think, cal. - yo, what did they tell you about me? - [gasps] - beecher! slow down! [tires screeching] - you serious? what, you think i'd hurt you? - i don't know. but i don't want to hurt you.
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- marijuana. this is what you were trying to protect from the storm. [both grunting] - unh! unh! - huh. [drops harpoon] [thunder crashes] - oh, no, that couldn't be. - unbelievable. we're hunting a killer, and instead we get amateur drug night in the sticks. - [groaning] - you smuggle it in on your boat?
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ordinarily, i'd make sure you went behind bars. but i got bigger fish to fry. so you go in the trunk. fbi. [punch, thud] [thunder crashes]
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platinum-based chemotherapy, it's not every day something this big comes along. a chance to live longer with... opdivo, nivolumab. opdivo is the first and only immunotherapy fda approved based on a clinical trial demonstrating longer life... ...for these patients. in fact, opdivo significantly increased the chance of living longer versus chemotherapy. opdivo is different. it works with your immune system. opdivo can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body and affect how they work. this may happen any time during or after treatment has ended, and may become serious and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you experience new or worsening cough;chest pain; shortness of breath; diarrhea; severe stomach pain or tenderness; severe nausea or vomiting; extreme fatigue; constipation; swollen ankles; loss of appetite; headache; confusion; hallucinations;
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or flushing as this may keep these problems from becoming more serious. these are not all the possible side effects of opdivo. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions including immune system problems or if you've had an organ transplant, or lung, breathing or liver problems. a chance to live longer. ask your doctor if opdivo is right for you. bristol-myers squibb thanks the patients and physicians who participated in the opdivo clinical trial.
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- how did you know? - the needle spiked in between the interviews. when i wasn't watching. when you were resting on the table. you should keep an eye on that heart rate. - i knew you were too good at those interrogations. who are you really? - i could ask you the same thing. you're taller than i would have thought. and you cut your hair. - and you bought every minute of the dedicated "agent fahey." - yes, quite the performance. - make a sound, i start hurting innocents. let's take a walk. i thought a bit more privacy would do us some good. - you know, the walls are closing in.
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- it's over for fahey, sure. just like it was over for rollins. - was that before or after you tore teeth out of his head and threw them in a furnace? - damn things never burn. sloppy, i know. but when the fbi's knocking on your door, you have to move faster than you should. - other agents will come looking. - like the last one? federal agents always work in pairs. but this hard-ass showed up solo in a stupid blue windbreaker, knocking on my door, looking for rollins. he talked to me. seemed nervous. a little out of his element. right then i knew i had him beat. he left me no choice. i had to kill him. then i realized my only way off this island was to become him. then this damn storm hits, and some cowboy u.s. marshal comes knocking. i was stuck as special agent fahey, so i improvised.
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- well, i couldn't be sure what she heard off the radio. you always have to be ready to improvise. honestly, the question isn't who i am. it's who you are. i watched you all night. i can always spot an impostor. i spotted you. are you like me? - you have no idea. you're an amateur at this. - not the way i planned it, man.
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and i didn't kill the fbi guy in that trunk. but you're in the way, so you go in the drink. [grunts] don't worry. as cold as this water is, it'll be quick. [grunting] - hey, ethan. - oof! uhh! - as quick as that? - now that fahey won't get far, i think the mysterious mr. gull might be my next great challenge. - you'll never get off the island. by morning they'll come here looking for the real alan fahey. - and they'll find him... in the trunk of his car. - and what about you? - and what about you? and what about you? and what about...
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you asked the question and you're the answer. your plane. you're gonna fly me out of here. you haven't outlived your usefulness. - you could never be me because i save lives. you take them. - no, i live those lives better than real people ever could. i follow them and watch them waste what they have. i do those identities justice. the things i've seen. the lives i've lived. one day i'll stop, when i find the person i'm meant to be. - what? people like you don't stop. you can rationalize it however you like. but you hurt people because you like it. because you're sick! you're maladjusted and you need help. - on second thought, maybe i'll find another way off this island.
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if there's anything left to tell, i'll make it up as i go along. don't worry, i'm good at that. just like you. [gunshot] - you all right, harold? - detective? you have impeccable timing. how did you get here? - i hitched a ride with the coast guard. and some very unpleasant people inside said they thought they saw you come this way. so is that him, our identity killer? - he was pretending to be an fbi agent. he was really rather good at it. he had a badge and a gun and a-- - and what? - body armor. [gunshot]
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[electronic beeps, buzzes] [police radio chatter] - what are you doing? - it's a police station. there's bound to be one of these around here somewhere. hey, listen... i don't know what happened last night between us, but, uh, i'm wondering what happens today. - i don't know what happens. but i'm glad you were here. - a drug smuggler shot at me with a spear gun last night.
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- wish i could say yes. - glad you made it back, mr. reese. - i am too. and i'm glad the machine was right. - how so? - it was smart enough to tell us about a killer with multiple identities. - it may be true that the six numbers were not a glitch, but the three days of silence preceding it were. if the machine had been working properly, we might have gotten a number for the real alan fahey and saved him. instead, an fbi agent is dead. but i wish i knew what that means for the future. - at least the storm is passing. - no, mr. reese, i have a feeling
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>> announcer: the following is a paid presentation for the nutribullet, brought to you by nutribullet llc. >> hi. i'm david wolfe. and for 25 years, i've been teaching people, to get the most out of your life, you need to get the most out of your food. all this food is loaded with nutrition, and you don't just need some of it. you need all of it. and the nutribullet is the machine that can get all of it. for a limited time, nutribullet has an incredible offer. when you order today, we will upgrade you to the 900-watt nutribullet pro at no extra charge. here's what makes the nutribullet pro different. now you have the power to do whole-food nutrition extraction. watch. not one, but two whole apples get completely obliterated in just seconds. the nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor.
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you just can't pass up. stick around. >> my muscle aches, my back aches really started to decrease significantly in one week. >> first night that i actually used the nutribullet, i actually slept really well. that was exciting. that was phenomenal. >> the bad cholesterol, which was 290, went down to 190. >> before you turn to drugs, please, give this a shot. it really, really works. >> announcer: join these people and thousands just like them and discover a machine that finally has the power to take years off the way you look and feel. learn from nutrition expert and best-selling author david wolfe, who speaks to sold-out audiences around the world, why he calls this the most significant discovery of his lifetime. introducing the nutribullet -- the superfood nutrition extractor. the nutribullet is not a blender, it's not a juicer. it's a breakthrough in nutritional science that can change your life. the nutribullet's high-powered motor, with bullet-exclusive cyclonic action, breaks down and
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level, opening up their hidden nutritional value that can reverse the effects of aging and supercharge your metabolism to fight off aches and pains, colds and flus, and even improve vital health markers like cholesterol levels and blood pressure. stay tuned. for a limited time, nutribullet will upgrade your order to the powerful 900-watt nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor at no extra charge. details just ahead. but, first, take an exclusive seat at our nutribullet seminar workshop with longevity expert david wolfe as he shows us how to unleash the power of food to fight arthritic pain, balance hormones, supercharge your immune system, lose weight, and turn back the hands of time 5, 10, even 20 years with this incredible machine, the nutribullet -- the superfood nutrition extractor. >> greetings, everybody. i'm david wolfe. welcome to my workshop. today we're gonna talk about nutrition. why? i'll tell you why.
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we've become the most overfed yet undernourished nation in the entire world. this has created an epidemic of high blood pressure, obesity, depression, stress, and a whole lot more. that's why i'm so excited to bring you a machine that's going to change your life the way it changed my life. this is the nutribullet -- the world's first nutrition extractor. a nutrition extractor is not a blender, it's not a juicer. it's completely different from anything else out there. this machine is designed to break down the cell walls of your food, releasing, unleashing the nutrients inside, transforming ordinary fresh foods into superfoods. now i'm gonna show you the difference between smoothies from a traditional blender and
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nutribullet. let me show you what i'm talking about. okay, we're gonna put kale in for chlorophyll and fiber. we're gonna take some pineapple for the vitamin c and a little bit of flavor. we're gonna put in some cucumbers -- great for hydration, great for the kidneys. puin some cashews for the creaminess and the protein. and of course, we're gonna add some flaxseeds in to get the omega-3 fatty acids, and then we're gonna add spring water. let's get the lid on there. put on the extractor blades onto our nutribullet. are you ready? >> all: ready. >> whoo! >> look. this blender is just mixing stuff around. it's not breaking anything down. but the nutribullet, with its 600 watts of compact power and bullet-exclusive cyclonic action, combined with the
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blades, turning at an amazing 10,000 rpms, pulverizing the cell walls, unlocking all that hidden nutrition so your body can actually absorb it and use it. now, i've got a strainer here. we're gonna pour our blended smoothie through and see what is left over. it's gonna make it through. we've got unbroken flaxseeds, lots of fiber. here, let me show you this. this, ladies and gentlemen, is what we call a smoothie. [ audience murmuring ] now let's see what happened with the nutribullet. i take off the extractor blades. looks like we've got quite a beverage in here.
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through the strainer. it's completely liquefied. all that nutrition has been turned inside out. everything's been completely broken down. and when we pour it, we can see just how glowing it is -- beautiful. the real test is always the flavor. let's give it a try. that, ladies and gentlemen, is what i call a nutriblast. we've taken all of those cells, pulverized them, flipped them inside out, got all of that juice, all the nutrients, the vitamins, the minerals, the enzymes, the essential fatty acids, the protein, and now we can actually assimilate and utilize those nutrients. we've turned this into a superfood. listen. juicers make juice and blenders make smoothies, but the nutribullet makes
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all i'm asking you to do is have one nutriblast a day and give your body the tools it craves to increase performance and even reverse the symptoms of aging. >> about five years ago, the doctor told me, after taking my cholesterol numbers, that i was gonna have to be on cholesterol medication and, most likely, for the rest of my life. there is a history of heart disease in my family. there's a history of high cholesterol in my family, so i felt this was the natural progression of things and it was out of my control -- that there was nothing that i could do, until i went onto this nutribullet system, and that's when things really started to change dramatically. when i make my nutriblasts, incorporating the nutribullet, it emulsifies fruits and vegetables so well that i feel them go right into my system. i feel those ingredients immediately, and i started to see results actually within three or four days. six weeks ago, when i started this program, i weighed 182 pounds, and after 6 weeks on
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believe i weighed in at 160. so, this weight loss over six weeks is just a by-product. the reason that i involved myself in the nutribullet program was for chchesterol purposes, to reduce my cholesterol, to regain control of my life, and to get rid of the acid reflux. my starting cholesterol was 263, and now i'm at 208 and within a normal range, and my triglycerides are almost cut in half. look at my results over six weeks. if i can enjoy these results, i have to think that everybody can. >> when we think of hormone imbalance, we think that's only something that happens to older people, and that's nonsense. this can affect any of us at any age -- in our teens, in our 20s, in our 70s -- and hormone imbalance leads to mood swings, infertility, acne, fatigue, low sex drive, and those things can affect any of us. the emphasis here is on hormones, and both men and women
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we're not built the same, so the approach has to be a little bit different. so what we've done here is we've created a nutriblast for the guys and a nutriblast for the gals. >> great. >> there are so many amazing hormone-e-ilding foods -- foods like beets, grapes, blueberries, pumpkin seeds, broccoli to support the prostate, olive oil, which helps keep good hormones from becoming bad hormones. we need good hormones to keep us young. we've got to put in spring water. let's put on the extractor blades. we're set. over here, we have a female nutriblast, and this contains some key different ingredients. we put in arugula, sometimes
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we've added raspberries for their volatile oils, which help to support female reproductive health. we've added avocado and goji berries -- one of the best antioxidants on the planet. are we ready to blast off? >> all: we're ready. >> look at the power. look at the bullet-exclusive cyclonic action. the nutribullet is pulverizing these ingredients. all right. let's see what we got. >> okay. >> love the colors. >> remove the extractor blades. here it is, coming down the counter. for the ladies, let's give that a try. >> yeah. >> if you have a nutriblast every day, you're gonna look better, you're gonna feel better, you can live longer, and you will love longer. >> my hot flashes started when i
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the years, they have just progressively gotten worse, where there's times in the middle of the night you just feel like you're being microwaved. but after doing some nutriblasts, for the first week, i slept better, i felt more rested, i didn't have a hot flash. i am thrilled to death by the change in my health and how i feel. it's the combination of the fruits, the vegetables, and all the vitamins that are all being emulsified together. it works. >> the antidepressants, the sleeping pills, and the blood-pressure medication did help in the beginning. but, as in long-term, it wasn't helping. well, within a week of drinking nutriblasts, i saw incredible changes. right now, i'm sleeping a solid eight hours, i am no longer taking my sleeping pills, and nutribullet has everything to do with that. >> i was diagnosed with
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it's extremely painful. when i started using the nutribullet, i was pleasantly surprised because the first night that i actually used the nutribullet, i actually slept really well. [ voice breaking ] thank you for giving me my life back. thank you for allowing me to enjoy my family more. thanks for taking away the pain. where have you been all my life? [ chuckles ] >> we all know how important the immune system is. it is the key. your immune system determines what belongs and what doesn't. when it finds something bad, it releases white blood cells, and white blood cells detoxify our body. they also help us fight illness, pain, even disease. our ability to create and release white blood cells is affected by a lot of things. it's affected by a lack of sleep, stress. it's especially affected by a lack of nutrition. if we can increase our
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nourish our immune system directly, then our bodies can handle practically anything. the nutribullet is designed to help us do just that. >> for the past two years, i haven't been very healthy. unfortunately, i was diagnosed with cancer. so, for the past two years, i haven't been very healthy, and i've been feeling, overall, pretty crummy. lost every ounce of my hair. i lost every hair on my head, and then i just covered my head up with wigs. but, you know, at the end of the day when you're taking your wig off, you know, and you have to see the result of the chemotherapy, it's really hard, you know, on your psyche. i was amazed at how quickly i saw results from the nutribullet. i was so excited because to feel it after the second nutriblast was a miracle to me. i was so excited. one of the best things about the nutribullet is that it's not a blender. it's something that pulverizes
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and you're extracting the nutrients out of these whole foods, so you're getting the maximum benefit by everything that you're putting in there. and probably about three weeks into the program, my hair just went through this growth spurt, and people were asking me, you know, what happened, because i didn't have a whole lot of hair before i started. i was just telling somebody, "i started this year off fighting for my life. i'm ending the year feeling better than i've felt in years." totally given me hope, you know, and i didn't have that. and i just feel wonderful and i'm so grateful for everything you've done. [ voice breaking ] thank you so much from the bottom of my heart. you guys are awesome, and i hope that this can help other people. >> one of the greatest keys to bolstering your immune system is hidden inside the foods that we buy every day. what we have to do is unlock those valuable nutrients so that we can actually absorb them. this can help change your life. in fact, it could actually help
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>> announcer: over the last 30 years, we have become the most overfed yet undernourished nation on the planet, leading to a modern-day epidemic of obesity, high blood pressure, stress, depression, and more. we're not getting healthier, we're getting sicker, and it comes down to one simple need -- nutrient absorption. we need to increase the nutritional power of the foods we eat every day to dramatically change the way we look and feel, and the great news is, now we can. from the makers of the original magic bullet, introducing the nutribullet -- the superfood nutrition extractor. with the nutribullet, you can turn ordinary food into superfood that now absorbs easily into your body's system so you can live a longer, healthier, more active life. all this food is loaded with essential nutrition, and the only way to get all of it is to break down, pulverize, and open up the food's hidden nutrition on a cellular level. this process is called nutrition extraction. look. even expensive blenders just mix things around.
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and with juicing, most of the valuable nutrition and fiber is just thrown away. but the nutribullet is different. watch -- start with some spinach for fiber, banana for potassium, add some berries for essential antioxidants, then almonds and flaxseeds for omega-3 oils, add a little water, and watch how the power of the nutribullet completely breaks everything down, extracting all the essential nutrition. look. even the almonds and flaxseeds have been broken down to fit through this strainer, unlike traditional blenders that leave everything behind. the secret of the nutribullet is its powerful 600-watt motor, combined with bullet-exclusive cyclonic action that forces everything through the turbo extractor blades, turning at an incredible 10,000 rpm, to break down and pulverize the stems, seeds, and skins where most of the essential nutrition lies, taking ordinary fresh foods and turning them into superfoods to give you the strength, energy, and vitality for a full, active life, whatever your age. but hold everything!
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your order to the 900-watt nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor at no extra charge. that's right. we will upgrade your order to the nutribullet pro, with 25,000 rpm of bullet-exclusive cyclonic action, absolutely free. juicers make juice, blenders make smoothies, but the nutribullet pro now gives you the power for whole-food nutrition extraction. watch how the nutribullet pro completely extracts the nutrients from whole foods in just seconds, so now you can make supercharged superfood nutriblasts from whole foods. and by drinking just one nutriblast a day, you can give your body the tools to help fight and prevent disease, lose weight, relieve joint pain, lower blood pressure, lower cholesterol, and give you more energy than you ever thought possible without taking prescription pills, without any side effects. just one a day can change your life. we've all bought expensive blenders and juicers and we all know the problem -- they're just too much trouble to put together, and clean them once and you'll never want to clean them again.
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seconds to use and seconds to clean. watch -- just load your ingredients into the cup, twist on the extractor blade, pop it onto the power base, and watch how the nutribullet pro blasts ordinary foods, including whole foods, into superfoods in an instant. then just separate, give it a quick rinse, and you're ready to go again in seconds. how easy is that? and with nearly twice the power of these other machines, the compact nutribullet pro is less than half the size. your nutribullet pro comes with a super-sized 32-ounce colossal cup with the same size and capacity as a full-sized blender, the perfect way to get your seven to nine servings of needed fruits and vegetables daily. it also comes with a 24-ounce cup, perfect for single servings of your personal favorite nutriblast. >> there's no doubt that you can reduce your cholesterol, reduce your blood pressure, reduce your sugar levels, and reduce your symptoms from other things and inflammation from what we eat. >> announcer: you could spend up to $500 on these big, bulky
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the nutribullet pro's exclusive cyclonic action. but call now and you won't pay $500, $300, or even $150. during this tv-only offer, you can have the complete nutribullet pro system rushed to your home for just 6 payments of only $19.9.. but hold everything! call in the next 18 minutes and not only will we upgrade your order to the nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor at no extra charge, but, as an added bonus, we will give you a second nutribullet pro system for free! that's right -- we'll give you a second complete nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor absolutely free. all you pay is shipping and processing. this is a limited-time, tv-only offer, so call or log on now. if you know anybody who may be suffering from stress, lack of sleep, diabetes, joint pain, migraines, fibromyalgia, fatigue, high cholesterol and blood pressure, or maybe just needs to feel like they used to, well, now is the best time to give the gift of health for free!
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$320 value, and it's yours today for just 6 payments of only $19.99. this offer is only available on tv, so remember to call in the next 18 minutes and get a second nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor absolutely free! don't wait another minute. call or log on right now and get your free upgrade to the nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor for just 6 payments of only $19.99. plus, remember to call in the next 18 minutes and get a second complete nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor absolutely free! all you pay is shipping and processing. >> people just like you have seen some amazing results by simply using the nutribullet to get their daily recommended amounts of fruits and vegetables. if you've ever considered the nutribullet, now is the time. this is a limited tv-only offer, and now is the best time ever to transform your life. so, what have you got to lose? you owe it to yourself to try this incredible machine.
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in our bodies has become a huge problem. anyone who suffers from arthritis or joint pain knows exactly what i'm talking about. pain -- debilitating pain. i bet most of you believe that once that pain starts, it just gets worse and worse, right? >> all: right. >> wrong. there are foods that contain hidden nutrients that can give your body the tools it needs to help fight the effects of arthritis and joint pain. this nutriblast contains the vitamin c brothers -- lemon and lime; the anti-inflammatory enzyme bromelain, found in grapefruit and pineapple; apples, with their malic acid, which cuts right into arthritis; the anti-inflammatory omega-3 inside the flaxseeds; and my personal favorite, turmeric. turmeric is probably the most powerful anti-inflammatory food you can find in your local
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you ready to try this? >> yeah. >> you just make and you drink. so easy. so, let's give it a try. >> okay. >> wow. that's powerful. i don't know if you guys know this, but both my parents are medical doctors. my mom told me that health is our greatest asset. >> absolutely. >> so, let's toast to the best health ever. cheers. >> bravo. >> i've had migraines most of my life, where there's times where just keeping my eyes open is very painful. basically, being put in a dark room, laying in a bed with your eyes closed, would be the only relief i would get from a migraine. once a week, i would suffer from a migraine. since incorporating the nutriblasts, i haven't had one headache -- not one migraine. the nutribullet is different
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nutrients from the fruits and vegetables and nuts, and i think everybody should do it, because you just feel great. i've never felt this good in my life -- never. never. >> ladies and gentlemen, we all know that what we eat is important, but how we eat it may even be more important. if you're eating healthy, good-for-you salads, you might only be absorbing a fraction of the available nutrition. by making the amazing nutrition contained at the cellular level of these foods available to you, you'll absorb them, and then you'll feel a huge difference in how you look and you'll feel a huge difference in your day-to-day energy. you can take everyday, ordinary foods and turn them into superfoods in literally seconds with the nutribullet. all i'm asking you to do is have just one nutriblast a day, and i promise you it can change your
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thanks so much for being here. have the best day ever. cheers. all right! >> announcer: from the makers of the original magic bullet, introducing the nutribullet -- the superfood nutrition extractor. with the nutribullet, you can turn ordinary food into superfood that now absorbs easily into your body's system so you can live a longer, healthier, more active life. watch -- start with some spinach for fiber, banana for potassium, add some berries for essential antioxidants, then almonds and flaxseeds for omega-3 oils, add a little water, and watch how the power of the nutribullet completely breaks everything down, extracting all the essential nutrition. the secret of the nutribullet is its powerful 600-watt motor, combined with bullet-exclusive cyclonic action that forces everything through the turbo extractor blades, turning at an incredible 10,000 rpm, to break down and pulverize the stems, seeds, and skins where most of the essential nutrition lies.
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when you call now, we'll upgrade your order to the 900-watt nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor at no extra charge. we will upgrade your order to the nutribullet pro, with 25,000 rpm of bullet-exclusive cyclonic action, absolutely free. juicers make juice, blenders make smoothies, but the nutribullet pro now gives you the power for whole-food nutrition extraction. watch how the nutribullet pro completely extracts the nutrients from whole foods in just seconds, so now you can make supercharged superfood nutriblasts from whole foods. and by drinking just one nutriblast a day, you can give your body the tools to help fight and prevent disease, lose weight, relieve joint pain, lower blood pressure, lower cholesterol, and give you more energy than you ever thought possible. the nutribullet pro takes seconds to use and seconds to clean. watch -- just load your ingredients into the cup, twist on the extractor blade, pop it onto the power base, and watch how the nutribullet pro blasts ordinary foods, including whole
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instant. then just separate, give it a quick rinse, and you're ready to go again in seconds. how easy is that? and with nearly twice the power of these other machines, the compact nutribullet pro is less than half the size. your nutribullet pro comes with a super-sized 32-ounce colossal cup, the perfect way to get your seven to nine servings of needed fruits and vegetables daily. it also comes with a 24-ounce cup, perfect for single servings of your personal favorite nutriblast. you could spend up to $500 on these big, bulky machines that still don't have the nutribullet pro's exclusive cyclonic action. but call now and you won't pay $500, $300, or even $150. during this tv-only offer, you can have the complete nutribullet pro system rushed to your home for just 6 payments of only $19.99. but hold everything! call in the next eight minutes and not only will we upgrade your order to the nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor at no extra charge, but we will give you a second system for free!
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second complete nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor absolutely free! all you pay is shipping and processing. this is a limited-time offer, so call or log on now. if you know anybody who may be suffering from stress, lack of sleep, diabetes, joint pain, migraines, fibromyalgia, fatigue, high cholesterol and blood pressure, or maybe just needs to feel like they used to, well, now is the best time to give them the gift of health for free! altogether, that's an incredible $320 value, and it's yours today for just 6 payments of only $19.99. this offer is only available on tv, so remember to call in the next eight minutes and get a second nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor absolutely free! don't wait another minute. call or log on right now and get your free upgrade to the nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor for just 6 payments of only $19.99. plus, remember to call in the next eight minutes and get a second complete nutribullet pro whole-food nutrition extractor
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all you pay is shipping and processing. >> people just like you have seen some amazing results by simply using the nutribullet to get their daily recommended amounts of fruits and vegetables. if you've ever considered the nutribullet, now is the time. you owe it to yourself to try this incredible machine. >> announcer: the preceding was a paid presentation for the nutribullet, brought to you by nutribullet llc. when i was 6, i had one thing on my mind. when i was 6, my days were spent playing basketball every chance i could. when i was 6, my dream was to make it to the nba.
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my mom had a stroke. i'm paul george, and i want you to learn the signs of a stroke, fast. f.a.s.t. f, face drooping. a, arm weakness. s, speech difficulty. t, time to call 911. because the sooner they get to the hospital, the sooner they'll get treatment, and that can make a remarkable difference in their recovery. protect the ones you love. spot a stroke, f.a.s.t.
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i guess sometimes things just happen. devastating things. it's got nothing to do with fairness. bam! your whole world changes in an instant.
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that's what happened to me... the day my mother had a stroke. i'm paul george, and i want you to learn the signs of a stroke fast, f.a.s.t. f, face drooping. a, arm weakness. s, speech difficulty. t, time to call 911. because the sooner they get to the hospital, the sooner they'll get treatment, and that can make a remarkable difference in their recovery. protect the ones you love. spot a stroke, f.a.s.t.
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of course the diamond-studded super bowl rings. we visited the place where most of the rings including the very first ones are made. >> reporter: on super bowl sunday, players from the winning team get to briefly hold up the lombardi trophy. what they take home is the most coveted prize in football -- the super bowl championship ring. >> the owner gets to take the trophy back. put it in the case either in carolina or denver. and this is their trophy that will stay with them forever. >> reporter: the vice president of the sports division at jostens, the company made super bowl rings, including the first ever super bowl ring. >> we created the ring for vince lombardi and green bay packers, 1966. we have continued on.
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bowl ring for the packers had a simple design. 40 grams of gold and 1 carat diamond in the center. but as the the game got bigger, so did the rings. last year's super bowl ring for the new england patriots had 100 grams of gold and an astonishing 205 diamonds. totaling almost 5 carats. >> the last few years it's getting to a point where the next ring i have a funny feeling will be a double finger. >> reporter: two finger ring. as josten's master jeweler, the quarterback of design. at production facility in denton, texas he is already thinking of the next championship ring before the game is even played. but the owner of the winning team will coach him through the ring's final design. a process which can take months. >> they are pieces of art that tell a story of a championship. >> reporter: last year's patriots ring shows off the team's winning history with four
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trophies. the packers 2010 ring features the iconic lambeau feel and the trophy coming home. the design starts as a 3 d computer model. then an actual ring is made for the team's owner to inspect. if the owner wants to add another diamond or put another lego on the ring, a new computer model is made, and a new ring is cast. once the design is finalized, a mold is made for each of the 53 players on the team with their name and jersey number on the side. the team has the option to make more rings for their staff. a 1500 degree furnace melts gold pellets into a liquid poured into each custom mold. the gold is then carefully polished and painted so sections of the ring scan be soldered together. then time to put the bling in the ring. a small team of 45 people will work on each ring. and this man oversees technician whose hand pick and set the
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>> you have to have the eye for bringing it altogether. these guys work in space, so they, they create that space. and fill it with the diamonds. >> reporter: after a final cleaning. the super bowl ring is ready for the hand of a champion. have you ever given a finished ring to a player? >> have i personally, yes, m my times. >> reporter: what reaction do you get? >> i have seen everything from jumping up and down to words that you don't want to mention on tv, to in a lot of cases just going, that silent and crying. >> reporter: the ring is a symbol of hard work, sacrifice, and victory. that for many players is the defining moment in their career.
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heaven. they think they're invincible. and then they get the trophy, but the trophy is given back. they get the bonus money. it is gone. the thing that is left to commemorate is the ring. the super bowl halftime show was an all-star extravaganza with cold play, beyonce and bruno mars rocking the stadium. >> reporter: cold play's chris martin described the show as combination between the past, present and future. well our story begins in the past, 50 years ago, with a little marching band from louisiana. >> hey, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. >> reporter: these college band mates haven't marched together in 50 years. when we met up with them recently they hardly missed a beat. >> fall out! >> you had to bring your dedication each time, practice like you perform, and perform like you practice. >> yes. >> reporter: it was their
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that would change history. that year, the commissioner of the national football league invited grambling state marching band to play in their first super bowl. 129 men from a small louisiana college marched alongside the university of arizona's band for millions of viewers. >> there was a lot of weight on our shoulders. a lot of times we didn't pay particular attention to thth weight. if we went out on the field and did a show and it pleased the public then we felt that we had done our job. >> reporter: for the next 23 years, marching band were a super bowl mainstay. then, in 1991, disney produced the halftime party. they chose the commercially successful boy band, new kids on the block. my world
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king of pop, michael jackson moon walked for 100 million viewers. more people watched his 12-minute performance than the game itself. and the era of the a list was born. >> pop culture's national holiday. it's become the place in which you see not only the kind of highest form of competition in sport. strike a pose >> and pop icons are affirmed. there is a real kind of sense of anything might happen. >> reporter: and anything did happen. in 1996, diana ross reaffirmed her diva status with a performance featuring a chorus, fireworks. and a high-flying exit. stages set for superstars, soon featured rising stars too.
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chance during super bowl 35. aero-smith with a baby-faced britney spears. >> kind of a point of possibility for performers who are very much on the verge. as well as those who are cemented in our cultural imaginary. >> reporter: there is another moment cemented in america's imagination. janet jackson and justin timberlake's wardrobe malfunction in 2004 set a new course for the halftime show. >> complicated moment in super bowl history. it certainly changed the lineup of halftime performers for several years afterwards. hey jude >> reporter: super bowl 39, hosted a beatle. into your heart >> reporter: in 2009, it was the boss.
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one, two, three, four. >> reporter: four years later, beyonce on full display. then rising star, bruno mars brought in the show's highest ratings yet. but none of the halftime steps or dramatic antics could have been possible without a group of teenagers from louisiana. do you think the super bowl performances helped to raise the level of awareness people had about the university and its band? >> i don't think, i know so. super bowl 1 launched the grambling band's legacy. they later starred in commercials. played the super bowl four more times. and even inspired the 2002 film "drum line." >> my not e is you don't know
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out of it. the grambling marching band of today made possible by a trailblazing band from the past. so what did you want to show america when you stepped foot out on the field? >> we leave a lasting impression on that individual to say "i have never seen anything look that before, and i will never see it again." he decided to save money by switching his motorcycle insurance to geico. there's no shame in saving money. ride on, ride proud. geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides.
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manning playing possible swan song in super bowl 50. a carolina panthers coach could be saying good-bye to the game he loves. steve hartman has his story. >> reporter: all week, carolina panthers special teams coach, bruce dehaven hahabeen deflecting. >> just going to refrain from answering a lot of question as but all that. for me it is a nonstory. >> reporter: reporter after reporter. there are more important things to talk about this week than him. >> appreciate your interest. this is not a story. >> reporter: in the one interview he did sit down for this week, i learned bruce dehaven knows a lot more about what it takes to win at football. than what makes an important story. in terms of what happened to me, if i only got a limited amount of time left, why would i want to spend it feeling sorry for myself? >> reporter: last spring at the age of 66, bruce was diagnosed with an incurable form of
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obviously, that diagnosis would have driven many people into retirement, but not bruce. in the end, i wanted to coach. >> reporter: why does coaching win out? >> i just love coaching. coaching is teaching. for whatever reason, it's in my blood. i mean -- i'll probably cry after this ball game just because -- we're not going to have another week of practice. >> reporter: in fact he loves practice so much he actually scheduled his cancer treatments around it. never missed a single day of work all season. some guys got to work for a
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i find myself lingering after practice. thinking about, i want to make a little picture here in my mind. in case i am not doing this soon. >> reporter: he knows this could be his last year. and given that perspective, you would think the super bowl itself wouldn't matter as much. but don't talk to bruce aout the prospect of losing. i wouldn't want to think about that. >> reporter: telling me it still matters. game still matters who wins and loses. >> we are in the same position. none of us are going to out of this alive. >> reporter: if you get out with the super bowl ring. even better. >> way better. rip as you probably fifired out been one of the nicest guys in the nfl. players like wide receiver, cory brown adore him. a guy that i care about. >> reporter: the difference is this season everyone has been going out of his way to tete him that. >> when lou gehrig said i feel like "i'm the luckiest guy in the world." i can understand what he meant. you just have no idea how you have touched people some times. and -- if it hadn't been for this, maybe i would have never known this. >> reporter: so says the man with no story to tell.
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san franci super bowl 50 was big
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but for some who live there just an expensive headache. john blackstone has a look at some backlash in the bay area. >> reporter: big super bowl 50s put all all over san francisco have been a popular place for photos and for vandals. pranksters quickly discover the letters could be rearranged so super bowl became sup bro, and superb owl and even oops, if the humor has an edge, many san franciscos think the big game is a big headache. we are psyched to be the host. in all excitement our city leaders dropped the ball. the city supervisor is demanding the nfl reimburse the city for expenses estimated at nearly $5 million. we provide public services, health care, police protection, and i think the nfl can afford to make san francisco whole. >> reporter: for many drivers no amount of money can make up for the traffic jams with super bowl events closing several major streets.
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than new york. new york you get it every now and then. here it is very constant. >> reporter: to add insult to injury, levi stadium is more than 50 miles away in santa clara. >> think it feeds into the narrative, the city is getting too big too, expensive, too fancy. >> reporter: he is a columnist for "the san francisco chronicle" sees resentment that goes deeper than football. >> if you get in a fist fight if you mention gentrification. >> reporter: it made housing prices among the highest in the country. that's driven up the cost of most everything else. not all in san francisco have benefited. inequality is growing. the nfl comes to town. takes over the city. it is a huge corporation. >> yep. >> reporter: lot of san franciscans don't like that. >> they don't. we are san francisco, affinity for the underdog, for the blue-collar people and so fort. we are not a big corporation
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>> reporter: for all the grumbling, one of the most important industries in san francisco is tourism. city officials say the super bowl is bringing a million visitors a day to the city. john blackstone, san francisco. and that's the "overnight news" for monday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and "cbs this morning."
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news." welcome to the "overnight news." they're celebrating in denver after the broncos 24-10 victory over the carolina panthers in super bowl 50. the game was billed as a battle of the mvp quarterbacks. peyton manning and cam newton. but there were more mistakes than highlights by the two gun slingers. in the end it was the denver defense that came up big. 26-year-old league mvp cam newton up against the sheriff, peyton manning, gunning for his second super bowl championship in perhaps the final game of his illustrious career. manning marched the broncos down the field on his first possession. the team traded punts. then denver's number one ranked defense made a statement. miller sacks newton. jackson recovers in the end
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broncos up 10-0. >> jacksks for the touchdown. >> second quarter, cam newton takes things into his own hands. couple nice runs. face mask penalty set up a jonathan stewart touchdown dive. >> and in for the carolina touchdown. >> jordan norwood ripped off the longest punt return in super bowl history. 61 yards. setting up another field goal. and a 13-7 denver lead at the half. >> for some people it is all about the halftime show. and this year's didn't disappoint. chris martin and coldplay kicked off festivities. they gave way to bruno mars. and then beyonce.
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up town >> 44 yard. >> more sloppy play in the second half. panthers claimed the 34 yard field goal attempt. off the upright. mcmahonis, 16-7, denver. cam newton's bullet in the hand of denver's t.j. ward. he fumbles. the broncos recover. newton hold the ball too long and gets sacked. manning hold the ball too long and gives it up. it was that kind of game. one more carolina field goal. one more newton fumble. sets up a denver score. and manning walked off the field as a champion for the second time. it was the 200th win of his career.
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what could be his final game. >> i'll take some time to reflect. i got a couple priorities first. want to go kiss my wife and my kids. i want to go, you know hug my family. going to drink a lot of budweiser tonight, tracy, i promise you that. going to take care of those things first. and say a little prayer. thank the man upstairs for the great opportunity. i'm just grateful. >> president obama is a big chicago bears fan. so he didn't have a dog in the fight this super bowl sunday. what he did have was a little time to sit down with gale king. the president and his wife michelle looked back on their time as first family, and what comes next. and of course, the super bowl at the white house. who is more likely to yell at the tv during the game? >> you know -- >> depend on who is playing. >> look, it's ben a while since the bears are there. we don't yell that much. we enjoy watching the game. we hope for a good game. >> if there is a good play,
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>> ooh. >> do you care about the halftime show? coldplay, bruno mars and beyonce. >> i care deeply about the halftime show. deeply. i got dressed for the halftime show. i hope beyonce likes what i have on. >> have you talked to her about any dance moves. those of us have seen you dance on "ellen" and jimmy. you have moves. you too, mr. president. >> i have moves. >> turn up for what, look, you got to put this in your next video. obviously she didn't listen. no, gale, i don't talk to beyonce about dancing. >> listen, i know you guys are tight. let's talk a little bit about barack and michelle obama, 2008, i just happen to have this picture. >> that's so sweet. >> isn't it? >> you look young, what happened to you? >> they wore me down. >> what were you thinking, one word. one of my favorite pictures of
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>> the first inauguration we had something like 10 balls we went to. >> i remember that. >> michelle was in heels the whole time. so i think she was thinking my feet really hurt. >> what were you thinking, mrs. obama, such a sweet moment in the elevator. >> i'm sure i was thinking i am so proud of you. that's the i'm so proud of you. but my feet did hurt. >> i think i said, one more to go, sweetie. one more. >> almost done. >> the thing when i think about the obamas, even your dates become national news, news stories. a movie "first date" i saw it. the thing that struck me in the movie. you are driving a car with a hole in it. >> this is true. >> you got a second date after driving that car? >> because i am so smooth. i could make up for the hole in the car. >> i thought i am going to upgrade this brother. awe thought was in her mind at the time.
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>> we can work with this. >> diamond in the rough. >> you are getting ready to go on to other things. do you have advice for the new couple in, the job, the house? its the water pressure good is? there wi-fi, does the toilet run in the lincoln bedroom? >> the whole tech thing we have been trying to get that straight for the next group of folks. because this is an old building. a lot of dead spots where wi-fi doesn't work. we will see if we can. >> i was thinking about the wi-fi working? >> actually it has an issue. we'll see. >> the girls are just irritated by it sometimes. >> there is a first lady running right now for, for first lady, for president, does that give you any ideas, mrs. obama? >> of what? >> okay. >> what are you talking about, gale. >> what are you talking about willis. i want to play the potus game. i love it when he -- >> i love it when he holds my hand. >> oh.
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>> i love it when she laughs. she has a great laugh. >> i can always count on her to -- >> i can always count on her to tease me about something. >> i can always count on him to -- >> not disappoint me. >> told you that a long time ago. >> i have never forgotten it. >> after leaving the white house, potus will want to? >> take a walk by himself outside. >> you think so? >> after leaving the white house, flotus will want to? >> she is going to want to travel. and roam around the world in ways that we can't do when we are traveling in official capacities. >> you can see the rest of gale's white house intervivi later on cbs this morning. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. it's the little things in life that make me smile. spending the day with my niece. i don't use super poligrip for hold,
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before those little pieces would get in between my dentures and my gum and it was uncomfortable. even well fitting dentures let in food particles. just a few dabs of super poligrip free is clinically proven to seal out more food particles so you're more comfortable and confident while you eat. so it's not about keeping my dentures in, it's about keeping the food particles out.
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now that super bowl 50 is in the books, the next step is a victory parade. of course the diamond-studded super bowl rings. we visited the place where most of the rings including the very first ones are made. >> reporter: on super bowl sunday, players from the winning team get to briefly hold up the lombardi trophy. what they take home is the most coveted prize in football -- the super bowl championship ring. >> the owner gets to take the trophy back. put it in the case either in carolina or denver. and this is their trophy that will stay with them forever. >> reporter: the vice president of the sports division at jostens, t company made super bowl rings, including the first ever super bowl ring. >>e created the ring for vince lombardi and green bay packers, 1966.
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>> reporter: the first super bowl ring for the packers had a simple design. 40 grams of gold and 1 carat diamond in the center. but as the the game got bigger, so did the rings. last year's super bowl ring for the new england patriots had 100 grams of gold and an astonishing 205 diamonds. totaling almost 5 carats. >> the last few years it's getting to a pin the where the next ring i have a funny feeling will be a double finger. >> reporter: two finger ring. as josten's master jeweler, the quarterback of design. at production facility in denton, texas he is already thinking of the next championship ring before the game is even played. but the owner of the winning team will coach him through the ring's final design. a process which can take months. >> they are pieces of art that tell a story of a championship.
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patriots ring shows off the team's winning history with four diamond-shaped lombardi trophies. the packers 2010 ring features the iconic lambeau feel and the trophy coming home. the design starts as a 3 d computer model. then an actual ring is made for the team's owner to inspect. if the owner wants to add another diamond or put another lego on the ring, a new computer model is made, and a new ring is cast. once the design is finalized, a mold is made for each of the 53 players on the team with their name and jersey number on the side. the team has the option to make more rings for their staff. a 1500 degree furnace melts gold pellets into a liquid poured into each custom mold. the gold is then carefully polished and painted so sections of the ring scan be soldered together. then time to put the bling in the ring.
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work on each ring. and this man oversees technician whose hand pick and set the diamond. >> you have to have the eye for bringing it altogether. these guys work in space, so they, they create that space. and fill it with the diamonds. >> reporter: after a final cleaning. the super bowl ring is ready for the hand of a champion. have you ever given a finished ring to a player? >> have i personally, yes, many times. >> reporter: what reaction do you get? >> i have seen everything from jumping up and down to words that you don't want to mention on tv, to in a lot of cases just going, that silent and crying. >> reporter: the ring is a symbol of hard work, sacrifice, and victory. that for many players is the defining moment in their career. >> when a team wins they're in heaven. they think they're invincible. and then they get the trophy, but the trophy is given back. they get the bonus money. it is gone.
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commemorate is the ring. the super bowl halftime show was an all-star extravaganza with cold play, beyonce and brbro mars rocking the stadium. but halftime wasn't always such a high powered event. >> reporter: cold play's chris martin described the show as combination between the past, present and future. well our story begins in the past, 50 years ago, with a little marching band from louisiana. >> hey, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. >> reporter: these college band mates haven't marched together in 50 years. when we met up with them recently they hardly missed a beat. >> fall out! >> you had to bring your dedication each time, practice like you perform, and perform like you practice. >> yes. >> reporter: it was their performance together in 1967, that would change history.
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the national football league invited grambling state marching band to play in their first super bowl. 129 men from a small louisiana college marched alongside the university of arizona's band for millions of viewers. >> there was a lot of weight on our shoulders. a lot of times we didn't pay particular attention to the weight. if we went out on the field and did a show and it pleased the public then we felt that we had done our job. >> reporter: for the next 23 years, marching band were a super bowl mainstay. then, in 1991, disney produced the halftime party. they chose the commercially successful boy band, new kids on the block.
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king of pop, michael jackson moon walked for 100 million viewers. more people watched his 12-minute performance than the game itself. and the era of the a list was born. >> pop culture's national holiday. it's become the place in which you see not only the kind of highest form of competition in sport. strike a pose >> and pop icons are affirmed. there is a real kind of sense of anything might happen. >> reporter: and anything did happen. in 1996, diana ross reaffirmed her diva status with a performance featuring a chors, fireworks. and a high-flying exit. stages set for superstars, soon
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halftime producer, mtv took a chance during super bowl 35. aero-smith with a baby-faced britney spears. >> kind of a point of possibility for performers who are very much on the verge. as well as those who are cemented in our cultural imaginary. >> reporter: there is another moment cemented in america's imagination. janet jackson and justin timberlake's wardrobe malfunction in 2004 set a new course for the halftime show. >> complicated moment in super bowl history. it certainly changed the lineup of halftime performers for several years afterwards. hey jude >> reporter: super bowl 39,
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into your heart >> reporter: in 2009, it was the boss. glory days one, two, three, four. >> reporter: four years later, beyonce on full display. then rising star, bruno mars brought in the show's highest ratings yet. but none of the halftime steps or dramatic antics could have been possible without a group of teenagers from louisiana. do you think the super bowl performances helped to raise the level of awareness people had about the university and its band? >> i don't think, i know so. super bowl 1 launched the grambling band's legacy.
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commercials. played the super bowl four more times. and even inspired the 2002 film "drum line." >> my not e is you don't know what you are in until you are out of it. the grambling marching band of today made possible by a trailblazing band from the past. so what did you want to show america when you stepped foot out on the field? >> we leave a lasting impression on that individual to say "i have never seen anything look that before, and i will never see it again." nice, bro-tato chip. that's not all, bro-tein shake. geico has motorcycle and rv insurance, too. oh, that's a lot more. oh yeah, i'm all about more, teddy brosevelt. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more.
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song in super bowl 50. a carolina panthers coach could be saying good-bye to the game he loves. steve hartman has his story. >> reporter: all week, carolina panthers special teams coach, bruce dehaven has been deflecting. >> just going to refrain from answering a lot of question as but all that. for me it is a nonstory. >> reporter: reporter after reporter. there are more important things to talk about this week than him. >> appreciate your interest. this is not a story. >> reporter: in the one interview he did sit down for this week, i learned bruce dehaven knows a lot more about what it takes to win at football. than what makes an important story. in terms of what happened to me, if i only got a limited amount of time left, why would i want to spend it feeling sorry for myself? >> reporter: last spring at the age of 66, bruce was diagnosed
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prostate cancer. obviously, that diagnosis would have driven many people into retirement, but not bruce. in the end, i wanted to coach. >> reporter: why does coaching win out? >> i just love coaching. coaching is teaching. for whatever reason, it's in my blood. i mean -- i'll probably cry after this ball game just t because -- we're not going to have another week of practice. >> reporter: in fact he loves practice so much he actually scheduled his cancer treatments around it. never missed a single day of work all season. some guys got to work for a living don't they? i find myself lingering after practice. thinking about, i want to make a little picture here in my mind. in case i am not doing this soon. >> reporter: he knows this could be his last year. and given that perspective, you would think the super bowl itself wouldn't matter as much. but don't talk to bruce about the prospect of losing. i wouldn't want to think about that. >> reporter: telling me it still matters. game still matters who wins and
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>> we are in the same position. none of us are going to out of this alive. >> reporter: if you get out with the super bowl ring. even better. >> way better. rip as you probably figured out by now bruce is and always has been one of the nicest guys in the nfl. players like wide receiver, cory brown adore him. like a grandpa to me. a guy that i care about. >> reporter: the difference is this season everyone has been going out of his way to tell him that. >> when lou gehrig said i feel like "i'm the luckiest guy in the world." i can understand what he meant. you just have no idea how you have touched people some times. this, maybe i would have never known this. >> reporter: so says the man with no story to tell.
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san franci super bowl 50 was big
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but for some who live there just an expensive headache. john blackstone has a look at some backlash in the bay area. >> reporter: big super bowl 50s put all all over san francisco have been a popular place for photos and for vandals. pranksters quickly discover the letters could be rearranged so super bowl became sup bro, and superb owl and even oops, if the humor has an edge, many san franciscans think the big game is a big headache. we are psyched to be the host. in all excitement our city leaders dropped the ball. the city supervisor is demanding the nfl reimburse the city for expenses estimated at nearly $5 million. we provide public services, health care, police protection, and i think the nfl can afford to make san francisco whole. >> reporter: for many drivers no amount of money can make up for the traffic jams with super bowl events closing several major streets. >> i think the traffic is worse than new york. new york you get it every now and then.
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>> reporter: to add insult to injury, levi stadium is more than 50 miles away in santa clara. >> think it feeds into the narrative, the city is getting too big too, expensive, too fancy. >> reporter: he is a columnist for "the san francisco chronicle" sees resentment that goes deeper than football. >> if you get in a fist fight if you mention gentrification. >> reporter: it made housing prices among the highest in the country. that's driven up the cost of most everything else. not all in san francisco have benefited. inequality is growing. the nfl comes to town. takes over the city. it is a huge corporation. >> yep. >> reporter: lot of san franciscans don't like that. >> they don't. we are san francisco, affinity for the underdog, for the blue-collar people and so fort. we are not a big corporation type of a place. >> reporter: for all the grumbling, one of the most important industries in san francisco is tourism.
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